<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archives.howelllibrary.org/items?output=omeka-xml&amp;page=106&amp;sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CCreator" accessDate="2026-04-24T17:31:03+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>106</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>10202</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="924" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="852">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/c05ec2e291a7ad7261c2e7f94a64e91b.pdf</src>
        <authentication>1c6a38377d5afcd620a8eae25ca2da38</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="9">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1621">
                  <text>Newspaper</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1630">
                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="57">
          <name>Hidden Search Text</name>
          <description>Enter Search Text that is always hidden except to edit.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32191">
              <text>OL. XVII. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, DEC 28, 1899. No. 52,&#13;
A Man About Town.&#13;
Mr. Hoyi.L. Co nary will appear at the&#13;
r i n c k u t y Opera H o u s e , J a n . 1, in his »fW&#13;
monuUgue, emitlkd " A Man About T o w n "&#13;
It u|)t'iih wiih a clever piece of verse, in&#13;
which the different characters are introduced:—&#13;
The Irish" Alderman tells a huiimrotw&#13;
story, how he tried to ride a bic&#13;
\ c l c ; t h e w l d English sa.lor tells a dramatic&#13;
*ii-ry of a shipwreck ; F a n n e r Jones&#13;
lei is his experience in the Farmers' Hotel;&#13;
U e m a r d o Fopiano, the Italian fiuit vender,&#13;
desci'iius the discovery of America by&#13;
''Cnristoloio t'olomho;" Cohen, the second&#13;
hand clothier, tneH io beat Farmer Jones&#13;
in a b.&gt;i'y,tin, and does not succeed; "Uncle&#13;
J o h n a l l i a n " Introduces himself and closes&#13;
the tiist scene.&#13;
The second scene is in the cafeof a hotel:—&#13;
the aldernvin sings u song; so does&#13;
Farmer Junes; the Jew tel.s a dream he&#13;
had; the " T h e M m About T o w n " and&#13;
•'Uncle J o l . c i t h a n " closes t h e second scene&#13;
with lilting stories. Taken as a whole, the&#13;
entertainment is highly interesting and instructive&#13;
MH. well as amusing, and extremely&#13;
laughable in places.&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
The - -&#13;
Surprise&#13;
v Store,&#13;
BARGAINS.&#13;
We wish to extend o u r t h a n k s&#13;
for the liberal patronA^e given us&#13;
t h e year junt d m winer to a close,&#13;
and wish all o u r friends a n d customers&#13;
a&#13;
Happy New Yean&#13;
We p l e d g e ourselves to give&#13;
you the very best goods at t h e&#13;
lowest possible price a n d it is .our&#13;
d e t e r m i n a t i o n t o make t h e ' new&#13;
year a b a n n e r year in o u r history.&#13;
We p r o m i s e ' t o save you m o n e y —&#13;
will you save some of y o u r t r a d e&#13;
for us?&#13;
A few prices to s t a r t t h e new&#13;
year w i t h :&#13;
Giant Thread 3 for , 10»;&#13;
Ladies1 Fleered Hose f&gt;8e&#13;
Nickel-plated Safety pins,&#13;
protected points, 5c grade 02c&#13;
Paper Pins 01c&#13;
Box Mourning Pins 01c&#13;
Bottle best Ink 02c&#13;
25 Good Envelopes 03c&#13;
No. 2 all silk Ribbons 02c&#13;
Good Crash' 05c&#13;
Guaranteed,Scissors 25c&#13;
Pocket Scissors 10c&#13;
Kin-ter^rarden Scissors 04c&#13;
Glass Cutter 10c&#13;
6 Good Sauce dishes 10c&#13;
Lamp Chimneys 03 and 04r&gt;&#13;
Lantern Globes . 05c&#13;
China Etrus 3 for 05c&#13;
X Box 12 good cigars 25c&#13;
Good Can Opener 05c&#13;
Mr. Bowman has gone to the&#13;
city to buy bargains which are to&#13;
be found in the big wholesale&#13;
houses just before they' take inventory.&#13;
With our two stores and our&#13;
ability to pay S p o t C a s h , we&#13;
can get Bargain* and when we&#13;
get them our customers share the&#13;
benefit k&#13;
Tours for trade,&#13;
E. A.. BOWMAN, Prop.&#13;
Bowman tiUock, Pittckaey.&#13;
^BERT WEL.LMAN,&#13;
lUpager of Pinokaoy Storo.&#13;
Mow»H Stor*, atit to P. 0.&#13;
Vol XVII. No. 52,&#13;
The last is&gt;ue of 1899.&#13;
Frank Shields of Howel! spent Sunday&#13;
here.&#13;
B. 0 Yountf of Detroit spent Xmas&#13;
with relatives hern.&#13;
MUs Kate Farnaja of Detroit spent&#13;
Christinas with her mother here.&#13;
Will Stickle and wife of Ann Arbor&#13;
spent Xmas with his parents here.&#13;
Lyle Younglove of Detroit was the&#13;
gue^t ot his parents in Marion, Xmas.&#13;
Mrs W. J. Black and children are&#13;
the gnesth of her patents in Plainfield.&#13;
S. T. UriniHS of Howell was the&#13;
true*! &lt;it his parents here over Sunday&#13;
and Monday.&#13;
VV. H. Cadwell and wife, of Stillwater,&#13;
Minn., spenta few days with&#13;
his parents here&#13;
Miss l&lt;ia Hants of Dexter&#13;
Sunday with her friend, Grac&#13;
man ol this place.&#13;
Mi&gt;s Kose Black who has been&#13;
spending three weeks with friends in&#13;
Lansing, returned Saturday.&#13;
\Us. B. K. Pearce of Chesaninp,&#13;
visiter) her parents P. A. Sigler ind&#13;
wife, at this place this week.&#13;
Mrs. Thos. Nolan and daughter&#13;
Ethel spent Xmas at the home of her&#13;
parents Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Hinchey.&#13;
Mr. p]dd Doane jtnd family and Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Elmer .Jackson and son, of&#13;
Daiisvilie visited at G. B. Hincheys&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
F. li, Andrews and family spent Xmas&#13;
with his sister in Owo.-so as usual.&#13;
Mrs. A and Florence are spending&#13;
the, week there.&#13;
J a n . 1, lyOu, Hoyt L. Connry, of Boston,&#13;
will be at the Pinckney Opera House.&#13;
Every body about the Country should hear&#13;
the favorite story telier, in his popular&#13;
lecture, ' ' A Man About T o w n . " Single&#13;
admission, [-$") cents.&#13;
Mav Moran was iti Howell on Sat&#13;
urday last.&#13;
Miss Hose Dunn returned to Ann&#13;
Arbor on Christmas.&#13;
John Tuomey spent Christmas with&#13;
relativerin Detroit.&#13;
Mesdames H. Kick and H. Gregory&#13;
of Gregory, were in town Tuesday.&#13;
P. G. Teeple and family of Marquette&#13;
are guests ot their parents here.&#13;
Miss Veronica• Fohey, ot" Ypsilanti,&#13;
is spending her vacation at her home&#13;
near here.&#13;
Mr. Kelogg was the guest of his&#13;
grand daughter, Mrs. Abel Smith, the&#13;
past week&#13;
Francis McKeeverof heton Iowa, is&#13;
the guest rf his grandmother, Mrs. J.&#13;
M. Kearney.&#13;
Miss Belle Kennedy ot Ypsilanti, is&#13;
spending the holidays with her brother&#13;
near here.&#13;
Miss Josie Reason who has been&#13;
working in Marquette returned home&#13;
;mst week.&#13;
Robt/jCulhane Sr. who has been&#13;
working at his trade in Grand Kapids&#13;
was horn *• Chiistmas.&#13;
John Siller and daughter Mae of&#13;
Leslie, spent Christmas week with G.&#13;
VV. Teeple and family.&#13;
Carl Reule and family, who have&#13;
been spending the pis'; three weeks at&#13;
Burdick Hincheys returned to their&#13;
home in Durand Tuesday.&#13;
E. A. Bowman of the "Surprise&#13;
Store" is in Detroit making his annual&#13;
purchases of sample goods etc. and&#13;
will have a line line in the near future.&#13;
Saturday eyening Dec. 30 the Columbian&#13;
Dramaticf^lub wHl give "Out&#13;
ol the Shadows; or the Convicts Revenge,"&#13;
at the opera bouse PincKney.&#13;
The Club needs no recommend from us&#13;
as all who have heard them before will&#13;
want, to hear them again.&#13;
A Few Left&#13;
Pancy Albums,&#13;
Xmas Toys,&#13;
Fancy Goods,&#13;
At Cost.&#13;
A full and complete&#13;
line of Drugs and&#13;
Medicines.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
Druggist,&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
INVENTORY&#13;
We wish to reduce our stock&#13;
before invoicing.&#13;
In Shoes&#13;
Ladies' $3 fine kid Shoes will sell for $2.49&#13;
Ladies' $2.50 fine kid Shoes will sell for 2.00&#13;
Ladies' $2 fine kid Shoes will sell,for 1.60&#13;
Ladies' $1.50 fine kid Shoes will sell for 1.25&#13;
Men's box calf, $3 Shoes will sell for . 2.50&#13;
Men's vici kid, $3.50 Shoes will sell for 2.75&#13;
Men's vici kid, $2.25 Shoe will sell for 1.85&#13;
Men's calf, $1.50 Shoes will sell for 1.20&#13;
Boys' calf, 2.00 Shoes will sell for 1.65&#13;
Boys'calf, 1.50 Shoes will, sell for 1.20&#13;
In Dress Goods&#13;
, All Dress Goods will be sold at cost&#13;
In.Silks, can show you a nice line of silks for&#13;
Ladies' waists. Will ^ive 15 per cent off&#13;
on all silks.&#13;
500 yards of best dark Prints for 5c per%yd&#13;
300 yards of best Tight. Prints for 4c yer yd&#13;
Our stock of Rubber Goods is full and can make you&#13;
low prices.&#13;
Special on Groceries for Saturday—come and get our&#13;
prices.&#13;
W. W. BARNARD.&#13;
We must ask all our Customers to settle&#13;
all Accounts and Notes that are due, before&#13;
S A L B # ^n. 1,1900.&#13;
Hoping to see yon all in time so we can&#13;
balance our books before taking our annual&#13;
inventory, Jan. 1, 1900, either by Note or&#13;
Cash.&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
l*»&#13;
TEEPLE ^ CADWELL.&#13;
Specials&#13;
FOP This Week#&#13;
Gents Flannelette Nisrht Robes 39, 50 and 75c&#13;
Ladies' Flannelette Nigrht Robe, in 1.00 quality, 82c&#13;
All odds and ends in Cotton and Wool Underwear&#13;
Less 50 per cent&#13;
All odds and ends in Shoes at actual cost.&#13;
Saturday, Dec. 30*&#13;
40c Tea&#13;
Pillisbury Vitos&#13;
1 qt can Syrup,&#13;
Best Rice&#13;
29c&#13;
l i e&#13;
07c&#13;
05c&#13;
F. G. 3ACKS0N. / -&#13;
EVENTS OF THE WEEK&#13;
N O U R G R E A T STATE RELATED&#13;
IN A BRIEF FORM.&#13;
Mrs. Aokins, the CoufenHed Child Murderess,&#13;
in on Trial at Frankfort und&#13;
Her Attorneys Will pat up a Ple»&#13;
of Insanity—Other Item*.&#13;
Child-Murderes* on Trial.&#13;
In the light of the past, the criminal&#13;
history of Benzie county has no record&#13;
of deliberate and premeditated crime&#13;
to parallel that 01 which Mrs. Mate&#13;
Askins, the child-murderess now on&#13;
trial at Frankfort, as a confessed principal.&#13;
On the night of Oct. (&gt; last, Mrs.&#13;
Askins left her boarding place at Honor&#13;
and proceeded to Thompsonville in&#13;
company with her two children, Glenn,&#13;
aped 8 years, and Margaret, aged 11&#13;
years. She registered ai the Commercial&#13;
hotel, and after having obtained 30&#13;
grains of morphine, -ounces of carbolic&#13;
acid and 3 ounces of cocaine from a&#13;
neighboring drug store, mixed the&#13;
morphine into a goblet containing&#13;
sherry wine, and gave each of her children&#13;
a liberal dose of the mixture.&#13;
When physicians arrived they found&#13;
the girl cold and stiff in death,' but the&#13;
boy and his mother were resuscitated&#13;
without much effort. Mrs. Askins,&#13;
freely confesses that she committed&#13;
the rash act for no other purpose than&#13;
to "get them all out of the world." The&#13;
attorneys for the defense will now try&#13;
and make out that the woman was insane.&#13;
• Mr*. Tilir'e S» mi •THOU Acquitted.&#13;
The jury iu the Sanderson case rendered&#13;
a verdict of not guilty at 1 **:01 a.&#13;
m., on Dee. 23. The jury iiled in at&#13;
1O:;JT p. in. and Foreman Emmons stated&#13;
it could not agree. Jurvman Austerburg&#13;
wanted to know if the contents&#13;
of the stomach had been subjected to&#13;
such heat by Prof. Pre&amp;eott duriug the&#13;
analysis to cause formation of glass.&#13;
Prescott's testimony was to the effect&#13;
that it had not and the jury again retired&#13;
at 11:30. The crowd was large,&#13;
over 1,000 people staying. When the&#13;
jury again returned, just on the stroke&#13;
of 12, Foreman Kmmons' announcement&#13;
of not guilty was received with cheers&#13;
and hand clapping. Mrs. Sanderson&#13;
shed tears and was clasped in her&#13;
father's arms, where she collapsed, but&#13;
soon revived und thanked each member&#13;
of the jury.&#13;
SPECIAL CESSION DOINGS.&#13;
World • Parliament of Lnbor.&#13;
After the longest session in its history,&#13;
the American Federation of Labor&#13;
on the 20th adjourned lis 10th annual&#13;
convention sine die. It will be looked&#13;
back up as one of the busiest convention&#13;
the central congress of the American&#13;
laboringinan has ever held. Much&#13;
was accomplished towards the furtherance&#13;
of the trades union movement and&#13;
towards the settlement of existing'&#13;
troubles. The following were elected&#13;
officers for the enduing year: !'resident.&#13;
Samuel Compere, of the cigarinakers:&#13;
1st vice-president, .1. P. MeGuire, of&#13;
the carpenters; 2d vice-president, .fas.&#13;
Duncan, of the granite cutters: 3d vicepresident,&#13;
J as. OVonnell. of the machinists;&#13;
4th vice-president. John&#13;
Mitchell, of the miners; 5th vice-president,&#13;
Max Morris, of the clerks; Oth |&#13;
vice-president, Thos. J. Kidd. of, the j&#13;
woodworkers; secretary. Frank Morri- I&#13;
son, of the printers; treasurer, John 15. i&#13;
Lcnnon, of the tailors. ;&#13;
Prominent Official* Asked to Resign.&#13;
One of the most sensational of the !&#13;
many sensations that have resulted j&#13;
from the calling of the grand jury at&#13;
Lansing, to investigate alleged crooked !&#13;
dealing of state officials, cropped j&#13;
out on the evening of the 10th when j&#13;
Gov. Pingree isked for the resignations I&#13;
of Brig.-Gcn. William L. White, of j&#13;
Grand Rapids, quartermaster-general; \&#13;
Brig.-Gen. Fred 11. Case, of Three- Riv-j&#13;
ers, adjutant-general; Brig.-Gen. Ar- 1&#13;
thur F. Marsh, of Allegan, inspectorgeneral,&#13;
and Samuel N. Bickerstoff. a&#13;
member of the board of trustees of the&#13;
Michigan asylum for insane at Kalamazoo,&#13;
and city salesmau for the Henderson-&#13;
Ames Co., of that eity, who is&#13;
alleged to have engineered the deal for&#13;
the Kalamazoo company, winch resulted&#13;
in a steal from the state of many&#13;
thousands of dollars while the state&#13;
troops were being equipped for the&#13;
Spanish-American war.&#13;
Oar State llanki*.&#13;
The comptroller of the currency on&#13;
the 22d gave out an abstract of reports&#13;
of the condition on Dec. 2 of the 74 national&#13;
banks in Michigan, exclusive of&#13;
Detroit. Since the report of Sept. 7&#13;
the total resources have increased from&#13;
£54,302,22'J to 854,330,74.&gt;; loans and discounts&#13;
increased from 831,410,3.-)1 to&#13;
§32,004.443, and cash reserve increased&#13;
from S3.1U7.177 to $3,200,744,- of which&#13;
gold holdings advanced from Si,771,()07&#13;
to §1,777,027, Individual deposits increased&#13;
from 83(),538,324 to ¢3().540,442.&#13;
and the average reserve held fell&#13;
from 20.40 to 25.70 per cent.&#13;
STATE GOSSIP.&#13;
Ray City was visited by a £75,000 mill&#13;
fire on the 20th.&#13;
The Votey Organ company's works&#13;
| at Detroit is to be removed to Garwood,&#13;
i * . J.&#13;
j A farmer:/ institute for Arenac&#13;
j county will be held at Maple Ridge,&#13;
.Jan. 18 and 10.&#13;
I MeRain is going to experiment with&#13;
I gasoline lamps as an illuminating&#13;
; agency for the streets.&#13;
The Gladwin County Fanners' institute&#13;
has been awarded the prize by the&#13;
state institute oilieers for second best&#13;
attendance at the last county institute.&#13;
Gratiot county farmers who raised&#13;
sugar beets the past season are well&#13;
satisfied with the returns, and the acreage&#13;
next year will be a great deal&#13;
larger than last.&#13;
The principal block in the village of&#13;
Haley was completely destroyed by&#13;
fire on the morning of the 21st. entailing&#13;
a lost estimated at SlO.OOO with&#13;
about'82,700 insurance.&#13;
An hourly service between Detroit&#13;
and Romeo has been established by the&#13;
Detroit, Rochester. Romeo and Lake&#13;
Orion Electric railway, much to the&#13;
satisfaction of people living along the&#13;
route.&#13;
The evaporator at Mayville will start&#13;
up again soon, the owner having secured&#13;
a contract from the British government&#13;
for a large quantity of evaporated&#13;
potatoes for the troops in South&#13;
Africa,.&#13;
State'* Money Loaned to Corporations.&#13;
The grand jury at Lansing will return&#13;
a great many more indictments.&#13;
It has been found that $4,030 of the&#13;
state's money was loaned to Grocer&#13;
Libbey at Grand Rapids to enable him&#13;
to do $25,000 worth of business w ith&#13;
the state troops at Island Lake, for&#13;
which exceedingly exhorbitant prices&#13;
were charged. The Blake Rifle Co.&#13;
wan loaned «10,000 of the state's money,&#13;
the state taking security on the company's&#13;
plant. The statutes, chapter 15,&#13;
page 189 and 190, first volume Howell's&#13;
is explicitly specific and strict on this&#13;
point of handling or loaning public&#13;
moneys. Under the statute there is no&#13;
excuse possible for the loans made, and&#13;
heavy penalties are provided.&#13;
A Proponed Reform.&#13;
The Michigan State Poultry association&#13;
which met in Detroit on the 19th&#13;
adopted the following resolution:&#13;
"Whereas, It being deemed that the&#13;
only equitable way of buying and selling&#13;
eggs is by weight instead of by&#13;
count, it is hereby resolved that all&#13;
Michigan poultrymen hereafter use&#13;
their best efforts to induce consumers&#13;
of eggs to demand that eggs be sold by&#13;
the pound, instead of by the dozen and&#13;
be it also resolved that' we petition the&#13;
state legislature at its next session to&#13;
fix the standard of weight for a dozen&#13;
eggs."&#13;
m&#13;
Editor Doty Gett no Redress.&#13;
Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Koh-&#13;
'ler has notified Alva WMourn* F. A.&#13;
Brigham, Elmer Moses and Charles&#13;
Van Kirk, of Metamora, who were indicted&#13;
by the grand jury, charged with&#13;
•wrecking the Cross Roads Weekly thaV&#13;
at the opening of the January session or&#13;
t h e circuit court a motion would be&#13;
insula by the prosecution for nolle pros&#13;
cque and that the parties need not pre&#13;
pare themselves for trial. Insufficient j but her conscience has talked to nor&#13;
evidence is the cause.&#13;
The supreme court has decided that&#13;
the act passed by the last legislature,&#13;
abolishing the water board at Detroit&#13;
and transferring its business to the&#13;
board of public works, unconstitutional&#13;
and void.&#13;
Three stories of a four-story brick&#13;
building on Woodbridge street, Detroit.&#13;
which had been weakened by a recent&#13;
.fire in an adjoining building, collapsed&#13;
on the 12th. Only . one person was injured,&#13;
but he probably fatally,&#13;
The funeral of a Meridian woman.&#13;
who died a few days ago, had to be&#13;
held out of doors, as the casket necessary&#13;
to hold the remains was so large&#13;
that it could not be gotten into the&#13;
house. The deceased weighed 450&#13;
pounds.&#13;
Hartford is at last in shape to fight&#13;
lire with its gasoline water works&#13;
plant. Full pressure can be obtained&#13;
in three minutes from the time the&#13;
alarm is sounded. The tower is not&#13;
yet completed, but at present a direct&#13;
pressure is used.&#13;
The proposed electric railroad from&#13;
Allegan to the lake shore seems to be&#13;
a sure thing. The necessary franchises&#13;
have all been secured except one.&#13;
through the village of Fennville, and&#13;
the council at that place noW has the&#13;
matter under consideration.&#13;
A new system of mail collectionjvent&#13;
into effect at Grand Rapids recently.&#13;
All the electric cars in the eity were&#13;
furnished with mail boxes fastened on&#13;
the side of the cars, the idea being that&#13;
any citizen who had a letter to post&#13;
could hail a car and as it stopped drop&#13;
his letter through the slot.&#13;
Railroad Commissioner Osborn has&#13;
decided to appeal the case brought&#13;
against the Wabash Railroad Co. to&#13;
compel it to sell tickets at thev rate of&#13;
two and a half cents per mile. .The&#13;
commissioner lost his case in the&#13;
Wayne circuit court, and the question&#13;
will now come before the supreme&#13;
court.&#13;
A woman employe of the Sanitarium&#13;
Health Food Co. at Battle Creek has&#13;
f/mfessed that she set fire to the company's&#13;
building on the night of July 10,&#13;
1808, when the structure was damaged&#13;
to the extent of 80,000. Incendiarism&#13;
had never been suspected. She says&#13;
she did it to cover up a Jheft of ¢500,&#13;
repeatedly since.&#13;
The extraordinary session of the legislature&#13;
convened on the morning- of&#13;
the 18th. There were no railroad lobbyists&#13;
present on the opening day and&#13;
little time was lost in settling down to&#13;
business. There were the usual religious&#13;
exercises in the opening of both&#13;
houses, and at noon Lieut.-Gov. Robison&#13;
merely told the senate that the&#13;
governor's call would tyll them why&#13;
they were tl&gt;ere. In the house Speaker&#13;
Adams made a formal address. When&#13;
the house convened in the afternoon&#13;
Rep. Rureh, of Detroit, offered a resolution&#13;
instructing the clerk of the&#13;
house to notify the prosecuting attorney&#13;
of Ingham county and the members&#13;
of the grand jury now in session in that&#13;
county, that the members of the house&#13;
waive all claims of privilege in the service&#13;
of any process that might issue&#13;
from the said grand jury. The resolution&#13;
was adopted without a dissenting&#13;
vote. After the reading of the governor's&#13;
message by himself, a joint resolution&#13;
was introduced by Rep. Wayne,&#13;
of Midland, under which it is proposed&#13;
to amend the constitution so as to compel&#13;
railroads and other corporations to&#13;
pay an equal proportion of the state's&#13;
taxes. The resolution was immediately&#13;
referred to the house committee&#13;
on judiciary, and that body tackled it&#13;
shortly after adjournment of the house.&#13;
The governor's message asking the&#13;
legislature to empower the attorneygeneral&#13;
to bring proceedings to recover&#13;
the 840,000 lost in the sale of military&#13;
equipments was sidetracked in the senate.&#13;
It was first sent to the judiciary&#13;
committee, but Senator Mon;\ghan presented&#13;
a resolution asking the srovernor&#13;
to send iu an additional message of&#13;
a broader scope so that the state can&#13;
take steps to recover all moneys that&#13;
nmy have been illegally expended.&#13;
This was passed, and nothing further&#13;
will be done until the governor is heard&#13;
from.&#13;
A special matter that the governor&#13;
j asked the legislature to act on is a proj&#13;
vision for new boilers at the soldiers'&#13;
I home in Grand Rapids. For this pur-&#13;
I pose 8S.000 is asked. Another matter&#13;
that may come up is an appropriation&#13;
of 8"&gt;.000 needed for the upper peninsula&#13;
normal school, the new institution having&#13;
been neglected.&#13;
Roth houses passed the bills-straightening&#13;
out the tangle in the soldiers'&#13;
home and Manpiette normal school ap- j&#13;
propriation bills on the 10th. There&#13;
was no opposition, as neither bill increased&#13;
an appropriation, simply making&#13;
the appropriation of the last legislature&#13;
available at once for the uses for&#13;
which it was intended. These bills&#13;
were given immediate effect, and will&#13;
become laws as soon as presented to&#13;
the governor and signed by him.&#13;
The house judiciary committee could&#13;
not agree on the Wayne joint resolution&#13;
proposing amendments to the taxation&#13;
provisions of the constitution.&#13;
Scully. Foster. Hunt and Chee.ver voted&#13;
for a motion to report it favorably.&#13;
while Davis, McCallum, Kerr and&#13;
Handy voted no. A motion to report&#13;
the resolution without recommendation&#13;
was supported by all of the above except&#13;
Scully, who refrained from voting.&#13;
The senate considered the Wayne&#13;
joint resolution in committee of the&#13;
v vJole on the 20th. The only important&#13;
amendment made was one by&#13;
Lyon, which provides that the '"legislature&#13;
may provide for the collection&#13;
of specific taxes from corporations,'' instead&#13;
of from ••banking, railroad, plank&#13;
road and other corporations,"' as passed&#13;
AT HOME AND ABROAD&#13;
A S U M M A R Y OF T H E NEWS FOR&#13;
W E WE^K BY W l R $ .&#13;
It Now tiookV «N Tlioujjh England "had&#13;
More Trouble Ahead of H*r — The&#13;
Ruler uf Abyssinia It After Her —&#13;
]touud»ry Line Don't Suit.&#13;
Abyssinia tind Uuglaud May yet Scrap.&#13;
Much anxiety over the attitude of&#13;
Menelek, ruler of Abyssinia, toward&#13;
Britain is displayed in London. At&#13;
present there is a dispute between&#13;
this potentate and Great Rritaiu as to&#13;
the boundary between Egypt and&#13;
Abyssinia, and it is feared Meuelik&#13;
may consider the present an excellent&#13;
time to make a demonstration. The&#13;
kings of Kthiopia have always claimed&#13;
the suzerainty of territories extending&#13;
northward as far as Nubia, southward&#13;
to Mombasa and westward to the White&#13;
Nile. Menelek claims to be the owner&#13;
of the right bank of that river, from&#13;
14th to the 2d degree of latitude, just&#13;
opposite Pnshoda. He reiterated these&#13;
pretentions as early as 1801 in a diplomatic&#13;
note addressed to all European&#13;
powers. Whether Menelek intends to&#13;
press his claim at this time or not, he&#13;
has sent troops to occupy the territories&#13;
which he claims, and has acted like&#13;
President Kruger, having made extensive&#13;
warlike preparations. In the last&#13;
two years he is said to have imported &lt;]&#13;
300,000 rifles, 4.000.000 cartridges and&#13;
mitrailleuses and rapid-fire cannon. It&#13;
is estimated that Menelek can put&#13;
nearly 200,000 men in the field. As to&#13;
military qualities, the bravery and endurance&#13;
of the Abyssinian soldiers have&#13;
been proved in their campaign against&#13;
the disciplined, well-trained troops of&#13;
Italv.&#13;
T R A N S V A A L WAR I T E M S .&#13;
The Brrtiafr.goTerament haw at* tost&#13;
consented t&lt;* mobilize a foyce which&#13;
Gen. Buller is credited with haying demanded&#13;
611 aldtfr a's'ar^espentiai of success&#13;
in £uuth gVfrifca^ namely 10,000&#13;
mounted infantry. Ou&amp;he morning of&#13;
fhe 20th the war office iSstaed an order&#13;
to the effect that the government had&#13;
decided to raise for* SouMu Africa a&#13;
mounted infantry fo»ce» io &gt;e &lt;alled&#13;
'•Imperial Yeomanry" and to be recruited&#13;
from yeomanry, volunteers and&#13;
civilians possessing the requite.qualifications.&#13;
Enlistment will be fty one&#13;
year or during- * thd continuance o/ the&#13;
war. The- meu»uu»&gt;t be between 20&#13;
and 3."&gt; ^ears of age and of equal physique&#13;
to the ordinary cavalry soldier.&#13;
Officers and men are to&gt; provide their&#13;
own horses and to wear neutrHl t i n t&#13;
doth shooting jackets, not necessarily&#13;
uniform, felt hats, breeches and gaitby&#13;
the house. After the committee of&#13;
the whole had agreed to the resolution&#13;
as amended it was referred to a special&#13;
committee.&#13;
The legislature adjourned on the 21st&#13;
to permit the lawmakers to spend&#13;
Christmas at home.&#13;
The house on the 20th passed the&#13;
Wayne joint resolution by a vote of&#13;
80 to 8.&#13;
Oar St»te Robbed of 851,500.&#13;
Developments of a most startling nature&#13;
have come out in connection with&#13;
the grand Jury's investigation of the&#13;
affairs of the state military board, and&#13;
indictments' against at least seven if&#13;
not 10 of the men most prominently&#13;
identified with the work of equipping&#13;
and sending Michigan's troops to the&#13;
front, are sure to be returned.&#13;
The trouble with the legislative investigation&#13;
last season seems to have&#13;
been a failure to secure any positive&#13;
evidence that any one man or party of&#13;
men. in conclusion or otherwise, added&#13;
to his or their eai'thly possession at the&#13;
expense of the state as a whole, although&#13;
there were all kinds of rumors&#13;
that Michigan was milked right and&#13;
left in, the purchase of supplies and&#13;
subsistence for its soldiers.&#13;
From the evidence now in hand it appears&#13;
that on July 17 the military&#13;
board held a meeting at which it was&#13;
decided to sell a large part of the state&#13;
stores, valued at thousands of dollars.&#13;
A few days later a deal was fixed and the&#13;
supplies, mostly clothing, were boxed&#13;
and shipped to the Illinois' Supply Co.,&#13;
at Chicago. There the goods were receipted&#13;
for in the name of the supply&#13;
company by Addison C. Cobb, a former&#13;
Kalamazoo man, who was then and is&#13;
now a clerk at the Ocean Beach hotel.&#13;
Without being unpacked, thes goods&#13;
were promptly reshipped to the Henderson-&#13;
Ames Co., at Kalamazoo, "the&#13;
price paid the state for this big shipment&#13;
by the Illinois Supply company,&#13;
which is in reality the Henderson-^mes&#13;
company, was 810, M)Q, Jp&#13;
Dwl«ht L, Moody Dead.&#13;
Dwight L. Moody, the famous evangelist,&#13;
passed away at his home in East&#13;
Northfield, Mass., at noon on Dec. 22,&#13;
at the age of 02. The cause of his&#13;
death was a general breaking down,&#13;
due £o overwork. While speaking at&#13;
Kansas City. Mo., Nov. 10, the noted&#13;
evangelist was stricken down. Upon&#13;
the advice of a phvsiciau Mr. Moodv re- i , , . -&#13;
i and their families.&#13;
ers. All must be good riders and&#13;
marksmen.&#13;
President Kruger's government has&#13;
formally protested to Secretary Hay&#13;
against the sale of munitions of war by&#13;
American manufacturers and merchants&#13;
to the British government. Secretary&#13;
Hay has sent a reply to the Boer government&#13;
reiterating the neutrality of&#13;
the United States in the present war&#13;
and declaring that American citizens&#13;
in trading with both beligereats violate&#13;
no neutrality obligation.&#13;
The gravity of the military situation&#13;
in London is again becoming accentuated&#13;
in the public mind owing to the&#13;
complete absence of news. Nothing'&#13;
has been heard from Lord Methuen&#13;
since Dee. ITth, and it is feared t h a t&#13;
his communications have been cut off.&#13;
If this be so, his position is dangerous.&#13;
(Jen. Uuller's casualty list at Colenso,&#13;
just published, shows that 140 were&#13;
killed and 740 wounded. Two hundred&#13;
and twenty-seven are described as missing,&#13;
and of those about 40 are known&#13;
] to be prisoners in the hands of the&#13;
j Boers. This makes u total larger than&#13;
H e n . Bailer's original estimate.&#13;
lloyal letters signed by the queen are&#13;
being circulated by the archbishop tothe&#13;
bishops of the various dioceses authorizing&#13;
a collection in the, churches&#13;
throughout England on Jan. 7 in aid of&#13;
the fund f or siciv and wounded soldiers&#13;
turned to his home, never to preach i&#13;
again. Fully 15,000 people listened to&#13;
his last sermon and many pronounced&#13;
it as one of the evangelist's greatest efforts.&#13;
Deceased was born on a farm&#13;
near Northfield. Mass., in 1837. At the&#13;
aged of 17 he started out in the world&#13;
for himself, commencing as a clerk in&#13;
a shoe store in Boston. One year later&#13;
he went to Chicago, where he became a&#13;
member of the Congregational church&#13;
and an active member of the Y. M. C.&#13;
A., and it was his work in connection&#13;
with the association that built the&#13;
foundation for his gteat evangelistic&#13;
future. He was without a doubt the&#13;
most famous evangelist of the day.&#13;
Brooke May Relieve AuileMoD,&#13;
Brigv-Gen. Thos. M. Anderson, commandant&#13;
of: the department of the&#13;
lakes, with headquarters in Chicago, Ik^dvers'artillervcnnnot&#13;
will be relieved from active duty Jan&#13;
21, 1000, by the law retiring army otlicers&#13;
at the age of 04. His retirement&#13;
will remove from the regular army&#13;
lists one of the old school, "whose military&#13;
training was gained on the field&#13;
of battle in the war of the rebellion.&#13;
It is highly probable that Gen. Anderson,&#13;
will be relieved by Major-General&#13;
Brooke, retiring governor-general of&#13;
Cuba.&#13;
The Boers have been largely reinforced&#13;
since Gen. Gatacre's reverse a t&#13;
Stromberg. The country north of t h a t&#13;
point is in arms, and the farms of the&#13;
loyalists are being taken by the Boers,&#13;
who reap the crops.&#13;
Gen. Gatacre has issued a proclamati&#13;
o n forbidding all persons living on&#13;
farms to move about the district or t o&#13;
visit Sterkstonn, except on Saturdays,&#13;
and then only with passes, under pain&#13;
of summary arrest.&#13;
The lord mayor of London, Alfred&#13;
Newton, is raising and' equipping a&#13;
force of 1,000 volunteers among the city&#13;
corps. The large city firms are'contributing&#13;
the necessary expenses.&#13;
Little credence is placed' in the report&#13;
that the guns lost by the British&#13;
were not captured by the Boers. Sir&#13;
now muster&#13;
That New Pension Rule.&#13;
The order issued Oct. 31 by the pension&#13;
department at Washington to the&#13;
effect that each pension agent shall issue&#13;
pensions only to such pensioners as&#13;
live within the agency has ereated no&#13;
end of trouble all over the country, inasmuch&#13;
as the transfer of pensioners*&#13;
names to their home districts has&#13;
caused some delay in straightening up&#13;
the books, any number of the pensioners&#13;
will be shy their cheeks this quarter—&#13;
an exceedingly inconvenient thing&#13;
just at the holiday season.&#13;
Tim* Extended to August.&#13;
The interstate commerce commission&#13;
on the 21st extended the time to August,&#13;
lOOOv when all railroads must&#13;
have their freight cars equipped with&#13;
automatie couplers and other safety&#13;
devices. The time would have been up&#13;
Jan. 1, and this extension was made&#13;
because applications for it was indorsed&#13;
by representatives of railroad employes.&#13;
Tbe Richest Yet Struck.&#13;
The Vigilante Mining Co, has struck&#13;
a vein of copper ore on its mine that&#13;
exceeds in value anything that has&#13;
ever been fonnd in the Black Hills. The&#13;
mine is about five miles from Custer,&#13;
S. D, The rich ore is found in'the 300-&#13;
foot level, and the width of the vein at&#13;
this time is 10 feet.&#13;
THE NEWS CONDENSED&#13;
It is rumored at Paris that the Bank&#13;
of Russia has advanced the Bank of&#13;
England £8,000,000.&#13;
By the burning of a house at Oreen&#13;
Brier, Ark., a mother and two small&#13;
children were cremated on the 10th.&#13;
Geo. Roberts, the father, was away&#13;
from home at the time.&#13;
The British and American minister*&#13;
at The Hague have asked permission to&#13;
retire to Antwerp with a view of avoiding&#13;
personal unpleasantness during the&#13;
anti-English attitude of the Dutch*&#13;
much more than 30 guns.&#13;
(Jen. Lord Roberts will supersede&#13;
Gen. Buller in handling the British&#13;
foree.s in South Africa. Gen Kitchener&#13;
will also go to South Africa as chief of&#13;
staff to Lord Roberts.&#13;
The g o v e r n m e n t s New South Wales&#13;
has decided to send a field' hospital&#13;
corps and a battery of artillery to South&#13;
Afri ca in addition to the mounted contingent.&#13;
The bodies of two of the guides who&#13;
mislead Gen. Gatacre at Stormberg&#13;
were found on the battlefield. The&#13;
mVn had been shot.&#13;
The imperial government has accepted&#13;
the offer of the Dominion government&#13;
to send a second contingent&#13;
to the Transvaal.&#13;
WAR NOTES.&#13;
Maj.-Gen. Henry W. Lawton was&#13;
killed at San Mateo on the 18th. The&#13;
general with cavalry and battalions of&#13;
the 20th and 27th infantries left Manila&#13;
on the above date for the purpose of&#13;
capturing the town of Sah Mateo, with&#13;
its rebel garrison of 300. On the same&#13;
day of his death, not thinking the&#13;
brave general to be dead, the President&#13;
had instructed the war department t o&#13;
prepare Gen. Law ton's commission as&#13;
a brigadier general in the regular army&#13;
to fill one ,of the existing vacancies.&#13;
Gen. Lawton was a hero of three wars,&#13;
was known as a'good fighter and a&#13;
soldier of experience. He was born in&#13;
Toledo, 0., and was appointed to the&#13;
army from Indiana. He was married.&#13;
Ex-President Harrison in commenting&#13;
on the death, of Gen. Lawton&#13;
says he believes that the general'*&#13;
death was the result of treachery. .&#13;
Gen. Young reports that he-believea&#13;
the American prisoners, including&#13;
Lieut. Gilmore, are now in the hand*&#13;
of the United States troop*. , l i e u t ,&#13;
Col. Howse and Maj. Hunter have been&#13;
operating with small commands in&#13;
North Hocus province, and it is sup*&#13;
posed that one of these has effected th*&#13;
release of the Americans.&#13;
A force of insurgents estimated a t&#13;
800, attacked the American garrison at&#13;
200 at Vigan, province of South Iloeoa,&#13;
The American loss was eight killed&#13;
and many wounded. After very hard&#13;
fighting the ^Filipinos were drivon off&#13;
and thijottf hfohf monntaiua, leaving S*.&#13;
dea4 ' "&#13;
«&#13;
,»••&lt;'** #h~')&#13;
••Mm,im.»\mfmmmMI:Klimm,t^t,it^^ _ ^ **•*•&#13;
»&#13;
Ayers&#13;
20th&#13;
Century&#13;
manac&#13;
( N o t the ordinary kind)&#13;
A handsome year-book filed&#13;
with beautiful illustrations, and a&#13;
complete calendar. It is sold on |&#13;
all news-stands for 5 cents, and&#13;
it's worth five times that amount.&#13;
It is a reliable chronology of&#13;
the progress of the 19th century&#13;
and a prophecy of what may be&#13;
expected in the 20th.&#13;
IJere ftro a few of tho great men who have&#13;
writtou for It:&#13;
Secretary Wilson, on Agriculture&#13;
Se% Chauncey M. Depew, on Politics&#13;
Russell Sage, on Finance&#13;
Thomas Edison, " Electricity&#13;
Gen. Merritt, " Land Warfare&#13;
Adml. Hichbom, " Naval Warfare&#13;
" A l " Smith, " Sports&#13;
You will enjoy reading it now,&#13;
and it will be a book of reference&#13;
for you through the years to&#13;
come. Sixty-four pages, printed&#13;
on ivory finish paper.&#13;
If your news-dealer cannot supply&#13;
you with it, cut out this ad.&#13;
and send it with three one-cent&#13;
stamps and receive this elegant&#13;
book free. Address.&#13;
J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass.&#13;
« S M&#13;
Onions peeled under ^^½ater do n o t&#13;
d i s t u r b t h e t y e s .&#13;
La Porte, Texas.&#13;
T h e progress of the construction&#13;
w o r k at La Porte, Texas, the future&#13;
g r e a t deep-water shipping point at the&#13;
head of navigation on Galveston Bay&#13;
o n the Gulf of Mexico, is progressing&#13;
favorably. .The wharves and switchi&#13;
n g tracks are nearing completion and&#13;
t h e work on the streets and on the&#13;
s e w e r a g e and rater s y s t e m s is now&#13;
under way. Mr.n. R. Holmes, the general&#13;
manager ofjthe La Porte Improvem&#13;
e n t C o m p a n y * and the La Porte&#13;
W h a r f and Channel Company, is pers&#13;
o n a l l y superintending the improvem&#13;
e n t s . Mr. H o l m e s makes his headquarters&#13;
at the Sylvan Hotel and visitors&#13;
to La Porte during the next six&#13;
w e e k s and before the time of the first&#13;
g e n e r a l La Porte sale, which will be&#13;
h e l d in February, 1900, should introd&#13;
u c e themselves to Mr. Holmes and all&#13;
o w him to extend to them facilities&#13;
f o r getting a thorough understanding&#13;
of the conditions surrounding the La&#13;
P o r t a enterprises.&#13;
A saucer of charcoal purifies t h e refrigerator.&#13;
Deafness Cannot B e Cared Slocal applications, as they cannot reach the&#13;
jeas-ed portion of the ear. There is only one&#13;
way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional&#13;
remedies. Deafness is caused by an&#13;
Inflamed condition of the mucus lining of the&#13;
Xustachian Tube. When this tube is inflamed Su have a rvimbling sound or imperfect hear-&#13;
?, and when it is entirely closed deafness is&#13;
the result, and unless the inflammation can be&#13;
taken out and this tube restored to its normal&#13;
condition, hearing will be destroyed forever;&#13;
nine cases out of ten are caused' by catarrh,&#13;
which is nothing but an inflamed condition of&#13;
tfee mucus surfaces.&#13;
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case&#13;
of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot&#13;
bo cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for&#13;
Circulars, free.&#13;
F. J. CHENEY &amp; CO., Toledo, a&#13;
Sold by Druffkists. 75c.&#13;
Ball's Family Pills are the best&#13;
Ei^e should be w a s h e d in h o t w a t e r ,&#13;
n o t cold.&#13;
It lias No Eqaal Anywhere.&#13;
Lightning Hot Drops; acknowledged pain pftnacea;&#13;
AH druggists. Herb Medl&lt;:lne Co., Sprlagtleld, O.&#13;
N e v e r feed a b a b y directly before its&#13;
b a t h .&#13;
One man's dislike i s a n o t h e r man's&#13;
•fad.&#13;
SUBSTANTIAL&#13;
PROFIT wttl be made hr every buverof LnTorte&#13;
property- First g'wieral sale in February,&#13;
lvtw, La Ports, Texas, is destined&#13;
to-be the future Rre'ate st senlport of tho&#13;
Gulf of Mexico. Every farmer, merchant&#13;
asa manufacturer of tnp United States&#13;
we«t of the Mississippi River is directly&#13;
interested in I.a Porte. A sm»U investment&#13;
will return handsome profit*. Write&#13;
lor FREE Folder. Maps and Art Botk to&#13;
AMERICAN LANO COMPANY,&#13;
I8U Madison St., CHICAGO.&#13;
r F S O ' S C U R E rofv ,r&#13;
O N IM P T | O N&#13;
ersrtlklS&#13;
WORD OF HONOR. |&#13;
yv A Tale of the Blue and the Gray* &gt;fi&#13;
^ BYE. WERNER. ffi&#13;
^ / Copyright. ISM, by Robert Bonner's Sons. M&#13;
*33*2;333:-i3«**3333*3233£33i*'&#13;
C H A P T E R III.—(Continued.)&#13;
"I believe you, Edward," she said,&#13;
In a low tone. "I will be ready this&#13;
evening."&#13;
Edward raised her hands to his lips&#13;
and rose.&#13;
" T h a n k s ! And n o w o n e favor n o r e !&#13;
Captain W i l s o n a s k s permission to pay&#13;
his respects to you. Will you receive&#13;
h i m ? "&#13;
"Not now. I m u s t g o to my father.&#13;
The captain will excuse me if I receive&#13;
him later."&#13;
"As you please. A n d w h e n may I&#13;
see my uncle?"&#13;
"As soon as ho w a k e s . I am expecting&#13;
the doctor. H e promised t o&#13;
come toward e v e n i n g and bring Doctor&#13;
Blackwood, w h o is to reach the city&#13;
this morning. Perhaps he can give&#13;
me hope."&#13;
"Hope? Ycu k n o w as wall as I that&#13;
it is only a question of time, a short&#13;
addition to the days of life. The p h y -&#13;
sicians have left us no doubt on that&#13;
score. But I won't detain you from&#13;
the sick-room now. F a r e w e l l ! I shall&#13;
hope to see my uncle in half an hour."&#13;
H e kissed her hand again, and left&#13;
the room.&#13;
Florence remained alone. She, too,&#13;
had risen, and now, slowly approaching&#13;
the fountain, bent over its basin.&#13;
The sultry air oppressed her till her&#13;
breathing a l m o s t failed. Perhaps it&#13;
w a s also the burden of dread of the&#13;
c o m i n g hours and the torturing decision&#13;
which they mu3t bring.&#13;
The water leaped and plashed. The&#13;
fragrance of the flowers stole softly&#13;
and sweetly to her. W h i l e her eyes&#13;
mechanically followed the falling&#13;
drops, their pattering and the fragrance&#13;
wove a dreamy haze of remembrance&#13;
about her and led her back&#13;
into tho past—this last year, which at&#13;
first had promised her so much happiness,&#13;
only to bring such bitter suffering.&#13;
E v e n this brief period of bliss had&#13;
at first cost a struggle. She was&#13;
obliged to conquer a prejudice of her&#13;
followed the former's serious illness&#13;
and Edward's passionate entreaties,&#13;
for the latter was determined to secure&#13;
her hand at any cost. At last, supposing&#13;
herself deserted by the m a n she&#13;
loved, she yielded to these creatures&#13;
and gave up her resistance.&#13;
The young girl was suddenly startled&#13;
from her reverie by a broad, bright bar&#13;
of sunshine, The blinds of the g l a s s&#13;
doors loading out upon the terrace had&#13;
been opened, and a man appeared, in&#13;
a light s u m m e r suit, with a broadbrimmed&#13;
straw hat pulled so low over&#13;
his brow that his features could&#13;
scarcely be distinguished. The visitor,&#13;
strange to say, cante through the garden,&#13;
instead of using the main entrance,&#13;
and now, unannounced, hurriedly&#13;
entered the drawing-room. The&#13;
young lady involuntarily took a step&#13;
toward the table, on which stood a&#13;
bell.&#13;
"Florence!"&#13;
She started, for she recognized the&#13;
voice, then the features, and w i t h a&#13;
cry of mingled fear and joy. she held&#13;
out both arms to him'.&#13;
" W i l l i a m ! "&#13;
H e was already at her side and&#13;
clasped her passionately in his arms,&#13;
e x c l a i m i n g with a deep sigh:&#13;
"Thank h e a v e n ! A t least I have not&#13;
lost y o u ! "&#13;
Florence clung closely to him, as if&#13;
seeking protection. E v e r y t h i n g that&#13;
had tortured her vanished in her&#13;
lover's presence, in the delight of seeing&#13;
him, and she eagerly exclaimed:&#13;
"Have you come at .last? W h y have&#13;
you left me alone so long—so e n d l e s s l y&#13;
long? I despaired of your return." ..&#13;
"I could not hasten to you," replied&#13;
William. "My regiment w a s one of&#13;
the first to receive marching orders.&#13;
Not a day, not an hour was granted&#13;
me, and every march increased the distance&#13;
between us. You know w h a t it&#13;
cost me to submit to this iron necessity;&#13;
my letters told you."&#13;
"Your letters? You wrote to m e ? "&#13;
"Then you did not receive t h e m ? I&#13;
S H E S T A R T E D FOR S H E RECOGNIZED T H E VOICE.&#13;
father, who had l o n g intended to wed&#13;
her to his nephew and would hear of no&#13;
other marriage. He considered the&#13;
y o u n g offieer w h o had won his daughter's&#13;
love as an insolent intruder, w h o&#13;
w a s destroying the peace of his household;&#13;
and the political opinions of the&#13;
two m e n , w h i c h were strongly opposed&#13;
t o each other, also threatened danger.&#13;
Nevertheless, for the time, Mr. Harrison,&#13;
conquered by the tears and entreaties&#13;
of his o n l y child, yielded,&#13;
t h o u g h with reluctance; Edward, w h o&#13;
had Just returned from a long journey,&#13;
found himself confronted with a&#13;
fact a g a i n s t which h i s fierce jealousy&#13;
w a s powerless. B u t he k n e w how to&#13;
m a i n t a i n his influence o v e r his uncle,&#13;
and never ceased to stimulate his aversion&#13;
to the s o n - i n - l a w -who had been&#13;
forced upon him.&#13;
C H A P T E R IV.&#13;
At last, the outbreak, of the war furnished&#13;
the long-dc3ired opportunity for&#13;
a n open breach. Harrison imposed&#13;
conditions which he knew the y o u n g&#13;
officer would never accept and, on his&#13;
refusal, withdrew h i s promise. In this&#13;
w a y he had a semblance of justice on&#13;
his side, and Roland's refusal was described&#13;
under the m o s t hateful colors.&#13;
F l o r e n c e w a s neither energetic nor independent.&#13;
She had been brave so&#13;
l o n g a s W i l l i a m stood at her side and&#13;
s h e w a s sure of h i s l o v e and protection.&#13;
Alone she w a s unable to contend&#13;
with her father and Edward, end now |&#13;
suspected it w h e n no answer came, yet&#13;
I still tried every m e a n s of c o m m u n i -&#13;
cating w i t h you. Florence, we have&#13;
been shamefully treated. I have never&#13;
had one line from your hand."&#13;
"From m e ? I did not write," said&#13;
Florence, in a low, hesitating tone.&#13;
William, w h o was still holding her&#13;
in close embrace, suddenly released&#13;
her and stepped back.&#13;
"You did not? You have not sent&#13;
^Vttfi a single line during the l o n g&#13;
m o n t h s of our separation? You have&#13;
not once attempted to elude the watch&#13;
set on your m o v e m e n t s ? Yet you must&#13;
have known that I would m a k e every&#13;
effort to' send you tidings cf me."&#13;
The reproach w a s felt, but at the&#13;
same time the old sting also piercad&#13;
her heart, and, with a touch of defiance,&#13;
the young girl answered:&#13;
"Tidings of you did come, but they&#13;
were not addressed to me—th? letter&#13;
in which you renounced me and all of&#13;
us."&#13;
"Your father—not you. W h a t other&#13;
answer could I make to his shameful&#13;
demand? Either he*' never knew me,'&#13;
or he could not have set such a choice&#13;
before me—or he k n e w m y decision in&#13;
advance, and my refusal was to seal&#13;
a separation on which hd had l o n g&#13;
determined."&#13;
"Well, at least you made your choice&#13;
rlromptly e n o u g h : You uttered^ the refusal,&#13;
a n d — g a v e m e up."&#13;
"No. Florence, n o ! " Wiliiam Impetuously&#13;
answered. "I did not give&#13;
you up, and never will, a3 l o n g as&#13;
breath remains In my body. I know&#13;
that we are parted for the time, that&#13;
there can be no thought of marriage&#13;
while I a m serving in the Union army.&#13;
It would be expecting the impossible&#13;
from your father if I were to ask h i s&#13;
consent before the war is over. But&#13;
m y fear was not vain that the effort&#13;
would be made to wrest you from me,&#13;
that estrangement and distrust would&#13;
come between U3 while I w a s absent.&#13;
You have doubted me, I see, and it w a s&#13;
t o destroy this doubt that I took the&#13;
dangerous ride here. But you will&#13;
now believe in me and m y love, my&#13;
Florence, as firmly as I trust you.&#13;
Will you n o t ? "&#13;
T h e last words expressed the utmost&#13;
tenderness. H e believed so implicitly&#13;
in the loyalty cf his fiancee; and she—&#13;
A sudden fear a w o k e in her with tha&#13;
memory of what had happened and&#13;
was yet to como. William must know&#13;
it1, yet she could not force her lips to&#13;
utter the confession.&#13;
She was to be spared the necessity.&#13;
While still struggling to find the wordd&#13;
with which to begin her story, Edward&#13;
returned and paused on the threshold&#13;
in astonishment, as he s a w the&#13;
stranger clasping the y c u n g girl's hand&#13;
so familiarly in his own. At the first&#13;
glance the civilian's dress and the dim&#13;
light deceived him; but as the young&#13;
officer, with a sudden movement,&#13;
turned toward him, Harrison started&#13;
back, exclaimingly furiously:&#13;
"Mr. Roland—is it you?"&#13;
"Certainly," replied the other, coldly,&#13;
with a gloomy glance at the man w h o m&#13;
he had long recognized as his foe. "You&#13;
probably did not expect to find me&#13;
here?"&#13;
Edward had already regained his&#13;
self-control. H e instantly perceived&#13;
what threatened him and the peril involved&#13;
by his rival's unexpected appearance.&#13;
A few hours later, the latter&#13;
would have had n o power to cross his&#13;
path; but c o w he must face the danger,&#13;
and Harrison was not the man to&#13;
shrink and give up the game as lost.&#13;
"No, indeed," he said, a n s w e r i n g tho&#13;
last question. "So far as I am aware,&#13;
the Union forces have not reached&#13;
Springfield."&#13;
'Yet I am here, as you see."&#13;
"On hostile soil. And for what purpose?"&#13;
"Do I owe a n account to you? You&#13;
seem to be usurping the place of the&#13;
master of the house, Mr. Harrison. I&#13;
regret that I cannot acknowledge it;&#13;
for I, too, h a v e a son's privilege here,&#13;
and will speak only to the father of&#13;
m y betrothed bride.".&#13;
"My uncle will hardly be disposed&#13;
to recognize your claim. At any rate,&#13;
you must forego an interview with&#13;
him."&#13;
"Will you prevent it?" demanded&#13;
Roland, threateningly.&#13;
But Florence, who had anxiously&#13;
noticed the rising wrath of the two&#13;
men, now interposed.&#13;
"My father is ill, William," she said&#13;
gently; "has been very ill for months.&#13;
During the last few w e e k s his disease&#13;
has assumed a dangerous phase, and&#13;
yesterday the doctor prepared me for&#13;
the worst."&#13;
Her voice w a s choked w i t h tears.&#13;
William listened in perplexity; whatever&#13;
wrath he bad cherished against&#13;
his future father-in-law, this n e w s&#13;
disarmed him.&#13;
"I had no t h o u g h t of this," he s i i d ,&#13;
deeply moved. "My poor Florence!"&#13;
He put his arm around the weeping&#13;
girl. But this movement, the quiet&#13;
confidence with which he asserted the&#13;
rights of a betrothed lover, enraged&#13;
Harrison to the utmost; his hands&#13;
clenched as if he longed to tear the&#13;
couple apart, and his voice sounded&#13;
hoarse, almost stilled.&#13;
"You don't seem to be aware of&#13;
what has happened recently, Mr. Roland.&#13;
I am compelled to inform you&#13;
of it; 1 - "&#13;
"I kuow and suspect more than&#13;
m i g h t be agreeable to you," interrupted&#13;
the y o u n g officer, releasing&#13;
Florence and approaching him. "I&#13;
just heard from Miss Harrison that&#13;
not one of my letters has reached her&#13;
hands, though I used every precaution.&#13;
Her father cannot have interfered,&#13;
since for m o n t h s he h a s been on a sickbed;&#13;
yet an intrigue has been carried&#13;
on which I see w i t h tolerable distinctness.&#13;
Perhaps I shall apply to the&#13;
right person if I ask y o u for information.&#13;
You will, of course, deny—"&#13;
" W h o tells you so?" asked Edward,&#13;
coldly.' "The letters are in my&#13;
hands."&#13;
W i l l i a m started, back. This coldblooded&#13;
a c k n o w l e d g m e n t completely&#13;
destroyed his self-command for a m o -&#13;
ment; but Florence exclainied in consternation:&#13;
" E d w a r d ! You did that?"&#13;
Hc» turned to her with a perfectly&#13;
unmoved manner. |&#13;
"I thir.k I can explain it. A t first I i&#13;
acted only a t your father's request, •&#13;
afterward 01% my o w n authority; but j&#13;
t h e n I was s i m p l y exercising my rights,&#13;
for you will remember that three&#13;
w e e k s ago you consented to become&#13;
my wife."&#13;
"That is a ^ie! A shameful slandrvrl"&#13;
cried William. "Speak, Florence! /.defend&#13;
yourself.! Y o u see I don't believe&#13;
one word of the calumny."&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
\&#13;
A Boston Man Plaaaad.&#13;
I n conversation w i t h s o m e friends, *&#13;
prominent Boston m a n told o f hia sufferings&#13;
f r o m r h e u m a t i s m a n d nervousness,&#13;
a n d one of his friends g a v e h i m&#13;
some advice, w h i c h w i l l be mentioned,&#13;
later, a n d w h i c h h a s proven t o be of incalculable&#13;
value.&#13;
To successfully act on t h e advice, i t&#13;
w a s necessary t o m a k e a trip of over&#13;
2,000 miles, but h e understood it. a n d&#13;
n o w t h a n k s h i s friend for t h e advice,&#13;
as h e finds himself fully relieved of .his&#13;
old trouble and h a s returned to h i s&#13;
home feeling- able to cope w i t h hia business&#13;
demands, a n e w man.&#13;
T h e advice g i v e n w a s to g o to " H o t&#13;
Springs," South Dakota, and t h e r e t a k e&#13;
the b a t h s and enjoy t h e finest climate&#13;
of a n y h e a l t h resort m America.&#13;
If t h i s m a n w a s satisfied after making&#13;
a l o n g trip, t h o s e r e s i d i n g w i t h i n a&#13;
f e w h u n d r e d m i l e s and similarly afflicted&#13;
c a n certainly afford t o try it, or&#13;
rather can't afford to n e g l e c t t o try jt.&#13;
Ask a n y a g e n t of t h e N o r t h - W e s t e r n&#13;
Line for full particulars, or w r i t e&#13;
J. R. B U C H A N A N ,&#13;
General Passenger A g e n t ,&#13;
F. E. &amp; M. V. R. R., Omaha, Neb.&#13;
School girls in S a x o n y are not all&#13;
o w e d to wear corsets.&#13;
Winter In the South.&#13;
T h e season approaches w h e n one's&#13;
t h o u g h t s turn toward a place w h e r e the&#13;
i n c o n v e n i e n c e s of a Northern w i n t e r&#13;
may be escaped. N o section of t h i s&#13;
country offers such ideal s p o t s a s t h e&#13;
Gulf Coast o n the line of the Louisville&#13;
&amp; N a s h v i l l e Railroad b e t w e e n Mobile&#13;
and N e w Orleans. I t possesses a mild&#13;
climate, pure air, even temperature and&#13;
facilities for h u n t i n g and fishing enjoyed&#13;
by u o other section. Accommodations&#13;
for visitors are first-class, a n d&#13;
can be secured at moderate prices.&#13;
T h e L. &lt;fe N. R. R. is the o n l y l i n e b y&#13;
which it can be reached in t h r o u g h c a r s&#13;
from N o r t h e r n cities. T h r o u g h car&#13;
s c h e d u l e s to all points in F l o r i d a b y&#13;
this l i n e are also perfect. Write for&#13;
folders, etc., to J A C K S O S S M I T H , D. P.&#13;
A., Cincinnati, O.&#13;
Winter Excursions.&#13;
The Southern Pacific Company and&#13;
its connections operate the best first&#13;
and second-class service to California,.&#13;
Arizona, Texas and Mexico. T h r o u g h&#13;
Pullman Palace Sleepers and T o u t i s t&#13;
Sleepers from all principal eastern&#13;
points. Personally conducted Tourist&#13;
Excursions from Cincinnati, Louisville.&#13;
St. Louis, Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis,&#13;
Des Moines, Omaha, K a n s a s&#13;
City. etc. For particulars and descriptive&#13;
literature write W.' G. Nelmyer,&#13;
Gen'l Western Agent, 238 Clark St.,&#13;
Chicago; W&gt; H. Connor, Com'l Agent,&#13;
Chamber Commerce Bldg., Cincinnati,&#13;
Ohio, or W. J. Berg, Tray. P a s s Agt.,&#13;
220 Ellicott Sq., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
Solid Trains to Northern Michigan.&#13;
The Chicago, Milwaukee &amp; S t P a u l&#13;
Railway is now running solid trains&#13;
of palace sleeping cars, dining car*&#13;
(serving meals a la carte) and flrstclass&#13;
day coaches, through from Chicago&#13;
to Calumet, Houghton, Hancock&#13;
and other points in the Copper country&#13;
without change of cars, w i t h direct&#13;
connection for Marquette, Negaunee,&#13;
Ishpeming, etc., and passengers from&#13;
the East, South and S o u t h w e s t w i l l&#13;
find this a most desirable route.&#13;
All coupon ticket agents sell tickets&#13;
via the Chicago, Milwaukee &amp; St. Paul&#13;
Railway.&#13;
You may oppress the t r u t h b u t y o u&#13;
cannot suppress it.&#13;
8 $s£&#13;
Fend r.% once for this n&amp;w two-step marcb.&#13;
It has the full swing and the air is catchy&#13;
and equal to SousaS.&#13;
S^nd 10 cents in money or stnmps to&#13;
George C. Johnston, Allen Boildinj, Cincinnati.&#13;
Ohio&#13;
TOURIST&#13;
TO&#13;
CALIFORNIA VIA&#13;
Y o u will p r a c t i c e g o o d e c o n o m y In&#13;
writing&#13;
C. S. CRANE, C. P. A T. A., St. Louis,&#13;
for particulars.&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • » » • • + + + + » + + &gt;&#13;
•• •&#13;
••&#13;
tx&#13;
•&#13;
t&#13;
!&#13;
Personally&#13;
Conducted&#13;
California&#13;
Excursions&#13;
V i a t h e S a n t a F e R o u t e .&#13;
Three times a week from Chicago&#13;
and Kansas City.&#13;
Twice a week from St. Paul and&#13;
Minneapolis.&#13;
Once a weak from St. Louis and&#13;
Uos&gt;ton.&#13;
,In improved wide-vestlbuled&#13;
Pullman tourist sleeping cars.&#13;
Better than ever before, at lowest&#13;
possible rates.&#13;
Experienced excursion conductors.&#13;
Also daily service between Chicago&#13;
and Calif ornir.&#13;
Correspondence solicited.&#13;
T. A. Q R A D Y .&#13;
Manager California Tourl* Serrtee,&#13;
Tac AtcbiMa. Tapeka* Saata Pe RaUwa*&#13;
1« Adums Street. CHICAGO.&#13;
w^^^nmum »• n •&#13;
'-•^r.'i T - » -&#13;
• '1&#13;
I!&#13;
)&#13;
:&gt; -'I&#13;
/&#13;
4- &gt;&#13;
Si&#13;
;i&#13;
•it&#13;
• 5&#13;
1«&#13;
i4&#13;
•Vi&#13;
• &gt;&#13;
•&amp;••&#13;
«?•&#13;
She fttufennj gwpatth.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS EDITOR.&#13;
THURSDAY, DEC. 28, 1899.&#13;
FARM JOURNAL&#13;
fcrreat Prom Now to Dec. 1903&#13;
* ^Oei* NEARLY 5 YL3AWS&#13;
B y special a r r a n g e m e n t with t h e&#13;
p u b l i s h e r s of the F A R M J O U R N A L&#13;
we are enabled to offer t h a t p a p e r&#13;
t o ever subscriber who pays for&#13;
t h e D I S P A T C H one year ahead, for&#13;
oqly $1, b o t h p a p e r s for t h e pripe&#13;
of o u r s only; our paper one year&#13;
a n d the F a r m J o u r n a l from now&#13;
t o D e c , 191*3, nearly five years.&#13;
H e m i l i a b l e R e s c u e .&#13;
Mrs. Michael Curtain, Plaintield 111.&#13;
makvs the statement, that she cauffbt&#13;
cold, which settled on her lungs; she&#13;
was treated for a month by her family&#13;
physician, hut ^rew worse. He told&#13;
.shu was a hopeless victim of consmption&#13;
and that no medicine could cure&#13;
her Her drut^'i&amp;L »u«rge*ted Dr.&#13;
Kind's Ne v Pisco very for Consumption;&#13;
she bought a bottle and to her&#13;
delight found herself benefitted from&#13;
first dose. She continued its use and&#13;
after taking six buttles, found herself&#13;
sound and well; now does her own&#13;
bouse work,,and is as well ts she ever&#13;
wa*.— Free trial bottle* of this Great&#13;
Disci'very at K A Siller's Drutf Store,&#13;
On 1 &gt; 50ceiif&gt; and £1.00, every bottle&#13;
RUdl TdilteeO&#13;
'ml*®6** 3?&#13;
- Bv BAILEY SMITH&#13;
The first people w h o will l i v e i u&#13;
t h e twentieth c e n t u r y , a c c o r d i n g&#13;
T h e F a r m J o u r n a l is an old e s - 1 1 ( ) t , 1 e c o m , ) l l t H t i o l l o f K w r i t e r i n&#13;
g £ Arranged bv M K S . \V. C A K I . I X . J M « ,&#13;
4HHMMMMWMMHMWM9WIM»*&lt;NK}(Hft4b&#13;
COVM-MIII:U.&#13;
D a w s o n City,&#13;
J u n e 20th, 1898.&#13;
I have finally r e a c h e d t h e&#13;
Mecca of t h e N o r t h W e s t — T h e&#13;
A SURE CUBE FOB CROUP.&#13;
Twenty-fire Year*' Constant u e&#13;
Without A Faitare.&#13;
The first indication of croup is&#13;
hoarseness, and in a cbild subject to&#13;
that disease it may be taken as a sure&#13;
siun of the approach of an attaok.&#13;
Following this uouirb, is a peculiar&#13;
rouuh cough. If Chamberlin's Couirh&#13;
Kemely is given as soon as the child&#13;
becomes hoarse, or even after the&#13;
Ion. All s u p p l i e s a r e in prices&#13;
p r o p o r t i o n a t e l y as high. L a b o r&#13;
_,, Ix . . . . * " i from My nook to Dawson is * 1 .&#13;
L I - D o r a d o of m i n i n g c a m p s — a n d , .,.n&#13;
r p e r h o u r or $ 10. per day, here at&#13;
t h e mines, $1.50 p e r h g u r and * l .&#13;
in town. A man and team is&#13;
s u c h it is no d o u b t for old m i n e r s&#13;
t h i n k it the richest placer c a m p&#13;
on t h e c o n t i n e n t . T h e n u m b e r of&#13;
, , , ,. , , w o r t h ¢10. per h o u r in d e l i v e r i n g&#13;
people, boats, s u p p l i e s , horses a n d . . . . T , . .,,,.. , n&#13;
.m. .y . ^i i freight. L u m b e r is $2 H) per t h o u s -&#13;
o u t - n t s t h a t have c o m e over t h e 1&#13;
steak d i n n e r s #3., a cigar, or d r i n k&#13;
50c. L a s t w i n t e r whiskey sold j oroupy eoutfb appears it will prevent&#13;
for $1. per d r i n k and *40. per gal- | the attack. It is used in many thousands&#13;
of homes in this broad land and&#13;
nevwr disappoints the anxious mothers.&#13;
We u;ivo yet to learn of a single instance&#13;
in whiuli it has not proved effectual&#13;
No other preparation can&#13;
show such a record—twenty five years&#13;
constant use without failure. For&#13;
sain l»y P. A. Siuler.&#13;
, , A Tx . . _ . a n d or £300 dressed and t h e r e are&#13;
p a s s and down t o Dawson is b e y o n d .1 .,, , . ,&#13;
f ,. , T , . - , • t h r e e mills h e r e r u n n i n g t w e n t y -&#13;
belief. I n f o r m a t i o n h e r e is not re- j * „ . , • * • , . ,&#13;
four h o u r s a day, e x c e p t i n g S u n -&#13;
tablished paper, enjoying g r e a t t h e j R n U H r v L m i i e H H o m e j , o u r&#13;
p o p u l a r i t y , one of the best and ^ , - . ft,v i n l m b i a n f 8 o f R k , r o u p&#13;
m o s t useful farm p a p e r s p u b l i s h - , Qf ulHl_pHc.iti,. island. T o woman ^ a o ' e a n ( * n o two people a r e of t h e&#13;
^ - ^ . „ t „ t ! w h o cont-nipl-ite visiting the P a r i s 6 f t I » * opinion, n e i t h e r d o t h e y j ^ / ^ y e f c ^ ^ ^ " ^ ^ j&#13;
S ^ T h i s offer should be accept-! Exposition next, y e a r " E d i t h and&#13;
ed without delay. j i n p H | . i s / . i n t | l H ^ m e m f i ^ H z i n e&#13;
will prove helpful and interesting.&#13;
" T h e liner Givl of S o u t h Africa,"&#13;
l&#13;
W. C- T. U- S T h e Home ( ' o m i n g o f the N a k a n -&#13;
tf nies," are nlso features of notable&#13;
i'i interest in 'lie . h u m a n J o u r n a l .&#13;
Fdlted by the W. C. T XT. of Pi nek ney. $ T . . . . ,, „ „ „&#13;
$ F r a n k l i n v \ e s wij.es. &lt;&lt;n I he&#13;
M R e h e a r s a l ••' 0 i&gt;;i\." MIMI the au-&#13;
1 t h o r o t \\ 1 P i c l » \ _'.i\t-. a con-&#13;
Man&gt; of the politicians of O n k - | v u l B i v e j v f | l f |1N ,.r t UMf ,,, M o M y&#13;
a h o t h a believe that t h e territory ; DoiialiueV I M I S U H I . Allurt W.&#13;
will soon Have t h e prohibition | £m[t\x ( . 0 1 , f n i m , f „ „ ltir 0 hi.s exi&#13;
s s u e on its hands owing to t h e ' q n i s i t e ^,,,,^,,.., v . r .•&gt; E d w a r d&#13;
d e t e r m i n e d efforts of the A n t i - j B o k w r i t e f c . j | ( ,,,,,,, t „ . M , , , . r * ' A&#13;
Saloon league, which is h o l d i n g | N a t i o n a l Crime a t e l-Wr t,f&#13;
m e e t i n g s all over the^ territory, j American P a r e n t s , " &gt;.nd in con-&#13;
— M H a ' s Criterion. ! t r a s t is shown " T h e N , w ldeH in&#13;
O h i o employs 10,305 male and ; T e a c h i n g Children " A score or&#13;
14,875 female teachers. T h e ! m o r e articles of special value to&#13;
a v e r a g e salary of male tea( hers is women touch every plin-e Of&#13;
$42 per month, and of females £39 home-making. By the Curl is&#13;
p e r month. The whole a m o u n t P u b l i s h i n g C o m p a n y , Fliiladelp&#13;
a i d to School teachers of O h i o is phia. One dollar a year; ten&#13;
$12,473,295 per a n n u m . About cents a copy.&#13;
$70,000,000 is spent for drink each j - • • • -&#13;
year. Twelve million dollars for! QUESTION ANSWKRED.&#13;
e d u c a t i o n a n d $ 7 0 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0 f o r j Yes. August Flower etill 1.:.8 the l a r ^ i&#13;
d r i n k . — T h e American Issue. 18 n l e o f a n y ^ d i c i » ^ * , l 'e t i v i l i z ' l l W('rhl-&#13;
! "^ our mothers and grand 1110tin r» nev» r&#13;
T h e d a n g e r of drink is g r e a t e r t ) l o n g h t ()f ll8ill„ anything else f,»r In«i.«et&#13;
o t h e n a t i o n s o f t h e c i v i l i z e d tion or Diliousnts^. Doctors were scan'*',&#13;
w o i l d than the danger of war, and and thry seldom herd of AppediciiiK, Nert&#13;
h e r e f o r e the c o m i n g i n t e r n a t i o u a l ! &lt;m18 **"»«™tion or He:,,, f.ilu.e, Wr.&#13;
,, , . , „, -,-, , 1 Tliey used August Flower to clean out the&#13;
congress, called l)y the t rench r e - : J , t " , , . ,. ,. , •&#13;
^&gt; ' * system and stop fermentation or umhtfet*led&#13;
public to devise some international' f(J()d J t .oU ja l v ,i,e ..ciion of the liver, siimm&#13;
e a n s of m a k i n g h e a d w a y a g a i n s t ; ulate (he nervous and organic action (it the&#13;
t h e a b u s e of A l c l i o l i c HtplOrS, c a n i »&gt;&gt; em. and that is all they took when feelh&#13;
a r d l y t e p l a c e d s e c o n d i n i m . ' »»g dull and bad wilh headaches and other&#13;
, A, e i i i ' aches. Vou only need a few doses of&#13;
p o r t a n c e to the conference called ,, , . ^ - „, - , - 1 , -&#13;
^ Green s August Mower, in liquid form, to&#13;
by t h e e m p e r o r of Russia to consul- m a k e v o u s a i i s t i o ( 1 l h e r e \H ,1(&gt;thing serious&#13;
er the question of international the matter wiih you. Sample bottle at&#13;
d i s a r m a m e n t . I t has a p r o s p e c t , F. A. Sigler's.&#13;
of a c c o m p l i s h i n g more than is to 1 • • •&#13;
b e hoped for from t h e m e e t i n g a t ! P. A. Siller t ' u a r a n r e ^ every hot-&#13;
T h e H a g u e , for no interest of o n e t l e of Ohamherlin^Oo.wli R-.n-dv and&#13;
p o w e r as against a n o t h e r would I w l U r e l u n d t l , H m o n e v t 0 a n v o n e w h o&#13;
i n t e r f e r e with legislation against&#13;
form like i m p r e s s i o u s of t h e&#13;
c o u n t r y . T h e r e a r e 20,000 p e ople&#13;
here, no doubt. T h e place is&#13;
a live, a moving m a s s of h u m a n i t y&#13;
twenty-four h o u r s a day. W e&#13;
have no n i g h t s in t h i s for away&#13;
land u n d e r the Artie C i r c l e ; t h e r e&#13;
day. Well e n o u g h of these cold&#13;
to which h u m a n n a t u r e in this&#13;
. , « . .&#13;
Business Locals.&#13;
Notice to T a x P a y e r s&#13;
The Townships Tax Ro)l ii now in nay&#13;
hands for the Collction of Taxes—1 will be&#13;
at the I'inckney Ex. Bank during business&#13;
m a d rush is p u s h i n g , j o s t l i n g a n d j , l o u r s lt&gt; ••"•m'e the same.&#13;
s t r i v i n g to reach. H i e r e was no ! R&gt; H' Te*'P,e- Twp. Treasurer.&#13;
suffering here last w h i t e r from I would like to trade a single harnem&#13;
w a n t of provisions, t h o u g h food i f o r H«' vv,md- JOE SVKES.&#13;
was scarce, yet t h e r e was sufficient&#13;
, to avoid s t a r v a t i o n . We passed a&#13;
m a y be a shade of t w i l i g h t per-: l m ^ r w i u t e r of idleness iu I n d w n&#13;
c e p t a b l e b u t t h e difference be- [ c a n a U „ d h a v i n g convinced „.„•&#13;
tween day and m i g h t is lost a n d g e , v e s t l m t t h t . M r t r e I s ] a n ( 1 w o l l | , i&#13;
one can read or write at a n y h o u r I m , v e r b e d b ] e t o s t e m t | l H ( , H r e n t&#13;
«.f t h e twenty four with o u t b e i n g ; f t h f t Y u k o n , we took&#13;
C . I . • f 1 '&#13;
For S a l e .&#13;
House and lot in the village of Pinckney&#13;
i-"&gt;li H. Isham.&#13;
s e - conscious of t h e time of day. j t o i l l c l n t . e t h e m H i l a ^ m e i i t 1&#13;
L i k e t h e m i n i n g c a m p s of B u t t e , ; c u r e o u r t r a n s p o r t a t i o n and that&#13;
Mont, and Leadv.lle Col. it s p r i n g s ' ^ Q U l . f r e i g h t o u W ) ( n e 8 W ( I 1 , j r ()tu&#13;
p i n a n i g h , t h k e t h e g r o w t h o f a T O U e o f t n e o M e 8 t a b l i s h e , c o m .&#13;
m u s h r o o m . S t o r e s , w a r e houses, i p a n i e 8 &gt; j f c was a p a r t of tlin deal&#13;
SMIOOU buildings, ( i n n u m e r a b l e ) t h f t t ftg m a n y a 8 eighteen s h o u l d&#13;
and l o n g cahins are u n d e r con- m f i k e a p o v t H g e to t n e Y u k o n a n d&#13;
struction in every p a r t of t h e t a k e the s t e a m e r , Chas. H. H a m i l -&#13;
v&lt;*r SHIHOP Exchati?e.&#13;
A l i U t i l J if Mil i'Hry ,!HHd|). W i l l&#13;
d k r o e i . H^^. OAIN. hay, or anynieasures&#13;
iino ! i( u, • A'rltakH same in&#13;
0 I'M rev Sw^rthont,&#13;
t'incknHy, M i c h .&#13;
Werrcr1 .'iiji'.isi Antonyms,&#13;
town. Alonv; the river front a&#13;
frame work is p u t t o g e t h e r , a canvas&#13;
s t r e t c h e d over, a stock of&#13;
goods put in and b u s i n e s s o p e n e d&#13;
u p in t h e e v e n i n g of t h e same&#13;
dav. A vast a m o u n t of provisions&#13;
t , , • *i 4 -i 1 t n e bay we had fine t r a v e l i n g as&#13;
were b r o u g h t 111 over t h e trail a n d ,, J , . . . . b&#13;
down t h e lakes in small boats;&#13;
more t h a n will be carried u p by&#13;
ton.&#13;
1 W e left M o n d a y Apr. 4th&#13;
j u s t after d i n n e r . We bid t h e&#13;
crowd good bye a n d s t a i t e d ac&#13;
r o s s t h e bay to t h e coast. O v e r&#13;
Myiii'jiogy and i'aailiai F&amp;rases.&#13;
A lKK&gt;k that should bpin thevest&#13;
.,, ockci of every |n.'i&gt;on,-because It&#13;
:»,*.''• tells von the ri&gt;jht word tc use.&#13;
* .&lt;o Two Words in the English&#13;
Language Have Exactly the&#13;
Same *lj?nlficanc\ To express&#13;
the [precise meaning thm one inj&#13;
lends, to convey a dictionary of&#13;
Synonyms is needed to avoid repetiti'yi.&#13;
The Mr&lt; :ige.st flpnre of&#13;
siieech is i:i,tiihe?is. In l! .. .11(.--&#13;
tiotiary I,1-- flpiH'txled Anioinuig&#13;
will, therelore, lx&gt; found extremely&#13;
vAlimbli'. Contain« many other&#13;
features s'K-h ur. Mythology,&#13;
Familiar Allusions and Foreign&#13;
Phrases, Prof. Lois&lt;*ttf's Memory&#13;
System,'The Art of Never Forgettlnp," etc.,&#13;
etc. This wonderful little book hound in a neat&#13;
the Stt-amers from St. Michaels.&#13;
'The river front is an i n t e r e s t i n g&#13;
ni^ht, for two miles a l o n g t h e Yukon&#13;
from the m o u t h of t h e K l o n -&#13;
d i k e alonej j lie front rf t h e town&#13;
to a bluff at, the u p p e r e n d , it is a&#13;
solid mass of small boats, large&#13;
t h e Rimw in n l a c e s l i a d b l o w n off ! cloth binding u i e s n o w 111 p i a t e s nao. u umi i o n !Le « t h e r and sent postpaid for $6.25. Full ( (rjh edee. $0 40. jxwtrnld. Order at&#13;
O u r first two n i g h t s we c a m p e d " °"~A ' '"&#13;
on t h e coast and laid o u r b l a n k e t s&#13;
on the frozen snow, t h e r e b e i n g&#13;
n o t i m b e r , n o b o u g h s for a bed.&#13;
T h e n i g h t s were cold, d r o p p i n g&#13;
below zero t h r o u g h t h e night, b u t&#13;
t h a w i n g d u r i n g a few iiours a b o u t&#13;
mid-day. A t an I n d i a n s e t t l e -&#13;
m e n t e i g h t e e n miles from St. Michonoe.&#13;
Send for our lare«- book eaiilogue, free.&#13;
Address all orders to&#13;
T H E W E R N E R C O M P A N Y ,&#13;
FlMUfean »nt Masnfactar&lt;&gt;r; ArXOK, OHIO.&#13;
boats, scows, canoes a n d water&#13;
baru'esof the most a w k w a r d size. a e N « w e l e f t t l i e coast and m a d e&#13;
'I'hey were n u m b e r e d a t some&#13;
point on t h e way a n d I have seen&#13;
as the highest n u m b e r , so far 12&#13;
a p o r t a g e over a range of h i g h&#13;
hills i n t o t h e h e a d waters of a&#13;
small river. I d o n t know of any&#13;
•iw- u i-'.i 1 ' i work in all my varied e x p e r i e n c e&#13;
080. S o m e of t h e large scows and , , J ^ K r i i c a ^ c&#13;
t h e use of alcohol, whereas the&#13;
jealousies of the nations may very&#13;
likely prevent an effective a g r e e -&#13;
m e n t b e a r i n g on the reduction of&#13;
a r m a m e n t . T h e invitation to p a r - j j n pneumonia,&#13;
ticipate in t h i s anti-alcohol congress&#13;
has been communicated to&#13;
t h e g o v e r n m e n t of the U n i t e d&#13;
S t a t e s t h r o u g h the F r e n c h minist&#13;
e r at W a s h i n g t o n . T h e congress&#13;
will m e e t in P a r i s in April, 1900.&#13;
is not salsified alter n^in^ two • n-iris&#13;
of the contents. This i-i the be*t remedy&#13;
in the world tor la grippe eoii^hs&#13;
colds, croop and whooping -on^h and&#13;
is pleasant and safe to take. It pre.&#13;
vents any 'end^ncy of a cold to result&#13;
t mnr.-l&#13;
boats b r o u g h t in horses and cattle.&#13;
T o n s of supplies were b r o u g h t in,&#13;
Biifficeut it is now e s t i m a t e d to&#13;
k e e p the people of D a w s o n for a&#13;
y e a r with out any h e l p from t h e&#13;
s t e a m e r s c o m i n g up. T o - d a y six&#13;
As a cure tor rheumatism Chamberlain's&#13;
Pa«n Halm is gaining a wide&#13;
reputation. I). B. lohnson of Richmond,&#13;
Ind., has he^n trouiiled with&#13;
that ailment since 1862. In speaking&#13;
of it he says: "I n*ver found anything&#13;
that would relieve me until 1 n«ed&#13;
Chan\berlain» Pain Bahrr It acN like&#13;
magic with me. My foot was swollen&#13;
and pained me, verv modi, hut one&#13;
jjood application of Pain Bulra relieved&#13;
me. For sale by P. A. Sisrler,&#13;
Drugffest.&#13;
W A N i i&#13;
&gt; \ D 1M\'KS&#13;
i'.iA' &gt;.&#13;
C. L. BOWMAN,&#13;
P r o p r i e t o r of&#13;
The Oty Marketv&#13;
Corner ol Main and Mill Sis.,&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
# •&#13;
tJrand Truak Railway System.&#13;
Time Talne in erte. J Nor 19, 185W&#13;
WILL&#13;
Iica. S.-ilcr.1.' *'J00 a v.-.r .,..(! (\&#13;
htn.i'. 'toiif-'ile. iv) mcirc no les...&#13;
lioti juMijiticnt. Our iffc'ie^ce.&#13;
tMink in a&lt;iv \uwi\. It i- miiiniv&#13;
Wor« conductctj at*home. Kcference. r-n-&#13;
9loee edf-*4drc«u*(l nuiuiued enteiope, Turn&#13;
UOMIITIOX.l'oWi'A.W tlupt S, CHfCAOci.&#13;
Ilic«&#13;
PAY&#13;
GASH&#13;
F o r Tallow, H i d e s , Pelts, a n d&#13;
D r e s s e d P o r k .&#13;
S e e u s before s e l l i n g y o u r Beef.&#13;
C. L. BOWMAN.&#13;
w h e r e b r u t e s t r e n g t h a n d d e t e r -&#13;
m i n a t i o n were as necessary as&#13;
m a k i n g t h a t distance, We were&#13;
all e q u i p p e d with a p u l l i n g h a r -&#13;
n e s s a n d often in m a k i n g a bad&#13;
place o r steep climb, when we&#13;
cattle sold for $0,000.(X) for "beef. W e r e o b l i ^ l to d o u b l e team, we&#13;
W h e n dressed the m e a t sold for *2 W O u I d b e d o w u o n o u r h * » ^ « 1 ^&#13;
a pound. T h i s of course is a lux- feet P u l l l u 8 l i k * so m a n y d u m b&#13;
u r y . b e e f steak b e i n g very r a r e in b r u t e 8 - A ^ e r r e a c h i n g t h e s u m -&#13;
Dawson. I heard t h a t Mr. Weir m i t w e h f i c l H n e a 8 y t i m « down t h e&#13;
h a d 1,500 head of c a t t l e on t h e O L l i e r s I o P e i n t o a r i v e r w l i e r e w e&#13;
way over the trail for Dawson. b t r u c k ^ l a r e i ( : e f o r a d i s t a n c e&#13;
W h e n they arrive, Dawson will w h e n . w e - . c a m p e d for t h e first&#13;
have a b a r b e c u e and b e a n s a n d t l m e i u t i m l ^ r a n d m a d e a b e d of&#13;
bacon wili go on a vacation. H e r e b o u « l l s - w e b i o k e c a m p early&#13;
a r e s o m e of the p r i c e s w h i c h a r e a n d f o l l « w e d t h e river for a s h o r t&#13;
not considered h i g h for t h i s p l a c - : d i s t a n c e when we b r a n c h e d off on&#13;
F l o u r $8. per sack—oOibs, bacon a i J o t b e r *"&amp; which we followed&#13;
40c p e r l b , s u g a r 30c, salt 30c, U P t o t h e ^ a d c l i m b i n g a s t e e p&#13;
b e a n s 25c, ~utter $1.25, tea a n d g u l c h a u d ^ a k i n g a n o t h e r p o r t -&#13;
coffee $1.25, rolled o a t s 50c, oat f^e o v e r a r a u K e oi m o u n t e t n s .&#13;
meal a n d rice 40c, c a u n e d fruits J ' u e c j , m b was m o r e s W p t h a n&#13;
t o m a t o e s , corn beans, etc. *1.25 t h e d a ^ **tare b u t t h e trail and*f'&#13;
d r i e d fruits 40c a n d 50c p e r lb. snow was m u c h better.&#13;
L u x u r i e s a r e so few t h a t prices Comimiwit Next Week&#13;
a r e b e y o n d reach. E g g s $4. a doz "&#13;
Meajs a t r e s t u r a n t s $2.00, moose S n S c r i b e i o r t h e Dispatch.&#13;
M. A. L. DIVISION WKSTBOUND.&#13;
No 27 Pas'senver, Pontine in Jaeksou&#13;
. cuuueetidQ from Detroit U 14 a m&#13;
No. "39 F'aaden^r, Pontiac to tuck-nm. ri:i'&lt; ». m&#13;
No. ^9 ba.s ttirou^h coach iro.u Detroit to Jazon.&#13;
No. 43 Mixed, Lenox to Jacknon&#13;
..connection from i)&lt;&gt;troit 4 45 p &gt;«&#13;
KAS'J OlTNl»&#13;
No 30 Paaaeower to Pontiac nnil introit ft \s i. i&#13;
No. 28 Passnnirpr, J axon *o Detroit, '&gt;:'•» a. tn.&#13;
No. 38 na» thrmi^ri eoacu fru n Itxdt) t&lt; l&gt;.-t p«»i t&#13;
No 44 Mixed 'o Pontiac and Lenox r vs . i&#13;
All trains daily except Smidav.&#13;
No 44 connection at Pnnti &lt;c for tVtrnif NIHI&#13;
for i'i»» west &lt;&gt;'&lt; i • ,* M K {&#13;
w. J h . . -. - • " ,&#13;
MID STEAMSHIP UNCS*&#13;
Popular route i, i .\h ii ...--., J o«&#13;
ledo and points Ea*t, 8outli, and i-&gt;r&#13;
Howell, Owo-so, A'liri, Ht Plea&gt;ant&#13;
Cadihac, Manistee, TraverHe (!ify and&#13;
points in North western \' ih'i .'n&#13;
W. H . liaA.xiCTT.&#13;
(». y. A. T«.iHdf»&#13;
5 0 YEAR*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
A Frlffbifnl B l u n d e r&#13;
Will often cau&gt;e a nornble bnrn,&#13;
•e&amp;ld, cut or bruise. Backlnn't* arnica&#13;
salve, ti;e best in th^ world, will kiil&#13;
the pain and promptly beal i t Core*&#13;
old nor**, fever sores, ulcers, boili, felons,&#13;
corns and all skin eruptions. Be*t&#13;
pile core on earth. OolrJ 25c a boi.&#13;
Cora iraaraoteed. - Sold by F . A. Bif-&#13;
Ur« dr«Atfiat&#13;
f h a i Tfe«»fciaff H « a &lt; M k l&#13;
Would quickly leave yoa, if jwm&#13;
UMd Or. Kind's New Lift PUto.&#13;
Thoasandi of sufferer* bar*&#13;
tbeir metealeM merit for tiek ud&#13;
vooi beaiacbec. They make&#13;
Mood aad atronir nerree and bm)4&#13;
your health. Eaay ao taka. Try&#13;
Only 25e, monay back if sot&#13;
Soid by F. A. Bi/riv. dnura^t&#13;
•t&#13;
TRAOC MAUKS&#13;
OcaioN*&#13;
Co^YRIOHTa A e .&#13;
•ending » ukrtoh and deMrtptlon mtf&#13;
f —oTt»m oar (ptnioo fr«e WIMUMT M&#13;
Lion la prohnhly pnt«nt»ble. CommaaMA*&#13;
wuioa f ooniltMntial. Handbook on PataMt&#13;
mt fro*. Olrtoat aproncy for aoonrtnv («tont«.&#13;
PatonU UtkOB tniKHurh Mum tt Co.&#13;
notice, without onarjre. la tb« Scientific flmctlcait A hnndaoMkotr Mad&#13;
ooJatkMi of any totonuto&#13;
f nar nonttaa, $1 ~ Tara»a..aTa&#13;
fear; fnar mohtoa, at acM^vaO imnnaalam&#13;
v. i&#13;
vrf^i K^ MI ini m i tki&#13;
% •&#13;
\&#13;
^ . ^ ^ , , ^ . ^ ^ . ^ ^ . ^ , , - : . ^ ^ rt&lt;i| ,. |fl-n :M . . ii^jl-'rfa^-it^^wJ.^^JMai.- ^A±. . ^ . ' . S ^ - . ^ . v * ! ^ . . ^ ^ 4^1. ~tK n .afl '. Aafa&#13;
\&#13;
^ . . . ^ ^ . . ^&#13;
F a c t s t o B e m e m b e r ,&#13;
T h e o r i g i n a l a n d i t e o u i n e R e d P i l l s&#13;
a r e K n i l l s Red P i l l s t o r W a n p e o p l e&#13;
a t 2 5 c b o x , t h e w o m o n ' s r e m e d y .&#13;
D o n ' t p a y 5 0 c e n t s .&#13;
Y o u c a n w o r k w h e n t h e y w o r k ,&#13;
n e v e r K n p e o r m a k e y o u sick, K n i l l ' s&#13;
W h i t e Diver P i l l s . B o w e l K e k u l n t o r .&#13;
T w e n t y five doses, 2 5 c e n t s .&#13;
P l e a s a n t , s a f e a n d s u r e a r e K m i •&#13;
B l a c k D i a r r h o e a P i l l s . Cures* s u m m e r&#13;
c o m p l a i n t s , d y s e n t e r y a n d all p a i n s of&#13;
t h e hiiinincb a n d bowels. O n l y 2 5&#13;
Cents box.&#13;
K n i l l ' s Blue K i d n e y Pill c u r e backa&#13;
c h e , etc. O n l y 25• c e n i s box.&#13;
P o r e , s w e e t stc niaehs a n d b r e a t h s&#13;
a r e uiiid by t a k i n g Knill's [dyspepsia&#13;
TaMet.&gt; T h e y will c u r e i n d i g e s t i o n ,&#13;
c o r r e c t a l l s t o m a c h t r o u b l e s , d e s t r o y s&#13;
all foul KHhes tor 25c b(.x Best a n d&#13;
c h e a p e s t G u a i t a n t a e d bv y o u i d r u ^ -&#13;
ffest Will ( ' u n e t t , Dexter.&#13;
W. B. D a r r o w , P m c k n e y .&#13;
r;sti *% n&#13;
MONTHLY REPORT&#13;
Of the Piuckney Public Schools for t h e&#13;
month ending D e c . 22, 1899.&#13;
THE GB£AT&#13;
J?£S70&amp;-&#13;
ATIVE.&#13;
Bar-Ben Is the gr eat e s t known TUADE i^AUi"&#13;
n e r v e tonic and blood purifier.&#13;
It c r e a t e s Bolid flesh, muscle mid STRENGTH.&#13;
clears the brain, m a k e s the M o o d pun- -n~\\ :-.;h,&#13;
a n d c a u s e s a general feeiinir of IK-SI Mi. i«iv.«_r&#13;
and renewed vitality, while the ::- i&lt; ;. : '-. •• ••;•:: t;..7&#13;
arc helped t o retrain their i-.o.-u-;-.. &lt; • .,:-1&#13;
t h e s u f f e r e r is quickly inn.k " • .... .&#13;
benefit. One b o x will work A.&#13;
perfect n cure. SOcts.A b'J. :&#13;
Bale by drusjdsts evcr.v&gt;.-.'•"-- .c&#13;
o n receipt of price. .'•.:•. I&#13;
A N D B E N S O N . liiir-1: .,&#13;
11 HI s m e l»y&#13;
i \ A. NioLEii, Druggist&#13;
Piuckuey, - - Mich.&#13;
HIOH SCHOOL DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whole number of pupiU 4 9 .&#13;
Total days attendance 704.&#13;
Average attendance 39.&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 5 8 .&#13;
Number of days taught 18.&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOB TARDY,&#13;
Sidney Sprout Laura Lavey&#13;
Mue Reason Boss Read&#13;
Bert Roche&#13;
Sidney Sprout has been neither absent&#13;
nor tardy during the term.&#13;
S T E P H E N D U R F E E , Supt.&#13;
GRAMMAR DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Number of pupils 25&#13;
Total attendance 226&#13;
Total tardiness 29&#13;
Per cent of attendance 22.87&#13;
Number days taught 19&#13;
Pl.'1'U.S NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
Eli cry Durfee Ethel Durfee&#13;
Fred Bead Rex Read&#13;
Eva Grimes Aubrey Gilchrist&#13;
For the term :&#13;
Kilery Durfee, Ethel Durfee,&#13;
Fred Read, Eva Grimes&#13;
C. L . G R I M E S , Teacher.&#13;
INTERMEDIATE DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whele number of days u u g h t 19&#13;
Total number days attendance 386J&#13;
Average daily attendance 19.32&#13;
Whole number belonging 2 3&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 26&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY&#13;
Ruel Cadwell Norma V a u g h n&#13;
Florence Reason Orpha H e n d e e&#13;
Nella Bowers Mary Brogun&#13;
F o r the term:&#13;
Ruel Cadwell Norma V a u g h n&#13;
Orpha H e n d e e&#13;
E D I T H C A R R , Teacher.&#13;
Master at Arms, E . R. Cook&#13;
1st Master of G u a r d s N . Whitcomb&#13;
2nd " " I . 8 . P . Johnson&#13;
Sentinel, J - Chambers&#13;
Picket, G. P . Lambertson&#13;
LOYAL GUARDS.&#13;
19&#13;
A $4.00 BOOK FOR TScts.&#13;
The Farmers' Encyclopedia.&#13;
PRIMARY DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whole number of days taught&#13;
Total number of days-attendance 472&#13;
Average daily attendance 23.6&#13;
Whole number belonging 26&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 39&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
Lloyd (irimes Roy Moran&#13;
Kate lirogan Gladys Brown&#13;
May Tee pie Thomas Moran&#13;
F o r t h e term:&#13;
Kate Brogan Lloyd Grimes&#13;
J ESSIE G R E E N , Teacher.&#13;
D r . C i d y s C o n d i t i o n P o w d e r s a r e&#13;
gr&#13;
Fug a n d equal to&#13;
other books c - t i n *&#13;
J1.00. If yon desire this book send us our special&#13;
oii'er rriet&gt;, $0.75, a n d fo.20 extra for postage a n d&#13;
we will forward the br»ok to you. If it is not satisfacto.-&#13;
y return it And w e will e x c h a n g e it or refund&#13;
\.&gt; ;; i:o&gt;iey. ?-'\i for our special illustrated catalogue,&#13;
iniot'inff the lowest price* o n books. FREE&#13;
"We can save you money. Address all orders to&#13;
THE YVLRNER COMPANY,&#13;
Publiihert and M a n u f a c t u r e r ! . A f c r O n , O h l O&#13;
jTiif W,. -! , r (" .;i'i i " n i* riinrfujihlv r r l i r - • I —l\!-.t'&gt;'&#13;
*"• Best Hotel in b Con do no more for yoo In Ifec w»v or &lt;&#13;
beds and good meali than t a t Frank i.&gt;&#13;
Bates and Larned Street* Ratas are *i ; '•&#13;
dav. American plan. Woodward ana J efi'.-r*&#13;
uea are only a hloek away, with carm t o r&#13;
the city. Excellent accommodations r.&gt;r » '.&#13;
H . H . J A M E S A S O N , P r r &gt; r -&#13;
Batoa a n d Lamed Sta., i v r&#13;
Every thing: pertainiteto&#13;
the affairs&#13;
of tbe farm,&#13;
h o u s e h o l d and&#13;
stock raising:. Embraces&#13;
articles on&#13;
11.e horse, the colt,&#13;
horse L.ihig, dislai-&#13;
es of tije horse,&#13;
the fa'm, gnis-es,&#13;
fruit culture, dairying.&#13;
cookerv htttllh. , , , , • , .&#13;
eatti", s!i&lt;"i&gt; swine, r •' ^ ' h a t a b o r . e needs w h e n i n b a d&#13;
do?!'l 7nia, ^social *• &gt;. t . d t n o n . T o n i c , ulood p u r i f i e r a n d&#13;
i r f J u ! e C ' m . w comt * " . t t . i t f e T h e y a r e n o t , f o o d b u t&#13;
p l e t o E n e y c l o - ,.&#13;
i&gt;ei;':• 'in ' xistence.&#13;
A laigehook, 8x;iJ-i i&#13;
x 1% inches. 6^6&#13;
pagis, fully illus- ,&#13;
trated, bound i n&#13;
rreen c!oih bind-&#13;
Cap. General,&#13;
8r. Captain,&#13;
J r Captain&#13;
Recorder,&#13;
Paymaster,&#13;
Chaplain,&#13;
Sr. Lieut.,&#13;
J . Lieut.,&#13;
Chas. (irimes&#13;
Arthur Shehan&#13;
A. D. Swarthout&#13;
F . L. Andrews&#13;
Guy Teeple&#13;
J o h n Monks&#13;
E . J . McCluskey&#13;
C. V. VanWinkle&#13;
Sargeauts, G. A. Sigler, Albert Mills&#13;
Sentinel, R. I I . Arnell&#13;
f F . A. Sigler&#13;
AuditorB, ' -{ C. J . Teeple&#13;
{ O. A. Sigler&#13;
MODERN WOODMEN.&#13;
Venerable Council, C. L. Grimes&#13;
Clerk,&#13;
R a i i k e r ,&#13;
W'orthy Advisor,&#13;
Escort,&#13;
Watchman,&#13;
Sentry,&#13;
Managers 1&#13;
Dec. 30, 1899,&#13;
The Columbian Dramatic Club,&#13;
At t h e Pinckney Opera House,&#13;
My s m h i s o-ini t r o u b l e ! fur y e a r s&#13;
w i t h c h r o n i c d i a r r h o e a . S o m e t i m e&#13;
a * o I p e r s u a d e d a i m t o t a k e s o m a o f&#13;
Lee Huff&#13;
F . G. Jackson&#13;
J o h n Kelly&#13;
Claude I la use&#13;
J a s . Fitzsinamoua&#13;
Casper Volluer&#13;
J o h n Jeffries&#13;
Bert VanBlaricum&#13;
N . Pacey&#13;
-» «.« «. • .&#13;
V O I I C E .&#13;
W e t b e u n a e r s i j / n e d , do h e r e b y ; i t our subscribers will &gt;e pr-jinpt to pay&#13;
aerree t o r e f u n d t h e m o n e y o n a 5 0 us the little they owe it will help us materc&#13;
e n t b o t t l e of D o w n ' s E l i x i r if i t does I ially.&#13;
n o t c u r e a n y c o u g h , cold, w h o o p i n g&#13;
" O u t of t h e Shadow; or t h e Convict's O b a m i w r l i u ' s Colic, C h o l r e * a n d D i a r&#13;
R e v e n g e . " rtaoer t t ^ a v i y . Aft*r iiiiatf t«ro b o t -&#13;
T h e C h r i s t m a s e n t e r t a i n m e n t s a t • t j e 4 0 | 2 5 . :dut siz^ Uo w a , ourrnl. I&#13;
t h e M. E . a n d C o n ^ l c h u r c h e s last K i V e t i n s b ^ s t i . n u a U i , n o p i a ^ s o - m o a e&#13;
S a t u r d a y e v e n i n g , passed off n i c e l y j ^ m U a r l y erf-sotek .ui.y re-td it a n d b e&#13;
w i t h good c r o w d s a t both p l a c e s . | b e n e f i t e d — T u o m \ ^ J . Bj«ver, Glenrjoe.&#13;
T h o s e w h o h a v e s t o v e s t o m o v e o r j 0 . b ^ o i s t M &gt;/ 1^ i . Si,'l ir, d . ' u ^ ^ i s t&#13;
r e - a r r a n g e , h a d b e t t e r a v a i l t h e m s e l v e s&#13;
of t h e l e w d a y s before J a n . 1,—it&#13;
mitfht s a v e b r e a k i n g a good r e s o l u -&#13;
t i o n ( ? )&#13;
R i c h a r d D. R o c h e will o p e n u p a&#13;
law office o v e r t h e F i r s t S t a t e &amp; S a v -&#13;
i n g s b a n k o n . J a n u a r y 1st. H e is a&#13;
b r i g h t yfiuno; m a n a n d h i s m a n y&#13;
f r i e n d s will wish h i m all(Hfne success&#13;
t h a t m a y c o m e to h i m in t n e pracYtce&#13;
ol h i s profession. — D e m o c r a t .&#13;
Hoyt L. Conary, who appears here J a n .&#13;
Subdcribti tor Dispatch&#13;
Sac ^iU'ii.uM Junicx&#13;
fHAN^ L. AN Jt^vVS&#13;
t'ltttor and Jfroprietor.&#13;
suotjunpUou t'rice $i m Advuuce,&#13;
&lt;u&gt; docoud-ci&lt;u&gt;d aidlkor.&#13;
coukrh, o r t h r o a t t r o u b l e . W e also&#13;
g u a r a n t e e D o w n ' s E l i x i r t o c u r e cons&#13;
u m p t i o n , v/ben used a c c o r d i n g to d i&#13;
r e c t i o n s , o r m o n e y b a c k . A f u ' l dose&#13;
on gointf t o lied a n d s m a l l doses d u r&#13;
i n g t h e d a y will c u r e t u e most s e v e r e&#13;
ciudiuead Cokrao, ji.'jj yoi: / e a r .&#13;
. tJAi.^ &lt;tud .Uji'.'ia^tJ aJi^-Jd ,JiJUUtiil i r a j .&#13;
&lt;luuoaiicd.uouio J I dateri^iuuieuis J l i / ja ^41 J&#13;
1, n e e d s n o r e r o r u r n e n d a t i o u at o u r b a u d s , i t^r, 0. aeaii^J, u&gt; jjrobouiiu^ 1.1-3 joioe .^ita u o i -&#13;
e w a s .here m i c e , iti ' A r o u n d t h e -Mofre," lo l U e o a i c e , .-&lt;»^ui«»r i*i&lt;&gt;i rfiiud,uir^i,&#13;
a n d that w i l l s e c u r e h i u i a b i g c r o w d f o r \ A U uidJ^i iut&gt;&gt;^iila&gt;ju.D.:Liujiu &lt;via i&gt;&lt;* ^ j j i - 6&#13;
this n e x t e u t e r t u u m - u i , " l i t e M a n A b o u t ( i U a , t U u u , „ u e f s u0 t l , u S .„ J i J a a i i M ) i U a^uood&#13;
T o . v u . " D o n o : fail to h e a r h i m . i ^ ^ ^ ^ = ^ ^ ^ - ^ j u a i j . a j r . a i ^ c - u a a w a , **a&#13;
&gt; f u i JO j . k . ^ a or * j xi.'aoi^l/. . y ^ i u o i i i U j e a&#13;
W e s h a l l n e e d e v e r y d o l l a r d u e u s , i n '* *a»eruoe.u,jai* j l J o i raa-u .a-ao-u-;* « « * a y&#13;
7 ad i J i i s u A i oi.jruiu^ ca lUdure *a»aoerLiou i.un&#13;
J a n u a r y , t o p 1 y o u r i a x ^ s , iiKerest, e t c . s&lt;»aio * c e » .&#13;
If o u r s u b s c r i b e r s '»p r o m p t p a y J &lt;J&amp; lJtC£„V ll.V tr !&#13;
ILL l U l t d jl'duC a e o , 4 j ^ O c l d i C / . Wtf JAVtf &lt;iil i i i u d B&#13;
dad t u c i4tcaL jt,j led J i i jv^i - 1 ^ . , * J i - a j u ^ j . d d&#13;
1 ua ^-J o x ^ c a t c a n akiada -ji ^ J f i , j a j j a j iijj*.*,&#13;
', t ' i u i j j i e i o , i'i»ki;i'3, t ' i J 0 i \ i j l - U t ^ , liiil .1 J - I J J , - N j l «&#13;
; ileAaa, ; u i c a j v - a . 3 , ^ ^ i " a j , .-tajWju l i . i u , ^-LC, tU&#13;
cta^criut'O^/.CJ, a^uu me ijjftdjL aaLicc, c'riutMaa&#13;
O V ^0 ; j j u ,V J. a. c ^ a 'JJ i J J J .&#13;
I&#13;
Gtijoyeil a B a n q u e t .&#13;
L a s t W e iu-*s:i.iy - v ^ n m ^ . • a f t e r t h e&#13;
business ui^*^**^/ i n j ^1^ :tiiirj of otii&#13;
cers, t h e L i . i l G i u - 1 - t i l f r i e n d s&#13;
• sat d o w n t o a n ivster suop-^r Ar&gt;our,&#13;
60 wer^ !)'•-•&lt;'i' t i l t l i j isr toe t o&#13;
l i i i l V i i - u A J i i D i d ^ £ J d { ,&#13;
cold, a n d s t o p t h e m o s t d i s t r e s s i n g | t o r h " ^ ^ Vt&gt;-r .-,,,,^,- i a h o u r&#13;
c o u g h .&#13;
F. V S l i d e r ,&#13;
W. B. D a r r o w ,&#13;
M O R E LOCAL.&#13;
1 i n e a n d t h e be&gt;t in u s e t o p u t a&#13;
-- HI p r i m e c o n d i t i o n . P r i c e 2 5 c&#13;
(. k a ^ e F o r salo by F A . S i g -&#13;
.MMiETY O K F K E R S F O R li&gt;00.&#13;
i lie f o l l o w i n g officers h a v e b e e n e l e c t e d&#13;
by t h e d i f f e r e n t s o c i e t i e s o f P t n c k u e y f o r&#13;
tb»* C f m i n g y e a r :&#13;
FREE MA80NS.&#13;
LAST&#13;
PERFECT FOREVER.&#13;
SCALES C o w i Plated&#13;
AllMeel Levers,&#13;
ComVinrtion r.eam.&#13;
Chtalog-.io I'ree.&#13;
Address, J ONE* OF BlNGHAWTON,&#13;
BINGH^WTON N Y&#13;
Worthy Master,&#13;
Sr. Warden,&#13;
J r . Waideu,&#13;
Secretary,&#13;
Treasurer,&#13;
Sr. Deacon,&#13;
J r . Deacon,&#13;
Chaplain,&#13;
Tyler,&#13;
Stewards,&#13;
H . F . Sigler&#13;
Kirk Van Winkle&#13;
F . Ci. Jackson&#13;
E. R. Hrown&#13;
G. W. Teeple&#13;
A . M e l i i t y r e&#13;
Chas. Teeple&#13;
K. H . Crane&#13;
Thos. J'tirtier&#13;
R. E . Fince, T . Read&#13;
P e r r y Blunt, w a s i n D e t r o i t S a t u r&#13;
d a y .&#13;
A g o o d m a n y s u b s c r i p t i o n s e x p i r e&#13;
t h i s w e e k .&#13;
Miss D e d e H i n c h e y s p e n t C h r i s t m a s j&#13;
in A n n A r b o r .&#13;
M r s . S. K". H a u s e s p e n t t h e past&#13;
w e e k i n D e t r o i t .&#13;
Miss E v a S m i t h visited f r i e n d s i n&#13;
H o w e l l t h e past week.&#13;
Miss M a r y V a n Fleet, s p e u t X m a s in&#13;
D e t r o i t , v i s i t i n g r e l a t i v e s .&#13;
A S t o w e a n d wife s p e n t t h e past&#13;
w e e k w i t h friends i n D e t r o i t .&#13;
Born to Mr. a n d Mrs, H u r l e y A n -&#13;
gell, on T h u r s d a y l a - t , a t/iri&#13;
Miss L i l l i a n Boyle is s p e n d i n g t h e sle --nc^s&#13;
h o l i d a y s a t h e r h o m ^ in Leslie,&#13;
R. M. G l e n n a n d f a m i l y s p e n t&#13;
C h r i s t m a s w i t h r e l a t i v e s in C h e l s e a .&#13;
Mrs. F. L A n d r e w s a n d d a u g h t e r&#13;
F l o r e n c e , w e r e in J a e k s o n last T h u r s -&#13;
d a y .&#13;
Mrs. A. B. G r e e n s p e n t a c o u p l e of&#13;
d a y s last week w i t h h e r son in Stockb&#13;
r i d g e .&#13;
or m o r e . v i s s | r - n t in a s r:i ii v i s i t&#13;
a n d torttiM ^ , , ,(j of r i i - 0-.1-.1- T h e&#13;
&lt; oin oanv I r »K • u p i t lovjr, 1():33. e v -&#13;
e r v o n e f-^iirij" v-'lt p i , I f&gt;r i " e n - I -&#13;
in^r&#13;
T h ^ pt&gt;r V ' f i n - O-&gt;MI a p r o - p e p .&#13;
o u r o n e t\f t h » ipie,--. i- to i i w m ^ e r s&#13;
a n d ri(i iTI• • i i' •»' I'll - v-* i r 'ti w-^s wit Ii&#13;
65 n 'OV'-M'S HI j io i -.und'tiLj; all&#13;
d e h t s p u d &lt; rid u u .\- i-i f h « r :•- t - t i r v .&#13;
VILLAGE O F F I C c r t a .&#13;
I ' u u s i u i . ' i ; . . . . ~ . . . ~ ^ ... i i ^ i . -*IjLa(./re&#13;
I M u i d i i l i C i ^ t i J , ' - - J J j . v o i i a , &gt; j a u d i&#13;
a y i i - s , r . O. J j a a ^ i j j ,&#13;
CL.£.II». •« ...~« • ...»—« •- . . . . . . t i . iL. L'rfdjJld&#13;
1'aiiAatjiieiii. »v. E.. . l i a r p u y&#13;
A-&gt;3a.33Jit «~« •— ' ^ • -^-- V/^*T&#13;
^I'ii&amp;jir „ j i . 4 u . &gt; . J S i . i . . . -. J . . i l j a i d .&#13;
.»lAit3AUL.... ....^-v. £l, .i. • •/ I.&#13;
a i . 4 i . i i i Jt't'tuu. j t . . i . . " . 5 i 4 ' - "&#13;
A i i J U M . ! ' —• --.~~ . . . « « V . .V. J » r r&#13;
C H U r t C r t t a .&#13;
P e t t e y s r i l l e H i l l s .&#13;
I have i u i H I -\ ri^tv • i r o m l c o b&#13;
c r u s h e r i l l i r- i i ' r / • . i ( ; • • * \ i\\^&#13;
M i l l F t - n • - -i'\&#13;
ti ri n'l i ULT 1 i o n&#13;
a t i d (in ' ii-* ^h !• '&gt;'&#13;
s a a u » j j i o f u i u ^ ^L to ;•.&gt;.&lt;, u i e«'ory o j i i i i /&#13;
eveuiu^ tic • :u&gt;&gt; u'cloCi.' i'fayer diddling I'uatU"&#13;
ia.) &lt;-• • emu*;!*, suiii^y 30^.^01 i . JUJ^J o i a u r a -&#13;
i u ' s e r \ , e e . LKAI. i i i i u u a , aupt.&#13;
1 i v ' - » ^ 1-m*&#13;
-'i;» o'ior rn -inner&#13;
11 l ' l i " ' . .&#13;
V 11; (-j 0 i l f p r&#13;
L\u&gt;otitt.vjiArio&gt;ALi ctjLitua..&#13;
/ ticv. c . W. itico pastor, .Sdrvictj &lt;JVofy&#13;
J a a d t k y a i o r u l ^ ^ »1 U : . t . l riili J . ' o f / U J l H /&#13;
B&gt;tfuiu'^ di t t'A. J c. .iCi. t'l'ayer aidoiiu^ I'aorid&#13;
j j o v e a i u ^ r i . -&gt;aalAy i C J D o i i t c u s o J i a j f i i -&#13;
lUii JO.-v-l^O. 1-.- t l . i'c-Sjllo , 5 i ^ ) . . •{&gt;!* A d d ! , ) J 0&#13;
CUR'OUS CONTJE^S^TIONS.&#13;
T a l a r i b a t s a r e €ix feet a c r o s s t h e&#13;
P o - t c nrp fiomet!me= found In m u s -&#13;
r.-^i?r,ri s p e n d s $25.onn,000 a y e a r on&#13;
wTvfkey.&#13;
P r - - - i ' o n t l i l i e s , of Brazil is a brir-o-&#13;
V'" 1 • o*vh P; as*.&#13;
c-p.-r,*,-)- t i o ^ r i i n^-'-s a cr&gt;py of ' 1 ; ^&#13;
f--i n= A i - U ' n P ' r l a&#13;
T-rm - ' o - » ^ P P C of India build e n m b s&#13;
ten fc-t in h e i g h t .&#13;
r t i i - m i»i 'Re's'i'i'Ts, is bul't. 0 " t^'-"":-&#13;
(v f ; v i--l"nr1&#13;
^ i'. i w t i a 'J A A' ii ^»u 1 vj O ;i ^ it J d .&#13;
e.wry SuuJay. Lkjtv luadt* *t i:.iO J cijuk&#13;
Uijjn aindd .sua ;terJIOU i t J;-!U A. J I . 0&lt;*woaidJl&#13;
at J :uu p. ui., .eijpereiiua jeuciaiciioii *t, . ; A) ii. J i .&#13;
o J C l L T I t S .&#13;
1)Ue A. O . i i . --3001^.v &gt;: Lai.-. ,&gt;ti : •, m j : i - i v e f y&#13;
m i r l 1 1 1 U . , i u » / r . l . t . j i . v l i . i .&#13;
o l d I ' j J i l f j l a l ill v : ITL. *..y , ' ) l t •• &gt; L |J l . J* .&#13;
i ^ r ' W ' O t ' . r t l LEAiiO'.-:. M e e t s t ^ e r y S n a l a j r&#13;
c o r a i a t l a v u ^ t i o u 14 o . v u - u a d l LO &lt;.•&gt;'• jryju..*, e*pdc&#13;
i a i l y y o i i u ^ p e o p l e . ^Ird. s t e l l a o r r a u a u a t're^*.&#13;
j^l i t u s n VN' , ^ ) . ; t , : i t - ) u ^ r i ' : - * i ^ c .&#13;
v j i i ^ e . ' r , - 1 1 li,- ^ • • • I U . ' it i:»• 'r -•*! 1 ^ac,&#13;
Miss -.tu :.i.',&gt; -.1.-..-: - uL- -). A.-..-. l;&lt;. '• V. . t . o ^&#13;
L\ C.&#13;
1* a &gt;atii AI :; i. p. .a. »t&#13;
1 • :ts t .1 • ir-tt "'ril.ty of e±oU&#13;
1,. m i ' II !)r. I. f\&#13;
Siller. iverv.»u- . it •:• .it-* I i i L e a j e r i u c * la&#13;
cotitlially ir 1 vk£. 1 &gt;[.•-. jf%l Si^i-jr, i'r-.«; d r s .&#13;
w h i c h a r e C 0 c n ~ C ' e d b v Etta Diirtee, secreu.-y.&#13;
MACCABEES.&#13;
Commander, (J. L . C;mipbell&#13;
Lieut. Com.,&#13;
Record Keeper,&#13;
Finance Keeper,&#13;
Chaplain,&#13;
Sargeant,&#13;
P. W. Coniwsy&#13;
C. L . (irimes&#13;
J . A. C:;dwell&#13;
A . J . Willieim&#13;
W H . (looiirieh&#13;
! r t p ' - t y b r i d p e t .&#13;
The Mis-.es M a u d e a n d F a n n i e T e e - Tn r^eV-Tv m a r r i ^ s e s t h e w o m a n is'&#13;
pie a r e h o m e from Ali.ion t o r t h e lioli- n^v —s p ' a c e d t o t h e r i g h t of t h e&#13;
dav v a c a t i o n . ;&#13;
1 c;,-, --r.prl can b e m r d e i n t o p a n e -&#13;
Leo F o h e v a n d sister, N o r a , a r e c n ,,.n 1VT1 i r e E t that, it m:;&gt;* b e u s : d for&#13;
s p e n d i n g t h e holiiiays with friends i n wind w s .&#13;
Ft. W a y n e . I n d . , Tl-e h i g h e s t p o i n t t o w h i c h a m a n&#13;
Miss M v r t i a Hal! of \ \ l i l i a m s t o t i , is „ n^n . ^&#13;
,. ' . . . . . . , f p c r d is 16.050 feet.&#13;
s p e n d i n g trie h o l i d a y s w i t h h e r m o t h - . . . , . ^ J&#13;
1 " A s e w i n g m a c h i n e i s - s u p p o s e d to d")&#13;
e r , Mrs. J a s . H a l l . - l V p w ; M ... ^ f t w e l v e K o r n e n . T h i s of&#13;
G W. T e e p l e a n d 0 M. W o o d , took I c m r s o d e p e n d s u p o n t h e r a t e a t&#13;
in Lhe R e p u b l i c a n B a n q u e t a t t i o w e i J , ! ^ n ^ c h it is w - r k e d , ae is t h e c a s e w i t h&#13;
last W e d n e s d a y n i g h t . a ! 1 ^ n o h i f h r r y .&#13;
T h e l a r g e s t m a s s of p u r e r o c k salt&#13;
Tbe C. T. A- aDd li. vji-ieij if f.ltvs i»'ac&lt;», meat&#13;
every third Saturany ^v^uia^ iti cae f'r. &lt; i t -&#13;
tbesv Hull. Johu l&gt; laohue. I renia«jut.&#13;
K:Ni 1GUi &gt; OK M.U' i 'At iKEs ,&#13;
Meeteverv t'riday eveiun^ "u ^&gt;r ixstore L j Li&#13;
ol tbe MIJOU i t their tuol ui '.lif. ?«v^rttiuut t&gt;ldi{.&#13;
Vieitiac orot tiers trc ''or.li.illy invited.&#13;
CHA.f. CiMi'BCLL, Sir tvunjtit Coininandtif&#13;
Li r i a g s t ou Lod^e, X &gt;. r,!, l''&#13;
C\oia iiuuuK'n:ioa i'u-s.l.ij' ^\i&gt;um,', n n r i H t u n&#13;
thelull of LU - uiKi. A..'S ia.l-jr Lclutyro, »\ . d .&#13;
OUDKK J F t:.VSr,:t:N' s t . v t : uioetmeaca mo'ita&#13;
tue Fn.Li.v e v c i c u : &gt;u.».Vi 1; : 1 &gt; it^mr t*\&#13;
•itA.M. laeetiu^. vL;s. d.viiv lii.vi.), A', d.&#13;
LADIES O f n i C MAC«:A15EES. :»Ioot every l e&#13;
a u d i r l -s.it oriity ut e.icum'Hiui *t l:iu p m. a t&#13;
K . ' ) , f, \l. i u a . \ ' i - i 0 , - , . 7 . 1 - - : u - . t u i : t y t o t&#13;
vited. L11.A (.'osnv.n' i.nds'Coiu.&#13;
G l e n d o n R i r h a r d s a n d w i f e , of in trfe w o r l d lies u n d e r t h e p r o v i n c e&#13;
4 &lt;rl'..'nio,i.yo.U)&#13;
1 ~ i&#13;
G r a n d R a p i d s w e r e q u e s t s of hi&gt; p a r - ' 0 f Cn'ivin. ITnngary Tt is k n o w n t o&#13;
e n t s h e r e t h e past week j \&gt;r ""o n r l e s Ton?. ?o m i l e s b r o a d a n d&#13;
250 feet in. t h i c k n e s s .&#13;
T h e sri'-affc va«= t h o u g h t t o b e n e a r&#13;
All o u r y n u n u people w h o a r e a t -&#13;
tendini.' c o l l e g e s a r e h o m e f o r t h e h o l -&#13;
i d a y s at th**ir h o m e s h e r e .&#13;
Miss Lucy Matin w;.s h o m e a t e w&#13;
d a v s last week. S h e a n d h e r m o t h e r&#13;
a r e n o w v i s i t i n g in D e t r o i . ,&#13;
T h e fireman ol' ' I r u b t o n will g i v e&#13;
a p u r t y at f n e 0 H I M house i n t h a t&#13;
place M o n d a y e v e n i n g , J a n 1.&#13;
M r . a n d M r s W i n . H a r r i s o n a n d&#13;
'.•hild, &gt;f Dakot.t, visited h e r m o t h e r ,&#13;
Mrs. D . I-1. E w e r , , ,t he past w e e k .&#13;
*k ine.-l e v e r y ^oi.:o:i-.i &gt;Ve t a d 4 d » f&#13;
r N i a i i r S o i - ' r u s L.iVAL u J t.iiJ&#13;
. • I&#13;
e v f i i u i i ; of e v e r y I I I H I I .1 i a t Ue £ , \},&#13;
T. M . 1U1I it .. i 1 U'CL• &gt;eci.. A l l v , d i U u &lt;&#13;
' i u a r d d w e l e o i u e . "&#13;
&lt;•. &lt;.'• J A C K S O N , C a p t . i r e n .&#13;
p v r ' r c ' l o r . h u t Major Maxes, a F ^ i ' i s h&#13;
ev.pl-rer. h a s found g r e a t h e r d s of&#13;
t h e m a l o n p t V S o l ^ t r i v e r , a t r i b u -&#13;
t s r v of t h e W h i t e Nile.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. 0- C, L, SIGLER ,M, O&#13;
0.\3. SiiLiiL-\ &amp;. iiJLiiiit&#13;
S t o r y of u M a r e .&#13;
T o be I w u n d h.-nd a n d loot for j e a n&#13;
by t b e c h a i n s of disease is t h e w o r s t&#13;
form of s l a v e r y . G e o r g e D. W i l l i a m s .&#13;
PilTSU-U* ir&lt; . i a i -mia&#13;
t t w n a e t t o d 1.- i r 1:^-11:&#13;
l'iuelviiey, M i c h .&#13;
o.tiee MI &lt;»i.i &gt;r,r&#13;
DR. A. 3. GREiN.&#13;
&gt; •, \ l , - t'-.-.,- -.-y :' 1 i:-i\w±:u[ Friday&#13;
Of M a n c h e . s t e r , M i c h . , t e l l s b o w BUCh a jOttl^i'v.-rSi.-ior's Dru-Stord. f&#13;
*!avo w a s m a d e free. H e s a y s : " M y —&#13;
wife has been &gt;o helpless tor five y e a r s ' T ^ L - Y { ^ \ , ^ , : 8 1 ^ ^ ^ . ¾&#13;
occupy the tall eat mercantile buildinf in the world. V&lt;- have&#13;
a,ooo,oao cuatomera. Sixteen hundred clerka are con«ta:...y&#13;
encaged fitting out-of-town orders.&#13;
Misses N o r a S h e h a n a n d E l l a ty„ ' t h a t she , o « l d Dot t u r n o y e r i n b e d A ' f f i * "Ti'"L^Z ^ *,rlu^ P u i t t a ' , l i&#13;
a.-e h o m e from A d r i a n , a n d w , l l 8 p f . n d : i ) , , n e - . *?!?* U S ' ^ t W 0 ^ ^ 8 ° f&#13;
X n i a s v\eek w i t h t h e i r p a r e n t s h e r e .&#13;
F r a n k Li w i n , wtio i s ' at.tend.inir a&#13;
O U R G E N E R A L C A T A L O G U E ia t h e book o f t h e pe &gt; —it quo: -&#13;
W h o l e s a t e P r i c e s t o Everj'bNdy, haa.«ver 1,000 p a g e s , 16.000'i:: " p t i r : ; ; ; i ; c&#13;
60,000 description's o f art; -Ivs w i t h prices. It c o s t s 7a c e n t s t o \u:. -. a . d v.-.ail&#13;
e a c h c o p y . W e w a n t y o u t o h a v e o n e . S E N D F I F T E E N C E N ' l . to s h o w&#13;
y o u r good fuith and w e ' l l , send y o u a oopy F i l E E , w i t h a l l c h a r g e s 1 • ( p a i d .&#13;
f.&#13;
.M0RT60MERY WARD &amp; CQ, MichtgaaAva. and Madison Street&#13;
CHIOAQO&#13;
v e t e r i n a r y c o l l e g e tn T o r o n t o , C a n a d n t&#13;
is s p e n d i n g t h e v a c a t i o n w t t h h i s p a r -&#13;
e n t * h e r e .&#13;
Rev. W. G. Stephens, of Plymouth,&#13;
was the gunst ol hja daughter, Mrs.&#13;
F G. Jaekaou, also to make tbe ao*&#13;
^'qnainUuceef his ifraad. son Harry,&#13;
^ ! the list ^imatw^ik&#13;
E l e c t r i c B i t t e r s , s h e is w o n d e r f u l l y&#13;
i m p r o v e d a u d is abla t o d o h e r o w n&#13;
w o r k / * T h i s s u p r e m e r e m e d y f o r fem&#13;
a l e d i s e a s e s q u i c k l y c u r e s n e r v o u s&#13;
uesa, sleeplessness, m e l a n c h o l y , h e a d -&#13;
• c b e . b a c k a c h e , f a i n t i n g a n d dizzy&#13;
s p e l l s . T h i s m i r a c l e w o r k i n g medioine&#13;
is a godsend to weak, sickly, run&#13;
doara people. Every bottle irnaramtefai&#13;
Oaaly SOcents. Sold by F. A.&#13;
^glar Dnaykt.&#13;
PATENTS M A N T E L Our fee retunieil if w c tail. A n y o n e 1&#13;
s k e t c h an.l clrscripiion ef an*y iiivention&#13;
promptly n - e n v e our opinion" free c o n e e m i a j p&#13;
t h e p.itcnt:i'i;lity vi .same. " H o w t o Obtain a&#13;
P a t e n t " s e n t u p o n request. P a t e n t * secstroE&#13;
through u s advertisetl for sale at our c x p e n a e .&#13;
Patents t a k e n out through u s r«cet\« ijifiiiojl&#13;
notice, without charge, in T H K P A T E N T Itaooaaw&#13;
a n illnatrateu a n d widely circulated joMOMsC&#13;
consulted bv Manufacturers aud investors* ""&#13;
oe&amp;d for bample copy F R E E . Addraoa,&#13;
VICTOR «1. eVAMt * 04a.&#13;
{PmtoMAttccmer*,)&#13;
iVARMI&#13;
H i&#13;
iifl&#13;
.•» \&#13;
i!&#13;
" ^&#13;
. ' ' J&#13;
* V&#13;
*&#13;
h .&#13;
i&#13;
&gt;&#13;
r-"&#13;
FJ.ANU [.. Aximtwa, Publisher.&#13;
PI.VCK •~~* • MICHIGAN-'&#13;
Set a bad example and it will hatch&#13;
o u t mischief.&#13;
Narrow minds overlook a charitablo&#13;
Act and search for tha motive.&#13;
Seme people are never so happy as&#13;
when they have bad news to tell.&#13;
A fool may be able to answer questions&#13;
t h a t a wise man wouldn't ask.&#13;
If General Joubert is dead his soul&#13;
IB certainly marching on with great&#13;
success.&#13;
When men have rn^re money than&#13;
they need they think they need more&#13;
t h a n they have.&#13;
All a man has to do to obtain socalled&#13;
social success is to put a fair&#13;
value on himself and live up to it.&#13;
A competitor to the Illinois State&#13;
Pawners' society is In the Held, and&#13;
there will soon be tvro cf these lowpriced&#13;
loan associations in active operation&#13;
In Chicago. Competition Is. in&#13;
this case at least, the surest proof that&#13;
t h e new idea is a success and has already&#13;
achieved popularity among "genteel&#13;
borrowers."&#13;
It has been discovered in St. Paul&#13;
t h a t electric ground connections, made&#13;
by attaching wires to water pipes, not&#13;
only ruin the pipes by electrolysis, but&#13;
seriously interfere with the operation&#13;
of the water meters. In one case a&#13;
meter through which a large quantity&#13;
of water was discharged failed to register.&#13;
This was an extreme case and&#13;
easily detected, but what the effect has&#13;
been upon the indicators in cases&#13;
where the current is not so strong the&#13;
officers of the water board have no&#13;
means to determine. To protect themselves,&#13;
however, they have ordered the&#13;
removal of all electric wires from the&#13;
water pipes.&#13;
Personal reserve is sometimes lost&#13;
eight of in the far West, as a famous&#13;
sugar merchant from the East recently&#13;
discovered. He had business in a Missouri&#13;
town, and was lunching a t a&#13;
table with a native. "Hi, stranger,"&#13;
asked the other, "where you from?"&#13;
T h e eastern man, having a stud farm&#13;
in Kansas City, mentioned that place.&#13;
" W h a t ' s your business?" "Well,&#13;
horses," came the reply. "Say, what's&#13;
your n a m e ? " "None of your business,"&#13;
rejoined • the disturbed sugar-dealer.&#13;
Even in Ohio, settled largely by Massachusetts&#13;
and Connecticut colonists,&#13;
t h e eastern man sometimes finds himself&#13;
in an atmosphere of frankness.&#13;
"You are all talking about your weste&#13;
r n reserve," such a one recently remarked.&#13;
"Blessed if I see a n y ! "&#13;
A wheat calendar, giving the time of&#13;
ripening in various countries, shows&#13;
how the grain has all seasons for its&#13;
own. Dwellers in the United States.&#13;
(for example, where so much of the&#13;
land is resting during the winter&#13;
months, find by the calendar t h a t&#13;
wheat is at the harvest point of&#13;
growth in December for Burma and&#13;
New South Wales agriculturists. J a n -&#13;
uary witnesses the same stage of development&#13;
in Australia. New Zealand,&#13;
Chile and Argentina; while February&#13;
and March are wheat harvest months&#13;
for Upper Egypt and India. The list&#13;
for June, July and August is the fullest.&#13;
There is one feature, almost inevitable,&#13;
in the world's annual wheat&#13;
story. A shortage, real or fancied, is&#13;
a p t to be reported in some quarters,&#13;
a n d then speclation sees lift opport&#13;
u n i t y quite as soon as legitimate&#13;
dealing.&#13;
The biograph is doing good service&#13;
t o science. A hospital in New York&#13;
is adapting a machine to record minutely&#13;
the actions of persons in epileptic&#13;
fits and similar affections. Movi&#13;
n g pictures have been taken showing&#13;
t h e walking movements in persons afflicted&#13;
with locomotor ataxia. When&#13;
these films are reproduced on the&#13;
screen doctors can study the sympt&#13;
o m s carefully in the laboratory. The&#13;
movements of all kinds of microbes&#13;
a r e also being photographed, as well&#13;
a s the actios of healthy and diseased&#13;
corpuscles. When these pictures are&#13;
magnified fc*d thrown on the screen&#13;
t h e improvement or decline in the&#13;
condition of the patient can be told.&#13;
One of tlie most interesting uses of&#13;
t h e biograph is to photograph and&#13;
show minutely the growth and flowering&#13;
of plants from the time of planti&#13;
n g until in full bloom. A picture is&#13;
taken every half-hour continually for&#13;
about thirty days and nights. In order&#13;
to secure a uniform light for every&#13;
view a powerful electric light is employed.&#13;
Sometimes 1,000 pictures will&#13;
he made of one subject. Should t h :&#13;
• a b j e c t be a lily the pictures at one&#13;
fltafe will show the opening of the&#13;
lttjr, while a t another stage its fading&#13;
«wsjr is seen. By quickening the time&#13;
4*4 t h e pictures en the scroen the plant&#13;
is actually saca to be growing.&#13;
TALMAGES SEflMON.&#13;
PILLARS OF SMOKE, LAST S U N -&#13;
DAY'S SUBJECT.&#13;
Text: Solomon'* 8on* 3: tt: Who la This&#13;
That Cometh Out or the WU&lt;l«ruea»&#13;
LlJco 1'illHM of iSmukef —HuBvtiag of&#13;
(Jod'a Church.&#13;
The architecture of the smoke is&#13;
wondrous, whether God with his finger&#13;
curves it into a cloud or rounds it into&#13;
a dome, or points it In a spire, or&#13;
spreads it in a wing, or, as in the text,&#13;
hoists it in a pillar. Watch it winding&#13;
up from the country farmhouse in&#13;
the early morning, showing that the&#13;
pastoral industries have begun; or, sec&#13;
it ascending from the chimneys of the&#13;
city, teliing of the homes fed, the factories&#13;
turniug out valuable fabrics, the&#13;
printing presses preparing book and&#13;
newspaper, and all the ten thousand&#13;
wheels ot work in motion. On a clear&#13;
day this vapor spoken of mounts with&#13;
such buoyancy and spreads such a delicate&#13;
veil across the sky, and trace,&#13;
t;ueh graceful lineu of circle and 'S&gt;1?micircle&#13;
and waves and tosses and sinks&#13;
and soars and scatters with such affluence&#13;
of shape and color and sugge-stiveness,&#13;
that if you have never noticed&#13;
it you are like a man who has&#13;
all his life lived in Paris and yet never&#13;
seen the Luxemburg, or ail his life in&#13;
Rome and never seen the Vatican, or&#13;
all his life at Lockport and never seen&#13;
Niagara, forty-four times the Bible&#13;
speaks of the smoke, and it is about&#13;
time that somebody preached a sermon&#13;
recognizing this strange, weird, beautiful,&#13;
elastic, charming, terrific and&#13;
fascinating vapor. Across the Bible sky&#13;
floats the smoke of Sinai, the smoke of&#13;
Sodom, the smoke of Ai, the smoke of&#13;
the pit, the smoke of the volcanic hills&#13;
when God touches them, and in my&#13;
text the glorious church of God coming&#13;
up out of the wilderness like pillars of&#13;
smoke.&#13;
In the first place-, these pillars of&#13;
smoke in my text indicate the suffering&#13;
the church of God has endured. What&#13;
do I mean by the church? I mean not&#13;
a building, not a sect, but those who,&#13;
in all ages, and all lands, and of all beliefs,&#13;
love God, and are trying to do&#13;
right. For many centuries the heavens&#13;
have been black with the smoke&#13;
of martyrdom. If set side by side you&#13;
could girdle the earth with the fires&#13;
of persecution. Rowland Taylor burned&#13;
at Hadleigh; Latimer burned at Oxford;&#13;
John Rogers burned at Smithfield;&#13;
John Hooper burned at Gloucester;&#13;
John Huss burned at Constance;&#13;
Lawrence Saunuers burned at Coventry;&#13;
Joan of Arc burned at Rouen.&#13;
Protestants have represented Catholics&#13;
as having a monopoly of persecutors,&#13;
but both Protestant and Catholic&#13;
have practiced infamous cruelties. The&#13;
Catholics, during the reign of Hunneric,&#13;
were by Protestants put to the&#13;
worst tortures, stripped of their clothing,&#13;
hoisted in the air by pulleys with&#13;
weights suspended, from their feet.then&#13;
let down, and ears and eyes, nose and&#13;
tongue were amputated, and red-hot&#13;
plates of iron were put against the&#13;
tenderest parts of their bodies.&#13;
George Bancroft, the historian, says&#13;
of the state of Maryland: "In the land&#13;
which Catholics had opened to Protestants&#13;
mass might not be said publicly;&#13;
no Catholic priest or bishop might utter&#13;
his faith in a voice of persuasion;&#13;
no Catholic might teach the young. If&#13;
a v a y w a r d child cf a Papist would not&#13;
become an apostate, the law wrested&#13;
for him from his parents a share of&#13;
their property. Such were the methods&#13;
adopted to prevent the growth of&#13;
Popery."&#13;
Catholicism as well as Protestantism&#13;
has had its martyrs. It does seem as&#13;
if when any one sect got complete'dominancy&#13;
in any land, the devil of persecution&#13;
and cruelty took possession of&#13;
t h a t sect. Then see the Catholics after&#13;
the Huguenots. See the Gentiles after&#13;
the Jews in Touraine, where a great&#13;
pit was dug and fire lighted at the bottom&#13;
of the pit, and one hundred and&#13;
sixty Jewish victims were consumed.&#13;
See the Presbyterian parliament of&#13;
England, more tyrannical in their&#13;
treatment of opponents than had been&#13;
the .jyriminal courts. Persecution&#13;
against t h e Baptist by , Paedo-Baptists.&#13;
Persecution of the Established&#13;
Church against the Methodist church.&#13;
Persecution against the Quakers. Persecution&#13;
against the Presbyterians. Under&#13;
Emperor Diocletian one hundred&#13;
and forty-four thousand Christians&#13;
were massacred, and seven hundred&#13;
thousand more of them died from banishment&#13;
and exposure.&#13;
Witness the sufferings of the Waldenses,&#13;
of the Albigenses, of the Nes^&#13;
torians. Witness , St. Bartholomew's&#13;
massacre. Witness the Duke of Alva&#13;
driving out of life eighteen thousand&#13;
Christians. Witness Herod, and Nero,&#13;
and Decius, and Hilaebrand. and Torquemada.&#13;
and Earl of Montfort, and&#13;
Lord Claverhouse, who when told that&#13;
he must give, account for his cruelties,&#13;
said: "i have no need to account to*&#13;
man, and as for God I will take him In&#13;
my own hands." A red line runs&#13;
through t h e church history of nineteen&#13;
hundred years, a line of blood. Not&#13;
by the hundreds of thousands, but by&#13;
the millions must we count those slain&#13;
for Christ's sake. No wonder John&#13;
Milton put the groans of the martyrs&#13;
to an immortal tune, writing: —&#13;
"Avenge, O Lord, thy slaughtered&#13;
saints, whose bones&#13;
Lie scattered on the Alpine mountains&#13;
cold."&#13;
T h e smoke of martyrs' homes and&#13;
m a r t y r s ' bodies if rolling up all a t once&#13;
would have eclipsed t h e noonday sun,&#13;
and turned the brightest day the world&#13;
ever saw into a midnight. " W h o is&#13;
this t h a t cometh out of the wilderness&#13;
like pillars of smoke?"&#13;
H a s persecution ceased? Ask t h a t&#13;
young man who is trying to be a Christian&#13;
in a store or factory, where from&#13;
morning to night he is the butt of all&#13;
the mean witticisms of unbelieving&#13;
employes. Ask that wife whose husband&#13;
makes her fondness for the house&#13;
of God, and even her kneeling prayer&#13;
by t h e bedside a derision, and is no&#13;
more fit for her holy companionship&#13;
than a filthy crow would be fit companion&#13;
for a robin or a golden oriole.&#13;
Compromise with the world and surrender&#13;
to its conventionalities and it&#13;
may let you alone, but all who will&#13;
live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer&#13;
persecution. Be a theater-going, cardplaying,&#13;
vine-drir.king, round-dancing&#13;
Jiristian, and you may escape criticism&#13;
and social pressure. But be an up&#13;
and down, out and out follower of&#13;
Christ, and worldling will wink to&#13;
worldling as he speaks your name, and&#13;
you will be put to many a doggerel, and&#13;
snubbed by those not worthy to blacken&#13;
your oldest shoes. When the bridge&#13;
at Ashtabula broke, and let down the&#13;
most of the carload of passengers to&#13;
instant death, Mr. P. P, Bliss was&#13;
seated on one side of the aisle of the&#13;
car writing down a Christian song&#13;
which he was composing, and on the&#13;
other side a group of men were playing&#13;
cards. Whose landing place in&#13;
eternity would you prefer—that of P.&#13;
P. Bliss, the Gospel singer, or of the&#13;
card-players?&#13;
A great complaint comes from the&#13;
theaters about the ladies* high hats,&#13;
because they obstruct the view of the&#13;
stage, and a lady reporter asked me&#13;
what I thought about it, and I told&#13;
her t h a t if the indecent pictures of actresses&#13;
in the show windows were accurate&#13;
pictures of w h a t goes on in&#13;
many of the theaters, night by night,&#13;
then it would be well if the ladies' hats&#13;
were a mile high, so as to completely&#13;
obstruct the vision. If professed&#13;
Christians fro to such places during the&#13;
week, no one will ever persecute them&#13;
for their religion, for they have none,&#13;
and they are the joke of hell. But let&#13;
tftem live a consecrated and Christian&#13;
life and they will soon run against&#13;
sneering opposition.&#13;
For a compromise Christian character&#13;
an easy time now, but for consecrated&#13;
behavior, grimace and caricature.&#13;
For the body, thanks to the God&#13;
of free America, there are now., no&#13;
swords or fiery stakes, but for the souls&#13;
of thousands of the good, in a figurative&#13;
sense, rack and gibbet and Torquemada.&#13;
The symbol of the domestic&#13;
and social and private^and public suffering&#13;
of a great multitude of God's&#13;
dear children, pillars of smoke. What&#13;
an exciting scene in India, when, during&#13;
the Sepoy rebellion, a regiment of&#13;
Highlanders came up and found the&#13;
dead body of one of General Wheeler's&#13;
daughters, who had been insulted and&#13;
mauled and slain by t h e Sepoys. So&#13;
great was the wrath against these&#13;
murderers t h a t the Scotch regiment&#13;
sat down and, cutting off the hair of&#13;
this dead daughter of Gen. Wheeler,&#13;
they divided it among them, and each&#13;
one counted the number of hairs given&#13;
him, and each one took a n oath, which&#13;
was executed, that for each hair of&#13;
the murdered1 daughter they would&#13;
clash out the' life of a bestial Sepoy.&#13;
But as we look over the story of those&#13;
who in all ages have suffered for the&#13;
truth, while we leave vengeance to&#13;
the Lord, let us band together in one&#13;
solemn vow, one tremendous oath,&#13;
after having counted the host of the&#13;
martyrs, t h a t for each one of those&#13;
glorious men and women who died for&#13;
truth an immortal shall live—live with&#13;
God and live forever.&#13;
But as I already hinted in the first&#13;
sentence of this sermon, nothing can&#13;
be more beautiful than t h e figures of&#13;
smoke on a clear sky. You can see&#13;
what you will in the contour of this&#13;
volatile vapor, now enchanted castles,&#13;
now troops of horsemen, now bannered&#13;
procession, now winged couriers, now a&#13;
black angel of wrath under a spear of&#13;
the sunshine turned to an angel of&#13;
light, and now from horizon to horizon&#13;
the air is a picture gallery filled&#13;
with masterpieces of which God is the&#13;
artist, morning c!oud3 of smoke born&#13;
in the sunrise, and evening clouds of&#13;
smoke laid in the burnished sepulchres&#13;
of the sunset.&#13;
The beauty of the transfigured smoke&#13;
is a divine symbol of t h e beauty of&#13;
the church. The fairest of all the fair&#13;
is she. Do not call those persecutors&#13;
of whom I spoke the church. They are&#13;
the parasites of the church, not the&#13;
church itself. Her mission Is to cover&#13;
the earth with a supernatural gladness,&#13;
to open all the prison doors, to balsam&#13;
all the wounds, to mo3D all the graves,&#13;
to burn up the night In the fireplace&#13;
of a great' morning, to change iron&#13;
handcuffs into diamonded wristlets, to&#13;
turn the whole race around, and wherea&#13;
s it faced death, commanding it,&#13;
"Right about face for heaven!" According&#13;
to the number of t h e spires of&#13;
-the^ churches in all our cities, towns&#13;
and neighborhoods, are the good&#13;
homefi, the world prosperities, and the&#13;
pure morals and the happy souls.&#13;
••"*&#13;
It la demonstrated to all honc.3t men&#13;
t h a t It is not so certain that William&#13;
Cullen Bryant wrote "Thanatopsis," or&#13;
Longfellow wrote " H i a w a t h a " as thfct&#13;
'God, by the hand of prophet and apostle,&#13;
wrote the Bible. All the wise men&#13;
in science and law and medicine and&#13;
literature and merchandise are gradually&#13;
coming to believe in Christianity,&#13;
and soon there will be no people who&#13;
disbelieve in it except those conspicuous&#13;
for lack of brain or men with two&#13;
families, who do not like t h e Bible because&#13;
it rebukes their swinish propensities.&#13;
The time Is hastening when there&#13;
will be no infidels left except libertines&#13;
and harlots and murderers. Millions&#13;
of Christians where once there were&#13;
thousands, and thousands where once&#13;
there were hundreds. What a bright&#13;
evening this, the evening of the nineteenth&#13;
century! And the twentieth&#13;
century, which is about to dawn, will,&#13;
in my opinion, bring universal victory&#13;
for Christ and the church, that now is&#13;
marching on with step, double-quick,&#13;
or, if you prefer the figure of the text,&#13;
is being swept on in the mighty gales&#13;
of blessing, imposing and grand and&#13;
majestic and swift like pillars of&#13;
.smoke.&#13;
Oh, come into the church through&#13;
Christ the door—a door more glorious&#13;
than that of the temple of Hercule3,&#13;
which had two pillars, and one was&#13;
gold, and the other emerald! Come in&#13;
today! The world you leave behind is&#13;
a poor world, and it will burn and pass&#13;
off like pillars of smoke. Whether the&#13;
final conflagration will s t a r t in the coal&#13;
mines of Pennsylvania, which, In some&#13;
places, have for many years been burning&#13;
and eating into the heart of the&#13;
mountains, or whether It shall begin&#13;
near the California geysers, or whether&#13;
from out the furnaces of Cotopaxl, and&#13;
Vesuvius, and Stromboli, it shall burst&#13;
forth upon the astonished nations, 1&#13;
make no prophecy; but all geologists&#13;
tell us t h a t we stand on the lid of a&#13;
world the heart of which Is a raging,&#13;
roaring, awful flame, and some day&#13;
God will let the red monsters out of&#13;
their imprisonment, and New York on&#13;
fire in 1835. and Charleston on fire in&#13;
1865, and Chicago on fire in 1871, and&#13;
Boston on fire in 1873, were only like&#13;
one spark from a blacksmith's forge&#13;
as compared with t h a t last universal&#13;
blaze, which will be seen in other&#13;
worlds. But gradually the flames will&#13;
lessen, and the world will become a&#13;
great living coal, and that will take&#13;
on ashen hue, and then our ruined&#13;
planet will begin to smoke, and the&#13;
mountains will smoke, and the valleys&#13;
will smoke, and the islands will smoke,&#13;
and the seas will smoke, and the cities&#13;
will smoke, and the five continents will&#13;
be five pillars of smoke. But the black&#13;
vapors will begin to lessen in height&#13;
and density, and then will become&#13;
hardly visible to those who look upon&#13;
it from the sky galleries, and after a&#13;
while from just one point there will&#13;
curl up a thin, solitary vapor, and&#13;
then even that will vanish, and there&#13;
will be nothing left exSept the charred&#13;
ruins of a burned-out woHW, the corpse&#13;
of a dead star, the ashes A f a n extinguished&#13;
planet, a fallen pillarNafs|lo&lt;fke7&#13;
But that will not interfere with your&#13;
investments if you have taken Christ&#13;
as your Savior. Secure heaven as&#13;
your eternal home, and you can look&#13;
down upon a dismantled, disrupted,&#13;
and demolished earth without any per-&#13;
^ tiirbation.&#13;
i ^ : W i i e n wrapped in fire the realms of&#13;
i j ether glow,&#13;
i And/heaven's last thunders shake the&#13;
earth below,&#13;
hou, undismayed, shalt o'er the ruins&#13;
smile,&#13;
And light thy torch at nature's funeral&#13;
pile."&#13;
CONORBS8IONAL N O T £ G .&#13;
Speaker Hend^rbou on t h e 18th a n -&#13;
nounced the oftairmen of the various&#13;
committees. The Michigan congressman&#13;
were mostly all given good places&#13;
on the committees as is shown by t h e&#13;
following list;&#13;
Corliss—Election of president, etc,,&#13;
chairman; interstate and foreign com--&#13;
merce, patents.&#13;
H. C, Smith— Railway** nnd canals,.&#13;
pensions, accounts, enrolled bills.&#13;
Educa*: "~ " , i , i t l u&#13;
holic liquor traffic.&#13;
Gardner — Education, militia, ulco--&#13;
Th« Oueen as a MotUer.&#13;
The queen, although kind, has been&#13;
a despotic mother and grandmother,&#13;
and has concerned herself, says "M. A.&#13;
P.," more than the average parent with&#13;
the bringing up of her descendants. Besides&#13;
carefully supervising her children's&#13;
education, selecting or approving&#13;
their friends, and providing their&#13;
husbands and wives, she has rigorously&#13;
controlled their pin money, of which&#13;
there never has been any wasting in&#13;
the precincts of old Windsor. Toys&#13;
and gewgaws in the royal nursery were&#13;
limited, but there never was any lack&#13;
of books. Each child had its own miniature&#13;
book case, and was responsible&#13;
for keeping it in order, as well as for&#13;
a periodical report showing just how&#13;
many and what books had been read.&#13;
The report was submitted to the queen&#13;
at t h e end of every month. The children&#13;
frequently preferred to pass the&#13;
time playing, making out their list at&#13;
random, but were invariably caught.&#13;
In this respect Princess Louise is reported&#13;
to have proved the worst delinquent,&#13;
and it. is said t h a t on an average&#13;
her royal highness spent a whole&#13;
day of each month in an empty room,&#13;
as punishment for this offense alone.&#13;
On one 6ccaslon, when a child of 8, she&#13;
reported that her literary food for the&#13;
month had consisted of a few "fairy&#13;
tales.' "The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius"&#13;
and "The Life of Zwingli." The&#13;
queen's suspicions being aroused, she&#13;
questioned her daughter as to who&#13;
these personages were. Unhesitatingly&#13;
came the reply t h a t Marcus Aurelius&#13;
had discovered America and Zwingli&#13;
was a famous German actor!&#13;
Some men lose hats on an election&#13;
r-ad some lose their heads.&#13;
Hamilton—Elections Ntf^J, territories,&#13;
cntilation and acoustics, enrolled,&#13;
bills.&#13;
W. A. Smith—Foreign affairs, Pacific&#13;
railroads, expenditures in state department,&#13;
chairman.&#13;
S. W. Smith—Invalid pensions, D i s -&#13;
trict of Columbia.&#13;
Weeks—Elections No, 3, pensions.&#13;
Fordney—Merchant marine and fish--&#13;
cries, expenditures in treasury department.&#13;
Bishop—Itivers and harbors, private&#13;
land claims.&#13;
t r u m p — R a i l w a y s and canals, m i n e *&#13;
and mining—chairman.&#13;
Mcsicl:—Elections No. 3—chairman,&#13;
war claims.&#13;
Nhelden—Indian affairs, mines a n d&#13;
mining, pensions.&#13;
•Rep. Do Armond, of Missouri, introduced&#13;
in t h e house on t h e 17th a t re solution&#13;
declaring- t h e purpo.se of t h e&#13;
I'uited States in t h e Philippines. I t&#13;
declares t h a t under the constitutioa&#13;
the federal government has no., p o w e r&#13;
to rule over colonial dependencies; t h a t&#13;
the expansion of our commerce c a n n o t&#13;
be depended upon a policy of imperialism&#13;
involving subjugation and annexation&#13;
of Asiatic colonies and t h a t " w e&#13;
are opposed to t h e retention of t h e&#13;
Philippines and t h a t it is our purpose&#13;
to consent to their independence a s&#13;
soon as a stable government shall be&#13;
established by t h e m and toward t h e&#13;
prompt establishment of such a government&#13;
we pledge our friendly assistance.&#13;
"&#13;
The house and senate on the 20th adjourned&#13;
for the holidays, and will convene&#13;
again on J a n . 3, IDLiO.&#13;
Senator F a i r b a n k s on t h e 20th introduced&#13;
a bill g r a n t i n g a pension of 82,-&#13;
000 a year to the widow of Gen. Lawton.&#13;
Kep. Landis. of Indiana, i n t r o -&#13;
duced a similar bill in the house.&#13;
The u r g e n t deficiency appropriation&#13;
bill, the first of the important supply&#13;
bills for the government expenses,&#13;
is practically made up, and the t o t a l&#13;
will a m o u n t to about 851,(MX).000. Of&#13;
this a m o u n t . 815.157.871 is asked for&#13;
the w a r department, and 83,143,740 for&#13;
the navy.&#13;
4U Children Drowned.&#13;
T p w a r d s of 40 school children were&#13;
drowned on the 22d in an ice accident&#13;
at Freiinghem. near the French frontier.&#13;
T h e children of the district had&#13;
l&gt;een given a holiday with permission&#13;
t &gt; play on t h e frozen river Lys. When&#13;
the merriment was a t full height t h e&#13;
ice broke suddenly and the children&#13;
disappeared. A few were rescued half&#13;
deid. but the majority were drowned,&#13;
firty-six bodies have been recovered,&#13;
ft t h e o t h e r s are still missing.&#13;
11 Children Darned to De*th.&#13;
While the school children of St.&#13;
Francis1 parochial school, a t Quincy,&#13;
111., were rehearsing on t h e afternoon&#13;
of the 22d for an e n t e r t a i n m e n t to be&#13;
given shortly, one of their dresses&#13;
caught tire from a gas jet and 10 minutes&#13;
later four of them were burned to&#13;
death, two died an hour later and five&#13;
others died before midnight. Half a&#13;
dozen others were burned more or lesa&#13;
severely. All the dead are between S&gt;&#13;
and 11 years of acre.&#13;
Masked robbers boarded a p a s s e n g e r&#13;
train at Kansas City, Kas., on the I'.ith,&#13;
and w h e n t h e train had proceeded a*&#13;
short distance they began t h e work of&#13;
holding up t h e passengers. They- secured&#13;
five gold wiitehes and a b o u t S10O&#13;
in money and made their escape. No&#13;
shots were exchanged.&#13;
Senator Jones, chairman of t h e D e m -&#13;
ocratic national committee, h a s issued&#13;
a call for a meeting of t h a t committee&#13;
to be held in Washington, on Feb. 22.&#13;
The purpose of the m e e t i n g is to fix a&#13;
time and place for h o l d i n g the Democratic&#13;
national convention n e x t summer.&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
New York— Cattle Sheep Lartb* Ho*s&#13;
Besttrralcs f4 6d@J»95 U 75 «5 8&gt;) M 40&#13;
Lower irrudes.. .8 7&amp;&amp;J 5J 2 50 5 0U 3 30&#13;
Chicago—&#13;
Best erados 5 407¾¾ 80 4 15 5 75 4 IS&#13;
Lower prudes... 4 S0&amp;5 25 ,A &lt;W 4 00 3 B»&#13;
Detroit— L&#13;
Bestjrrades 8 767M 75 4 £&gt; fed 4 10&#13;
Lower grades.. .2 &amp;A&amp;8 75 •• 8, jtt£." JNO * 06-&#13;
B u f f » l o — '' '••*.* " ? - • •&#13;
Besttrrades 4 flftftft (K&gt; --4 m " « M 4 »&#13;
Lowergrades...2 25&amp;3 00 3 75 5 40 ' 8 &amp;)&#13;
Cincinnati— A-,&#13;
Best grades ft 2TV?rS 7\ . 4 2S 5 25 4 IS&#13;
Lower grades... 4 15(5.1 0J 3 65 6 0d 3 8A&#13;
I'lttubur*—&#13;
n&lt;r* grades 5 fiOfMl 2R 4 tlF «40 4" W&#13;
Lower etudes... 4 4U&amp;4 70 8 IW i&gt; '2J i 10&#13;
GRAIN, ETC!.&#13;
Wheat. Corn. Oat*.&#13;
No -2 rod No. 2 mix No. 2 whit©&#13;
Now Tork 7tfj&amp;?iV 4U©4J 20®2»%&#13;
Chtoajto ffX((*0* 8aVfc83'4- 24^24½&#13;
*i&gt;etrblt 7Ua7t)* S3tft&gt;3S&lt;* 27@27&#13;
Toledo Wfttt *3®8&gt;&lt;4 2«$&gt;4&#13;
Clneinomtl 70&amp;7JH SJI&amp;32* 2¾^½¾&#13;
Pltuliartf 73&amp;!2&gt;i SN&amp;SS* £*&amp;»&#13;
ItafNlo ?lft7ltt 3«fta4H '•&amp;&amp;»&#13;
•Detroit—Hay. No. I Timothy, t i l 50 per ton.&#13;
Potato©*, Me per bu. Live Poultry, aprtmr&#13;
ohlckenn. 7^o per lb; fowls, tett; turiteyH, ttu;.&#13;
ducki. Be J£3*x, wtriotly frewb. 19c per dazan*&#13;
Duller, best duirjr, He fit»Lb;«routa^ry, 2tla&#13;
\&#13;
\ , P-&#13;
»^iji_ ..-.id../ ."^ M'-J* ' . J l . '• cJf/*^&#13;
,i!&#13;
tt^^^klm^LMt^^mM ih'''m%\if*Mi'•**-• ' •-•' ••• — u,*»LikJ.&gt;'K-^mXk£*~Mistm-'&#13;
- •&#13;
I3jr M. S. Jameson.&#13;
'•.'Well, U those fellows are coming&#13;
oround to see the old year out they&#13;
had better show up pretty soon,"&#13;
yawned II. Paiker Baxter as he slammed&#13;
down the cover of a ponderous&#13;
and gruesome medical book and turned&#13;
a pair of sleepy eyes to the clock,which&#13;
was complacently ticking away the&#13;
last fifteen minutes of '98. No other&#13;
sounds- were to be heard, save the occasional&#13;
settling of the fire in the&#13;
grate, fcr the snow lay deep and soft&#13;
over the cobble and flagstone outside.&#13;
The old year, after a stormy life, was&#13;
dying calmly and beautifully.&#13;
To our friend BaxLer, one of these&#13;
unimpasiioned, dusty men who never&#13;
"Join in," this ancient ceremony of&#13;
seeing the old year out appealed but&#13;
blue ocean sparkling in the summer&#13;
rifilhlight! More than this, H. Parker&#13;
Saras conscious of a slight odor of salt&#13;
in the air, as of seaweed and wet rocks&#13;
left by the, tide. The distunt boom of&#13;
breakers, soft at Brat, grew louder and&#13;
nearer,' When the girl stepped down&#13;
from the drift log to the sand before&#13;
his eyes, the doctor's smile of incredulity&#13;
suddenly expired. When she looked&#13;
at him and spoke he felt a tremor&#13;
in the very marrow of his bonei, and&#13;
not a tremor wholly of surprise either.&#13;
There he was—on the beach with&#13;
her again; not Baxter of surgical treatises&#13;
and test-tubes, but the summercjad,&#13;
sun-tanned devotee of Granite&#13;
Head, and* the very ardent, though unassuming,&#13;
admirer of Grace Marston.&#13;
Her first words confused his thoughts,&#13;
he felt a ghostlike atmosphere about&#13;
him, but after that the glaring August&#13;
sun warmed him through, the sea&#13;
breeze exhilerated him, he was filled&#13;
with energy and real live happiness.&#13;
"Dear me," she was saying, "to think&#13;
that there is nothing better for you to&#13;
photograph than a summer girl making&#13;
a guy of herself on an -old log!&#13;
There go those Sewall girls from the&#13;
'Pines;' if you hurry you can catch&#13;
heard they are great at it."&#13;
"At posing, I suppose," he answered.&#13;
"No, Miss Marston, I have graduated&#13;
from the snap-'em-whenevor-you-can&#13;
THE&#13;
feebly. He used to say of New Years.l^heni to pose in a group for you. I've&#13;
"an arbitrarily fixed point in time&#13;
which has become the inaugural date&#13;
for good resolutions, to the necessary&#13;
neglect of all other dates for their&#13;
formation," but most of his friends&#13;
thought this simply a speech that he&#13;
was gratilied to make. He was trying&#13;
hard to.pose as a "rising young physician,"&#13;
and was really acting the part&#13;
to himself, as many an ambitious man&#13;
will do.&#13;
But however this may be, as the&#13;
seconds ticked along, H. Parker grew&#13;
more and more drowsy. He settled&#13;
himself back in the chair, stared at the&#13;
fire, and blinked. Then his eyelids&#13;
d r o p p L d .&#13;
"This will never do," says he,&#13;
straightening up with a jerk and&#13;
reaching out to the table for something&#13;
to read or look at, "I must keep awake&#13;
&amp; few minutes longer." Chance put a&#13;
stack of photographs under his hand,&#13;
and though they were stale enough he&#13;
began to look them over again—incidentaliy&#13;
yielding to the comfort of lying&#13;
back in the big chair. Some were&#13;
portraits of. his friends at school and&#13;
•college, some were old faded prints&#13;
t h a t ought to have had romances attached,&#13;
but which were reaily very&#13;
prosaic, even to him. Others bore the&#13;
brand of the amateur's first attempt—&#13;
these to be passed by quickly; a few&#13;
were the products of his own photographic&#13;
skill at Granite Head last summer—&#13;
bathers in the surf, the hotel, a&#13;
•clam bake, etc.—all very fair photographs&#13;
in their way—but hold! here&#13;
, is one that might be studied critically.&#13;
There is no hurry. It is too late now&#13;
for the revellers to come. H. Parker&#13;
shifts to a still more comfortable position&#13;
and the soft lamp light shines&#13;
over his shoulder upon as pretty a little&#13;
picture as you would ask to see.&#13;
It is the picture of a dark-haired girl,&#13;
•dressed in a suit of duck. She is standing&#13;
on a log of driftwood with her&#13;
hands behind her and her handsome,&#13;
happy face turned squarely to the camera.&#13;
In the developing of this picture&#13;
H. Parker had conceded that more&#13;
care was required than in ordinary&#13;
wrork; he had watched its delicate lines&#13;
appear with the enthusiasm of a true&#13;
lover of the chemist's art. With any&#13;
other passion? Possibly, but that was&#13;
past and gone four months ago.&#13;
The young dsctor liked that photograph,&#13;
somehow. He had examined it&#13;
time and again until he knew its every&#13;
detail. It did not grow stale like the&#13;
others. But tonight there seemed to&#13;
be a new light upon it, a new tone in&#13;
the unfocused background of sand and&#13;
sea, an undefinable change of expression&#13;
in those brown eyes looking out&#13;
DOCTOR LIKED THAT PHOTOGRAPH.&#13;
c'a.-s and have entered the art scb.ool-rh^&#13;
nc&lt;? I have cluscn you fjr tb&gt;; picture."&#13;
"Ha-ha-ka! I appreciate that,'&#13;
laughed the girl as they be^an to saunter&#13;
down toward the cliffs, "but have&#13;
you considered, Mr. Baxter, the probability&#13;
cf my breaking the plate?"&#13;
"What! An angler, too? I shall&#13;
not humor the weakness in you, still,&#13;
if you are a summer girl, as your own&#13;
confession would indicate "&#13;
"Pardon me, Mr. Baxter, "you know&#13;
I like the assertion better when you let&#13;
me make it."&#13;
"Of course. Observe,that I advance&#13;
no statements on the. subject myself. I&#13;
was merely going to say that if you are&#13;
a summer girl of the approved, newspaper-&#13;
joke sort, your likeness upon&#13;
the plate could not fail to produce the&#13;
effect that it has&#13;
hearts, to wit—complete fraciure." Yg strong for&#13;
''Why, I am surprised at you," said [V fray.&#13;
Grace, a faint blush hardly perceptible j ^ a ^ ; Ring!&#13;
under the healthy tan which she had&#13;
found no difficulty in acquiring at&#13;
Granite Head.&#13;
H. Parker studied her face in its&#13;
mock severity and watched the dainty&#13;
little hand go up to push back some&#13;
annoying hair that blew across her&#13;
am very clever at showing fallacies in&#13;
reasoning."&#13;
"Well, unless because I live a uselei's&#13;
life. Just look at my diary for a&#13;
winter. Just look it through and see&#13;
If you find anything accomplished,&#13;
anything improving or worthy. Dances&#13;
—calls—teas, over and over again. Do&#13;
you call that sort of thing living? The&#13;
people I meet diiy by day there; do I&#13;
know them, are they friends, do they&#13;
know me.? No, lt'a all vanity—artificial—&#13;
a waste of time."&#13;
Grace was serious enpugh now and&#13;
stared out to sea with a- frown upon&#13;
her brows a* dark as any that ever&#13;
hovered ther&amp;.&#13;
A pause and her companion spoke.&#13;
"It may be vanity for some, but not&#13;
for you, Mjss Marston. Society furnishes&#13;
a field for superficial character&#13;
to breed and thrive in, but yours U&#13;
good and strong and sincere."&#13;
"I have begun to forget and disregard&#13;
what it naturally is. I am tired&#13;
of that life. I love the woods and&#13;
the sea—the open air and the sense&#13;
of freedom; freedom to go where I&#13;
please, be as I want to be, choose companions&#13;
that I like."&#13;
"Then the view cf cliffs and breakers&#13;
is pleasanter than the brilliant ballroom&#13;
with its music and flowers? That&#13;
cottage half buried in the pines seems&#13;
a truer home than many a brown stone&#13;
front on the avenue?"&#13;
"Ah, a thousand times," answered&#13;
Grace with the frown dying out of her&#13;
face. His words were slow and earnest,&#13;
but she seemed not to connect&#13;
them with the speaker. They put her&#13;
into a brown study and she fell to examining&#13;
a handful of sand for garnets.&#13;
Watching the search, he continued&#13;
ever, more quietly than before.&#13;
"Would there be happiness for you&#13;
in a little home such as that cottage,&#13;
far from town, with all its parties and&#13;
things, where you would be with real&#13;
people, where you would be loved and&#13;
served by real friends?"&#13;
Closer scrutiny of the sand.&#13;
"Would you give up that luxurious&#13;
life that you have followed for this,&#13;
and for a fellow whose every energy&#13;
would be turned to your happinesssuch&#13;
a fellow, in fact, as I?"&#13;
The sand slipped away, and the garnets&#13;
were lost.&#13;
"Oh, Grace, Grace, would you—could&#13;
y o u - — ? "&#13;
Dine, dong—dins,.dong—ding, dong;&#13;
twelve o'clock.&#13;
II. Pr.rksr Baxter awoke with a great&#13;
str.rt arid looked around astonished. He&#13;
had seen the New Year come in Au-&#13;
T H E NEW BABY.&#13;
Ring! Ring! Ring!&#13;
Out on the New Years air,&#13;
With clash and clang the New Year';&#13;
song;&#13;
The birth of right, the death or wrong;&#13;
All eighteen, nine and ninety s t r o n g&#13;
RingL Ring! R n g !&#13;
Ring! Ring! Rin'= '!&#13;
The message everywhere.&#13;
The baby year that's born to-day&#13;
To help the century away&#13;
upon—er— m e n ' a ^ W i l l n e v e r l e t injustice stay;&#13;
though girt fo«&#13;
Ring!&#13;
Rin;&#13;
now apeyes.&#13;
A great wave of admiration for&#13;
.STANDING ON A LOG OF DRIFTWOOD.&#13;
,-of the albumen paper. Our imaginatioa&#13;
is subject to suoh unhealthy flutters&#13;
as this, yet most interesting grew&#13;
•that picture, and H. Parker's eyes and&#13;
heart were won, if his reason sanctioned&#13;
not.&#13;
Preposterous and incredible! The&#13;
dock skirt began to move slightly, as&#13;
if stirred by a breeze from the sea, and&#13;
the margins of the picture drew farther&#13;
and farther apart, until on one&#13;
•ide a row of bath houses came into&#13;
-view, while on the other the broad.&#13;
that noble girl rose up in his breast—&#13;
admiration very unlike that with&#13;
which he had heard his brilliant classmates&#13;
proclaim their knowledge. His&#13;
heart told him, "I love her." Why not&#13;
let his heart be heard?&#13;
They strolled along together to the&#13;
music of the sea. H. Parker felt that&#13;
there was melody even in the screaming&#13;
of the gulls overhead. He wondered&#13;
why it had never seemed so before.&#13;
"Let us sit up there under the big&#13;
rock," suggested Grace, pointing to the&#13;
nearest of the cliffs which leaned forward&#13;
over the sand and made a cosy&#13;
shelter from the sun. Here the sand&#13;
was cool, the glare softened and the&#13;
view of cheap cottages and decrepit&#13;
bath houses cut off, while the whole&#13;
stretch of beach on the right lay before&#13;
them like a broad white highway.&#13;
Grace sat with her back against the&#13;
rock, and at her side reclined the doctor,&#13;
full length upon the sand.&#13;
"Are you ever serious, Miss Mars-&#13;
^ton?" quoth he with but a 'trace of&#13;
that quality in his own tone.&#13;
"Sometimes."&#13;
"On what rare occasions woald it he&#13;
possible for one to find you in that&#13;
mood?" &lt;&#13;
'Oh, well, I'm not naturally so, you&#13;
know, but once in a while when something&#13;
goes wrong to induce it I get&#13;
very serious—even blue—and as I always&#13;
end by finding out what a silly,&#13;
useless creature I am, there is very little&#13;
enjoyment in being serious. Please&#13;
let's not be serious, Mr. Barter."&#13;
"Never more lig«ht-minded in ray&#13;
life. Miss Marston—never. But tell me&#13;
how you deduct your conclusion! which&#13;
proves you a silly, useless creature. I&#13;
Ring! Ring!&#13;
Of hope's best promise sing.&#13;
May "ninety-nine," which&#13;
pears,&#13;
The last before one hundred years,&#13;
Not leave a record blurred with tears.&#13;
Ring! Ring! Ring;!&#13;
Love T h e y Cannot Tell.&#13;
"Can a man and woman love each&#13;
other when their speech is different&#13;
and they can't exchange a word?" said&#13;
a lounger in the smoking room of one&#13;
of the hotels the other night. "Loti&#13;
says they can. Most of his bocks are&#13;
about the charming and poetical love&#13;
that existed for a time between himcelf&#13;
and a Japanese, a South Sea&#13;
islander, a Turkish girl, a Montenegrin,&#13;
Tartar, or a Chinese lady. Loti&#13;
will never forget these loves, he says&#13;
in the books; but the fact that he&#13;
abandoned them makes him rather a&#13;
poor pleader. Go out in Dakota,&#13;
though, into the wheat section of the&#13;
northwest, if you want to know&#13;
whether a man and a woman of alien&#13;
speech can be lovers. Many of the&#13;
wives there are Swedes, and they and&#13;
their American husbands often can't&#13;
undestand a word the other says.&#13;
Yet they seem contented, happy&#13;
and more loving than the aver- .&#13;
age couple. Women in the wheat I&#13;
section are the scarcest thing&#13;
there is, you know; no women go .&#13;
there but Swedish girls, imigrants I&#13;
looking for places in kitchens. These&#13;
girls are married in a short time after&#13;
their arrival by the young farmers of&#13;
the neighborhood. The husbandB are !&#13;
often educated fellowp, who at home&#13;
would have counted on wedding the&#13;
daughters of lawyers, physicians or&#13;
clergymen. But out there, where&#13;
women are so scarce, they are less par- :&#13;
ticular. and they marry and are happy."—&#13;
Philadelphia Record.&#13;
DEWEY'S FLAG SHIP OLYMPIA-CAPTAIN GR1DLEY, COMMANDER.&#13;
Mrs. Gridley, mother of Captain QvU\Xey%who was in command of&#13;
Dewey's flag ship, at Hie destruction of the Spanish fleet at Manila, say»&#13;
of our remedy, Peruna:&#13;
"At the solicitation of a friend I used Peruna, and can truthfully&#13;
say it is a grand tonic a^d is a tuoman's friend- and should be used in&#13;
every liousehold. After using it for,, a sitort period I feel like a new&#13;
person." Ann E. Gr'ulleu.&#13;
N e a r l y a l l o u r i l l s a r e d u e t o c a t a r r h . W e a r e l i a b l e t o h a v e c a t a r r h of t h e&#13;
h e a d , c a t a r r h of t h e t h r o a t , c a t a r r h of t h e l u n g s , s t o m a c h , k i d n e y s , b l a d d e r&#13;
a n d p e l v i c o r g a n s . P e r u n a c u r e s c a t a r r h w h e r e v e r l o c a t e d . A d d r e s s Dr.&#13;
I l a r t m a n , C o l u m b u s , Ohio, for f r e e b o o k .&#13;
It takes four weeks' hard labor to prepare for&#13;
a two-vreeks' summer vacation.&#13;
Politicians are sometimes called dark horses&#13;
because of their shady record*&#13;
T E N W E E K S F O B 1 0 CENTS.&#13;
That ltlk family pa; er. The Illustrated Meekly, o1&#13;
Denver, Colo, (founded 1830) will be eent ten week*&#13;
on trial for 10c; clubs of 0.50c; 12 forll. Special oiler&#13;
solely to Introduce It. Latest mining new* and ltlustrationn&#13;
of scenery, true urorlesof love and adventure.&#13;
Address a* above and mention tola paper; iumt:i&#13;
taken.&#13;
DOVYGU&#13;
Poetry is what a man writes about gardens&#13;
without mentioning the weeds.&#13;
TO C U R E A COLD I N ONK D 4 Y ,&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All&#13;
druggists refund the money if it falls to cure.&#13;
25c. E. \V. Grove's signature on each bos.&#13;
Martyrdtm consists in being the only one in&#13;
the family wno likes onions.&#13;
FITS F»rmanentlyCut«.u. T»ofits or nervouaneasatvot&#13;
first day'* use of I&gt;r Kline's Great Nerve Restorer.&#13;
Bend for P R E B $ 2 . 0 0 trial bottle and treatise.&#13;
Da, a. H. KLLNK. Ltd..931 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa.&#13;
The only thing a man can rind around a house&#13;
without assistance is fault.&#13;
\&#13;
Cored A f t e r R e p e a t e d Failures W i t h O t h e r s&#13;
I win inform addicted to Morphine. Laudanum,&#13;
Opium, Cocaine, of never-falling, taarmle&amp;e, homecare.&#13;
Mrs. M. H. Baldwin. Box 1212, Chicago, 1)1.&#13;
BALSAM&#13;
It Cures Cold*, Cought. Sore Throat, Croup. Influenza.&#13;
Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma.&#13;
A certain cure (or Consumption in first stages,&#13;
and a sure ret id in (.chanced stages. Use at once.&#13;
You will see the excellent eflect after takina the&#13;
first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Lars*&#13;
bottles 25 cents anr&gt; 'A cnta.&#13;
PATENTS^ BTAitMOinFrt Washington D.C. A*&#13;
to pafceirtubility lr«ir. &gt;o «ttomey*»&#13;
luttil patent Uallu wad. Circular free.&#13;
The prayers published in book torm are bound&#13;
to be repeated.&#13;
For Lung and chest diseases. Piso's Cure is&#13;
the best medicine we have used.^Mrs. J. L.&#13;
Northcott, Windsor, Ont., Canada.&#13;
The closer we get to our good deeds the smaller&#13;
they seem.&#13;
Brown's Teething Cordial keeps babies&#13;
healthy, and makes mothers happy.&#13;
True love builds the morning fires all the year&#13;
round.&#13;
Go to your grocer to-day&#13;
and get a 15c. package of&#13;
It takes the place of coffee&#13;
at J the cost&#13;
Made from pure grains it&#13;
is nourishing and healthful.&#13;
Inttot that roar craesr gives fen GfcAIS-O.&#13;
Aooept no imitation.&#13;
n D A D Q V N E W DSCOVERY. gives&#13;
•V/kTC^MFkr ^a* 1 quick re lief and cures worst&#13;
caees. Book of teHtlmenlaa find 10 DAYS' treatment&#13;
FK1X. DB. B. U. iiESKl*S BOSS, Baa E, AUaaU, Qa,&#13;
ARTE RS INK&#13;
t Is food for thought.&#13;
| ) £ M A I f | l | A Get your Pension&#13;
• E H W I U I I W DOUBLE QUICK&#13;
Write CAPT. O'PARRBLL, Pension Agent,&#13;
1425 New York Avenue. WASHINGTON. D . C&#13;
CHEAP FARMS&#13;
DO YDt) W M T I DONE? ( A i l A f l f l A f t R F ^ Improved and unimproved&#13;
l U V f U U U n u n c a fanu'.as lands t&gt; t&gt;e divided&#13;
and s. Id rn long time and «037 pav mriit:,. a little&#13;
each year. Come agdaee us or irrUa, THE TBV&amp;UC,&#13;
jIOSS STATE H . v ^, ramiac center, Mich., i&gt;r&#13;
The Triiaaa.i Mot* UUle.Cros«ell. Sanilac Co.,Mick.&#13;
MILLIONS&#13;
of acres of choice agricultural&#13;
LANDS n o *&#13;
opened for settlement&#13;
in Western Canadi.&#13;
Here is irrown ti.e celebrated&#13;
NO. 1 HARD&#13;
WHEAT, whicn brings the hi ,'hest price in the&#13;
markets of the world; thousands of cattle are&#13;
fattened for market w thout bein? fe &gt; grain,&#13;
and without a day's shelter. Send fcr information&#13;
and secure a free home in Western Canada.&#13;
Write the Superintendent of Immigration. Ottawa,&#13;
or address the undersigned, who will mail&#13;
you atlases, pamphlets, etc.. free of cost. M.&#13;
V. Mclunes. No. 1 Merrill Block, Detroit. Mich.;&#13;
James Gr eve. Mt. Pleasant, Mich., or D. L.&#13;
Caven. Bad Axe. Mich. W.N.U.—DE5TR OI T—NO. 5 2 - 1 8 9 9&#13;
"[HtpRE^Utl Htlfcf^X I ••• I f « «•:&#13;
G/PA/SS2fCOAL&#13;
OF THE WORLD&#13;
• LISTS F-ftll&#13;
A D D R E S S _&#13;
CHICAGO SCALE* C9&#13;
0mOAt«0(K"SiSDE&#13;
WORLDS FAJRXHICAGOJ803&#13;
ALSO OMAHA EXPOSITION 1896&#13;
AWARDED DIPLOMA SGOLD MECAL.&#13;
v^oreaav&#13;
(?MfC400./lL&#13;
To succeed one xuust depend&#13;
others and clepend on one o sell on&#13;
The Hague.—The Japanese envoy,&#13;
on behalf of the mikado, has signed&#13;
all the conventions of the international&#13;
peace conference,&#13;
Paris.—It is rumored here that the&#13;
Bank of Russia has advanced the&#13;
Bank of England £8,000,000.&#13;
San Jose, Cal.—San Jose held a two&#13;
days' celebration of the golden jubilee&#13;
of the founding of California's government.&#13;
Washington.—The government of&#13;
the United States has adopted "Puerto&#13;
Rico" as the official spelling of the&#13;
name of that islandv&#13;
Dubuque. Iowa.—rFLre destroyed the&#13;
carshop of the Chicago, Milwaukee &amp;&#13;
St Paul railroad. The loss will be between&#13;
$75,000 and $100,000.&#13;
Chattanooga, Tenn.—The trial of&#13;
Julia Morrison, who killed Frank Leyden,&#13;
stage manager of a theater, ia set&#13;
tor rUa! her on Jan. 4, 1800. j&#13;
made here that P. A. B. Widener and&#13;
William U Elkins of this city and&#13;
William C. Whitney of New York have&#13;
secured the controlling interest in the&#13;
stock of the famous Academy of Music&#13;
at Broad and Locust streets, and will&#13;
erect a new opera house on the site of&#13;
the present building.&#13;
Toronto, Ont—Lucius R. O'Brien,&#13;
the landscape artist, is dead, aged 67&#13;
years. He painted many celebrated&#13;
pictures, some of which were given a&#13;
place in Windsor castle and at Oabourne.&#13;
Bolivar, Pa.—An explosion blew up&#13;
the nitro-glycerin magazine of the&#13;
Pennsylvania Torpedo company. The&#13;
shock was felt at a distance of many&#13;
miles. Nobody was killed.&#13;
Boston, Mass.—lhe lumber yards of&#13;
Andrew F. Leatherbee and Blaker *&#13;
Shepard were damaged $60,000 by Are.&#13;
W e a n n o u n c e n e x t week t h e&#13;
w i n n e r in our c o r r e s p o n d e n t s contest.&#13;
{ E d .&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Xu. B . E o e p c k e h a s been q u i t e&#13;
s i c k ' t h e past week.&#13;
Geo. BJnj is h o m e from G r a n d&#13;
R a p i d s on a t e n day visit.&#13;
- M a t e B a r t o n visited friends in&#13;
B o w e l l F r i d a y a n d S a t u r d a y .&#13;
J o h n WatFon of Chelsea visited&#13;
his b r o t h e r A. C. last S a t u r d a y .&#13;
F r a n k Copfan and family of So.&#13;
L y o n s p e n t C h r i s t m a s a t W. H .&#13;
Placeways.&#13;
Mtss M a r y Vanfleet is s p e n d i n g&#13;
h e r X m a s i n D e t r o i t .&#13;
Mrs. E l l a O. Rollison I n s b e e n&#13;
E d d Jofrlin ircin n e a r Howell G r o v e and M i s s K h t e Brown of&#13;
visited Ins p a r e n t s h e r e S a t u r d a y . C h i c a g o a r e a t t h e bedside of t h e i r&#13;
Miss A d d i e B i r k h a r t of Howell father,&#13;
is s] e n d i n g t h e w e t k at \Y. Sales.&#13;
Mrs. H e n r y H i c k s of J a c k s o n s p e n d i n g a few d a y s with h e r pars&#13;
p e n t C h r i s t m a s with relatives in cuts Mr. a n d Mrs. J a c o b Kice.&#13;
E a s t P u t n a m .&#13;
Mrs. J . B . Hall a n d family e n -&#13;
tertained a c o m p a n y of relatives&#13;
C h r i s t m a s day.&#13;
T h e B r o w n family had t h e i r&#13;
C h i i s t n m s g a t h e r i n g a t M.&#13;
T w i t c h e l l ' s in H a m b u r g .&#13;
T h e C h r i s t i n a r festivities in&#13;
t h i s vicinity were saddened by t h e&#13;
severe illness of G. W. Brown.&#13;
M r s D . Al. B o o g e m a n of Oak&#13;
STII.L MOKE LOCAL.&#13;
J e a n P y p e r of Chelsea spent&#13;
C h r i s t m a s u n d e r t h e p a i e n t a l roof.&#13;
I U &lt; ( i j 1s of i h e ] fli) (tit fecial&#13;
in t h e hall last W e d n e s d a y w e r e&#13;
14.50.&#13;
pETT'-YSVILUfc&#13;
N o school t h i s week.&#13;
Vacation t h i s week in t h e C o r d -&#13;
ley District.&#13;
Miss E l l a M e l v i n was home&#13;
T h e P u t n a m a u d H a m b u r g&#13;
F a r m e r s club will meet a t t h e&#13;
h o m e of E d d McCluskey S a t u r -&#13;
day Dec. 30, »09.&#13;
P r o g r a m :&#13;
Sinking by the club&#13;
Kfcitutioii Claytoi; PlHcoway&#13;
Duet Mr. and Mrn. II. F. Kice&#13;
Paper Mrs. John Fohey&#13;
Instrumental music Maud Culy&#13;
Heading&#13;
Solo&#13;
Paper&#13;
Inst. Music&#13;
I'II per&#13;
Solo&#13;
Reading&#13;
Song&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
G&#13;
Ar&#13;
. P. Lamburtson&#13;
Iva Pliiceway&#13;
Clias. ('ampbell&#13;
thur SolioenhaU&#13;
Addie Kice&#13;
Grace Nash&#13;
Maud Culy J&#13;
Albert Mills&#13;
E l m e r B a r t o n h a s r e l u m e d t o o v e r S u n d a y .&#13;
L u t h e r Clare Co. w h e r e h i s wife's M a u d Culy i s visiting h e r a u n t&#13;
p a r . n t s live. j a t G r a s s L a k e .&#13;
A. C. W a t s o n a t t e n d e d t h e R e - ! Miss F a n n i e Teeple is h o m e&#13;
publican rally m e e t i n g in Howell from Albion for the holidays.&#13;
last "Wednesday. I C h a r l e s M e i c e i is lirnie from&#13;
Mrs. Molly C h r i s t o p h e r from A n n A r b o r for t h e holidays.&#13;
L a n s i n g is s p e n d i n g a few d a y s a t M eting of t h e F a r m e r s club a t&#13;
t h i s place and G r e g o r y . E d d McC'luskeys S a t u r d a y next.&#13;
Rev. William's t w o children Mr. F d d B u n i n g s t a l l of Clare&#13;
from A n n A r b o r a r e s p e n d i n g t h e Co. is t h e guest of h i s d a u g h t e r&#13;
week with J a n e t W e b b . j M r s . A r t Flintoff.&#13;
Airs. I ucy T tittle of D e t r o i t Miss E l l a J ' e n e r who h a s been&#13;
s p e n t t h e first of t h e week with visiting in Toledo for the past few&#13;
h e r sister A n n a G i l b e r t . weeks r e t i m e d Monday.&#13;
j J&#13;
T h e next m e e t i n g of t h e 011a-: - M r s A n n a B o h r g r a s s a n d&#13;
p e d r i d a ( Jnb will b e at Z. A. children a r e s p e n d i n g t h e week&#13;
B a r t s u f i s S a t u r d a y eve. J a n . 6. r w i t h relatives i n Webberville.&#13;
Mips J e n n i e a n d E m m a R i c h - Misses Tre^sa Melvin a n d I v a&#13;
m o n d attend* d t h e funeral of their Piaceway a t t e n d e d t h e T e a c h e r s&#13;
u n c l e J o h n Rieves iu L a n s i n g B»-ading ( i i c l e a t B r i g h t o n last&#13;
M o n d a y . S a t u i d a y .&#13;
T h e P r o g r a m and a t t e n d e n c e of Miss E t t a S h e h a n who has been&#13;
the Clirislmas tree last S a t u i d a y uiide; t h e doctors care for t h e&#13;
n i g h t w a s f-mall b a r e l y m e e t i n g past two ^ e t k s has «o far recoverhalf&#13;
of t h e expenses. cd that t-he ONJ &lt;cts to lesun e h e r&#13;
Mrs. J a m e s B a r t o n and children stud it-s at t h e Ypislmiti B u s i n e s s 1&#13;
W a r r e n a n d Avis s p e n t t h e last of College after t h e holidays,&#13;
last week a n d t h e first of this,&#13;
Pop Oorut&#13;
If Santa Clai.. u;.- &gt; -rue the sr:ue&#13;
as grandpa." said a wee girl the o;!ior&#13;
day. "I link h 'd be 'nald to eeme&#13;
down the chin ney over a not lire tor&#13;
feur his corns would pop."&#13;
Fino wheeling these days.&#13;
We wish von all a Happy New&#13;
Year.&#13;
l\at« O'Connor ;tnd Ann Fitzsimmons&#13;
sp»nt Xtna^ with their parents&#13;
in Howell.&#13;
A. J. Wilhelm and wife ate Christmas&#13;
dinner with L. Hicks, and family&#13;
at Howell.&#13;
Those who have not paid for their&#13;
lecture course tickets ;• re requested to&#13;
do so oy Jan 1.&#13;
W. W. Barnard, wife and Miss Nelli&#13;
Bennett, spent Christmas with relatives&#13;
in Howell.&#13;
Pl«a*e excuse errors this week as&#13;
we were out celebrating Xmas and&#13;
had to hurry our work.&#13;
Several have presented us with a&#13;
year in advance on their' subscription.&#13;
Thanks. Let others do the same.&#13;
M. E Fohey and family spent their&#13;
Xmas here. Mike carries his riffht&#13;
hand in a slinj* caused by trying to&#13;
keep the bumpers of two cars apart.&#13;
He will not lose onv tintfures.&#13;
Frank Wright and wife of Jackson&#13;
were quests of their parents here over&#13;
Christinas. 4W- *&#13;
Tbos. Clinton and wife spent Xmas&#13;
with their daojfhter, Mrs. W. B .&#13;
Watts, of Jackson.&#13;
Remember Saturday evening at the&#13;
Opera bouse Out of the Shadow; or&#13;
the Ca^vi^'s Revenue.&#13;
'We^i. 8wl»toe and family of Webster&#13;
were Quests of Frank Johnson and&#13;
family of this place, Saturday and&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. A. Daley and daughter, Mabelle,&#13;
of Iosco, visited at A. Wilhelm's&#13;
over Sunday and Desde Daley returned&#13;
with them to spend her vacation.&#13;
Matt Brady who has been very low&#13;
with typhoid fever fever tor several&#13;
months past is slowly improving and&#13;
his many friends wish him a speed/&#13;
recovoty.&#13;
Henry Thompson of Oklahoma is&#13;
the flfuest ot his brother E. L.:/:THx&gt;mpson&#13;
of this place. Mr. Thompsons was&#13;
a resident here over thirty years atro&#13;
and has not visited the vicinity for 32&#13;
y^ars&#13;
'Mii-lr M)IT.V l ' l i ^ h t .&#13;
Psyche—Tins i^ Christmas time&#13;
amoi'iK the inortals.&#13;
Ci'i'-d Yes; 1 with we had a pair&#13;
of a ocK'-ngd.&#13;
&lt; li»'«|» I ' x v s i ' i i t i h&#13;
Perd'ta—Willi as". -;uy admirers as&#13;
yuu have, it n;i;s; n.;\v been . r.uuer&#13;
t'&gt;pui&gt;ive Christmas Tor you.&#13;
I'ene.ope•- Ui&lt;. i:o: at ail. 1 me^Piy&#13;
gav!&gt; them tauh more or less encourage&#13;
111 tilt.&#13;
CIirNtintis D i n n e r in s l c h t lint—&#13;
A Short Story.&#13;
Our Story in last week's Dispatch gave&#13;
such satisfaction that we concluded&#13;
to republish it. So on&#13;
Friday and Saturday, Dcc- 29 and 3 0&#13;
I will sell&#13;
"Now. eis. T eot 'im hypnotise! &lt;"&#13;
off 'is luVd. quick. Ocllv! I "kin rl"-'...&#13;
smell 'um breff a-coo'dn'."&#13;
Little Rasi-etus (in background) —&#13;
speaks fer de drumstick.&#13;
Only fiat a V.&#13;
Van Ishe—;&gt;iu &gt;uu hang up your&#13;
stocking?&#13;
Ten Broke—No. ray dress euit—ami&#13;
I only got $5 on it.&#13;
12 bars Jackson Soap&#13;
20 lb Granulated bugar for&#13;
Beet Kice&#13;
Royal Tiger Salmon&#13;
20c Coffee at&#13;
25c Coffee at&#13;
30c Coffee&#13;
lit) Chocolate Candy&#13;
1 It) Candy Free with every tt&gt;o f Tea&#13;
25c&#13;
$1.00&#13;
5c&#13;
luc&#13;
15c&#13;
19c&#13;
23c&#13;
15c&#13;
Greatly reduced prices in Gloves, Mittens, and Caps.&#13;
All S a l e s at t h e s e p r i c e s , Cash.&#13;
WT'E. MURPHY.&#13;
v i t l i h e r uncle J u m e s A t q u i t h a t&#13;
A h r u i l j i s Rlfictn.b C o .&#13;
rJ b e C. E . isociety of t h i s place&#13;
will give a Llntqut-rade Oyeler&#13;
S u p p e r in t h e P r e s b y t e r i a n hall&#13;
Monday eve J a n . 1, all w h o c a n&#13;
a r e requested to come masked.&#13;
At the election of officers of t h e&#13;
/&gt;NCERi-CN.&#13;
. M i ^ ^iniR ]• )a&lt;'k of P e r r y is&#13;
visiting at G. W. Black's.&#13;
Miss L e t t i e W y l i e r e l n r n e d&#13;
h o m e F r i d a y from Commerce.&#13;
Mr. Carl B o l l i n g e r of G r e g o r y&#13;
spent S u n d a y w.ith friends here.&#13;
T lie l:ullis famlies held t h e i r&#13;
vikv^yc(&#13;
Have You TO Busy Bee ffive Friends&#13;
Heard&#13;
is&#13;
S u n d a y school last S u n d a y , t h e x , l l « * ftt ^ - ^ ' a s s o n s of Plainfield.&#13;
following were elected: Supt., N . D. Lhirkee of t h e Y p s i l a n t i&#13;
W i r t B a r n u m ; Asst. S u p t , F r a n k N o r m a l is s[&gt;ending t h e holidays&#13;
B i r u i e ; Secy., M a b e l Harlsuff: at IK me.&#13;
T r e a s . , E m m a B i c h m o n d ; L i b . , E u g e n e S m i t h a n d family s p e n t&#13;
F r a n k B a r n u m ; O r g a n i s t , F a n n i e C h r i s t m a s a t A . J o h n s o n ' s of&#13;
L a v e r o c k C h o r i s t e r Alex P y p e r . N o r t h L a k e .&#13;
S a m ' l P i a c e w a y and family&#13;
spent X m a s at TV. H . Placeway's&#13;
of E a s t T u l n a m .&#13;
F. G. B a n d a l l of Howell s p e n t&#13;
t h e fore p a r t of t h e week with&#13;
! A i u U r s o n friends.&#13;
j JMif-s M i n n i e IIoff of L a n s i n g i s&#13;
s p e n d i n g the^ h o l i d a y s wi h h e r&#13;
p a r e n t s at this place.&#13;
, Miss I v a H a l s t e a d of P i n c k n e y&#13;
1 s p e n t tl e fore ] a r t of t h e week&#13;
w i t h Miss F d i i h Wood.&#13;
^1 r. a n d M r s . N . M. Coleman&#13;
a n d d a u g h t e r N e t t i e of L a n s i n g&#13;
s p e n t X m a s at Chas. HofFs.&#13;
H o n . C. M. W o o d a t t e n d e d t h e&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
E d d JVJerrilltw of D e t r o i t&#13;
h o m e for H o l i d a y s .&#13;
S t e w e r t Griswold i s h o m e from&#13;
D e t u i t i c r P ( lidfjK&#13;
Miss Nella Cole is h o m e from&#13;
Owosso for H o l i d a y s .&#13;
J u d Cox and family of St. J p h n s&#13;
a r e t h e g u e s t s of F . K i r k for a&#13;
few weeks.&#13;
Mihs Bessie Cornell a n d Miss&#13;
E m m a S a n b o r n of L i n d e n went t o&#13;
E l s i e to, visit relatives t h e last of&#13;
t h i s week.&#13;
M o r r i s A n d r e w s a n d wife of&#13;
O w o s s o and Cristal Cole a n d s i s -&#13;
t e r o t D u r a n d a r e t h e gu&lt; sts of R e p u b l i c a n C l u b a t Howell last&#13;
Y. T . Cole for C h r i s l m a s .&#13;
M r s . G( dfrey a n d children of&#13;
B a n c r o f t a n d Mrs. B e l l a H a r v e y&#13;
of Olivet a r e i h e g u e s t s of t h e i r&#13;
a u n t M r s . Geo. Cornell t h i s week.&#13;
week a n d r e p o r t s a good time.&#13;
Mr. a n d Airs. J a s . M a r b l e a n d&#13;
M r . a n d M r s . K i r k Van W i n k l e&#13;
a t e C h r i s t m a s d i n n e r a t Willis&#13;
S m i t h ' s of Mark»n.&#13;
LAV&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG.&#13;
T h e exercises b e ld a t t h e N o r t h&#13;
M i s s M y r t a H a l l i s borne fiom H a m b u r g c h u r c h S a t u r d a y e v e n .&#13;
W i l l i a m s t o n t h i s week. I i n g were a success. M u c h credit&#13;
Mr. J O B Lowell of S o . B e n d ig d u e Miss G r a c e Naeh, ( w h o so&#13;
l a d ift v i s i t i n g a t Geo. H i c k s . j tirelessly p r a c t i s e d t h e c h i l d r e n )&#13;
£L W . L a k e a n d family e n t e r - B e r t S t e w e r t a s S a n t a C l a u s e&#13;
t s i o e d • l a r g e c o m p a n y a t d i n n e r * n d t h e c h i l d r e n for d o i n g t h e i r&#13;
fi^tatday. p a r t *o well.&#13;
You may have heard&#13;
about SCOTT'S EMULSION&#13;
and have a vague notion&#13;
that it is cod-liver oil with&#13;
its bad taste and smell and&#13;
all its other repulsive features.&#13;
It is cod-liver oil, the&#13;
purest and the best in the&#13;
world, but made so palatable&#13;
that almost everybody&#13;
can take it Nearly all&#13;
children like it and ask for&#13;
more.&#13;
SCOTT'S&#13;
EMULSION&#13;
looks like cream; it nourishes&#13;
the wasted body of&#13;
the baby, child or adult&#13;
better than cream or any&#13;
other food in existence, ft&#13;
a bears about the same rela-&#13;
$ tion to other emulsions that&#13;
% cream does to milk. If you&#13;
have had any experience&#13;
with other so-called "just as&#13;
good" preparations, you&#13;
will find that this is a fact&#13;
The hypophoiphitei that are&#13;
combined with the cod-liver oil&#13;
jive additional vakie to it became&#13;
they tone up the nervous system&#13;
and impart strength to the whole&#13;
body.&#13;
Soc. and i t .CO, «H dnittfeta.&#13;
Si:oT T' &amp; BOWNB, Chemteu. N«w.York.&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL. DETROIT&#13;
A * C * / C A * AMO MUmOPMAM PUUt.&#13;
•# t o •» mo st.oe ro m*.oo t&#13;
um TO OATM&#13;
tX?&#13;
All Over Southern Michigan, We Wish&#13;
You a Happy New Year,&#13;
and invite you to get ready for&#13;
the G r e a t R e d M a r k&#13;
le which commences&#13;
TUESDAY, JAN. I.&#13;
We will do you good.&#13;
p . S — W e wish t o&#13;
t h a n k y o n for t h e&#13;
largist holiday t r a d e&#13;
in o u r history.&#13;
Yours respectfully,&#13;
L. H. FIELD.&#13;
Jtokm, Mkfc&lt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Note</name>
          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36680">
              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6397">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch December 28, 1899</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6398">
                <text>December 28, 1899 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6399">
                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6400">
                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6401">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6402">
                <text>1899-12-28</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6403">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="15">
        <name>newspaper</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="16">
        <name>pinckney dispatch</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="925" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="853">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/47d460515a6870688cd4f71e4aaee9c6.pdf</src>
        <authentication>c13963db2bdef82887a0d3e71bd66d79</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="9">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1621">
                  <text>Newspaper</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1630">
                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="57">
          <name>Hidden Search Text</name>
          <description>Enter Search Text that is always hidden except to edit.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32192">
              <text>VOL. XVIII. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MIQH., THURSDAY, JAN. 1,1900. No.Liio'-:&#13;
*•* :&gt;r,&#13;
I L O C A L N E W S .&#13;
• « • •&#13;
•v;&#13;
.Vol. X V i a , No 1&#13;
The first issue of 1900.&#13;
No, this j s n o t a new century.&#13;
This is the closing year ot the nine&#13;
teenth century&#13;
Mrs. John Martin is visiting relative*&#13;
in Lansing.&#13;
Rev. Fr. Comerfdrd was on the sick&#13;
list the first o! the weak.&#13;
The youny people have be?n eiijoyin^&#13;
sonyLfine skating the past week.&#13;
There is a district school in Iosco&#13;
'with 16 scholars and not a *rirl among&#13;
them.&#13;
Bridget Carrol of Ann Arbor, was&#13;
the truest of her parents near here the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Mjss Anna Bragan,of Detroit, spent&#13;
a lew-days the past week with her&#13;
parents here.&#13;
Mrs. Ann Fitzsimmons and Miss&#13;
W e wish to extend oar thanks! K * ' « O'donor are spendingtire; week&#13;
for the liberal patronage given i t s | i n A n n A r b n r&#13;
the year just dfawimr to a close^ 'Gilbert How* and mother, of Ann&#13;
Mid Wish all our friends and CUB- j&#13;
The—&#13;
Surprise&#13;
BARGAINS.&#13;
We are just beginning another volume of&#13;
the DISPATCH. For seventeen years the&#13;
paper has been a.faithful distributer of&#13;
the new*, both pleasing and sad, that has -vear* b a v e k e P l o o r broM&#13;
transpired and goes to make up the history Keviews, he has alw^jpi&#13;
of our plt-asant, 6ouwhing village during »° heart and s^fltpt*0JF**lfays au in&#13;
that time. spiration to UK. ^Opi |ii»&gt;#tle ot life&#13;
For the past nine years it has been un- is now ended; n^JMfe'jpQpMpenced hiw&#13;
der the present management and we thank journey to that** r&lt;N|J« |i#yO!)d the&#13;
all for their liberal patronage during'those ,,,ravH. a i ) ( j while frft*eTO*t boeds are&#13;
years. With' your-help financially and g M f e r e d t Livingston tfe»t wUJ ever&#13;
otherwise, we have been able to make r. the . '„ . . _ . » ^ . . , c .• »•• keep green his memorv. Slid esftftnd DISPATCH one of the most newsy papers in . ' " t, . d . . " \- s^5M&amp;&#13;
the county We have tried to be just and l t 8 h e * r t ' e , t l0Vfl a n d W m * * * * * * • '&#13;
impanial to all, and if any feel slighted m e m t * ' « o! the bereaved family,&#13;
because some matter of news regarding — * m&#13;
them has not been published. pleasH re-: PetteTaville WilU&#13;
member thai an editor is neither omnipres- _&#13;
ent or omnicient. We are only too glad I have put m a new corn and cob&#13;
to receive items of interest, and bear in ******* ™* thoroughly ropiirwd the&#13;
mind that these items are what go to make M^11- Farmurs can now-' get their&#13;
up a newsy newspaper. grinding don* in a superior manner&#13;
As we said at the beginning, we are en- and on the shortest notice.&#13;
^toraersw Services preparatory'to'" communion&#13;
at the Cong'l (ihurch, Saturday afternoon&#13;
«f. 2:30 nVlock.&#13;
Several Irbra here attended the&#13;
danw) at. the K O T. M hall,'(^rnfibry&#13;
you the very beet goods at the | Friday evening last.&#13;
lowest possible price and it is our j M»*s Florence faster, of Howell,&#13;
determtuftHou to=-makfr-U»»-iM»H w a s a »"l t t s t ot F&lt; ^ A n d r e w s and&#13;
Happy New Year,&#13;
We pledge ourselves to give&#13;
Arbor, spent- New Y^ars : with T. J..&#13;
Clark and ianvly. *!&#13;
year a banuer year in »ur history.&#13;
VPe promise to save you money—&#13;
will you save some of your trade&#13;
for us?&#13;
&gt;.$:{$'&lt;&#13;
:•.?&#13;
i&#13;
x&#13;
„ A few prices to start the new&#13;
year with:&#13;
Giant Tbread'3 lor&#13;
Ladies' Fleered Hose&#13;
,K*nR^ckel plated Safety pins^&#13;
^ pfotected points, 5c grade&#13;
P».Der Pins&#13;
, Bos Mourw^te Pins&#13;
Pottle best Ink&#13;
25 Good Envelopes&#13;
No; 2 all silk Ribbons&#13;
Good Crash&#13;
Guaranteed Scissors&#13;
Pocket Scissor* *&#13;
Kinter^rarden Scissors&#13;
Glass Gutter&#13;
. 6 Good ftamse dtshea-&#13;
Lamp Chimneys&#13;
Lantern Globes -&#13;
China titfus 3 for&#13;
% Box 12-gobd tiyars&#13;
Good Can Opener&#13;
10c&#13;
08c&#13;
02c&#13;
01c&#13;
0.1c&#13;
02.;&#13;
03.:&#13;
02.:,&#13;
05c&#13;
25.:&#13;
10c&#13;
04c&#13;
family, Tuesday Last.&#13;
- Mrs Thor-.. Brewer, wife of the editor&#13;
of the Livingston Herald waa buried&#13;
at Howell Sunday.&#13;
1.] Abliott of Marion, has been entertaining&#13;
friends from Bowfin^,&#13;
Ohio, for thf p*i.«t week.&#13;
Ohm. Love and family, P G. Teeple&#13;
and family spent Saturday at Dr. H.&#13;
E. Brown s in Stockhridg-e.&#13;
Geo Svkes and wife,, of Detroit,&#13;
were ^nests of his parerrrs and other&#13;
relatives here the p.ist. iveek.&#13;
Mi&gt;s Mabel Tripp, of Detroit was a&#13;
gne&gt;r at. the home of her uncle, John&#13;
Uhalker. r.lie lir&gt;t of tl.ie week.&#13;
Mi-s KanuieClinton who is teaching&#13;
near &lt;'rysul. Lake, was a guest qf_&#13;
ber parents her*. ih*_pa*t week.&#13;
Rex Rrad had the? misfortune on&#13;
Saturday la&gt;t to i/er a badly sprained&#13;
ankle while ^katitttf It will lay him&#13;
TO OUR PATRONS, t j community and state have been justry&gt;&#13;
proud.&#13;
Thoujfb, during the pMlMT ywfa.&#13;
tbe weivht and cares W MHMIi &amp;"&#13;
J. W. Harris and wife, who lfeve b*«9&#13;
spending severaljweekg with their son jba&#13;
Aspen, Colo., returned home on Friday ,&#13;
U s t . , V . •'•&#13;
At tbe play Saturdays evening, t b ^&#13;
- ½ ¾ ^ ¾ **between acts" wa* enlivened by aa.*';&#13;
orchestra which baa. Keen organized i a&#13;
our village. Very few knew tfeat&#13;
there was such an organization and&#13;
many compliments were beard ow*&#13;
every band at t e success t^--^^*^*&#13;
attained. We hope they g | | f&#13;
tret ber. •'...-• ^--^--&#13;
tering another year, and as usual at this ;&#13;
timer many subscriptions expire and aj&#13;
prompt settlement of such accounts will'&#13;
materially aid us in keeping the paper up !&#13;
to its present standard. It coats money to ,&#13;
make a newspaper newsy. • j&#13;
Tms week we insert a blank in all papers&#13;
that expire with tins issue or before, and if&#13;
WtE. Hooker.&#13;
F o r S n l e . . __„&#13;
Cheap, a two horsepower and grinder&#13;
combined, in good repair.&#13;
0 . W. Rrown'.&#13;
Tbe play S a t p d y ^ f i » t M r ^ t ,&#13;
"Out of the S h a d o ^ | p # lifr'Conyict.s&#13;
Revenge," was p!ay*M»y the Columbian&#13;
Dramatic Club at the opera boos*&#13;
here to a lark'e and appreciitive crowd.&#13;
Although the play is a heavy one tbe&#13;
club d d the work in a fine manner,&#13;
and proved that they are capable of&#13;
taking most any play. Every pari&#13;
was so well done that no one need&#13;
special praise. It would seem aa irafter&#13;
all tbe work putuapon the play^&#13;
and tbe success attained, that it w o u l i&#13;
pay to visit some of our sister ?J|H;&#13;
The music hy the orchestra, attic!'•'m^t^1^&#13;
ing by loi;al talnnt wax excellent.," li.'? /, : r ,,&#13;
10.&#13;
03 and 04c&#13;
05c&#13;
05c&#13;
25c&#13;
05c&#13;
rHnrp tor several days,&#13;
Jusr as wjs'goto ores&gt; we are informed&#13;
l&gt;y telephone to make arrange&#13;
m e l H s t o 1U4J—a^ ' U l l — p U ^ a aHverfi^fttnent&#13;
for L H. Pield of Jaukson, n^xt&#13;
ee4. We presume be has some bar&#13;
gains to &lt;ffer our patrons.&#13;
We would not have people think&#13;
Mr. Bowman has gone ,to the ror a moment tnat because our business&#13;
city to bt^ bargains which are to men have taken their advs out of th»&#13;
I&#13;
be found in the big wholesale&#13;
bouses juat before they take inventory.&#13;
• . • +.&#13;
With our,.two stores and our&#13;
ability to pay S p o t C a s h , we&#13;
c&amp;n get B a r g a i n s and when we&#13;
get them our customers share the&#13;
benefit&#13;
Yours for trade/1&#13;
• k. BOWMAN, Prop.&#13;
Bowman,Block, Pinckney.&#13;
BERT WELLM^rV&#13;
Manager ot Pinokney Store.&#13;
Howell Biore, next to P. O:&#13;
M-'.&gt;'- i&#13;
* •&#13;
how'&#13;
4&#13;
IF&#13;
^&#13;
ikLy^-,*.&#13;
ft*&#13;
- t&gt;..&#13;
DISPATCH that Pinckney is dead The&#13;
business men are busy taking inventory&#13;
and we presume cajnnot find time&#13;
to write advs;&#13;
-Communion Services at the Conir'l&#13;
church Sunday"morning, Jan. 7. All&#13;
are invited The Sunday school will&#13;
hold Ihe annual election ot ofli'-ers. A&#13;
full attendance is urged. (Irjion serv-&#13;
Ufa at 7 o'clock^Snbject^. &lt;4Wby&#13;
should we believe in a future lite?&#13;
Prayer meeting Thursday and Friday&#13;
evenings at tbe M. £. cburcb. On&#13;
Saturday afternoon there will be&#13;
preaching and on Sunday "morning&#13;
quarterly "meeting services. Monday&#13;
evening it is expected that Rev E VV&#13;
you happen to get one in your paper pfease&#13;
remember that a good many others hawe^&#13;
one also. Try and be prompt in sending&#13;
in the little due us as we have a paymeu^&#13;
to make Feb. i, and these littles will help&#13;
us out. If we made an error in mirkiugj&#13;
your paper, bear in mind that we are not&#13;
infallible but are liable to mistakes the&#13;
same as others. Bring in your receipts and&#13;
we will willingly correct the error.&#13;
, Those who send in tlfetrfl miring tbts |&#13;
month will be entitled to the Farm Jour-!&#13;
nal for five years FREE. |&#13;
Again thanking yotr-for past favors and&#13;
hoping to merit a continuance of the same,&#13;
I remain, yours for news,&#13;
THE PUBLISHER.&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
Gforye Washinwton Brown was&#13;
born at Fleming, Civuga oouhty, N.&#13;
Y , September 9, 1825, and died Dec.&#13;
29, 1899, a^ed 74years 3 months and&#13;
20 days. c&#13;
His father was Dr. L&gt;aac Brown,&#13;
native ot Mima, and ,t~piimgHr~ot Mich*&#13;
igan. Mr Br &gt;wn cairw witb his father's&#13;
family to M i b , wuen 11 years&#13;
old, and settled Hist at Dejfte«\ then a&#13;
3*3®^?&#13;
Left |&#13;
Fancy Albums,&#13;
X ntasr Toy s,&#13;
Fancy Goods,&#13;
;f WW®*'&#13;
VA&#13;
At Cost. •t-e^&#13;
tew yenrs later"th^y u».)ved to a farm&#13;
near tbe villaue of Hudson, lour miles&#13;
noTlf of Dexter. They remained&#13;
thure a short time when they moved&#13;
fo wha* became the old Rrown homestead,&#13;
two mil^s east ot Pincknev.&#13;
He remained with his fatlier domg&#13;
farm wofk until 21 years ot ag*, he&#13;
married Miss Sarah Wood, ot an "ad7&#13;
joining township. For tbfee/years&#13;
after bi^ marriage he remained on&#13;
bis fathers tar el, and/fben axovfiid.Jo&#13;
Bexterr^=^A||fj&amp;r fonr _years_ spent.in&#13;
business there he next located on a&#13;
fafm just south ot [)r. lirown's farm. _&#13;
In 1881 fie moved to his late home&#13;
where he lived until death called him&#13;
to the irreat beyond&#13;
A full and Completeline&#13;
of Drugs and&#13;
Medicines. *&#13;
-&amp;•&#13;
r FT&#13;
A TRTBUTE PROM THE KBrOHBORS.&#13;
Mr. Brown has lived among us&#13;
many years, and we have-found hirrt&#13;
a man ot sterling qualities, a good&#13;
citizen^a kind and onli^in^ neuhtior,&#13;
whose memory will "lontr be cherished&#13;
among us for bis gonial i?ood svill, and&#13;
friendship extended to all.&#13;
THE K. O. T. S£ j&#13;
On March 12. 1882, George W.I&#13;
Browjk-became a Knight of. the \Licc*a-|&#13;
bees, a member of LiviniMton Tent,&#13;
^Jer-^85; and the members ot tliis Tent'&#13;
•J?AS&#13;
NOTICE %&#13;
Kyan will preacb and quarterly con- •mourn his dea^hns a personal loss.&#13;
feren^e will follow. The nhliuktiohs be t.-»nk. nearlw&#13;
Hoyt L. Coteary, in '^A Man About&#13;
Town,^at the opera bouse Monday&#13;
evening, sustained bis reputation as&#13;
one ot the best, most original enter&#13;
tftioert in tb*. world. While tbe entertamment&#13;
weg buutoroutlo enlarge&#13;
degree, there jwas Jtt it thinua well&#13;
wotlb lememNiript: • Tbie ie Mr.[qualiti»t of mind»nd heart, character&#13;
Oooary'SeeooDd virit to oor viHege,&#13;
Md any who mwaedlwejtiftf himnitaie4akree|&#13;
ofAUtt ^&#13;
• ^ ; • * • , ; • -&#13;
We must ask all our Customers to settle&#13;
• . - • ' * • * • - all AocDiats aai N&gt;3tss that are* due, before&#13;
Jan. 1,1900.&#13;
Hopia? to see you all iu tinoie so w« can&#13;
The oblivions be took, nearly »! balance our b^k^'bdt^TB tikm? our auatiai J&#13;
yea'rs awo, before the altar, upon- the | \..---"^~ — - —— ~:— " Bible and tbe circle be has kept invi- inventory, Jan. 1,1900, either by Note of&#13;
olate,; His lile, at all times, exempli- ^ -" ' '&#13;
fyinlt^hose^eautitul attributes, 1*^^*»? C a s h ^ "~ —^— .^-^^.^-&#13;
hope, and charity, the foundation UJ&gt;- * &lt;*&lt;&#13;
on which Maocabeeism is btilded.&#13;
The tjuB«r^pritteipletl-^tbe *M»e&#13;
ratio ot the trqe 3tecc*oe«, made o u r&#13;
deoe^sed Sir I^%ht « kived one iu&#13;
i^fwuily, a*4 Voftisett of whom, tha&#13;
Bespecthilly Y&lt;mr% • • : » ' • * • '&#13;
^ : v j&#13;
- - . ^ ¾ -v&#13;
. -r.&#13;
IM O U R G R E A T S T A T E R E L A T E D&#13;
IN A B R I E F F O R M .&#13;
Hkcomb Coanfcy Couple Married Under&#13;
Difficulties—The Farmer* or Southern&#13;
Michigan Have Formed a Co-&#13;
- Operative Beet Sugwr Company.&#13;
* T&#13;
The Cold Didn't Bother Them.'&#13;
H e r m a n Wibley and Miss Mary Yax,&#13;
of, Ray township, Macomb county,&#13;
m a d e u p their mind on Dec. 26 t h a t&#13;
t h e y had lived apart l o n g e n o u g h . Ac-&#13;
Mrs. K a t e Green, of Coldwater, w a s&#13;
riorn in Poland on March 23, 1790, and&#13;
is therefore nearly 110"«years of age.&#13;
She i s doubtless the oldest w o m a n in&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
Jackson's h u m a n e society h a s taken&#13;
up the cudgel for the horse this w i n t e r&#13;
and is prosecuting t h o s e people w h o&#13;
m a k e a practice of c l i p p i n g horses in&#13;
cold weather.&#13;
A t Le Roy, Osceola county, dry hard&#13;
w o o d is s e l l i n g for. 81 per cord and&#13;
green stove w o o d b r i n g s o n l y CO c e n t s&#13;
per cord. P o t a t o e s are selling at 50&#13;
c e n t s per bushel.&#13;
1 T h e charter of t h e Grand Rapids National&#13;
bank, w h i c h e x p i r e s on Feb. 5.&#13;
1900, has been e x t e n d e d another 20&#13;
years. T h e bank w i l l c o n t i n u e w i t h&#13;
•wjas too young. The pair drove bac&amp;&#13;
t o Ray, secured the paternal permission&#13;
a n d agViin appeared before the county&#13;
clerk a n d the ceremony w a s t h e n performed&#13;
and t h e happy couple departed&#13;
for home, h a v i n g traveled 48 m i l e s over&#13;
r o u g h roads w i t h the mercury hoveri&#13;
n g around zero. - " ^&#13;
Farmer* Will Erect a Sucir Factory.&#13;
AillRHJt 50 farmers residing in t h e&#13;
southern part of the state have filed articles&#13;
of association of t h e Farmers*&#13;
Co-operative B e e t Sugar Co., t h e object&#13;
b e i n g to raise beets a n d manufacture&#13;
sugar. T h e capital stock is 850,-&#13;
000, a n d 828*500 has been paid in. It is&#13;
pr6posed to erect a factory at Dundee,&#13;
Monroe county, and operate t h r o u g h&#13;
farms in Monroe, Wayne, Oakland,&#13;
L i v i n g s t o n . I n g h a m , Jackson. Hillsdale,&#13;
Branch, L e n a w e e a n d Washten&#13;
a w counties. T h i s is t h e first co-operative&#13;
company to be o r g a n i z e d for&#13;
t h i s purpose.&#13;
c o r d i n g l y Herman secured a horse and&#13;
b u g g y and t h e pair started for t h e&#13;
c o u n t y seat. To their surprise t h e y 1 ^ s present capital of 8500,000,&#13;
w e r e refused a marriage license b j r t h e Mm. Ftorlina Butts, a g e d 92, of near&#13;
c o u n t y clerk on the ground t h a t M&amp;r^^Bediord, presented each of her three&#13;
. « , , . . . .,.._„_ ^ - - • - ' ^ i i i B ^ i i i w i t h a cheek J o r S2.000. Besklee&#13;
t h i s the old lady g a v e each of her&#13;
nine grandchildren a c h e c k tor H 0 0 .&#13;
Jas. Hinton,-aged SO, l i v i n g aear Seb&#13;
e w a i n g , w h i l e ^temporary demented&#13;
crawled t h r o u g h ft wifcdow o n e n i g h t&#13;
recently i a b i s n i g h t clothes, and w a s&#13;
found the* n e x t morning! frozen stiff.&#13;
f h e body of Geo. McCreery, a farmer&#13;
of neftr Charlotte, w a s found in a&#13;
s w a m p a short distance from h i s home&#13;
on t h e 36th. He w a s out h u n t i n g and&#13;
it i s supposed he accidentally shot himself.&#13;
"&#13;
J u d g e Person, of Lansing, has decided&#13;
to g o on w i t h the grand jury indefinitely,&#13;
probing the military deal,&#13;
and if necessary he w i l l call in an outside&#13;
judge to continue t h e September&#13;
term.&#13;
T h e popularity of St. Joseph as the&#13;
favorite Gretna Gr&lt;&gt;en of Chicago duri&#13;
n g the- w i n t e r season a s -well as in&#13;
summer w a s est-abliahed o n Christinas.&#13;
F o r t y - t w o Chicago couple w e r e married&#13;
on that day.&#13;
• Grand llapids claims to be the banner&#13;
recruiting point of the state of Michigan&#13;
for the United States army. From&#13;
J u n e 20, 1899, to Dec. 7, 1S91&gt;, the recruiting&#13;
station at t h a t point-enlisted&#13;
a total of 400 men.&#13;
T h e common council of Muskegon&#13;
h a s t a k e n steps to look into the cost&#13;
and expense of operating an electric&#13;
l i g h t i n g plant, and it is proba*ble t h a t&#13;
in another year the city will have its&#13;
o w n l i g h t i n g system.&#13;
The construction w o r k on the n e w&#13;
Copper Range railroad in Houghton&#13;
c o u n t y is practically completed, and&#13;
trains are expected to be running regularly&#13;
over the w h o l e l e n g t h of the&#13;
road some time this w e e k .&#13;
At a chancery sale in Lansing one&#13;
dav recently 13,000 acres of land Were&#13;
sold for $70. The land is situated in&#13;
Clare, Gladwin and Roscommon counties&#13;
and w a s formerly covered w i t h&#13;
pine, irost of which has been cut off.&#13;
Cha«. Hayliss, of Temple, while havi&#13;
n g teeth extracted by a dentist in&#13;
Cadillac, suddenly expired. A physician&#13;
w a s present and administered the&#13;
chloroform, but it is supposed Mr.\lt&gt;tyliss&#13;
w a s afflicted w i t h heart trouble&#13;
and could not s t a n d t h e drug.&#13;
T w e n t y prominent business men of&#13;
Traverse City have formed a stock company&#13;
and purchased t h e fair groun d&#13;
property formerly o w n e d by the agricultural&#13;
society, w h i c h will be made&#13;
into a recreation park, w i t h a b.isebal&#13;
diamond, race track and good fair&#13;
buildings.&#13;
--- A deputy sheriff made a raid on the&#13;
nickel-in-the-slot m a c h i n e s In the saloons&#13;
and hotels at Marine City recently,&#13;
and confiscated eight of them.&#13;
Some time a g o the c o u n t y officials notified&#13;
the "Marine City salo'onists to rid&#13;
t h e m s e l v e s of the machines, but no att&#13;
e n t i o n w a s paid to t h e order, hence&#13;
t h i s summary action.&#13;
A short time ago William Smitherman,&#13;
of Stockbridge, noticed blessoms&#13;
on some pf the strawberr3r vines in his&#13;
garden. He dug up the vines and replaced&#13;
t h e m in a deep box, w h i c h he&#13;
placed in a sunny b o w w i n d o w , and&#13;
Mrs. A*kla» Gets Life Imprisonment.&#13;
The Askins murder case at Frankfort&#13;
c a m e to a close on Dec 23, w h e n the&#13;
j u r y returned a , verdict of murder in&#13;
t h e first degree. When apprised of the&#13;
result of the trial the prisoner s h o w e d&#13;
n o evidedce of surprise and said she expected&#13;
it. S h e Was i m m e d i a t e l y sentenced&#13;
to life imprisonment. Mrs.&#13;
Mate Askins murdered her d a u g h t e r&#13;
a n d tried to, kill her son and herself&#13;
w i t h morphine. \&#13;
Wtints a Railroad and Must Hav« It.&#13;
T h e residents of, Hubbard. Midland&#13;
c o u n t y , have been w i t h o u t railroad&#13;
c o m m u n i c a t on since the s t u b line runn&#13;
i n g u p from Midland w a s abandoned&#13;
and t h e tracks taken u p some m o n t h s&#13;
ago. Residents of the place have offered&#13;
t o provide the ties if the railroad&#13;
c o m p a n y will relay the rails, and if the&#13;
c o m p a n y declines to accept the proposition&#13;
there is a likelihood of an electric&#13;
road b e i n g built.&#13;
—,—^——&#13;
Largest DOR; In Michigan.&#13;
\V. J. B r o w n , of B i r m i n g h a m , claims&#13;
t o have the largest dog in Michigan,&#13;
.and the'second largest d o g of his breed&#13;
in the world. The dog is a St. Bernard.&#13;
He measures G feet from tip of&#13;
nose to end of tail; his average h i g h t is&#13;
34 inches; g i r t l r just back of shoulders&#13;
3 feet () inches; girth of head 32 inches.&#13;
The animal is only 18 m o n t h s old and&#13;
w e i g h s 204 pounds.&#13;
Copper Range Road Completed.&#13;
A copper spike w a s driven on the&#13;
Copper Range railroad on 'the 26th.&#13;
c o m p l e t i n g the track laying. T h e road&#13;
began doing business before its com-.&#13;
pletiori, o w i n g to the necessities of the.&#13;
m nes tributary. This g i v e s direct rail&#13;
comrminication from one end of the&#13;
l a k e copper belt to the other.&#13;
M I C H I G A N N E W S I T E M S .&#13;
Traverse City may have a w o o d alcoh&#13;
o l plant.&#13;
£6The n e w Cass county court house h a s&#13;
b e e * completed.&#13;
A terrific blizzard prevailed at) Sehoolcraft&#13;
on t h e 24th.&#13;
— P o t a t o buyers a r e - p a y i n g 36--and- 60&#13;
c e n t s per bushel at Reed City.&#13;
Lumbermen in Osceola c o u n t y are&#13;
jubilan%over a heavy fall of snow.&#13;
Tlfc state taxes of t h e L. S. &amp; M. S.&#13;
Ky. a m o u n t e d to S46.743.60 this year.&#13;
T h e discharged m o r t g a g e s in Washt&#13;
e n a w county since 18S"&gt; number 5.030.&#13;
1'lainwell is to have a pickle factory.&#13;
A Detroit firm is interested in the project.&#13;
P l a i n w e l l has cinched that pickle factory&#13;
she lias so long been t r y i n g to&#13;
secure.&#13;
AT HOME AND ABK0AD&#13;
T h e legislature convened a g a i n o n&#13;
the 27th. The joint resolution w a s discussed&#13;
in t h e senate and,, i t is believed&#13;
will be t h r o w n down. However, t h a t&#13;
body h a s a third s u b s t i t u t e measure.&#13;
T h e substitute w a s simply reported to "&#13;
the senate w i t h the recommendation&#13;
t h a t it be referred to t h e committee of&#13;
the whole.&#13;
T h e senate does n o t propose to ass&#13;
u m e any responsibility for t h e comm&#13;
e n c e m e n t of suits to recover t h e&#13;
$40,000*? lost by t h e s t a t e on the&#13;
military deal. T h e vote by w h i c h&#13;
it passed the joint resolution asked&#13;
for by Gov. P i n g r e e w a s reconsidered&#13;
on*m0tion of Senator Lyon, it&#13;
b e i n g claimed t h a t t h e attorney-general&#13;
h a s ample authority in t h e premises&#13;
under e x i s t i n g l a w s , and in support&#13;
of t h i s the fact is cited t h a t special&#13;
authority to commence suits w a s&#13;
never before asked for, a l t h o u g h scores&#13;
of actions have been i n s t i t u t e d by the&#13;
attorney-general and carried t o a successful&#13;
issue. - , "'x-&#13;
T h e senate committee )to w h o m t h e&#13;
house resolution w a s submitted, on t h e&#13;
27th reported the f o l l o w i n g resolution&#13;
as a third substitute to the t a x amendm&#13;
e n t :&#13;
"Sec. 10. The state may continue to&#13;
collect all specific t a x e s accruing to t h e&#13;
treasury under e x i s t i n g l a w s . T h e&#13;
legislature may provide for the collect&#13;
i o n of specific taxes from corporations.&#13;
T h e legislature may provide for the ass&#13;
e s s m n t of the property of t h e railroads&#13;
and other corporations at its true cash&#13;
value, and for the l e v y i n g of t a x e s&#13;
thereon, by a state board of assessors,&#13;
or such other person or persons, as t h e&#13;
l e g i s l a t u r e may direct, in such manner&#13;
as the legislature shall by general l a w&#13;
direct, w h i c h . l a w s shall be uniform.&#13;
"All taxes hereafter levied on t h e&#13;
property of.railroads and railway com-&#13;
-pararietei-tel^gf^h^companies. t e l e g h o n e&#13;
companies, express companies, -plank&#13;
road companies, river improvement&#13;
companies, and insurance companies,&#13;
shall be applied as provided in section&#13;
o n e of t h i s article.. ^&#13;
"Sec. 11. The l e g i s l a t u r e ^ h a l l provide&#13;
a uniform rule of taxation, except&#13;
on property p a y i n g specific taxes,&#13;
and taxes shall be levied on such&#13;
property as shall be prescribed by law.&#13;
Provided, the legislature m a y classify&#13;
corporations for the pur-pose of assessm&#13;
e n t for taxation, and the properly in&#13;
each class shall be assessed, subject to&#13;
review in such manner as the legislature&#13;
shall provide by law, and t h e taxes&#13;
thereon uniformly levied in such manner&#13;
as the legislature may direct. -' Provided,&#13;
further, that corporate property&#13;
Upon which,- taxes, are assessed and&#13;
levied by the provisions of section 10 of&#13;
t h i s constitution, shall be assessed and&#13;
p iy a t a x equal to and not .excess of&#13;
the average aggregate rate of taxation&#13;
for st;ue, county, municipal and school,&#13;
t a x e s on other property for the previous&#13;
year." • t&#13;
Rep. IJurclV precipitated • a long,''discussion&#13;
in the house on the 27th by offering&#13;
a resolution p r o v i d i n g for the&#13;
appointment of a special committee of&#13;
five to investigate charges of corruption&#13;
in connection w i t h the passage of&#13;
the MeLeod bill. Chamberlain moved&#13;
to amend the resolution, by substituti&#13;
n g the grand jury for the special committee.&#13;
Kurch-accepted—tlie amendment.&#13;
McCall t h o u g h t ' t h e ' h o u s e w a s&#13;
b e l i t t l i n g itself in t.his matter, and&#13;
said that "the grand jury k n o w s w h a t&#13;
it w a n t s to investigate and will r!o it&#13;
w i t h o u t any request or instructions&#13;
from us. The j u d g e * and prosecutor&#13;
k n o w their business, and so does t h e&#13;
jury. Let each body attend to its o w n&#13;
business, and the p e o p l e w i l l be better&#13;
o h V Carton roasted the proceedings&#13;
a s undignified, s a y i n g that the legislature&#13;
w a s convened for a special purpose&#13;
and should attend to that business&#13;
and go home. Cheevcr indorsed&#13;
Carton's sentiments. Herrig spoke of&#13;
the nearly unanimous_demand for i t s&#13;
passage, and on his m o t i o n the resolui&#13;
t i o n w a s tabled. T h e house than adjourned.&#13;
Jte ,&#13;
The s e n i l e on the 28th by a vote "of&#13;
16 to 13 decided to k i l l the Pingree&#13;
joint resolution providing for a n&#13;
ame.ndmenl^QLjthe constitution td be&#13;
A S U M M A R Y O F T H 5 N E W S F O R&#13;
T H B W E E K B Y W I R E .&#13;
Ovtr 8100,000,000 m ut be Paid 'Oat bit&#13;
try — German j has Co»«i»d»d HJie&#13;
Don't Want tb« Dantih Wait Indie*.&#13;
n o w he h a s enough berries nearly matured&#13;
to furnish a strawberry shortcake&#13;
for his N e w Year's dinner.&#13;
The remains of Samuel Dryer, w h o&#13;
w a s employed at the Michigan Alkali&#13;
Co.\sfplant at Ecorse, w a s found in a&#13;
badly crushed c o n d i t i o n b e t w e e n the&#13;
l i m e kiln elevator and shaft on the&#13;
26th. H o w the accident occurred is a&#13;
mystery, as no one else w a s present&#13;
w h e n it occurred. T h e unfortunate&#13;
man resided w i t h h i s w i f e in Wyan-&#13;
•dette. •&#13;
T h e grist mill, w h i c h w a s recently&#13;
destroyed by fire at Hear Lake, w i l l be&#13;
rebuilt. " ~&#13;
S n o w h a s fallen in Arenac county&#13;
and lumbermen are pleased over the&#13;
outlook*.&#13;
There are f&gt;,400 m o r t g a g e s in force in&#13;
Gratiot county, a g g r e g a t i n g i n l i m o u n t&#13;
$2,855,300.&#13;
T h e business portion of Charlotte&#13;
w a s scorched to the e x t e n t of ¢10,000&#13;
on the 27th, ' -&#13;
Flood of Gold to Europe.&#13;
More t h a n $150,000,000 w i l l be paid&#13;
o u t shortly in interest and dividends.&#13;
T h i s is t h e largest sura in t h e history&#13;
of trade i n t h i s country. Less t h a n&#13;
ever of t h e semi-annual outpouring&#13;
from s t r o n g b o x e s w i l l be sent to&#13;
Europe at this season. It is usual in&#13;
London for t h e discount rate to advance&#13;
half a point in December as it&#13;
h a s this year, and g o l d h a s heretofore&#13;
flowed toward that center. T h i s year&#13;
o n l y exports' of gold from N e w York&#13;
u n w a r r a n t e d by trade balances are t o&#13;
be looked for. There* is n o reason,&#13;
financiers contend, w h y g o l d should&#13;
n o t be exported from this country as&#13;
a n y other surplus product is. T h e&#13;
year's yield of American m i n e s w a s&#13;
more t h a n $6o,000,000, w i t h o u t includi&#13;
n g the ^15,000,000 to «20.000,000 sent&#13;
from t h e Alaskan camps. E x p o r t s&#13;
have been practically none.&#13;
Indian Territory Settlers Mutt Vacate.&#13;
On J a n . 1 every lessee of land in the&#13;
Indian Territory w i l l be compelled to&#13;
leave t h e territory or s u b m i t to" ejection&#13;
by the tfrnted S t a t e s authorities.&#13;
T h e number of 'farmers w h o h a v e&#13;
leased lands on the five civilized tribe&#13;
reservations will reach i n t o the thousands&#13;
and all will h a v e to vacate. T h e&#13;
exodus from the territory began some&#13;
d a y s a g o and it is e s t i m a t e d that more&#13;
than 3,000 families h a v e g o n e t o Oklahoma,&#13;
150 families' h a v i n g left Whitfield.&#13;
4. T., in one* dajr for Oklahoma.&#13;
Recent l a w s passed by congress deoar&#13;
t h e Indians from l e a s i n g their&#13;
l a n d s for any purpose 'and this w i l l ,&#13;
s h u t out not only farmers, but the cattlemen.&#13;
Congress w i l l be asked to repeal&#13;
t h e law.&#13;
A Husband's Awfal Promise.&#13;
The charred remains of William J.&#13;
Thomas, a farmer, and his three children&#13;
were found in the a s h e s of their&#13;
home, 11 miles s o u t h w e s t of Chillicothe,&#13;
Mo,, on the 24th. T h e supposition&#13;
is "that T h o m a s murdered the children,&#13;
t h e n set fire to the house and&#13;
took h i s o w n life. A b o u t _ a year a g o&#13;
-Thomas' wife c o m m i t t e d s u i c i d e - b y&#13;
t a k i n g poison. T h o m a s had frequently&#13;
told his neighbors that his wife, o n&#13;
her death bed, exacted a promise from&#13;
h i m t h a t he would m a k e a w a y w i t h&#13;
t h e children and hiraseUL-and f o l l o w&#13;
her, and he evidently k e n &gt; h i s promise.&#13;
.Earthquake Causes 9 0 0 , 0 0 0 Dm mace.&#13;
A severe e a r t h q u a k e shock w a s felt&#13;
over a large portion' of southern California&#13;
o n Christmas m o r n i n g , the undulations&#13;
lasting a b o u t U' seconds. T h e&#13;
entire center of the shock appeared to&#13;
have been at San Jacinto, a small towTn&#13;
in Riverside county. The, business portion&#13;
j ^ _ S a n _ J a c i n t o consists of t w o&#13;
blocks of two-story buildings, some "of&#13;
brick. Ten or fourteen buildings w e r e&#13;
damaged, c h i m n e y s b e i n g toppled over&#13;
and w a l l s cracked-,and shaken. T h e&#13;
total damage at San .Jacinto and Hemit.&#13;
a small t o w n nearby, is e s t i m a t e d&#13;
at$50,000.&#13;
W A R JSrOTfcS.&#13;
Col. L o c k ^ b j t U f e AiQ»W Ot2,500, 1 *&#13;
c l u d i n g artillery, a t t a c k e d a «**ong&#13;
force of inswsgents Intrenched i n t h e&#13;
m o u n t a i n s n e f r Alofatalban* Kodut*lTf&#13;
m i l e s northeast of San • Mateo, on vtfw&#13;
Iftth, The tasemyi\were comple$plj&#13;
routed, the Americans pursuing t h e m&#13;
interest and D ^ l d e a d . br T h . a ^ a w , v t h ^ h t h e h i U e J d w M o h ^&#13;
Riot on a Trolley Car.&#13;
During a riot a m o n g 47 Negroes, m e n&#13;
and w o m e n , on a trolley ear in Morrisania,&#13;
N. Y., early o n the morning of&#13;
the *-'()th, one man w a s fatally shot and&#13;
t w o dangerously w o u n d e d . There w a s&#13;
a cake w a l k the n i g h t previous w h i c h&#13;
w a s attended by a large c r o w d of colored&#13;
people. The row w a s started, itis&#13;
said, by some of the colored m e n&#13;
m a k i n g disparing remarks a b o u t ' t h e&#13;
female w i n n e r of the prize. Most of&#13;
the Negroes involved in the row escaped.&#13;
The fellow w h o . d o n e the shooti&#13;
n g c l a i m s he done it in self-defense.&#13;
fled i n every direction, yvrar' A n k r i -&#13;
eajfts were.- w o u a d o d . ^ T k e ' ^ H A p i n o&#13;
loss w a s large, r e s u l t i n g from B h e a v y&#13;
i n f a n t r y and artillery Are for t h r e e&#13;
hours i n t o the t r e n c h e s .&#13;
Gen. Otis h a s issued a decree authori&#13;
s i n g the.celebration of^oivil martlafcet&#13;
i n t h e Philippines. Heretofore * all marriages&#13;
w e r e celebrated by the Catholic&#13;
church, so t h a t protestants a n d non-&#13;
Christians were prohibited from marrying.&#13;
The decree does s o t interfere&#13;
w i t h t h e Catholics, w h o may be married&#13;
according to their o w n rites, h u t&#13;
e x t e n d s the privilege of civil marriage&#13;
to those w h o desire it, j u s t a s practiced&#13;
in the United States.&#13;
A report has been received t h a t Cols.&#13;
Hare and Howze have released 23&#13;
American prisoners, i n c l u d i n g Lieut.&#13;
Gilmore, at Banna, in t h e province of&#13;
North Ilocos. A n o t h e r report s a y s&#13;
Gen. Tino h a s b e e n captured n e a r&#13;
Juavag. Col. Hare reports h a v i n g h a d&#13;
t w o encounters w i t h Gen. Tino, i n&#13;
w h i c h 150 Filipinos w e r e killed o r&#13;
w o u n d e d and about 250 rifles w e r e captured,&#13;
w i t h o u t casualties on the Amercan&#13;
side.&#13;
Gen. Santa Ana, w i t h a force of i n -&#13;
s u r g e n t s estimated at 300, attacked t h e&#13;
garrison at Subig o n the 2Gth. A body&#13;
of marines were sent from Olongapo t o&#13;
reinforce the garrison, and the Filipinos&#13;
w e r e driven back, several being killed.&#13;
There warn no casualties on the American&#13;
side. A company of the 46th v o l -&#13;
unteer infantry, t o g e t h e r w i t h a cont&#13;
i n g e n t of marines, h a s been sent from&#13;
Manila to reinforce the Subig garrison&#13;
still further. • fc&#13;
A detachment of the^ 34th i n f a n t r y&#13;
encountered a band of the enemy o n&#13;
the L*3d at Aritao, province of N e w Vizzaya,&#13;
and routed them, k i l l i n g t w o a n d&#13;
w o u n d i n g or capturing 13. The Americans&#13;
also seized a q u a n t i t y of a m m u -&#13;
nition.&#13;
The 32d r e g i m e n t on the 24th had a&#13;
brush w i t h the enemy from the mountains&#13;
n o r t h w e s t of Dinalupijan. One&#13;
American w a s wounded. The troops&#13;
captured 425 head of cattle and took&#13;
t h e m to Granji, B a t a a n province.&#13;
Col. J. Frandlin Bell of the 30th i n -&#13;
fantry encountered l.")0 FUipinos on t h&#13;
21st n e a r Alaminos,—province of-Zam^&#13;
bales, and killed, w o u n d e d or captured&#13;
28 of them. Our troops also o b t a i n e d&#13;
possession of a number of rifles and a&#13;
quantity of ammunition. One American&#13;
w a s wounded. ~&#13;
In the Island of Panay Capt. B r o w n -&#13;
ell's company of the 26th i n f a n t r y&#13;
f o u g h t the e n e m y near Saia. The rebels&#13;
lost heavily, and the Americans&#13;
captured»a number of rifles. ~&#13;
T h e rebels w h o fled from Pan ay t o&#13;
Romblen Island are surrendering t o&#13;
the American garrison from Panay.&#13;
• .Thp remains of the victims of t h e&#13;
M a i n e were interred in the A r l i n g t o n&#13;
national cemetery on the 28th,- under&#13;
appropriate military ceremonies.&#13;
T h e funeral of Major-General L a w -&#13;
ton w i l l take place Dec." 30. T h e rem&#13;
a i n s will be embarked on the t r a n s -&#13;
port Thomas.&#13;
The 21st regiment attacked a F i l i p i n o&#13;
outpost on the 24th, near, Calamba,&#13;
scattering them and killed five~of t h e&#13;
enemy.&#13;
Gen. Y o u n g h a s been appointed mill?&#13;
tary governor of the provinces of northw&#13;
e s t e r n Luzon, w i t h headquarters a t&#13;
Vicran.-&#13;
T R A r T S V A A L WA-ft I T E M S .&#13;
A corset company, w i t h a capital&#13;
r,tock of $75,000. was o r g a n i z e d at Kalamazoo&#13;
on the 20th.&#13;
Wild'flowers are b l o s s o m i n g in the&#13;
w o o d s near Pcrrmgton, or ''were prcvidus&#13;
to th« recent cold snap.&#13;
Only 50 deaths occurred at Miles durn&#13;
g t h e past year,the-mortality rate bei&#13;
n g about. 50 per cent less t h a n l a s t&#13;
y e a r . ' •' _ •• •&lt;•&#13;
The recruiting of British colonists in&#13;
Cape Colony is actively proceeding.&#13;
T h i r t y thousand are already under&#13;
arms and several thousand more w i l l&#13;
be added. Those n o w in t h e field include&#13;
Cape mounted police, the Rhodesian&#13;
and Natal forces and t h e colonial&#13;
troops beleaguered at Kiinberley »tind&#13;
other points.&#13;
T h c - t c * t s 7 o f w i r e l e s s t e l e g r a p h y at&#13;
Mnddcr river hftve hf^n h i g h l y sunppss-&#13;
\&#13;
i » - » " ' j . !7t#&#13;
fnt, communication over a distapce of&#13;
70 miles b e i n g perfectijr—established.&#13;
Six Marconi i n s t r u m e n t s , intended for&#13;
the Boers, have Yieen seized at Cape&#13;
T o w n .&#13;
The lord mayor of London, Alfred&#13;
N e w t o n , is raising and equipping a&#13;
force of-1,000 volunteers a m o n g the c i t y&#13;
corps. -The large city firms are contrib&#13;
u t i n g t h e necessary expenses.&#13;
_ , ..J ... "•' .. • " '•&#13;
submitted to the electors. The result&#13;
w a s a surprise to m a n y , as it w a s admitted&#13;
t h a t the proposition would be&#13;
defeated, but few w e r e prepared for&#13;
t h e large majority a g a i n s t it. Only&#13;
nine votes w e r e necessary to defeat the&#13;
resolution, but t h e r e w e r e seven to&#13;
spare.&#13;
Gov. Pingree on the 29th. sent t h r e e&#13;
more messages to the legislature. I n&#13;
these messages he advocates, the passage&#13;
of a joint resolution providing for&#13;
| an a m e n d m e n t to the constitution t o&#13;
permit cities to o w n and operate street&#13;
r a i l w a y s and other public utilities; to&#13;
raise the specific taxes of t h e railroads&#13;
of the state from -$1.030,77(3.00 to $2,-&#13;
"»00,000; and to raise by a specific t a x&#13;
$1.."00,000 from the iron a n d ' c o p p e r&#13;
m i n i n g companies of Michigan. 1 Jills&#13;
encompassing t h e s e ideas w e r e introduced&#13;
in the house, and referred to t h e&#13;
proper c o m m i t t e e , a tremedqus a m o u n t&#13;
of work b e i n g mapped out. T h e n t h e&#13;
house adopted a j o i n t resolution to adjourn&#13;
until Tuesday n i g h t , Jan. 2, and&#13;
minhad it fivhr in fhn wntttp, wherf! it&#13;
w a s also finally adopted. As the t i m e&#13;
limit of the present special session expires&#13;
Jan. () it w i l l be impossible to dispose&#13;
of these m e a s u r e s before t h a t&#13;
time, hence a n o t h e r special session w i l l&#13;
be t h e o n l y alternative left. . « .,&#13;
Spain h a s agreed t o g o on makingp&#13;
a y m e n t s to th,e U n l t e d ' S t a t e s pledged&#13;
under the treaty of 1 8 3 4 — i n d e m n i t y ^ :&#13;
illegal Spanish b l o c k a d i n g in t h a t year&#13;
Germany Won't&#13;
T h e German"&#13;
Buy BitnTsh West InHTes.&#13;
g o v e r n m e n t has defin&#13;
i t e l y abandoned all idea of acquiring&#13;
the Danish West Indies, either by purchase&#13;
from Denmark or otherwise. T h e&#13;
German embassy i n W a s h i n g t o n h a s&#13;
left no doubt t h a t any such a t t e m p t&#13;
w o u l d be looked upon b y the Americans&#13;
as an unfriendly act, and as a serious&#13;
infringement of t h e Monroe doctrine.&#13;
According to the same authority,&#13;
the reports representing that Denmark&#13;
is n e g o t i a t i n g to sell tire islands&#13;
to the-United S t a t e s are either entirely&#13;
premature or w i t h o u t foundation.&#13;
Aid for the Boers.&#13;
T h e r e is a general m o v e m e n t a m o n g&#13;
the Irish citizens at Philadelphia to&#13;
aid t h e Boers in t h e i r w a r w i t h England.&#13;
A call w a s s e n t o u t for a special&#13;
assessment on every member of t h e&#13;
Ancient'Order of Hibernians, of w h i c h&#13;
there are 2."&gt;,000 in that city on the 27th.&#13;
A return of $25,000 is expected, w h i c h&#13;
w i l l help to s w e l l the general fund of&#13;
$1,000,000 w h i c h Irish o r g a n i z a t i o n s&#13;
throughout the country seek tu raise.&#13;
r C O N G R E S S I O N A L N O T E S .&#13;
Congressman Corliss' bill, h a v i n g in&#13;
view the construction of ; a dam at the&#13;
l o w e r end of L a k e Erie, so t h a t t h e&#13;
lake levels w i l l be raised t w o feet, does&#13;
&gt; not m e e t much favOr in Ontario* especially&#13;
among the Canadians t h a t reside&#13;
oji_theJborder of Lake Erie, and on t h e&#13;
Detroit river and. L a k e St. Clafiv I n&#13;
order to carry the e n g i n e e r i n g s c h e m e&#13;
t h r o u g h it w i l l be necessary to secure&#13;
the consent of t h e dominion govern-,&#13;
ment, hence the bill may be doomed&#13;
for defeat.&#13;
. f~-&#13;
T H E MARKETS.&#13;
L I V E S T O C K .&#13;
Cattle Sheep&#13;
.3 7,&gt;S1 85&#13;
.4 IKiifca ib&#13;
21 Dr »wned « t Sea.&#13;
A s p e c i a l f r o m N o r f o l k , V a . , s a y s :&#13;
T h e JJritish s t e a m s h i p A r i o s t o , C a p t .&#13;
R a i n e s , b o u n d frgrn G a l v e s t o n t o H a m -&#13;
b u r g w a s w r e c k e d s i x m i l e s s o u t h o l&#13;
• H a t t e r a s , N . C,., a n d 21 of t h e c r e w&#13;
we're d r o w n e d . Capt. B a i n e s a n d e i g h t&#13;
o f t h e c r e w w e r e s a v e d b y tKe' h e r o i c&#13;
effort*,of t h e O c r a c o k e life* s a v i n g c r e w .&#13;
N e w Yorkfiestprudes&#13;
Lower Krailes..&#13;
rhlc*qr&lt;&gt;-TBesttrnules....&#13;
Lower grades..&#13;
D e t r o i t —&#13;
Best unities .1 TJWMT 7JC&#13;
Lower araiies... 2 5J&lt;tj*3 75&#13;
Unffalo—&#13;
nest grades 4 0:&gt;ft5 03&#13;
Lower urades.. ,-j 2a®a &amp;)&#13;
Cincinnati—&#13;
Pest grades 5 ftVftiS 7*&#13;
Lower grades.. .4 l5(o&gt;4 75&#13;
Pittsburg—-&#13;
Best grades ,B 40(¾¾ \&#13;
Lower wades.. .4 5WS&gt;4 75&#13;
H 4)&#13;
2 7o&#13;
4 05&#13;
4 OJ&#13;
4 no&#13;
3 0J&#13;
4 00&#13;
3 63&#13;
,s&#13;
885&#13;
3 00&#13;
40&#13;
0J&#13;
Lamb*&#13;
*5 90&#13;
4 75&#13;
5 85&#13;
4 25&#13;
.,5 25&#13;
4 00&#13;
5 6 0&#13;
4 00&#13;
»75&#13;
5 uo&#13;
5 40&#13;
5 00&#13;
Hops&#13;
W40&#13;
3 30&#13;
4 20&#13;
3&gt;J0&#13;
4 10&#13;
3 05&#13;
430&#13;
a 93&#13;
4 3 0&#13;
DUD&#13;
4 25&#13;
4W&gt;&#13;
%&#13;
• # # &gt;&#13;
- ¾ ^&#13;
c&#13;
G R A I N ,&#13;
Wheat,&#13;
Nu, 2 red&#13;
ETC.&#13;
Oorn. ,&#13;
No.'2 mix&#13;
Oats.&#13;
NO: 2 wlilto&#13;
New York TX&amp;T2%&#13;
Utilcttffo 69(¾¾¾ 83&amp;33„&#13;
*l&gt;etrolt ?0@7rt* 33@824'&#13;
T o l e d o eS)®89&gt;4 *X8pi&#13;
Cincinnati ?o®7)1^ 83®31&#13;
P l t U b u r g 7^72¾ 84(^34¾.&#13;
IlaftMo 71(^71¾ 83®33^&#13;
•Detroit-Hoy. No, I Tlmot&amp;y, $11 50 per&#13;
Potatoes, 35c per bu. Live Poultry, s&#13;
chiokens, 7c per )b; fowls, 0o; turkeyi&#13;
ducks. 9c EKRS, Htrictly fresh, l»o per&#13;
Butter, best dairy, 22c per lb; cretan&amp;y&#13;
20&lt;&amp;&gt;4&#13;
24&amp;S4&#13;
2 4 ^ 4 *&#13;
2*340&#13;
29® 3» *&#13;
£8®28i&#13;
* H&#13;
BfeBaM M M a ti^m^Xi&#13;
• * • * I&#13;
»£^.*"'. ". V *&#13;
'*.. . •&lt;&lt;..'&#13;
' r&#13;
; • . /&#13;
4&#13;
v ^&#13;
•*•" V *&#13;
; v-':&#13;
- , - • • * " * " .&#13;
\r?''"'••&#13;
fr&#13;
.'•',"• . i . V T " \&#13;
w v&#13;
"."?'*;. »•• i |&#13;
•Mi* SsSSSiSSc^&#13;
HISWQRD OF HONOR §&#13;
\to A T*lc of the Blue and the Grayt — jy*&#13;
I D \ BY&amp; WERNBSL jffk&#13;
^j( Copyright, 18M, by Robert Bonner'a Son*. AfK&#13;
CHAPTER V.&#13;
But Florence waa silent. She only&#13;
cart a beseeching glance at EM ward;&#13;
but theriatter knew bis advantage too&#13;
well.. He was aware that there was&#13;
atill one moans of parting the two&#13;
lovers, and did not delay using the&#13;
weapon.&#13;
"You have come at an unfortunate&#13;
time, Mr. Roland," he said, with cutting&#13;
scorn. "I shall be at your service&#13;
for the explanation you will probably&#13;
demand at any hour tomorrow; today&#13;
I regret that it is impossible. At my&#13;
uncle's urgent desire, my marriage with&#13;
his daughter takes place this very day:&#13;
all the arrangements for the ceremony&#13;
are completed; the Justice of the peace&#13;
will arrive in an hour. You probably&#13;
understand that our affair must be deferred&#13;
for the present."&#13;
Roland had turned deadly pale; lie&#13;
scarcely beard the last words; his eyes&#13;
rested only on Florence. At last., with&#13;
a violent effort he murmured, almost&#13;
unintelligibly:&#13;
"You heard. What have you to say?&#13;
Answer!"&#13;
Florence stood as if utterly crushed.&#13;
For the first time she realized how unpardonable&#13;
her weakness had been,&#13;
and that the decision which she had&#13;
regarded as a sacrifice to filial love&#13;
was really an act of treason to the m.Mn&#13;
to whom her promise and her faith&#13;
were pledged. In the consciousness of&#13;
this guilt, she did not even attempt&#13;
to defend herself, but&gt; instead of answering,&#13;
burst into passionate weeping.&#13;
"I know enough!" said William in a&#13;
hollow tone. "Farewell!"&#13;
A flash of triumph blazed in J3dward's&#13;
eyes, but he'exulted too soon.&#13;
The moment when William turned&#13;
from her broke the spell 'Which had&#13;
his death-bed, such e dispute cannotbe&#13;
settled. So I yield to necessity and&#13;
shall wait a more fitting season."&#13;
Edward looked as if he were on the&#13;
point of rushing upon his enemy. The&#13;
icy contempt in Roland's words enraged&#13;
him even more than the insults&#13;
themselves, but by exerting all Ms&#13;
strength of will, he controlled himself.&#13;
' " A more fitting season!'" he repeated.&#13;
"You are right, Mr. Roland.&#13;
I, too, can wait, and perhaps the hour&#13;
for settlement -will come before you&#13;
expect it."1&#13;
He. turned slowly toward the door.&#13;
His game was lost; the prize for whose&#13;
sake he had humbled himself to intrigue&#13;
was snatched from him at the&#13;
last moment, y£t he did not quit the&#13;
field like a vanquished m a n . ^&#13;
The menacing glance which rested&#13;
on the young couple ought to have&#13;
warned them; it was the look of a man&#13;
sure of his vengeance and his ultimate&#13;
triumph.&#13;
CHAPTER VI.&#13;
In. the Enemy's Hands.&#13;
As the door closed behind her&#13;
cousin, Florence uttered a sigh of relief.&#13;
She had feared an instant outbreak&#13;
of the quarrel, which seemed at&#13;
an end; at least for-tb&amp;jQioment, but&#13;
the last threatening words oC the two&#13;
men had not escaped her notice.&#13;
"What are you to do?" she asked&#13;
anxiously. "What is the moaning of&#13;
the concealed threats you exchanged&#13;
with Edward? William, 1 beseech&#13;
you—"&#13;
"Say no more," he intemiplod gravely,&#13;
almost sternly. "This U a niatinr&#13;
which concerns us men alone. You&#13;
hear that, no explanation will tnke&#13;
place, at-present. Let that sumce."&#13;
my regiment today, and God aloue&#13;
knows when I *hall be permitted to&#13;
see ,you again."&#13;
At his first words Florence's features&#13;
expressed vague anxiety; now she&#13;
started In sudden terror.&#13;
"You are going? You 'win leave&#13;
me?"&#13;
"I must. I gave my colonel my word&#13;
of honor to return at sunset This was&#13;
the sole condition on which he would&#13;
permit me to ride here. I must keep&#13;
this promise."&#13;
"And leave me alone, exposed to the&#13;
*full fury of the storm which Edward&#13;
will raise. You mortally insulted hfro,&#13;
flung the word 'fraud* into his face.&#13;
He will avenge himself for Jt, and on&#13;
me, if you are out of reach."&#13;
"Then come with toe," said William,&#13;
with desperate resolution. "Cast everything&#13;
behind you and follow me at&#13;
once. Our marriage has long been&#13;
agreed upon. We shall find within our&#13;
lines a justice of the peace and a priest,&#13;
will perform the ceremony. Day after&#13;
tomorrow—tomorrow even—you can be&#13;
my wife. Then come what may, at&#13;
least nothing can separate us."&#13;
"And- my* father?" replied t h e young&#13;
girl, with a trembling voice. "Must&#13;
he, in his last hour, call in vain for his&#13;
child? Must a stranger's hand close&#13;
his eyes? So long as he breathes, my&#13;
place is at his side."&#13;
"You are right! I forgot. You are&#13;
bp.und; but,'so, too, am I. You hear. I&#13;
gave my word of honor, and where&#13;
duty calls—"&#13;
"Duty? To whom? Your first, most&#13;
sacred duty is to protect me. I shall&#13;
stay. I have not the heart to leave my&#13;
father.- You will go, when, you see that&#13;
I cling to you in mortal anguish? William,&#13;
our love is at stake!"&#13;
"And so is my honor! Florence!&#13;
Merciful heaven! Hear me! Do not&#13;
torture me longer by your entreaties!&#13;
Do you not understand" that I must go,&#13;
even though the whole happiness x\f&#13;
my life depended on my- remaining!"&#13;
She really did not understand. The&#13;
spoiled, idolized daughter of the rich&#13;
planter could not believe that anything&#13;
could be more valued than herself.&#13;
She had had before her eyes the dangerous&#13;
example of a passion which ret&#13;
aside duty and honor to gain her^hand.&#13;
Only -air liuur before she had heard the&#13;
confession from Edward's lips. From&#13;
William she always hearcLof,honor and&#13;
duty; and the old suspicion that there&#13;
""vras-a lack of love stirred in her heart.&#13;
Aad—yet, her whoje,_s^uXjdrew her to&#13;
QUE BUDGET OF FUN.&#13;
SOME QOOD JOKES, ORIGINAL&#13;
AND SELECTED.&#13;
A V a r i e t y of Q u l p i , G i b e * »n4 I r o a t o *&#13;
t o C a u s e a S m l U — F l o t s a m a n d&#13;
J e t a a m from t h a T i d e of H u m o r —&#13;
W i t t y gay l a s * .&#13;
W h e r a I t H a r t .&#13;
"Why are you weeping?" asked t&amp;e&#13;
loving husband.&#13;
"When little Harry and I went down&#13;
town today," she sobbed, "the conductor&#13;
insisted that I must pay for&#13;
the child."&#13;
"Oh, well," he said, "I wouldn't let&#13;
that bother me. What's a nickel to&#13;
us?"&#13;
"It Isn't the nickel," she indignantly&#13;
replied. "It's the impertinence of&#13;
the brute of a conductor in Insinuating&#13;
that it is possible for me to be&#13;
the mother of a child more than ten&#13;
years old,"—Chicago Times-Herald.&#13;
IT WAS THE LOOK OF A MAN SURE OF,HIS VENGEANCE.&#13;
held the young woman captive. She&#13;
knew that if he crossed the threshold&#13;
she would lose him forever, and, eve he&#13;
reached it, she rushed forward, clasping&#13;
his arm with both hands. ,&#13;
"William, don't leave me so! You&#13;
see that I was deceived, ensnared, and&#13;
that.unfortunate promise was extorted&#13;
from me beside ray father's iicU-bed.-Hast-wish has a powerful influence, but&#13;
They gave me no choice,'and constantly&#13;
told me you had given me up, until&#13;
I believed it."&#13;
The young officer paused; hl3-voice&#13;
still sounded harsh and bitter," but at&#13;
least he lingered. " —&#13;
' "Then choose new," he said. "Now&#13;
the net that ensnared you is t.srn. and&#13;
no one shall prevent your free decision.&#13;
Choose whose wife you will be."&#13;
"Yours!_ Yours!" cried Florence&#13;
with passionate fervor, as'^he rushed&#13;
into his armjp "Protect me, WiKinm!&#13;
You do not know how they have tortured&#13;
me!"&#13;
"Yes, I see it," he said, bending toward&#13;
her. ,&#13;
His resentment could not endure&#13;
against this touching entreaty. Cl.up&#13;
ing her hand in his, he turned reso-&gt;&#13;
lutely- to Harrison.&#13;
My fiancee's explanation is sufficient&#13;
for mo, and, I hope, for you a l s o . / A S&#13;
•she has been the victltn of a fradd—"&#13;
Edward started at the insult, ^nd was&#13;
about to answer, but Roland arav'e'irnn&#13;
no opportunity.&#13;
"Well, call it delusion, ji the word&#13;
founds better. The factTremains the&#13;
same, and also the part which you have&#13;
played In It You probably will not&#13;
refuse to account toyme for I t , even&#13;
though there must be delay. * in this&#13;
house and at the hour when, the man&#13;
Who alto was a father to you lies on&#13;
Florence looked timidly at him. The'&#13;
dark^loucl on his brow was not caused&#13;
by the dispute with ftdwtu'd; she knew&#13;
only too well what had occasioned it.&#13;
"You are angry with me—still!'' she&#13;
said; softly. .&#13;
"No*_L understand that you were deceived&#13;
by the intrigue, that, a father's&#13;
P had expected my affianced wife to&#13;
show more.resolution, more confidence.&#13;
I, too, remained for month-*, with no&#13;
message from you;.I, too, heard that&#13;
you assented to the separation your&#13;
-rather decreed: but I did not believe it&#13;
for an instant, What urged me hither&#13;
was merely the torturing uncertainty,&#13;
a-vague presentiment of misfortune.&#13;
Had I arrived a few hours later, I&#13;
should have found you another's wife."&#13;
Florence bowed hoi* head in conscious&#13;
guilt. She had so dreaded this&#13;
fate, yet had not had courage to boldly&#13;
resist it. But for this intervention, she&#13;
woirld indeed have fallen a victim to it.&#13;
'I am brave only when you are at&#13;
y side,"'she confessed. "Do not reroach&#13;
me, William! I was so utterly&#13;
deserted; but now you are here again,&#13;
and all will be well."&#13;
He gazed'silently ;\t the pale, sweet&#13;
face raised so imploringly to his, and&#13;
_th€_repro9f'died on.his lips. He loved&#13;
this tender, yielding creature, wiUT&#13;
"her gentle unseltUBfttSSH, amOiifeW that&#13;
she was capable of'any sacrifice as soon&#13;
as a s^ang 4iand s»Med ^'vi directed&#13;
her.&#13;
"Then shoW me that you can be&#13;
brave and steadfast vrh*&gt;n only my love,&#13;
not my presence, r&gt;rptart3 you," he ieplied.&#13;
"I cannot stay with -you as you&#13;
expect; my leave of absence gives me&#13;
only a few hours more. I must rejoin&#13;
p i&#13;
the man who seemed so hard and unyielding—&#13;
she would not lose him.&#13;
"William!" There was no reproach&#13;
in her voice now-. The tones were&#13;
sweet and persuasive. "William, do&#13;
not leave me; you do not^lthow what&#13;
I must encounter during the next few&#13;
hours. My father will demand the fulf&#13;
i l m e n t of my promise. If I refuse, the&#13;
excitement will perhaps cause h-is&#13;
death. Then I shall be.wholly in Edward's&#13;
power, and you do not know&#13;
him as I do. He has a fiendish will,&#13;
which can overcome all resistance.&#13;
During his suit I have often felt like&#13;
the bird spellbound by the gaze of 4he&#13;
serpent. It knows&gt; that, it is going to&#13;
destruction, yet flutters into its jaws.&#13;
Have you courage to leave me to this&#13;
power? I—fear it."&#13;
With feminine instinct, she had&#13;
touched the right chord. William's&#13;
jealousy blazed up at the. thought of&#13;
the possibility suggested. He, toot&#13;
k^new-Edward, and was aware that Edward&#13;
would make every effort to wrest&#13;
from him the prize which he had just&#13;
regained. Florence was not created for&#13;
a heroine. To leave her now was indeed&#13;
to loo.se her, Torn ffom the sheltering&#13;
trunk, she would flutter—helplessly,&#13;
like a vine in the storm, and&#13;
become a prey to the tempest.&#13;
Roland made n o reply, but-^a- terrible&#13;
conflict was raging in hisr soul.&#13;
Now, for the first time, he understood&#13;
the warning of Colonel Burney, who&#13;
had been unwilling to let him go into&#13;
temptation.&#13;
He had manfully resisted it, when&#13;
Harrrsoirassalled him.; but it was very&#13;
different to stand face to face with&#13;
Florence, listen to her entreaties and&#13;
see her tears. The young officer loved&#13;
her with all the passion of his fourand-&#13;
twenty years, and his strength&#13;
threatened to forsake him.&#13;
Florence saw the c6nfiict in his face,&#13;
and, clinging to h i m i i k e a timid dove,&#13;
she pleaded more and more fervently,&#13;
while the,temptation stole nearer and&#13;
nearer. After all, why was it "necessary&#13;
that he should return today?&#13;
There f was no battle in prospect; t&gt;u&#13;
soldier wtnild not be missed from his&#13;
post. What if he should stay merely&#13;
until the morrow? Much—nay, everything—&#13;
would be decided by that time.&#13;
Death was already knocking at tlia&#13;
door, and, as soon as Mr. Harriscu&#13;
'. passed from earth, his daughter would'&#13;
be *free to follow her lover.&#13;
Until tomorrow! ) (b&#13;
A pretext was easily found. Springflcld&#13;
wao wlthin-lhfi_enemy s lines. The&#13;
I n t h e B a r n y a r d .&#13;
Rooster—Oh, say, this is a cinch. All&#13;
the other chickens down the hill and&#13;
the old lady with such a cold she can't&#13;
call them.&#13;
A l r e a d y S h e H a d B e g u n t o P r e p a r e .&#13;
"If you keep c I as you have begun,&#13;
Mabel," complained the young • husband,&#13;
running his eye over the week;*&#13;
ly account, "we shall never be able"&#13;
to lay up. anything for a rainy day."&#13;
"How can you say so, Henry," exclaimed&#13;
the young wife, righteously&#13;
indignant, "when you know that I&#13;
have two of the loveliest rainy-day&#13;
skirts that were ever made!"—Stray&#13;
Stories.&#13;
44An Empts Sack&#13;
Cannot Stand Uprighti*"&#13;
9{jtHher can poor, &lt;ox*k, thin blood&#13;
nourish and sustain the physical system*&#13;
For strength of nerves and muscles there&#13;
must be pure, rich, vigorous bleed*&#13;
Hood's Sarsaparitta is established as the&#13;
standard preparation for the Hood by Us&#13;
many remarkable cures*&#13;
.^,-,&#13;
The constantly increasing buaineaa&#13;
of the B. &amp; 0. R. R. has necessitated&#13;
very material additions to the .telegraph&#13;
service. During the past year&#13;
nearly 2,000 miles of copper wire, 1$6&#13;
pounds to the mile, have been strung.&#13;
New lines have been placed in service&#13;
between Baltimore and Pittsburg, BaV»&#13;
timore and Parkersburg, Newark, O*&#13;
to Chicago, PhiladeFphia to Newarjc,&#13;
Philadelphia to Cumberland and CunV&#13;
berland to Grafton. During the summer&#13;
several of these wires were quadruplexed&#13;
between Baltimore and Cumberland&#13;
and duplexed west. [&#13;
••m&#13;
V ,&#13;
To the pure all things are moreor&#13;
less adulterated.&#13;
A lasvsuit is the proper court dress&#13;
for an attorney.&#13;
There are no reserved seats in heaven&#13;
for rich people.&#13;
T r y G n t l n - o ! T r y G r * t n - o t&#13;
Ask your grocer today to show yon »&#13;
packag-e of GRAIK-O, the new food&#13;
drink that takes the place.of coffee.&#13;
The children may drink it without injury&#13;
as well as the adult. All whotjry&#13;
it, like it. GRAIN-0 has that rich seal&#13;
brawn of Mocha or Java, but it is made&#13;
from pure grains, and the most delicate&#13;
stomach receives it without distress.&#13;
One-fourth-the price of coffee. 15c&#13;
and 2"JC.'per package. Sold by alt&#13;
A death-bed convert goes to heaven&#13;
empty handed..&#13;
Lone'R 1'amJly M e d i c i n e . —&#13;
M o v e s t h e b o w e l s e a c h d a y I n o r d e r&#13;
t o b e h e a l t h y t h i s i s n e c v s ^ a r y . A c t s&#13;
g e n t l y on" t h e l i v e r a n d k i d n e y s . C u r e s&#13;
s i c k h e a d a c h e . P r i c e '2"t a n d r&gt;0c.&#13;
H o t t e r t o d i e of h e a r t f a i l u r e t h a n ,&#13;
b a n k f a i l u r e .&#13;
B r o u g h t I t U p o n H i m s e l f .&#13;
- ^ &amp; £ a t i s t h e w o m a n ' s nffpnfiB?"&#13;
"She threw a brick at a neighbor,&#13;
your honor, and hit a nJTn standing behind&#13;
her."&#13;
"The man is guilty of contributory&#13;
negligence." If he hadn^r been an&#13;
idiot, he would have stood "in front of&#13;
her. Case is dismissed."—Stray Stories.&#13;
R e l i a b l e H e l p W x n f r t&#13;
• niftier s^x.i Tin* Hunv'nitartiTT'H'Mii^nr.d San •&#13;
i.itriuiu for ItivV.hla iirui Ht'ii'.M S&lt;"''.&lt;&gt;TS. nic'i'-&#13;
[•oraUMl. "j^ii'l U',' La Miu'.iin fi»i-1n11 tu'.orruatt.m.&#13;
Aildi-oasJ. H. T«Web7irrm7Tmn» .uavVvrfas.N..&amp;L&#13;
H ^ a r - b t t f l m g - - w a t e r w i l t r p m n v f l t e A&#13;
s t a i n s . -^ — -••&#13;
N a t u r a l I n f e r e n c e .&#13;
"It seems strange that you never received*&#13;
a proposal of marriage," remarked&#13;
the sarcastic girl.&#13;
"Who says I never received a proposal&#13;
of marriage?" demand\d the&#13;
other. \ _ ^&#13;
"Why, no one, of. course, but I've&#13;
always understood that you are u&#13;
spinster."—Chicago Evening Post.&#13;
T H E G R I P CC7KE T n A T D O E S C U R B .&#13;
Laxative fcromu Quinine T;iblsts r e m o v e&#13;
t h e on use tliiir. produces \.'\ G r i p p e U. "W.&#13;
Grove's si^'iiatUXL! io-'-vn each box. 2oc.&#13;
Riches have wings and poverty has&#13;
stings.&#13;
There is no problem equal an aching&#13;
tooth.&#13;
AMERICA SAYS SO.&#13;
The Entire Country&#13;
on the Move.&#13;
is&#13;
T h o s e Lovlnsr Glrl«.&#13;
Maiid&lt;3—Mr. De Jones as-ked me to&#13;
sing for Jhim the other- evening after&#13;
we had been introduced.&#13;
Clara—And what did you sing?&#13;
Maude-^-Why, how do you know that&#13;
I sang at all?&#13;
Clara—Well, I noticed that he didn't&#13;
ask you to sing , to-night.—Chicago&#13;
News.&#13;
Cascarc+s Canriy Ca hartfc DiJ It. a«d Recor*&#13;
. a Phenomenal VUtary. HiveAlUiou&#13;
Loxes Sold Last Year.&#13;
A D i f f e r e n c e In T a s t e s . „&#13;
"I saw you kissing my daughter. ' 1&#13;
don't like it, sir."&#13;
"Then you don't know what's good,&#13;
sir."—Life.&#13;
P o l l t e n e s * In t h g C o u n t r y .&#13;
"Hand .me my hat, Schorch!"&#13;
"What do you want of it?"&#13;
"I, want to take it off to the parson&#13;
when he passes!"—Fliegende&#13;
Blaetter.&#13;
way might be Obstructed; return im^&#13;
possible; any one of the hundred perils&#13;
iv'tiich threatened the daring rider&#13;
might intervene. It was but a word&#13;
which stood between him and his happiness—&#13;
true, his word of honor.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
Always speak the trwth, but do not&#13;
alwajp tell it—Ivan Paala.&#13;
A _ F o r e c a s t .&#13;
"The Indications are," remarked the^&#13;
man who was looking at-the sky with&#13;
an expression of great wisdom, that it&#13;
will be cold and raw."&#13;
- The man who has trou Die with the&#13;
servant girl problem meekly inquired:&#13;
"What are you talking about, the&#13;
weather or dinner?"'— Washington&#13;
Star..&#13;
J F r e q u « n tly.&#13;
"Pa, what Is a drawn battle?"&#13;
"It Is one in which the enemy has&#13;
r a t n e r the test of it."—Puck. '&#13;
F r o m every, p a r t of A m e r i c a f o r t e s t h e&#13;
n e w s t h a t s u f f e r e r s from constipation^&#13;
h a v e fount! relief in C a s e u r e t s C a n d y C a -&#13;
t h a r t i c , t h e w o n d e r f u l m o d e r n s c i e n t i l i c&#13;
l a x a t i v e a n d i n t e s t i n a l tonic. C a s c a r e t a&#13;
a r e f i g u r a t i v e l y a n d i i t e i a l l y in e v e r y -&#13;
b o d y ' s n y ' T h r - T ' l r m g f l n ' i " M&lt;.*n rrted C,i\n-.&#13;
c a r e t s w i t h t h e m o s t p l e a s a n t a n d eff&#13;
e c t i v e r e s u l t s , a n d v o l u n t a r i l y t e s t i f y t o&#13;
t h e i r e x p e r i e n c e s . H e r e a r e a f e w * * *&#13;
t r a c t s f r o m s o m e of t h e l e t t e r s :&#13;
" I l m v e been u s i n g C a s c a r e t s for h e a d -&#13;
a c h e a n d c o n s t i p a t i o n a n d h a v e r e c e i v e d&#13;
g r e a t benefit from t h e m . " M r s . M. G a b -&#13;
ler,'5U! L a r r a b e e St., C h i c a g o .&#13;
'"I h a v e been t a k i n g C a s c a r e t s f o r o v e r&#13;
a m o n t h a n d find t h e m j u s t t h e t h i n s f o r&#13;
c o n s t i p a t i o n . " A l b e i t B. B u r t , Tu M a i n&#13;
St.. A n d o v e r . M a s s .&#13;
'"I a m u s i n g C a s c a r e t s a n d h a v e n e v e r&#13;
f o u n d a n y t h i n g ' s o s a t i s f a c t o r y . " M r s . C .&#13;
. W . D u r r a n t , 57 E m e r s o n St., Buffalo, N .&#13;
V.&#13;
" I h a v e t a k e n C a s c a r e t s a n d c h e e r f u l l y&#13;
r e c o m m e n d t h e m to all m y f r i e n d s . " M r s .&#13;
G. J. G r a d w e l l . F r u g a l i t y , P a .&#13;
" C a s c a r e t s are, tine for b i l i o u s n e s s and}&#13;
m a l a r i a tind a r e so p l e a s a n t t o t a k e . " M r s .&#13;
M a r y C u m m i n g s , M a u d , O k l a h o m a .&#13;
'"I u s e C a s c a r e t s in m y f a m i l y a n d find&#13;
t h e m all you r e c o m m e n d t h e m t o b e . " E .&#13;
I,. I r v i n , Cor. M e a d a n d R a i l r o a d . M e a d -&#13;
vllle, P a . •&#13;
" Y o u c a n s a f e l y a d d a p p e n d i c i t i s t o t h e&#13;
]J,n of d i s e a s e s t h a t C a s c a r e t s will b e n e f i t&#13;
o r - c u r e . " E u n i c e J . S m i t h , R i c h V a l l e y ,&#13;
Onio. * '&#13;
" I have* u s e d C a s c a r e t s ; t h e r e is n o t h -&#13;
ing- b e U e r for c o n s t i p a t i o n . " B e n j . P a s -&#13;
sage-. K n i j r h t s t o w n . I n d .&#13;
" C a s c a r e t s a r e all r i g h t , Th'ev h a v »&#13;
c u r e d m e of . c o n s t i p a t i o n , -rttl I n.-ver e x -&#13;
p e c t e d a n y t h i n g w o u l d . " C h a r l e s H . N y e .&#13;
L o c k B o x '205. C t n e t n r r a t i , O h i o r -- : _&#13;
" I a m so t h a n k f u l for y o u r C a s c a r e t s .&#13;
T h e y a r e b e t t e r t h a n a n y m e d e c i n e I e v e r&#13;
u s e d . " M r s . M. H e w , L a c e l l e . I o w a .&#13;
"I do not hesltsite to s a y t h a t C a s c a -&#13;
r e t s i s t h e v e r y best m e d i c i n e e v e r p l a c e d&#13;
be-fore t h e p e o p l e . " A n d r e . / Woodruff,&#13;
r&gt;aysville, X. Y.&#13;
. " C a s c a r e t s a r e t h e b e s t c a t h a r t i c I e v e r&#13;
u s e d . " T o m H o l t . W e l l w o o d . M a n i t o b a&#13;
"L h a v e t r i e d - y o u r C a s c a r e t s a n d I w a n t&#13;
to tell you t h e y a r e j u s t s p l e n d i d . " J o h n&#13;
W i e i s m i n k , Vox Ml, A l l e s a n , Mich.&#13;
W e could Mil t h e w h o l e p a p e r w i t h e x -&#13;
p r e s s i o n s like t h e a b o v e . T h o u s a n d s o f&#13;
P i m i l a r r e c o g n i t i o n s of t h e m e r i t s o f - C a s -&#13;
c a r e t s h a v e b e e n v o l u n t e e r e d a n d p r o v e&#13;
thaF"Uhis d e l i g h t f u l ' I &amp; x a t i v e . so p l e a s a n t&#13;
of t a s i e . so mild, a n d y e t effective, h a s&#13;
s e c u r e d a t l r m l y e s t a b l i s h e d p l a c e in t h e&#13;
h e a r t s of t h e people.&#13;
,Go b u y a n d try C a s c a r e t s y o u r s e l f t o -&#13;
d a y . All d r u g g i s t s , 10c, 26c, oiJe. B o o k l e t&#13;
a n d s a m p l e fiee. A d d r e s s SlerMng R e m -&#13;
e d y C o m p a n y . C h i c a g o or N e w Y o r k . J&#13;
T h i s is t h e C A S C A R E - 7 - t a b -&#13;
let. E v e r y t a b l e t of t h e o n l y&#13;
g e n u i n e C a s c a r e t s ' b e a r s t h e&#13;
mafc'ic l e t t e r s " C C C . " L o o k&#13;
a t t h e t a b l e t before y o u b u y ,&#13;
a n d b e w a r e of f r a u d s , i m i t a -&#13;
flr&gt;n&lt;» a n d s u b s t i t u t e s .&#13;
-~ P I S O ' S CURE. FOR&#13;
y WK12&gt;- -I-fn- tRt ALL u a t- -N-U- LSt&#13;
I Confb Syrask T u M t O o o d .&#13;
'.' Ct nCti BNM. SSUo iMd b yFdTnmJt tOt t . N&#13;
. „ /&#13;
mm m •*m tMuaM&#13;
.-w&#13;
* * * •&#13;
*?*••&gt; v;:fe -^--^iir—Y- -v-""-1^-&#13;
- ^ .&#13;
fe&#13;
Rv&#13;
L&#13;
*&#13;
• * ^&#13;
;.?/ - M&#13;
/ -&#13;
L&#13;
. - : . . - : .^&#13;
..v&#13;
She findmcg f isjratrtt.&#13;
^&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS&#13;
= 1 ^ ^&#13;
EOiTOR,&#13;
* THURSDAY, dAN. 4, 1900.&#13;
-A. FARM JOURNAL&#13;
C* I" €» a t r r o m N o w t o j w ^ ^&#13;
" " e r NEARLY ^ Y E A R S&#13;
"• By special arrangement with the&#13;
publishers of the F A R X JOUKNAL&#13;
we are enabled to offer that paper&#13;
to ever subscriber who pays for&#13;
the DISPATCH one year ahead, for&#13;
only 81, both papers for the price&#13;
of ours only; our paper one* year&#13;
and the Farm Journal from now&#13;
to D e c , 1903, nearly five years.&#13;
The Farm Journal is an old established&#13;
paper, enjoying great&#13;
popularity, one of t h e best and&#13;
most useful farm papers published.&#13;
8S§?*Thi8 offer should be accepted&#13;
without delay.&#13;
ing rooms, land then pay them&#13;
liberal pensions besides, ninty per&#13;
of which they spend besoting&#13;
their\ bodies, hastening their&#13;
death) aud consigning themselves&#13;
to a jarunkardH doom! Better a&#13;
^##l^l^^f«^##i###^##iii####:&#13;
m&#13;
a/ $&#13;
By BAILEY SMITH.&#13;
thousand times better, no pensiousl sj|§ , , w ,„ ,&#13;
, L . A , -, , . . | ^ . A r r a n g e d bv M K S . \ \ . ("AULIN.&#13;
to these inmates than that ninty , q$&#13;
' cent, of it should go to inflate - « - . * . ^ 1 . . 1 . . 1 . . . 4 , . a . H j j a | a ft|&#13;
the pockets of the brewers, dispillers,&#13;
and saloonkeepers. B u t&#13;
rum rules! I t is politics—not&#13;
kindness, b u t cruelty to the old&#13;
soldiers.&#13;
c o v a m n n . | ^ a v o j d t h e trees. We reached&#13;
We readied the summit of the [Auvik statiou at 4 o'clock in the&#13;
mountains about 4 o'clock in the | morning of April 17th making t h e&#13;
DOKS IT PAY TO BUY CHEAP?&#13;
A cheap remedy for coughs and colds is&#13;
all right hut you want something that will,&#13;
relieve ami cure the more severe results of c o a s t l a n d m a r k e s , n i l l o s t i n t h e&#13;
lun^ trubk's. What shall you do? G&gt;&gt; to distance, and filling in the greater&#13;
afternoon. We had:a commanding&#13;
view of the country. North of us&#13;
was the open Behring sea a little&#13;
more to the west the bay at St.&#13;
Michaels. . The buildings a n d&#13;
distance—about 150 miles—in ^4&#13;
days. We rested thiee days on&#13;
the way. Our traveling time was&#13;
eleven days. O u r party of five&#13;
kept t h e lead down t u e river and&#13;
were-the first iu, b u t we had a&#13;
close second iu t h e Loyd party,&#13;
warmer and more regular climati? Yes. part of the sceue was the rolling ; coming iu, tw ) hours afterwards.&#13;
They intended to be first at&#13;
Auvik a u d the last day travled&#13;
if possible; if not p o s M ^ n r you, then in m o u m a n i g f e t c h i n g a w a y t o&#13;
eather case tukeJUe ON|,Y railedy ths'it luis&#13;
&lt;* W. C- T. Lf. to&#13;
to&#13;
. . . ... ., , . ,. ^ - r i &gt;• ward the Yukon and aloug the&#13;
been introuuctd in nil civj]i«ed countries , • i I i&#13;
with success in severe throat and lung coast a V.ast sea of whiteness with jail night expecting to pass us&#13;
trubles, '-R.scliee's German Syrup." It no relief—not a shrub or tree, jasleep—but we were to far ahead.&#13;
not only heals and siioulates the tissues to x h e c le l ] 8 e whiteness was blind-! I n making the portage we reached&#13;
ing under the-reflection of t h e t h e Yukon about 400 miles u p&#13;
warm sun. We all wore snow from t h e mouth. We left Auvik&#13;
olffsses, which did n o t prevent and started u p the Yukon to find a&#13;
cases of Fiiow blind. Seven of location to cut wood. We went&#13;
the boys were so blind that they u p the r-iver adout 18 miles where&#13;
could not well travel and were we cut wood until J u n e 3rd when&#13;
obliged to day a n d rest wTe took t h steamer for here.&#13;
A TfaMmand T o m u N&#13;
Could not express tbe raptnrt of&#13;
Anna E. Springer of 1125 Howard tt,&#13;
Philadelphia, Pa., when she funnel&#13;
that Dr. Kind's New Discovery for&#13;
Consumption had completely cured&#13;
her of a hacking cough that for many&#13;
years had made hie a harden. All&#13;
other remedies and doctors could givt&#13;
her no help, hut *he says of this Royal&#13;
Cute "it soon removed the pain in my&#13;
chest and I can now sleep noundly,&#13;
something I can scarcely remember&#13;
doing before. I feel like bounding its&#13;
praises throughout the universe." 8o&#13;
will everyone who triea Dr. King**&#13;
New Discovery for any trouble of thft&#13;
throat chest or langs^-^Price 50c and&#13;
$1. Trial bottles f^e aYj1 . A. Biffier's&#13;
drug store;&lt;fVery bottle guaranteed.&#13;
fl&#13;
Business Locals.&#13;
destroy the germ-disease,' kit allays it fhirumation,&#13;
cant&gt;es thsy exptctorfltion, gives a&#13;
goc.d nights list, and cures the patient.&#13;
Try one.bottle. Kiconiended n&gt;&amp;uv years&#13;
by all.druggists in the world. Sample bottles&#13;
at F . A. i^igler's.&#13;
Each ynar when we receive the&#13;
&lt;r* ®' TT i) J&gt; -ii A&gt; i i o m i ^ t i xo camp a uny uuu retst we tooK n i e sieamer ror nere.&#13;
ijj Edited by the W. C. T U. of Pinciney. M H o o d S h a i y a p a n l l a C a l e n d a r w e . . , v } n , o„tvnrw,,-f / i t-i' v «.1 • i i&#13;
«Hi • . 8S5i wond,e r h. ow i.t i.s por?s.ib.j.e to orjji. their eyes. \\ e lett the summit Cutting woodm the spring is haj*d&#13;
^fe&amp;e&amp;6€6:€:f 6fe€¢66 6 ^ 6 6 - : ^ 6 ^ j l i a ^e such clever desiynes. "Q he&#13;
"Dont mix religion and poli-! "Proverd Calendar" itself in front&#13;
tics." This is the plea of the man&#13;
i s i&#13;
anything.&#13;
8.&#13;
Coniaiisioner of fmmi^ration,&#13;
of twolittle tots, one rolx-d in&#13;
who has no religion to mix -with I delicate pink and t h e other in&#13;
blue. On the reverse side there&#13;
THI on. mI . TVT. TPo»w dieriJ y, UTr. n i are the usual astronomical calcul- atious HIK! other facts. The cal-&#13;
•endar. is m»d^ to sfand alone on&#13;
with a jump into a deep gulch work. .We were working on 4 ft.&#13;
about 20(1 ft so.hteep that we had of snow which had melted down&#13;
to p u t brenks on our sleds to let much by J u n e yet there was snow&#13;
them d( wn safely. Once into the I 2 ft. deep in some places when&#13;
gulch we had a gradual decent in- i we left. The breaking u p of t h e&#13;
to the Auvik river*" . O u r sleds • Yukon was a grand sight. One of&#13;
needed no pulling, i^'ost of the [natures moving panoramas, grand&#13;
boys were on ahead of o u r party.- !• and exciting. T h e water raised&#13;
says: "What have the s a l o o n s ! , ": - , , .. iileven of the eighteen having about 30 ft. from the-winter level&#13;
i • . i • .. n TI i desk or tHble, or it may be BUS- , . , .. T v -, ,, . -, , . - , - . , -,--&#13;
ever done far humanity? How , , A, „ XT&#13;
J&#13;
nv.Bny people have they clothed, v n hired the Indians and their dog j before the ice began to -move.&#13;
except the ealooi&#13;
•When ttie men&#13;
saloon keeper often contributes&#13;
pended on the wall. You should teams to help the;:) over t h e two Then it started in one unbroken&#13;
, , . - , 0 be sure^o^get one of these t a l e n - , ^ . - « . , , . , , „ . , -,&#13;
)ii keepers tamily.' - - • ^ , .L portages. Our party of nve aud mass, moving slowly at first hard-&#13;
, , ., ,, dais from your druggist, or q u e / ^ , i •• i * u i . Vi • i - a&#13;
have a strike,-the-! wi~ll be m"a iMle=d rt7o" y~o^"u ib y se-n-?d^i~n-g~"i ±g^r-taJhjbJ: trtTy-r-^tee^o^Uto-^i^U-Uly —pr^#--p^4^.---cra^k4i4g-—aad&#13;
,, ., , -, , . 6 cents in stamps to C. I. Hcod &amp;&#13;
more than the dry goods man, but: ,, ~&#13;
, , , - T I Co., Lowell, Mass.&#13;
he robs them of more. 1 never i * _&#13;
k-*^ew one of tliem to give a cent;&#13;
rt rf^., ^ v _ ___..4^,1 . |,. _F. A Siyler yuarnitees every hot&#13;
tliaf he did not expect a doirarnn | — -&#13;
retum. Why shouldn't they ]&#13;
close on Sunday ? I knowT of no&#13;
class that needs a rest on Sunday&#13;
more and time for thinking about&#13;
their souls. If they would not do&#13;
or counselors, use your influence&#13;
to secure Sunday closing. If any&#13;
one having power to make the&#13;
laws, or to enforce them refuses&#13;
to aid you, seclect some one who&#13;
tie of Chamheriins Couth Remedy and&#13;
will refund the money tc any one who&#13;
is not falsified alter lining Iwo thirds&#13;
ot the contents. " This is the best remour&#13;
loads over without help and breaking in everv direction, moviii&#13;
the two days travel of unusual i ing faster aud faster. I n an hour&#13;
hard work we were b u t six hours t h e ice was moving as fast as the&#13;
behind. The next day we rested, current, probably 7 miles an&#13;
t he ot luar boy ft pu Hit) tt on H»avtng hour, and in large floes. For two&#13;
us last on the trail. As t h e sun |days t h e river was a mass of mo.vwas&#13;
getting most to warm for day J ing ice, when the jam was over,&#13;
traveling, we decided to traveIH then it gradually r u n lighter for 3&#13;
edy in the world tor la pripne onnghs,! nights taking advantage of the ; days when it was all out above us.&#13;
colds, i roop and whooping couuh and crust and cold weather. We j I t does n o t clear u p on t h e bars at&#13;
i t voluntarily, let us make them is pleasant and safe to take. It pre- started the next morning at three ; the mouth of the Yvkon so boats&#13;
do so. If any of you axe-legislators, l vents j.ny tendency of a cold to result o'clock and by sunrise had passed can enter from t h e out side un-&#13;
\in pneumonia. t mar.-l ^ j five of the boys still m camp. The til about J u n e 2 6 t h . Since May 15&#13;
..- - * • , • - next day we were in the lead. (we have had no night; when we&#13;
WeTTre'in receipt of a beautiful, p o w u t h e Auvik we had fine sled- ;&#13;
C ame through t h e Yukon flats -on&#13;
-Calendar issued by tiie Michigan j n g a n d excellent weather, blight the artic circle there was no&#13;
Agricultural College. It contains' W f i r m days, snow melted some and change in the shades of light. At&#13;
some, forty.pictures of buildings, froze in a fine crust nfghts whjch^-Ft. Yukon just above t h e circle&#13;
live stock, interior, and campus would bear us Aip until - a b o u t " 10 we had one day that t h e sun did&#13;
scenes, arranged in twelve groups.J o'clock in the forenoon, when we not go out of sight. How would&#13;
The progress of t h e institution would pitch camp and take s o m e ' y o u like a few such days.down in&#13;
in recent years is very gratifying needed sleep. We made severaUMich? This "would be a good&#13;
to its friends. The' attendance j large portages across the bends of country,for farming, a man Could&#13;
has almost trebled during the p a s t the river saving distance,but n u k - ; work his help 24 hours a day. All&#13;
four years, and will reach, during ing ourselves lots of hard worlw; winter I have surTered from nothyear&#13;
nearly 700. I n making portages we rtstmlly worse than a cold and few frost&#13;
The advantages offered by this left t h e river where the banks, bites; think I frosted my nose&#13;
Coldest we&#13;
Genearl Horatio C. King, presi.&#13;
dent of the New York State board&#13;
that' has control of t h e Soldiers'&#13;
H o m e at Bath, New York, iir an&#13;
an official letter—t£r^ Governor&#13;
Roosevelt, says that of the more&#13;
than §100,000 paid last-year- iu&#13;
pensions to the inmates of that ] the present&#13;
institution, "is is not an over esti&#13;
m a t e to state at least ninty per j College are certainly worth very were high, it invarbly seemed so about nine times,&#13;
cent, was spent foi intoxicants.''! careful consideration by all par-! a t W s t , and our sleds, at times, had at S t Michaels was 40degrees&#13;
Doubtless the same is true of sol- ents who expect to send their sons1 had to be lifted like so much dead below zero. Up the river it is-]&#13;
diers' homes generally, the one near&#13;
Dayton included. Surely we are&#13;
a""Ve'Ty pariotic philanthropic ( ?)&#13;
people! We provide at an enormous&#13;
expence palatial "soldiers'&#13;
homes" for the dependent veterans&#13;
of t h e Civil War," slip ply tlietn&#13;
with all the necessaries of life, including&#13;
medical attendence, parks&#13;
for recreation, libaries and readn&#13;
o b b e d lllC U l U T B&#13;
A startling- incident ot which Mr.&#13;
John Oliver of Philadelphia, was the&#13;
subject.is narrated hy finnas follows:&#13;
"I was in'a. mo*t dreadful condition,&#13;
my skin was almost yellow, eyessunken.&#13;
tongue coated,.pain.continually in baxik&#13;
no appetite, gradually growing .weaker&#13;
day hy day. Three physicians had&#13;
given me up bait fortunately 4 friend&#13;
•advised trying Electric Bitters and to&#13;
my Rrea|fJ^ and surprise, the fir*t&#13;
brttle;-toade a decided improvement. I&#13;
continued their use for three week,*&#13;
and am now a well man. I know tbey&#13;
saved my life and robbed the grave of&#13;
another victim. No one should fail to&#13;
try them. Only 50c guaranteed at ? .&#13;
k. Sighir's drug stoje.&#13;
and daughters away to school.&#13;
C. L. BOWMAN,&#13;
Proprietor of&#13;
The City Market,&#13;
, Corner ot Main and Mill Sts.,&#13;
I'lNCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
WILL&#13;
PAY&#13;
CASH&#13;
For Tallow, S i d e s , Pelts, and&#13;
Dressed Pork.&#13;
weight u p the bank; then we^ much colder,&#13;
would wind our way through the No letters came after this one&#13;
timber following a dog trail which, in June, until Dec. 13th, 1898.,&#13;
snake fashion, twisted eyeiry way Conituued Next Week&#13;
Notice to Tax Payers&#13;
The Township's Tax R&gt;!1 is now in my&#13;
hands for the Collction of Taxes—I will be&#13;
at the Pinekney E x . B ink during businegg&#13;
hours to receive the eame.&#13;
R. II. Teeple. Twp. Treasurer.&#13;
I would like to trade a single harueas&#13;
for pole wood. J O E S Y K E S .&#13;
For S a l e .&#13;
House and lot in the village of Pinukney&#13;
t-52 I I . Isham.&#13;
For Sale or Exchange.&#13;
A $140 00 ir^an very «!inu,&gt;. Will&#13;
takh butt«rT »u&gt;j{&gt;, oal&gt;, hay, or anything&#13;
I can use. WitlMkH samfl ia&#13;
installments, Percy^warthont,&#13;
Vinekney, Mich,&#13;
Werner's Dictionary ol ay uoayms &amp; Antonyms,&#13;
HytSology and Familiar Pltrascs.&#13;
|\ A book that should 1KM:I tljevest&#13;
rxicket of every person, Lec»iui-e it&#13;
tells you the right ^vorti tc use.&#13;
Ho Two Words In the English&#13;
Language Have Exactly the&#13;
Same Significance. To express&#13;
the precise meaning tliut one intends&#13;
to", convey a dictionary of&#13;
Synonyms U. need&lt;*l to avoid reix;-&#13;
utmii. TJTe Mmnpest tlRtire .of"&#13;
speech 'is antithciiis. lv. this die-,&#13;
tionarv the appended A,i/ni . .-&#13;
will, therefore, bo foui\d exlreiiiL-ly&#13;
valuahle. Contains many other&#13;
features such JIK JH^'tholorty,&#13;
Familiar Allusions and Foreign&#13;
Phrases, Prof. Loisette's Memory&#13;
Sy8tem,'The Art of Never Forgetting." etc..&#13;
etc. This wonderful HUle-bonk bonr.d in nneut&#13;
cloth binding and sent postpaid for &amp;0.25. Full&#13;
Leather, gilt edrre. $0.40, pom paid. Ordor at&#13;
ouce. Send for our large book catalogue, free.&#13;
AdMress all orders to&#13;
THE WERNER COMPANY,&#13;
fubliiheri and H&amp;nufactui-eri. AKKOK, OHIO.&#13;
Railroad Guicie.&#13;
Wrand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Time Table in effect, NOT. 19,1899.&#13;
*&#13;
M, A. L. DIVISION -WESTBOUND.&#13;
No 2? Passencer. Pontiac to Jackson&#13;
connection from Detroit 9 44 a •&#13;
No.'29 Passenger, Poattac to facksoa. fl:4*S p. ro.&#13;
No. 29 bas through coach from Detroit to J axon.&#13;
No. 43 Mixed, Lenox to Jackson '&#13;
connection from Detroit 4 45 p m&#13;
EAST OUND&#13;
No. 30 Passenaer to Pontiac and Detroit 8 IB p na&#13;
No. 28 Passimger, Jaxon to Detroit, 9:1*5 a. m;&#13;
No. 38 na9 through coaoii from Jaxon to Detroit&#13;
No 44 Mixed *o Pontiac and Lenox 7 M a m&#13;
All trains daily except Sunday.&#13;
No 44 connection at Pontiac for Detroit_ andfor&#13;
the west on DA M R B&#13;
W-. J Hiaa¥TAc«nt, PJnclrtiey&#13;
V o l c a n i c E r u p t i o n * j ^ R E W A R D .&#13;
Are grand, hut sk»n eruptions rob j We tbe undersigned drupj?ists, offli^&#13;
e of j&lt;\y. Butcklen'b arnica salve j er a .eivard of 50 cents to any person&#13;
cures tbetn; also old, tunning and j who pu-chases of us, two 25o boxes&#13;
fever sores, ulcers, boils, felons, corns, j 0f Baxter's Mandrake Bitters Tablets,&#13;
warts, euts, bruises, burns, scalds, if it fails to cure constipation, biliouschapped&#13;
bands, chilblains, best pile • ness, sick-beadache, jaundice, loss of&#13;
cure on earthy drives out pains and ! appetite, sour stomacbe, ^ s p e p s i a ,&#13;
aches. Onlt 25c a box; cure guaran- i liv er complaint, or any of the diseases&#13;
tetd. Sold by P. A. Sit?Ierr druggist ; {or which it is recommended. Price&#13;
numb, er o•f- i 2..5. ce7n.t.s. fo, r eit-h er , t.a.b lets or li^q uid, We Will also refund the money dn one&#13;
package of either if it fails to give&#13;
good things as usual. Michigan | satisfaction,.. j&#13;
The J a n r u a r y&#13;
P r a n k Leslies Magazine is full of&#13;
E_A, Sigler,&#13;
W. B. Darraw&#13;
Se^ us before selling your Beef;&#13;
C.L.BOWMAN.&#13;
•*r *' 1 1&#13;
readers will b e . especially inter&#13;
ested in "Artistic American Fur--&#13;
niture," by Florence Milner, who&#13;
describes with fine ae&amp;tbetic taste, VST'ANTLi/w^'y^r •&gt; ^ i ; : : i i ; ^&#13;
as w^ll as thorcrugb_knowledge, '_' . V - ! V . ' ;&#13;
the fin-de-siecle products of liCS# S f t l e r y m o u y0:I1. ,,„,, .,.,.,ni.tH.&#13;
Grand Rapids, Michigan, which IB fctmi1, boWi-KMe. no more; no. ICKS. I'osithe&#13;
great furniture-manufacturing tion poininucnt. Shir refcre;ieu, .my&#13;
centre of America. . »«nk 'm a°y l 0 w n - u " m*iul? ' ^ -&#13;
work com!ootid at home. Reference. Kn.&#13;
•lote telf-addretted aumpea envelope, I&#13;
OCT&#13;
AMD STEAMSHIP LINES*&#13;
f Popular rout« tor Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and., for&#13;
Howjell, 0*0*80, Alraa, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
joints in North western Michigan.&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,* ; \&#13;
G. P . A. TaleAo-. * IU&#13;
•tO YEARi -'&#13;
EXPERIENCI&#13;
Subflotibe for the Difipatch. i !T" - ^ - 7 - ^ 1 r-«i— 7-^7---1-&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHT* AC.&#13;
qnAlonkyloyn aes «c*enr&lt;taHinng nao nrk oeptoinhi oann df rde«eM wHhpetttohner M aftf iUnovnean stitornic t\l*y pmrnnhflwdhelnyt ipaal.t eHntaanbdleb,o okC nomn mPaaDtteesat&gt;i tent free. OJdent naency for •ecorlng patent*.&#13;
Patent* taken thronrh l^nnn Jt Co. reoatf* apttlal notiet, without charge, in tbe Sckntific JUncrkaiu A handaomeiy Uhirtrated weekly. Large* d *&#13;
ODlatlon of any aetenttflo KmrnaL Terma, l i f t&#13;
Bar; f onr montha, $L BOM bv an mwadeaiam&#13;
'• 4--. 1¾&#13;
^..&#13;
•A&#13;
•I'-&#13;
ll&#13;
t&#13;
&gt;&#13;
'l&#13;
At :J»&#13;
^ i » ) W « ^ w » ! . « ( l W W f l W * a ^ ^ ' WVSCffiWP* ..•'•W*er'*&lt;*&#13;
..fe?vc ^;-:rti/.i'&#13;
• • &gt; - ' r ^&#13;
' • v i •:...&gt;'&lt; " W ; ;vLV'i.'Vy.» SR :&lt;* &gt;"": iJJW /•*!^ '&#13;
M - ^ ^ A K :&#13;
** A-&#13;
. / ^ . -&#13;
• " • ' : S f '.. &lt;"-&#13;
'A"&#13;
^&#13;
• V ' ' ' .&#13;
***' ,f-&#13;
^&#13;
ujr&#13;
l!,-&#13;
- \ I&#13;
1 * i&#13;
I"-&#13;
t&#13;
&gt;S.# ••-••j&#13;
/;-'&#13;
Facts to Beniember.&#13;
'J'he original and genuine Red Fills&#13;
are Kmil's lUd Pills tor Wan people&#13;
at 25c boxt the womon's remedy.&#13;
Don't pay 60 cents.&#13;
You tan work when they work,&#13;
mv^&gt; • tii'ipe or make you eick, Knill's&#13;
u liu,- Liver Pills. Bowel KetiOiJ-.tor.&#13;
'i\v"ji^ live doH«s, 25 cents.&#13;
I'i• a.&gt;ririt, safe and sure are Kni I'•'&#13;
IIUM i Diarrlicea Pills, $)ures summer&#13;
. in• iMiu, dysVnte^y atid all pains of&#13;
it.- -i..uii.ch and bowels. Only 25&#13;
lv. V 4 i ne Kidney Pill cure back-,&#13;
4 Oi lv 25 cents box.&#13;
-•. MWHt stomarhs and breaths&#13;
• i)' t&gt;y lakmyr Knill's Dyspepsia&#13;
They will cure indigestion,&#13;
•i 11 -^iiIIIIHfli troubles,- destroys&#13;
i H^S tor 25c t&gt;ox. Best and&#13;
i Guai iHntaed l&gt;v yout dru^-&#13;
Will Unrlett, Dexter.&#13;
W B. Harrow, Pinckney.&#13;
;i i&#13;
MEN'S THOUOHTLESSN&#13;
AR-BE&#13;
/tgSTOHATIVE.&#13;
B a r - B e n is t h e g r e a t e s t k n o w n&#13;
n e r v e tonic a n d b l o o d purifier.&#13;
It c r e a t e s solid flesh, fhuscle a n d STRENGTH,&#13;
c l e a r s t h e brain, m a k e s t h e b l o o d pure and rich.&#13;
T i i c U i u Ki),l IVItli Kucli OUl 1 - - . .&#13;
W e a p o n s .&#13;
"He tried to kill inel" she walled.&#13;
There were those that sought to&#13;
comfort her. They pointed out the&#13;
fact that she wasatill alive. The villian'a&#13;
murderous designs had failed.&#13;
She had not even been hurt beyond the&#13;
shock to her feelings incident to the&#13;
discovery of the fact that he no longer&#13;
loved her a* of yore, when they walked&#13;
the green fields together and he&#13;
helped her over the fences.&#13;
For of course even her comforters&#13;
could not pretend that he loved her&#13;
after he had made an attempt to destroy&#13;
her life.'&#13;
Still, as has been said, the attempt&#13;
had failed. The intended victim Uvea,&#13;
while the would-be asassin was in&#13;
prison to answer for his attempted&#13;
crime. This ought to have been reason&#13;
for gratitude. Bad as the situation&#13;
was, it m!ght have been much&#13;
rworse. He might have succeeded in&#13;
his attempt, and he might have been&#13;
made to suffer capitally for his crime.&#13;
Both extremes hfcd-fceen avoided. Nevertheless&#13;
she refused to he comforted.&#13;
She wrung her hands in grief.&#13;
"I -wouldn't have minded it so&#13;
much," she went on in her anguish, "if&#13;
he hadn't tried to kill me with such&#13;
an old-fashioned weapon as an axe.&#13;
That sort of thing went out-long ago&#13;
in poTTte society, and even- attempts&#13;
at murder by throwing lighted lamps&#13;
are no longer considered the thing."&#13;
Here she paused to replenish her&#13;
supp'y of breath, for her remarks had&#13;
been delivered at a rapid gait. Then&#13;
tsho resumed her querulous complaint,&#13;
and after all there seemed to be much&#13;
reason in herposition. '&#13;
"\Vhv couldn't he." ahe demanded,&#13;
GLASOS3EE1 VELLING.&#13;
PROCESS BY WHICH EDGE IS CUT&#13;
AWAY AND REFlNI^HtD.&#13;
a n d c a u s e s a general feeling of health, power " W h y c o u l d n ' t h e h a v e b e e n u p - t o - d a t e&#13;
. 1 ^ 7 ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ a n r t * J n t m e a b o x o f P o i s o n e d , c n n d y r&#13;
t h e sulTerer is quickly m a d e c o n s c i o u s of direct&#13;
benefit. One b o x will work w o n d e r s , s i x should&#13;
p e r f e c t a cure, J 6 0 cts. A BOX; G h o x c s , .%.G0. For ]&#13;
ealo by dnijrirists everywhere, .- , jnniled, s^filci,&#13;
o n receipt of price. Ai&gt;'';\ •. DKS. HAi;TOM '&#13;
A N D B E N S O N , Uar-1 , .. iiiook, Cleveland, 6 '&#13;
- i e by I&#13;
i&lt;". A. SIGLER, Druggist&#13;
* .ii • i i . - y , - - M i c h . I&#13;
They could not answer her, but,&#13;
moving out slowly, with pity in their&#13;
countenances,, they left her to her&#13;
great grief.&#13;
Oh, why will men be so unmindful&#13;
of women's feelingk?&#13;
A $4.00 ROM FOUXSctS.&#13;
The Farjners' Encyclopedia.&#13;
E v e r y t h i n $r p e r -&#13;
t a i n i n g to t h e tiff&#13;
a i r s o f t h e f a r m ,&#13;
h o u s e h o l d t a d&#13;
s t o c k r a i s i n g . Embraces&#13;
articlos ou&#13;
the horee, die colt,&#13;
horse hiJ.iis, diseases&#13;
of the horse,&#13;
the^ faTm, g r a c e s , -&#13;
fruit culture, dairyinR.&#13;
cookery.lx'iftth,&#13;
-eaole, she* ii.su ii;^,&#13;
poultry, t.ivs, -the&#13;
dog, toilet, Bocial&#13;
liie, etc., etc. One&#13;
of the moEt ccnip&#13;
l e t e E n c y e l o -&#13;
pedjnsincxistpnro.&#13;
A large book, gi'-1 ^&#13;
x 1 ¾ inciitis. (i;^j&#13;
pagjs, fully illustrated,&#13;
bound i n&#13;
green cloth bindi&#13;
n g and equal t o&#13;
other books d a t i n g&#13;
M.0O. If you desire this br&gt;ek send us our special&#13;
olTer price, $0.75, a n d $0.20 extra for povtaga a n d&#13;
w e will fonvard the book to you. If it is \ux satisfactory&#13;
return it a n d w e will e x c h a n g e it or refund.&#13;
your m o n e y ^ e u d for our special illustrated catalogue,&#13;
quoting t h e lowest prices on books, F R E E&#13;
V e c a n save y o u money. Address all orders to&#13;
T H E WERNER COMPANY, •&#13;
FtblHfcert and Manufacturer*,* A k r o n , O h i o&#13;
i H i e WVriii-r ('..•";&gt; n v ! , t l i i T . ' . u c h l V r&lt;rlTil&gt;[,&gt;.! • -r'&gt;!:- •&#13;
It lias hrt^n demonstrated repeatedly&#13;
in everv state in the Union and in&#13;
many foreii/n countries that •'hamh^rlitin'&gt;&#13;
(,'t'i ' ' I'ein^dv i&lt; a certain prf-&#13;
^ If iTas'&#13;
that&#13;
W.&#13;
said&#13;
: "1&#13;
venfiVH and 'viri (or' croup&#13;
Imeomn th« nnivpr^al rum^dv 'or.&#13;
•'li^wa^n .VI V Pish-y, of Li'^rtv,&#13;
Va., only reo^ats ivlvit his iv-»&gt;n&#13;
around thn i/lolv» vvh^u h^» vvrit"&gt;&#13;
Ii4ve us^i 1 J3h i-u'&gt;»*rl lio'-i '"loii/ii R-'m-&#13;
^dy in my t'a-nily for s^v^ral years&#13;
and alw ivs with.o^rfnr't snii.•«'&lt;&lt;&gt;«. W-H&#13;
believ« that it. i&lt;* not. only the I P'l&#13;
.COUL'II rein^'lv, h\\K that, It" is a sine&#13;
&gt; ure tor orou|). It his ^avel the liveof&#13;
o'ii1 *hill"en a nu n h e r c&gt;\' t u n e s "&#13;
This ruinedv is for sale by b1. A. .Siller,&#13;
Dt'UsJLJtst.&#13;
r h © P l » t « t o B « J J e v e l l e d G o « » f r o m O n e&#13;
W h e e l U» A u o t h e r U n t i l it 1» U r o u t j i i t t*»&#13;
t l i e K i j ; h t 4 * o l u n J £ m e l &gt; , SuuU a u d W o o d&#13;
W U o e U A r e LiteO.&#13;
Bevelled glass Is not new, but it is&#13;
now far more extensively used than&#13;
formerly. Twenty years ago bevelled&#13;
mirrors were comparatively rare; now&#13;
they are common, and are &lt;seen iu&#13;
many shapes and s;ze«. Bevelled&#13;
places, large and small, and both&#13;
straight and bent, are Used for various&#13;
other purposes. The process of g.ass&#13;
bevelling is very simple, but the work&#13;
calls for skill on the part of the operators.&#13;
The plate to be bevelled goes first to&#13;
the roughing mill, which Is a solid,&#13;
heavy steel wheel about two feet and&#13;
a half in diameter, set horizontally,&#13;
and turning at a. high rate of speed.&#13;
The upper face, or top of this wheel.&#13;
is slightly rougheneTd. Suspended over&#13;
the wheel is a big hopper containing&#13;
sand, which is fed down through a&#13;
spout in Mich quantity us may be re-i&#13;
quired upon the top of the rough-fa^ed&#13;
steel wheel. The" grinder holds the&#13;
plate to be ground in his hands, with&#13;
the edge to be ground off upon the&#13;
face of the roughing mill; he shiits&#13;
the plate along as the glass is" ground&#13;
away. The expert grinder, holding a&#13;
sheet of glass against the roughing&#13;
wheel in this manner. wMll grind a&#13;
true- bevel, with a perfectly straight&#13;
line along ^ts inner edge, anil he&#13;
brings the side bevels together with a&#13;
perfectly true angle at the corners.&#13;
In the roughing mill the bevel is&#13;
wrought to shape but its face is rough&#13;
looking and fee tng, in fact, like what&#13;
it is. ground glase. The plate goes&#13;
then .to the emery wheel, also of steel&#13;
and set hoiiizon.ally. Suspended over&#13;
this wheel is a ljUle hopper filled with&#13;
emery, the emery feeding dow^i upon&#13;
^he wheei. Upon this wneel tne rougn&#13;
face of the bevel as it comes from the&#13;
nr.'.ghing mill is again ground, the&#13;
pla.e being held, in_the sarr.e manner&#13;
by a grinder, and ' the surface is&#13;
brought neaier to smoothness.&#13;
From the emery, wheel the plate&#13;
goe«i to the smoothing ston&gt; . which is"&#13;
also set. to turn horizontally. The&#13;
^iiioothiiig gtone, wh4eh is of_an -e*-&gt;-&#13;
tremely tine sandstone, i s made__wllhl&#13;
W t t a t t o T»o In « T o r n a d o J&#13;
Do you live where there are tornadoes?&#13;
Wive sou learned to dread the&#13;
approach of raat funnel-shaped" cloud&#13;
that Is the herald of disaster?&#13;
Here are a few hints that may help&#13;
-f you some day to save your life audi&#13;
property. Thev are Irserl on facts of&#13;
which Prof. E. B, Ciumott, of the Chicago&#13;
Weather Bureau, is authority:&#13;
Don't feel that you must pen yourself&#13;
up in an air-tight house. A ,cy.&#13;
clone is lfkely to make straight for a&#13;
tightly closed house and lift it from.&#13;
Its foundation. However substantial&#13;
the structure the confined air inside&#13;
will invite destruction.&#13;
Ou the other hand„ don't feel that&#13;
you are necessarily doomed just because&#13;
your dwelling is frail. Open all&#13;
'the windows. Be'ter still, open all&#13;
th'i doors and window" both. When&#13;
the tornado arrives the air will" be&#13;
able lo pass freely through the house,&#13;
and the building will stand.&#13;
It is u-ele^s to at;empt to fly from&#13;
the approach of a tornado. No one&#13;
can predict, where a tornadoOwill&#13;
s-rike. Make up jonr mind that it ia&#13;
all a matte.- of chance, and don't*&#13;
waste energy in i i ' ^ e "precautions."&#13;
Cvclon{r* force'- are a mystery even&#13;
to the elo.-es't pimlrnt^ of natural phenomena.&#13;
All tl.;\i i&gt;- known is that&#13;
tornadoes travel fven wrst to east and&#13;
are mo-t frecu^r.t. in the Northwest&#13;
and -Middle \Vr:-t. In the Winter tornpdoc.&#13;
s form nv. ihe p,- ine coa?t and&#13;
in the Culf States, i ne summer tor-.&#13;
naclor^ eor e oa-t oi the Rocky Mountain&#13;
r gion.&#13;
My son h i s been troubled for years&#13;
with chronic diarrhoea. Sometima&#13;
ago I persuaded him to take some of&#13;
Uhamberrin's Colic, Ubolrea and Didr*&#13;
rhoer Etam-sdy. After aaia&lt;? t ^ o bottles&#13;
of 25-".ant siz'i he vva% cared. I&#13;
ffive this testimonial, hoping someooa&#13;
similarly effected may read it and be&#13;
benetited—•Thomas 0. Bower, Glencoe.&#13;
0. Foe sil* o / P. A.. Si*ler, d r a ^ / i . s t&#13;
t i e K i « &gt; \ » ,&#13;
Willie—Sant- C ans only brings&#13;
presents to good litt e boys. •—&#13;
Tom (confidentially)—YTes, but he'e&#13;
easi.y fooled. "&#13;
Th6Best Hotel in timlx A Die&#13;
at&#13;
Can do no more tor w0u in the Way of- ^oi.iiv.jtj&#13;
bedi,»nd good meali than the Franklin lion*; . .&#13;
Bates and Larned Strwu. R * t « ar* $t.f&gt;o to J; Co %&#13;
dav, American plan. Wot&gt;dwanl and Jefferson Arenpea&#13;
are only a bloc* away, with c*r» tr&gt; »11 nBrts of&#13;
thacitjb AxceUent accommodatlom for wbeflaaen,&#13;
H . H. J A M E S A S O N , P r o p r i ^ t o r a&#13;
B a t e ! « n d L a r n e d S t a . , P e t r o l t . H i e )&#13;
LAST&#13;
F O R E V E R .&#13;
A n lnt«T' n t i o n a l Cnmpttrntion".&#13;
•"'Tin- Ch,- _....o. ,.!!&gt; one would&#13;
knew, tlvi Vo-bh • was a B.iton and his&#13;
w':'.-&gt; _^n v meriean."&#13;
"I'cr v. .'.at reason?"&#13;
'Ilo-xhe havh g n eea'skin di=nnte&#13;
nd h y can't even settle it by arbitraticn."&#13;
:v r: t&#13;
T n e k v I-'«cjipe,&#13;
;vc; Hi—+—v\':..- about $"o ,we&#13;
Of Q U r p n r i s h&#13;
its upper surface, that against; which&#13;
the gl::«s is brought, very sligh ly convex.&#13;
This stone is finished perfectly&#13;
smooth and it is.jso tine, grained that&#13;
to Nthe touch iT"seems almost to he&#13;
polished. . A tiny stream of water,&#13;
enough to {keep i b e f:ire of the-stono,&#13;
wet, is made to trickle down upon Tt&#13;
ami the tlass is he'd to ibis wheel&#13;
just as it was to the others, and here&#13;
the bevelled oj'sre j ^ brought down to a&#13;
emooh surface, but not po'ished '(he&#13;
plate goes then to a polisliing wheel&#13;
marie of wood and set to turn v.erticnlly;&#13;
th(- bevel edge of the'glass Is held&#13;
agniust the edge, or f^ice of this,&#13;
wooden wheel as i' rapid'y revolves.&#13;
The face of the wheel is "kept wet and&#13;
constantly supplied with pulverized&#13;
stone,- Upon this wheel the bevelled&#13;
edge gets its first polish. The glass&#13;
then takes the. final step itl the bevelling&#13;
process It goes to another wheel,&#13;
aleo_of_ wood, and also turning vertically&#13;
whose" faceTis of TeTf." The-frrce&#13;
of this wheel also is kepi we; and it&#13;
ife supplied with a fine poMsh'ing rra-1&#13;
terial called- from i"s color, rm^gn.&#13;
i Here, as at the first polishing wheel,&#13;
the glass is held with the be\el ae-u?v?&#13;
, the edge, or face of the wheel. On t"Hp&#13;
'rouge wheel the bevel gets i"s fin"H&#13;
'polish and finish and 1he-snvface ot&#13;
iLJLbevelled edge, which after the Pv:&#13;
A O n &gt; ' ; 1)l«li O r (Hjnpany.&#13;
A reiil q u i c k ill.-/: : o / u h e x i J f c t r d&#13;
eoni]1 ::!]}' c:in l.-c r.'i:o;cj&gt;: t h e o m n i ' p : c s -&#13;
e i u eg;_'., l l o i l h:\.: ;i t l o / ; , - n — l e s s &lt;;r&#13;
m o r e — l o r ' t e n I U I M K O S , t l i e n l i m v ;&#13;
t h e m jntti cn'(l u- • ;• M^t'or o n e uiinut.e,-&#13;
c f i e r w h i c l i le'Vif^vp T h o s j i f ' l a n d o u t&#13;
i n t o h o t ' w a t t ' r a,t:'!:.n. &gt; | a k o ;i c r e a m&#13;
g r a v y o f m i l k . Vii•:;':• ;iiid h o u r . ;&gt;od&#13;
s e a s o n w e l l , l l a l v " t h e e g g s a n d ptar.1&#13;
i t ov'X' t h e m . ' •&#13;
E v e n a j t e r m - r r i a i r e a fireman l o v e s&#13;
to talk of his own (lames-.&#13;
I want to let, t.h-3 people who suffer&#13;
from rheumatism and siatica know&#13;
that Chamberlain's Pain Halm reliev-&#13;
4 ed'ma alter a number, of other medicijjes&#13;
and a doctor had failed. It is&#13;
t h e b e s l t i n r n r ^ j H : M y ^ ^&#13;
oH—J. A. Dodjzen, Alpharetta, Ga&#13;
Thousands Wave l&gt;een 'cured of rhenmrtisin&#13;
by this remedy. One application'relieves&#13;
the paiu. - F o r sale by P..&#13;
A. Sitfler, Drut/gi^t.&#13;
Salwcribe for Despatch&#13;
P U B H 3 U B D KVSRT THDB8DAY MOBMINe B V ^&#13;
F R A N K L. A M O i E W S&#13;
Editor and 7*ropfieior.&#13;
Subscription Price $1 ia.Advance &lt;\&#13;
l a t e r e a at t h e PoutoHc* at i'laaany, JCttbl^fio,&#13;
aa aecoad-ulaaa inittar.&#13;
Adrertising ratea made Jcaown on application.&#13;
Bcainese Cards, $4.00 per y e a r .&#13;
I^eath and marriage uucicaa pu^liatted t r e e .&#13;
Annouriceiaeatf oi e a t a r t a i a m e m a may bo p a i d&#13;
for, if desired, by presenting t n e &lt;&gt;01CB with ticlci&#13;
eta of adiuidaioQ. l a ciwecioi^t^ape aat uroii^at&#13;
1 to tueotUce, regular rates will tw ctiir^ed,&#13;
I A l l matter i n l o c a l notice c o l u m n will be c n a r a&#13;
ed at 5 c e n t s per line or f r i c t i o n t h e r e o f , for e a c h&#13;
Insertion. Where no t i m e la s^eciaed, all n o t i c e *&#13;
will be inserted until ordered l i d c o a t i a u e d , and&#13;
will b&gt;» c'ia;'j Vd ' ' o r a y o r d t a j l y . ^T* vlica&lt;ui^e6&gt;&#13;
of advertiseinente MUaT r e a b t a i s o . n c d a d -sarly,&#13;
as TuBsuiir m o r n i n g t o . insure an i n s e r t i o n t b e k&#13;
mood w e e k . '"":-.;"&#13;
In a l l i t s branches, a specialty. We haveall k i n d s&#13;
and the latest styles of Type, etc., wrncb e n a o l e s&#13;
us to e z w u i e ail tiuda of wort, sac.n an Hui&gt;Hfl»&#13;
Paiuplets, Posters, Pruxrauauies, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., i n&#13;
superior styles, upon tne shortest notice. P r i c e s M&#13;
o*\- as ijuo'i WJfR can ije a o a e .&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY,&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICEftSV&#13;
P R B S H J B S T . ...... .:..~~ UiiX. M c l n t y r e&#13;
iTnusTHCs li, L, L^i &gt; U;J-J yd. Vicred . I &gt; i . i s ,&#13;
Daniel Klch.irda, 'Hu. 3)»v,nia, S i u u e l&#13;
I "~ . - Sykes. f. i&gt;, Jouuaon.&#13;
C.'LEBK.-.. ....... ...,^. •• ••.•««&gt; ••&#13;
TliEA^OUEit. •-:-..... •..« ••&#13;
I A*»tiS*im&#13;
' &gt;TRBEH.:Oil&gt;ll"*S[i)SBrt . . .&#13;
M A K S A U L A. E. , 1 , - I Y - I .&#13;
' u J i K A L T i w m c e u . o r . ti. K. si^Lir&#13;
ATTORN nv M ....MM ......•• ^v". A. O i r r&#13;
. : % •&#13;
• ^&#13;
.11. H. reeple&#13;
, \V. E. Murphy&#13;
...\V. A. C^rr&#13;
.J,- &gt;tonK3.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
ME T H O D I S T E P I S C O P A L U U l ' k W d .&#13;
Kev. Oiui-5. SiLUJSou, ^istor.'S^rv-i;i4 i v j r y&#13;
Sunday inor'uin« at IDM-i, and -jvory S a n l a y&#13;
eveniukj at T:»&gt;» o'cV»ct. Prayer meeting L'aura-&#13;
,+*y-nTBpjrwu. Sunday -JO ;»oi ,-it Hose of J i o r n -&#13;
AiTint^ i. Egrsyp*-T&#13;
CO-SL* tiEG A TIC) N A L C il C UC l i .&#13;
Kev. C. - W . l t i c e p^.-itur. Service e v e r y&#13;
Suadav morning it , in;;-|.i -iu 1 -jw-sry S i i Uy&#13;
evening at":0C )'ci. &gt;c*. Prayer luentin^ Puursdav&#13;
e v e n i n g s . S a a l - i y school *t cli&gt;&gt;*e &gt;»f : nori\-&#13;
i n i service. It.-Hr-Tii'eple , i iu'.. lt&gt;ss ^*A, Sec&#13;
Th^1 "Rank of Spain now holds $12,-&#13;
Tno.OOO more gold thnn ir held a year&#13;
ag . and $41,700.0^0 more suver.&#13;
Tts note circnlation, meantime, has increased&#13;
$21,800,000.&#13;
About the most expensive luxuries&#13;
In Lima are postage stamps. It cort*&#13;
22 cents in native s;ivei- to carry an&#13;
ordinary letter, which is equivalent to&#13;
11 ceMs in gold.&#13;
Tn those parts of Armenia where&#13;
ST. M \ It i"S '.' A 1' H i &gt; L. IC •' i i U itC d.&#13;
Itev. M. .1. Co.uiii Tior.l, i'i^t)f. •••'rvic^M&#13;
[every Sunday. Lumz uiaas a t 7 : M o ' c l o c k&#13;
i higli uiaes wiiu s e r m o n iit J:i;&gt;*. m. C^ueclnsm&#13;
at :J:WI p. m., vespers&lt;»afi.oeU'*dtr.tlon at t :•«» p. n .&#13;
SOCIETIES.&#13;
The A. O. II. SDcietv i»f tuis , ) l v \ o w » ^v-^ry&#13;
t t i i r i S u i l i t - i i t m :'\-, t i t n e [ i l l&#13;
J o a n l\i&gt; ii «y .in I »li c iv 'uy^ J &gt; i it.- &gt; -l &lt;( v'.-is .&#13;
t ? P W O E l T H LEAGUE. Moets every Sunday&#13;
Itjeveainij; at i&gt;:'&gt;'&gt;«)cli»ck; m ihr&lt; ^1. ••], Jnnrcti. . V&#13;
cordial iuvltatinu is.e&lt;t.erid.&gt; i f.o .'very&gt;i»e, e-ip^-&#13;
ciallv vouu^ people. Mrs. .Stella Or*UAin'Pre-»&#13;
poor_&#13;
PERFECT&#13;
SCALES&#13;
operation, was rough like ground g'^ss.'&#13;
is now as smooth and as polished as&#13;
the flat surface of the plate.&#13;
' Grea' plates that are tor&gt; hig to b&lt;5&#13;
Vnr,_-it vv *s So5 exactly. held by h°nd are looked into a frame&#13;
-. ' n My I'.rrband old me&#13;
vc :h:&gt;t--nearly- h?lf of it that can be so moved ps to brine tht».&#13;
.1 li- a gooi-natu ed sort of , e d *p i J t o be'bevelled against wheels&#13;
Copppi P l a t e d Alliiteel Levers,&#13;
Combination Beam.&#13;
Catalogue Free.&#13;
Address, Jones or BINGHAMTON,&#13;
B I N G H A M T O N N- Y- wa- u,&#13;
g r r l . e s . Ke won it at&#13;
:vC. '.".-::ed it over to our fund.&#13;
V.ig' ?e---\Ve.l. l'n- thankful&#13;
i , ! (1 it oir till the monev&#13;
di-iv.-.sed nf.---Crlor&gt;$;o Tribune&#13;
adjusted for the purpose.&#13;
• E&#13;
•'- 'V.-v&#13;
carry a&#13;
sio«k oi s;ix)ds&#13;
valued v(&#13;
$1,500,000.00&#13;
receive&#13;
irt.m 'l0,tKX&gt; to&#13;
2a,UMJ.lt tters&#13;
every day&#13;
r, : . . . - ^ ^ . . •- c .«..&#13;
&lt;'&#13;
1 Havintr n *;r« ««i R a n nn Chamber*&#13;
| laln'a r - u g h Remedy.&#13;
! Manager Martin, of the Pearson&#13;
drug store, informs ns that lie is havin?&#13;
a a rait r a n on Chamberlain's&#13;
Consh Remedy.. He selU five hurries&#13;
of that medicine t o one. or jiny other&#13;
kindra,nd-i± gives ffrpat sati^fai• ti.»n.&#13;
In These davs of la urippe there i»&#13;
TTnfiTinir tike Ch^mbBFl«ifi£^ C^uiib&#13;
.flem^dy to stop the convrh, heal up&#13;
the sor-'throat and lnnes and yives&#13;
t-ejief in a very short tun*. ; The s^ifs&#13;
ire arrowing, ahd all who trv i* aie&#13;
'»'eas-d &gt;vith its» pr mpf netir&gt;t«.:—Son'h&#13;
'lii'iiii'V-.f) lily Cal,umet. \?'^V sale bv&#13;
the ma.-sacres t^ok place three yea-s&#13;
ago Turkish so'diers-^ill infest th«&#13;
v H ' ^ r s and foTce the impove.ished&#13;
natives to support^them._ •&#13;
T.art ypar the Sweetmeat Automatic&#13;
Snrtn'v Company of London collected&#13;
in c--pprr'?'from thel" Trneh'nes no le^s&#13;
th-n €139 796—33.sni.O40 pennies,&#13;
nvi"bly.2l2 ton of coppers.&#13;
The "Belgians a^e an eminently&#13;
cCr\-rvn-hil people. : Tn- An'we- p ten&#13;
t'"ivo':r? commercial sc%o'nr7hrp?:' of&#13;
three yen^^ deration, with an annual&#13;
income r(. tlSUl^. are sr'ven to s'uden^&#13;
s whSyl^nost deserve such "ppo.--&#13;
tnnities. ^ ' . t'..&#13;
A yew Jersey mar har= patented a&#13;
v itchlr°' p^s1, wh:c&gt;i wi'l .accommo-&#13;
^n*e bicycles as we1! as horses, the&#13;
no-ti^n of the no=t nearest t, - e pavement&#13;
l'c&gt;&lt;r nmvi'ed wi'h s^V nf snffe'e^&#13;
v '.vidth t" admir-fhe.v.'h'e! of the.&#13;
macb.ine&#13;
Ttrkey flo°s que'r Th nc- ?-^m^';m,&gt;s&#13;
—-t,,!r'.;•« whie^i ca"n o4 he fu lv 'tn:!erstord&#13;
bv 'the n^-^le r( *N-&gt; We-;^rri&#13;
^-r-r,d 0"e o* the n-W i°.-'d^"i'? rp-&#13;
PP^'^V re'"itnd te'l-' ^f a ne:"P'at: ti'm&#13;
tending som^ ^n-^ tex'i1"1 qr^c!-- v:-aprrrT&#13;
; n n ^ ^ ' T T o - c : f r t o u r ' k ^ v . T h "&#13;
pn^'om o'^^'a'^ f'-.-i V'1 -h't th" sro^is&#13;
had to ^e TTt'^'"\\""."^-nW &lt;e;u oh the:r&#13;
' wav min,,s t^e re^'-vn^rs.&#13;
C CU-il'lVN" ESV&gt;.-:W'M S ^ U i l ' f i - M w t ,&#13;
Li-^- !»vr»rv s.i i i i / ^^»ii i,' it •&gt;: 11 .'r MI I -nt,&#13;
Mis-S .^tt.k ,'.iri&gt; uic^r; i&gt;'jr ii.u1/, &gt;l:*. V. ii,.^.&#13;
r n Q j ; ^V. (;. T. U. inv^t* tli ? : i r « ^ r i l i y of e*ch&#13;
1 . H ^ t t v o t ^ c p. tn. it t i^r^vra^ or :&gt;r. f. f\&#13;
si^ler.^ tiV'Tvoa-i i-itt-r^st* t i i t ' O i i a a c ^ i-i&#13;
&lt;M*&lt;liiiUv invito I Mrs. '^e.il Si^l^r, Prjs; »Irj.&#13;
Etta Diiriee, Secretary. 1;&#13;
The C. T. A. and B. Sueie&gt;.j&lt; jf t h i s . n ' a c e , m ^ i t&#13;
every third Saturday evening in t'ir» f r . X vtthew-&#13;
Hall. — John Dnnohue, 1: resident.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
of&#13;
N I O U T S O F MACCABBESi.&#13;
Meet every Priday-evenin^ on or tiefore t a l l&#13;
v,. the moon at their hall in the Swartliuut bld^.&#13;
Visitinir brothers ire rordiallv invited.&#13;
C H A » . CaHPBELi., Sir Eniuht C o m m a n d e r&#13;
Livingston Lod^e, No. 7", * \ \ , « . tC-?^i»*r&#13;
Coiniuuulcatiou 1'iifsday-eveain^, i&gt;a &gt;&gt;r imfar*&#13;
t h e m i l ot the mo.ni. Aiex&gt;u ler dolutyfe, i'.'.'&gt;I.&#13;
OltOEK OE EASTEKN S l-AUineetaeach uioutn&#13;
tiir» End.iy ev.?ntn4 t i i l o w u ^ uicj re'u:*r t \&#13;
A A.M. in-etm^, »- vt*s, .UAHY titAO, * , .*.&#13;
LADIES OE T H E M A C C A B E K S . i l e i t every la*&#13;
and ird 3at.1rd.-1y of eachinouih at 4:top in. » .&#13;
K . ' ) . l\ &gt;l. u.ill. Visiua^ *.»tjr&gt; o &gt; r i u i i y 11&#13;
\ i t e d . LILA C O S I W A I ' Lady Com.&#13;
^&#13;
S i i ! UTS OF THK L J Y A L GU vKl)&#13;
_. me -t every s e o o a i &gt;Veiuesddf&#13;
ev^niu^ of every monULljULthd l£. Q»_&#13;
T.'.M. Hall At ."ilioVtocK. All visitinrf'&#13;
.Guards welcome.&#13;
e . G . J A C K S O N , Capt. (Ten.&#13;
8US!N£SS CARDS.&#13;
And «x:eapsrthe talleat mercant*l!» buildiafe i f f ' f n e V o r ' . d . ; , , : nr.v-&#13;
Qver 3,oao,ooo c u s t o m e r s . Sjxtpeti h u n d r e d t l e i r k a a r e const .• '};?• .&#13;
: e n g a g e d filling 6ut-ot-tov^n orders. , .' •, .v..&#13;
• "* .- v _ . * . ' , . . • '"' ''""'•^ .&#13;
O U R G E N E R A L C A T A L O G U E i s \ t &gt; * bopkifp*f thy. p&gt;*r'&gt;, - i ' *-**;&#13;
W h o l e a i l e P r i c e * t o E v &gt; r y t A d y . h^s ovcr,j[,ono p a g e s , 16,000. illv-s.:.. u ;-.-.vi&#13;
60,000 d e s c r i p t i o n s o f aivn '.. a wi'thppi'cea: It c o s t s ?3 Cents t o print -&gt;:S Vr.ail&#13;
e a c h c o p y . W c W a n t y o u t J ^ a v e o n e . S ^ N D F r F T E E N ' ' C E N T S t&#13;
^ o t i r&#13;
! - * • -&#13;
The' Qovernment of India is UJSTI-SCVT&#13;
-fo-employ electricity as its mcitivp&#13;
newer ir the gre^t central fnc o l ' s ,&#13;
which it intends to 3?t.up/"lTrj Jub^ulpore.&#13;
t ,^w^ • " • ' ' / ' ,&#13;
Th'^ cheapest posla' %arr^ ltr&gt;he&#13;
/1.^ror1^"ls that of Japsn. where for" two&#13;
t ^en—about Reven-tp';,^«» c &gt;&gt; ptr,"^..&#13;
D r . O i i y s t^onditif^n Poivd^rs are&#13;
)i\it ivliat a h i r , - ne^^&lt; wren in bad&#13;
condition. T m i c , idood puririer and&#13;
\^r;nil'i^e. Th*v an&gt; n-ot t-ioi but&#13;
ou- tii'ine and-the b»&gt;&gt;t in use t -&gt; put a&#13;
liorse in prime condition. Price 2-^&#13;
H. F.SIGLER M » 0 - C, L, SIGLER M. Q&#13;
PRS.jIJrLER &amp; S I J L E R . -&#13;
P;i&gt;-^ii.i» .-* ^rrl;i S.ir.;o &gt;.i*. A i l c.iit* ^ r o i u p t l&#13;
an-»:i t "I t o I iv vr '114m. O 4 ¾ o n M a t a ^ c r&#13;
rrnnlcnpTT-H ttrlt;—&#13;
per p.i.'fcAtfe.' For sa'r hv F A. Sijich^&#13;
copy. W e ^ a n t y o u t o ^ a v e o n e . • S E . N D ' F P P T E E N ' C E N T S to •ni'.cw r ^ J l e t t e r s a r e - C O n V e y e d 1 »11 O V f t M h e E m -&#13;
»tfr good f«it!i. a n d vve'll^s-.cnd J&gt;-u a cq^v T''''•:':•:, w i t h ail c.havjt.sj.v.y.'j-'. \ »,* f .,_.,__. ' 7 W &gt; • '&#13;
" • • ' — ^ »«: - I ; . *'.• .P'r e« j y&#13;
. , - . . &gt; • • - l V* V L . . •* . H ^ Wn^TSPf^PRV l / ' P ^ f. rf\ Mtch:c-«Avo.an&gt;^r?isa.Titreej f'V&gt; S\ Tn (termfiny, during the ye*r,ending&#13;
^ . r H U i n u L u L m Vr/iaJ Co J 0 . - C H I C A G O ' . ^-)-½^i :. .Tu^.uftg.^ut -f.S87&lt;H»l p-r«nn« l o o ^&#13;
. / ^ - - ''ti*"&#13;
. &gt; » ^ * • . . —&#13;
IVR ^or e«rpj^yn&gt;«»t, 22?.5*f"&gt; frVond occ^&#13;
r&gt;fitipn rpy,ftoeaa» of tree en^ploywent&#13;
agenclet.&#13;
'er&#13;
. Yankee ingenuity Vms itpset an #n&gt;&#13;
cient cvstnm in 4ndia. For jwnMir'rs&#13;
p-very.»ra'ah ^ d cvejrL,-'he minor poten't:'&#13;
tlV! havo. bjKf-"snpc^l men called&#13;
"r.itnkas*-.te-;ran f-hem du-l^ijr th^i'* all&#13;
wak'n? honr«. Now thei^ .lohl-gore,&#13;
t*r rvprv ralnh ha» bought jan American&#13;
BVctrlc fan.&#13;
Da. A. B. GREEN,&#13;
&gt; •: ; rt - r - •;.• -.-y r i I M U y ami Kril^y&#13;
Office over ^L'ler's Oraj; Store. ^&#13;
Funeral ')irvt&gt;r an I '•UTii'inr. ftasldeieo&#13;
• u i v " ' l .VHT i s v &lt; t r i &lt; l s p i » n . Ul calls&#13;
pv.viiDiiy i ! M v r « d O-tri nile n^rth o&lt; ?l.itadeld&#13;
Village. J . :i $\Y1.&amp;$.&#13;
T PATENTS GUARANTEED&#13;
Our fee returned if w e faiL A n y o n e s e n d i n g&#13;
s k e t c h a n d description of a n y i a v e n t k H i w u l&#13;
p r o m p t l y receive our o p i n i o n f r f e T o n c e r n i n s j&#13;
t h e p a t e n t a b i l i t y of s a m e . u H o # " C b O b U i t t i -^.--¾&#13;
WlXrED-The Sahacription&#13;
&lt;Iae,aa the DISPATCH.&#13;
f a t e u t " s e n t u p o n request. P a t e n t s&#13;
t h r o u g h u s advertised for s a l e a t o a r e x p e n s e&#13;
" . P a t e n t s t a k e n o u t t h r o u g h u s reeehre Mwetan&#13;
• • t t o * , w i t h o u t c h a r g e , i n T H K P A T S X T • * « • %&#13;
a n illustrated a n d .widely circulated Joocaa%&#13;
c o n s u l t e d b y Manufacturers a n d XnvastoOb&#13;
S c a d for s a m p ) « « o p y P f f t t 4 ft 'IdrsajL&#13;
VICTOR J . t V A M * OO.&#13;
... , :..-.A WMNIINffiOIti aV flbt -&#13;
. W U J I . . J , t &gt; . „ &gt; l ,&#13;
..V'&#13;
i • • * *- M. ^Kf^*:-**-- $ ¥ ^&#13;
V'''H:,'&#13;
;W :••;&#13;
'.'''.'ty'-' '"••&#13;
• JL ^&#13;
* * ^ .&#13;
^&#13;
[ . « * ! ' '&#13;
; A - '&#13;
•T&#13;
u&#13;
F B A N K L. ANDREWS, P u b l i s h e r&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN.&#13;
1 • I 88»&#13;
Matching for the drinks is one kind&#13;
of a ball match.&#13;
The village minister acquires a surplice-&#13;
-tut seldom a surplus.&#13;
A woman forgets she h a s a headache&#13;
when sb.9 is wearing a new hat.&#13;
The flrst step is often so expensive&#13;
t h a t you can't afford to take the second.&#13;
Many a so-caHedl\pait. triot whose voice&#13;
i s for war is unable to hear a call to&#13;
a r m s .&#13;
W h e n a woman reads the opening&#13;
Ohapter of a novel she j u m p s t o the&#13;
conclusion.&#13;
^ M A G E ' S SEEMON.&#13;
v&#13;
MILLARS O F S M O K E . L A S T S U N -&#13;
D A Y ' S S U B J E C T ,&#13;
Lore., thy slaughtered&#13;
whose uoues . /&#13;
Text* SolomoQ'a 8on* 8: 6: Who 1» Thl*&#13;
That Cometh O* of - t h e WUdemeu&#13;
Like Pillar* of •Smoke?— Suffering of&#13;
tiod'a Church.&#13;
Fate is what a man calls it when he&#13;
Sets In trouble for doing w h a t he&#13;
shouldn't do. '""~~&#13;
Some people fail to recognize an opportunity&#13;
when it comes up and shakes&#13;
h a n d s with them.&#13;
Wrinkles are the little furrows in&#13;
which Father Time sows t h e seeds~6f&#13;
discontent with a lavish hand.&#13;
Medical statistics from Luzon show&#13;
t h a t the death rate among the American&#13;
soldiers engaged In t h e present&#13;
w a r is r a t h e r lower t h a n among the&#13;
troops stationed at Washington, Boston,&#13;
New York % and San Francisco.&#13;
Pedestrianism has always been regarded&#13;
as a healthy-ferra-of-exercise, and&#13;
the daily marches' In pursuit of the&#13;
pugnacious Aguina^ldo have undoubtedly&#13;
served to more *tnan counteract the&#13;
supposed bad effects of a torrid&#13;
climate.&#13;
L o n g Lee, a Chicago Chinaman, has&#13;
- The architecture of t h e smoke is&#13;
wondrous, whether God with his finger&#13;
curves it into -a cloud- or rounds it into&#13;
a dome, or points it in a spire, or&#13;
spreads it in a wing, or, a s in the text,&#13;
hoists it in a pillar. W a t d k j j t winding&#13;
up from the country f^artfplouse in&#13;
the early morning, showing t h a t the&#13;
pastoral industries have begun; or, seo&#13;
it ascending frofc the chimneys of the&#13;
city, telling of the homes fed, the factories&#13;
turning out valuable fabrics, the&#13;
printing presses preparing book and&#13;
newspaper, and all the ten thousand&#13;
wheels of work in motion. On a clear&#13;
day this vapor spoken of mounts with&#13;
such buoyancy and spreads such a delicate-&#13;
veil across the sky, and traces&#13;
such graceful lines of circle and semicircle&#13;
and waves and tosses and sinks&#13;
and soars and scatters with such affluence&#13;
of shape and color and suggestiveness,&#13;
t h a t if you have never noticed&#13;
it you are like a man who has&#13;
ali his life lived in Paris and yet never&#13;
seen the Luxemburg, or all his life in&#13;
Rome and never seen the Vatican, or&#13;
all his life at Lockport and never seen&#13;
Niagara. Forty-four times the Bible&#13;
speaks of t h e smoke, and it is about&#13;
time t h a t somebody preached a sermon&#13;
recognizing this strange, weird, beautifuU„&#13;
e_lastic, charming, terrific and&#13;
fascinating vapor. Across the Bible sky&#13;
floats the smoke of Sinai, the smoke of&#13;
Sodom, the smoke of Ai, the smoke of&#13;
the pit, the smoke of the volcanic hills&#13;
when God touches them, and in my&#13;
t e s t the glorious-church of God coming&#13;
up out of the wilderness-iike pillars of&#13;
smoke.&#13;
In the flrst place, these pillar's of&#13;
smoke in my text indicate the suffering&#13;
the church of God has endured. ;What&#13;
do I m e a n by the church? I meain not&#13;
been sentenced to work out a $100 fine, [ a building, not a sect, but those who,&#13;
at the rate of $1.50 a week day? in' the , in all ages, and all lands, and of all behouse&#13;
of correction. But the authorities&#13;
have n o ' w o r k f o r ' h i m to do, and&#13;
trio nnfrtrtnnatP "pftlpstial" is beginn&#13;
i n g to fear t h a t "oJcT age with his&#13;
ste'aling step may claw him in his&#13;
clutcn" before the amount is discharged.&#13;
No wonder the simple children&#13;
of the east are often los% in&#13;
wonder and amazement at the strange&#13;
workings of western justice.&#13;
A society woman who had" shown&#13;
much kindness to a young collegian&#13;
overheard him one" day S pgaklng : ofa lies as having a-monopoly of persecu&#13;
her by her Christian name. Innocent&#13;
in intention, ho showed himself inexcusably&#13;
careless of the bounds between&#13;
friendliness and familiarity, and was&#13;
pever again invited to her house. F a r&#13;
more innate was the courtesy of a comp&#13;
a n y of young recruits who recently&#13;
fell out of a military procession to salute&#13;
Miss Gould at her house door.&#13;
"She's Helen, our Helen!", they&#13;
shouted, stamping their feet and toss1-&#13;
i n g their caps, as they read her p a r d o n&#13;
in her answering smiles.&#13;
T h e extraordinary improvements&#13;
-which have'recently been made in bicycle&#13;
lamps makes It t h e more surprising&#13;
that the locomotive h e a d - l i g h t a ' w i y w a r d " e h i f d o f T P a p i s t would not.&#13;
liei's, love" God, and are trying to do&#13;
right. For many centuries the heavens&#13;
have been black with .the smoke&#13;
W martyrdom. If set side by side you&#13;
could girdle the earth with the fires&#13;
of persecution. Rowland Taylor burned&#13;
aJLHadleigh; Latimer burned r t Oxford;&#13;
John Rogers burned at Smithfield;&#13;
John Hooper burned at Gloucest&#13;
e r ; Jotfn Huss burned at Constance;&#13;
Lawrence -.Saunters burned at Coventry;&#13;
Joan of Arc burned at Rouen.&#13;
Protestants have represented Catho-&#13;
"AvengM, 0&#13;
saiLts&#13;
Lie scattered on the Alpine mountains&#13;
cold."&#13;
T h e smoke of m a r t y r s ' homes and&#13;
m a r t y r s ' bodies if rolling up all at once&#13;
would have~ecllpsed the noonday sun,&#13;
and turned the brightest day the world&#13;
ever saw into a midnight. " W h o is&#13;
this t h a t cometh out of t h e wilderness&#13;
like pillars of s m o k e ? "&#13;
H a s persecution ceased? Ask t h a t&#13;
young man who is t r y i n g to be a Christian&#13;
in a store or factory, where from&#13;
morning to night he is t h e butt of all&#13;
t h e mean witticisms of unbelieving&#13;
employes. Ask t h a t wife whose husband&#13;
makes her fondness for the house&#13;
of God, and even her kneeling praygr&#13;
by the bedside a derision, and Is no&#13;
more fit for her holy companionship&#13;
t h a n a filthy crow would he fit companion&#13;
for a robin or a golden oriole.&#13;
Compromise with the world and s u r -&#13;
render to its conventionalities and it&#13;
,may let you alone, but all who will&#13;
live godly in Christ Jesus must suffer&#13;
persecution. Be a theater-going, cardplaying,&#13;
wine-drinking, round-dancjng\&#13;
Christian,- and you may escape criti-^&#13;
cism and social pressure. But be an up&#13;
and""down, out and out follower of&#13;
Christ, and worldling will wink to&#13;
worldling as he speaks your name, and&#13;
you wilhbe put to many a doggerel, and&#13;
snubbed by those not worthy to blacken&#13;
your oldest shoes. W h e n the bridge&#13;
a t Ashtabula broke, and let down the&#13;
most of the carload of passengers., to.&#13;
Instant death, Mr. P. P. Bliss was&#13;
seated on one side of t h e aisle of the&#13;
car writing down a Christian song&#13;
which he was composing, and on t h e&#13;
other side a group of men were playing&#13;
cards. Whose landing place in&#13;
eternity would you prefer—that of P.&#13;
P. BHss, the Gospel singer, or of the&#13;
card-players?&#13;
A great complaint comes from t h e&#13;
theaters about the ladies' high hats,&#13;
because they obstruct the view of t h e&#13;
stage, a n d 4 a lady reporter asked me&#13;
what I thought about it, and I told&#13;
her that if the Indecent pictures of "actresses&#13;
in the show windows were accurate&#13;
pictures of w h a t goes on i n&#13;
many of the theaters, night by night,&#13;
then it would be well if the ladies' hats&#13;
were a mile "high, so as to completely&#13;
obstruct the vision. If professedtors,&#13;
but both Protestant and Catholic&#13;
have practiced infamous cruelties^ The&#13;
Catholics/ du-ring the reign of Hunneric,&#13;
were by Protectants put tdTThe&#13;
worst tortures, stripped of their clothing,&#13;
hoisted in the air by pulleys with&#13;
weights suspended from tbeir feetrthen&#13;
let down, and ears n.nH pyp^, nopft nn(i&#13;
tongue were amputated, arid red-hot&#13;
plates of iron we^e put against the&#13;
tenderest parts of their bodies.&#13;
George Bancroft, the historian, says&#13;
^&gt;f the state. a O l a r y land: " I n the land&#13;
which Catholics had opened to Protestants&#13;
mass might not be said publicly;&#13;
no Catholic, priest or bishop might utter&#13;
his faith In a v o l a r of persuasion;&#13;
no Catholic might teach t h e young. If&#13;
h a s been so long neglected, since noth&#13;
ing is more important t h a n t h a t the&#13;
engineer should see as far aheati along&#13;
t h e track as possible. The introduction&#13;
of electricity&#13;
do away with one&#13;
danger* t h a t now attend rail&#13;
become an apostate, the law wrested&#13;
for him from his parents a share of&#13;
their property. Such were the meth-&#13;
? odsr adopted to prevent the growth of&#13;
promises , to.' popery.".&#13;
of the chief I Catholicism as well as Protestantism&#13;
r o a d traveling by night. Ob- has had its martyrs. It does seem as i f w n e n a n y o n e s e c t g o t complete domstacles&#13;
on the track, broken, bridges,&#13;
o t h e r trains ahead, and all the unk&#13;
n o w n dangers t h a t the darkness covinancy&#13;
in any land, the- devil of persecution&#13;
and cruelty took possession on&#13;
t h a t sect. Then see the Catholics after&#13;
e r s will in future he^Uistinguishable in. t h e Huguenots. See the Gentiles after&#13;
ample time t o bring t h e train to a the Jews in Touraine, where a, great&#13;
standstill before any damage is done, pit was dug and fire lighted at the bot-&#13;
— •- •- • - • torn of the pit, and one hundred a n a&#13;
An illustration of t h e present-and sixty Jewish victims were consumed,&#13;
prospective value of timber lands is See the Presbyterian parliament of&#13;
furnished by the Charleston News and England, more tyrannical in their&#13;
Courier, which tells, in a recent issue, j t r e a t m e n t of opponents than had been&#13;
how an unusually large w h i t s oak log, the criminal courts. Persecution&#13;
measuring forty feet in length and against t h e Baptist by Paedo-Bapforty-&#13;
two' inches in diameter at t h e tists. Persecution of the Established&#13;
emaller end, was recently shipped from Church against the Methodist church.&#13;
Savannah to a northern firm. Its Persecution against t h e Quakers. Pervalue,&#13;
says our'contemporary, when secution against the Presbyterians. Unsimply&#13;
sawed into lumber for shipping d e r EmReror Diocletian one hundred&#13;
was estimated at $240. Smaller logs _a°4 *°rty-foux thousand Christians&#13;
bring equally good prices in propor- w e r o massacred, and seven hundred&#13;
_tlon, of pource. 4 B , recent years timber t n o u s a n d m o r e o f t h e m d i e d f r 0 n i b a n "&#13;
l a n d s in the south bearing similar l s h m e n t a n d exposure,&#13;
lumber have been sold for $2 and even&#13;
leas per acre. Landowners who dis&#13;
Witness the sufferings of the Waldenses,&#13;
of the Albigenses, of the Nesposedof&#13;
or neglected theTr7orestlands t o r I a n s - W l i n e s s S t : Bartholomew's&#13;
played a losing game in those years, f f f c r e . f&#13;
W , i t n * s s ^iP"**" A l v a&#13;
but, now that the folly of such busi^ ) £ v 4 n f o u t f* *i f e e £ h t e * n t h ? u&#13;
x f n d&#13;
ness has been brought home t o them. C h ? S f f ? » : T ^ J ^ L ^ J ^ l&#13;
«• io n/x* iiniib-*i«. **?* . ) , . „ «111 *l tBd-Bechwr-and Hilaebrand, and Tor-&#13;
L „ £ ? J £ l n ! l ^ t S S L LProflt auemada, and Earl of Montfort, and&#13;
tty p a a f ^ s s o n s And preserve and n u r - ^ ciaverhouse, who when told t h a t&#13;
t n r e their growing timber. Viewing&#13;
recent developments in the lumber&#13;
m a r k e t s , it may not-be-amiss t o suggest&#13;
t h a t the farmers having about fort&#13;
y acres or more on which oak Is now&#13;
growing could do n o t h i n g better t h a n&#13;
leave It alone, for it is more t h a n probable&#13;
t h a t they will find U a good int&#13;
e r e s t payer, If not t h e K c u f ^ u a b l e&#13;
p a r t of .their flm^ Irf a f e w y i m to&#13;
ae must give account for his cruelties,&#13;
•jaid: "I have no need to account to&#13;
mac, and as for God I will t a k e h i m in&#13;
n y own hands." A red l)ne runs&#13;
hrough the church history of nineteen&#13;
mudr-edjrears, a line of bfood,____Not&#13;
&gt;y the hundreds of thousands, but by&#13;
che millions must we count those slain&#13;
for Christ's firiff, Hip wootfe* J f h n&#13;
Milton put the groan* oi&#13;
' M a s immortal tune-, writing&#13;
Christians go to such places during the&#13;
week, no one will ever'persecute them&#13;
for their religion, for they have none,&#13;
and they are the joke of hell. But let&#13;
inem live a consecrated and Christian&#13;
4ife and they will soon run against&#13;
sneering opposition.&#13;
For a compromise Christian ' charactor&#13;
an easy time now, but for consecrated&#13;
behavior, grimace and caricature.&#13;
For the body,-thanks to the God&#13;
of free America, there are now no&#13;
swords or fiery stakes, but for the souls&#13;
of thousands of the good, in a figurative&#13;
sense, rack and gibbet and Torquemada.&#13;
The symbol of the domestic&#13;
and social and private and public suffering&#13;
of a great multitude of God's&#13;
dear children, pillars of smoke. W h a t&#13;
an exciting scene in India, when, during&#13;
the Sepoy rebellion, a regiment of&#13;
Highlanders came up and found the&#13;
dead body of one of General Wheeler's&#13;
daughters, who had been insulted and&#13;
mauled and slairj, by the Sepoys. So&#13;
great was the wrath" against "these&#13;
murderers that the Scotch regiment&#13;
s a t down and, eutting-off the hair of,&#13;
this dead daughter of Gen. Wheeler,&#13;
they divided ii among them, and each&#13;
_one counted the number of hairs g i v e n / :&#13;
him, and each one took an oath, which,&#13;
was executed, t h a t for each hair of&#13;
the murdered daughter—they would&#13;
dash out the life of a bestial Sepoy.&#13;
But as v;e look over the story of those&#13;
who in all ages have suffered for the&#13;
truth, while we leave vengeance to&#13;
the Lord,,let us l&gt;nd together iu one&#13;
solemn vow, one tremendous oath,&#13;
after having counted the host of the&#13;
martyrs, that for each one of those&#13;
glorious men and women who died for&#13;
truth an immortal shall live—live with&#13;
God and live forever.&#13;
But as ^ a l r e a d y hinted in t h e flrst&#13;
sentence of this sermon^ nothing ca-n&#13;
be more beautiful than the figures of&#13;
smoke on a clear sky. You can, see&#13;
what you will rn the contour of t h i s&#13;
volatile vapor, now enchanted castles,&#13;
cow troops of horsemen, now bannered&#13;
procession, now winged couriers, now a&#13;
black angel of w r a t h under a spear of&#13;
light, and now from horizon to hori&#13;
zon the air is a picture gallery filled&#13;
with masterpieces of which God is the&#13;
artist, morning clouds of smoke born&#13;
in the sunrise, and evening clouds of&#13;
smoke laid in the burnished sepulchres&#13;
of the sunset.&#13;
The beauty of the transfigured smoke&#13;
is a divine symbol of the beauty of&#13;
the church. The fairest of all the fair&#13;
is she. Do not call those persecutors&#13;
of whom I spoke'the church. They are&#13;
the parasites of the church, not, the&#13;
church itself. Her mission is to cover&#13;
th» tn*r\vt with a supernatural gladness.&#13;
to open all the prison doors, to balsam&#13;
all the wounds, to moss all the graves,&#13;
to .burn up the night in the fireplace&#13;
of a great morning, to change, iron&#13;
handcuffs into diamonded wristlets, to&#13;
t u r n the whole race around, and whereas&#13;
it faced death, commanding it,&#13;
"Right about face for heavenf" According&#13;
to the number of the spires of&#13;
the churches in all our cities, towns&#13;
and neighborhoods, are the good&#13;
homes, thg_jmrld_p_rpsperltle8&gt; and the&#13;
pure moral* and the happy souls. *&#13;
It is demou*:rated tr&gt; a n ^oueert wen&#13;
t h a t it is not so ceruun t h a t William&#13;
Cullen Bryant wrote "Tha&amp;atopsls," or&#13;
Longfellow wrote " H i a w a t h a " as t h a t&#13;
God, by t h e hand of prophet and apostle,&#13;
wrote the Bible. All the wise men&#13;
in science and law and medicine and&#13;
literature and merchandise are grad-^.&#13;
ually coming to believe in Christianity,&#13;
and soon there will be n o people w h o&#13;
disbelieve in it except those conspicuous&#13;
for lack of brain or men with two&#13;
families, who do not like the Bible because&#13;
it rebukes their swinish propensities.&#13;
T h e time is hastening when there&#13;
will be no infidels left except libertines&#13;
and harlot^ and murderers. Millions&#13;
of Christians ^ h e r e once there were&#13;
thousands, and thousands where once&#13;
there were hundreds. W h a t a bright&#13;
evening this, t h e evening of t h e nineteenth&#13;
century! And the twentieth&#13;
century, which is about t o dawn, will,&#13;
in my opinion, bring universal victory&#13;
for Christ and the church, that now is&#13;
"marching on with step double-quick,&#13;
or, If you prefer t h e figure of the text,&#13;
Is being swept on in the mighty gales&#13;
of blessing, Imposing and grand and&#13;
majestic and swift like pillars of&#13;
smoke.&#13;
Oh, come into the church through&#13;
Christ the door—a door more glorious&#13;
A boiitttn Mmi PlmMi'd.&#13;
I n conversation .with some friends, 0«&#13;
p r o m i n e n t "Boston "man tbl3 o f h i s s u i *&#13;
tarings from r h e u m a t i s m a n d n t r v o u *&#13;
Siss, and one of hi^ friends gave him*&#13;
me advice, which will /be mentioned'&#13;
l i t e r , and which h a s proven to be of in»r&#13;
^calculable value.&#13;
To successfully act on the- adrlo©, i t&#13;
was. necessary t p m a k e W tjrip of o v e r&#13;
2,000 miles, but h e understood it, a p d&#13;
now t h a n k s his friend' for t h e advioe*&#13;
a i he finds himself fully relieved of hUold&#13;
* r o n b &amp; tod/.'ha* ^ $ ^ $ &gt; V*&#13;
home feeling able to cope w i t n l i i s b u s i -&#13;
ness demands, a n e w man], „ * '&#13;
The advice]given w a s t o ' g o to "Hot*&#13;
Springfi," South Dakota, and t h e r e t a k e&#13;
the b a t h s and enjoy t h e finest-^Umatei&#13;
of any health resort in America,&#13;
If this man w a s satisfied after m a k -&#13;
i n g a long trip, those residing w i t h i n •&#13;
few hundred miles a n d similarly afflicted&#13;
can certainly afford tb try it, or&#13;
r a t h e r can't afford to neglect to t r y it.&#13;
Ask any agent of t h e North-Western.&#13;
Line for full particulars, or w r i t e&#13;
J . R.• BUCHANAN,&#13;
General passenger •Agent,&#13;
F. E. &amp; M. V. R. UM Omaha, N e b .&#13;
. TIIA Health and l*l«a»ure Resorts&#13;
Of Texas, Mexleo, Arizona and California&#13;
are quickly and comfortably&#13;
reached via the Southern Pacific Comt&#13;
h a n that of the temple of Hercules, | pany's Sunset Route. Daily- t h r o u g h&#13;
which had two IpTIIarsT and one w a s ' service from New Orleans to S m&#13;
I&#13;
gold, and the other emerald! Come in&#13;
today! The world you leave behind is&#13;
a poor world, and it will burn and pass&#13;
off liko pillars of smoke. Whether the&#13;
final conflagration will s t a r t In the coal&#13;
mines of Pennsylvania, which, In'some&#13;
places, have for many years been burning&#13;
and eating Into the heart of the&#13;
mountains, or whether it shall begin&#13;
near the California geysers, or whether&#13;
from out the furnaces of Cotopaxi, and&#13;
Vesuvius, and Stromboli, it shall b u r s t&#13;
forth upon the astonished nations, I&#13;
m a k e no prophecy; but all geologists&#13;
tell us that we stand on the Hdvftf a&#13;
world the heart of which is a raging,&#13;
roaring, awful flame, and some day&#13;
God will let the red monsters out of&#13;
their Imprisonment, and New York on&#13;
fire in 1835, and Charleston on fire in&#13;
1865, and Chicago-on fire in' 187.1, and&#13;
Boston on fire in 1873, were only like&#13;
one spark from a blacksmith's forge&#13;
as compared with t h a t last universal&#13;
blaze, which will be seen in other&#13;
worlds. But gradually the flames will&#13;
lessen, and the world will become a&#13;
great living coal, and that will take&#13;
on ashen hue, and then our ruined&#13;
planet will , begin to smoke, and the&#13;
mountains will smoke, and the valleys&#13;
will smoke, and the Islands will smoke&#13;
and the seas will smoke, and the cities&#13;
will smoke, and the five continents will&#13;
be five pillars of smoke. But the black&#13;
vapors will begin to lessen in height&#13;
and density, and then will become&#13;
hardly visible to those who look upon&#13;
it from the sky galleries, and after a&#13;
while from just one point there will&#13;
curl up a thin, solitary vapor, and&#13;
then even t h a t will vanish, and there&#13;
will be nothing left except the charred&#13;
ruins of a burned-out world, the corpse&#13;
of a dead star, the ashes of an extinguished&#13;
planet, a fallen pillar of smoke.&#13;
But that will not interfere with your&#13;
investments if you have taken Christ&#13;
as your Savior. Secure heaven as&#13;
your eternal home, and you can look&#13;
down upon a_ dismantled, disrupted,&#13;
-and demolished e a r t h without any perturbation.&#13;
"When-wrapped in fire the realms of&#13;
ether glow.&#13;
And heaven's l a s t . t h u n d e r s shake t h e&#13;
earth below,&#13;
Thou, undismayed, shalt o'er t h e ruins&#13;
smile,&#13;
And light thy torch at nature's funeral&#13;
pile."&#13;
Francisco via Houston, San .Ajalftnlo.&#13;
El Paso and Los Angeles.. Special&#13;
semi-weekly service, Sunset Limited&#13;
from New Orleans Mondays and&#13;
Thursdays, composed of Buffet Smoking&#13;
Car, containing Bath Room and&#13;
Barber Shop, Drawing Room Compartment&#13;
Oar, regular Pullman Sleepers,&#13;
and Dining Car (meals a la carte), all&#13;
of the latest-design and moat luxuriously&#13;
appointed. Direct connections&#13;
made at New Orleans from all points&#13;
North and East. Detailed information&#13;
cheerfully furnished by W. G,&#13;
Neimyer, ,G. W. A., So. Pac. Co., 23S&#13;
Clark St., Chicago; W.* H. Connor,&#13;
Com'l Agt., Chamber Commerce Bldg.,&#13;
Cincinnati, 0., W. J. Berg, Trav. Pass.^&#13;
Agt., 220 Elllcott Square, Buffalo,&#13;
N. Y. •_ ..&#13;
.— -&#13;
"L» Forte, Texas.&#13;
• The progress of ^ the construction&#13;
work at La Porte, Texas, the future&#13;
great deep-water shipping point a t the&#13;
head of navigation on Galveston Bay&#13;
on the Gulf of Mexico, is progressing&#13;
favorably. The wharves and switching&#13;
tracks are nearing completion and&#13;
the work on the streets and on the&#13;
sewerage and water systems is now&#13;
under way. Mr. I. R. Holmes, the general&#13;
manager of the La Porte Improvement&#13;
Company and the La Porte&#13;
Wharf and Channel Company, is personally&#13;
superintending the improvements.&#13;
Mr. Holmes makes* ;h1s headquarters&#13;
at the Sylvan Hotel and visitors&#13;
to La Porte during the next six&#13;
weeks and before the time of the first&#13;
general La Porte sale, which will be&#13;
held in February, 1900, should intror&#13;
duce themselves to Mr. Holmes and allow&#13;
him to extend to them facilities&#13;
for getting a thorough understanding&#13;
of the conditions surrounding the L a&#13;
Porte enterprises.&#13;
Hop© is olwuys sayin? that there Is a light&#13;
close hy-when wo fret in the dark.&#13;
The Queen am s» Mother.&#13;
The queen, although kind, has been&#13;
a despotic mother and grandmother,&#13;
and has concerned herself, says» "M. A.&#13;
P.,""more t h a n the average parent with&#13;
the bringing up of her descendants. Besides&#13;
carefully supervising her children's&#13;
education, selecting or approving&#13;
their friends, and providing their&#13;
husbands and wives-, she has rigorously&#13;
controlled their pin moneys .of. which&#13;
there n e v e r - b a a been any wasting in&#13;
the precincts of old Windsor. Toys&#13;
and gewgaws in the royal nursery were&#13;
limited, but there never was any lack&#13;
of books. Each child had its own fflin-&#13;
1,000 NEWSPAPERS&#13;
Are now using our&#13;
International Type-High Plates&#13;
Sawed to&#13;
LABOR-SAVING LENGTHS.&#13;
They^vftt-save time 4n—your composing&#13;
room as thoy can bo handled even quicker&#13;
than type.&#13;
No extra charge is made for sawing plates&#13;
-to short lengths. ^&#13;
:^end a trial order to this office and be&#13;
convinced.&#13;
WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION,&#13;
D E T R O I T , (MICH.&#13;
TOURLST&#13;
TO&#13;
••••*£•*&#13;
•7-'"&#13;
•:«M&#13;
V-;i&#13;
"Vw.&#13;
r/&#13;
t&#13;
^ !&#13;
CALIFORNIA ^ _ /&#13;
VIA&#13;
the sunshine turned to an angel of Mature hook case, and was responsible&#13;
for keeping it in order, as well as for&#13;
a periodical report showing just how&#13;
many and w h a t books had been read.&#13;
The report was submitted' to the queen&#13;
at the end of every month. The children&#13;
frequently preferred to pass t h e&#13;
time playing, making out their list a t&#13;
random,, but Were Invariably caught.&#13;
In this respect Princess Louise is reported&#13;
to have proved the worst delinquent,&#13;
and it is said that on an average&#13;
her royal highness spent a whole&#13;
day of each-month In an empty room,&#13;
as punishment for this offense alone.&#13;
Qn one occasion, when, a child of 8, she&#13;
mm&amp;m Y o u will p r a c t i c e g o o d e c o n o m y In&#13;
w r i t i n g&#13;
C. 8. CRANE, C. P . A T. A., St. L o u i s ,&#13;
for n ^ c t l c u l a r a .&#13;
• • » • » • • • • • • • • • • • » &gt; » • • • • + &gt; •&#13;
• ^ t i c u i a r a .&#13;
Ortsdl&#13;
4?&#13;
reported t h a t her.literary food for the&#13;
month had consisted of a few "fairy&#13;
tales," "The Meditations of Marcus Aurellujj"&#13;
and "The Life o r Z w i n g l i . " The&#13;
queen's suspicions being aroused, she&#13;
questioned her daughter as „ to who I&#13;
th£M&gt; personages were. Unhesitatingly&#13;
came the reply t h a t Marcus Aureliua&#13;
had discovered America and ZwlngJl&#13;
was a famous German actor!&#13;
I Personally&#13;
Conducted&#13;
California&#13;
I Excursions&#13;
J V i a ttus S a n t a P e R o u t e .&#13;
A. Three tltnes a week flfoin Chicago&#13;
• . and Kansas City; *&#13;
T Twice a WPPK from St. Paul and&#13;
^ Mtnneap^ft*— ^ .&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
t&#13;
X&#13;
t&#13;
Some, men lose hats on an election&#13;
and some lose their heads. ^&#13;
• Once a week from 3». LoulMind&#13;
I Boston.&#13;
¢. In &gt;mprovod wlde-vestibuled&#13;
+ Pullman tourist sleep ng cars.&#13;
• Bettor \han ever before, at lowest&#13;
£ possihln rates.&#13;
£ Experienced excursion conductors,&#13;
+ Also daily service between Chicasca £&#13;
• and California. T&#13;
• CorreapoH-ienee aciioited. X&#13;
t T.-A. Q R A 6 Y , — •&#13;
X - . Manager C*l iforala Tourlai Service, •&#13;
+ Tk« Atcklana, Tcpeka A Saata re Railway T&#13;
• •. 1» A4am» Street, CHXCAOO. x X&#13;
•••••••+T^+^Tt*Tf»+W»TT+»&#13;
mm**&#13;
.».'*~m *•• .. •-'••-••wn- « ' . •!«. -A..*. .:-•-«/&lt;'.*%*•• '•.•*•?..*•.»' - &lt;• L'u/a'' . - 3 ijliur.'y,.••'••A .&lt;•..•» • .- • ^.HPi.Vummt^.H.Si+Avl life vY*tiifcit# '&#13;
' 4J1 ••..&lt;'.• i • . - . ' . ; ' . . ' . . - . - : 1 . • • .* • ' * " ' X,.' • ' v . ' • * • ' V • *,&#13;
' &gt; - '• '•/ . - ,i.\&#13;
'.''.*"&gt;.'., £?^#V-;:' ~ ~ - - . • * : « • ' — .&#13;
', - ^ •; ' ^ w j . i/l-r. -.&lt;•.&#13;
I r-&#13;
». r ""'.&#13;
otf w/ #&#13;
retora this coupon tad tfcree&#13;
one cent stamps to the J. C&#13;
Ayer Co., Low«U, Mts»», you&#13;
•ill receive in return t copy of&#13;
ike aotb Century Year BooL&#13;
Tfcis is not an ordinary a|manac,&#13;
but * handsome book, copiously&#13;
illustrated, and sold for 5 cents&#13;
on all news-stands. (We simply&#13;
allow you' the two cents you&#13;
spend *n postage for sending.)&#13;
Great men lave written for&#13;
the Year Book. In it is summed&#13;
up the progress of the 29th century.&#13;
In each important line of&#13;
work and thought the greatest&#13;
living specialist has recounted&#13;
the events and advances of the&#13;
past century and has prophesied&#13;
what we may-expect of the next.&#13;
Among the most noted of&#13;
oul^ontributors arc; -&#13;
Secretary of Agriculture Wilson, o n&#13;
Agriculture; Senator Chauncey M.&#13;
D e p e w , o n Politics • Russell Sage, o n&#13;
F i n a n c e ; - T h o m a s Edison, o n Electricity&#13;
; JDr.' Madison - Peters-, oh R e -&#13;
ligion; General Merritt, o n Land Warfare;&#13;
Admiral Hichborn, o n N a v a l&#13;
Warfare; " A l " S m i t h , o n Sports, e t c . ;&#13;
making a complete review of the whole&#13;
field of h u m a n endeavor and progress.&#13;
Each article is beautifully and&#13;
appropriately illustrated, and.the&#13;
whole makes an invaluable book&#13;
of reference, unequaled any*&#13;
where for the money.&#13;
Address J. C. A Y E R Co., Lowell, Mass.&#13;
4SSSawu^hi Thompson's Eys Waim&#13;
n D O D Q Y N E w DISCOVERY.'gives&#13;
I V I m w r ^ 9 • quick relief and cures worst&#13;
canca. Book of testimonials nod 10 DAYS'treatment&#13;
m i l . OS. H. U. OKEKM'8 SONS, fcoi K, Atlanta, Ga.&#13;
• J P i i e i A l l J O H W W . n i O B R I S L&#13;
| l C « n O l w l w W a M k l n g t o u , n.cl&#13;
urtttu. cA RTEKSMNK&#13;
Grow up with :u&#13;
CHEAP FARMS&#13;
10 YOU WUITIMHK) I f i n A H A A A A F Q Improved and unimproved&#13;
I V V j U V V A V n U farming lands H be divided&#13;
and suldoti long time ami easy p a y m e n t * , a little&#13;
each year Conic and see us or write. THE TRUMAN&#13;
MOSS ST ATK BANK, Sanilac Center, Mich., or&#13;
Tho Truman MOM tttate.Croswell. Sanilac Co.,Mich.&#13;
r&#13;
WTT% ^ = ^ ^ =&#13;
r Send-' t on&lt; e for this n e w two-stepmnTYK&#13;
It hus the full s w i n g and the a i r is cutchy&#13;
a n d equal to S msa's.&#13;
S«'nd l o ceii s in m o n e y or s t a m p s to&#13;
George C. J o h n s t o n , Alien B u i l d i n g . Cinc&#13;
i n n a t i . Ohio&#13;
MtUONS&#13;
of acres of cholcse agricultural&#13;
LANDS now&#13;
opened for settlemrnt&#13;
in Western Canad i.&#13;
Here *s frown ti.e oel-&#13;
%«,*„ „, ebrwtedNO 1 HARD&#13;
w H E A T . w h f c u Oriugs the hi hest price in the&#13;
markets oFthtfwjtfrM: HShousan«ls of cattle are&#13;
fattened for market w thout being fe-i grain,&#13;
and wftsssft | day's *helter. Send for information&#13;
and secure n free home in Western Canada,&#13;
write the Superintendent of Immigration. Ottawa,&#13;
or add .ess the undersigned, who will mail&#13;
you atlasejB, pamphlets.' etc., free of cost. M.&#13;
V. Mclnnes, No. 1 .uerril! Block, Detroit. Mich.;&#13;
James Gr eve. Mt, Pleasant, Mich., or &amp; L.&#13;
Caven. Bad Axe. lt'«h.&#13;
• » r - i , •&#13;
V&#13;
'1&#13;
li&#13;
SUBSTANTIAL&#13;
PROF5T&#13;
will he raude hv every buyer of l4n Porte&#13;
property. First jje oral .s;i,c in February.&#13;
IWU La Porte, Texas, is destined&#13;
to bf the future »ri"eaip&amp;&lt;- s c iport of the&#13;
Gulf ol Mexico. Kvrry farmer, merchant&#13;
and nriiinufuci.vircT of l.,v Untied States&#13;
we-t of thn Mis-issippi ltiver is directly&#13;
interested in La Port«i. A sm 11 investmrnt&#13;
wiH return handsome profits. Write&#13;
(or FREE Folder, NTaptand Art Book to .&#13;
AMERICAN LAND COMPANY,&#13;
18b M a d i s o n S t . , CHICAGO.&#13;
DO NOT &amp;tt«u UJ *«Y toONtY,&#13;
A PBH8KM FUK Y U t .&#13;
LOOX! fmt SOLID&#13;
LD&#13;
RtNC&#13;
N o . 3 § 2 , 2 Rubles and 2 Pearls.&#13;
Thl* c^uiliul juii« will Hiloni yim' hun^i wlthmit&#13;
liny cost-to yon. Don't xenil n* nny nvmey. ju&gt;t yonr&#13;
name and w'.s'ji'sa. U"« wir «civt ymi P.rairitld ri « i&#13;
onrLnrge, llAnJ»omc Doillei*. dllTerent dc&gt;lvrn . Sel&#13;
tbein to yi&gt;t;r KHinUy nnii lrleu&lt;l» nt I c. emh, semi&#13;
n» hei 'iO und we will send yoo by Ktnrn um.l ihe&#13;
beaatliut !: 1 n«r.&#13;
•iV'o «.f)cr rur.t, stcrtnKSiiTornrareipm. So'idGo a&#13;
Pitted Hract-|,H&gt;. S Ud Ould Rlnjc*. Sother* loslivci&#13;
Brmtele**&gt; Ctohl t'on and Pearl Handle, tur»clllinf our&#13;
'•JB»t\rt-oiT»«* "*&gt;-»il*«»fi.&#13;
V ^ W l l T K St'BK TO DAT. TOCt «tNTK88 18 CXKTAI5.&#13;
iv A. ttreo &amp; CO., Jewctey D r.&#13;
«1» uiusox ttftun, &gt; I r IOCK.&#13;
/&#13;
R F ^ T JV() fFTTF T^R(^NT i a thiTt* d a y s Plac«d t h e British n&amp;g&#13;
K I T C H E N E R A N D ROBERTS&#13;
FOR S O U T H AFRICA.&#13;
O F F&#13;
One B e a p e i l tJndylng F a m e In t h e&#13;
J&amp;ajroh t o K»uU»har, thw O t h e r pn&#13;
t h e B l o o d y $aada of t h e Houdrnn—&#13;
N o w Cotuit on Victory.&#13;
T i e s e r i o u s n e s s o f t h e w a r s t t u a t i o a&#13;
i n S o u t h • A f r i c a h a s s t i r r e d u p E n g -&#13;
l a n d aa s h e h a s n o t b e e n s t i r r e d b e f o r e&#13;
i n t h r e e - q u a r t e r s 6t a c e n t u r y a n d h a s&#13;
l e d t o ; h e r o r d e r i n g t a t h e s c e n e of&#13;
h o s t i l i t i e s t w o of h e r a b l e s t g e n e r a l s ,&#13;
F i e l d M a r s h a l L o r d R o b e r t s a n &lt; $ M a j . -&#13;
G e n . L o r d K i t c h e n e r , t h e o n e t h e h e r o&#13;
of K a n d a h a r , i n A s i a , a n d t h e o t h e r&#13;
t h e h e r o \ o f O m d u r m a n , i n A f r i c a .&#13;
L o r d R o b e r t s , w h o w i l l a s s u m e ^ l i e f&#13;
c o m m a n d i n S o u t h A f r i c a , i s t ^ e i d o l&#13;
o f t h e B r i t i s h a r m y a n d l S * p o p u l a r l y&#13;
k n o w n a s " B o b s . " H e i s r e g a r d e d b y&#13;
the' m i l i t a r y a u t h o r i t i e s of t h e l e a d i n g&#13;
c o u n t r i e s o f E u r o p e a s t h e f o r e m o s t&#13;
B r i t i s h c o m m a n d e r of t h e V i c t o r i a n&#13;
era, h i s c e l e b r a t e d f o r c e d m a r c h t o&#13;
K a n d a h a r c o n s t i t u t i n g o n e of t h e fine&#13;
s t f e a t s o f E n g l i s h a r m s i n m o d e r n&#13;
t i m e s . ' v&#13;
L o r d F r e d e r i c k S. R o b e r t s w a s b o r n&#13;
a b o v e t h e c i t a d e l o f - K a b u l , a f ^ x o u t ^ ^ ^ n t h e i M t f e w y e a i ^&#13;
i n * t h e Aferhan a r m v. w h i c h o u t n u m - incurable. F o r » great many years doctors prcli&#13;
l g A f g h a n y , o u t n u m&#13;
btfred t h e B r i t i s h b y t w e l v e t o -one.&#13;
T h e n a f t e r r e i n f o r c e m e n t s h a d b e e n&#13;
s e n t t o h i m h e b e g a n o n e of t h e m o s t&#13;
f a m o u s m a r c h e s i n h i s t o r y — o v e r t o w -&#13;
e r i n g m o u n t a i n r a n g e s a n d t h r o u g h&#13;
h o s t i l e t e r r i t o r y , s t r a i g h t f r o m K a b u l&#13;
t o K a n d a h a r — 3 0 0 m i l e s i n 20 d a y s .&#13;
A t t h e e n d o f t h e m a r c h h e c r u s h e d&#13;
A y o o b K h a n , a n d t h e w h o l e ' e m p i r e&#13;
r a n g w i t h t h e p r a i s e s of t h e m a n w h o&#13;
a f e w m o n t h s b e f o r e h a d b e e n a l m o s t&#13;
u n k n o w n .&#13;
S i n c e t h e n R o b e r t s h a s ' a d v a n c e d&#13;
t h r o u g h s u c c e s s i v e s t a g e s t o t h e p o s i -&#13;
t i o n o f c o m m a n d e r - i n - c h i e f of t h e&#13;
f o r c e s i n I r e l a n d . N o w i n h i s 6 7 t h&#13;
y e a r h e i s c a l l e d u p o n t o f a c e t h e h a r d -&#13;
e s t t a s k of h i s m i l i t a r y c a r e e r a n d a&#13;
p a t h e t i c t h i n g a b o u t hia d e p a r t u r e i s&#13;
t h e f a c t t h a t h i s o r d e r s c a m e t o h i m&#13;
s i m u l t a n e o u s l y w i t h t h e n e w s of t h e&#13;
d e a t h o f h i s s o n , a b r i g h t y o u n g officer,&#13;
w h o f e l l i n t h e b a t t l e of t h e T u g e l a&#13;
r i v e r F r i d a y of l a s t w e e k .&#13;
L o r d K i t c h e n e r , c h i e f - o f - s t a f l t o&#13;
L o r d R o b e r t s , i s E n g l a n d ' s l a t e s t a n d&#13;
m o s t p o p u l a r w a r h e r o . H i s s u c c e s s -&#13;
f u l c o n q u e s t of t h e E g y p t i a n S o u d a n&#13;
w o n f o r h i m a f a m e i n E n g l a n d t o b e&#13;
c o m p a r e d w i t h t h a t of A d m i r a l D e w e y&#13;
i n t h i s c o u n t r y . I n r e t u r n f o r t h e s e r v -&#13;
i c e s Gen.* K i t c h e n e r r e n d e r e d h i s c o u n -&#13;
t r y l a E g y p t h e w a s r a i s e d t o t h e p e e r -&#13;
a g e a n d w a s v o t e d a g i f t of ¢150,000&#13;
b y t h e h o u s e of c o m m o n s .&#13;
H e w a s b o r n i n K e r r y c o u n t y , I r e -&#13;
l a n d , i n 1851, a n d a t t h e a g e of 20, r e -&#13;
c e i v e d h i s c o m m i s s i o n a s l i e u t e n a n t of&#13;
e n g i n e e r s . F o r a l o n g t i m e h e w a s i n&#13;
t h e c i v i l s e r v i c e , b u t i n 1882 e n t e r e d&#13;
t h e r e g u l a r s e r v i c e i n E g y p t u n d e r Sir&#13;
E v e l y n W o o d , w h o w a s t h e n e n g a g e d&#13;
in t h e r e o r g a n i z a t i o n of t h e E g y p t i a n&#13;
a r m y . H e r e c e i v e d a n a p p o i n t h e n f f o n&#13;
t h e i n t e l l i g e n c e staff w h e n t h e t r o u -&#13;
b l e s i n t h e S o u d a n m a d e n e c e s s a r y t h «&#13;
There is more Catarrh in this section of the '&#13;
country than all other diseases put together.&#13;
FIELD MARSHAL LORD ROBERTS&#13;
i n I r e l a n d i n 1832 a n d w a s e d u c a t e d a t&#13;
t h e R o y a l M i l i t a r y C o l l e g e a t S a n d -&#13;
h u r s t H e w a s o n l y 19 y e a r s o l d w h e n&#13;
h e w e n t , t o I n d i a a n d e n t e r e d t h e B e n -&#13;
g a l a r t i l l e r y a s a l i e u t e n a n t . H e r e h e&#13;
labored, u n k n o w n t o f a m e u n t i l t h e&#13;
I n d i a n m n t i n y w h e n h e w a s a t t a c h e d&#13;
t o t h e c o l u m n w h i c h w a s s e n t t o ' a t t a c k&#13;
D e l h i , t h e f o r c e s of t h e r e b e l l i o n . T h e&#13;
p o s i t i o n o f t h e s m a l l B r i t i s h f o r c e b e -&#13;
fore t h e c a p i t a l of t h e i n s u r r e c t i o n " w a s&#13;
for m o n t h s a p e r i l o u s o n e . F i g h t i n g&#13;
w a s of d a i l y o c c u r r e n c e , t h e m u t i n e e r s&#13;
h a v i n g a n u n l i m i t e d n u i u b e x . of g u n s&#13;
a n d a n i n e x h a u s t i b l e s u p p l y of a m m u -&#13;
n i t i o n . R o b e r t s c a m e u n d e r fire_.fpr&#13;
t h e first t i m e In a s k i r m i s h , w h e n e i g h t&#13;
o f h i s p a r t y ' w e r e k i l l e d a n d t h i r t y&#13;
w o u n d e d . S o o n a f t e r w a r d , i n a n o t h e r&#13;
of t h e e n g a g e m e n t s n e a r t h e w a l l s of&#13;
t h e c i t y , t h e y o u n g l i e u t e n a n t w a s h i t&#13;
by a b u l l e t n e a r t h e s p i p e a s h e w a s&#13;
h e l p i n g t h e d r i v e r s k e e p the" h o r s e s&#13;
q u i e t w h i l e l i m b e r i n g u p t h e g u n s .&#13;
A - l e a t h e r p o u c h h a d s o m e h o w s l i p p e d&#13;
b e h i n d h i s b a c k a n d p r e v e n t e d t h e b u l -&#13;
let p e n e t r a t i n g d e e p l y . \&#13;
A f t e r t h e c a p t u r e of D e l h i R o b e r t s&#13;
j o i n e d t h e a r m y of Sir C o l i n C a m p b e l l ,&#13;
w h i c h a d v a n c e d t o t h e r e l i e f of L u c k -&#13;
n o w . W h e n t h e ..relieving a r m y g o t ,&#13;
c l o s e t o t h e r e b e l l i n e s o u t s i d e L u c k -&#13;
n o w S i r C o l i n , w i s h i n g t o l e t t h e B r i t -&#13;
i s h c o m m a n d e r , O u t r a m , _ k n o w "o^f-*his&#13;
p r o g r e s s w a n t e d a flag r a i s e d on* t h e&#13;
m e s s h o u s e . W i t h i n p l a i n v i e w of t h e&#13;
m u t i n e e r s L i e u t . R o b e r t s c l i m b e d t o&#13;
t h e t o p of t h e b u i l d i n g , a n d , a m i d a&#13;
r a i n of s h o t , r a i s e d t h e flag e n t h e t u r - ,&#13;
r e t n e a r e s t t o t h e foe. I t . w a s s h o t&#13;
a w a y , a n d h e r e p l a c e d it. A g a i n it&#13;
w a s s h o T a w a y , a n d ' h e r a i s e d i t a g a i n .&#13;
B u t it w a s n o t f o r t h i s d e e d t h a t R o b -&#13;
e r t s w o n h i s V i c t o r i a C r o s s . T h a t w a s&#13;
d o n e . - a t K h o d a g u n g e J a n . 2, 1858. He*&#13;
s a w in t h e d i s t a n c e t w o s e p o y s g o i n g&#13;
a w a y w i t h a s t a n d a r d . P u t t i n g s p u r s&#13;
t o h i s h o r s e , h e o v e r t o o k t h e m . T h e y&#13;
t u r n e d a n d p r e s e n t e d t h e i r m u s k e t s a t&#13;
h i m , a n d o n e of t h e m e n p u l l e d t h e&#13;
t r i g g e r . I t s n a p p e d , m i s s i n g fire, a n d&#13;
t h e s e p o y w a s c u t d o w n b y R o b e r t s '&#13;
s w o r d . T h e o t h e r m u t i n e e r r e d e a w a y ,&#13;
a n d t h e y o u n g l i e u t e n a n t b r o u g h t . . . t h e&#13;
s t a n d a r d b a c k t o c a m p . The. s a m e d a y&#13;
he r e s c u e d a w o u n d e d c o m r a d e u n d e r&#13;
a l m o s t s i m i l a r c i r c u m s t a n c e s .&#13;
I n t h e y e a r s t h a t f o l l o w e d t h e m u -&#13;
t i n y R o b e r t s s a w a l m o s t c o n t i n u a l&#13;
s e r v i c e . H e w a s at U m b e y l a , in t h e&#13;
f r o n t i e r c a m p a i g n , in 1S03: i n 1S67 h e&#13;
hijd c h a r g e of t h e e m ' b a r k a t i q n - o f t h e&#13;
f o r c e for t h e A b y s s i n i a n c a m p a i g n . ' In&#13;
1S71 a n d 1S72 h e w a s t h e s e n i o r staff&#13;
officer in t h e L u s h a i c a m p a i g n , a n d&#13;
f r o m 1S75 t o 1S78 h e w a s q u a r t e r m a s t e r&#13;
g e n e r a l . A l l h i s p r o m o t i o n s w e r e "for&#13;
m e r i t . "&#13;
I t w a s t o w a r d t h e end' of 1878 t h a t&#13;
t h e g r e a t o p p o r t u n i t y of G e n . R o b e r t s '&#13;
c a r e e r c a m e . t o h i m . T h e a m e e r of&#13;
A f g h a n i s t a n r e b e l l e d a g a i n s t t h e a u -&#13;
t h o r i t y _ / o f G r e a t B r i t a i n a n d R o b e r t s&#13;
w a s s e n t a t - Uiu h e a d of- - t h e a r m y 4 o -&#13;
s u b d n e . h i m . H e c a r r i e d t h e e n e m y ' s&#13;
s t r o n g h o l d a t T e i w a r K o t a l w i i h a&#13;
M A J . - G E N . L O R D K I T C H E N E R .&#13;
kii»ed. K i t c h e n e r o n r e t u r n i n g h o m r&#13;
a f t e r t h i s b r i l l i a n t e x p e d i t i o n became&#13;
the, p o p u l a r idol. H e i s t h e y o u n g e s ;&#13;
m a j o r - g e n e r a l in the_.British a r m y .&#13;
E x t i n c t i o n of t h e Maori*.&#13;
J u d g i n g f r o m t h e - r e c e n t r e p o r t of&#13;
t h e r e g i s t r a r - g e n e r a l of N e w Zeatonri.&#13;
t h a t fine m a r t i a l r a c e , t h e M a o r i s , i?&#13;
g o i n g t h e w a y of all a b o r i g i n e s w h o s e&#13;
c o u n t r y h a s b e e n c o l o n i z e d b y t h e&#13;
w h i t e s . T h e y m a y n o t b e c o m e a b s o -&#13;
l u t e l y e x t i n c t f c r a f e w m o r e dfecades.&#13;
b u t t h e i r d o o m i s s e a l e d . A m o n g the&#13;
c a u s e s officially a s s i g n e d for t h e t h i n :&#13;
n i n g of t h e i r n u m b e r s a r e t h e h i g h&#13;
i n f a n t i l e m o r t a l i t y r e s u l t i n g f r o m i m -&#13;
p r o p e r f o o d , e x p o s u r e a n d t h e w a n t&#13;
of o r d l n a f y ~ c a r e , c o n s t i t u t i o n s d e b l l i -&#13;
t a t c d b y p a s t d e b a u c h e r y , t n e _belio&#13;
i n n a t i v e d o c t o r s a n d n e g l e c t of the&#13;
s i c k , a n d t h e a d o p t i o n of E u r o p e a r&#13;
proaounoed&#13;
It a local disease, and prescribed local&#13;
remedies, and by constantly falling to cure&#13;
with local treatment, pronounced It incurable.&#13;
Science has proven catarrh to be a constitutional&#13;
disease, and therefore requires constitutional&#13;
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured&#13;
by F . J . Cheney SL Co., Toledo, Ohio,&#13;
is the only constitutional cure on the market.&#13;
I t is t a k e n internally in doses from 10 drops to&#13;
a teaspoonful.. It acts directly upon the blood&#13;
and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer&#13;
one hundred dollars for any case it falls to cure.&#13;
Send for circulars and testimonials. Address&#13;
P. J. CHENEY &amp; CO., Toledo, Ohio,&#13;
Sold byDruggists, 76c.&#13;
H a l l s Family Pills are the b e s t&#13;
The man who looks for difficulties will find&#13;
two where he only expected one.&#13;
A woman's pocket book i s nearly always&#13;
worth more than the money in it.&#13;
C o a c h i n g X e * d s t o CoBSumptloa,&#13;
K e m p ' s B a l s a m w i l l s t o p t h e c o u g h&#13;
a t o n c e . G o t o y o u r d r u g g i s t t o d a y&#13;
a n d g e t a s a m p l e b o t t l e f r e e . S o l d i n&#13;
25 a n d 5 0 c e n t b o t t l e s . G o a t o n c e ; d e -&#13;
l a y s a r e d a n g e r o u s .&#13;
17 •• : .y.&#13;
•%t}&#13;
•*&gt;l&#13;
N o man knows the right way so well as the&#13;
one who has once been mliiss*l ed.&#13;
Mrs. W i n s l o w ' s Soothing: S y r a p .&#13;
For children teething, softens the gumi, reduces infisromstlon,&#13;
allays pain, cures wind colic ascabotu*.&#13;
Some men's Idea of practicing economy is to&#13;
preach it daily to their wives.&#13;
W h e n C h a n g i n g W a t e r or D i e t&#13;
T7«e Lightning Hot Drupi and arold Ma«8«; 3&#13;
All drujudsu. Herb Medicine Co., Sprlagnsld, 0.&#13;
:tfJ&#13;
i&lt; &gt;l&#13;
ACTS GENTLY ON T^E&#13;
KIDNEYS, LIVER&#13;
AND BOWELS&#13;
ClEAN5ts THE SYSTEM&#13;
^EFFECTUALLY&#13;
A fat woman never looks as fat in a phaeton&#13;
as i n a high top buggy. ^&#13;
Baker's B r e a k f a s t Cocoa&#13;
1» deHdous. Coats less than one cent a cup.&#13;
Made only&#13;
by Walter Baker &lt;S Co. Ltd., Dorcht»tea Br, Mae&#13;
St. Paul said that all men are liars,&#13;
probably an assessor.&#13;
He was&#13;
OVERCOMES&#13;
* * i w t s s * 2 ^ PERMANENTLY&#13;
-Piso's Cure for Consumption has saved me&#13;
large doctor bills.—C. L. Baker, 4 3 * Regent Sq.,&#13;
Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 8, 18S/5.&#13;
After a man reaches 35 he should stop dreaming&#13;
and go to work.&#13;
Brown's Teetilag Cordial is the babies&#13;
best friend, so say the mothers,&#13;
BV7 TMt G t N V l N E - M A N ' f O B y&#13;
&lt;£Ur9rWIAFG$YRVP(§&#13;
,t.*L. X?*»&#13;
d i s p a t c h o f t r u s t w o r t h y E n g l i s h offl&#13;
c e r s t o D o n g o l a i n a d v a n c e of L o r d -&#13;
W o l s e l e y ' s N i l e e x p e d i t i o n fifteen y e a r s&#13;
a g o . T h e r e K i t c h e n e r w a s a l w a y s t h e&#13;
o n e s e l e c t e d for a n y w o r k t h a t d e -&#13;
m a n d e d g r e a t f o r c e of c h a r a c t e r , c o m -&#13;
b i n e d w i t h t a c t a n d r e s o u r c e f u l n e s s in&#13;
d e a l i n g w i t h i n t r i g u e s of d i s l o y a l offic&#13;
i a l s o r w i n n i n g o v e r t h e c h i e f s w h o -&#13;
w a v e r e d b e t w e e n f e a r of E g y p t i a n&#13;
p o w e r a n d a h a n k e r i n g after, t h e g o o d&#13;
t h i n g s p r o m i s e d b y M a h d i s m .&#13;
W i t h t h e N i l e e x p e d i t i o n K i t c h e n e r ' s&#13;
p r o m o t i o n w a s r a p i d . H e b e c a m e o n e&#13;
of t h e t w o m a j o r s of c a v a l r y in 1884,&#13;
w a s m a d e l i e u t e n a n t - c o l o n e L i n 18S5&#13;
a n d b e c a m e cOlcnel in 1888. H e w a s&#13;
in c o m m a n d c f a b r i g a d e of t h e E g y p - '&#13;
t i a n a r m y i n t h e o p e r a t i o n s n e a r S u -&#13;
a k i m in D e c e m b e r , 18SS, a n d w a s p r e s -&#13;
e n t i n t h e e n g a g e m e n t s a t G e m a i z a h&#13;
a n d a t T o s k i , i n 1889.&#13;
A t t h e b e g i n n i n g of t h e c a m p a i g n of&#13;
1896 f o r t h e r e c o n q u e s t o f t h e S o u d a n&#13;
K i t c h e n e r w a s m a d e c o m m a n d e r - i n -&#13;
c h i e f of t h e f o r c e s i n E g y p t . H e led a&#13;
s u c c e s s f u l e x p e d i t i o n u p t h e N i l e&#13;
a g a i n s t t h e K a l i f a , s a f e l y c o n d u c t i n g&#13;
h i s troop's u p c a t a r a c t s a n d t h r o u g h&#13;
m a r a u d i n g t r i b e s a n d burning~"deserii&#13;
u n t i l _ _ , e m d u r m a n w a s r e a c h e d . _ H e r e&#13;
w a s f o u g h t a terrific b a t t l e b e t w e e n&#13;
t h e A n g l o - E g y p t i a n t r o o p s a n d t h e&#13;
d e r v i s h e s , t h e l a t t e r b e i n g c u t d o w n&#13;
l i k e g r a s s b e f o r e t h e s c y t h e . I n o n&#13;
c h a r g e T h e d e r v i s h e s l o s t 4,0G(Tmen a m .&#13;
w h e n t h e b a t t l e w a s o v e r 16,000 oi&#13;
t h e i r dead' a n d d y i n g s t r e w ^ the&#13;
g r o u n d . T h e K a l i f a a n d h i s "chief."&#13;
w e r e f u g i t i v e s a n d h a v e r e c e n t l y b e e n&#13;
There is no fun n grumbling when nobody&#13;
pays any attention.&#13;
fba &amp;*u w Aii oRysetffi, wmet **. m acme&#13;
W . N . U . — D E T R O I T — N O . 1 * - 1 9 Q Q .&#13;
Vhea Answering Advertise m e a t s HifxH}&#13;
Mention This f a p e c .&#13;
^,wi.iiiit,i»iiiimmmm;&gt;wiffi!mKmmTmiiuiitiui;.itinn7iT^r&#13;
9 oo DROPS&#13;
.iHHUUminulMHiiiUiiliilm, lr,&#13;
Vegetable PrepacaLionfor Assimilating&#13;
the Food andBegulating&#13;
the S toiaachs anlBowels of&#13;
i N r A N ' I S / i . H U . D K E N&#13;
' Promotes DigcslioaChecrfurness&#13;
and Rest.Con tains neither&#13;
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral.&#13;
N O T " N A R C O T I C .&#13;
&amp;ctpe &lt;*OUI*S4MUn.HKHRR&#13;
Pump/a* Setd&gt;'&#13;
ftin? Seed-&#13;
A perfect Remedy rorCon$tipa-&#13;
Fion, So ur S totivach, Diarrhoea&#13;
Worms .CmwuisTons ,Fcverish-'"&#13;
ness and L o s s OF SLEEP,&#13;
F a c s i m i l e Signature o f&#13;
X E W Y O R K .&#13;
GASTORIA For Infants and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Latins&#13;
of&#13;
&gt;v&#13;
MOYBL&#13;
A l b i t l ' o o l h v o l i i .&#13;
J 5 D 0 S r ^ | 5 C l N i v | |&#13;
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER*&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORIA h&#13;
s p l e n d i d r u s h a t o d d s of a l m o s t t e a t o - W l b l t s a n d c o s t u m e s , l e a d i n g t o diso&#13;
n e . T h e n e x t y e a r t h e n e w s , of S i r ^ M o f t h e ~ r e S p l r a t o f y O r g a n s . A&#13;
L o u i s C a v a g n a r l ' a m u r d e r in K t b u l ^ a o r j M , A . . N g a t a , In " a d d r e s s i n g a&#13;
h o r r i f i e d all E n g l a n d a n d R o b e r t s w a s&#13;
c a l l e d u p o n t o l e a d a n o t h e r a v e n g i n g&#13;
f o r c e d W i t h ¢,0.00 m e n h e c u t h i s * a j t&#13;
s t r a i g h t t h r o u g h t h e h o s t i l e l a n d , a n d&#13;
r e c e n t c o n f e r e n c e of h l s ~ c b u n t r y m e n .&#13;
s a i d t h a t d r i n k w a s p a u p e r i z i n g t h e m&#13;
a n d s a p p i n g t h e i r v i t a l i t y . — L o n d o n&#13;
C h r o n i c l e .&#13;
SPECIAL COUCH SAW&#13;
Beautiful Rococo Conch, Ion? and wide, with&#13;
hiphly tempered steel springs, soft and luxurious,&#13;
upholstered in handsome velours, any&#13;
shade desired, usually re mils at 112.00, only, S8.75&#13;
F D F l f l H T D A i n ^ h e n cash accompanies order we will ship ubove Couch, freight&#13;
• i Y i _ i v j i • i r ^ i L * , pajjj JQ a n y point i n Michigan. Our goods are strictly high&#13;
prade and are fully guaranteed. SAflPLES FREE. Name the shade desired and&#13;
we will send you free samples of best covering. Agents Wanted.&#13;
6. R. WHOLESALE FURNITURE CO,, Grand Rapids, Mich.&#13;
/ \&#13;
^KASKOLATABLETS&#13;
15 c e n t s . All drup-orists.&#13;
n&#13;
a-1&#13;
MH • M mi&#13;
• • • ' I V - V&#13;
• &gt; &gt; • • • &lt; ' : .&#13;
*\?7*&gt; ^T?&#13;
• /&#13;
&gt;• --^2---T ~- * W.*'^^'&gt;,Vr,'V-,-^vH T " ; T ; v ,'•:,..&#13;
... 1.,.. tV ...&#13;
.. f&#13;
w."',&#13;
. * &gt; • • ;&#13;
*&#13;
It&#13;
» i -&#13;
V *&#13;
\&#13;
J!&#13;
* • : : . ; ' • &amp;&#13;
• r'&#13;
?&#13;
! • ; •&#13;
j , — ^ - - - — — — I . I ii m i — —&#13;
As we said in otfr last issue we would announce&#13;
this week tbe winner ol th^ tonga-&#13;
«ine among our correspondents, we give&#13;
below a summary of the number of lines&#13;
lieut in by liaise who have sent in any large&#13;
•mount. \Yc thank all for (their,efforts to&#13;
help make the DISPATCH a newsy paper,&#13;
and shall extend thesitme offer for another&#13;
year with the exception that we will make&#13;
the second in the race a present of a fine&#13;
book or magazine of our own selection.&#13;
Please read our rules in our Book of In-&#13;
•truclious carefully. If you have never&#13;
Jbad one or worn one out, ask for another.&#13;
T H E PUBLISHER/&#13;
&gt; Unadilla... ....'. ..2,013&#13;
A nderson 1,862&#13;
Parshallville »1,111&#13;
Hamburg.' t 78i'&#13;
Silver Luke... j 681&#13;
Gregory .' 543&#13;
Pettysville ; 471&#13;
East Putnam !. 435&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
Aubery Eoyce, of Detroit, is&#13;
visiting his parents here.&#13;
Mrs. Truman Lake is visiting&#13;
her daughter, Mrs. Grant Race, in&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Miss Arola Steiner has been&#13;
visiting with relatives near Hotfell&#13;
tW paBt two weeks.&#13;
Miss Nora Durkee spent New&#13;
Years with her aunt in Unadilla.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. HolmeB, of j&#13;
Lansing, spent New Years at Jas. j&#13;
Marble's. ;&#13;
Miss Olivo Brearley, of Greg-)&#13;
ory, spent apart of last week at]&#13;
J o h n Birnie's. • •&#13;
Miss G r a c e D r e w of Howell,!&#13;
s p e n t t h e first of t h e week a | | 6 a n i&#13;
uel Placeway's.&#13;
L e l i a C o l e m a n a n d S n m u e l i&#13;
C l a p h a m , of L a n s i n g , are v i s i t i n g '&#13;
r e l a t i v e s in t h i s vicinity. !&#13;
A n u m b e r of y o u n g people from&#13;
t h i s vicinity a t t e n d e d t h e oyster&#13;
s u p p e r at H e n r y SingeltonV.&#13;
T h e Misses J e n n i e end K i t t i e&#13;
M o n t a g u e , of C h u b b ' s C o r n e r s ,&#13;
visited at A. G. W i l s o n ' s last week.&#13;
T h e A n d e r s o u F a r m e r s ' C l u b&#13;
meets a t the h o m e of JSHiiluel&#13;
piaceway^ J a u . 13^ E v e r y o n e invited.&#13;
T h e m a n y -friends of C h a r l i e&#13;
H i u c h e v *vill "be s o r r y t o learn&#13;
t h a t be died on the 1 7 t h of D e c ,&#13;
in t h e west where h e h a d g o n e&#13;
Lila Chubb, ot Marion, was a&#13;
guest«of her teacher, Miss Thressa&#13;
Melviu, over New Years.&#13;
Frankie Plaoeway, of Gregory,&#13;
was a guest of her cousin, Iva&#13;
Place way the first of the week.&#13;
The New Year was ushered in with&#13;
a very tine day.&#13;
•Gilbert Howe and Miss Marion Clark&#13;
are visiting friends iu St John and&#13;
St Louis.&#13;
V. . ^ » 0 * « . . . , . . '&#13;
Bl«murk'« Iron N*rv«&#13;
Was the result of his splendid health.&#13;
Indomitable will and tremendous&#13;
energy are not found where stomach,'&#13;
liver, kidneys and ,bowela are out of&#13;
.order. If you want these qualitiei&#13;
and the success they brintf, use Dr.&#13;
Kind's New Lite Pills. They tterefop&#13;
Avery power of brain and body. Only&#13;
25o at V. A. Siller's drug store.&#13;
OF REAL INTEREST.&#13;
M i s s L a u r a B e c k e r is h a v i n g a l i o r h i s l u , R l t b ' l a s t B W n *&#13;
t w o weeks vacation from h e r&#13;
school d u t i e s in tlie__Howell H . S.&#13;
Bertfca-and M a b e l W r i g h t , of&#13;
M a f i o i \ M Rifle a n d M a b d ^igler,&#13;
Dr. Swartz has" p u r c h a s e d , t h e ^ ^ H a l s t e a d a n d I ^ l l i a n Boyle,&#13;
EIOTO which belonged t o B u r t o n&#13;
E o y c p , nml also the stock of d r u g s&#13;
he lately sold to p a r t i e s from&#13;
D e t r o i t ,&#13;
BHV. H a r v e y Pen ice a n d wife&#13;
will jjive an elocutionary e n t e r -&#13;
t a i n m e n t at-tlie M. E. c h u r c h , h e r e&#13;
of P i n c k n e y , spent t h e latter p a r t&#13;
of last week with E d i t h Wood. |&#13;
^ETTPVSViLLa&#13;
'. R u b e B l a d e was h o m e for New&#13;
Y e a i s .&#13;
R a y T o m p k i n s i s h o m e from&#13;
s o m e t i m e t h e lailei p a r t of tlTTs i H a r t l a i u H o r a few days".&#13;
m o n t h . ExHct date will b e k n o w n Atost of o u r y o u n g t e o p l e went&#13;
later. •- j to 'Whit more L a k e to t h e N e w 1&#13;
^___ I Y e a r s party. |&#13;
. • ANOWfON. i J . W. P l H c e w a y a n d vvjfe s p e n t !&#13;
School began T u e s d a y after a N e w Y e R r s w h h G e o b r i g h t a n d !&#13;
r e e k s vacation. ! family in Iosco. |&#13;
B n g e n e rniiili and family s p e n t ; 8 T e e p l { 4 ^ {n H o w e n T f l e g . ]&#13;
New Years m Daiu-ville. i„. ±. i- .• ' J +i&#13;
day, a t t e n d i n g a m e e t i n g ot t h e&#13;
Dillivan D u i k e e r e t u r n e d to L i v i n g s t o n Co. M u t u a l F i r e In-1&#13;
t h e Noi'mal at Y p f i l a n t ^ Tuesday, s u r a n c e Co. '&#13;
" T h e ftfar^-nfle union in the United&#13;
States was ufat of the tailors, formed&#13;
in 1806.&#13;
, One of ijhe Buffalo p ^ e r s runs He&#13;
entire r4nnt bv electricity furnishe'l&#13;
from Niagara Falls.&#13;
Q'-ecn Victoria is ^ e shortest adult&#13;
60.Yj»i-eig:n in the world, being only 4&#13;
feet 11 inches in height.&#13;
J C i e screv'e of an Atlantic liner, re^&#13;
vo'ves pomrtlring ike fiSO.Ono times'Detween&#13;
Liverpool and New York.&#13;
According to' Lfeb7g, tiveralklall in&#13;
ppraragus develops form iu the human&#13;
brain.&#13;
Hair dve drcclv'es p^eop'e who use it&#13;
Into thlnk'ns: they .arn rlcceiving other j&#13;
people.—Chicago N e s ^ ^&#13;
The Brothernrod of Carpenter and&#13;
Joiners hr.ve CO.000 -'members, being&#13;
one*tenth-of the whole number of men&#13;
In this trade.&#13;
~ The p.'ijdii.'tlve-cpp'c'ty of the labor&#13;
sivirg rnachii cry o; the United States&#13;
at• the present time-M x qu-" 1 to a. hand&#13;
working papulation of 400,000.000."'&#13;
Ebenezor Ford, elected to the New '&#13;
York Legislature in 1829, was the first&#13;
man to g a n office as a labor candidate.&#13;
A few ye*us :go tli^re was as^mar.y i&#13;
as thirty-three vegetarian restaurants&#13;
in Lonii'on.. To-day there exist only&#13;
about six.&#13;
MoceanIiM the U»t Foolw««r.&#13;
Tbe moccasin is the most rational&#13;
and comfortable of all footwear, - l a&#13;
moccasins tbe feet have full playr&#13;
they can bend and grasp{ there ie&#13;
nothing to cnate H1*em or Impede circulation.&#13;
In moccr !.ne one can move&#13;
like an acrobat. c\ ^iing slender and&#13;
slirpery log(5rcH'"l ing trees or pas«inr,&#13;
with ease and security along dizi:y&#13;
trails on the mountain side, where a&#13;
slip might mean sure deetruction.&#13;
The leet do not slick fast In the'mud.&#13;
Tn the]nor h. when the mercury is far&#13;
below lz,ero and no civilized boot will&#13;
protect the feet from freezing, the eivrrre&#13;
suffers no inconvenience, Hie&#13;
moccasins, stuffed with dried grass,&#13;
let the blood course freely. The perspiration&#13;
may freeze on the hay in a&#13;
-solid lump of tee, -bjrpthe feet remain&#13;
warm and dry. ^&#13;
The buckekln moccasin, Indian tanned,&#13;
with deers' brains and wood&#13;
smoke always dries soft alter a wetting&#13;
In autumn, when all the leaves and&#13;
twigs are dry as tinder, a man wearing&#13;
shoes-nmkee-a noise fn-the forest like&#13;
a troop of cavalry. **nt In moccasins&#13;
he can move swiftly through the&#13;
woods with the stealth, of a panther.&#13;
The feet are not bruised, for after enjoying&#13;
for a time the freedom of natural&#13;
eovering, these hitherto blundering&#13;
members become .ike hands and&#13;
feel their way through, the d.irk„4ike&#13;
thoce of a cat avoiding obstacles as&#13;
though gifted with a special sense,&#13;
ites- of all, the moccasin is light. Inexperienced&#13;
sportsmen and soldie/s&#13;
affect high-topped laced boote with&#13;
heavy"soles and hobnails, Imagining&#13;
that these are rro^t -erviceab e for&#13;
rough weather. THit these weigh between&#13;
four ;md live pounds, while a&#13;
p"ir of thick moose-hide jnocc'aVina&#13;
weigh only eleven ounces. In marching&#13;
ten miles a man wearing the clumsy&#13;
hoots lifts '.wenty tons mbre shoe&#13;
leather than.if he wore moccasins.&#13;
r m**-m—i m i II i MI H in • to*&#13;
It vou want H|| the nnvvs subscribe&#13;
tor thn ni-r-ATrii&#13;
Gentle Art of Scoldloff.&#13;
One branch of the gentle art of disagreeing&#13;
is "How to scold," a very&#13;
Important branch' for' women who&#13;
have chi.dien and servants under their&#13;
care&#13;
It is often a duty to point out faults&#13;
and sugre t a remedy, and it is a most&#13;
difficult ciu y to perform we 1. Thlfc is&#13;
UMial'y because people do not realize&#13;
that dis-g eement may be a gentle art.&#13;
They tfyink it necessary to speak&#13;
sharply because their words contain&#13;
a reiuike; whi'h is a sad mistake, because&#13;
at no live are such gentle woiidB&#13;
needed as when sonib one must be set&#13;
right. •&#13;
Of course, it is useless to reason&#13;
with n child or a grown up who is out&#13;
of temper; but it is also useless to tr\&#13;
anjJL shout him down.&#13;
Oh. i is worth di'igent "study arrrt&#13;
much application, tbU gentle art~~oT&#13;
dis..gJ"( eir.g.&#13;
asa YOUR&#13;
DOCTOR]&#13;
Ask your physician this question,&#13;
• * What is the one great&#13;
remedy for consumption?" j&#13;
He witt answer, "Cod-liver&#13;
oil." Nine out of ten will&#13;
answer the same way,&#13;
Yet when persons have '•&#13;
consumption they loathe all&#13;
fatty foods, yet rat is neces- :&#13;
*ary for their recovery and&#13;
they cannot take plain cod-'&#13;
liver oil. The plain oil disturbs&#13;
the stomach and takes&#13;
away the appetite. The disagreeable&#13;
fishy odor and&#13;
taste make it almost unendurable.&#13;
What is to be done?&#13;
This 4|uestioJV was answered&#13;
when we first made&#13;
^&#13;
: ^&#13;
%&#13;
\f r •\fV&#13;
i i&#13;
I&#13;
SCOTT'S&#13;
EMULSm®&#13;
of Cod-Liver Oil with Hypophosphites.&#13;
Although thct&#13;
was nearly twenty-five yens&#13;
ago, yet it stands alone today&#13;
the one great remedy&#13;
for all affections of the throat&#13;
and lungs.&#13;
The bad taste and odor have been&#13;
taken away, the oil itself has been&#13;
partly digested, and the most sensitive&#13;
stomach objects to it rarely.&#13;
Not onelif tehTcanlaXe and digest&#13;
the plain oil. Nine out of ten can&#13;
take SCOTTS EMULSION and digest&#13;
ii That's why it cures so&#13;
many cases of early consumption.&#13;
Even in advanced cases it brings&#13;
comfort and greatly prolongs life.&#13;
9 I&#13;
*» &lt; i&#13;
50c. and fx.oo, »11 druggists.&#13;
SCOTT &amp; BOWNE, Chemists, NevTYork.&#13;
H&#13;
U^ k W »•••&lt; »••• »4«*« *m* *m&gt;&#13;
is&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL,, DETROIT&#13;
AMERICAN ANO EUROPEAN PLAN.&#13;
%a TO 95 so $1.00 ro 0a.OO f&#13;
6MQLM MEALS, GOO. UP TO GATM GAFMB&#13;
The First Week&#13;
In^rrrgrVew Year,&#13;
will be&#13;
The Lasfi/Veefc&#13;
that w e will offer our lines&#13;
of Men's and Boys' Suits,&#13;
OVercoats and UlstersTxT&#13;
the people of Pinckney and&#13;
vicinity..&#13;
BUSY&#13;
HJVn.&#13;
J, . _&#13;
T H B G R B A T&#13;
Xh is Week&#13;
w e offer some especially good&#13;
bargains on account of our anticipated&#13;
removal-&#13;
Don't Neglect&#13;
^Fhis Opportunify.&#13;
Give us a call and&#13;
Sou will be convinc-&#13;
1 /&#13;
ed that .we know&#13;
what w e are talking&#13;
about.&#13;
/ P o s i t i v e l y our last w e e k in Pinckney.&#13;
\ .&#13;
RED&#13;
tVlARK&#13;
SALB&#13;
ir&#13;
VNow&#13;
in ppo^pess.&#13;
.y,,-..- ., „„,&#13;
Watch fop OUP&#13;
Announcement&#13;
Mext Week&#13;
- h.&#13;
Yours respeetf utry,&#13;
H. FIELD: - I&#13;
Jackson, Mich , ^J&#13;
MM ?&amp; mm</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Note</name>
          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36681">
              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6404">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch January 01, 1900</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6405">
                <text>January 01, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6406">
                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6407">
                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6408">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6409">
                <text>1900-01-01</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6410">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="15">
        <name>newspaper</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="16">
        <name>pinckney dispatch</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="926" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="854">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/c7da3641e78a3107d05617649e7df6b8.pdf</src>
        <authentication>0370223823db9f69ba427b043a84ebd4</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="9">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1621">
                  <text>Newspaper</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1630">
                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="57">
          <name>Hidden Search Text</name>
          <description>Enter Search Text that is always hidden except to edit.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32193">
              <text>VOL. XVIII. LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, JAN. 11.1900. No; 2.&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
The - -&#13;
Surprise&#13;
-Store,-&#13;
FIRST&#13;
GREAT&#13;
BARCJAIN&#13;
SALE&#13;
OF&#13;
Ice harvest began last week.&#13;
Fred Teeple was laid up with tonsilitis&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Tbe Board of fcJupefvisoiS are in&#13;
session at Howell this week.&#13;
E J. Bri^rt&lt;8 and wife visited relatives&#13;
in Oueola the past week.&#13;
F L. Andrews visited bis people in&#13;
J?arsballville the last otlast week.&#13;
Wilhelm Nelson, ot Marion, visited&#13;
at John Mortenson's the past week.&#13;
Miss Betbie Wright ot Iosco visited&#13;
tnends in town tbe first of the week.&#13;
Miss Grate Lake was a guest of&#13;
Miss Mame Siglitr tbe last of last week.&#13;
Tfie" njoon• ligb t"~and~statinglire&#13;
making tine sport tor the young peo&#13;
pie.&#13;
Miss Grace and Fred Aid rich ot&#13;
Marion, visited Desde Daley last Saturday.&#13;
E. N. Book of Ann Arbor spent the&#13;
past week with J. A. Donaldson and&#13;
-family • ' s&#13;
Little Kenneth Teeple has been suffering&#13;
with a severe case ot tonsil itib&#13;
tbe past week.&#13;
Little Helen Teeple is ill with measles&#13;
at the home of her grandparents,&#13;
Mr. and Gbas. Love.&#13;
Mrs H. F. Siglejfc visited at tbe&#13;
tome of Dr. W. B. Watts, in Jackson,&#13;
the last of last week.&#13;
Among our many exchanges there&#13;
comes words, of good cbeer on our&#13;
seventeenth anniversary. -&#13;
County tjohool Commissioner, J. H.&#13;
•:-sm&#13;
' •'' .'-sly&#13;
Wallace, of Fowlerville, was a. guest&#13;
of Stephen Darfee laSb Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. A. Brings returned to her&#13;
home in Oceola last Thursday, after&#13;
several weeks Visit with relatives here.&#13;
Tbny bettaa rilling the Schuler ice&#13;
M r . B o W n t a i l p i c k e d Up Touse at Hamburg Jet. Tuesday.&#13;
S o m e Choice b a r g a i n s -^while ^Bveral from here are working tbere.&#13;
in the city and put them on l b e Youo* Ladif*' C l u b of this&#13;
. TT -it A 11T 1 •' J. J_I_ place have sent out cards tor a dancsale.&#13;
He will tell about them ^ pftrly t0 be ?iveQ by t b e m J&amp;Q l 2&#13;
next week. The following; i960.&#13;
prices of course hold good."&#13;
^iant ThreadSfor -&#13;
Ladies' Fleeced Hose '_.&#13;
Nickel-plated Safety pins,&#13;
protected points, 5c grade&#13;
Paper fins&#13;
I0C+&#13;
08c&#13;
02c&#13;
Olc&#13;
Olc&#13;
02c&#13;
03c&#13;
02c&#13;
Bos Mourning Pins&#13;
Bottle best Ink&#13;
25 Good Envelopes&#13;
No. 2 all silk Rib bom&#13;
Good Crista ~&#13;
Guaranteed Scissors&#13;
Pocket Scissors&#13;
Kintergarden Scissors&#13;
Glass Cutter&#13;
6 Good Sauce dishes&#13;
Lamp Chimneys&#13;
Lantern Globes&#13;
China Eggs SJ'QJ '&#13;
1 Box 12 good citfars&#13;
Good Can Opener&#13;
Yours for trade,&#13;
E. A^BO^MAN, Prop.&#13;
_ JBqi^inaii Block, Pinckney. '&#13;
BERT/WELLMAN&#13;
Manager of Pinckney Store.&#13;
Howell 8tore, next to P. 0. /&#13;
Mrs. Will Cad well and son left last&#13;
Friday fdr a short visit in Leslie and&#13;
Detroit before er return to Stillwater,&#13;
fclirfh.&#13;
Mrs. George Anderson and son Shirley,&#13;
of Jackson, visited her sister, Airs.&#13;
R. E. Finch, and other relatives here&#13;
jhe past week, r&#13;
We wonder if those who are cutting&#13;
ice in the pond know that there is_a.&#13;
severe penalty for not putting up&#13;
/&#13;
&amp;?:&#13;
danger signals.&#13;
The "cussedness" of some one broke&#13;
a window in G. A. Siglers store also'&#13;
ftfa^one in F.-G^ Jackson*, Sunday even-&#13;
2§c in* and Monday morning. ^,&#13;
10c A large party of Masonic brethren&#13;
04c went to Jackson last Friday to attend&#13;
10c a School of Instructions. They report&#13;
10c a profitable and enjoyable time.&#13;
OS and 04o The ladies Aid of the M. E. church&#13;
05b will bold a dinger at tbe home of Mr.&#13;
05c and Mrs, R E. Finch, Friday, Jan. 12.&#13;
25c A cordjal invitation is~extended to all.&#13;
0°^ About 60 Gleaners and friends enjoyed&#13;
an oyster supper at tbe home of&#13;
Geo. Poole, last Friday evening. A&#13;
huge time and a large quantity of bivalves&#13;
were eaten.&#13;
Municipal ownership of the electric&#13;
lighting plant is under discussion at&#13;
Howell, and the council has taken the&#13;
first steps toward submitting the matter,&#13;
to a vote of the citizens.&#13;
S. G. Kime, and son, of B reck enridge,&#13;
spent the past two weeks with&#13;
the Clark families at this place. He&#13;
was also a pleasant caller at this office.&#13;
He considers the DISPATCH a weekly&#13;
letter from home. f&#13;
A short time ago William Smitherman&#13;
of Stock bridge, noticed blossoms&#13;
on bis strawberry vines. lie dug the&#13;
vines up and placed them ID a sunny&#13;
window and he had enough berries to&#13;
make a short cake for his New Tear's&#13;
dinner. . . _ . . '&#13;
Mrs. Leal Sigler was quite 111 the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Miss Mamie Wallace is visiting, her&#13;
people nearOarkon.&#13;
Geo. Clinton of . Gregory was a&#13;
pleasant caller at this office, Monday.&#13;
The^ week of prayer was observed at&#13;
tbe Couft'l and M. E. churches, alternate&#13;
this week.&#13;
Jas Wilcox came out with a' new.&#13;
bus which is a dandy, and much more&#13;
eonveni nt for making trains.&#13;
Several of our subscribers have responded&#13;
te our call this week; but&#13;
tbere are others who have no*.&#13;
And still tbe good weather and&#13;
wheeling continue. A good time to&#13;
draw in that wj2ndyfiJi- promised the&#13;
Editor.&#13;
Eugene Campbell has purchased 80&#13;
acres of land of Miss Lucy Hincbey,&#13;
just west of town. Gene is getting to&#13;
be quite a farmer.&#13;
Tbe Missas Maude Tapper of Benton&#13;
Harbor, and Clara Dorranue, of&#13;
Howell, were guests of Mrs. Jennie&#13;
Baker tbe past week.&#13;
Since our m-ide pages Were printed&#13;
with C. L. Bo &lt;vtnaus adv. in, Mr.&#13;
Bowman has closed his meat marked&#13;
and gone out of ousraess.&#13;
The hnn of J dines &amp; George who&#13;
have been cIos&lt;in* out a bankrupt&#13;
stock of clothing at this place tor a&#13;
couple of weeks, moved their goods to&#13;
Dexter, Tuesday.&#13;
^"StTMary's society held a forty hour&#13;
devotion the first ot tbe week. Kevs.&#13;
Fr. Conley, of Williamston, Fr, Kelly,&#13;
of Dexter, and Fr. Hallisey, of Jaukson,&#13;
assisted during the services. '&#13;
Miss Margaret Vlaloney and Miss&#13;
Anna Spears who went south for a&#13;
visit this winter were obliged to return&#13;
sooner than expected owinur to&#13;
the severe illness of Mtss B|alonpy.&#13;
OQ&lt;HMMMMHH&gt;«Oi&#13;
Gome to the&#13;
Dispatch Office %&#13;
For&#13;
b e t t e r Heads,&#13;
Envelopes,&#13;
Cards, Etc.&#13;
P r i c e s Right.&#13;
Always at iiv&#13;
At What?&#13;
Selling Goods of c o u r s e .&#13;
While the holiday trade is always a harvest for some&#13;
'and~wrj~gGt bur sfaareF^ouFTrade"~always remalns^good&#13;
Miss Myra Morella, the prima donna&#13;
wbo was known in private life as Miss&#13;
Myra Muliken, died in Florida. Jan.&#13;
9. She was the daughter of E. F.&#13;
Mulliken who was at me time a railroad&#13;
agent at £lowell. ,&#13;
the year around. The reason is that we sell the best staple&#13;
goods for the least money. People today are not looking&#13;
for CHEAP goods but GOOD goods cheap.&#13;
The following are some of our lines:&#13;
ni&#13;
Dru£s and Medicines.&#13;
A full and complete line.&#13;
School Supplies,&#13;
Arrangements are being completedand&#13;
a program made for a one day&#13;
farmers institute for this county to he&#13;
held in the Opera house, Pinckney,&#13;
Jan. 24. Watuh the DISPATCH for&#13;
further announcement and program&#13;
The consolidatiou of therC &amp; W. \1.,&#13;
D. G. &amp; W. and F &amp;'P VI. took place&#13;
Jan. 1, 1900— All the above names&#13;
%*ve-iiow become a tbing of the past,&#13;
(hat lives only in rneorory. The nnw&#13;
system will be known as the Pere&#13;
Marquette Railroad Co,&#13;
The Beldinar Star.thinks that Judge&#13;
R. H. Persons, of, Lansing, would&#13;
make an excellent Governor tor Michigan;&#13;
they believe he would bring&#13;
both dignity and capability to tbe ei»-&#13;
ecutive chair. HU mteurrttvand riffid&#13;
adherence to tbe ri^ht would he for&#13;
the best interest of the people of Michigan.&#13;
Perhaps, but according to past&#13;
experence of governors, he may wield&#13;
more power where he is. '&#13;
B o o k s , T a b l e t s . P e n c i l s P e n s ,&#13;
Ink and&#13;
E x a m i n a t i o n B l a n k s .&#13;
Fancy Articles*&#13;
Crockery.&#13;
A full line of&#13;
Plain and Pancy w a r e .&#13;
A fine line of Lamps.&#13;
Celluloid Goods, Hdkf., Cuff&#13;
and Col lor Boxes.&#13;
T h e y make fine birthday gift*.&#13;
Groceries.&#13;
W e c a r r y a l i n e&#13;
of t h e b e s t in t o w n .&#13;
P ^ i c l e s ^ e e j i ^ h t .&#13;
RESOLUTIONS*&#13;
The following preamble and resolutions&#13;
were passed by the Putnam and&#13;
Hamburg Farmer's Club upon the&#13;
death of Mr. Geo. B'owu:&#13;
WHEREAS:—For the first time kinet the&#13;
organization of our Club death has rei^&#13;
oved from our midst one of our oldest&#13;
members, George W. Brown;&#13;
RESOLVED:—That we acknowledge this&#13;
act as coming from God, and that- we tender&#13;
our heartfelt sympathy to the dere&amp;yed&#13;
family;&#13;
RESOLVED:—That a copy of these retold*&#13;
tions be sent to the family of the, deceased,&#13;
and also thai a copy be pticeti-iipon our&#13;
record; also that a copy be published in&#13;
the Pinckney DISPATCH. {J. T. Chambers. »&#13;
Mrs. £. A. Kennedyr Mrs, W. H. Placeway.&#13;
Wall Paper.&#13;
* : *" •&#13;
Our s a l e s the past year were- far ahead, of&#13;
bur expectations, and this season w e will be&#13;
better prepared than ever to give values.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
Druggist.&#13;
s NOTICE.&#13;
Starke gives hie | 3 , $2.50 and | 2&#13;
photos tor $1, on Jan. 17.&#13;
We must ask all our Customers to settle&#13;
aUAacouats aad Notes that are due, before&#13;
Jan. 1,1900.&#13;
Hoping to see yotralt in time so we can&#13;
balance our books before taking Dur annual&#13;
inventory, Jan. 1,190Q^g§ither by Note or&#13;
Casli;&#13;
-'v&#13;
\ • • • ' . . .&#13;
fcj .'•'&#13;
. , • * • • . '"."•!»&#13;
V&#13;
Respectfully Tpurs, t &lt;v&#13;
TEEPtiE m CADWELL.&#13;
jifc-uiat^afcufiii-r'^' •*LL ji:-^~ M B •AdMU&#13;
, , ^ - ^ *' ' • • • - . • ' • ' • • ' &lt; I &lt; • ' , ' • • • ' • &gt; . ^__&#13;
Mi!--' '"'&#13;
fev'V"' '&#13;
*&#13;
fc&#13;
Im**&#13;
ft&#13;
K\ c.&#13;
Ki J&#13;
Ti&#13;
. — ,— . .^&#13;
!&#13;
&gt;V~:.&#13;
- - — - ' + - - -&lt;&lt;&#13;
,•/..',.&#13;
T&#13;
'EVENTS O M I E WEEK&#13;
N OUR GREAT S T A T E R E L A T E D&#13;
IN A BRIEF F O R M .&#13;
Tbo Stmt* Salt Inspector's Annual Report&#13;
Shows Manlitee County Lends In the&#13;
Production of Salt—Gen.' Wbtte ha*&#13;
Gone to Some Secluded Spot for Best.&#13;
Manistee Still Leads In Salt Production.&#13;
The 3d annual report of State Salt&#13;
Inspector Jabez B. Caswell, and the&#13;
31st of the department, has just been&#13;
•completed. Ifc covers the year ending&#13;
November 30. The inspector gives&#13;
the usual date concerning different districts&#13;
"of the state. The number of&#13;
firms engaged in manufacturing salt&#13;
during the year was 57; number of&#13;
blocks, 02; solar salt covers, 1,200. Salt&#13;
was inspected in the different districts&#13;
as follows: Manistee county, 2,205,182&#13;
barrels; Wayne. 072,823; Mason, 500,123;&#13;
iSt. Clair, 43:1,929; Saginaw, 424,432j&#13;
Bay, 405,079; Midland, 20,700; Iosco,&#13;
SMM1; total, 4,732^609. The increase&#13;
and decrease in inspection was: Increase&#13;
— Saginaw, 338 barrels; Bay,&#13;
2,848; Manistee, 050,170; Mason, 2,285;&#13;
Wayne, 126,530; total. 782.227. Decrease&#13;
—St. Clair, 163,618; Iosco, 52,757; Midland,&#13;
5/099; total, 221,474. There was&#13;
manufactured during the year 4,759,253&#13;
barrels of salt, and the number in the&#13;
bins Dec. 1, 1899, was 1.152,837. There&#13;
were 560,753* more barrels of "salt inspected&#13;
in 1899 than in 1898, and 587,337&#13;
more barrels of salt manufactured.&#13;
The amount of salt inspected since the&#13;
inspection law w e n t i n t o effect is 83,-&#13;
392,717 barrels, and the total amount&#13;
manufactured is 86,675,398 barrels.&#13;
M I C H I G A N NEWS I T E M S .&#13;
Has Gen. "White Skipped?&#13;
It was a shock to the friends of Gen.&#13;
White on the 2d to learn that he has&#13;
fled from the country and will not be&#13;
in Grand Rapids to face the grand jury&#13;
indictments unless he is brought back&#13;
by the officers. Without any question&#13;
whatever he has become a fugitive and&#13;
from all accounts Gen. Marsh has gone&#13;
with him. Ever since he was notified&#13;
by telephone from Lansing two weeks&#13;
ago of the action of Gov. Pingree in&#13;
-demanding his resignation, Gen. White&#13;
has been a complete changed man. On&#13;
the 2d a letter was received by mai£&#13;
from Gen. White. It was dated Chicago,&#13;
and was written Dec. 30, although&#13;
not mailed until Jan-t.—It watrbrief&#13;
and stated in substance:&#13;
"I am thoroughly discouraged, and&#13;
can't stand this any longer. Everything&#13;
is working against me, and if I&#13;
should return I would be in torment&#13;
continually. I have suffered every&#13;
minute for weeks, and am now going&#13;
away iviiere I can get a little rest. I&#13;
don't know just yet where it will be,&#13;
but I leave here at once."&#13;
There were some injunctions enclosed&#13;
for other friends ~ a h d s o m e directions&#13;
for the disposal of his property. At&#13;
first it was thought that Gen. Marsh&#13;
had gone with Gen. White, but he had&#13;
merely went to-Brockport, N. Y., and&#13;
"as sootfas he learned that the state- of~&#13;
ficials were looking for him, he telegraphed&#13;
as to his whereabouts and immediately&#13;
returned.&#13;
Two Moro Indictments Returned.&#13;
The Ingham county grand jury, which&#13;
has investigated the charges of eor-&#13;
-ruption in the state legislature, the&#13;
state mili'tary hoard anri nt.hpr departmentsof—&#13;
the—state government, is a&#13;
thing-of the past. SWortly after noon&#13;
on the 6th the jury came into court, returned&#13;
two niore indictments, and was&#13;
-discharged by the circuit-judge. The&#13;
indictments returned were against&#13;
'•Col. Eli R. Sutton and J. II. Brown,&#13;
president of the live stock commission.&#13;
"The former is charged with fraud and&#13;
-embezzlement, and the latter with collecting&#13;
money from the state for services&#13;
performed when he had been employed&#13;
and paid by private, individuals.&#13;
«5 Divorce Suits In Calhoun County.&#13;
County Clerk Austin, of Calhoun&#13;
county, issued 484 marriage license&#13;
during the past year and 85 divorce&#13;
suits were started. The records show&#13;
that tb^rc-is-n© improvement in the decrease&#13;
of divorces over the previous&#13;
year. Nearly two-thirds of the divorces&#13;
originate in Battle Creek' One&#13;
hundred and seventy of the marriage&#13;
licenses were issued during the past&#13;
three months—an unusually large number&#13;
for such a short time. During the&#13;
past month alone 05 licenses were issued,&#13;
making it .the-banner month&#13;
s since 1896.&#13;
Berrien Springs had 20 inches of&#13;
snow on the 2d, and it was still snowing.&#13;
Holly's new industry, the handle factory,&#13;
is almost ready to begin operations.&#13;
'•Jack the Hugger" is operating in&#13;
Ann Arbor, and naturally the female&#13;
sex are terrified.&#13;
Milan's new hoop and stave mill is&#13;
nearly completed. It' will furnish employment&#13;
to 100 men.&#13;
There is much talk at Evart of formi&#13;
n g a stock company to operate a large&#13;
cattle ranch in Osceola county.&#13;
Peach Plains, Ottawa county, on the&#13;
1st celebrated the 50th anniversary of&#13;
the founding of that settlement.&#13;
Dowagiac has a chance to secure a&#13;
canning factory, and it is not likely&#13;
that the citizens will let the chance&#13;
get by.&#13;
Decatur is putting on metropolitan&#13;
airs. She has been sued for 85,000 for&#13;
injuries sustained on an alleged defective&#13;
sidewalk.&#13;
The granges of Van Buren county*&#13;
are going to organize a fire insurance&#13;
company for the protection of the&#13;
property of their members.&#13;
Midland people are talking of securing&#13;
a chickory factory, so many of the&#13;
farmers roundabout would rather&#13;
raise chikory than sugar beets.&#13;
A South Lyon man has been ill for&#13;
40 days, and the singular part of it is&#13;
that in all t h a t time he has taken no&#13;
nourishment except cold water.&#13;
The organization of an independent&#13;
military company is under way at Saline.&#13;
No effort to get int&lt;Ktbe state&#13;
national guard is contemplated.&#13;
_The cash balance in the state treasury&#13;
at the beginning of the new year&#13;
'was 9301,134.47.' '-Dn" is. amount is 8113,-&#13;
500 more than the balance one year ago.&#13;
The old saying that the "mills of the&#13;
gods grind slow" doesn't obtain Newberg.&#13;
Cass county. A~"youhg"man there&#13;
got drunk and threw his father out of&#13;
doors one cold night recently, and&#13;
within an hour he had been arrested&#13;
and senteneed-to 30 days in jail.&#13;
If Paw Paw doesn't have a basket&#13;
factory next- year it will be because&#13;
she doesn't think such an addition to&#13;
the list of local industries is worth&#13;
$500. That amount, the price of the&#13;
site, is all that is asked by the .man&#13;
^vho-proposes to build tlie factory-^-&#13;
The Detroit Association of jEthwal&#13;
and Economical Reform has beenformed&#13;
in Detroit to publish a daily paper beginning&#13;
probably in March. Those&#13;
who signed the articles are: Tom Bawden.&#13;
Dr* Geo, II. Sherman. D. E. Weikert,&#13;
J. L. Pickering, Geo. E. Williams,&#13;
E. E, Mains. A. M. Beebe, John R.&#13;
Morrisey and E. M. Goodell^&#13;
Rapid Railway combination freight&#13;
and passenger train No. 17, northbound,&#13;
ran into an open switch at the&#13;
gravel pit of the company, four miles&#13;
south of Mt. Clemens on the evening of;&#13;
the 7th and six people were injured.'&#13;
The wreck is thought to be the work&#13;
Murder and Suicide In Kalamazoo County&#13;
Charlds Root, a farmer, aged 40, of&#13;
Texas township, Kalamazoo county,&#13;
murdered his wife on the 4th by cutt&#13;
i n g her throat with a razor and then&#13;
killed himself by the same method. It&#13;
is supposed that they quarreled Root's&#13;
family consisted of two little boys besides&#13;
himself and wife. While Root&#13;
l e f t no note or word to indicate wtfy&#13;
lie did the deed, it "is supposed that he&#13;
w#ts jealous of his wife. They fiad had&#13;
"^notttcal quarrels for several months.&#13;
but who he was .jealous of is*Uiot&#13;
Known.&#13;
of vandals, although no posilite proof&#13;
to that effect is at hand.&#13;
Alphonse Hempke, aged 48. of Detroit,&#13;
was found frozen~stiff- upon the&#13;
street at an early hour on the morning&#13;
of Dec. 31. He had—been drinking&#13;
heavily the night before, and while on&#13;
his way home had fallen upon the&#13;
ground, where a desperate struggle&#13;
between life and death must have ensued,&#13;
as the unfortunate man h'acT succeeded&#13;
in dragging his almost lifeless&#13;
body along the street until within one&#13;
block of his home, where he was completely&#13;
overcome and gave up in dispair.&#13;
The stock of the firm of Morgan,&#13;
Puhl &amp; Morris, manufacturers of regalia&#13;
and military supplies, valued at $50,-&#13;
000, and located in the Parisian laundry&#13;
building, corner Washington and&#13;
Grand River avenues, Detroit, was totally&#13;
destroyed by fire on" the .morning&#13;
of the 3d/' The laundry company suffered&#13;
a loss of S3,000 and W. T. Fiske,&#13;
shoe supply manufacturer, about the&#13;
same amount, while the building was&#13;
damaged, to the extent of §5,000. All&#13;
the loss was covered by insurance with&#13;
the exception of that of Mqrgan, Puhl&#13;
.&amp; Morris, who only carried 820,000.&#13;
The origin of thcTire is a mystery.&#13;
SPECIAL SESSION D O I N G S .&#13;
On the re-convemng of the legislature&#13;
on the evening of Jan. 3 the a t&#13;
tendance was light, only 18 senator!&#13;
and 65 representatives answerbsg tc&#13;
the roll call. The senate passed: Sena-&#13;
I tor Graham's concurrent resolution&#13;
asking Gov. Pingree for a message recommending&#13;
the submission to the people&#13;
of the question of a genera) revision&#13;
of the constitution. When this w a s received&#13;
in the house a viva voce vote on&#13;
concurring resulted in a tie, 23 voting&#13;
each way. Then there was a brief season.&#13;
of oratory, Elkhoff and Lusk opposing&#13;
concurrence on the ground that&#13;
it is useless to submit the question at a&#13;
special election unless the constitution&#13;
is first amended so that i t can be&#13;
carried by simply a majority of the&#13;
votes cast on that proposition. Mc-&#13;
Call was in favor of the resolution,&#13;
saying "that now that the senate has&#13;
finally agreed to something, let&#13;
us, for God's sake, agree to it to'o.&#13;
Let's see if the two houses cannot&#13;
get together just for once. The&#13;
people want to vote on some of these&#13;
questions, 4ind here appears to be a&#13;
chance to accommodate them." The&#13;
resolution was finally adopted by a&#13;
vote of 40 to 21.&#13;
GovT Pingree fulfilled the prediction&#13;
that more messages would be forthcoming,&#13;
and the latest is a recommendation&#13;
that all special railroad charters&#13;
be amended so as to bring them under&#13;
the provisions of the general railroad&#13;
laws of the state for the purposes of&#13;
taxation. Rep. Colby gave notice of a&#13;
bill in the" house on the 3d, encompassing&#13;
the governor's ideas. It stands a&#13;
show in the house, but will probably&#13;
uot reach the senate.&#13;
The Bryan bill providing for a specific&#13;
tax on copper and iron ore was before&#13;
the house all day on the 3d, the&#13;
familiar discussion of last spring being&#13;
reproduced in a large measure. The&#13;
only amendment made to the bill was&#13;
one changing the rate of tax on iron ore&#13;
from three to two cents per ton. After&#13;
some warm arguments both for and&#13;
against the measure the bill finally&#13;
passed the laouse by a vote of 76 to 12.&#13;
The tax commission appointments&#13;
was finally held up in the senate on the&#13;
3d by that body turning them over to&#13;
the taxation committee, which means&#13;
that the commission will now have to&#13;
serve under appointment of the governor&#13;
for the balance of their respective&#13;
term, thus holding the governor responsible&#13;
i o r t h o i r actions during the&#13;
remainder of the term. .,_&#13;
Late on the afternoon of the 4th Gov.&#13;
Pingree sent the house three special&#13;
messages—in a bunch. They were all&#13;
brief rarid referred to' local matters.&#13;
Ionia city had made a mistake in issuing&#13;
830,000 worth of bonds and wanted&#13;
the legislature to pass an act legalizing&#13;
the issue. At the regular session*a billwas&#13;
passed changing- the boundaries of&#13;
certain school districts on the line between&#13;
Wayne and Oakland counties,&#13;
the result being that two sections of&#13;
land were not placed in either district.&#13;
A law to correct this state of affairs&#13;
was wanted. The township of Springwells&#13;
iisked for leave to borrow money&#13;
to pay its share of the cost of constructing&#13;
a bridge and to take" care of other&#13;
indebtedness. Bills covering these&#13;
three cases were introducted at once&#13;
and passed.&#13;
—T4re=ra#read&#13;
AT HOliE AND AM0AD&#13;
A S U M M A R Y O F T H E NEWS FOR&#13;
T H B W S E K BY WJRE. \&#13;
She Big Drainage Canal at Chicago It&#13;
Upjnpleted—Alabama has Another&#13;
Horrible and Brutal Murder to Her&#13;
Credit—Other Item*.&#13;
McCoy Won In Five Boaudr*&#13;
"Kid" McCoy again placed himself in*&#13;
the ohampionship class by defeating&#13;
Peter Muher in a brisk, well-fought&#13;
battle of five rounds before the Coney&#13;
Island Athletic club on the afternoon of&#13;
Jan. 1. The fight was scheduled to last 25&#13;
rounds, and the purse was to have been&#13;
920,000, but the attendance was not as&#13;
large as had been expected, and before&#13;
the fight was begun, the principals&#13;
agreed that the winner should receive&#13;
the gross gate receipts. The battle&#13;
was hard-fought • from start to finish,&#13;
but McCoy was far the cleaverer man&#13;
in ring tactics, dodging, side-stepping&#13;
and hitting powers. He showed hiuv^&#13;
self to be a good ring general, ever&#13;
watching for an opening and never&#13;
failing to take advantage of one.&#13;
Maher, although credited with being&#13;
a heavy hitter, did not get in many effective&#13;
blows His foot-work was poor,&#13;
and at times he did not appear to have&#13;
perfect control of himself.&#13;
'00 a Prosperous Year for K*11ron&lt;l*.&#13;
The best evidence that th" year 1 SW)&#13;
was one of general prosperity is fohnd&#13;
in the fact that it was a year almost&#13;
without railway bankruptcies. In&#13;
only two years since 187"), have the&#13;
roads for which receivers were appointed&#13;
been BO few—and in only three&#13;
of those years' ""were~ thmniteage 'arret&#13;
capital involved so small. Only one&#13;
road of importance is fohnd In the list,&#13;
the new Kansas, Pittsburg &amp; Gulf,&#13;
which defaulted in its obligations before&#13;
it had time to demonstrate its&#13;
•Chaoiplon VNItmi by u SIS.OOO-FJre.&#13;
The; two best business buildings in&#13;
Champion were destroyed by fire on&#13;
the 1st. The loss, is estimated Ht 8i3,-&#13;
nnn, vv\tk Htt.lft insnttnw&#13;
charge of receivers early in th'c year,&#13;
For the past 24 years the foreclosure&#13;
sales have averaged more than 34 a&#13;
year, the largest number in one year&#13;
being 05 and the smallest !.*&gt;. In the&#13;
hist six years, 273 roads have been sold,&#13;
a yearly average of 45!^, no^t counting&#13;
a number of insolvent companies that&#13;
have been reorganized without sale.&#13;
It is not conceivable that the coming&#13;
quarter century will show any such&#13;
rate_of mortality among railway corporations.&#13;
committee had been&#13;
hanging on to Fleischhauer's bill to increase&#13;
the specific tax rates so long&#13;
that Rep. IJurch on the 4th moved that&#13;
it be take from the committee and&#13;
placed on the generar order. The motion&#13;
to take it from the committee prevailed.&#13;
Later when the bill came up,,&#13;
Rep. Lusk moved to amend the rates&#13;
provided so as to make-the increase in&#13;
revenue as based on last year's earnings&#13;
8")00,000 a year, the increase provided&#13;
for in the bill as introduced being only&#13;
8124,000. The Lusk amendment was&#13;
adopted, the new rate being as followsr&#13;
On earning under §2,000 per mile, 2¾&#13;
per cent; between 82,000 and $4,000, 4&#13;
per cent; between 84,000 and $6,000, 6&#13;
per cent; between 86,000 and 88,000, 8&#13;
per cent; in excess of 88,000,10 per cent.&#13;
This will yield an annual revenue of&#13;
81,500,000. No new arguments developed&#13;
and the bill finally passed by a&#13;
vote of 72 to 17.&#13;
The special session of the legislature&#13;
was brought to an unceremonious end&#13;
by the senate shortly after, the noon&#13;
hour on the 5th. Not a single law of&#13;
any benefit to the taxpayers w a s enacted.&#13;
The bills passed were: One appropriating&#13;
840,0(¾) for the replenishing&#13;
of the Spanish war relief fund; one&#13;
straightening out a technicality in the&#13;
laws of the regular session making appropriations&#13;
for the Marquette Normal&#13;
school an the Soldiers' home; a joint&#13;
resolution authorizing the attorneygeneral&#13;
to commence suits to recover&#13;
any money lost through the improper&#13;
Robert* May be Excluded.&#13;
The report of the committee of the&#13;
house of representatives, which is investigating&#13;
the case of Mr. Roberts, of&#13;
Utah, will be made shortly, and there&#13;
is reason to believe the majority report&#13;
will -recommend that Roberts be excluded&#13;
from the house and that he be&#13;
not permitted under his credentials to&#13;
exercise any prima facie right of being&#13;
sworn in. Whether the report will be&#13;
unanimous is open to doubt, as three&#13;
of the'members of the committee are&#13;
not counted on as positively favorable&#13;
to the course indicated and this may&#13;
result in the submission of a minority&#13;
report. The minority view, if submitted,&#13;
probably will deal^wTthT the prima&#13;
facie right to he sworn in on credentials,&#13;
which are regular, and will recommend&#13;
that Roberts be sworn in and&#13;
thereafter expelled.&#13;
Chicago s Big Drainage Canal Dpened.&#13;
Chicago's big drairiage canal was&#13;
opened on the morning of Jan^ 1. The&#13;
canal isnf Rufflfliant. Kir.p. and capacity&#13;
to produce and maintain at all times a&#13;
continuous flow of at leahl 110,000 cubic&#13;
feet of water a minute with a current&#13;
notr exceeding one mile an hour. The&#13;
flow of water is of the minimum depth&#13;
of 33'feet in~ihe~earth sections of the&#13;
canal, and the same depth throughout&#13;
the rock sections. The rock sections&#13;
are constructed of a width of 150 feet&#13;
aYthe-bottom. All of the rock sections&#13;
and five of the earth sections have now&#13;
a capacity for a flow of 600,000 cubic&#13;
feet of water a minute. The work was&#13;
first commenced on Sept. 3, 1892, so&#13;
that a little more than seven years&#13;
have been consumed in the entire work,&#13;
There will prob*.b4y be BO reduction,&#13;
*in-the military force now in the Phttippines&#13;
format leaet-aty month, s| Including&#13;
aH t h V M m * of j*u« •e'rvicj, there:&#13;
are now1 in the' islands 65,tfod" soldier*,&#13;
in addition to about 1,200 marines a t&#13;
Cavite, and about 5,000 sailors on t h e&#13;
warships. The total of the fighting&#13;
forces is thus fully 70,000' wfltti'' The&#13;
war departmenV;wiebj«s 1 o : f T # d &gt; f e e&#13;
mistake made when*Gen. *f&gt;tntfft*rtbok&#13;
command, of underestimating the difficulties&#13;
to be encountered, and the policy&#13;
is to be followed of b a v i n * more&#13;
men than needed rather than W&gt;£ee*~&#13;
Gov.-Gen. Wood has recommended&#13;
that the bridges .throughout t h * inland&#13;
be repaired, so as to make than* passable&#13;
for trains, and urges that a large&#13;
force of men he put to worlf i » eachprovince.&#13;
The water Bupply system&#13;
will also receive immediate , attention*'&#13;
Ordinary wells and artesian wells will&#13;
be constructed in sufficient .numbers,&#13;
if possible, to supply the needs of the&#13;
eutire island. As soon as the prisons&#13;
.have been emptied of persons unjustly&#13;
•held Gen. Wood intends to have their&#13;
sanitation looked after.&#13;
Four explosive bombs, a few firearms&#13;
and 500. rounds of ammunition&#13;
were discovered in a house in the center&#13;
of Manila on Dec. 31, while the police!&#13;
were seeking Itecarto, the insurgent&#13;
leader, who was said to have come&#13;
„to Manila in the hope of effecting an&#13;
outbreak by taking advantage of the&#13;
mobilization of the American troops at&#13;
Gen. LaWton's" funeral.&#13;
Aguinaldo's wife, sisters and 18 Filipinos&#13;
have surrendered to Maj. March's&#13;
battalion of the 32d infantry, at Bon-'&#13;
toe, province of that name. The Filipino&#13;
officers also surrendered and t w o&#13;
Spanish and two American prisoners&#13;
were released. It was reported some&#13;
time ago that Agxiinaldo's wife had&#13;
died, but this w a s ^ mistake.&#13;
The health officers of" Manila have&#13;
found a native with all the symptoms&#13;
of bubonic plague, in a house in the&#13;
walled city, where two suspicious&#13;
deaths have recently occurred. T h e&#13;
patient has been isolated and every&#13;
precautionTias been taken to prevent a&#13;
spread of the disease.&#13;
Gen. Schwan's column, advancing t o -&#13;
the south, occupied Binau. One AmfiCican&gt;&#13;
was Tsilled and three were&#13;
wounded. Nine of the enemy's dead&#13;
were found on the field after the fight.&#13;
A number of rifles- were captured and&#13;
several prisoners were taken.&#13;
It is re pur ted that—Lieut. Gilmoreinvolvingan&#13;
outlay of about 833,000,000.&#13;
TTomai't Body&#13;
Thft-mMilatpd&#13;
Backed and Burned.&#13;
remains of Mrs. Jennie&#13;
Jones were found in a ditch near&#13;
Rosser, Choctaw county, Ala., on the&#13;
2d. The arms and legs had been hewn&#13;
from the trunk with an ax and the&#13;
head had been severed with a knife; a&#13;
bruise on the head indicating- that&#13;
death had been inmcxed with an ax.&#13;
All portions of the body had been&#13;
partly burned, and it was with dilHeulty&#13;
that the identity pf the dead&#13;
woman was established. The smoldering&#13;
ashes of a spent fire in a nearby&#13;
thicket showed that after the woman&#13;
had been murdered her bddy h a d b e e n&#13;
crrtTto pieces and heaped upon a pile of&#13;
brushwood, which was then lighted,&#13;
but the fire failed to accomplish its&#13;
work and the remains were then cast&#13;
into the ditch and covered with leaves.&#13;
"7&#13;
expenditures of the military board; a&#13;
concurrent resolution urging the ap-&#13;
, . , pointment of Chief Clerk Miller of the&#13;
earnvng capacity and WHS p l a m L i r ^ h j i l ^ ^ ^ a s o n e o f t h e commissioners to&#13;
revise the federal statutes, and four&#13;
purely local bills, which permits the&#13;
cities of Grand Rapids and. Ionia and&#13;
the township of Springwells, "Wayne&#13;
county, i o make loan«7~ -and one&#13;
straightening out a school district in&#13;
Wayne and Oakland counties.&#13;
Chrintlan Science Treatment Failed.&#13;
. Diphtheria and Christian science&#13;
have had a bitter battle in a New&#13;
Brighton, Pa., family for the past two&#13;
weeks, "V" *V* * '&#13;
and party have been released from the&#13;
clutches pf the Filipinos. Their liberty&#13;
was the reanlt of remarkable military&#13;
achievements on the part of Cols. Hare&#13;
and Howze.&#13;
' A reconnaissance oirt of Imus, Cavite&#13;
province, on the 7th, resulted In the&#13;
loss of three Americans killed and 20&#13;
wounded. The enemy's loss is estimated&#13;
at 00 killed and 80 wounded.&#13;
Johnson, 'a deserter from the 6th&#13;
United States artillery, clothed in a&#13;
major's uniform, was found among the&#13;
insurgent dead at Neveleta on the 7th.&#13;
Five American prisoners held by Filipinos&#13;
were recently noTribly mutilatedvthree&#13;
of the number are dead, but the&#13;
others may possibly recover.&#13;
Two more regiments have been detailed&#13;
for provost duty in Manila, mak-'&#13;
ing a total of 37000 troops in the. city.&#13;
The six military commands in Cuba&#13;
will be reduced to two, it is said.&#13;
/ — •&#13;
C O N G R E S S I O N A L N O T E S .&#13;
Kentucky Legislature In Session.&#13;
Both houses of the Kentucky legislature&#13;
organized at noon on t h e 2d, by&#13;
electing the nominees of the previous&#13;
night's Democratic caucus. Gov. W. S.&#13;
Taylor submitted a message of over&#13;
7,000 words, covering state affairs and&#13;
presenting elaborate reasons for the&#13;
repeal of the Gocbel election law,&#13;
which he called the "infamy of 1S98,&#13;
that had demoralized, disliu:*^*^ and&#13;
disgraced the -state." /The- governor&#13;
recommends a new state capitoL building,&#13;
stringent taws against lynching&#13;
and all mobs a'nd tm£_prohibition of&#13;
the use as well as the sale of cigarettes.&#13;
The notices of contest by Senator&#13;
Goebel and J. C. W. Beckham against&#13;
Gov. Taylor and Lieut.-Gov. Marshall&#13;
were served late in the day.&#13;
30 Fronehipen Killed by Chinese.&#13;
News has reached Canton that a battle&#13;
occurred between natives near&#13;
Wang Chaun and the French forces&#13;
stationed there. It is said that the&#13;
Chinese routed the French and pursued&#13;
them for some distance. The&#13;
French loss was 30 killed. The Chinese&#13;
losses are not stated. The battle&#13;
occurred on Dec. 10 and 11. , On hearing&#13;
of the affair the viceroy dispatched&#13;
three gunboats w i t h ..1,000 soldiers to&#13;
restore order. The viceroy also wired&#13;
the tsung li yamen asking what steps&#13;
are to be taken, as he is quite unable&#13;
to carry out delimitation to the satisfaction&#13;
of the French*&#13;
A bill has been introduced by Congressman&#13;
W'm. S. Mesick, of Michigan,&#13;
which is considered liable to .make a&#13;
decided change in the affairs of the bureaxvof&#13;
pensions, as it is intended to&#13;
clear up at one twist of the wrist, so to&#13;
speak, a considerable number of claims&#13;
for pensions that are in a high degree&#13;
perplexing. It is in the nature of a&#13;
general service pension law, "but the&#13;
beneficiaries are only those who have&#13;
reached the age of 60. Mr. Mesick's&#13;
bill provides: "Survivors of the army&#13;
and-navy of the rebellion w h o served&#13;
90 days and who received an honorable&#13;
discharge from the service, and have&#13;
attained, or will attain, before or aftei*&#13;
the passage of this act, the age of 60 or&#13;
over, shall be granted an unconditional&#13;
pension of $24 per month during life,&#13;
and that survivors are entitled to the&#13;
provisions of this act on the condition&#13;
that all other pensions they are receiving,&#13;
or may receive from t h e United&#13;
States government, shalirbo forfeited."'&#13;
Congress will soon take up the bill&#13;
providing a government for the Hawaiian&#13;
islands which will be reported&#13;
out of committee probably within a&#13;
week. The bill may be amended to&#13;
omit giving the islands a delegate in&#13;
congress.&#13;
Congress convened on t h e 3d after&#13;
the holiday recess. Little* business of&#13;
importance was done, and no special&#13;
work was mapped out for the first&#13;
weekn&#13;
Senator Beveridge, of Indiana, introduced,&#13;
a resolution on the 4th that&#13;
is composite of views of the Republican&#13;
leaders of the senate regarding the&#13;
status o f the Philipines. The resolution&#13;
is as follows: "That the Philippine&#13;
islands are territory of the United&#13;
States, that it is the intention of the&#13;
United States to retain them as such,&#13;
and to establish and maintain such&#13;
government control , throughout* the&#13;
archipelago as the. situation may demand,"&#13;
- • • #&#13;
. , I. v ' *&#13;
i&#13;
' • )&#13;
*v&#13;
t4:J.&#13;
* £ • -&#13;
• T -A&#13;
\&#13;
r .&#13;
^ A&#13;
..&lt;.,tW*»&lt;U-MMK*K&lt;" •*•' .""*-.•• l,!«&lt;l'*,**Jr*''*'- &lt;9tT mm*m*mummm»mmmmm&amp;mmmmmmM4m*^&#13;
, • • • ' &gt; &lt; • • • ' . • • • • • ' ' - . • , ' • ; . • . " " " " • • y * » . - ; . . : - - ! • . . ' • • '&#13;
BftPt:&#13;
..:,-:,:¾ : ^ ^ 1&#13;
-r&#13;
vKw,'&#13;
/J"&#13;
^ ,&#13;
'N&#13;
i&#13;
| H/5 APO«D OF HONOR, f&#13;
X A 7a/e o/ die Blue and the Gray, jft&#13;
BYE WERNER. ft&#13;
* -&#13;
yty ' Copytighfc l«M, by Sober* Bonner'* Sons.&#13;
f«-•-.&lt;!- CHAPTER VI.&#13;
Then, with this last thought, a burning&#13;
gfens* of shame 'filled the young of-^&#13;
ficert Will.1" The face of hiB old com-'&#13;
ma«der suddenly rose vividly before&#13;
him'. He taw his earnest gaze; heard&#13;
the warning words: "If Lieutenant Ro-&#13;
. land haa riot returned by eight o'clock&#13;
tblft evening, I shall believe that he Is&#13;
either dead or dishonored." And at&#13;
the same moment William felt that he&#13;
could not stand in his presence with a&#13;
lie or an evasion on his lips; that he&#13;
must tell him the "truth; and with this&#13;
thought the struggle was over.&#13;
He released himself so hastily, so&#13;
abruptly, that the young girl almost&#13;
tottered back. His lip3 quivered, but&#13;
his voice v a s as firm as when he made&#13;
the fateful promise.&#13;
"I cannot be a dishonored man, Florence,&#13;
net even for the prize of your&#13;
hand. If you fear Edward more than&#13;
you love me—if you have not the courage&#13;
to defend this love against him—&#13;
why, I must lose you. I will not break&#13;
my word of honor."&#13;
Florence had shrunk back. Her dark&#13;
eyes rested with a look of mingled surprise&#13;
and anger upon the man, whose&#13;
rigid sense of duty she could not understand..&#13;
But ere she could frame an&#13;
answer, the floor again opened, and a&#13;
stranger appeared on the threshold. It&#13;
was a young man in uniform, who&#13;
paused a moment, scanning the pair&#13;
with a hurried glance, then courteously&#13;
approached the lady.&#13;
"Pardon this intrusion, Miss- Harrison.&#13;
Allow me to request a brief "private&#13;
interview with this gentleman. I&#13;
have some important news,for him."&#13;
Florence recognized Captain Wilson,&#13;
Edward's friend, whom she had seen&#13;
—several times. She knew only too well&#13;
i what had brought him to Springfield&#13;
that day, but this sudden entrance&#13;
into her drawing-room aroused the&#13;
"Yield, Mr. Roland," he said, quietly.&#13;
"Resistance would be vain. You&#13;
will not find your horse where you&#13;
left him; all the exits from the house&#13;
are guarded; jand the servants have&#13;
orders to prevent your departure by&#13;
force. Convince yourself that flight&#13;
has become an impossibility/'&#13;
He pointed toward the terrace and&#13;
Willlam&gt; eyes followed the gesture.&#13;
He really did see several figures&#13;
whose faces were unfamiliar to him,&#13;
and who certainly would not fail to&#13;
carry out the orders which they had&#13;
received.&#13;
The preparations had evidently been&#13;
made with the greatest caution. Edward's&#13;
revenge.was swift and sure.&#13;
' "I do not know you, sir," said the&#13;
young officer slowly, without lowering&#13;
his weapon or averting his eyes&#13;
from his enemy. "You, on the contrary,&#13;
seem to be very well informed&#13;
concerning my personality. In that&#13;
case, you probably are also aware&#13;
that I am in the house of my future&#13;
father-in-law, and came solely to see&#13;
my betrothed bride. By what right&#13;
do you attack me?"&#13;
Wilson shrugged his shoulders.&#13;
"By the same right which you would&#13;
exercise" if an officer of the hostile&#13;
army should fall into your hands in&#13;
disguise. I am a soldier and must&#13;
discharge my duty;-it-is not my business&#13;
to inquire the motive that&#13;
brought you here. Will you surrender?"&#13;
"So long as I carry a weapon, no!&#13;
However the struggle may end, the&#13;
flrst man" who touches me I will shoot&#13;
down!"&#13;
"Then you will force me to extreme&#13;
measures. The consequences must be&#13;
on your head."&#13;
The captain turned toward the terrace,&#13;
with the intention of summoning&#13;
the men who'were waiting there,&#13;
SHE RUSHED PAST HIM TO ROLAND.&#13;
• • % » * ' •&#13;
utmost astonishment. For the moment&#13;
she lacked the least comprehension of&#13;
the situation.&#13;
But William understood it better.&#13;
He saw the Confederate uniform, and&#13;
with it the danger menacing him, and&#13;
slowly thrusting his hand into the&#13;
breast-pocket of his coat, where he&#13;
carried his pistol, he replied with cold&#13;
formality^&#13;
. "I shall be at your service, sir, as&#13;
soon as my conversation with Miss&#13;
Harrison is over. We have some ini--&#13;
portant masters to discuss, so I&#13;
beg—"&#13;
Glance and tone plainly requested&#13;
the captain to retire. But instead of,&#13;
doing so, he advanced close to the&#13;
young officer, saying in a low tone:&#13;
"I wish to spare the lady, and hope&#13;
you will aid me—Lieutenant William&#13;
Roland."&#13;
^.William.started. He perceived that&#13;
ho was betrayed, and did not doubt a&#13;
moment the authfcfr of the treachery.&#13;
To deh'y his'identity was impossible.&#13;
Only prompt action could be of service&#13;
now. If he succeeded,in reachi&#13;
n g his horse,' whieh -was fastened a&#13;
few hutidred paces from—'the bouse,&#13;
escape might yet be possible. Hastily&#13;
retreating a few steps, at the&#13;
same time drawing his revolver,&#13;
said In a loud, sharp tqner^&#13;
"Well, what do you want "with Lieutenant&#13;
Roland?"&#13;
Florence uttered a cry of terror.&#13;
~Bh&lt;s too, now suddenly realized th*»&#13;
fu&gt;l extent of the peril, but the curtfjn&#13;
remained unmoved, though Iho pistol was" aimed at him.&#13;
-he- 4s&#13;
when Florence, who had stood trembling&#13;
and deadly pale, anticipated&#13;
him. She rushed past him to Roland,&#13;
threw herself on his breast, and clinging&#13;
to him frantically, exclaimed:&#13;
"You nrasrnn-otr William! There&#13;
are ten to one! You will be conquered&#13;
in the struggle! They will kill&#13;
you!"&#13;
"Let me go, Florence! Let me go,&#13;
I say!"&#13;
William was vainly striving to release&#13;
himself, when Captain Wilson,&#13;
taking advantage of the favorable moment&#13;
in which his enemy was defenseless&#13;
in the arms that clasped him so&#13;
closely, with a rapid movement&#13;
snatched the revolver. A cry of indignation&#13;
escaped the young man's&#13;
lips. The next instant he had&#13;
wrenched himself free, but it was too&#13;
late. He stood defenseless.&#13;
"Florence, what have you done?" he&#13;
cried in a tone of-&gt;sharp reproach.&#13;
"Saved you!" she passionately exclaimed.&#13;
"They would,, have killed&#13;
you here before my (eyes!"&#13;
_;*Calm yourself, Miss Harrison,"&#13;
said the captain, gravely. "Lieutenant&#13;
Roland will not be so mad as to&#13;
offer resistance now. Once more, sir,&#13;
yield! Spare us useless- bloodshed. It&#13;
t-no-disgrace to- a soldier 4f he submits&#13;
to the inevitable, and I give you&#13;
my word that you have no dishonoring&#13;
treatment to/fear as a prisoner of&#13;
the Confederacy you will be treated in&#13;
an honorable manner.&#13;
William bent his eyes gloomily on&#13;
the floor. He perceived the truth of&#13;
have been madness and, at the utmost,&#13;
brought only degrading treatment&#13;
upon him. After a brief, tincomfortable&#13;
pauce, he turned t o the&#13;
officer. -&#13;
"I am in your power. Dispose of&#13;
me.**&#13;
"I will send news of your arrest to&#13;
the city. Mean while, /remain, here;&#13;
and, If you give me your word of&#13;
honor to make no attempt to fly—"&#13;
"No! I yield to force, but to that&#13;
alone."&#13;
"Then I cannot leave you in Miss&#13;
Harrison's society, but must provide&#13;
a more secure prison."&#13;
"Which you will doubtless find in&#13;
Springfield," said William, "with, an&#13;
outburst of resentment. "I was prepared&#13;
for everything when I risked&#13;
the ride here, except treachery in&#13;
the house in which I was called son."&#13;
_ "You are right, Mr. Roland." The&#13;
captain raised his voice so loud that&#13;
a person on the other side of the closed&#13;
door could not fail to hear it. "But&#13;
do not address your reproaches to me.&#13;
I did what I was forced to do. I do&#13;
not believe in treachery, and I regret&#13;
that you have fallen a victim to it."&#13;
"My words do not apply tp you. i,&#13;
know the traitor—and now I will ask;&#13;
only ,a_ moment longer." j&#13;
lie went to his fiance and bent ovef&#13;
her, but just at that moment a side*&#13;
door was hastily flung open and&#13;
Ralph rushed in.&#13;
"Miss Florence, master is asking for&#13;
you. He has suddenly grown worse.&#13;
.We are afraid the end is near."&#13;
Florence had hitherto found it difficult&#13;
to sustain herself. This last&#13;
blow threatened to crush her. She&#13;
tottered and would have fallen had&#13;
not William clasped her in his arms.&#13;
"I cannot go!" she murmured, despairingly.&#13;
"Not at this moment! William!&#13;
What will become of you?"&#13;
"Lieutenant Roland is my prisoner&#13;
and under* my protection," said Wilson,&#13;
with marked emphasis. "Have no&#13;
anxiety for him. I will answer for&#13;
his safety so long as he remains in&#13;
Springfield." ^_JL_&#13;
"Go to your father," said William,&#13;
pushing tlie~fre*mbirrlg~girl with gentle&#13;
violence toward the door. "You&#13;
hear? No harm will befall me, and&#13;
your place is tpere. Courage, my poor&#13;
Florence!" I cannot be with—you in&#13;
this trying hour, but, at least, you&#13;
know that._I_.am near. So be resolute."&#13;
He gave her to Ralph, who drew&#13;
the .half-senseless girl away with him,&#13;
and then went back to the captain.&#13;
"If you wish to go to the sickroom,"&#13;
said the latter, in a low tone,&#13;
-"t-writ not" prevent yon." —&#13;
William made a gesture of refusal.&#13;
- "No. After what has passed between&#13;
me and the sick man, my presence&#13;
could not help exerting a bad influence&#13;
upon him. He-has no suspicion&#13;
that I am here; let him remain&#13;
ignorant of it. I thank you for your&#13;
consideration,, sir. Let us go!"&#13;
The servants, at the captain'* order,&#13;
had left their posts at the doors&#13;
but stood whispering together witl.&#13;
troubled faces. Ralph had ^betrayen.&#13;
that the officer under arrest was Mia-.&#13;
Florence's lover. And it had happened'&#13;
in her own house!" True, the master&#13;
of the hou.se had had.no share i.o&#13;
it; they all knew now that he w.,-&gt;&#13;
dying.&#13;
Edward Harrison, pacing up an&lt;2&#13;
down the drawing-room alone, with r&gt;&#13;
cloud upon his brow, knew it also.&#13;
The end-se-rong expected was comini'&#13;
more quickly than had been supposed.&#13;
The physician had given the siclt mar&#13;
days, and now, at the utmost, there&#13;
were only hours. Yet Edward had&#13;
not courage to enter the apartment&#13;
where Florence was, and had Ralph&#13;
bring him reports, which constantly&#13;
grew more alarming.&#13;
Then Captain Wilson entered, but&#13;
the cordiality with which he. usually&#13;
treated young Harrison had given&#13;
place to coliL_fonnaIIty; he_b_owed_as_&#13;
if he were saluting a s t r a n g e r ^ __&#13;
"I wished to inform you that "I am&#13;
going to the city to report t h e capture,"&#13;
he said, distantly. "An escort&#13;
will be sent for the prisoner; until&#13;
then he must remain at Springfield."&#13;
Edward did not appear to notice the&#13;
icy coldness In the tone and manner&#13;
of&#13;
the words. Longer resistance would&#13;
TRANSVAAL WAR ITEMS.&#13;
The exact position at Molteno and&#13;
Zyphergat is not yet clear, but in any&#13;
«se these little engagements are beginning&#13;
to attain a greater degree of&#13;
nobility. Lord Methuen's cavalry&#13;
iconting has developed the fact t h a t&#13;
She Boers' intrenchments extend some&#13;
10 miles, far overlapping the British:!&#13;
positions and making flank attacks ex-!&#13;
seedingly difficult. Military analysts&#13;
iffirm t h a t the Boer trenches confronting&#13;
Oen. Buller stretch away some 17&#13;
miles, and t h a t work upon them is&#13;
pushed unremittingly. While t h e advance&#13;
is delayed, flank movements a r e '&#13;
rendered most difficult because long&#13;
marches are not done with celerity,&#13;
and it is hard to time an attack with&#13;
jertainty.&#13;
lGen. French reports that while en*&#13;
Sfaged in Bombarding Kuruman on Jan.&#13;
1, he took '120 prisoners, including&#13;
two captains, Mr. Hilliard, the magistrate,&#13;
and eight other officers, besides&#13;
capturing it natives together with a&#13;
number of rifles and revolvers and a.&#13;
quantity of ammunition. Fifteen British&#13;
were wounded. J&#13;
There was a small skirmish near&#13;
Belmont on the morning of the 3d.&#13;
The British fired a few shells, but the&#13;
Boers did not respond. A detachment&#13;
of about 40 Boers attempted to rush&#13;
Klokfontein, but were beaten back by&#13;
the mounted infantry. Possibly this&#13;
force consisted jf fugitives from Sunnyside.&#13;
A report from Col. Pilcher of the&#13;
British forces says that on Jan. 1 he&#13;
completely defeated the Boers in com&#13;
mand at Sunnysidelaagar, taking the&#13;
laager and capturing 40 prisoners, with&#13;
a loss of-only two privates killed and&#13;
one lieutenant wounded.&#13;
The guns which were captured from&#13;
Gen. Buller at Colenso have been&#13;
mounted in the hills commaning the&#13;
drift over the TUgela river at Springfield.&#13;
The Boers also captured 620&#13;
rounds of shrapnel when thej* took the&#13;
A N o w f t a * .&#13;
Big resourceful Texas li famed for&#13;
its great undertakings. T k * aew««t&#13;
and brightest star whleir 1*ir alroC&#13;
athwart its horizon la the wondtcfui&#13;
town of La Porte, located on Galveston&#13;
Bay midway between Houston a n d&#13;
Galveston in the celebrated Coast&#13;
Country of Texas. A happy trinity of&#13;
pluck, brains and capital is here foun4&#13;
at work building up a great deepwater&#13;
seaport city. Extensive public work t »&#13;
under way Including wharfs, docks ana&#13;
water front shipping facilities. The&#13;
tJ. 8. Government Is soon t o deepen&#13;
the channel, thus enabling the largest&#13;
ocean vessels to receive and discharge;&#13;
cargoes at La Porter&#13;
...v&gt;:.....1- .^A*-&#13;
•iiiiin'n. • |ijiiniii'iliitw,%&#13;
•#m&#13;
'•y&gt;,^i&#13;
L Prove t h a t Moses made no mistakes^&#13;
nd you picv^ that he was not a man.&#13;
W l u t e r Tonx*.&#13;
Should you desire information r e -&#13;
garding California, Arizona, Texas o r&#13;
Mexico, and the long limit, low rate*&#13;
round-trip tickets, sold to principal&#13;
points, the various routes via which&#13;
the tickets can be purchased, or r e -&#13;
garding one way flrst and second-class&#13;
rates, through sleeping car lines,&#13;
first-class and tourist, call upon or address&#13;
W. G. Neimyer, Gen'l Western&#13;
Agent, Southern Pacific Co., 238&#13;
Clark St., Chicago; W. H. Connor,&#13;
Com'l Agent, Chamber Commerce&#13;
Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio, or W. J. Berg,&#13;
Trav. Pass. Agt., 220 Ellicott Sq., Buffalo,&#13;
N. Y.&#13;
Follow Jesus closely, and it will b e&#13;
well with the man who follows you.&#13;
SlOO R e w a r d SIOO.&#13;
T h e r e a d e r s of this paper will be pleased t o "&#13;
learn t h a t t h e r e is, a t least one dreaded d i s e a s e&#13;
t h a t science h a s been able to c u r e In all i t s&#13;
stages, and t h a t is Catarrh,- H a l l ' s C a t a r r h&#13;
Cure is t h e only positive cure now k n o w n to t h e&#13;
medical fraternity. Catarrh being a c o n s t i t u -&#13;
tional disease, Tequi res a constitutional t r e a t -&#13;
ment. Hull's C a t a r r h Cure Is taken i n t e r n a l l y ;&#13;
acting directly upon t h e blood a n d mucous s u r -&#13;
faces of t h e system, thereby destroying. tbe&gt;&#13;
foundation of t h e disease, and giving t h e p a t i e n t&#13;
s t r e n g t h by building u p t h e constitution andassistlng&#13;
n a t u r e in doing its work. T h e p r o -&#13;
prietors have so m u c h faith in I t s c u r a t i v e&#13;
powers t h a t they offer One Hundred Dollars for&#13;
any case t h a t i t fails to cure. Send for list o t&#13;
Testimonials.&#13;
Address FTT^CHENEY &amp; C©., Toledo, O.&#13;
Sold by druggists 75c. .&#13;
Hull's F a m i l y Pills a r e t h e b e s t&#13;
F r o m t h e s t a n d p o i n t of t h e b u l l d o g ^&#13;
t h i s i s a v e r y q u a r r e l s o m e - - w o r l d .&#13;
R e l i a b l e H e l p W a n t e d&#13;
I (E'thersex.) The Htimaaltnrian Home and Santtar-&#13;
| film tor Invalids and Health Si-ekers, incorporatetl&#13;
I ^end ].!&lt;• In BtHinps for in I Information. Address&#13;
J. li. Teltlcbauui, Treasurer, Laa Vegas, X. M.&#13;
"They that hprior mo, I will honor."&#13;
a yood thin^ when-it comes from (Jod.&#13;
T O C C K E A C O L D I N O N E D A T ,&#13;
T a k e Laxative Bromo Quinine T a b l e t s . A l l&#13;
driirpfsts refund t h e monfy if it fails t o c u r e .&#13;
25c. E . W. Grove's signature on each b o s .&#13;
To t h e m a n who seeks God hrst, seeking »&#13;
fortune will become a means of grace.&#13;
A B o e r d i s p a t c h f r o m D o r d r e c h t&#13;
d a t e d J a n . 4 . s a y s t h a t t h e B r i t i s h&#13;
w e r e c o m p e l l e d t o r e t r e a t f r o m t h a t&#13;
p l a c e ; t h a t t h e fighting a r o u n d C o l e s -&#13;
b u r g c o n t i n u e s , a n d t h a t t h e B r i t i s h&#13;
o c c u p y s o m e o f t h e o u t s i d e l ^ o p j e s .&#13;
T h e l a t e s t t e l e g r a m s s a y d e n . F r e n c h&#13;
h a s a T m o s t s u r r o u n d e d C o l e s b u r g . b u t&#13;
t h a t t h e B o e r s a r e stiffly d e f e n d i n g a l l „&#13;
t h e i r p o s i t i o n c l o s e t o t h e t o w n , p r e -&#13;
v e n t i n g t h e B r i t i s h f r o m c a p t u r i n g i t .&#13;
T h e K a f f i r s t a t i o n s i n t h e v i c i n i t y of&#13;
D e r d e p o o r t h a v e b e e n d e s t r o 3 ' e d b y t h e&#13;
B o e r s a n d t h e i n h a b i t a n t s h a v e fled t o&#13;
a p l a c e of s a f e t y . I t i s e s t i m a t e d t h a t&#13;
3,000 K a f f i r s w e r e d i s p e r s e d .&#13;
T h e T T r i l i s l i r n a v a r g u n S n r t - e h T g v e i t ' y I F»TS P ^ t m i u i e o t ^ p u i n L ^&#13;
, . &amp; . _ , , ^ first dny * tis&lt;« of Dr Kline&#13;
c a m p c o n t i n u e t h e i r i n e f f e c t i v e , l o n g - " - •&#13;
r a n g e fire n i g h t a n d d a y , t o d i v e r t&#13;
B o e r a t t e n t i o n f r o m t h e m o v e m e n t s of&#13;
B r i t i s h t r o o p s .&#13;
Col. B a d e n - P o w e l l of t h e B r i t i s h&#13;
f o r c e s , r e p o r t s t h a t i n a r e c e n t a t t a c k&#13;
o n t h e B o e r s a t M a f e k i n g t h a t h e l o s t&#13;
21 m e n , h a d 14 w o u n d e d a n d 3 t a k e n&#13;
p r i s o n e r s . ~"~&#13;
I t i s s a i d t h a t P r e s i d e n t K r u g e r h a s&#13;
s e n t s e v e n s o n s a n d r&gt;0 g r a n d s o n s i n t o&#13;
t h e B o e r a r m y t o l i g h t t h e E n g l i s h , _ j n _&#13;
a d d i t i o n t o t a k i n g t h e field h i m s c l . l&#13;
B r i t a i n h a s l o d g e d a p r o t e s t w i t h j&#13;
S w i t z e r l a n d a g a i n s t B o e r r e c r u i t i n g , ]&#13;
w h i c h i s s a i d t o b e i n p r o g r e s s i n t h a t !&#13;
c o u n t r y .&#13;
Honor i s&#13;
I p e r T o turn « »« arme&#13;
s Greal Nerve Restores.&#13;
bead fur F R E E $ 4 . 0 0 trial bottle and treatise&#13;
Da. H. li. KtiNK. Ltd..931 Arch St., Philadelphia. F »&#13;
Failure is impossible when God helps, arid God.'&#13;
always helps waen we take his way&#13;
F o r Cnta. R n r n s a n d B r u i s e s .&#13;
IJchtnlrnr Hot Drop*; applv at onro; why »nffer&gt;&#13;
23c. Ail druggUta. Herb Med. Co., Springfield, O.&#13;
Before J e s u s told any man to love h . s neighbor&#13;
a s himself, he showed h i m h o w&#13;
A t t r a c t i v e B o o k l e t S e n t F r e e .&#13;
Choice KeiMpe* for making Cwoa ami Chocolate.&#13;
Address Waiter Baker &amp;. C». Ltd.. Dorchester. Mas*.&#13;
A cheerful pift is always a lari/e gift, because&#13;
nothing small can be given to God.&#13;
Lieut.-Col. "WatsoB^of Gen. French's&#13;
command was wounded on the fJth, and&#13;
70 of his men were,taken prisoners, including&#13;
seven officers.&#13;
M r s . W i n s l o w ' B S o o t h i n g S y r u p .&#13;
i Forchlldren teethlnft, softens the gums, reduces t t r&#13;
tUminailoa, allays pal a, cured wind colic. &amp;cabotiie»&#13;
If you would keep the wrinkles o u t of y o u r&#13;
face, keep sunshine in your heart.&#13;
I shall recommend Piso's Cure for C o n s u m p -&#13;
tion. f;\r and-wide.—Mrs. Mulligan, Plumsteath&#13;
Kent, England. Nov. 8, 1685.&#13;
The size of a m a n ' s bank account h a s nothing&#13;
to do with h i s fitness for heaven.&#13;
Brown's Teetblna Cordial m a k e s good&#13;
babies o u t Of cross babies.&#13;
T n e »&#13;
friend, atfd answereof&#13;
the point in question&#13;
of the utmost indiffer-&#13;
I'll see that the&#13;
us."&#13;
his former&#13;
quietly, a&amp; if&#13;
were a matter&#13;
ence:&#13;
"Have no anxiety,&#13;
spy doesn't escape&#13;
"I am positive TEaTXTeutcnant Roland&#13;
is not a spy," replied Wilson,&#13;
with marked emphasis. "What brought&#13;
him here is perfectly apparent, and&#13;
I shall make m^optirtpir-as emphatic&#13;
as possible at the court-martial."&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
D i s h e v e l e d .&#13;
From Judge: yB^h was deeply interested&#13;
in a weeping willow that her&#13;
father had planted the night before on&#13;
the lawn. "Come, mamma, hurry!"&#13;
she called, as she looked from the sitting&#13;
room window, "and see this cunning&#13;
little-tree w4th-4ts hair all down.**&#13;
At the close of formal dinners In&#13;
Japan guests are presented with any&#13;
portion of the mcaj they may fail to&#13;
eat, which they a r e expected to take&#13;
h o n e . ' : ' r^ ——&#13;
G e r m a n S t e a m e r S e i z e d b y t h e B r i t i s h .&#13;
The imperial mail stejnner General \&#13;
has been detained at Aden and occupied i&#13;
by British troops, with the object of,&#13;
searching her cargo, which is to be dis- j&#13;
charged. The General is owned by the {&#13;
German East African liue, the owners |&#13;
of the Bundesrath. previously captured !&#13;
by the British cruiser Magieienne, off&#13;
Delagoa bay. The seizure of t h e '&#13;
steamer General has considerablj- ag- j&#13;
gravated t h e situation at Berlin, and j&#13;
the mrfio^fttTmi against England is in- •&#13;
ten^rfied._^The government is still j&#13;
earnestly endeavoring to preserve cor- j R is net &lt;zvfut &lt;wcs*y, bot&lt;G&gt;hat HootTs&#13;
rect official relations, b u t England wiH j Sarsap&amp;ritt* does, ifut teUs the story.&#13;
Thousands of people geve the proof py&#13;
telling of remarkable cures by Hood's $4D*&gt;&#13;
sdpArUU of ScrofuU, Salt Rheum, Dyspepsia,&#13;
Catarrh, Rheumatism, and aW&#13;
other blood diseases and dtbHiiy.&#13;
Has not God alwavSTSeeTTTrood t o us?&#13;
why net Relieve he always will?&#13;
4'Proof of the ^Pudding&#13;
Is in the Eating. 9»&#13;
do well to make the amende honorable&#13;
to Germany.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
N e w Y o r k — Cattle S h e e p k a m b v&#13;
Best grades *5 WJH6 25&#13;
Lower grade*. 4 t£&amp;5 3D&#13;
C h i c a g o —&#13;
Best g r a d e s . . .&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
*4 50&#13;
S 00&#13;
16 70&#13;
5 75&#13;
HOSTS&#13;
fi 8i i&#13;
1 73 Zfood&amp;Si&#13;
i 25(58 «0&#13;
.4 *X&lt;t5 2J&#13;
- D e t r o i t —&#13;
Best tcrade* 3 TSJjM 55&#13;
Lower g r a d e s . . .•: jU^J 73&#13;
B u f f a l o -&#13;
Best grades 4 OOfto 03&#13;
Lower grades .2 23t&amp;3 00&#13;
C i n c i n n a t i —&#13;
B e s t g r a d e * . . . .6 35&lt;fc5 3D&#13;
" L o w e r g r a d e s . . .4 0X&amp;4 40&#13;
P U t u b a r s —&#13;
Best grades 5 M@« 35&#13;
Lower g r a d e s . . .4 i i f i o 00&#13;
4 73&#13;
4 i i&#13;
~4 S)&#13;
3 30&#13;
4 63&#13;
4 2&gt;&#13;
4 10&#13;
4 6)&#13;
4 00&#13;
6 3 3&#13;
4 SO&#13;
5 9 0&#13;
3 0J&#13;
6 3)&#13;
3 75&#13;
5 r&gt;&#13;
4 73&#13;
3 90&#13;
4 6-Y&#13;
4 3 5&#13;
4 33&#13;
N e w York&#13;
C h i c a g o&#13;
' D e t r o i t&#13;
T o l e d o&#13;
Claelaaatl&#13;
PUUbarg-&#13;
B v f f a l o&#13;
G R A I N .&#13;
W h e a t .&#13;
J¥o.2red&#13;
7J@73&#13;
70&amp;70&#13;
75©734&#13;
?*a?4H&#13;
E T C&#13;
Corn.&#13;
No. 2 mix&#13;
Oat*.&#13;
No. 2 white&#13;
— - 2 0 &amp; 2 &amp; %&#13;
»9*2* 24&amp;&gt;t&#13;
»fc33H&#13;
ft£33H ^ - * * 3 2 8 *&#13;
, •DetrolV-Hay. No. 1 TJjaothj. I l l 80 per ton.&#13;
tPotatoee, 60c per b». Live Poultry, spring&#13;
^fo; fowls. «c;jurkeya, 1 0 J ;&#13;
do—i&#13;
chicken*.&#13;
dtiem.»c&#13;
Duttex^btst&#13;
" ...-7&#13;
7c Pjr^lb;&#13;
M&lt;g».irtrt«&#13;
stdatry.afc&#13;
Mo par per lb; creamery, Ma&#13;
CHEAP FARMS&#13;
N YOU WUI» MMEt&#13;
l O O t O O O A 1 * ^ ^ Improved •»« unlmproT**&#13;
eecnj&#13;
and sold pe long time and e a e y p a y m e n t * , a r i m e&#13;
- e u v C o m e and see us o r write. T H B T R U M A J I&#13;
» T A T E B A N K , Sanilac C e n t e r . Mica., ar&#13;
, O S C U R L F&#13;
/&#13;
fe. r*- \&#13;
&amp;&gt;**?'.'&#13;
^$wJ$ffi$&amp; *•' ^Qf;.'. T'&#13;
'.!&amp;&#13;
' ^&#13;
M»-&#13;
• '•\!-' i'' •-•'.•''t '•'',".oli.S'','i.'jiS(?' ••i'^*'. •&gt;&gt;;; .',v.v:':''fr:'"'"''-T?' 'A* • .u*"''1 -,-:-: ,.-:v,'.'." ..\*—w* ." '.-&gt;.-"•-v. &gt;• ••• , .' (if&#13;
- • s i -. ; ; : ^ : - # ^&#13;
•'•rt-t-&#13;
• t - , r&#13;
•' c JT'^Mi P.V'I*1 » '» '•••-'-•r • * • * &gt; . f;^.^ 1-.", &gt;/..,.•&#13;
;''&#13;
, '. /•&#13;
L . } ^ - : _&#13;
•v" ' V -&#13;
Vr '&#13;
V&#13;
•VXT&gt;&#13;
'#.&#13;
"Vf'&#13;
• t ^ T &gt;..^.v&#13;
&gt; . &lt; • * * *T"&#13;
1 . " &gt; " &gt; ' " , ; . . ^ r * " *&#13;
' • • • &lt; * ,&#13;
«• z •.? • V , / . * .&#13;
^ ^ r r ^ '&#13;
fEkt ffitufemg gtfcpatrii.&#13;
fe v-t;&#13;
• vv .1=. L. ANDREWS EDITOR.&#13;
. r^v&#13;
~fT* tJT!&#13;
THURSDAY. JAN. 11, \900.&#13;
I Mill III. I '11,1 ",.' , ' ' ' ' ' . ^&#13;
Iff&#13;
$ * • ; • • • ;&#13;
.A. FARM JOURNAL&#13;
Cat !•€» 1 ¾ t r r o m N o w t 0 Dec. 1903&#13;
O i l e r NEARLY 5 YEARS.&#13;
By special arrangement with the&#13;
publishers of the F A R M JOURNAL&#13;
we are enabled to offer that paper&#13;
to ever subscriber who pays for&#13;
the D I S P A T C H one year ahead, ^ o r&#13;
only $1, both papers for the price&#13;
of ours only; our paper one year&#13;
and the Farm Journal from now&#13;
to-DfC, 1903, nearly five years.&#13;
The Farm Journal is an old established&#13;
paper, enjoying great&#13;
popularity, one _of the best and&#13;
most useful farm papers published.&#13;
w W A X A- * x v i ",'i 4 t £&#13;
QUESTION ANSWERED.&#13;
_Ye«, August Fl&lt;»w«r BtiH Ixm the largest&#13;
sale of any medicine in the civilized world.&#13;
Yoijr pothers tnd grandmothers wever&#13;
thought of using anything else for liulideation&#13;
or Biliousntas. i l)&lt;&gt;ctort were bcarce,&#13;
and they seldom herd of Appediciue, Nervous&#13;
Prostration or Htart«f»ilute, etc.&#13;
They used August Flower to clean out the&#13;
system and stop ferjnfniation otyariigcst*^&#13;
food, reguTate the • ciiou of the Jiver, siimulate&#13;
the nervous and organic action of the&#13;
system, and that i* ail th« y took when feciing&#13;
dull and bad with heudac-hes ntul other] JWlft ice king HOW&#13;
achea.^You only need a few doses of sway over this country&#13;
Green's AnMus. Flower, h» liquid f&lt;.»m, to had snow the latter part of Sept.&#13;
make you satisfied there is nothing serious i&gt; . •• . l x -i .,&#13;
A, ' . . u i t ... * Uoats carue into Dawson daily&#13;
the mutter with y o u . cwtaiple buttle ut - J&#13;
'f-'-'.-.Hr-&#13;
By BAILEY SMITH.&#13;
^Arranged by Mfis. W. CARLIN. rt*&#13;
WW" &amp;&#13;
co^ri^tii o.&#13;
F, A. Sigler's.&#13;
A very welcome letter w &lt;s r e -&#13;
ceived from one of bur "boys who&#13;
is in the far west, a part of which&#13;
"twill be read with interest: —&#13;
Germantown, Cal., Dec. '30,"*9&amp;&#13;
F . L . Andrews:&#13;
Dear 8ir,&#13;
May Wood Colony, or Corning, is&#13;
ha« a store a t S k e g ^ a y . ' H i s&#13;
holds ! stores are better than a xood mine&#13;
We [ when a few small capsuls cost/12&#13;
or $3. and caster oil $1-per oz.,&#13;
and other drugs in proportion.&#13;
~ Feb. aoth, 18W9.&#13;
The winter Las been ' u r better&#13;
than I expected, we have no%evere&#13;
storms or winds in the winter. I n&#13;
Thankful words writiw by ¥«KT&#13;
Ada B. Hart of Oroton, ^ 0 , . ^ ,&#13;
tak«n with a bad cold wbjcb iettlrtl t&#13;
OQ my lonATt; oo«tfb wttl^d lp * w | .&#13;
finally terminated io OoDwmpiio^,&#13;
FOUR doctpjra jt*f+*mQ up MjiBt f ?&#13;
coal i live but a abort time. 1 «ftff{&#13;
myseTTup U&gt; nay Saviour, d«UrtniRO^&#13;
it I could not stay with mv frieudj o i |&#13;
earth, 1 would meet my absent OMi&#13;
aboye, My husband was advised t *&#13;
get Dr. j i m « ' s New Discovery fi»&#13;
| Consumption, Coughs and Colds.—$ift.&#13;
-¾^&#13;
'•'r7^:~'&#13;
dnripu Au^. a n d Sept. Provisions&#13;
and general supplies wer*« u u -&#13;
loaded by t h e barge aud cargo&#13;
lottdand many predicted that Dawson&#13;
would be supplied for years,: very cold weather there is appar-&#13;
) et there is MOW a scarcity of but- ently no rate of wind. We had a&#13;
ter, eondenned milk an 1 sugar. jCpldjmap of about 10 days in Nov.&#13;
hy the w a y - - ! see considerable from 30 to 45 degrees below ,zero.&#13;
'"Darling Oondensed Milk" in \ From the 1st of Dec. up till Xmas&#13;
Dawson put u p in Howell aTid ! was mild, scarcely below zero, and&#13;
liHusiiig. Suppose I have been much of the time from 10 t o 20&#13;
gave it a trial, took in all eight hot*&#13;
ties. It ha* cured me. and thank God:&#13;
I am saved and'now a well an#&#13;
healthy woman. Trial bottles free H&#13;
F. A. Sitfler's drag store. Regular&#13;
•ize50c.aod $1, guaranteed or priflD&#13;
refunded.&#13;
Business Locais&#13;
This offer should be accept- j a b ; o m i n e o J ^ " ' ; i t V planted ' l i n k i n g milk fnmi the f.rm this ' degs. above. After Xmas i t grew&#13;
• • &lt; . ' • ; • ' • &gt; &lt;&#13;
, . . &gt; ! » • • • "&#13;
ed_without delay. out to orange&#13;
••••r:**tiA-&lt;*&#13;
W. C. T. UE&#13;
d i t e d by the W. C. T V. of Ptncknej. &amp;&#13;
: ^ * * • : • '&#13;
^&#13;
^ e « see ees 6&amp;€ e@e e^« e&amp;«&#13;
Be Sironir—mid H&lt; I p.&#13;
If you are free from acquired&#13;
appetites for alcohol' o r from an&#13;
iuheiiled predigpiOsitioi^bJOltLik&#13;
,(*th«-rH^G"d with all your soul, but&#13;
.don't indulge in grain of prid^.&#13;
L e t your thalT^ngi\Mvg take 1 he i&#13;
form of s^mpalhy for^the other*&#13;
felh w who has both inherited pre- !&#13;
disposition and acquired appetite, j&#13;
While you lift, him u p with one&#13;
hand, knock the stumbling-blocks&#13;
neach aud almond w n , ^ r « Butter sells for ¢2.00 per cold and has remained so, and av-&#13;
1 trees etc. T h e tree's are' young, ]h- -Mi'k 75c'f&gt;er can, sugar 7 5 c eraged about 30 degs. below. W e j&#13;
but are looking well in spite of l&gt;er pound We have plenty of do not feel t h e coTtT weather as&#13;
8--the fact that t h e m-ound under ^ r e s ^ me#r. Thousands of cattle.keenly as in t h e states. I have&#13;
$ t h e immediate surface W as hard weredrive.i in here last season expert need weathei in Dakota&#13;
£ as rock aud has to be blown u p n " ^ butchered nfter the freeze^up.. far worse than any j e t in Dawsor.&#13;
| with dynamite or powtter-tomake 'I'l'^ meat keeps as it t . e v e r f h a w s People suffer less from t h e cold&#13;
8 holes to plant t h e trees. T h e ' " ' , n e H ', n l&gt; H R l 1 ^ will remain here than 4« t h e states as they&#13;
ground in summer has to be irri- T ' » ^ e " l l , , , i l ^ p r i l o r May; t h e dress better for th« cold: you see&#13;
gated, so is expensive, but eastern l^i^** are. from 7'&gt;c to gl.25 p.er no leather shoes or boots, t h e foot&#13;
capital is sacrificed on t h e altar M&gt;und. There is also some pork wear being felt shoes and moccftof&#13;
a big scheme to make money. 8 , , d mutton hi the m a r k e t at $1JiO sins. F u r s and mackiuaws art&gt;&#13;
""""ESTetfiii"&gt; iB veIT"batrkward this P e r I'btuid, chickens and turkeys worn by t h e miners and travelers;&#13;
y^ar. We have had so much rain ftre " ' tMtJ «""'ket l&gt;ut t h e prities wlfile you see the business men of&#13;
tliat it is impossble to work t h e are very high. W_e have neatly Dawsofi dressed about the same as&#13;
land. I t will be a week befoie we every thing here row' that one they would be in Seattle, unless&#13;
are able to start work if we have " ^ d s , if it U properly cooked, when traveling, then" they wear&#13;
Canned goods-of every kind c a i r t u r s . We have weather here from&#13;
be found in t h e stores. AH kiiuls April to October that a Californof&#13;
meats, fruits and veuetables are iau would envy.&#13;
ancfr-quit at sundown—not a v e r j T ^ W ^ 1 i n ]wr^ T 1 , e ««""ed The volunteer fire department&#13;
goods are astonishing; can^ get give good service, and with two&#13;
canned beef, mutton, pork, c h i c k - clientieal a n d a steam fire engine,&#13;
S Notice t o T«x Payers&#13;
The Totfinhi'M T-ix !1&gt;M is »»* i'J my&#13;
hands for thn OolJction of r»i&lt;-'&gt;—1 will be&#13;
at the Pinckney Ex. Bv&gt;K d.iri-i^ husiuesa&#13;
houriJ to rTirptvo the NHtne.&#13;
H H. T o i o l ' . Two' ri«'!isurei*.&#13;
I wouhl lik« to tra.ie a si&lt;i jl &gt;. h t-u^ss&#13;
for pole wood. J O K S V K ^ S .&#13;
&lt;, • • . For Sale.&#13;
• House nnd lot in the v i i ^ w o f Piuukney&#13;
t-55i 11. lotitiiit.-&#13;
'•Vtr S.IIH or Kx«'liJt.»,*»*.&#13;
A &lt; U t ) 0 J .rri.i v \•'- , ;&#13;
t a k f bmt.Hi", Htfj/s. «i . &gt;»•&#13;
thintf I &lt;!an usu. Vi I i • i n &lt; iTtin-&#13;
tallniHnts. Percv s.v -. u.mt,&#13;
I ' M I , \ , M l i b ;&#13;
' t i i y -&#13;
gobd weather. I am now driving&#13;
an eight mule team; we go to work&#13;
as soon as we can see to hitch-up^&#13;
of ot.e•r .it-li.iiT ikn4igi place•s oniti- of i hiie i .lo ng d,a y_if_l ^t h. i.s— t-i,m e of« ye—ar, way with the other, using the bal | &amp; f /&#13;
lot of an American sovereign.—&#13;
J. F . C. .-:&#13;
"t Can Dutik or Let it Alone."&#13;
A man who used to run a saloon&#13;
in Wellsville, Ohio, had wonderfully&#13;
developed his power of self&#13;
control. One of his customers,&#13;
who when he got one drink, always&#13;
wanted more and usually&#13;
ended in a drunk, had" been in- __&#13;
duced many times to drink by the i VPnti? hVy f ^d ^n t &gt; y of acoTcTTo result&#13;
. liytiiol&amp;gy aiid i acinar hti&#13;
•smt&#13;
etgn&#13;
«iv»A Atvjoicil'u-ii sho'.'jil '»cJn(iu:veat&#13;
^•' ;"§! cocket of o^eiy |.t'i OJI", t/.".u»!iK' i t&#13;
5 i M i do Two Wj;-ds rn til9 EoRlish&#13;
*#:';|i Uacs'ttaga Have Exactly the&#13;
' v '• : Jam© ••^r.trntfi'c.'nc^. T&gt; oxI&gt;rocs&#13;
jtands to convey a dictionary of&#13;
^»UB|fc-yuonytast» uecdtd to I'voltl repe-&#13;
""{'/•••'jjjtnj^n. The fl?jviig«ft figure of&#13;
'^Ijifwoch is nntltJiewx. J» this cite-&#13;
^•rjli tionn'V the nt^ioi'.-'wl AT.toj.vjis&#13;
"^ will, thereiorc.'tie.found exlJ-o.i..-ly&#13;
valuable. Contains ainny otber&#13;
features puch *&gt;» Mythology,&#13;
Familiar Allusions and For-&#13;
Fhrases, Prof. l.ol«&lt;nte'S MeajOTjr&#13;
Your Friend. j en, turkey, and wild fowel, fish of two hose carts, and a hook ^ , ^Sy-ste^m.^ 'T0he ^Ar6t of^ Ne^ve^r "Forcettiticr/' efcej."&#13;
^ \- r _ . : all kinds; but canned goods soon ladder truck of t h e best make, we j £ 5 $ , ! ! ^&#13;
F A Sit/ler S a r T n t e ^ every hot-! grow tasteless and tiresome. One feel fairly well protected. T h e i " " * - - - ^ ^ 0 0 ' 1 8 ^ ^ 6 1&#13;
i&gt; ptt-a»&gt;arit and ?afp to ta^rp. It pre&#13;
XT&#13;
in pneumonirt t mar.-I&#13;
J. G. SAYLES&#13;
Plainfield, Mich.&#13;
&gt;5:" l&#13;
•iii-rv&#13;
saloonkeeper, who would say,&#13;
"Come on and rake a drink and&#13;
then let it alone like I do."&#13;
But listen! t h e saloonkeeper j&#13;
fills a drunkprds grave today,&#13;
while th© other man used good&#13;
common sense and quit drinking,&#13;
and is now living an upright, temperate&#13;
life.&#13;
The first party proved that h e&#13;
conld take a drink W h a t did the&#13;
second party prove?&#13;
Whiskey Jug- Wrecks ErjfTit Cars..&#13;
During the local option contest&#13;
at Dorset, Ashtabula county, one ««»««*«« i miienorth ot village&#13;
of the saloonistB, ill fact the lead- ; State Telephone Connection.&#13;
e r of the Saloon crowd, went t o All call^promptly answered.&#13;
Ashtabula to buy a special ship- — — — ^ i — i — — — • • —&#13;
tie.of Chamhprlins Conyh Remedy and needs vegetables and fresh fruits, police census approximate about&#13;
will refund Uie money to any one who W7e have onions and potatoes at 5,000 people in Dawson this winis&#13;
not sfif*ified aHer u&gt;in# tuo thirds 60c jjer_p°und. Some_ fruit-came ter, and 15,000 on the various riv-&#13;
•ot the contents. This i&lt; the lest rem- | n lrt8t summer, no one but a good, ers and creeks, of this district.&#13;
«-»Iy. i»i ili^1 w.-.1 Id &lt;f»r In urippe eonphs. c l a i m owner could afiPord to "eatr During t h e short days t h e sun&#13;
colds, rroop and wliPopin««onB|i and m a c h o f i h Saw two watermelons- for. some five weeks did irot apmarked&#13;
S15.CHJ and $25^&gt;0; good pear to the people of Dawson, we&#13;
apples 25c a piece, and other fruit had dayJight from 9 a. m. until&#13;
in proportion. about 3:30 p. m., a g r a y . d a w n&#13;
Since I arrived in June, have rather of somber color. T h e sun&#13;
been working for a, storage Co., appeared about Jan. 10th, and the&#13;
driving team at $10 a day, and 5&gt;1 days lengthened rapidly; Feb. 1st&#13;
per hour for a i l over time. The We had tliree"Tiours of sun, and&#13;
first mouth I made *293. Tejyniiig_a o W T .j,&#13;
e b. 20th, we have nearly 8&#13;
is §10. per hour and f »r six weeks hours of sunlight, with 12 hours&#13;
I made * 100.00 per day and better daylight. Two -monthj fronT'now&#13;
for the company. Since the cold We will have—no darkness- ^ B r e&#13;
weather began I have been haul moon in this north rn country is&#13;
once. Send for our lar»?« boo' cutaiogne, free.&#13;
Address all ortlers lo&#13;
THE WERNER COMPA\Y&gt;&#13;
fablUhera *nd M^nqfactarem, AKXOX, OHIO.&#13;
Funeral-&#13;
Director&#13;
and&#13;
E»mbalmer*&#13;
ing wood, which was *35 per cord 'assfcj&amp;nge in its manner of whirlin&#13;
4 foot length, in t h e f a l l - b u t i ' ^ around ns as the appearance&#13;
i 2d- i i i • . °f the sun. 1 ve seen the moon in&#13;
is now only *2o. An ol 1 acquaint- t h e h e R w n s 2 0 h o u r s o f t h e ^ i u&#13;
ance from Howell, Chas. Kelly, is December^&#13;
here in th? drug business, \ip also ConcKideil N e x t W e e k ,&#13;
Spain** Greatest lfe«d&#13;
Mr. ft. F. Oliva of Barcelona, Spain&#13;
lw&#13;
lit'--,&#13;
r&#13;
rf'Vment&#13;
of liquor to be used on t h e&#13;
(Jay of the local option ele'etion.&#13;
After transacting his business a t&#13;
Ashtabula be purchased a j u g of&#13;
whiskey a n d g o t ou a freight&#13;
train to steal a ride home. ir.te&#13;
imbibed from t h e j u g freely. As&#13;
thertrain did not stop a t Dorset&#13;
and _wajLgoing to fast for him t o&#13;
jump, ^e opened the valve of t h e&#13;
air breaks which set so quick a s&#13;
to pile u p e i g h t / d the cars en top&#13;
of one anoliier. Some hours «fcr&#13;
The annual meeting of the Livingston&#13;
County Mutual F i r e I n -&#13;
jsiirance company was held at the ^P«nda hi* winters at" Aikne, 8. a&#13;
C . ' L . B O W M A N , {*&gt;"* house, Howell,Tuesday J a n . W e a k aer™ b a d c f t a 8 e d 8 e ? e r e *****&#13;
' 1 T h e secretary's report showed&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
tfraiKl Trunk Railwar Mystem,&#13;
T i m e Table In Mffect, N o r . 19, 1899.&#13;
M. A. L. D f V t S t O N -WESTBOUND.&#13;
N o 2? Paswak'er. Pontiae ro J a c k s o n&#13;
.cunnectipR from Detroit 9 44 a M&#13;
No.'-S P*s*ei»^Hr, Pontine t*&gt; Inckwn, fl:&lt;ip. rn.&#13;
No. 29 has through coach irom Detroit t o Jaxoa«&#13;
No. 43 Mixed. Lenox t o Jncksaa&#13;
..connection from Detroit 4 49 p m&#13;
EAST OUNi)&#13;
N o 30 P a u e n j e r to Pontine and Dwtrolt 5 15 p at&#13;
No. 38 Pasannzer, J axon t * D e t r o i t , 0:1« a. m.&#13;
No. 28 a m tbr &gt;u^b coacb from J A ton tn Detroit&#13;
N o 44 MIXPU *o Pontiae and L e n o x 7 66 • m&#13;
All trains daily exempt Sunday.&#13;
No 44 connection at Pontine for Detroit and&#13;
- j-for th# weat o i D d N R R&#13;
W. J Bla**. A&lt;?«nt. P i n c k n e y&#13;
Proprietor of&#13;
J h e Grty Market,&#13;
Corner ol Main and Mill Sts.,&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICH.&#13;
ter wards h*&gt; was pulled out o f t h e ]&#13;
wreck horribly.':&gt;angWl. H e died&#13;
shortly afterward. T h e election&#13;
winch he was t r y i n g to control&#13;
came off July 11th, resulting in a&#13;
victory of two t o o n e f o r tempera&#13;
n o * P e r h a p s one of the Strang.&#13;
9tt features of this occurence w a s&#13;
t h a i t h e pastor who led t h e temperaoce&#13;
forces against the saloons&#13;
was aaked t o .preach t h e funeral&#13;
aermon of t h e dead saloonist—&#13;
Gilbert J . Kaynor, Colttmbna, Q,,&#13;
WILL&#13;
PAY&#13;
CASH&#13;
F o r Tallow, Hides, Pelts, a n d&#13;
Dressed Pork——&#13;
S e * us before sedling y o o r B e e t&#13;
C.L BOWMAN.&#13;
that one year ago there was 3144&#13;
policy holders in the county, today&#13;
they number 3216. T h e total&#13;
in the back of his head. On using&#13;
Etffcrrte Bitters, America's greatait&#13;
blood and nerve remedy, all pain toon&#13;
latt him. He says this g-asd medietas&#13;
i» what bis conntry needs. Ail Amera&#13;
m o u n t a f pfft|,mtty now insured ica knows that it cures liver and kidand&#13;
at risk amount to ^5,3()2,835. ney, trouble, purifies the blood, tones&#13;
Amount paid for losses *&amp;,?5,3J!2.^np-tb^aiomaeh, strengthens the nerves&#13;
Cash balance on hand $2,t)06.30. PuU *»m, vigor and. new life into&#13;
T h e foliowingofficers were elect- every muscles, nerve and or jan of t b t&#13;
eoT:— \ . •&lt;• body. If weak, tried, or ailing* yea&#13;
President—Wm. M. Horton, of n*«d i t Every bottle goaraate«dt&#13;
FowlerviHe. ^ 0nly SO Sold by P. A. Sigler, drnggisl.&#13;
Vice Pres.—D. O. Smith, of ^&#13;
M " i c « t a r y - W . J . L « r | t i n ; G e n o % ' ' * " * » * HOTEL. DETROIT&#13;
Di rector—E. Wilson Hardy, of * ^ *&#13;
Oceola.&#13;
AMD STEAMSHIP UNCBm&#13;
Popular route tor Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owo«so, Alma, VIt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H . BkNNBTT, \&#13;
tt.'P. A, Toledo&#13;
60 YtARff&#13;
EXPERiENCI&#13;
A r r i a a t l n l Blonder&#13;
Will often caave a horrible bum,&#13;
scald, eat or bruise. Back left's arnica&#13;
salve, the tx^t in tbV world, wilt kill&#13;
tkiejayn and promptly beat ik Caret&#13;
oideoret,'fevar sore*, ulcers, boils, lei&#13;
oat, corns and, ad skin ftraptions. Best&#13;
pit* tmto oa earth. Only 25e a hoT&#13;
Core goaraatstdV Sold by f. A. Big&#13;
AMSmOAM AMO MUROPMAfi FLAK.&#13;
19 •»• eo St'Oa r o *a»oo t m*AiA,soo. UP ToOATmOAPmm&#13;
tts is Manager.1* iu thi.i :KM! i:i&lt;*&gt; \&#13;
fief. 8»Jery,$900 a y«:-.r and \j)^nccs&lt;.&#13;
•BlraJ», bono-fide, no more; w» len&gt;. IVwition&#13;
pcrnianent. Our ^fehsrc&lt;.5, ..HV&#13;
bank in any town. \t U ma'mlv • fB«s&#13;
work coodtioted ^&#13;
•lose telMKidrwMxl auuaped envelope, ^ n l&#13;
DoaimoN ('on PAJ*V. hffPT .T, CurcAoo.,&#13;
TaAot MARKS&#13;
DCSIQNS&#13;
COPVRIOMVS a\o.&#13;
;i,- 4 -| p JA*Blyto tw»a***nrrt«t1inBg oaanrk Boptrimtooann ddpanatewrotpktkthomci&#13;
i ^ '-*-"f«oned#ntW. Handbook tm Pat _&#13;
WM| Kyency.for aecortpirjpXaat^ _ •&#13;
•tt•cnniifaraet*r.t oOUMjriAwto nnfelodntntyt tafol.r »H«aontd--t„ . aj,M1Pe*iot«l nntoat ictaek*n wn ttthhortorntt orhb arMgan.n lna fttb «, Scientific Jltncricam&#13;
L r% *- .. J A handaomelr illnirt.nit§d WMkly. Lanwat d»&gt;&#13;
• t OOOte. Refcrencer hn* i ootatton of any aetonufta Joomat. T«rmt, | T a&#13;
_, ... ^, -T &gt; i J L l gfcwr^fmiTmonthe.il SoMb»«R a w t l i i l e m&#13;
^.'•tP&#13;
TV&#13;
*Wr&#13;
^ t&#13;
--.^.,.&#13;
m?BJim^mi^M^ - "•*•,».? w&#13;
*5%r&gt;vim&#13;
" &gt; V ••:&#13;
- - ,/(i*-y..:.&#13;
/*MMMIU&#13;
, . . . ^ / - \ , l : , &gt; . v * ^ \ : ' u v V ; , ' V . . , ! ' v , A : . i . - , / , • , / , '..- •»•..,.•&lt; •-.,:.'..••':...• ••^V-.w... 7:,-./-:-:. , , : , : : . - . . ^ - : - - ^ ^ ^ - - - ^ : ^ . - , . ^ ^ - ^ . -./,: - ,, :/.:•,:'.' ..V / •/.•'\ - / . . / . . / / : . / . . - . . . , - : . - . - - f t / , / ;&#13;
S^asewsseiavepMpsaavsWEeasesa&#13;
&gt; W I W » » I » W B » * » ^ M A - W W ^ » &lt; P H M » I B I W ^ * M ^ . i n * i n .1-11 in u in, Hiiiiw . in •iifiaumn iminMiiim IIIIII; in «' it" »n^.«. T """ " " "" ' " ' ' ' ' ^ - ^ = = = = ^ ^ ^ ^ - - - - ^ - ^ - - ^ ^ — r V i I n n r ' t i n ' i a m h n l i&#13;
|T'!&gt;'«.*.&#13;
&gt;w—jiirywHf.1 '. *" WMi'H.', iini'iutWMi^i;&#13;
'k.; /Hi&#13;
'"'f^'1&#13;
•&gt;*A= ^ • / • :&#13;
-.^--&#13;
. &lt; : • &gt; . .&#13;
iife/-"v&#13;
ft*-V'W&#13;
yw •;•»* %.&#13;
f'aeti to BFmember. *&#13;
Tb« ordinal aM genuine Red Fill!&#13;
*re KwMi#¢4 Pitialor Win people&#13;
f t £5$ jbpx,' i£eM#omdtt*e remedy.&#13;
fyooty; pay 60 cents,&#13;
••"!toV* can work when they worlt,&#13;
pever gripe or pie Ice yon sick, K niiis&#13;
^¾¾¾ Liver Prtia, Bowel iWj^tor.&#13;
I-&gt;w»iity tive doses, 36 cent*.&#13;
^l«a**nti safe^cd sore are KnWBlack&#13;
IMsrrbcea Fill*. Cure* lummer&#13;
torn plaints, dysentery and at! peine of&#13;
thV-^mnuai and Dowels. Only 26&#13;
tents box. . Y&#13;
KaillV Blue Kidney Pill core back-&#13;
#jsil«i.joi«» Q'tilj 25 e^nts box.&#13;
-nsr&#13;
^&#13;
- j / -¾.,&#13;
• » X&#13;
urn niad« by tafrnp Knill's Dyspepsia&#13;
I'ahipts.. They will core Indigestion,&#13;
torreet all htooiaiib troubles, destroys&#13;
all toul unf#$ lor 26c"box. Best and&#13;
iheape*t. Guar ran tard bv yoot drug/&#13;
gest. Will Oorlett, Dexter.&#13;
W *J1 Darrow, Ptnckney.&#13;
AL4. 8QR?8,&#13;
• « * • THUNTEES&#13;
-INQ.OF ALU&#13;
«*nd stored i n large taufei .from&#13;
which it can be ahifted aotozDarioally . , . - M M ^4 ^ ,&#13;
to W or an parta of the mmmt in J P^WMMSW-- KRUOER THE MOST OARH&#13;
Biich- a manner ae to amotber a Are effectlTely,&#13;
!a a new idea to be need in&#13;
change at Indlanapolte. ted.&#13;
the new Telephone Companj'e Bx-&#13;
Thla 1« a Boer dejicacy: A great&#13;
eonare elloe la out off a loei made ot&#13;
eoerfte unsifted meai. and covered with&#13;
r thick layer of Jam—preferably atraw.&#13;
berry. A;row-j»f^aardAnet la then placed&#13;
on top and the oil from the sardine&#13;
box is liberally poured over the whole.&#13;
ATnewly married couple In Portland/&#13;
Me., who are both deaf, and are trying&#13;
houeekeeplng -without a servant, have&#13;
devised an Ingenious arrangement for&#13;
i. • • -»'_-'u- . . A u-M»ir„i t^*^ door bell, by which a caller, when&#13;
Piiiu-Rwwt sroma.bs and breaths |»e presses the button lights the lamps,&#13;
. . * / • &gt; * •&#13;
A \ - .-•y&#13;
THEGPEAT&#13;
JaSTOM",&#13;
AT/VE.&#13;
Bar-Ben is the greatest known • « VBABBHABK.&#13;
nerve tonic and blood purifier. * ^ » - • * • • * » •&#13;
It creates solid flesh, muscle and STRENGTH,&#13;
clears tbe^brain. makes toe blood pure and rich,&#13;
and causes a general feeling of health, power&#13;
and renewed vitality, while the generative organs&#13;
are helped t o regain their normal powers) and&#13;
the sufferer is quickly m a d e conscious of direct&#13;
benefit One box will work wonders, sia should&#13;
perfect a cure. 60 da. A BOX; 6 boxes, $2.50, For&#13;
sale by druggists everywhere, or mailed, sealed.&#13;
&amp;,&amp;S$BLP* l*10*- Address DRS. BARTON&#13;
AND BENSON. Bar-Ben Block,devel&amp;pd. O.&#13;
IV! s«le b y&#13;
h\ ArSlGLBR, i&gt;rn^H6t&#13;
P i n c k n e y , . - M i c h .&#13;
and thus makes his presence known.&#13;
In Australn hotele it Is still customary&#13;
to charge extra for caudles. A&#13;
•man Who made a foot tour recently&#13;
figured out that at the 24 hotels whero&#13;
he stopped In the course of 56 days he&#13;
paid more than nine florins for light—&#13;
a sum for which be could have bought&#13;
138 candles.&#13;
The curious fact Is -revealed by the&#13;
discontinuance of the coining of the&#13;
thaler of the free city of Frankfort&#13;
that the great actor. Fanny Tanauschek,&#13;
was once &lt;beavfiful as well as interesting&#13;
la countenance. She was&#13;
Chosen queen of beauty at a Frankfort&#13;
schuetzenfest, and her features in profile&#13;
were c'H^^e^ for the heafi on the&#13;
Frankfort thaler.&#13;
The largest bell in the world is in a&#13;
Buddhist mon"atery • near Canton.&#13;
China. J t is eighteen feet high and&#13;
is forty-five feet in circumference ana&#13;
Is of solid bronze. It is one of eight&#13;
great bells • which were cast by command&#13;
of the Emperor YungTo about A..&#13;
D. 1400, and is said to have cost the&#13;
lives of eight me"n, who were killed&#13;
during the process of casting.&#13;
A $ 4 . 0 0 BOOK FOR TSctS.&#13;
The Fanners' Encyclopedia.&#13;
Everything pertaiainrto-&#13;
tfee affairs&#13;
of the farm,&#13;
h o m s e k o l d and&#13;
stock raising. Embraces&#13;
articles o n&#13;
the hone, the colt,&#13;
horse habits, diseases&#13;
o f the none,&#13;
the farm, grasses,&#13;
fruit culture, dairvtagtCOokery.&#13;
health,&#13;
cattle, sheep,swlne,&#13;
poultry, bees, t h e&#13;
dog, toilet, social&#13;
life, etc., e t c One&#13;
of the most comp&#13;
l e t e E n c y c l o -&#13;
I&gt;edias in existence.&#13;
A large book, 8x5V£&#13;
x 1% inches. 636&#13;
pages/ fully illustrated,&#13;
bound in&#13;
m cloth bind-&#13;
It has been demonstrated repeatedly&#13;
in every state in the Union and in&#13;
many foreign countries that Chamberlain's&#13;
Couurh Remedy is a certain preventive&#13;
and c i r e tor &lt;&gt;roup. i t has&#13;
become the universal remedy* lor that&#13;
disease. M V. Fisher, of Liberty, W.&#13;
Va., only-repeats what has be«n said&#13;
around the crlobe when he w r i t e r **t&#13;
have used Chamberlain's Con?b Remedy&#13;
in my family fer several years&#13;
and always with perfect success. We&#13;
believe that it. i* - n o t Onty the lest&#13;
coucrh remedy, b a t that it is a sure&#13;
cure for croup. It has saved the^Hves&#13;
^of our children a nuraber^ofyiuhies "&#13;
This remedy is for sale by K. A. Sigl&#13;
e r t D r n ^ ^ i s t .&#13;
other books costing&#13;
$4.00.- If you desire this book send us our special&#13;
offer price, $0.75, and »0.20 extra for postage and&#13;
we wlU forward the book to you. If it is not satisfactory&#13;
return it and we will exchange it or refund&#13;
your money. Send fe^our-speclal illustrated catalogue,&#13;
quoting the lowest prices on books,&#13;
"We can save you money. Address all orders to&#13;
- THE WERNER COMPANY, «&#13;
. rsbutten and Xumfecttirtrt. AkTOn, OhiO&#13;
[The Wtrner Cytripanv is thorouehly reliable.J — T'Utor&#13;
^f W&#13;
€_•- i'n HI more for »ou in tto« »»y of comfortable&#13;
twi.sunci gotKi tueajj than ths Franklin BOUM, at rot «&#13;
aealj _ _&#13;
liaies an.l Laroed Streets. RaUs ar« Sl.60 to'ts.eb'a&#13;
day, Asaerican plan. Woodward and Jefferson Arannea&#13;
are only a block away, with cars to all parts of&#13;
ta« city. Excellent accommodations for wheelmen,&#13;
H . H. J A M E S A S O N , Proprietor*&#13;
JSrUo- txiid l e a r n e d Sts.« D e t r o i t , Mlel.&#13;
LAST&#13;
FORCVKM. PERFECT&#13;
SCALES &gt;ppei F i s t e d&#13;
U Steel Levers.&#13;
Co&#13;
Al CCoatmalboignuaeti oFnr eBe.e am.&#13;
Address, J o N t a OP BINOHAMTON,&#13;
•1NOHAMTON, N. Y&#13;
, There are 5,0ft0 theatres In thn&#13;
United states. More than 2,000 are&#13;
fairly claesible as legitimate and over&#13;
1,000 more are devoted to vaudeville.&#13;
2,000~000 cases of condensed milk&#13;
were put uip In this country last year&#13;
and^uai**ib'"|~and most of it was consumed at home.&#13;
This Indicates that the condensing nf&#13;
milk may become an important business.&#13;
The total wealth of the United&#13;
States will be nearly $100,0QQ.000,on&gt;)&#13;
when the next century begins, and&#13;
since the country has grown so richwe&#13;
have become one of the first among&#13;
nations that seek investment In foreign&#13;
lands.&#13;
Anaesthetics were known in the^daye&#13;
of Homer, and the Chinese 2.000 years&#13;
ago had a preparation of hetap known&#13;
as "una yo," to deaden pain—something&#13;
similar to our modern cocaine.&#13;
An Jtaliari pajper which purports to&#13;
give statistics of all canonizations and&#13;
beatifications since the year 1500 shows&#13;
that there have been no saints in Ireland,&#13;
England or Scotland from that&#13;
date.&#13;
At a depth of 27 feet a curious discovery&#13;
was made recently, a Berlin&#13;
aper says, on the Island of Gothland&#13;
the skeletons of several knights In&#13;
fuHl armor seated on. their horses.&#13;
Archaeologists think they date back&#13;
to the,ninth century.&#13;
in Detroit&#13;
A N Ciwdlted. WttH F r e e i n g&#13;
' a«*thAXrl«»«fUott»-Ten*«rfTlM&gt;u»aiHl«&#13;
• f H a r m l e s s UiraJE* K i l l e d f s * Th»lr&#13;
B i d e s - T I M 1» very Valuable.&#13;
The Boers are credited with being&#13;
t r e a t hunters, and chief of them itf&#13;
his younger days wa# President Kruger,&#13;
whose daring in attacking a lion&#13;
single handed, with a bunting knife,&#13;
has many times been told. When tht&#13;
Boers migrated from Cape Colony to&#13;
the Transvaal they were forced to&#13;
clear tho way by killing 6,000 lions,&#13;
many of which were killed by Kruger.&#13;
For years the South African Boers&#13;
have been hunters, and their skill with&#13;
the knife is due to this daily practce&#13;
in the fields and woods. But with&#13;
them the killing of game has been either&#13;
a matter of dollars ad cents or&#13;
self protection.&#13;
Their creditable work of freeing&#13;
South Africa of the dreaded liqns.&#13;
which roamed ,in|such numbers that&#13;
life was rendered [unsafe anywhere in&#13;
the country, ia offset by the ruthless&#13;
destruction of the giraffe from Cape&#13;
Colony to the Botletli river. If they&#13;
killed 6.000 lions In the Transvaal_b£-_&#13;
fore existence was made safe, they&#13;
may have kiilled 60.000 of the Innocent,&#13;
graceful giraffes. In the early&#13;
days of South African history the giraffe&#13;
was the most abundant game in&#13;
the Transvaal. Matabeleland and Orange&#13;
Free State, "but the creatures has&#13;
been killed off like our American buffalo,&#13;
and the few remaining representatives&#13;
of a noble race gradually driven&#13;
north. For years past the giraffe&#13;
has been a .profitable quarry for t h e&#13;
Buer hunters, and the animal was valued&#13;
by them only because the hides&#13;
were articles of commercial use. They&#13;
were pot hun'ed, shot down in droves,&#13;
and destroyed in the greatest number&#13;
possible in every direction.&#13;
A good giraffe skin is worth from&#13;
$10 to $20 in South Africa to-day, and&#13;
much more in Europe On their hunting&#13;
trips ten and fif een years agO it&#13;
was a common matter for one hunter&#13;
to kill forty and fifty of these graceful&#13;
animals iu pne day. The reason for&#13;
this is that'the giraffe Is the most innocent&#13;
of animals and is easily hunted.&#13;
It is absolutely defenceless, and there&#13;
is hardly a case on rpco.d where a&#13;
wounded giraffe turned upon the hunter.&#13;
It is true giraffes have g^eat powers&#13;
of speed, arid they can dodge rapidly&#13;
from tree to tree in tb^e woods,&#13;
but they offer such a fafr~roark that&#13;
these tactics hardly ever save them&#13;
The hide of the animal is its chiefl&#13;
article of. value. No wonder that the&#13;
bullets often fall to pene rate th's sic71,&#13;
for it is from three-quartere to rn i' ch&#13;
thick, anl as tough a&lt;s it is thick. The&#13;
skin, when cured and tanned, makes&#13;
excellent leather tor cer:a:n purposes&#13;
The Boers make riding whips and r nduls&#13;
out of the skins they do not e'id&#13;
to Europe^ The bones of the gir:1 ..o&#13;
brve also a commercial va ue. The&#13;
leg bones are solid instead of hollow,&#13;
~ancTTn l^urope they are-4n great demand&#13;
for manufacturing bu tons and&#13;
other bone articles.- The tendon^ of&#13;
the giraffe are so strong that th y&#13;
will sustain rn eno;-:;~o^s de d.we'gfct,&#13;
which gives them pecun.ary value.&#13;
I want to let the peoplt, wM suffer&#13;
from rheumatism and &lt;iiatiea&gt; know&#13;
j that Chamberlains Pain Balm reliev&gt;&#13;
ed me alter a number of other medicines&#13;
and a doctor bad failed. It 1$&#13;
the heat liniment X have ever known&#13;
of.—J. A. Dodgen, Alpharetta, Ga.&#13;
Thousands have 0009 cored of rbeumrtisto&#13;
by this remedy. One applieation,&#13;
relieves the paiu. For sale by F*&#13;
A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
American capitalists have invaded&#13;
the Canadian iron country and organised&#13;
a company which will control the&#13;
iron, steel, coal and/ limestone output&#13;
of Newfoundland, together with the&#13;
Cape Bre'ten coalfields and the Sidney&#13;
limestone Quarries.&#13;
" Instead of the bicycle driving, t h e&#13;
-horse out of business the two havecome&#13;
to an understanding and do well&#13;
together. It is curious how these&#13;
things do clash for a time and then&#13;
sett'e down to both work out the inevitable&#13;
destiny of man.&#13;
My son has been trouble i for year*&#13;
with chronic diarrhoea. Sometime&#13;
aero [ persuaded him to take some of&#13;
Ohamberlin's Colic, Cholrea and Dfarrboer&#13;
Remedy, After using two botties&#13;
of 25=£fliit size he was cured. I&#13;
I*.*»r*&#13;
w &gt;&#13;
^'-•TMiijg^.fi^rttai* W&#13;
Manasrer Martin, of tue j^arson&#13;
drag store, inlorms us that he is baviaj?&gt;&#13;
gre^t ran on Oh*»lwrla&gt;o4e&#13;
QoQirh Remedy} 8e salU tlf a littles&#13;
of that sjedicioe to ooo or any other&#13;
kind, and it fftves great satiafaction.&#13;
fa these days of la grippe there fa&#13;
nothing like Chamberlain'i CouH&#13;
Remedy to stop thn coqgh, heal up&#13;
the sore throat and lnn«e and gives&#13;
relief in a very abort time. k The ealeo&#13;
are growing, and ail who tr/ ^_»f»K&#13;
pleased with its prompt aetioaf-iy8oatb.&#13;
Cbieago Daily Calumet. For sale by&#13;
F. A. SiffLer, drugget..&#13;
give this testimonial, hoping someone&#13;
similarly effected may read it and be&#13;
benefited—Thomas C. Bower, Glencoe.&#13;
0 . For sate by P. A. Si«ler, dra^s?ist&#13;
USEFUL SUGGESTIONS.&#13;
For burns and scalds apply vaseline.&#13;
It will give speedy-relief and is a sure&#13;
cure. Do not allow the burns to Ixsi,&#13;
come dry. but keep them well covered&#13;
with vaseline.&#13;
Camphor moth balls will keep silver&#13;
and si ver-prated ware from tarnishing.&#13;
I was standing at a glass case iu a&#13;
large store watching the e'erk putting&#13;
these balls in 'among the silver. I&#13;
asked why she was doing this and was&#13;
told it was to keep the silver- from&#13;
tarnishing.&#13;
For bleeding from the nose bathe&#13;
the face and neck with cold warer. A&#13;
physician's wife told me that Dlecdmg&#13;
from the nose could be stopped by&#13;
chewing. Put girm or any substance&#13;
in the mouth and keep constantly&#13;
chewing it and the bleeding will stop&#13;
in a short time.&#13;
• Powdered rosin is good to stop a cut&#13;
from bleeding. After the rosin is&#13;
sprinkled on the cut wrap the part&#13;
with soft cbtton or linen. As long aa&#13;
the wound feels, feverish keep the&#13;
cloth wet with cold water. /"&#13;
If sleeplessness Is caused by too&#13;
much blocd in the head^t may be help-&#13;
! ed by putting a cloth.Twet in cold water,&#13;
to the back of the neck.&#13;
Salt and water not too strong, will&#13;
reUeve_a tickling in the throat. Use&#13;
.water about milkwarm and gargle frequently.&#13;
Sickness of the stomach is often relieved&#13;
by drinking a'teacuplul'of-hotwater.&#13;
Drink just as hot a=s you cTvnT&#13;
Purgatives and strong physics are&#13;
hurtful. A dose of castor oil is per-&#13;
Site £iittstg ^ipfirrtr&#13;
rasusaso S V S B Y TVOBSDAY K U « N U « » T , .&#13;
Bailor and 2*ropri*tor.&#13;
Kabscriptton Price $1 in Advance / :&#13;
Sotered at ttte Poetofflc* at Pioc*aay, J£lo*l«a»«&#13;
as eecood-ciase master;&#13;
Advertising rate* mads known on sppJtestios.&#13;
Business Cards, |4.oo per year, r&#13;
Peata and marrlase uoticea paMisaed tree.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may be paM&#13;
for, if desired, b / presenting the office wita tickets&#13;
of admission, l a owe ticteteare act iiroutfat&#13;
to the office, regaiar rates will be charged.&#13;
AU matter In local notice column trill be enarf&#13;
ed at 0 cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
insertion. Where no time is speelned, all notices&#13;
will be inserted ontil ordered llacuatinaed, and.&#13;
wiU be cnarr»d for a c u w a i n 4 y . ^§r- \U changes&#13;
of advertiMments MDSf rea^h this omee as early&#13;
as T o s s o a r morning to in*ore an Insertion t h e&#13;
same week.&#13;
SOB PBMTIjrG/&#13;
In aU its branches, a specialty. . We have sU kinds&#13;
and the lateat styles o f rype, etc., waich enables&#13;
as »0 execute all kinds of work, such aa Books,&#13;
Pamplete, Posters, Programmes, BUi tieada, Note&#13;
Heads, {Statement*, Cards, Auction BU1», etc., i s&#13;
saperier styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
o-v as good work can lw aoae. '&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
P-BS81DKNT . ^ - . , . . . _ viex. Mcfntyrs&#13;
TttuuTESs E. L. Ttioinpaoa, Alfred rfjius.&#13;
Daniel Bicn&amp;rde, -eo. Bowinin, Samuel&#13;
Sykes, If. 1&gt;. Jobnson.&#13;
( J L B H K . . . . B. (LTeeple&#13;
X^asAscasa......MM. . • • ......^..-....^... w. c^ jLtirpny&#13;
ASBBSSOH ..-« -M W V A . 0*rr&#13;
STRBBT COMXISSIONBH .J. Monks.&#13;
MAaSAHL A. Jfi. rfi-»#a.&#13;
UitALTUurrioBft.,..,... . . . . D r . t i . K. SUU&lt;&#13;
AiTotiNicY...WWM .MM.. ...iim •••««•. n , A. o&gt;irr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
MBTUOOlSTEPlSOOPAliCtfUaCtt.&#13;
Hev. Cbaa. Siinpoon, ptutor. $*rnc&lt;i4 avury&#13;
bandsy morning, at 10:3^, and arery Sandsy&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
eventnga. Sunday ecuool at cloaa of aiorning&#13;
service. LBAJ. SiQLsa, 8upt.&#13;
CO &gt; 0 » « K Q A n « N A L CHUttCH.&#13;
Bpv. 0. W. itice :S?a etor. Service every&#13;
Sunday raorninj st 1U:&amp;) and erdry S j a i i y&#13;
eveninK at 7:UC o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. SaaJAy school at close ot aoro-&#13;
Inif service, tt. U. f«wple , ia.pi. Aon iCead, iac&#13;
T h a t T t t o b b i u f f H e a d a c t s w&#13;
WoUld qmi'kly l«&gt;nve -yoth if ysej&#13;
used Dr. Kind's New Life Pills&#13;
Thousands of sufferers have proved&#13;
their matehless merit for tick andaar*&#13;
vous heal aches. They make pure&#13;
blood and strong nerves and build a p&#13;
your health; Easy to take. Try Uesa.&#13;
Ooty 25c, money back if n o t&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, druggist.&#13;
FEMININE OBSFRVER,&#13;
fectiy harmless and is sure to rel eve&#13;
the stomach. It is good for bilious&#13;
colic and if taken in time may prevent&#13;
serious illness.&#13;
FANCY WORK DO-NT'S&#13;
ST. ilAtt^'S CATHOLIC Ct£U KOd.&#13;
Hev. H. J. Uotnmarforil, P*-stit. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at7:30o'clock&#13;
high mssS witnsermon at 9:40 a. in. CateebiematoiOU&#13;
p. m., vespers ana benediction at 7:iu p. m.&#13;
SOCIETIES.&#13;
\h* A. O.-Ki, ^'V'tftiyi^tftiJUllv!gi''T^&lt;&gt;^ *v«ry&#13;
tbird S n a i i / iactxelTrT vTitcui* 'tilf"-—&#13;
Jatxo Tuomiy an I \Iiij tC-^u/, ' &gt; i it/ &gt; &lt;i -gaM,&#13;
EPV70RTH LEAGUE. Meets" every Suniay&#13;
evening at «}:0O oclook in too \4. ci. ouurcu. A&#13;
cordial invitation U extende-l to evaryoiid, ii)Mciaily&#13;
young people. Mrs. stalls (iraaam Pre-*&#13;
i a i s n \ ^ ESTJS\.v &gt;^ io JiarTT^Tlet.&#13;
ii^a every Sunday av&lt;mia^ m d:l) t*rin 1 mt,&#13;
Misls &amp; titta Carp^atar; Sdcr^tafy, A.a, 0. Y. &gt;i.&gt;n.&#13;
11H1&#13;
in&#13;
^HE ^V. C. T. U. tneits the beat friJjy of eaoii&#13;
&gt;ntb at -ivi~ p. in, at t ie ho ne of Or. 1. v%.&#13;
_ , , , , Sigler. Bveryoae iatereatud it* teinperano* is&#13;
D o n t CUt t h e e d g e s o f a n y p i e c e o f j coadially i n v i t o Mrs. 'jeal Siller, Pr«»; At*.&#13;
Etta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
If, . - . r*-fi&#13;
'&lt;a^.\&#13;
W'f carry a'&#13;
StfK&#13;
vnlt&#13;
!:.. f i o r d s ; •&#13;
cil ;a&#13;
$1,.T0U.IU&gt;00&#13;
:.'"• i j » " - —»'&#13;
••L&amp;**t*Fr- ' /&lt;'*?:.**? f-&gt;!i&gt;!'-&#13;
2o.UKJ k'ltcr&#13;
every day&#13;
occupy the talleat mercenttU building tn the world. We hsvi;&#13;
over a,ooe^ooo customers.. sixteen hundred clerks are constantly x engaged filling out-of-town orders.&#13;
O U R G E N E R A L C A T A L p Q U E is the book of the peepleWholesale,&#13;
Prices tos E vrr'SM v . has over 1,000 pagee, 16,000 il lust rat. oris, end&#13;
60,000 descriptions ot' r..&#13;
each co^y. V.'cv/ant;&#13;
your f;ood ./ • / : r '-. ^; w&#13;
rH'\\lM^\\*&gt;Y''i\%/ \'^:'&gt;&amp;*S'9&gt; t&gt;\} •'•'•'••'• 'j^nAvi.and ittadiionStrwj;&#13;
. « - : i &gt;&lt;•&gt;». •&#13;
Th© love of self outlasts all othe&gt;i&#13;
dievotlon.&#13;
SimpMoity is the last resource of (ho:&#13;
knowing womnn.&#13;
If tirre is money, how many are jruil -&#13;
ty of stealing fortunes.&#13;
To keep, your husband absolutely&#13;
truthful do not cr.teohise him.&#13;
True politeness consists in treaties:&#13;
othe:-«! as you wou&gt;d care to be treated&#13;
yourself.&#13;
Dresser covers showing polka-riots&#13;
scattered over a wliite ground, are the&#13;
correct thing this season.&#13;
• No man is eo absolutely1 disagreeable&#13;
as tfe one wnose manner is either overly&#13;
gushing or absolutely boorten.&#13;
Why is it that the woman who cau&#13;
only afford one Hew&#13;
p-e^era1 !y "selects one&#13;
work until it is dampened and pressed.&#13;
Don t i o gainst natu e in your shadings&#13;
jor desifeuo. r&gt;iu^ao_.ib and leaves&#13;
should a.'AM/.s be wovKed in tints like&#13;
the natural ones.&#13;
Don't -forgeT that pure white and&#13;
green are, alter all, the daintiest ancl&#13;
pre;tie«st for table ;pieceo, no matter&#13;
how briillaut the oOxuiuig.'&#13;
Don't use an ironing board for pressing&#13;
embroideries uu.c-ss it is well and&#13;
softly p.uld.d-wi.h tii'Lk flannel. This&#13;
is nece'sc-ry to r. i^e the work and&#13;
bring uut the ue.-tsu.&#13;
Don't h-ve large flowers or designs&#13;
on small pieces, i :' . tive results are&#13;
o b i a i n d only by consistent treatmrent&#13;
acco.-viius tu t-iz^, kiha and the purpose&#13;
for which the .inen is intenued^.-&#13;
Don'i neglect your edges when workin?&#13;
the scallops- -t'.]e universal edge&#13;
flnLsh now. Unless they are close and&#13;
firm they will loox f.:iyed and rsurg&gt;ed&#13;
and rspeitrd washings will soon finish,&#13;
them altogether.&#13;
Don't have ug'y knots showing on&#13;
the ur.der side cf- your work. The&#13;
The C. T. A. and a. Sociev/ of this p^see, aid^t&#13;
every third Saturoay evening in the ft. Mttthevr&#13;
Hall. Jonn Donahue, President,&#13;
I7-N1QUTSOF MACCABSKS.&#13;
IVMeetevery Friday evening on or Oetore Call&#13;
of tne moon at their hall in the Swarthout btdg.&#13;
Visiting hrotbera ATK cordially invited.&#13;
CHA». UAUPBKLL, Sir Knight Oou&gt;mandat&#13;
Livingston bodge, No. 7 « , " * A. « . K-i'»&gt;sr&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or oel'ore&#13;
tbetull of the moou. Alexander dolotyre, vV. vf,&#13;
RDSR OF EASTErtS STAK meeUeach month&#13;
tne Friday eveningC&gt;ilo&gt;via^ the regular b\&#13;
a a s . MASTT RSAD, V7. .«. 0 AA.M. meeting.&#13;
LADIE.S OP THE MACCABEKS. Meet every Is.&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachmoutb at *:3u p in. a*&#13;
K. «•&gt;. C. H. Uall. VmUa,' *;dt&lt;srs vj&gt;rlUuy ta *&#13;
vited. Liua COXIWA? Lady Com.&#13;
«•&#13;
gown a sci-'^i , wi\ nir ^iue tlion- .1,0^ ..^ n e i&#13;
Kn:)ts are&#13;
brie that she becomes identified with i rubn.u 0ff whh the iron and&#13;
of such hue or fa-",- right - 1.1--.: be-'de&#13;
i t t&#13;
SB t h e&#13;
to b e&#13;
the&#13;
hereby&#13;
money on a 50&#13;
i •' ;i ; *.»"ork O'.rt&#13;
Don t ase lghi. f tne fact that otten&#13;
l i -• .. ^ LK'iSpri&#13;
ne s Many tiu.e rt che.r and more&#13;
bi.iik.wj," rt^ ;^s ...c »cmi^ed by large&#13;
\ with prices. It ^os^ts 74-centa to print ac J^mail&#13;
10 haVP one. S E N D F I F T E E N CENTS to,show&#13;
• c.i t y :: a &lt;- -••••' :" '*.!?,, with all charges orcpaid.&#13;
&gt; O I I C I ; .&#13;
VVe the una^rsi^nfd, &gt; do&#13;
Hifree to refund the&#13;
ennt bottle of Down's Elixir if it does stitches boldly designed.&#13;
not core any con^h, cold, whooping ( &gt; D r. Oarjy* fTnndition Powders aYe&#13;
conab,6r throat trpohh..' We als.o j a , t what a hor.,« needs when in bad&#13;
K uarantee Down's Elixir to cure con- condition. TVmic, biood purifier and&#13;
softtption, when used aeeord.nir to di-j W i n i ? n i r . # T h „ y a w n o r : ! o o d b a t&#13;
1 IT NIGHTS of THB LOYAL QU IBO&#13;
• \ me^'t every . second Wednesday&#13;
ev«ula* of every month id the VL. O.&#13;
T. M. Uall a t . / i t o'clock. AU vlsitlntf&#13;
U cards weteotne.&#13;
t. t&gt;. JaoKaos, Capt. (ten.&#13;
8USINSS3 CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIQ4.ER M. D- C, L, SIQACA M, O&#13;
D&amp;$. SIJLER &amp; SIGrLEfts&#13;
PQvslctai3aa.il Sar.^e'as. Ail oalts promptl&#13;
attended to d \y tr iit(nr. Oittoeoa )(aia«tr&#13;
Pinokney, Mich.&#13;
J •""DR. A. B.GREE8;&#13;
0:-: i V(* I'—iJy,r&gt; CMrsisy sad Friday&#13;
Office over Sl«ler*s Uruir Store.&#13;
:"*»r.,&#13;
1 ' ^ ; .&#13;
^;&gt;&#13;
''•'&amp;* 1&#13;
7 T&#13;
v..,'/1 •&#13;
• T f t&#13;
Zv'l&#13;
— -1&#13;
Is&#13;
i*v,&#13;
?1:&#13;
•*••* ^ ' ( J a &amp; t j j a v ^&#13;
Our fee returned if w e faU. A n y one sendin«&#13;
sketch and description of a n y invention will&#13;
: / 1 . - . — . - « « w . .»..'»7 W^»J .••". iwvu nub, promptly receive our opinion free concerninar&#13;
r * 0 h o n s . o r m o n e y back A tuM d o s e ; m e d i c i n f t a n d t l w b ? h l t ,n n M k o p Q t a ^ P J t e n U b i i i t y of same.. - H o w t o O ^ S t&#13;
^on j^oinff to (&gt;ed and small doses daring&#13;
the day vrtU oare in* most severe&#13;
colo\ a n d 8V&gt;p Che most distre^iog&#13;
COQKh,&#13;
W,vB. Darrow,&#13;
V&#13;
»v - w * . J upon request. : Patents/ ^^^.&#13;
bm-ee in prime condition. Pric^ 25c ^ 1 ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ½ ¾ ¾&#13;
f^r pack^. Por«'ai0 by. P A. 3i*- ^ ^ ¾ 1 ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^&#13;
yyr?* y? *?*!**.* °*^ / f /&#13;
• A s J H t l t e h J O s ^ ^ s V s ^&#13;
I .WA.NTE€K^The Subaoription&#13;
due on tha DISPATCH. / ;&#13;
'V":&#13;
Lt^flB^&#13;
\ .&#13;
'i!w.VL&#13;
&gt; '&#13;
ii liMi ^ ^ : ^ w ^ &amp; » i h . ^x&amp;itoK^^.i,^ii^^xi&gt;rt&#13;
'-jwrnm&#13;
\Vr :,V:^w'S'&gt;S:v&gt;.( • f&#13;
* p v » * ^ - &gt; •••• iv*&#13;
&amp;&amp;&gt;?'• " IT"&#13;
4* * a j p i&#13;
vat*':,&#13;
.V4!t 'V&#13;
• • »&#13;
FBAKK L, ANDREWS, Publisher.&#13;
"PINCKNEY, f * * MtcniOAir.&#13;
i ' .^i.&#13;
A temperance crank must he a c&#13;
Rodger. t&#13;
The whir-r-r of the alarm clock&#13;
an eye-opener.&#13;
orn&#13;
\ .&#13;
%&#13;
\&#13;
i&#13;
. r v&#13;
f *&#13;
Poverty may be a blessing, but only&#13;
when it clings to our enemies.&#13;
It is said that many a model woman&#13;
earns a living by trying on cloaks.&#13;
• . % •&#13;
waste much time reading the bill of&#13;
fare.&#13;
The test kind of local government&#13;
1B founded on the wrecks of political&#13;
machines.' - ',&#13;
The late General, Lawton didn't depend&#13;
upon the typewriter or the newspaper&#13;
interview for his heroism.&#13;
The new bankruptcy law appears to&#13;
be inviting some rather complete&#13;
smash-ups from the most unexpected&#13;
Quarters.&#13;
TALHAGE'S SERMON. of it ho sees angels of XJod hovering -allies of'that Bta to'marched Ifl'procx*-&#13;
TALK ABOUT WOMAN'S&#13;
FULNESS.&#13;
USETh*&#13;
r« Are Danjrerog* Alaremanta or&#13;
Trap* That Blo»t Ever B e Avoided&#13;
—**8h« Shall lie Called ^ o m » D " -&#13;
&lt;ien. l i t 9^3.&#13;
God, who can make no . mistake,&#13;
made man and woman for a specific&#13;
work and to move in particular&#13;
spheres—man to be regnant in his&#13;
realm; woman to be dominant in hers.&#13;
The boundary lind between Italy and&#13;
Switzerland, between England and&#13;
Scotland, is not more thoroughly&#13;
When « m * n i s - hungry _ e d o e s n ' t 4 marked than this distinction between&#13;
It is said that there is now ¢35 in&#13;
money to every person in the United&#13;
States. How many of us can fork up&#13;
that amount. «&#13;
One enterprising newspaper reporter&#13;
can generate more railway rumors&#13;
in one day than the magnates can deny&#13;
in an entire week.&#13;
, There is a strong suspicion in rational&#13;
quarters to the effect that the&#13;
belligerency of the Boers doesn't .require&#13;
any special recognition.&#13;
The cautious persons doesn't feel&#13;
that his position in society Is secure&#13;
until his nose instinctively turns up at&#13;
the mention of the names of "people&#13;
In trade."&#13;
Phillips Brooks said, in the last&#13;
Thanksgiving sermon he preached: "I&#13;
defy a. man to put his finger "upon any&#13;
page of history when it was clearer&#13;
than it is^today that, man has something*&#13;
to do with his brethren and that&#13;
they are his brethren. Yes, it belongs&#13;
to nations, too. No nation dare act in&#13;
sublime selfishness." Whether the restraining&#13;
motive be high or low, the&#13;
fact of greed, envy, hate, under some&#13;
control, is a grountT'b^hope for individuals&#13;
and governments.&#13;
Inspector-General Breckinridge, reporting&#13;
to Secretary Root, suggests the&#13;
employment of officers returned from&#13;
foreign service, and unable to perform&#13;
other duty, as professors of military&#13;
science at military colleges. There&#13;
-are many indications H/hat- t4io rpign&#13;
of peace is yet far off, and until the&#13;
millennial sun chases away the martial&#13;
clouds t h a t brood over every land it&#13;
may_be wise to instruct the youth of&#13;
the country betimes in military drill&#13;
and discipline, "A defensive force will&#13;
always be. necessary here as elsewhere,&#13;
and this plan offers congenial and easy&#13;
tasks to men whose health has been&#13;
injured in their country's service, and&#13;
promises to provide at least a framework&#13;
on which to build up an efficient&#13;
force to meet any national emergency.&#13;
the empire masculine and the empire&#13;
feminine. So entirely dissimilar are.&#13;
the fields to-jxh^ch God called them,&#13;
that you can no^ more compare them&#13;
than you can oxygen and hydrogen,&#13;
water and grass, trees and stars. All&#13;
this talk about the superiority of one&#13;
sex to the other i&amp;^an everlasting&#13;
waste of ink and speech. A jeweler&#13;
may have a scale so delicate that he&#13;
can weigh the dust of diamonds; but&#13;
where are the scales so. delicate that&#13;
you can weigh in them affection&#13;
against affection, sentiment against&#13;
sentiment, thought against thought,&#13;
soul against soul, a man's world&#13;
against a woman's world? You come&#13;
out with your stereotyped remark that&#13;
a man is superior to woman in intellect;&#13;
and then I open on my desk the&#13;
swarthy, irontyped, thunder-bolted&#13;
'writings of Harriet Martineau and&#13;
Elizabeth Browning ami George Eliot.&#13;
You come on with your stereotyped remark&#13;
about woman's superiority to&#13;
"man in the item of affection; but I ask&#13;
you where was there more capacity to&#13;
love than in John the disciple—and&#13;
Matthew Simpson the bishop and Henry&#13;
Martyn, the missionary? The -heart&#13;
of those men was so large, that after&#13;
you bad rolled it into two hemispheres,&#13;
there was room still left to marshal&#13;
the hosts of heaverr,—rmdsel^tip the&#13;
throne of the eternal "Jehovah. I deny&#13;
to man the throne intellectual. I'deny&#13;
to woman the throne affcctional. No&#13;
human phraseology will ever decline&#13;
the spheres; while there is an-intuir&#13;
tion by which we know when "a man&#13;
is in hi3 realm, and when a'woman is&#13;
in her realm, and when either of&#13;
them is out.of it. No bungling legislature&#13;
ought to attempt to make a definition,&#13;
or to say: "This is the line and"&#13;
that is', the line." My theory is, that&#13;
if a woman wants to vote she ought to&#13;
vote, and that if a man wants to embroider&#13;
and keep house, he ought to&#13;
be allowed to embroider and keep&#13;
house. Thexe are masculine women&#13;
and there are effeminate men. My&#13;
theory is that you have no right to interfere&#13;
with any one's doing anything&#13;
that is righteous. Albany and Washington&#13;
might as well decree by legislation&#13;
how a brown-thresher should&#13;
The father of the Countess Schim&#13;
melmann, now in this country doiag4l i &lt; 3 w n b u t t h e ° . u e s t l o n o f incapacity.&#13;
evangelistic work, ranked in Denmark&#13;
second in wealth to the king. The&#13;
countess has sold hundreds of precious&#13;
family jewels Jn order to carry on her&#13;
charities among thfiJiungry and needy.&#13;
General Gordon was once asked the&#13;
secret of his ability to do certain&#13;
benevolences. He confessed reluctantly&#13;
that he "gave his medals." For his&#13;
services in quelling the Taiping rebellion,&#13;
the Emperor of China conferred&#13;
on him a magnificent gold medal, and&#13;
this, his most precious possession,&#13;
Gorden gave anonymously to the Widow's&#13;
Relief Fund, after first obliterating&#13;
the proud inscription. Do not our&#13;
fly, or how deep a trout should plunge,&#13;
as to try to seek out the beight and&#13;
depth of woman'3 duty. The question&#13;
of capricity will settle finally the whole&#13;
question, the whole subject. When a&#13;
woman is prepare4 to preach, £he will&#13;
preach, and neither conference nor&#13;
presbytery can hinedr her. When a&#13;
woman is prepared to move in highest&#13;
commercial spheres, she will have&#13;
gerat influence, on exchange, and no&#13;
boards of trade can hinder her'. I want&#13;
svoman to understand that heart and&#13;
brain can overfly any barrier that&#13;
politicians may set up, and that nothing&#13;
can keep her back or keep her&#13;
own experiences with our "medals," "world are a long scene of jostle and&#13;
Whatever they be, suggest that lesser&#13;
personages ar© often satisfied with&#13;
lesser sacrifice* for their fellow-men.&#13;
^ . :&#13;
In qne of his most beautiful and affecting&#13;
poems- Longfellow mention's&#13;
some of the achievements of men who&#13;
have reached the age of fourscore&#13;
years. Such a summary, if complete,&#13;
would support the poet's assertion that&#13;
old age as well as youth is opportunity.&#13;
Worthy of a place in the list is&#13;
the service to the civilized world by&#13;
Theodor Momrasen. Past the limit of&#13;
eighty years, his energy has survived&#13;
in a remarkable measure, and he has&#13;
published a new work on Roman&#13;
criminal law, which will supplement&#13;
his authoritative contributions to the&#13;
knowledge we possess df t h e general&#13;
subject of Roman law. Work, under&#13;
proper conditions, has a preservative&#13;
influence. What if he had laid down&#13;
his .pen when' he reached his threes&#13;
c o r e ^ a n d . ten? These are many&#13;
Aances that heHfrttti* not now be&#13;
living.&#13;
My chief anxiety is, not that woman&#13;
have other rights accorded her; but&#13;
that she, by the grace of fciod, rise up&#13;
to the appreciation of the glorious&#13;
rights she already possesses. First, she&#13;
has the right to make home happy.&#13;
That realm no,one has ever disputed&#13;
with her. Men may come home at&#13;
noon or at night, and then tarry a comparatively&#13;
little while; but she all day&#13;
long governs it, beautifies it, sanctifies&#13;
it. It is within her power to make&#13;
it the most attractive place on earth.&#13;
It is the only calm harbor in the&#13;
world. You ktlow as well as I do, that&#13;
this outside world and the business&#13;
about it. 1 he ladders of heaven aro&#13;
let down to that house. Over the&#13;
child's rough crib there a r e the chantin&#13;
gs of angels that broke over Bethlehem,&#13;
It is home. These children&#13;
-may come up after awnue, ana taey&#13;
may win high position, and they may&#13;
have an affluent residence; but they&#13;
will not until their dying day forget&#13;
that humble roof, under which their&#13;
father rested,'and their mother sang,&#13;
and their sisters played. Oh, if you&#13;
would gather up all tender memories,&#13;
all the lights and shades of the heart,&#13;
all banquetings and reunions, all filial,&#13;
fraternal, paternal and conjugal affections,&#13;
and you had only just four letters&#13;
with which to spell out that height,&#13;
and depth, and length* and breadth,&#13;
and magnitude, and eternity fff meaning,&#13;
you would, with streaming eyes,&#13;
and trembling voice, and agitated&#13;
hand, write it out in those four living&#13;
capitals, H-O-M-E. .^--- —&#13;
When you want to get your grandest&#13;
idea of a queen, you do not think of&#13;
Catherine of Russia, or of Anne of&#13;
England, or of Marie Theresa of Germany;&#13;
but when you want to get your&#13;
grandest idea of a queen, you think of&#13;
the plain woman who sat opposite your&#13;
father at the table, or walked with him&#13;
arm-in-arm down life's pathway;&#13;
sometimes to the thanksgiving banquet,&#13;
sometimes to the grave, but always&#13;
together—soothing your petty&#13;
griefs, correcting your childish waywardness,&#13;
joining ' in your infantile&#13;
sports, listening to your evening&#13;
prayers, toiling for you with needle,&#13;
or at the spinning wheel, and on cold&#13;
nights wrapping you up snug and&#13;
warm. And then at last on that day&#13;
when she lay in the back room dying,&#13;
and you saw her take those thin hands&#13;
with which she had toiled for you so&#13;
long, and put them together in a dying&#13;
prayer that commended you to the&#13;
God whom she had taught you to trust&#13;
—Oh, she was the queen! The chariots&#13;
of God came down to fetch her; and&#13;
as she went up all heaven rose up.&#13;
You cannot think of her now without a&#13;
rush of tenderness that stirs the deep&#13;
foundations of your soul, and you feel&#13;
as much a child again as when you&#13;
cried en her lap; and if you could&#13;
bring her back again to speak, just&#13;
once more your name, as tenderly as&#13;
she used to'speak it, you would be \vilir_&#13;
ing to mrow yourself on the ground&#13;
and kiss the sod that covers her,~crying:&#13;
"Mother! mother!" Ah, she was&#13;
the queen—she was the queen! . Now,&#13;
can you tell me how many thousand&#13;
miles a woman like that would have to&#13;
travel down before she got to the ballot&#13;
box? Compared with this work of&#13;
training kings and queens for God and&#13;
eternity, how insignificant^seems 'all&#13;
this, work of voting for alderman and&#13;
common councilmen, and sheriffs, and&#13;
constables, and mayors, and presidents!&#13;
To make one such grand woman&#13;
as I have described, how many&#13;
thousands would you- want of those&#13;
-people who go in the round of fashion&#13;
and dissipation, going a3 far toward&#13;
disgraceful apparel as they dare go,&#13;
so as not to be arrested by the police—&#13;
their behavior a sorrow to the -"good&#13;
and a carricature to the vicious, and&#13;
an insult to that God who made them&#13;
women and not gcrgons, and tramping&#13;
on, down through a frivolous and dis-;&#13;
sipated life, to temporal and eternal&#13;
damnation.&#13;
Oh, woman, with the lightning of&#13;
your soul, strike dead at your feet all&#13;
these allurements to dissipation and&#13;
to fashion. Your immortal soul cannot&#13;
be fed on such garbage. God calls&#13;
you up to empire and dominion. Will&#13;
you have it? Oh, give God your heart,&#13;
give to God all your best energies;&#13;
give to God all your culture; give to&#13;
uod all you* refinement; give yourself&#13;
to him for this world and the&#13;
next. Soon all. these bright eyes will&#13;
be quenched, and these voices will be&#13;
hushed. For the last time you-jwjll&#13;
look upon this fair earth. Father's&#13;
hand, mother's hand, sister's hand,&#13;
slon, and by prayer and Christian&#13;
songd ^shut up more places' of dissipation&#13;
than were ever counted. Were&#13;
they opened again? Oh, yes. But is&#13;
it not a good thing to shut up the&#13;
gates of hell for two or three months?&#13;
It seemed that men engaged in the&#13;
business of destroying others did not&#13;
know how to cope with this kind of&#13;
warfare. They knew how to fight the&#13;
Maine liquor law, and they knew how&#13;
to fight the National Temperance society,&#13;
and they knew how to fight the&#13;
Sons of Temperance and Good Samaritans;&#13;
but when Deborah appeared&#13;
upon the scene, Sisera took to&#13;
his feet and got to the mountains.&#13;
It seems that they did&#13;
not know how to contend against&#13;
"Coronation," and "Old Hundred," and&#13;
"Brattle Street," and "Bethany," they&#13;
were so very intangible. These men&#13;
fo.und they could not accomplish much&#13;
against that kind of warfare, and in&#13;
one of the cities a regiment was&#13;
brought out all armed to disperse the&#13;
women. They came down in battle&#13;
array;* but oh, what poor success! for&#13;
that regiment was made up of gentlemen,&#13;
and gentlemen do not like to&#13;
shoot women with hymn books in their&#13;
hands. Oh, they found that gunning&#13;
for female prayer-meetings was a very&#13;
poor business! No real damage was&#13;
done, although there was threat of&#13;
violence after threat of violence all&#13;
over the land. I really think if the&#13;
women of the east had as much faith&#13;
in God as their sisters of the west had,&#13;
and the same recklessness of human&#13;
criticism, I really believe that in one&#13;
month three-fourtns of the grog-shops&#13;
of our cities would be closed, and there&#13;
would be running through the gutters&#13;
of the streets Burgundy, and Cognac,&#13;
and Heidsieck, and old Port, and Schiedam&#13;
Schnapps, and lager beer, and you&#13;
would save your fathers, and your husbands,&#13;
and your sons, first, from a&#13;
drunkard's grave, and secgnd, from a&#13;
drunkard's hell! To this battle for&#13;
home let all women rouse themselves.&#13;
Thank God for our early home. Thank&#13;
God for our present home. Thank God&#13;
for the coming home in heaven.&#13;
One twilight, after I l i a d been player&#13;
BUDGET OF T W ,&#13;
SOME GOOD JOitES ORK31NAV&#13;
AND SELECTED.&#13;
- r T «&#13;
A T«*!«ty of i&gt;albs. Glb«fl and Ironiaa&#13;
to Can»a a Bmlle — Flot*anaK a n *&#13;
Jateaai from t*e P4&lt;fc% y t »aa|pf-»,&#13;
Witty tafias* *« I *&lt;' * !&gt; .* '&#13;
\ 7 . .,. .--/• u;r stLMfiV t&#13;
Ha Kn«w.&#13;
* Voice, at the Telephone1—**I» Mr. Bfl^&#13;
lfag;er:yiere?,,&#13;
i , • ?• • -*&#13;
'Office Boy—"Yes, but he's busi. W h *&#13;
shall 1 tell him wants to talk -, w^lthv&#13;
h i m ? " &lt;•- SM.'&#13;
VoLce-r-"Umrm-tn-m-m-m,'Vi&#13;
Office Boy—"I dan/t get ,tt, , S p e t t&#13;
louder, please.** ' •&#13;
Voice—"Tell him he's an old fool-&#13;
He'Jl know who i£is*'V f_,t&#13;
Billlnger (upon receiving the met*&#13;
sage)—"You idiot, that's my w l f e / w&#13;
Prom the Cleveland Plain Dealer.0 ( '&#13;
i M&#13;
A Fortunate Mlstnk*.&#13;
contention. The man who has a dollar&#13;
struggles to keep it; the man who has&#13;
it not struggles to get it.; Prices up.&#13;
Prices down. Losses. Gains. Mlsrepre-,&#13;
sentations. Underselling. Buyeys depreciating;&#13;
* salesmen exaggerating.&#13;
Tenants seeking less rent; landlords&#13;
demanding more. Struggles about office.&#13;
Men who are in trying to keep&#13;
in; men out trying to.get in. Slips.&#13;
Tumbles. Defalcations. Panics. Catastrophes.&#13;
Oh, woman! thank God&#13;
you have a home and that you may be&#13;
queen i ; it. Better be there than wear&#13;
a Victoria's coronet. Better be there&#13;
than carry the purse of a princess.&#13;
Your alfo'de, mayv be humble, but you&#13;
can, by your faith in God, and your&#13;
cheerfulness of demeanor, gild it'with&#13;
splendors such as an upholsterer's&#13;
hand never yet kindled. .There are&#13;
abodes In every city—humble* two&#13;
stories; four plain, unpapered rooms;&#13;
undesirable neighborhood; A and yet&#13;
there is a man who would die on the&#13;
threshold rather than surrender.&#13;
^ Why? It Is home, Whenever he thinks&#13;
will no longer be in yours. It will be&#13;
night, and there will come Up a cold&#13;
wind from the Jordan, and you Will&#13;
start. Will it be a lone woman on a&#13;
trackless moor? Ah, no! Jesus will&#13;
come up in that hour and-offer his&#13;
hand, and he will say: "You stood by&#13;
me when you were well; now I will&#13;
not desert you when you are sick." One&#13;
wave of his hand, and the storm will&#13;
drop; and another wave of his hand&#13;
and midnight will break into midnoon;&#13;
and another wave of his hand and the&#13;
chamberlains of God will come down&#13;
from the- treasure-houses of heaven,&#13;
with robes lustrous, blood-washed and&#13;
heaven-glinted, in which you will array&#13;
yourself for the marriage supper of&#13;
the Lamb. And then with Mariam,&#13;
who struck the timbrel of the Red sea;&#13;
and with Deborah, who led the Lord's&#13;
host into the fight; and with Hannah,&#13;
who gave her Samuel to the Lord; and&#13;
wkh Mary who rocked Jesus to sleep&#13;
while there were angels singing in the&#13;
air; and with the sisters of charity,&#13;
who bound up the battle-wounds of&#13;
the Crimea, you will, from the challice&#13;
of God, drink to the soul's eternal rescue.&#13;
-&#13;
Your-«ominion .is home, 0 woman!&#13;
What a brave fight for home the&#13;
women of Ohio made some ten or fifteen&#13;
years ago, when^hey banded to- It is a great satisfaction to find out&#13;
gether and in many of the town* and I that what we fcalieve is reaTy | 0&#13;
ing with the children for some time.&#13;
I lay down on_the loung:e to_resL__The&#13;
children said, play more. Children always&#13;
want to play more. And, half&#13;
asleep and half awake, I seemed to&#13;
dream this dream: It seemed to me&#13;
that I was in a far-distant land—not&#13;
in Persia,'although more than oriental&#13;
luxuriance crowned the cities; nor&#13;
the tropics—although more than tropical&#13;
frultfulness filled the gardens; nor&#13;
in Italy—although more than Italian&#13;
softness filled the air. And I wandered&#13;
around, looking forthorns'"and nettles,&#13;
but I found none of them grew there&#13;
And I walked forth, and I saw the sun&#13;
rise, and I said: "When will it., set&#13;
again?" and the sun, sank not. And&#13;
I saw the people in. holiday apparel,&#13;
and I said: "When do they put on&#13;
workingman's, garb again, and delve&#13;
in the mine, and swelter at the forge?"&#13;
but neither the garments nor the robes&#13;
did they put off. And I wandered in&#13;
the suburbs, and I said: "Where do&#13;
they bury the dead of this great city?"&#13;
and I looked along by the hills where&#13;
it would be most beautiful for the dead&#13;
to sleep, and I saw castles and towns&#13;
and battlements; but not a mausoleum&#13;
nor monument nor white slab could&#13;
I see. And I went into the great&#13;
chapel of the town and I said: "Where&#13;
do.the poor worship? where are the&#13;
benches"~,oh which they sit?" and a&#13;
voice answered: '^We havie no poor&#13;
in this great city." And I Wandered&#13;
out, seeking to find the place where&#13;
were the hovels of the destituifce; and&#13;
I found mansions of amber ana ivory&#13;
and gold, but no tear did I see or&#13;
3igh hear. I was bewildered, and I&#13;
sat under the shadow of a great tt*ee,&#13;
and I said: "What am'I, and whence&#13;
uuuit/a all Llfly?" ••And at that moment&#13;
there came from among the leaves,&#13;
skipping up the flowery paths and&#13;
across the sparkling waters, a very&#13;
Jagson—"Mus' 'pologlze ole (hie)&#13;
man. Mistake all found. You mad?&#13;
(hie) mistake in housh. M'wife made&#13;
mistake in man. She must thought it&#13;
was (hie) me."—Philadelphia* Inquirer.&#13;
• &lt; n :A*fc«r»jffhlnff.&#13;
Sparkle—Yem?-sis£ej{ Js^wearing one&#13;
of Miss Pinkie's rings. I wish you'd&#13;
get it for-m©,—t want to take- the&#13;
measure. Going to buy an_ engagcmenta*&#13;
in#,. you Jeadm «^r •&lt;*»•&#13;
BarKley-Eh? Tlas , Miss, Pinkie aft»&#13;
cepted you?&#13;
Sparkle—Sfhe will, .when I propose.&#13;
Last night s,he aske$ mp how'. I liked&#13;
her mother'.—Ne\y York &gt;Veekly.&#13;
ThH Uapt&gt;enAd iii pittftbnr;;.&#13;
From the Chtea^o Dally News: Ho-&#13;
4e-l-Guest (as fire alarm sounds)—Does&#13;
the fire department here haye__aay difin&#13;
locating a .fire?&#13;
Landlord—Not any more than in any&#13;
other city, 1 suppose. But why do you&#13;
ask?&#13;
Hotel Guest—Well, it's so smoky&#13;
here I don't see how they ever find&#13;
the fire.&#13;
r~ Not Dead Yet.&#13;
Laura—While Jack was calling the&#13;
other evening he made the statement&#13;
that he would kiss me or die in tft»&#13;
attempt. '&#13;
Belle—Yes? (After a pause.) Well,&#13;
did he kiss you?&#13;
Laura—You haven't read any account&#13;
of Jack's death in the papers,&#13;
have you?—Paris American "Messenger.&#13;
Of Otlior HfKhti*.&#13;
Ethel (rummaging in grandma's&#13;
drawer)—"Oh, grandma, what a curious&#13;
key this is!"&#13;
Grandma—"Yes, my^dear. That was&#13;
your grandfather's latch-key."&#13;
"And you keep it in memory of old&#13;
days?"&#13;
"No, my dear; old nights."—London&#13;
Tit-Bits. .&#13;
Mutual Grief.&#13;
bright and sparkling group; and when&#13;
I saw their step I knew it, and when&#13;
I heard thei'r voices I thought I knew&#13;
them; but their apparel was so1 different&#13;
from anything I had ever seen,&#13;
1 bowed a stranger to strangers. But&#13;
after awhile, When they had clapped&#13;
their hands and shouted: "Welcome!&#13;
welcome!" the mystery was solved, and&#13;
I saw that time Jiad passed and eternity&#13;
had come, and that God had gathered^&#13;
us up into a higher home; and I said:&#13;
"Are we all here?" and the voices of&#13;
innumerable generations answered:&#13;
"All here;" and while tears of gladness&#13;
ware raining down our cheeks,&#13;
and the branches of Lebanon cedars&#13;
were clapping their hands, and the&#13;
towers of the great city^were chiming&#13;
their welcome, we began to laugh, and&#13;
singr and leap, and shout: "Home!&#13;
home! home!"&#13;
And then I feltia child's hand on /my&#13;
face, and it wtfke me up. The children&#13;
wanted more play. Children always&#13;
want to play more.&#13;
"Do not be desirous of having things&#13;
done quickly. Desire to have things&#13;
done quickly prevents their being done&#13;
thoroughly. Do not look at small advantages."&#13;
"What&#13;
girl?"&#13;
"Boo-hbo, vooe sittin' on my&#13;
tart!"—Punch. u&#13;
little&#13;
jam&#13;
More Ont&#13;
From -the Chicago Daily *New3:&#13;
"Brown," said the partner of the corner&#13;
office, "you put that notice on the&#13;
wall, 'No Loafing/ and there are now .&#13;
actually five men lounging directly under&#13;
i t Go out and tell them to move&#13;
"No/'.answared^Brown, "r won't d o *&#13;
&gt;&#13;
i t They are beneath my notice." 'K4^'&#13;
,1 -v; ;iM&#13;
/ M i A&#13;
:!.&amp; *&lt;W* ' ' • &gt; &lt; » • : ^ : - ^ ^ : ^&#13;
S1&amp;5¾ / W; ) • * ; m . , ^ « f 445 W*iF&#13;
v .&#13;
• * i . &gt; • • * • .&#13;
f$:^^$M!\u&#13;
•I w&#13;
^ i|iin i ii &gt; l , n&#13;
7-^,^ I*".'.' •'• 'ff^-'Vw'' ^^ ~ ^&#13;
* p - » - s * — im&#13;
MMMBlMlMMMHi^MH Ho//&#13;
H i t&#13;
- "About tilrty JCUJ w o I&#13;
bought a bottle of I Aver'5 Hair&#13;
Vigor to stop my hair from&#13;
falling out. One-half 1 bottle&#13;
cured me. A few days ago my&#13;
nair began to fall out asata. 1&#13;
lent totjbe_fl^£ane_ snelf and&#13;
found the old bottle of Hair&#13;
Vigor just as good as wben I&#13;
Bought i t . " — ] . C. Baxter,&#13;
Braidwopd, 111» Sept. 27, 1899.&#13;
Keeps&#13;
Years&#13;
Ayer's Hair VigotJa_certainly&#13;
the most economical preparation&#13;
of its kind on the market,&#13;
A little of it goes a long way.&#13;
And then, what you don't need&#13;
now you can use some other&#13;
time just as well.&#13;
It doesn't take much of it to&#13;
stop falling of the hair, restore&#13;
color to gray hair, cure dandruff,&#13;
and keep the hair soft and glossy.&#13;
There's a great deal of good and&#13;
an immense amount of satisfaction&#13;
in every bottle of it.&#13;
$l.W a bottle. AH drcrjlsts.&#13;
THE BlDICULOUB.&#13;
If Christina Chrlstofel had been&#13;
weighed in tireUatanrer shxrWroM ijtrt-1-t**** * -«tr«et car people stared;&#13;
ftavelyeea found wanting, i n d e e d , she&#13;
would have been found to be overprovided.&#13;
Christina was a large baby when&#13;
whe was born—so large that the miree&#13;
had to split open the sleeves of the little&#13;
shirts to get them on the dimpled&#13;
arms, and to put strings in the neckbands&#13;
ot the embroidered frocks. At&#13;
the ago of 2, Tiny, as she was Inconsistently&#13;
called, was as large and robust&#13;
as most children of 5. At 13 she had&#13;
her full growth and was ashamed to be&#13;
seen with the little girls in her grade&#13;
at school.&#13;
, Her thirteenth year was a distressing&#13;
period for Tiny, for she made the miserable&#13;
discovery that shq was ridiculous.&#13;
She had suspected it for some&#13;
time, but the remarks which she overheard,&#13;
and the unwillingness of certain&#13;
trig girls she knew to be seen with&#13;
her, confirmed her in the suspicion.&#13;
Moreover, she began to study her mirror.&#13;
There was no doubt about it—&#13;
the 4argo neck, with its pink-tinted&#13;
creases of flesh, the soft double chin,&#13;
the big arms and ovcrconspicuous&#13;
bust, the great waist girth, and the&#13;
heavy hips were distinctly ridiculous.&#13;
The-night that Tiny actually realized&#13;
it she wept. It was a beautiful night,&#13;
as it happened, and she was sitting by&#13;
her window. The moon flooded the&#13;
world with a sort of bluish light. Only&#13;
a few stars; wefe~seen, pale and inef- I ble that through the spaces which the&#13;
Write the Doctor&#13;
If you do notobtalnall the benefit*you&#13;
desire from tho use cf the Vigor, write&#13;
the Doctor about it. Address,&#13;
Dr. J. C. A Y E B , Lowell, Mass.&#13;
Many S t u d e n t s of F o r e s t r y .&#13;
The number of students taking part&#13;
In the college of forestry of Cornell&#13;
university has become so large that it&#13;
has been found necessary to provide&#13;
oew quarters.&#13;
Florida, W e a t I n d i e s a n d Central America.&#13;
The facilities of the Louisville &amp;&#13;
Nashville Railroad for handling tourists&#13;
and travelers destined for all&#13;
points in Florida, Cuba, Porto Rico,&#13;
Central America, or for Nassau, are unsurpassed.&#13;
Double dally lines of sleeping&#13;
cars are run from Cincinnati,&#13;
Louisville, Chicago and St. Louis&#13;
through Jacksonville to interior Florida&#13;
points, and to Miami, Tampa and&#13;
New Orleans, the ports of embarkation&#13;
ror the cou^itries^menttaned. " F o r&#13;
ers, etc., write Jackson Smith, D. P.&#13;
A., Cincinnati, O.&#13;
, — - 3 •&#13;
No man can be truly known until he&#13;
is seen through the eyes of love.&#13;
There is nothing like faith in God for&#13;
taking the bitterness out of life.&#13;
rw N,»+» + + » ? » + »&#13;
Try Grain=0!&#13;
Try Graih=0!&#13;
Ask yon Grreer to-day to show yon&#13;
a package orSRAIN-O, the new food&#13;
drink that takes the placo of coffee.&#13;
r The children may drink itjrithout&#13;
injury as well as the adult. All who&#13;
try it, like it. * GRAIN-0 has that&#13;
rich seal brown of Mocha or Java,&#13;
but it is made from pure grains, and&#13;
the most delicate stomach receives it&#13;
without distress. £ the price of coffee-&#13;
15 cents and 25 cents per package.&#13;
Sold by all grocers&#13;
Tastes like Coffee&#13;
Looks like Coffee !•.•'. v&#13;
Insist that your groceftfiiveryou GRAIN-0&#13;
Accept no Imitation.&#13;
!&#13;
•&#13;
T l D O D Q V N E W DISCOVERY. Rives&#13;
B ^ I m \ e w B ^ » 3 i 1 quick relief and cures worst&#13;
cases. Book of testimonials and 10 DAYS* treatment&#13;
tlllS. DR. H. H. OKKV8 SPSS. 10¾ E. AtlaaU. Ba.&#13;
B E %i A I f | I I AGet your Pension&#13;
rCHwlllllWDOUBLE QUICK&#13;
Write CAPT. O'PARRELL, Pension Agent,&#13;
1433 Ne^r York Avenoe. WASHINGTON, Q.C» CARTERS INK Sdentinoally made—&#13;
P** Therefor© .THBBBST. •?&#13;
« « * • « &amp;&#13;
aaoked In a few bows with ^ _. • _&#13;
MAUSERS' LIQUID EXTRACT OP SHOW.&#13;
.Jade from hiekori wood. Cheaper, oleaster,&#13;
sweeter, and m m than the old way. Sand for&#13;
einoias. JUKIUVaiU**BKO*lliltea( l»a»&#13;
* • * &lt; « « « , * « « * « - « - « * * « * &gt; * _ „ * * * POTATOESftSff lareeet feet r«TAT^«M»m niWtrtca. Trtees *&#13;
St.M* a*. «•!&gt;•••• stesfcs ef Been, O e w aad Ttrm »&#13;
•eats. Urn* tale aetlee aae-lOe far eaurietea* It ft aaa."""»CLavER{ »•* A. saima &gt;«rft co., u capsaa^wia,. w i i I W M W » P » W W W W &gt; 1&#13;
fectual in the midst of the chastened&#13;
f lendor. The trees were unreal and&#13;
adowy, the breath of the wind indescribably&#13;
caressing. Something in the&#13;
glory of this night filled poor Tiny&#13;
with a longing and regret to which she&#13;
could give no name. She realized dimly,&#13;
as a child might, that the great joys&#13;
of womanhood wonlcPnever' be hers.&#13;
Nefesiover would ever creep out of the&#13;
blue moonshine to murmur beneath&#13;
her balcony—providing she had one.&#13;
She could never be dignified nor impressive,&#13;
nor fascinating. It was simply&#13;
her destiny to be fat. She was&#13;
doomed to drag about a fatiguing burden&#13;
of flesh, which would be her shame&#13;
and hindrance. She looked at her softly&#13;
tinted flesh with, loathing. She felt&#13;
shtf would have endured any torture to&#13;
have got rid of it.&#13;
Seven years later, after Tiny had&#13;
been graduated from the state university&#13;
and had returned to her home, she&#13;
in the course of years she had a '&#13;
great many beautiful thoughts, but she&#13;
never looked as if she did. She seemed&#13;
to grow larger every year.' f f s h e enat&#13;
church the children giggled; she could&#13;
not be induced to go to a party or a'&#13;
dinner. She especially objeoted to&#13;
dinners.&#13;
"I . shall b? suspected of being&#13;
greedy," she said. So she staid by&#13;
herself and found her friends in books.&#13;
She tried not to grow bitter, but she&#13;
did, and then her complexion got sallow.&#13;
She took but little exercise. She&#13;
let time.go by and was painfully conscious&#13;
of Its passage.&#13;
One day she died of a sudden difficulty&#13;
of the heart, and even in death she&#13;
could not manage to look dignified.&#13;
There was no shroud large enough to&#13;
fit her, and mree sewing women came&#13;
and gossiped and snickered, and measured,&#13;
and basted, and stitched, and&#13;
with the aid of the undertaker and his&#13;
assistants got her into it. The coffin&#13;
came too short and had to be sent back&#13;
and made over, and the grave had to&#13;
be lengthened a bit "at the last moment.&#13;
When at last she was safely&#13;
laid away a little sardonic wind started&#13;
among the bushes and made a rasping&#13;
laughter. It was the comment oV&#13;
nature upon her preposterous daugh*&#13;
ter. Later, when the night came, the&#13;
moonlight which she loved streamed&#13;
over her grave; the lake intoned with&#13;
solemnity. A peace and loveliness&#13;
brooded over everything. It is possi&#13;
moonlight sweeps a soul, liberated&#13;
from hampering flesh, darted with&#13;
ecstasy. It could enter God's presence&#13;
clothed in its inherent majesty. It&#13;
was released from the thrall of the&#13;
ridiculous.&#13;
ENGLISH CRANKS.&#13;
FLED TO HER ROOM.&#13;
happened to be called upon to entertain&#13;
one pt her brother's friends for an&#13;
entire evening. The friend, Who was&#13;
named Quinton Sherry, had come to&#13;
spend a fortnight with her brother&#13;
James, and James being out of town&#13;
upon the evening of young Sherry's_arrival,&#13;
Tiny did what she could. She&#13;
had hated to meet him, for she always&#13;
disliked to have men look at her. She&#13;
was particularly embarrassed when she&#13;
met Sherry, for he was an uncommonly&#13;
small man. She was almost a head&#13;
.taller than he and fully twice his&#13;
width. She wanted to yell with laugh*-&#13;
ter as they sat facing each other in&#13;
the drawing-room.&#13;
For the next fortnight she was almost&#13;
at peace. The world seemed for&#13;
the time being to be made up not of&#13;
material things, but of ideals. Unsuspected&#13;
beauties came to light in her&#13;
thought; she, who had always hated&#13;
herself, began t o enjoy herself, presented&#13;
to herself as she was by her&#13;
lover's appreciation and flattery. For&#13;
they were lovers. There was no doubt&#13;
about it. He told her so one night&#13;
when "the moon burned blue, just as&#13;
it had that night five years before.when&#13;
she discovered sorrow, and4" she&#13;
stbopecTover and kissed him. She had&#13;
to stoop quite a way. Then, suddenly,&#13;
all her fabric of joy tottered and fell&#13;
in a ridiculous ruin about her feet. She&#13;
laughed harshly and snatched her hand&#13;
from his and fled to her room. The&#13;
next morning he received a cruel note.&#13;
"1 will not be made a spectacle," it&#13;
said. "We would be ludicrous if we&#13;
married. We cannot afford to furnish&#13;
material_for the jests of our friends.&#13;
We have no business even to suffer—&#13;
only the beautiful and interesting havea&#13;
right to suffer. Please never let me&#13;
see you again. Where has your sense&#13;
of humor been while you have been&#13;
making love to me? I shall laugh to&#13;
my last day, thinking of It." '&#13;
The letter was really a cry. of pain,&#13;
but Sherry was too hurt to realize it.&#13;
He did as he was told. He went away&#13;
never saw her again.&#13;
U. S. SENATOR ROACH&#13;
Says Peruna, the Catarrh Cure,&#13;
Gives Strength and Appetite.&#13;
T h e E c c e n t r i c i t i e s o f Genius S o m e time a&#13;
P r o v e R i d i c u l o u s .&#13;
When I lived at Newport, R. I., from&#13;
1864 to 1878, says Col. T. W. Higginson,&#13;
in the October Atlantic* there was a&#13;
constant procession of foreign visitors,&#13;
varying in interest, and often quite&#13;
wanting in it.. I remember one eminent&#13;
literary man who, in spite of all&#13;
cautions to the contrary, appeared at a&#13;
rather fashionable day-reception in&#13;
what would now be called a golf suit,&#13;
of the loudest possible plaid, like* that&#13;
of the Scotch cousin in "Punch," who&#13;
comes down thus dressed for church to&#13;
the terror of his genteel' cousins. In&#13;
this c?s,c the visitor also wore a spyglass&#13;
of great size, hung, round his&#13;
ncc'.:, all through the entertainment.&#13;
Another highly connected Englishman,&#13;
attending an evening reception given&#13;
expressly for him, came into the parlor&#13;
wiu i his hat and umbrella in, his hand;&#13;
declining to be parted from them during&#13;
the whole evening; which suggested&#13;
to a clever Newport lady the story&#13;
of the showman who exhibited a picture&#13;
of Daniel in the lions' den, and&#13;
pointed out that Daniel was to be distinguished&#13;
from the lions by having a&#13;
blue cotton umbrella under his arm. In&#13;
this case, the lady remarked that the&#13;
conditions were reversed, since it was&#13;
"' the lion that carried the umbrella^ A REMEDY SUPREME&#13;
T r a g e d i e s of t h e G r e a t Canon.&#13;
Tragic stories are told of men "who&#13;
have lost their lives in the search for&#13;
precious metals v/hich may lie hidden&#13;
or uncovered here, says Harriet Monroe&#13;
in the December Atlantic. The&#13;
great primeval flood cut this broad V&#13;
through all the strata of rock, and all&#13;
their veins of metallic ore, down to the&#13;
earliest shapeless mass, leaving in its&#13;
wake the terraced temples and towers&#13;
which seem to have been planned by&#13;
some architect of divinest genius to&#13;
guard their inaccessible treasures t o '&#13;
the end of time. And the river, rising |&#13;
far to the north ainong--tfae-mountainsj&#13;
rich in mineral, has-been washing for'&#13;
ages the sands away and depositing!&#13;
this gold and silver and lead in the still&#13;
crevices of the inaccessible chasm.&#13;
Here the earth„ laughs at her human&#13;
master, and bids him find her wealth&#13;
if he dare, and bear it away if he can.&#13;
A young Californian who accepted, thft&#13;
[TRADE MARK]&#13;
9f% f% A V A to enable rofferfl to itlTe "5 DROPS" at least a trial, we win send a aample bottle, pre*&#13;
O V U M I O p ^ b y m a l j for £ 5 0 . ^ B a m pie bottle will convince you. Also, large bottles &lt;SO0 doaea)&#13;
•1.00,6 bottles for 15. Sold by ui and agents, AGISTS WASTU* U S«» TenHt-ry. D o n ' t w a l t ! W r i t e n o w t&#13;
challenge, and set forth upon the turgid&#13;
water to sift its sands for gold,&#13;
never emerged tfith his hapless men to&#13;
tell the story of,his search. Only near&#13;
the brink of the cleft are a few miners&#13;
burrowing for copper, and sending&#13;
theirjare up to the rim on the backs of&#13;
hardy burros; as'who should prick the&#13;
mountain with a pin, or measure thf&#13;
ocean with a cup.&#13;
D i p l o m a c y of a n Editor.&#13;
Editors of newspapers are often In&#13;
jeopardy of their lives; and only by&#13;
coolness and discretion do they escape&#13;
from the harm which might otherwise&#13;
come"to them from cranks. The editor&#13;
of a certain, newspaper in a New Jer-&#13;
$ey town was approached by a wellknown&#13;
general whose death had been&#13;
published in the' paper several days&#13;
before. "I want that statement taken&#13;
back, sir," cried the general, "or I'll&#13;
have your life.", The editor looked&#13;
frightened, but. retaining his presence&#13;
of mind, answered: "I am very^sorry,&#13;
ray dear sir, but we do not take back&#13;
anything we have published, nor can&#13;
we contradict mistakes, but." with a&#13;
broad smile, "tomorrow we'll publish&#13;
your name in the column of 'births.''&#13;
The humor of the remark struck the&#13;
general, and his anger was appeased.—&#13;
Philadelphia' Call.&#13;
DOVOU&#13;
COUCH&#13;
DON'T DELAY mm D I I C X U&#13;
It Cure* Colds. Cough*. Sore Throat, Croup. In*&#13;
taenia. Whooping Caugh, Bronchitis and Asthma.&#13;
A certain euro for Consumption in first stages,&#13;
and a sure relief in advanced stages. Ueeatonce.&#13;
You will toe the excellent effect after taking tho&#13;
•rst dose- Sold by dealers everywhere. Largo&#13;
bottles 2ft ctnts" and SO cents.&#13;
SUBSTANTIAL&#13;
PROFIT — will be made by every buyer of I A Porte&#13;
property. First gencfal sale In February.&#13;
ItiOu La Porte, Texas, is destined&#13;
to be the future greatest seaport of the&#13;
Gulf of Mexico. Every farmer, merchant&#13;
nnd manufacturer ot the United States,&#13;
west of the Mississippi River is directly&#13;
interested in La Porte. A sznull investment&#13;
will return handsome profits. Write&#13;
for FREE Folder, Maps and Art Booh to&#13;
~ AMERICAN LAND C O M P A N Y ,&#13;
188 Madison St., CHICAGO.&#13;
MILLIONS&#13;
FOR 14 CENTS We «iah to r«ln thia y ear 9KSCC0&#13;
saw oastomen, and nanoe offer&#13;
1 P*». Citj Garden Beet, lOe&#13;
1 PkYBarl'at Emerald OoenuborUo&#13;
1 *• La Croua Marat* XMtaos, lie&#13;
I " Btrawbern Matao, Uo&#13;
I - Early Ripe CabbOfO, Me&#13;
1 * larlf Dinner Oniaa? SOo&#13;
Ilaoty lower Seeda. fee&#13;
eemta. f E »&#13;
of acres of choice airrl.&#13;
cultural J J A N D S now&#13;
opened for settlement&#13;
in Western Canada&#13;
Here is Krown tfeo celebrated&#13;
NO. 1 HARD&#13;
WHEAT, which brings the hixhest price in the&#13;
markets of the world; thousands of cattle are&#13;
fattened for market without being fevt grain,&#13;
and without a day's shelter. Send for information&#13;
and secure a free homo in Western (.Canada.&#13;
Write the Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa,&#13;
or address the underatoned. who will mail&#13;
TOU atlases, pamphlets, etc.. free of cost. M.&#13;
V. Mclnnos, No. 1 MerrULBlock. DetrOU, Mich.;&#13;
Jamea Grieve. Mt. Pleasant. Mich., or D. L.&#13;
Caven. Bad Axe. Mid&#13;
i • BrtlflaatJIower&#13;
Wartk ¢1.00, far 14&#13;
Above 10 Pkca. worth fLOO, wo will&#13;
saall yea free, together with eat&#13;
areat Catalog, telu n't ailaboat&#13;
S A U t l S MAU&amp; M U I NTATt&#13;
npon reeeint of this a o t f e e * f i e .&#13;
stampa. W e invite yoortrade, a » i&#13;
h g U anew when yea eaee try Mavl s o P o&#13;
g^gHfOOO}ayon will never do without.&#13;
••SiawHrOO Prtaeeon Salter's 1»00 :&#13;
eat eexiieetToaftto QUat on earth, m i. aAUxmsa^aco^LACBoesxwis.&#13;
W . N . U . - - D E T R O I T — N O . 2 — l d O O .&#13;
7 » « i « * ^&#13;
^.1&#13;
' • ^&#13;
fsN- - ,-¾..&#13;
Hon. W. N. Roach. United States Senator from Worth Dakota.&#13;
Hon. W. N. Roach, United States Senator from North: Dakota, personally&#13;
endorses Peruna, "the great catarrh cure and tonic. In a recent letter to The&#13;
Peruna Medicine Company, at Columbus, Ohio, written from Washington, D. C ,&#13;
Senator Roach says:&#13;
"Pirsuaihd by a friend, I havi ustd Peruna ** a tonic, and I am -&#13;
glad to testify that it has greatly helped me In strength, vigor and&#13;
appelite. I have been advised by friends that It Is remarkably efficacious&#13;
as a oure for the almost universal complaint of catarrh." '&#13;
S e n a t o r R o a c h ' s h o m e a d d r e s s i s J L a r i m o r e , N o r t h D a k o t a .&#13;
P e r u n a i s n o t a g u e s s , n o r a n e x p e r i m e n t : i t i s a n a b s o l u t e , s c i e n t i f i c c e r -&#13;
t a i n t y . P e r u n a c u r e s c a t a r r h w h e r e v e r l o c a t e d . P e r u n a h a s n o s u b s t i t u t e s —&#13;
n o r i v a l s . I n s i s t u p o n h a v i n g P e r u n a . L e t n o o n e p e r s u a d e y o u t h a t s o m e o t h e r&#13;
r e m e d y w i l l d o n e a r l y a s w e l l . T h e r e i s n o o t h e r s y s t e m a t i c r e m e d y f o r c a t a r r h&#13;
b u t P e r u n a . A d d r e s s t h e P e r u n a M e d i c i n e C o m p a n y , C o l u m b u s , O h i o , f o r a&gt;&#13;
f r e e b o o k o n c a t a r r h , w r i t t e n b v D r . H a r t m a ' n .&#13;
AN APPEAL TO HUMANITY GENERALLY W e need your assistance In announcing to tho world the GREATEST REMEDY t h a t Science&#13;
b a s e v e r produced, and you need our assistance to secure relief lor yourself and friends through,&#13;
SWANSON'S "5 DROPS." "- - - ^ -&#13;
As surely as the American Navy^ias conquered&#13;
and will conquer all that opposes&#13;
it, so will "5 DROPS" unfailingly conquer all diseases like Rheumatism, Sciatica, Neuralgia.&#13;
Lumbago. -Catarrh of «11 kinds, ASTHMA, Dysngps^,Backache, Sleeplessness, Nervousness.&#13;
Heart Weakness, Toothache, Earache, Creeping Numbness, BronChltlsr&#13;
Liver and Kidney Troubles, etc., etc., or any disease for wttich we recommend&#13;
it. *'5 DROPS" is t h e name and the dose, "o DROPS" is perfectly&#13;
harmless. It does not contain Salicylate of Sofia nor Opiates in&#13;
any form. The Child can use it as well as the Adult.&#13;
Read carefully what Mr. L. R. Smith, of E l Dorado Springs, Mo.,&#13;
writes us under date af Nov. 27, 18C9, • » • • • • • • • » — • ^ ^ • m&#13;
also Martan Bowers, of Caraghar, M E I I R A L G I JsV&#13;
Ohio, ucder date of Doc. 16¾. 1899: • « • • « » • ^ • - • • • ^ • • a - m&#13;
I do not know how"7 to espre»s how wonderful I think your "5 D R O P S ' *&#13;
medicine Is. 1 was sufferlag intensely with MEURAL.GIA and thought for a&#13;
month that I would have to die. One day a lady called I &gt; «ee me and brought me&#13;
an advertisement of your "5 D K O P 8 . " 1 resolved to try it and aent for a eanipie bottle. Have been&#13;
tejelag It for three weeks and have not hadan attack of suffering stace-t-took the first do^e. I believe It baa&#13;
•saved my life. This statement is ponlilvely true. I shall Aiao take pleasure in recommending your&#13;
«5 D R O P S " for the cure of N E U R A L G I A . L.R.SMITH,&#13;
El Dorado Springs. Mo., Nov. 27, 1889.&#13;
Q | j ana a | m sa • • • • A SAM Yomr "5 D R O P S " came to hand on the 11th of last month and&#13;
f \ 0 £ V - I w l # % I I w I w l was ?lad to receive it for I was suffering at the time with untold&#13;
agonies. The nrstdose helped ine out of my pain on short notice. Bless the name of tiod for it. It will do&#13;
all you Say it will and more too. 1 had severe paina all over my body, wh?n night came I could not Bleep.&#13;
The worst pain was In my left leg. 1 could not put my foot to the floor without suffering great pain. Hare&#13;
used four different kinds of medicine for R H E U M A T I S M and got no relief until I got your **5 DROPS,**&#13;
jEhichgaveme Immediate tellef as above stated. MARTAN BOWERS, BoxBS.Caraghar, Ohio, Dec. 16,18».&#13;
m&#13;
\ MtfQ AtsvetUsg Advefttseaetta&#13;
Hottioa TMs rapw.&#13;
.Mfl'v&#13;
X ^&#13;
:.. «' ,•». .J-?^';T.-' -"...',s&#13;
I .•• i . ; -. • V&#13;
',' • • . • . . . . . , .'.'•• ' ! ; . . • • &gt; • ' ' . - r :&#13;
: : * A ... I . * — » *&#13;
.4.K.'&#13;
. " * . ' • ; .&#13;
f&#13;
* . 1 • • .&#13;
w&#13;
•&#13;
• ; •&#13;
•#*&#13;
VNA0H.LA. [mother of seven children, six of&#13;
Mrs. Martha "Webb is on fthfr-whom survive her. She was a&#13;
sick l i s t faithful wife and mother, a faith-&#13;
Horace Miller of Iosco called f u l christian friend and neighbor.&#13;
on friendB bete Sunday.&#13;
Will Clark of Stockbridgie spent&#13;
last week with Geo. Siegrist.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Ives is spending the&#13;
week wilh friends in Bancroft. v&#13;
. The two churches at this place&#13;
are observing the week of prayer.&#13;
Bev. H, Palmer and family vis-&#13;
•*•*• * T&#13;
Miss Kate Brown returned Satuidap,&#13;
to h e r school duties in&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Elmer Hause and wife, of Wil-&#13;
For her "to- live was Christ, to die; l i a m 8 t o n .visited a t E . G. Fish's&#13;
last week.&#13;
Bert Hicks a n d family visited&#13;
was gam.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Miss Maggie Birnie is spendiug&#13;
the week at home.&#13;
Fred Merrill and wife spent&#13;
Sunday in Iosco.&#13;
Miss Jessie Messinger spent&#13;
Hamburg aod Putnam Farmer's Club.&#13;
The H a m b u r g and P u t n a m&#13;
Farmers Club met a t thev pleasant&#13;
home of J . E . McCluskiy the last&#13;
Saturday in Dec&#13;
The meeting opened jby siuging&#13;
an&lt;£; ^ BV Plaoeway were a p ^&#13;
pointed to do the work.&#13;
The report of associations of&#13;
Farmers C l i u s , at Lansing, was&#13;
next given by Miss Mary V a n -&#13;
Fleet. This was a profitable papi&#13;
e r ^ and showed t h a t we 8©fltw a&#13;
good delegate to Lansing. Ouoof&#13;
pointmeut of committees, then ad- j h e r r e m a r k s was, that "the Oiub&#13;
journed for diuuer. „ , , | Bhould be intensive instead o l&#13;
First after dinner was t h e pro- j extensive," in order that our Club&#13;
11 W U 1 giaro which consisted of a solo by j 8 h o u i d bo improved.&#13;
• J a s * Iva Placeway, a seclect reading by mi n~~~ :„ *u« ~„~Q ^~«&#13;
invited to . T v l ^ ^ : ^ - . . u „ The questions ID t h e question&#13;
. , ' , . . , , . A m e r i c a . Then followed t h e a p -&#13;
one day last week at t h e home of . , t , ... ,, "I&#13;
Will Hicks near Gregory.&#13;
On Saturday evening next ( J a n .&#13;
13, 1900) an old time social will&#13;
be tield&gt;t the home of Mrs. J a s . I v a p l a c e w a y &gt; a s e c l e c t reading by&#13;
rPeeaarrssoonn.. All are mvitea ro come ^ j Fohey, recitation by , * ZSLI 7 J L A ZA 1Z»17&#13;
ited relatives in Parma last week, j l a s t week with her aiater, and l i s t ento the literary and m u - i ^ ^ ^ c ^ ^ i o ^ ^ * W ^ i e x t read, and brought&#13;
Wirt Ives of Chelsea, visited j Mrs Jas. Durkee was In O h M - ^ a m a d b y t h B ; — - — out quite a nveiyaiscus&#13;
friends in this place the past week. s e a on business one day last week. | ' * p . R to&#13;
d u e ; ^ fr' and Mrs. l l e n r y Jiice, , C | b h ftd o u l . n e J to&#13;
^O4t.i s Poo nd, anJd wif*e off ITo 's co', ' M. . r. G^ ri•s wel,di andJ fBa mi• •y o*f Sc-o . c o u i m i t t e K ^ome! pay your ceu r e a d i n g by Maud Only, p a p e r , ; . , c ,. , • To„ «• T W . ., , , • . , , , i L • . . . „ , „ , 0cMexfna ts, (g/ feltf yvonui lrP Ssnunptpwe r, aamml i hneea»r r ««a'S -i # ^-r* » n i r n u u l H s t Saturday in Jan. at J . W. 0il fertility, Charlie Campbell. , « , ,&#13;
Visit ed hexmother here last week.! Lyon are visiting at b. Placeway B.; t h e c o u f f t 8 9 i o n 8 ' l&gt;f t h e maidens H e said that the people that h a d P l H C e w a y 8"&#13;
out quite a livelydiscussion. T h e&#13;
meet t h e&#13;
Miss Eleanor Bird of Stock- j M^sdames Geo. Black and Gene and bachelors of East Putnam,&#13;
bridge visited at.R Barunms last Smith w*»re in Stockbridge Mon&#13;
week.&#13;
- 'Inss Mable Tripp is home on a&#13;
fao weeks vacation&#13;
t r o i t&#13;
day. PARSHALLVILLEMr.&#13;
and Mrs. Jas. HoflP were J u d Cox went to AJbioa last&#13;
from De-1 visiting Ih Handy the first of the w e e k ° » husiuess. • —&#13;
wevk. Mrs. E. E. Caster of Howell, is ! BOil. The discussion was led by&#13;
kept themselves posted for t h e&#13;
last ten years knew that t h e fertility&#13;
of the soil was decreasing,&#13;
and that every farmer should&#13;
aim to keep u p the lichness of the&#13;
K&#13;
Chas. Rud of' Detroif was in ' The Anderson ladies'aid socie- visiting friends-here this week. i Mr. "J. Fohey who said he thought&#13;
this vicinity on business last Sat- ty met mith Mrs. Jas. Durkee ou Chauncey Snow of N. Y., a t - a good way to enrich the soil was&#13;
urd^y. [Wednesday. fc tended the funeral of his mother to plow under oats, rye or clover.&#13;
Miss Kittie Livermore is spend-! Mesdames Isaac-Psngborn, Geo. on Mouday. Mr. Kice said he didn't believe&#13;
ing t h e week with relatives iu43ullis,mid Will Daley, are on the Elmer Preston aud wife of Ban- in bough ten fertilizer b u t ' t h o u g h t&#13;
Ionia. sick list this week. croft^ are spending a few days it best to plow under rye or clover.&#13;
Mrs James Gibn«y is "spending Miss Minnie Hoff returned to with friends here. | Miss Addie Kice then read a&#13;
a few days with her daughter in her work in lyHusing las' "Sntur-&#13;
Detroit. day, after a two week's holiday.&#13;
Mrs. Charlie Hadley is spend-1 There was a latv.e att. ndHitce at&#13;
ing a few days with her daughter the teacher's reading circle nt the&#13;
near Ypsilanti. . Eaman school house on .Sainrday&#13;
Mrs. Maggie Dyer and two chil- la s f -&#13;
dren f n m Eowlerville, visited at j A number of young j.enn .&#13;
Win. Doyle's last Sunday. pjthis vicwity, attended ih;&#13;
•Mr. slid Mrs. Layfette Gallup supper al-Geo. BowenV li&#13;
returned last week from a visit to d a y evening.&#13;
their'daughter in Chicago. ( L T h e A l u ^ r w &gt; n hr^f&#13;
^ i .1 TJ 3 J 'c t meets--at !S. I'laeewfnV&#13;
•CJiRfles Hudson and wife, of ; •&#13;
^ i T i J - e urday next. A gY.nd lure&#13;
Grand Ledge, are spending a few J , , . .&#13;
-, . .,i , . . , pected and e v e n body m-vU'&lt;&#13;
d a \ s with his parents here. , r&#13;
The feed mill of this place is j LA&#13;
now in running order. Grinding j \y. H.. Placeway was in If &gt;* • 11,&#13;
done every day except Sunday. ;Mondaydast&#13;
- E d w i n Nutting and Charlie; School opened Monday at'u-r a ArborMonday.&#13;
A Houlton (Me.) man recently tooli&#13;
n. ve: v sr^nti photograph with a s'mpif&#13;
pastpboard box and a dry plate.&#13;
An-aperture was cut in the box, over&#13;
which was pasted a.piece of black paper&#13;
in which a small hole was unde&#13;
with the point of a pin. The box wa»&#13;
then taken to a dark room aud the&#13;
plate' securely faetened Inside.&#13;
PetteysYlllo «Hls.&#13;
I have | uf in a new corn and cob&#13;
crushm* ami thoroughly rnptirvl the&#13;
Mill Fannnrs can now &lt;t»t thelr&#13;
yrinrti.ni/ (\nr\" in a .superior manner&#13;
and on the shortest notien&#13;
Wri-. Honker&#13;
Mrs: C. M Smith is still quits very interesting paper on, " W h a t&#13;
sick. Her daughter, Mrs. F r a u k w i U we do to make our club better,&#13;
Parker, uf Flint, is with her for a i n 1900." Among the many good&#13;
few duv** vi pointers which it contained was, ' „ „,, , . . , - , , , „ . „ „ " ' . . ' , .&#13;
l e w (iH&gt;s. f &gt; M T A T K O I Ml' Hlf.AN, Gountv of i.ivlu^aton&#13;
Old Mrs. Snow died at her home by o&lt;v U t r e « u l a F attendence, 2nd&#13;
last Saturday and was buried from being willing to help in t h e pro-&#13;
4, ,, .. . i ». i. ~ gram, and if we were a little bash&#13;
fiirn ^', e *"&gt;«f)tist emirch, ou Monday, &gt; , A ^, _A t , ^&#13;
.,.r Rev. Davis? officiating. She leaves&#13;
t BFffflii (if il P. .Piobat. ( onrt for saidcountv,&#13;
hp)ri at tlif PiobHte. (»tti(p in Die vlilaKe of&#13;
How. II. on Moniisty. the Mli •! .y • • t Ian , in th«&#13;
ful at first by a repeated effort we J&#13;
In&#13;
[.,( [.,[_ two sens and two daughters to&#13;
mourn the loss of a patient mothei.&#13;
•c l i b&#13;
SHI -&#13;
• X -&#13;
would gain courage, and not only&#13;
help ourselves, b u t add our inlist&#13;
rent-lit: AlbjnlM I'uvle, Jinkeof V oliate.&#13;
t h t ' MIMllPr l ) f t'1 *' HBlHlP D l&#13;
N K f R O h W (IHIIWN &lt;IHI'*» • «M&lt;1&#13;
On muling Hr&lt;&lt;! fllinuth.' pitition duly verifled,&#13;
flueUCe i l l b e t t e r i n g t h e c l u b . Ill of SHI--' H «»vni. ;ntylni' ih*t mlnuniatrailon&#13;
I ^4.U^„ ~,^-~A~ 1*. ^,^^, i«xr«^M ' , ..,1 of sail tetiil. intiv. b irrmitwl to ncr.s^-lt or some&#13;
^r • • ' i n k other words it was "Jborward .. .. ,, a --&#13;
Ft-hel V.vV i« nn tlie siei. liof | March' and do your duty." This Ti&gt;er„„/u, u i...m«&gt;^d tf„u vn» ,i«v, theoth&#13;
*^^J^i s on t l ^ SICK list i ^ a f i u e p ^ R 1 K l o n e H l i B h o u h ^&#13;
M l &gt; . M. A . U a V 1 8 - 4 S O n t h « s i c k a . , F&#13;
7&#13;
F , , , , , , , 'H U I '^l-HtMifhre, »* Mb-U..o,l t.,.-n.« Uesriag Of&#13;
profit by. J o h n Chambers then »«id p.titii.n&#13;
It U nirilUT iinlerrd Hi ti a emu of ttnw orderly&#13;
Mrs. Larkin is visiting relatives resolutions on t h e death of Mr."«i&gt;ri.'.tHi9n(idr.-ui.ti..K in '-..n ...,,^, enrae&#13;
in Ann Arbor. |-Brown, which was carried, and •uco.wiveWk-,..^..,,, i .i*v,r h-wim.&#13;
( MHS Mercer returned to Ami! John Chambers, Mrs. Kennedy • t-s ;I&lt;«&lt;I^ uf fmbate,&#13;
-Bne ach o,f Howell visited at Ryal two weeks vacation. ^ r v t l u „.Q O .,. T , - liarnnm s tt,h e -1la s.t oet il astt . weelk . - A-M..,.. Q &gt;»..U. I ee^le was in Jackson a n L»i.,u0 ia' a»A I.TN . /&gt; i i \&#13;
/ 2 ^Arthur .hchoenhals and jvyte, couple &lt;»f tlnys last week.&#13;
. Edtl Craneyi has purchased'the a n ( ] Mrg. Hugh Rice, of HfiinKiiig u • v v . , . „ r . , farm across fr om nG eo. Mfit arshi alnl spent ^Frid,ay a- t th, e home' •"o f (U.r ns. nessie H right ot Iosco and n • ,-. p , , i&#13;
whi -ici h was ownedi ib y M»»y ra Br»i-r di. Blown JJw4s.nt i ura&#13;
'The..next meeting of the, Olla- -—r&#13;
podrida Club will be held at Mrs.&#13;
JaH. Gibdey'.s next Saturday evening,&#13;
Jan 13.&#13;
Word WKS received last week of&#13;
the death df Rev. S. Osinga, a&#13;
Prer-byleriai* minister, formerly&#13;
of t his place.&#13;
- Richard Mackinder went to&#13;
Lansing last Tuesday and will&#13;
take a six weeks course in the&#13;
college there.&#13;
Miss Emma Scripter, daughter&#13;
• • •&#13;
V of St. Johns, visited&#13;
at ,]. W. Placeway's, Sunday&#13;
and Monday.&#13;
J n i n e s l l e n r v left Monday for&#13;
Whit more Lake where he expects&#13;
to siiperi'iTt"end the cutting of ice&#13;
for the Bennett ice house.&#13;
Making a&#13;
Mark&#13;
I Babies and children need&#13;
proper food, rarely ever medicine.&#13;
If they do not thrive&#13;
nf Daniel Scripter of this t plnce, l - p n their food Something is j daysHast week in the-lieu of her&#13;
1&#13;
died at her I t me in White O a k / i *&#13;
last Wed.nes(1ay. r~"&#13;
Word was received last week of&#13;
the death of Clysses Steadman, a&#13;
former well known resident here,&#13;
but who has been residing in Cal.&#13;
for the past 25\ears. ' ,&#13;
Geo. Rla\ le.mited to his work&#13;
~rn Grand Bapids, last Tuesday.&#13;
H e was acct mpanied by Mrs.&#13;
Tong. They need a little&#13;
help to get their digestive&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
- Mr H rt. Radley called on&#13;
friends in this vicinity last week.&#13;
_Miss,Nelb| Christopher of Lansmg&#13;
visited'at Silas Bartons last&#13;
week&#13;
Miss Mame Brady taught a few&#13;
Record •&#13;
. T h i s 1 9 0 0 R e d M a r k S a l e is s t a r t i n g&#13;
off t o b e t h e bujorest o n e in o u r h i s t o r y . ' » £ &gt;&#13;
will generally correct this. M y r a May who will spend the&#13;
•winter will) her son -Seymorer&#13;
»i -ni-' i i ^. , ",,•** , difficurty. Mrs. Elizabeth Pickell was born I Iifc you wi-lnl puxt efr om one in Palm.MM, N.-Y., April; 8, 1826",&#13;
ar'd died ut her heme in Pnadilla,&#13;
Jan. 5, 19"0. She WHS the daughter&#13;
of James and IAH\ Smith, At&#13;
the a^et»f ten years she can e with&#13;
h e r paienls to Michigan and settled&#13;
in Jackson counU, where, at&#13;
the-age of-"Pr slie married Jeremiah&#13;
Pickell: af.er h e r marriaure&#13;
sister&#13;
H. B. Gardner and daughter&#13;
machinery Working properly. | Grace were in HbweH last Wednesday.&#13;
' ^&#13;
Master Francis Dunn of Anderson&#13;
vwited his uncleTat this place&#13;
last week.&#13;
N»dla Gardner visited Miss&#13;
Ethel Read in Pinckney t)ie first&#13;
of last week.&#13;
H. B. Gardner attended t h e&#13;
Masonic gathering in Jackson&#13;
last Fri4ay. . _:...,„&#13;
Ernest J . Cooke of* Chelsea&#13;
COD LIVER O I L&#13;
WfrtHfYPePHOSPHITES OF LIMES SODA&#13;
fourth to half a teaspoonful:&#13;
: in baby*s bottle three or four;&#13;
8 Pe n t H iwt~of last week with&#13;
I times a day you will soon see .&#13;
a marked improvement. For&#13;
J larger children, from half to&#13;
a teaspoonful, according to&#13;
, age, dissolved in their milk,&#13;
settled on ", the&#13;
previously owned "by John Wat- \&#13;
son, at this place. Mr.. Picked&#13;
Irving Kennedy.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Gardner a n d daughter&#13;
E m m a Sundayed with parents&#13;
and grand parents iu Dexter&#13;
township. ^&#13;
While felling a treeu last YV-edshe&#13;
returned to Stuben county* N. I If • you SO desire, Will Very J | nesday, Andrew Murphy hjfet-With&#13;
Y., and settled on a farm where SOOn show its g r e a t nourbh- " a very serious.Bccideut, a branch&#13;
the) continutd to r»side lor «bou;t I ing power. If t h e mother's : of the tree striking him on t h e&#13;
20yearsT In 1804 they with .their \ mJ|K does n o t nourish t h e . Il i e a &lt; i : A t e a m b e i n K n e a r ^ h e&#13;
family the farm \ ^ 5 n c n e c d $ t h c ^ ^ ^ '•[was brought to Drs. Sigler, who&#13;
sion. It will show an effect&#13;
yr&amp;s converted at the a^e of 21, f at once both upon mother&#13;
and united with 1 he^BreslTyferTaTr • i^nd^chlld. ' "&#13;
oburch of which hhe haa l&gt;eej» a so«.«nd$i.oo,«iidrugg»«t».&#13;
# « { * K # n l n , . ^ ^ . G l « ^ * ' 4t f SC.QTT .¾ DOWWC, Chcmi«ts, Ntw York.&#13;
fttthfnl inember. S h ^ ^ a s the ] , » — . . , -nn • » , •&#13;
found it necessary to take eight&#13;
stitches.&#13;
Far Sale.&#13;
t*&#13;
Cbaa'p, a two horsepower and grinder&#13;
combined, in good repair.&#13;
C. W. Brown.&#13;
T h e first w e e k w a s a g r e a t s u c c e s s .&#13;
E v e r y d a y t h e s t o r e c r o w d e d w i t h , b u s y&#13;
b a r g a i n _ g e t t e r s .&#13;
K v e r y b o d y p l e a s e d w i t h t h e R e d M a r k&#13;
p r i c e s . T h e c o n t i n u e d c r o w d s of p u r -&#13;
c h a s e r s s h o w b e t t e r t h a n a n y w ^ r d s in&#13;
n e w s p a p e r s c a n t h a t t h e p e o p l e a r e &lt;*et-&#13;
4 + n g g r e a t v a l u e f o r t h e i r m o n e y a t o u r&#13;
s t o r e d u r i n g t h i s R e d . M a r k S a l e , , f o r&#13;
p e o p l e d o n ' t k e e p c o m i n g d a y in a n d&#13;
d a y o u t i n c r o w d s u n l e s s T H E A T -&#13;
T R A C T I O N S A K E R E A L A N D&#13;
STRONG. J'^ X&#13;
We are not/ut^n^ the public very&#13;
hard to buy at this sale, for every bit_of&#13;
merchandise we are soiling is worth more&#13;
than the day it was bought. You're&#13;
welcome, though, to take advantage of&#13;
these Low Red Prices/ and you won't&#13;
get another such chance for years •&#13;
l[our8 respecrtf i*Uy,&#13;
L. 1^^1 ELD.&#13;
/&#13;
• ^1 * .1&#13;
Jackson, Mich&#13;
i&#13;
V*&#13;
mmimmm ^</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Note</name>
          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36682">
              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6411">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch January 11, 1900</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6412">
                <text>January 11, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6413">
                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6414">
                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6415">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6416">
                <text>1900-01-11</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6417">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="15">
        <name>newspaper</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="16">
        <name>pinckney dispatch</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="927" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="855">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/0f4b761b2ae7386d0bf8157466f85c82.pdf</src>
        <authentication>513a9c494ac3d479ea6bc5b682f7a0a2</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="9">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1621">
                  <text>Newspaper</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1630">
                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="57">
          <name>Hidden Search Text</name>
          <description>Enter Search Text that is always hidden except to edit.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32194">
              <text>VOL. XVIII. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, JAN. 18.1900. No. 3,&#13;
£** ill&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
The--&#13;
Surpi4se&#13;
Store,&#13;
/&#13;
Prices That&#13;
Speak for Them!: elves.&#13;
per yard 04&#13;
- 05&#13;
02 £nd 03&#13;
01 and 04&#13;
01&#13;
per skein 05&#13;
per skeirt 06&#13;
10&#13;
Brush Edge binding&#13;
Dress Stays&#13;
Card ot hooks and eyes&#13;
Paper of pins -&#13;
Box Mourning Pins&#13;
Saxony yarn&#13;
Gerraaritown zephyrs&#13;
Ladies' Fleece lined Hose&#13;
" Casbimer wool bowe 15&#13;
" Cotton bo*e, double beel&#13;
and toe 10&#13;
Bottle best Ink 03&#13;
Red in* 05&#13;
Bottle ot good mucilage 03&#13;
25 Good Envelopes 03&#13;
Men's heavy cotton socks 05&#13;
Men's leather faced mittens 25, 35&#13;
Hiop-sticks— 09&#13;
Large size corn-popper 10&#13;
Coat hanger 02&#13;
Lanterns 45 and 64&#13;
F. E. Wright and wifa are visiting&#13;
in New York.,&#13;
B«rt Carpenter of Chilson, was in&#13;
tbi» place Monday.&#13;
Miss Maybelle Daley, of Marion, is&#13;
a guest ot her sifter Desd%.&#13;
Miss Eva Grimes was the guest of&#13;
Miss Alice Barton over Sunday.&#13;
I. S. P. Johnson and wife visited&#13;
relatives in Stotkbridwe last week.&#13;
Remember the Farmers1 institute at&#13;
this place next Wednesday, Jan. 24.&#13;
Mrs, Millie Bates has been, caring&#13;
for a fcick friend in Iosco the past&#13;
week.&#13;
The K. O. T. M. installation of officers&#13;
took place at their hall last Friday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Mr. Wellman, at tbe "Surprise&#13;
Store" is agent tor the Howell laundry.&#13;
He dmptajs a fine sign.&#13;
The amount ot the revenue stamp&#13;
wbicb was* required on the new Pere&#13;
Marquette Ry. deed was ^7,350 50.&#13;
Friends of the DISPATCH when you&#13;
are obliged to have any legal printing&#13;
done, justshow your appreciation of&#13;
your home paper by requesting it to&#13;
be printed in this paper. .&#13;
Mary V, l+M* is recovering nicely&#13;
from a severe attack of measles.&#13;
Miss Mande Richmond spent tbe&#13;
last ot lafttfweek with ' Un ad ilia rela*&#13;
tives.&#13;
Tbe ladies1 aid society of tbe Lakin&#13;
appointment, will bold a social at tbe&#13;
borne of Mr. Willison, toniffbt, (Thursday&#13;
.) All are invited&#13;
Special union services are being held&#13;
this week by tbe Couu'l and M. E. societies,&#13;
and considerable interest is&#13;
manifested. Tuesday evening Rev,&#13;
Harvey Pearce preached and the service&#13;
closed with an alter service. The&#13;
meetings aie held alternately between&#13;
the churches—tonitfht it being in tbe&#13;
M. E. cburcb. Services begin a t , 7&#13;
o'clock. All are invited.&#13;
COUNTY ASSOCIATION&#13;
Of Farmer's Clubs, Meet in Pinckney&#13;
Wednesday, Jan. 24.&#13;
On Wednesday of next week, Jan.&#13;
24, the Livingston County Association&#13;
of Farmer's Clnbs will hold a meeting&#13;
in tbe opera house at this place and a&#13;
big time is expected. The t'ol lowing&#13;
is the prografn: y&#13;
F0BENQG2L, 1 0 O'CLOCK:&#13;
America, by the Audience&#13;
'*&lt;&#13;
III&#13;
#+**0*4MMMM&gt;00&#13;
Invocation, K. H. Oram&#13;
During 1899 there have been 175 j Address of Welcome, Hon.G W . T&lt;wple&#13;
marriage licenses ifSUed ; 206 births Addreo, "Liv* Stock on the Farm and Means ot&#13;
a j J „ r r J A mL Improving It, Hon. Peter Voorhels, Pontiac&#13;
recorded.and 255 deaths. There were , Diwuasion&#13;
also 26 dlVOP-.es granted. Nearly One j Kemarke, Kev. Fr. Oomerford&#13;
divr-rce out ol 7 marriages.&#13;
I£ you need anything in&#13;
ourjine it will pay you to&#13;
call. s&#13;
Our two stores enable us&#13;
to give you the greatest value&#13;
for your money—why pay&#13;
morev&#13;
Your* for trade,&#13;
E. A.BOWMAN, Prop.&#13;
Bowman Block, Pinekney.&#13;
BERT WELLMAN.&#13;
Manager of Pinckney Store.&#13;
Howell 8tore, next to P. O.&#13;
"Better be born lucky than rich,"&#13;
thought a young1 lady and gentleman&#13;
who skated into a place where ice bad&#13;
been removed on a lake near pleasaut&#13;
valley. They were rescued* ^.&#13;
A special communication of Livingston&#13;
Lodge No 76, P. and A. M., will&#13;
I be held Tuesday evening, Jan.* 23, for&#13;
work. Let all tbe membeis be present.&#13;
E R Brown, Sect'y.&#13;
The County treasurer's report shows&#13;
thutrevery cent, of the peoples raonev,&#13;
which was $115091 94, was accounted&#13;
for. Would that the people of the&#13;
s-tate could say the same ot their, state&#13;
taxes.&#13;
1» th^re, are any widow pensioners&#13;
in t.bis community, beware of the man&#13;
that willt.rv and make you think he&#13;
can uet vour pension, increased. All&#13;
he wishes is tbe $5 00 for preliminary&#13;
examinations-.&#13;
Last Friday evening was a busy&#13;
time tor the people in this place. Tbe&#13;
union prayer meeting at the M. E.&#13;
«hureh; the O. E. S. and K. O. T. Mt&#13;
societies met in their respective balls;&#13;
ano1 the dance in the ball room ot the&#13;
Tuomey house.&#13;
The Columbian Dramatic.Club of&#13;
this place will present the realistic drama&#13;
of tarm and city ]ite,'**na.prioe"*at&#13;
Dexter opera house tomorrow night&#13;
(Jan. 19). Miss Nella Gardner Mr. Edward&#13;
Misner and Lincon Smith will&#13;
give some vocal selections.&#13;
This is the season of the year when&#13;
people are scanning the different papers&#13;
for bargains, fts tbe majority of&#13;
us are working the economy plan in&#13;
every channel possible. Many are&#13;
seeking the cities for bargains which&#13;
they see advertised in the dailies. Tbe&#13;
merchants ot the country towns make&#13;
a mistake when they cease to keep,&#13;
their goods before the. public eye.&#13;
This is an age of bargain seekers.&#13;
F. L. Andrews of the DISPATCH&#13;
office attended the meeting of the&#13;
Mich, Press club at Detroit on Friday&#13;
of last week. Tbe session was full of&#13;
meat for the country publisher and&#13;
all present enjoyed the occasion. At&#13;
the close of the session, Ed. Staire, a&#13;
former Livingston publisher, extended&#13;
an invitation to the dub to attend&#13;
in a body the play "1 tie Night B^tore^&#13;
Christmas," at the Whitney opera&#13;
house. Those who availed themselves&#13;
of the opportunity pronounced the&#13;
play.one ot the best and Mr. Staire&#13;
has tbe thanks of tbe club for hit&#13;
Always at it.&#13;
A t What?&#13;
Music Selling Goods of course.&#13;
AFTERNOOK, 1 O'CLOCK:&#13;
. Question Box&#13;
Diversified Farming, Hon. Peter Voorheia&#13;
Discussion-&#13;
Moalc, Audience&#13;
Recitation, Miss I „a Pl*ceway&#13;
Remarks Rev. C. W. Rice&#13;
Farm Needs and Requirements, Hon. wm Bail j the year around. The reason is that we sell the best sta*&#13;
Tran pprtation, " Prof. Sterling, Howell t p i e g o o d s f o r t h e l e a s t m o n e y . P e o p l e t o d a y a r e n o t l o o k -&#13;
Remarks, Rev. Chaa. Simpson&#13;
While the holiday trade is always a harvest for some&#13;
—and we *ret our share—our trade always remains good&#13;
Duet, Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Kice&#13;
UNADILLA FiRMER'S CLUB.&#13;
The folfowing is the program'that&#13;
will be rendered at the club which, will&#13;
meet a_^the home of Vtr. and Mps Z.&#13;
Hartsuff, in Uuadilla/&lt;m~ Saturday ot&#13;
this week, Jan. 20 Club will be called&#13;
to order at 1 o'plock sharp:&#13;
Singing by the club ' The Club&#13;
Papen^Jhe Woman Problem"&#13;
Mrs. E. J. Harris&#13;
Discussion led by Mrs. C. Wood*^rth&#13;
Solo Miss Inez Marshall&#13;
Recitation Miss Gertrude Mills&#13;
Singing Mr. and Mrs. G.ttes&#13;
Paper "Clover, as a Feed and Fertilizer"&#13;
Frank Birnie&#13;
Discussion led by Th&lt;&gt;8. Howlett&#13;
Solo F. L. Andrews&#13;
Song, "A Farmer's son. am !'!__&#13;
Henry~Uowman&#13;
In Good Order.&#13;
The nig ts of tbe Loyal Guard in&#13;
stalled-theiru)fficers at their regular&#13;
meeting last week, and beard the report&#13;
of officers, wbicb went to show&#13;
that the order has been doing business&#13;
tbe past year and is in a flourishing&#13;
condition.&#13;
Tbe paymaster's report was in subrtance&#13;
as foTTows:&#13;
Receved for Asse»ments-|6iJ.70—&#13;
Paid Sup. Div. 500.20&#13;
I courtesy.&#13;
Bal. on hand 13.50&#13;
Received for P. C. Tax $125.00&#13;
Paid Sup.^iv. 123.00 ..&#13;
Bal. on hand 2.00&#13;
Tbe balance on baud in tne aoove is&#13;
for assessments paid in advance by&#13;
members who are to I* away a year&#13;
and do so to keep in good standing and&#13;
avoid being suspended.&#13;
Rec. for Div. Dues $68 46 .&#13;
Paid out as per report 61.60&#13;
ing for CHEAP goods but GOOD goods cheap.&#13;
The following are some of our lines:&#13;
Drugs and Medicines.&#13;
_ _. A full and complete line.&#13;
School Supplies.&#13;
Books* Tablets. Pencils Pens,&#13;
Ink and&#13;
• Examination Blanks.&#13;
Fancy Articles.&#13;
Celluloid Goods, Hdkf., Cuff&#13;
and Collor Boxes.&#13;
T h e y make fine birthday gifts.&#13;
Crockery.&#13;
A full line of&#13;
Plain and Fancy w a r e .&#13;
A fine line of Lamps.&#13;
Groceries.&#13;
We carry a line&#13;
of the best in town.&#13;
• Prices are right.&#13;
W a l l Paper.&#13;
~ Our safes the past year were far ahead of&#13;
our expectations, and this season w e will be&#13;
better prepared than ever to dive values. rj&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
Druggist.&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
Bal. on hand 6.86&#13;
Total Receipts $707.16&#13;
Total expenditure* 684.80&#13;
Total balance 22.86&#13;
As there are 65 ^members in good&#13;
standing, nil debts paid and $6.86 on&#13;
hand, the showing is a good one&#13;
which intpiret oon^denon,&#13;
We must ask all our Customers to settle&#13;
alt Aecoiiats and Notes that are due, before&#13;
Jan. 1,:19007&#13;
Hoping to see yon all in time so we can&#13;
balance our books before taking our annual&#13;
inventory, Jan. 1,1900, either by Note or&#13;
Cash.&#13;
r&#13;
• / •&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEBPLE S» CADWELL.&#13;
/ .-.^,. v., 'JF ^ -1&#13;
' . ) - •&#13;
't .:&#13;
" ».:•••• i*&#13;
.J&#13;
iNMjglialSta**** ^atamik al^iii m ^ ^&#13;
* . • • •&#13;
&amp; •Ik itmaum&#13;
if-- &gt;&lt;&#13;
: sMw^.twaafti^^ .j^feitfa^'ftte v*&amp;»&lt;... -.-*»*&#13;
. - . , - ^ n «7 •*r.V-&gt;&#13;
WSTi). r w t m VilnUniiii i n n — — « H — * *&#13;
' 1 ¾ ¾ ^ ^ fl^ti. i r t t f i f r ^ * * ^ - ^ ^ •• *»&lt;«&amp;#&#13;
J'&#13;
*--:• v-'v '.."f &lt;"': '•••*,,• ..vV ..*.. ,&gt;,. .-.-^^^.-4. ' . • . 1 '&#13;
EVENTS OF THE WEEK&#13;
.'$?;&#13;
N OUR GREAT STJCTE R E L A T E Q&#13;
IN A BRIEF FORM.&#13;
The Monthly Crop Report Ssys With&#13;
Favorable Conditions There la Yet a&#13;
! Chance for Wheat — Another New&#13;
f Klectrlc Line—Other Items.&#13;
m&#13;
! ' • • &gt; ' . '&#13;
Monthly Crop Report.&#13;
. T h e January crop report, issued by&#13;
Secretary of State Stearns on the ©th,&#13;
says that with favorable conditions&#13;
Michigan may have, a fair wheat crop&#13;
this year, but to the conservative observer&#13;
the chances are against it at the&#13;
present time. One-half of the correspondents&#13;
think that wheat has suffered&#13;
an injury during December.&#13;
Whether this injury is due to unfavora&#13;
b l e climatic conditions or to the ravages&#13;
of the Hessian fly, cannot be determined.&#13;
The number of bushels of&#13;
Wheat reported marketed by farmers&#13;
t n December at the flouring mills was&#13;
425,421, and at the elevators 288,066, a&#13;
total of 714.0S7 bushels. Of this whole&#13;
bmount 562,404 bushels were marketed&#13;
i n the southern four tiers of counties,&#13;
130,566 bushels in the central counties&#13;
(and 21,057 bushels in the northern&#13;
counties. At 54 mills and elevators&#13;
from which reports have been received&#13;
there was no wheat marketed in December.&#13;
The total amount of wheat&#13;
Shipped by railroads f rem the various&#13;
stations, as reported ,-for November,&#13;
was 500,341 bushels._ &gt;&#13;
The average condition or live stock&#13;
i n the state is reported as follows, comparison&#13;
being with stock in good,&#13;
healthy and thrifty condition: Horses&#13;
(and sheep, 96 per cent; cattle, 95 per&#13;
&lt;cent; swine, 97 per cent. Milch cows&#13;
were worth $32.44 per head. Cattle&#13;
tataer than milch cows, under one year&#13;
old,-were worth, per head, $10.79; between&#13;
one and two years olcU 818.79;&#13;
vetween two and three years old,&gt;&#13;
-$2A.30, and three years old and over,&#13;
&lt;$36.54. The average prices of sheep&#13;
•under one year old was 82.81, and one&#13;
'year old and over S3-.57; arid hogs not&#13;
fattened were worth 83.33 per cwt.&#13;
The prices of farm products d o not&#13;
r *ary much when compared with those&#13;
of Jan. 1, 1899. The price of wheat&#13;
1 dhows an increase of one per cent, and&#13;
j -oats a decrease of one per cent, while&#13;
' 4hat of corn is the same. One year ago&#13;
Hhe price of hay showed a decline of 13&#13;
3ents per ton, while this year it has insreased&#13;
$2.54. The average price of&#13;
^dressed pork has increased 75 cents per&#13;
ewt.; fat hogs 60 cents per cwt. .and&#13;
lIat cattle 26 cents per cwt.&#13;
Manufactories Prospered In 18u».&#13;
In a bulletin sent out by Labor Commissioner&#13;
Cox on the 10th on the industrial&#13;
conditions in this state it&#13;
is stated that at no time in its&#13;
history has Michigan enjoyed the same&#13;
general condition of prosperity as it&#13;
did in 1899. Manufactories are said to&#13;
have been run to thjeir full capacity,&#13;
laborers and skilled mechanics have&#13;
been employed at fair and improved&#13;
wages, the real estate business has improved,&#13;
lake traffic has been heavy, and&#13;
the mineral deposits have been developed&#13;
to a wonderful degree. The average&#13;
daily wages in factories have increased&#13;
from 31.37 per day in 1888 t o&#13;
81.39 in 1899. In the canvass of nearly&#13;
5,000 factories it was determined that&#13;
545 of them have increased their,actual&#13;
capital 86,531,884. In 1,333 factories&#13;
of those canvassed there were fquhd to&#13;
be employed a total of 24,262 mqre employes&#13;
than in 1898. It is estimated&#13;
that 74 factories are able to pair their&#13;
employes weekly, 12 per cent monthly,&#13;
and 1¾ percent semi-monthly, Sjeventyfour&#13;
per cent of these factories! report&#13;
an increase of business over 189^.&#13;
Someone was Negligent.&#13;
A sensation developed in the circuit&#13;
court at Port Huron on the 9th at the&#13;
trial of a 82,000 damage suit brought&#13;
by Wm. fy Johnson against John,. C.&#13;
Hamilton, a saloonist, and C. Bern and&#13;
Joseph Casselo, his bondsmen, for the&#13;
year of 1897, for the alleged selling of&#13;
liquor to his minor son, causing him to&#13;
become intoxicated. When the bond&#13;
was produced in evidence it developed&#13;
that instead of being made~ out in the&#13;
penal sum of 84,000, as provided by the&#13;
city charter, it was in the sum of only&#13;
$4. The amount was plainly written&#13;
in the body of the bond, while in the&#13;
justification the sureties simply justified&#13;
to "the amount of the bond." The&#13;
introduction of oral testimony to show&#13;
that the bond was intended to be for&#13;
84,000, and that the error was simply a&#13;
clerical omission, was objected to as&#13;
inadmissable„and ruled out by Judge&#13;
Atkinsony upon-h?galgrounds.&#13;
r0ow a Friendly Game of Cards Ended.&#13;
What will probably prove to be a&#13;
• murder in self-defense occurred at the&#13;
saloon of Mike Hayes at Mill Creek,&#13;
aear Grand Rapids, just across from&#13;
•*the soldiers'1 home, on the evening of&#13;
"the 9th. Henry Morsel aged about GO,&#13;
who served in the war in a Massachusetts&#13;
regiment and was admitted to the&#13;
home nine years ago from Detroit, was&#13;
'struck on theTiead and fatallyTnjurod&#13;
•toy Harry Hollis, a railroad brakeman.&#13;
This saloon is the nearest, one to the&#13;
home, just across the mile limit line&#13;
fixed by law, and is a great resort for&#13;
t h e old soldiers. The two were-engaged&#13;
in a game of cards and Morse&#13;
was drunk and ugly, and finally accused&#13;
Hollis of cheating. At this the&#13;
t w o arose from the table, and the foraaer&#13;
drew a knife and chased llollis&#13;
about the room, when the railroad&#13;
-ttnan seized a lemon squeezer from off&#13;
t h e bar and hit Morse over the head,&#13;
felling him to the floor.&#13;
,r. J&#13;
• New Electric Line,&#13;
St. Clair citizens are elated by the&#13;
Vfact that after a struggle of several&#13;
years they a r c to have direct railroad&#13;
. 5ommunication with Detroit. On Jan.&#13;
9 a company was organized in Detroit,&#13;
with J. R. Whiting, of St. Clair, as&#13;
president, which will construct a line&#13;
of road from Lenox to Rochester, a distance&#13;
of 18 miles, connecting, with the-&#13;
Michigan Central at both ends. Behind&#13;
t h e deal are prominent beet sugar men&#13;
•who aim to secure for the farmers of&#13;
that section satisfactory transportation&#13;
\for their saccharine product. * It is the&#13;
Intention to construct sidetracks in the&#13;
townships at intervals, thus giving the&#13;
farmers an easy way to market their&#13;
feugar beets without hauling more than&#13;
« fay miles. St. Clair is interested because&#13;
of th)s increased facilities for exporting&#13;
salt and the prospect of a direct&#13;
road to Detroit without a change&#13;
of cars by running its St. Clair trains&#13;
lover the proposed road.&#13;
Beet Sugar Output in Michigan.&#13;
Land Commissisner French has issued&#13;
a statement showing the output&#13;
of beet sugar in Michigan up to Jan.&#13;
1. There was not quite a two-thirds&#13;
crop of beets. The amount of sugar&#13;
fnanufactured at the various factories&#13;
t o Jafc. 1 is as follows: Michigan Sugar&#13;
Co., Bay City* 5,640,297 pounds;&#13;
Bay City Sugar Co., 4,007,551; West&#13;
Bay City Co., none; Alma Sugar Co.,&#13;
2,420,820; JSalamazoo Sugar Co., 1,265,-&#13;
858; Wolverine Sugar Co., Benton Harbor,&#13;
1,509.527; Holland Sugar Co., 1,-&#13;
S41,115; Detroit Sugar Co., Rochester,,&#13;
3,660,839; Peninsular Sugar Refining&#13;
Co., Caro, 2,619,908. " T h i s makes a&#13;
total of 2^075,004, the bounty on whi(jh,&#13;
if t h e l a w b f lSOTis valid, amounts* to^&#13;
$226,750.04. During-the period naafed&#13;
there, was "received at the pine factories&#13;
jaa aggregate of 175,838 tons of beets. j&#13;
Another Grand Jury In Sight.&#13;
Although there have been no direct&#13;
assurances from that gentleman himself^&#13;
it is generally believed at Lansing&#13;
that Judge Wiest, who succeeded Judge&#13;
Person, will soon^call another grand&#13;
jury tolnvestigate alleged crookedness&#13;
in the legislature. It is believed that&#13;
the jury will be called i n March. The&#13;
methods by which the McLeod bill was&#13;
passed and the use of liquor in the legislature&#13;
will be among the subjects to&#13;
be investigated. It is *hot improbable&#13;
that if the grand jury is again called&#13;
that other expenditures of public money&#13;
will be thoroughly investigated.&#13;
Milan's School Destroyed by Flrfc&#13;
Milan's public school was destroyed&#13;
by fire on the 10th. At the time the&#13;
fire started there were 300 pupils in the&#13;
building, all of whom escaped death.&#13;
Two girls, however, were badly burned&#13;
ttfid Miss C l a r a Eage's, preceptress,&#13;
saved her life by jumping from a window.&#13;
Great praise is given Prof, Carrick&#13;
for his presence of mind in the&#13;
hour of-danger, as it was through his&#13;
efforts that all but .the above persons&#13;
escaped in safety. All the pupils lost&#13;
their wraps and books. The fire is&#13;
supposed to have caught from the ~fnrnace.&#13;
Another Street Crossing Accident.&#13;
"""Alex. Sim, aged 65. flagman in the&#13;
employ of the Wabash Ry., at Detroit,&#13;
was killed while at his post of duty on&#13;
the 12th. He was in the act of warning&#13;
others of the approaching danger&#13;
when he either misjudged the speed of&#13;
the train or else slipped and was struck&#13;
bv the engine. This°is the same crossing&#13;
where little Irene Tyler was killed&#13;
in December.&#13;
M I C H I G A N NEWS ITEMS.&#13;
Morrice has a new electric light&#13;
plant.&#13;
Lapeer's grand jury cost the county&#13;
abu 11183,000.&#13;
The January calendar of Eaton circuit&#13;
court contains 17 divorce cases.&#13;
A large wildcat was shot in Fraser&#13;
township, Saginaw county, recently.&#13;
ASeveral farmers of Berrien count}'&#13;
raised profitable tobacco crops last season.&#13;
The number of undischarged mortgages&#13;
in Huron county since 1885 is&#13;
5,385.&#13;
Ten wildcats were recently killed in&#13;
one day by Geo. L. Atkins, of Crawford&#13;
county.&#13;
Calumet police officers are making an&#13;
effort to stop the gambling which has&#13;
flourished in that city.&#13;
Work on the (lull Lake branch of the&#13;
Battle Creek-Kalamazoo electric railroad&#13;
has been suspended until spring.&#13;
Regular service on the Detroit &amp;&#13;
Northwestern Electric railroad between&#13;
Pontiac ancLDetroit began on&#13;
the 8th.&#13;
Benton Harbor maids have formed&#13;
an anti-cigarette league and will boycott&#13;
the boys who smoke the "nasty&#13;
things."&#13;
The Saginaw Southern Railroad/do.&#13;
has been organized and will build an&#13;
electric road &gt; from Saginaw/ to St.&#13;
Charles and Chcsaning. /&#13;
Barry county farmer* who have bet&#13;
come interested in the breeding of&#13;
Shropshire sheep have organized the&#13;
Barry County Shropshire Breeders' association&#13;
for mutual benefit.&#13;
Port Huron is after the L. A. W. offer&#13;
for the city sending in the first 200&#13;
applications for membership in the&#13;
league to have a mile of macadamized&#13;
road and the four days' festival.&#13;
% Grand Ledge people don't believain&#13;
using adulterated products, and a Toledo&#13;
firm which has been selling cider&#13;
there that was not made from the pure&#13;
apple juice was fined 350 recently.&#13;
Lumbering is going on with a rush&#13;
since the recent cold snap. Ice roads&#13;
are being made all over northern Michigan&#13;
and if the weather remains cold&#13;
the output of logs wilL be immense.&#13;
Omer is to have a new tub and pail&#13;
factory. Saginaw parties will back&#13;
the venture. The factory will use jackpine,&#13;
which has always—or rather until&#13;
very lately—been considered worthless.&#13;
'&#13;
Branch county* board of supervisors&#13;
has voted to submit a proposition to&#13;
the voters of the county next April to&#13;
raise by tax S2.500 for the purpose of&#13;
repairs and additions to the county&#13;
house.&#13;
Miss Lena Kehil, af Tawas City, committed&#13;
suicide on the 7th .by shooting&#13;
herself. She had been in poor health&#13;
for some time and it is claimed that a&#13;
love affair over which she was despondent&#13;
caused her act.&#13;
There is talk that the Caro branch of&#13;
the Michigan Central is to be extended&#13;
to Harbor Beach, and Bad Axe people&#13;
are hopeful that if it is done, the route&#13;
will be laid out in such a way as to&#13;
take int-their village.&#13;
The survey of the route for the extension&#13;
of the South Haven &amp; Eastern&#13;
railroad from Law ton to Schoolcraft&#13;
has been completed and construction&#13;
worjlc will begin as early in the spring&#13;
as the weather will allow.&#13;
F. W.. Wolf, of Chicago, a sugar factory&#13;
contractor, who has visited the&#13;
Michigan counties where sugar factories&#13;
have been erected, is quoted as&#13;
saying that Bay county beates all of&#13;
the counties in the state on the raising&#13;
of sugar beets.&#13;
State Salt Inspector Caswell's report&#13;
for the month of December is a9 follows:&#13;
Manistee county, 104,104 barrels;&#13;
Mason. 5.U95; Bay, 38.512; Wayne, 37,-&#13;
326; Saginaw, 37,111; St. Clair, 32,270;&#13;
Midland, 5.508; total, 299,042. December,&#13;
1S9S, 297,068. '&#13;
Cold water people may soon be in a&#13;
position to get the benefits of competition&#13;
in the matter of a telephone service.'&#13;
as the council has received an application&#13;
for a franchise *from an independent&#13;
company which wishes to install&#13;
an exchange there.&#13;
Albert Linabury, a progressive&#13;
farmer, of Metamora, has conceived the&#13;
idea of stamping all the eggs which his&#13;
hens lay with the date on which they&#13;
are laid, thus enabling purchasers to&#13;
know, w.itlLOu£._breukil»g-. the shells,&#13;
whether they are buying eggs or&#13;
chickens. •&#13;
Kalamazoo supervisors cut . Sheriff&#13;
Snow's-board bill from 40 to 30 cents&#13;
per day for each prisoner. The sheriff&#13;
says he cannot feed the prisoners for&#13;
30 cents, and after a certain date will&#13;
refuse to board them, leaving the supervisors&#13;
to .provide some other means&#13;
-for their care.&#13;
The supervisors of Jackson county&#13;
believe in patronizing hpme industries&#13;
and at their present session adopted a&#13;
resolution that hereafter all printing&#13;
and binding work shall be done by&#13;
home concerns, instead of being sent&#13;
outside, as has frequently been the&#13;
case in the past.&#13;
When the hardware warehouse of&#13;
Adams &amp; Lieh, at Lawton, was opened&#13;
on the morning of the 8th the body of&#13;
a man was found hanging from one of&#13;
the rafters. Later the body was identified&#13;
as-that of Chas. Brown, of Benton&#13;
Harbor. He had gained entrance&#13;
to the building by breaking open a&#13;
transom.&#13;
Rev. J. J. Axtell, the pugilistic pastor&#13;
of the Congregational church of&#13;
Royal Oak, was formally given his&#13;
walking papers by the congregation on&#13;
the 10th, when the following result&#13;
was arrived at after the matter had&#13;
been debated for two hours behindclosed&#13;
doors: '"In view of Mr. Axtell's&#13;
recent conduct we ask him to resign.'&#13;
.- ^&#13;
BRIEF NCWS P A R A G R A P H S .&#13;
AT HO^E AHjfcABSGAl}&#13;
/&#13;
r&#13;
Owing to defective walls^n new three&#13;
story brick structure at Battle Creek&#13;
collapsed on the 9th. It was known&#13;
as the Stewart biock;'^ '&#13;
S U M M A R Y QF T H * N B W 8 F p ^&#13;
t T H t WEEK BY W1RB,&#13;
New Mexico hat Experienced the ^ftarat^&#13;
Billiard Ever Witnessed in That&#13;
Seglon—An Unlcnowa Ship Wuu4mt»&#13;
•n the Fewfoundland Coast.&#13;
Many Live* Lost la a BItssard.&#13;
Derails of the blizzard which swept&#13;
over southwestern New Mexico on th»&#13;
9th and 10th are earning in and they&#13;
Indicated that it was the severest&#13;
storm ever experienced in the region.&#13;
A strip of territory 50 miles in width&#13;
with White Oaks and Nogales. for the&#13;
cenier, seemed to suffer the most, although&#13;
the severity of the storm was&#13;
fully felt throughout the Sacramento&#13;
mountain region. The velocity of the&#13;
wind was terrible, all roads and trails&#13;
were obliterated and the driving snow&#13;
made it impossible for travelers to see&#13;
their way in the storm. When the&#13;
storm abated wagons which bad been&#13;
abandoned were found strew u all over&#13;
the section. Several fatalities are reported&#13;
including the driver of the&#13;
White Oaks-Lincoln stage. It is feared&#13;
that many sheep herders have lost&#13;
their lives. Thousands of head of&#13;
stock perished and it is believed that&#13;
the loss will aggregate over ¢500,000.&#13;
Shipwreck of Newfoundland Com**.&#13;
An unknown steamer foundered in&#13;
St. Mary's bay, the crew, passengers&#13;
and boat being a total jloss. The ship&#13;
is a two-master steamer of nearly 3,000&#13;
tons and probably carried a crew of 60,&#13;
with probably some passengers. She&#13;
went ashore before daybreak on. the&#13;
11th, striking a ledge at the foot of the&#13;
cliff, where escape was hopeless- The&#13;
crew launched the boats, but probably&#13;
^during the panic some were crushed&#13;
against her sides, others being&#13;
swamped, and all the occupants apparently&#13;
perished. The ship was seen to&#13;
be on fire by residents six rtliies away.&#13;
Attracted to the scene, they found the&#13;
after half of the wreck blazing fiercely&#13;
and the forepart under water. Kerosene&#13;
in the cargo helped the blaze.&#13;
An Insane Doctor's AvrJal Deed.&#13;
Dr. G. W. Appleby, for several years&#13;
the leading physician at Bristow, Butler&#13;
county, la., in a fit of insanity&#13;
killed a 10-months-old child of Henry&#13;
Wearly, of Hampton, while making an&#13;
examination of it. He took the child&#13;
in his arms and handled it so roughly&#13;
that the parents protested, but to no&#13;
avail. Suddenly he put his thumbs&#13;
under its chin and, with his fingers on&#13;
top of its head, crushed its face in so&#13;
that blood gushed out of its nose and&#13;
mouth. , Then jumping up he seized&#13;
the'chilAJjy one foot and began swinging&#13;
it around his head, resisting all efforts&#13;
of the terror-stricken parents to&#13;
stop him, and it was not until help&#13;
was called in that the child was takeii&#13;
from him, dead. Appleby declared&#13;
that-Ood-had-Uken the child. _&#13;
Santo Domingo to Settle With France.&#13;
A dispatch from Surfto Domingo says&#13;
that President Jiminez, who has been&#13;
at Macoris since the 6th, superintending&#13;
the raising of the popular subscription&#13;
to pay the Boismare-Caccavelli&#13;
claim to the French government, returned&#13;
on the 9(th with 300,000 francs.&#13;
The claim amounts to 280,000 francs.&#13;
As the subscription is larger than the&#13;
claim, the Dominicans are rejoicing.&#13;
The return of the president under such&#13;
auspicious circumstances was marked&#13;
by patriotic enthusiasm and and a general&#13;
flag display The French cruiser&#13;
Cecille saluted the gunboat on which&#13;
President Jiminez returned. In addition&#13;
to the settlement by paying her&#13;
the cash, France also demands an apology,&#13;
but the latter may not be con*&#13;
ceded.&#13;
The Lawton fund up to noon, on the&#13;
8th had reached,867,40g, and Gen. Corbin&#13;
is ef the opinion that 885,000 will&#13;
be raised.&#13;
U. S. Consul Macrum, formerly situated&#13;
at Pretoria has been heard from.&#13;
There is nothing in hisfeport to throw&#13;
the faintest light on his inexplicable&#13;
action in leaving his post in the middle&#13;
of the war.&#13;
Gov. Shaw, of Iowa, in his message&#13;
to the legislature denounced the&#13;
"brutal practice" of the "prize fight,"&#13;
and recommended that a more string-,&#13;
ent lasy be enacted in^that state suppressing&#13;
the practice altogether.&#13;
The famine in India grows darker&#13;
every week, and the sale of children by&#13;
starving parents is becoming common.&#13;
It is a famine of water as we^l as food.&#13;
C.attJ.e are dying off by thousands, and&#13;
no~rain is now expected until June, -&#13;
•: - • . . . &lt; . V ' : - --••' ••••&#13;
_, Julia Morrison James Acquitted.&#13;
The trial of Julia Morrison Jaraesrfor&#13;
the murder of Frank Leidenheimer, of&#13;
the "Mr. Plaster of Paris" company, of&#13;
which they were leading man and lady,&#13;
on the stage of the Chatanooga opera&#13;
house on the night of September 23&#13;
last, ended on the 10th, when the jury&#13;
returned a verdict of not guilty. Miss&#13;
Morrison, upon hearing the words&#13;
which insured* her freedom, advanced&#13;
to the speaker's platform and made a&#13;
most dramatic speech to the court and&#13;
the jur^-.&#13;
Seized Flour Released by England.&#13;
The American flour seiaed off De4agoa&#13;
bay has been released. United States&#13;
Ambassador Choate had an interview&#13;
with the' Marquis of Salisbury^ on the&#13;
10th and received a verbal reply to the&#13;
representations of the Washington government.&#13;
The British note on this&#13;
subject w a s sent later to the United&#13;
States embassy. The gist of it was&#13;
cabled to Washington. In brief, foodstuffs&#13;
are not considered contraband of&#13;
war unless intended for the enemy.&#13;
Massacred bjr Cannibals.&#13;
Mail advices from New Britain report&#13;
the massacre of the captain and&#13;
crew of 15 men belonging to the British&#13;
schooner Nukumania, % of South&#13;
W'al&amp;s, while trading among tho A.dmirality&#13;
islands. Only three boys escaped.&#13;
u The ithtiVes after murdering&#13;
the sailors,-inaugurated,a fenst ashore&#13;
and ate the victims.;' "&#13;
. . - « y » • .«•» « • &gt; ^ ^ M ^ j g f * -**** • * •*•*&#13;
The infiabitants' of the island off&#13;
Leyfe^^5M ShmaK'jfce suflering^from!&#13;
lacku&gt;l. food, jfe&amp;timttg f rota * t b * longi&#13;
blockade, the arbitrary confiscation of [&#13;
S ) peppert^ and tA* levying of tribute h y&#13;
,thfy so-called government of the Filipinos.&#13;
The governors of both island*&#13;
are Tagalos, w h o are ' appointed by&#13;
Aguinaido, and*hey fed*. tJse territories&#13;
completely in their power, admin*&#13;
istering; local affairs according t o their&#13;
own whimsu*hd aocewntable t o « 0 otoe.&#13;
They bawe armed forces which terror-;&#13;
ize the-peaceSal rnhabftahtsl-^Trh* rebel!&#13;
forces o a the other hand, have never&#13;
lacked food or money. The inhabitants, I&#13;
driven t o desperatio» by the neeeafity&#13;
of having to pay four times the normal&#13;
price for. foodstaffa, are organized U&gt;&#13;
fight insurgent depredators, but hawing&#13;
no arms they were unable to resist&#13;
their oppressors.&#13;
A formal order has been i feued from&#13;
the w a r department t o Maj^*Gesw&#13;
Shafter to escort the remi tins of tb»&#13;
late Maj.-Gen. Henry W. Lawton froaa&#13;
San Francisco to Washington, upon&#13;
their arrival at the former place from&#13;
Manila-, which is expected to be about&#13;
Feb. 1. Genl Shafter will be accpm&gt;&#13;
panied by one of his aides-de-camp*&#13;
The remains are to be interred with&#13;
full military honors in the national&#13;
cemetery at Arlington.&#13;
Reports from the movements of the&#13;
American commanders south of Manila&#13;
show that Gen. Bates and Gen. Wheaton&#13;
are at Perez das Marinas and Gen.&#13;
Schwan at Silang, all awaiting the arrival&#13;
of provision wagons. Reconnaissances&#13;
have shown that 2,000 armed in*&#13;
surgents have retired to the mountains&#13;
from the districts between Indang and&#13;
Maig, and thatJ others have retreated&#13;
along the coast from Novelita toward&#13;
Batangas. "--&#13;
As a compromise ana settlement of&#13;
property claims in the Philippines^ it&#13;
said that Archbishop Chapelle has an*&#13;
agreement with President McKinley&#13;
whereby, in consideration of $20,000,-&#13;
000 worth of property to be-^eJected by&#13;
the archbishop, for which a^lfewr and&#13;
unencumbered title is to be given by&#13;
the United State's, the church is to&#13;
waive all claim's to title to any other&#13;
property or lands in the Philippines.&#13;
The President has created a military&#13;
department consisting of the territory&#13;
of Alaska, and assigned Col. George M.&#13;
Randall, 8th U. S. infantry, to command.&#13;
Col. Randall is on d u t y ' w i t h&#13;
his regiment in Cuba, but will report .&#13;
at Washington en route to Alaska on&#13;
Jan. 15.&#13;
The tranrports Tartar and Aztec&#13;
sailed for Manila on the 10th. The&#13;
Tartar will go to the Philippines direct,&#13;
with 500 recruits and a large&#13;
quantity of commissary stores. Cot&#13;
Freeman of the 6th artillery will* be a&#13;
passenger. The Aztec will carry cavalry&#13;
horses and will stop at' Hilo.&#13;
The 30th regiment, made up chiefly&#13;
of Michigan and Illinois recruits, and&#13;
commanded by Col. Gardener, have a t&#13;
last seen actual service. The boys&#13;
fought bravely and their only loss was&#13;
CorporaTJ"a"s. W. Johnson, of Detroit. —&#13;
Gen. Schwan has ocexipied Silang and&#13;
Indang, Cavite province, meeting with&#13;
but slight resistance. He captured&#13;
three guns and a quantity of ammunition.&#13;
The roads in that section are&#13;
very heavy.&#13;
Lieut. Gillmore, formerly of the&#13;
Yorktown, and for many months a&#13;
prisoner in the hands of the Tagals,&#13;
has been assigned to temporary duty&#13;
on the Glacier.&#13;
On the 9th Nolan's squadron of the&#13;
l i t h cavalry drove a body of insurgent*&#13;
from Maig, killing 13 Filipinos. One&#13;
American was killed and two wounded.&#13;
•&#13;
McGovern Mow the Champion.&#13;
Terry McGovern on the 9th wrested&#13;
the featherweight championship of the&#13;
world from George Dixon, who defended&#13;
it for nearly nine years. T©&gt;&#13;
save Dixon from a knockout Tbm,&#13;
O'Rourke, his manager, threw u p t h *&#13;
sponge in the eighth round, w h e n the&#13;
Negro was staggering helplessly, bleedy&#13;
ing and weak, but as game as the dying&#13;
gladiator;. The fight took place be- *&#13;
fore a crowd .that packed; the, Broadway&#13;
Athletic clubv New York city, and. tho&#13;
victory decided the awnej:sbip(©f;a$io,-&#13;
000 purse. When Dixon and McGovern&#13;
stepped on the scales to make the necessary&#13;
118 pounds. Dixon seemed to&#13;
be ih a better condition. He was full&#13;
of life and energy, and looked as if the&#13;
making of the weight had not'troublcd&#13;
him, ^wbile McGovern seemed to be toa&#13;
finely drawn. -When they stepped in the&#13;
ring, however. McGovero*s face showed&#13;
no traces of rigid training course and&#13;
as soon as they stripped to the buff&#13;
each looked in perfect condition.&#13;
The Dewey Loving Cop*&#13;
The loving cup of silver made from&#13;
the melted dimes contributed by- over&#13;
70,000 American citizens, the majority&#13;
of whom were children, was presented&#13;
to Admiral Dewey on the 9th. A small&#13;
but notable gathering met in the parlors&#13;
of the Dewey residence in Washington&#13;
and participated in the ceremony.&#13;
The cup, which ^ is a massive&#13;
and artistic creation, nearly six feet in&#13;
height and appropriately inscribed, occupied&#13;
the bay window, draped aboftt&#13;
the base with the American flag. At&#13;
one side wa$ a large silver bound volume&#13;
containing the names of the con&#13;
tribntors of the /dimes who had subscribed&#13;
to the- token through the "in*.&#13;
Btrumcntnlity of the NeuLYork Journal.&#13;
1&#13;
!&#13;
r&#13;
/&#13;
.-^,.&#13;
m t m m&#13;
*&gt;'&amp;*.. -OT&amp; \'M,lw'J' gSfc * * ? ; sa^&#13;
= 4 ^ , ^ : 4*v -.&#13;
?*m&#13;
:M&#13;
'"•'• ;;7":':" y'cty':, ['±i-r &lt;••'-: i&gt; w^v.-jr&#13;
•• lI'.JJI ' f r.&#13;
'•;:• t •&#13;
r''-',&#13;
V •'•»' ••'.r&#13;
W W&#13;
Or&#13;
f HIS WORD OF HONOR, 8&#13;
A Tak, of the Blue and the Gray. if*&#13;
Copyright. 18W« *y Robert Bonner's Sons.&#13;
C H A F T E f c VJ,—{Contleued.)&#13;
. " I . f p t r i t . w i l l b * of little service t o&#13;
the, pri&amp;qnw. Tfcere i» t o m u c h bitt&#13;
e r t t e s i t a f a i n a t t b e $ » n e i a y t h a t t h e&#13;
m e r e suspicion of his h a v i n g c o m e a s&#13;
a spy will suffice t o bring t h e m o s t&#13;
• e v e r e sentence t h e court-martial can&#13;
Impose. In t h e interest of our s a f e -&#13;
t y , I felt c o m p e t e d to give you t h e&#13;
Information and urge the arrest of t h e&#13;
s u s p i c i o u s person."&#13;
"And I have fulfilled your request,&#13;
a s duty required. ( M y ^ o p i n i o n of it&#13;
w e n e e d n o t discuss. Only I desire to&#13;
remind' you that I h a v e given L i e u -&#13;
t e n a n t m y word of honor that he&#13;
s h a l l have honorable treatment. 1&#13;
shall* hold you responsible for every&#13;
i n s u l t -that Is offered h i m . "&#13;
Edward shrugged his shoulders and&#13;
tried to as3umb a scornful manner.&#13;
"You don't seem able to show ,y.our&#13;
prisoner sufficient respect and Indulg&#13;
e n c e . *Jo one intends to insult him.&#13;
I s h a l l confine myself t o p r e v e n t i n g&#13;
a n y effort t o escape; w h i c h is a l w a y s&#13;
possible. You m o s t positively refused&#13;
t o adopt a n y further precautions."&#13;
"Of course I did. Captured officers&#13;
a r e hot gagged; that is a measure fit&#13;
o n l y for spies or traitors." ,&#13;
Edward clenched his teeth. T h e&#13;
g l a n c e w i t h w h i c h he surveyed t h e&#13;
captain w a s full of m e n a c e ; but W i l -&#13;
s o n o n l y smiled contemptuously.&#13;
"Farewell, Harrison. T h e object for&#13;
w h i c h y o u s u m m o n e d me here is proba&#13;
b l y baffled; and after w h a t I h a v e&#13;
l e a r n e d today I can only congratulte&#13;
Miss Harrison. I a g a i n request t h a t&#13;
t h e prisoner shall be neither m o l e s t -&#13;
ed nor insulted until the escort arrives."&#13;
H e bowed as coldly and formally a s&#13;
before, and left the room. Harrison&#13;
did not return; the1 salute, but gazed&#13;
m u t e l y and g l o o m i l y after his former&#13;
friend, w h o n o w turned from h i m w i t h&#13;
undisguised contempt. The act w h i c h&#13;
sir," said the older of the two, a little&#13;
w i t h e r e d m a n , w i t h gray hair.&#13;
"But w e are g o i n g to Springfield, t o o ;&#13;
a n d if y o u will Join u s y o u cannot mr&amp;a&#13;
the road."&#13;
"With pleasure. I should n o t like&#13;
to g o out of m y w a y , as I am in a&#13;
hurry."&#13;
T h e rider urged h i s horse to a faster&#13;
trot a s he spofce, In order n o t to&#13;
fall behind the carriage. The old&#13;
g e n t l e m a n eyed him curiously.'&#13;
"You are in a hurry?" he repeated.&#13;
"I suppose t h i n g s are very bad at&#13;
Springfield."&#13;
"Very bad!" w a s t h e laconic answer,&#13;
but a sharp, k e e n glance rested&#13;
on the speaker.&#13;
"Unfortunately, t h a t w a s to be expected.&#13;
But as you are so well informed,&#13;
I presume I a m n o t m i s t a k e n&#13;
in supposing that I h a v e m e t Doctor&#13;
B l a c k w o o d ? "&#13;
"Doctor Blackwood—of course," returned&#13;
t h e stranger, w i t h the s a m e&#13;
brevity. "And to w h o m have I tile&#13;
honor.—"&#13;
"My n a m e is' T h o m p s o n . I a m a&#13;
justice of the peace i n t h e city, and a&#13;
friend of y o u r colleague, Doctor&#13;
Green. H e told m e yesterday that y o u&#13;
had been s u m m o n e d for consultation,&#13;
and t h a t he w a s g o i n g w i t h y o u to&#13;
Springfield. ~ B u t y o u are alone, I&#13;
see."&#13;
"Yes. Doctor Green w a s detained&#13;
by an e x t r e m e l y critical case, and cannot&#13;
leave t o w n today, so I s e t off&#13;
alone. T h e s e confounded military disturbances!&#13;
N o t a v e h i c l e could be&#13;
had in the w h o l e city. I w a s o b l i g -&#13;
ed to ride in t h i s scorching heat."&#13;
"May I offer you a seat in my carriage?"&#13;
asked the m a g i s t r a t e courteously.&#13;
"My c o m p a n i o n can take&#13;
your horse." ~ *—&#13;
"I t h a n k you. Don't trouble yourself.&#13;
I'll keep up w i t h the carriage."&#13;
Mr. T h o m p s o n , w h o was e v i d e n t l y&#13;
C H E C K E D H I S H O R S E .&#13;
t h e w i l d e s t jealousy had led htm to&#13;
c o m m i t already showed to him a v e r y&#13;
different face t h a n a t the first m o m e n t&#13;
of gratified1 revenge. W h a t had h e&#13;
g a i n e d b y it? Florence w a s forever&#13;
l o s t to him, for she k n e w as well as&#13;
R o l a n d himself w h o ; . h a d been g u i l t y&#13;
of t h i s deed of treachery. Her father&#13;
w a s no "longer able' t o exert a n y c o n -&#13;
trol over her or m a k e a n y bequest&#13;
i n favor of h i s n e p h e w w h o , w i t h h i s&#13;
daughter's hand, w a s to receive all the&#13;
r i g h t s of heirship and now possessed&#13;
n o legal claims. N o t h i n g was left&#13;
s a v e vengeance o n the hated rival,&#13;
and this vengeance, a t least, should&#13;
be wreaked.&#13;
C H A P T E R VII.&#13;
A horseman, w h o w a s evidently a&#13;
stranger to' the road, w a s trotting t o -&#13;
w a r d Springfield.' HeL scanned1 ; every&#13;
object very closely, a n d . s o m e t i m e s&#13;
o v e n seemed doubtful concerning t h e&#13;
d i r e c t i o n * t o pursue. H e wore" c i v i l -&#13;
ian's, dress, a g r a y s u m m e r suit s u i t -&#13;
ed to the climate. N o w , at a point&#13;
w h e r e t h e road branched in t w o direct&#13;
i o n s , h e checked his horse irresolute*&#13;
ly, pondered a f e w m i n u t e s and t h e n&#13;
' w a i t e d for a carriage approaching h i m&#13;
from behind. It w a s a light open v e -&#13;
hicle, occupied by two gentlemen. T h e&#13;
stranger, bowing, said:&#13;
"Pafdqn me. I a m on m y w a y to&#13;
Springfield, and don't k n o w w h e t h e r&#13;
t o t u r n - t o the "right or the left. Perh&#13;
a p s you will be kind enough t o inf&#13;
o r m m e ? "&#13;
glad to find s o m e one w i t h w h o m he&#13;
could chat a w a y the weary hours, ordered&#13;
the driver fo proceed more s l o w -&#13;
jy, and a n - a n i m a t e d conversation was&#13;
s o o n ^ i n full course. 'The old g e n t l e -&#13;
m a n did not perceive that it consisted&#13;
a l m o s t e x c l u s i v e l y of q u e s t i o n s&#13;
which he answered. He did this, h o w -&#13;
ever, v e r y eloquently, and w a s m u c h&#13;
pleased w i t h his n e w acquaintance.&#13;
"Yes, I w a s s u m m o n e d for consultation,"&#13;
said t h e physician. "Doctor&#13;
Green h a s no doubt about t h e case,&#13;
but the p a t i e n t — " ' ,&#13;
Ho paused, apparently s e e k i n g just&#13;
the right words.&#13;
"Poor Mr. H a r r i s o n ! " observed the&#13;
justice.&#13;
"Yes—poor Mr. H a r r i s o n ! You&#13;
know him, t o o ? "&#13;
"Certainly; he a l w a y s spends half&#13;
the year at Springfield with his c h a r m -&#13;
ing daughter. It is hard for the y o u n g&#13;
lady that her w e d d i n g should take&#13;
place under s u c h sorrowful circumstances."&#13;
T h e physician started. A g a i n a&#13;
swift, s e a r c h i n g g l a n c e scanned the old&#13;
g e n t l e m a n ' s face.&#13;
" W e d d l u s ? A\ her father's sickbed?"&#13;
• •&#13;
"That is t h e reason. H e probably&#13;
k n o w s that t h e end. of h i s life is approaching,&#13;
and wlsb-es first, to place&#13;
his daughter in h e r ' husband's arms.&#13;
At least t h a t Is w h a t Mr. E d w a r d Harrison&#13;
told m e w h e n h e asked m e t o&#13;
.perform t h e m a r r i a g e ceremony " a t T h e r e a r e t w o levers Tor m o v i n g m e n&#13;
Tfou m u s t take the right-hand one, [ Springfield. U n d e r t h e c l r c u m s t a n w i , 1 — t o U r t S t and fear.—Napoleon.&#13;
I could n o t refuse, and a m o n m y way&#13;
there." i&#13;
"Edward H a r r i s o n ? A relative of&#13;
t h e sick m a n , I suppose?"&#13;
"His n e p h e w , and, through t h i s wedding,&#13;
also h i s heir. Miss F l o r e n c e is&#13;
t h e o n l y child.":...-&#13;
"But t h i s h a s t e is incomprehensible!"&#13;
said t h e physician, w h o s e lips&#13;
curled in a s m i l e Of cutting s a r c a s m .&#13;
"I i e a r d f r o m m y colleague t h a t but&#13;
a_ahort t i m e ago the y o u n g lady w a s&#13;
ootmd by o t h e r ties."&#13;
"Yes, I h a v e heard/ so, too. S o m e&#13;
romantic' y o u t h f u l l o v e affair, w h i c h&#13;
probably w a s not m e a n t t o be t a k e n&#13;
seriously. T h e lover, a y o u n g officer,&#13;
is said to h a v e entered t h e Union&#13;
army, w h i c h , of course, ended t h e matter.&#13;
At a n y rate, the y o u n g lady will&#13;
be Mrs. g a r r i s o n t h i s evening, if God&#13;
s o wills."&#13;
"Certainly—if God s o wills."&#13;
T h e tone w a s s o peculiar that even&#13;
u n s u s p i c i o u s Mr. T h o m p s o n noticed&#13;
it. .&#13;
" W h a t did you mean, s i r ? " , , h e&#13;
asked..&#13;
" N o t h i n g especial; I merely repeat-,&#13;
ed your p i o u s words."&#13;
T h e m a n s i o n of Springfield w a s n o w&#13;
visible in t h e distance; they were already&#13;
d r i v i n g through the plantation.&#13;
T h e justice of the peace availed himself&#13;
of the opportunity t o dwell upon&#13;
Mr.' H a r r i s o n ' s w e a l t h , discussed the&#13;
possible l o s s e s which the war m i g h t&#13;
inflict u p o n his property and e x p r e s s -&#13;
ed his belief that a large portion of&#13;
h i s fortune w a s invested elsewhere.&#13;
T h e doctor listened attentively, but&#13;
t h i s did n o t prevent h i s s c a n n i n g the&#13;
vicinity s t i l l more closely t h a n be*&#13;
fore. H e s e e m e d trying to fix every&#13;
bend in t h e road, every distant landm&#13;
a r k upon h i s memory, and t h e house&#13;
w i t n iia d o o r s and terraces received&#13;
the same s c r u t i n y .&#13;
"A fine estate," he said. "Do y o u&#13;
think its v i c i n i t y , to the city w i l l afford&#13;
it p r o t e c t i o n ? I have t h e ' contrary&#13;
o p i n i o n , for it is an open secret&#13;
that t h e m a r c h of the U n i o n&#13;
•forces is directed here."&#13;
"Impossible! H o w do you k n o w ? "&#13;
cried T h o m p s o n , starting from his&#13;
corner ol t h e carriage in terror.&#13;
"I- heard it on m y journey to the&#13;
city."- ' • . . . "&#13;
"I heard, on the contrary, that their&#13;
march w^s southward, otherwise'I certainly&#13;
s h o u l d not have left t o w h . " _ 7"&#13;
The doctor smiled m i s c h i e v o u s l y at&#13;
the timid little gentleman, w h o had&#13;
"turned pale w i t h fright.&#13;
"Why, t h e troops w i n riot interfere&#13;
w i t h a j u s t i c e of the peace. A t the&#13;
utmost, y o u could only be obliged to&#13;
unite s o m e loving couple w i t h i n the&#13;
e n e m y ' s l i n e s , in t h e . bonds of matrimony."&#13;
"Jest an m u c h as you choose," eaid&#13;
T h o m p s o n , angrily. "I want nothing&#13;
t o do w i t h the enemy. At a n y rate,&#13;
1'irinquire about that rumor, and, for&#13;
the present, remain in the city, w h i c h&#13;
can only b e taken by a regular siege."&#13;
T h e carriage now stopped at the&#13;
house, the g e n t l e m e n alighted, and the&#13;
doctor d i s m o u n t e d from his horse,&#13;
throwing t h e bridle to a n e g r o w h o&#13;
hurried up.&#13;
"Don't u n s a d d l e my horse," he said,&#13;
carelessly. "I m u s t go back to the&#13;
city_ as quickly as possible, and at any&#13;
rate shall leave before the other gentlemen."&#13;
He let t h e t w o men precede h i m and&#13;
lingered, a s if by accident, o n the&#13;
steps, l o o k i n g after the servant.&#13;
A n u n m i s t a k a b l e expression of satisfaction&#13;
flitted over his face as he&#13;
saw t h a t t h e .animal w a s lid to a&#13;
stable c l o s e by the house.&#13;
Edward H a r r i s o n received the new&#13;
arrivals, and the loquacious Mr,&#13;
T h o m p s o n instantly presented Doctor&#13;
B l a c k w o o d , sparing the latter a n y explanation&#13;
by relating in detail the&#13;
cause of Doctor Green's absence. Then&#13;
he introduced his clerk, a. pale, eff&#13;
e m i n a t e fellow, whose m a n n e r w a s&#13;
e x c e s s i v e l y timid and deferential, and&#13;
of w h o m n o notice w h a t e v e r w a s taken.&#13;
M e a n w h i l e , during the last half hour&#13;
Edward h a d had t i m e to regain h i s&#13;
composure. These visitors m u s t , of&#13;
t o u r s e , o b t a i n no glimpse of the catastrophe&#13;
w h i c h had happened, here.&#13;
H e e x p r e s s e d in courteous phrases&#13;
his regret for h a v i n g troubled the&#13;
m a g i s t r a t e in vain, his uncle's condition&#13;
had c h a n g e d so suddenly for the&#13;
worse t h a t it w a s impossible to have&#13;
t h e w e d d i n g take place that day. Miss&#13;
Harrison w a s in a state of the utm&#13;
o s t a n x i e t y and excitement. Then,&#13;
turning w i t h the s a m e courtesy to the&#13;
physician, ^he added:&#13;
"You a r e welcome. Doctor Blackwood,&#13;
t h o u g h I fear you can g i v e us&#13;
no c o n s o l a t i o n . We were prepared for&#13;
the w o r s t long ago, yet a physician's&#13;
presence i s a l w a y s a satisfaction. I&#13;
suppose Doctor Green h a s told y o u&#13;
about t h e c a s e ? " ^&#13;
"Yes," replied the doctor, . w h o s e&#13;
sharp k e e n eyes raised,steadily on t h e&#13;
y o u n g m a n ' s face. "So I should like&#13;
to g o to t h e ' s i c k room at once. Pray,&#13;
don't t r o u b l e yourself. I prefer t o see&#13;
t h e p a t i e n t first alone, and w i l l t h e n&#13;
inform y o u o f t h e result of m y e x a m -&#13;
ination."&#13;
( T o be continued.)&#13;
T R A N S V A A L W A R I T E M S .&#13;
T h e p l i g h t of British arms in S o u t h&#13;
Africa is o v e r s h a d o w e d for t h e p r e s e n t&#13;
oy t h e storm w h i c h i s bursting" o v e r&#13;
She head of t h e h o m e g o v e r n m e n t ,&#13;
r h e Manchester Bpeeches of Mr.. Balfour,&#13;
t h e g o v e r n m e n t leader i n t h e&#13;
l o u s e of c o m m o n s , l i a s loosened s u c h a&#13;
torrent of c o m m e n t from t h e press and&#13;
individuals of h i s o w n party t h a t w e r e&#13;
parliament t o re-assemble today i t i s&#13;
doubtful if t h e conservatives w o u l d retain&#13;
power i n spite of their t r e m e n d o u s&#13;
majority of t h e past session. T h e pentup&#13;
dissatisfaction w i t h t h e government's&#13;
lack of e n e r g y in w a g i n g t h e&#13;
war is no l o n g e r concealed.&#13;
Gen. M e t h e u n h a s been recalled t o&#13;
England. T h i s is g i v e n on t h e h i g h e s t&#13;
authority. I t is reported t h a t h e w a s&#13;
laboring under g r e a t m e n t a l e x c i t e m e n t&#13;
after the b a t t l e of Modder River, and&#13;
that t h e w a r office h a s c o n s i d e r e d - i t&#13;
necessary t o displace him, as h e i s evidently&#13;
not i n a fit condition t o command&#13;
troops. T w o m e m b e r s of h i s&#13;
family are said to be w e a k - m i n d e d .&#13;
I n the e n g a g e m e n t at L a d y s m i t h on&#13;
the Oth t h e B r i t i s h loses were: Officers&#13;
killed, 14; w o u n d e d , 34; non-commissioned&#13;
officers and men k i l l e d or&#13;
wounded, 800. T h i s account is from a&#13;
British source a n d is probably not overestimated.&#13;
F r o m the same source it is&#13;
estimated t h a t t h e Boer losses w a s bet&#13;
w e e n 2,000 and 3,000.&#13;
A report from Col. Pilcher of t h e&#13;
British forces s a y s t h a t on Jan, 1 h e&#13;
completely defeated the Boers i n com&#13;
m a n d at S u n n y s i d e laagar, t a k i n g t h e&#13;
laager and c a p t u r i n g 40 prisoners, w i t h&#13;
a loss of o n l y t w o privates k i l l e d a n d&#13;
one l i e u t e n a n t w o u n d e d .&#13;
T h e g u n s w h i c h w e r e c a p t u r e d from&#13;
Gen. Buller a t Colenso h a v e b e e n&#13;
mounted in t h e h i l l s c o m m a n i n g t h e&#13;
drift 6ver t h e T u g e l a river at Springfield.&#13;
T h e Bcfert also captured 620&#13;
rounds of shrapnel w h e n t h e y took t h e&#13;
guns.&#13;
T h e e x e c u t i v e c o m m i t t e e of t h e Int&#13;
e r n a t i o n a l Peace society recently sent&#13;
a t e l e g r a m to President McKinley aski&#13;
n g h i m to i n t e r v e n e w i t h a v i e w ' of&#13;
e n d i n g the w a r in S o u t h Africa.&#13;
Gen. Lord Roberts, the n e w commander&#13;
of t h e British forces i n South&#13;
Africa, a n d h i s chief of staff, Gen.&#13;
Lord Kitchener, arrived at Cape T o w n&#13;
on the 10th. ;&#13;
Boers accuse t h e British of m i s u s i n g&#13;
~the w h i t e flag", bearers of it t a k i n g&#13;
part in l i g h t i n g and a train c a r r y i n g it&#13;
a i d i n g in,bridge repairing.&#13;
C O N G R E S S I O N A L N O T E S .&#13;
There e x i s t s a serious difference of&#13;
opinion b e t w e e n the members of t h e&#13;
commerce c o m m i t t e e of the t w o h o u s e s&#13;
on the s h i p p i n g subsidy bill. A s t h i s&#13;
bill w * s ottered in last c o n g r e s s t h e&#13;
premiums were largely for speed. T h i s&#13;
means t h a t the chief benefits w o u l d accrue&#13;
to t h e s w i f t passenger carriers&#13;
and the h i g h class freighters. N e w l y&#13;
constructed A t l a n t i c liners w o u l d receive&#13;
the g r e a t e s t sums because t h e y&#13;
naturally w i l l be the speediest and&#13;
largest vessels. There are a large&#13;
number of s e n a t o r s and representatives&#13;
w h o think this is w r o n g in principle.&#13;
TheA- say. t h a t the g r e a t e s t benefits&#13;
shoulcf g o to the coarse f r e i g h t&#13;
jcarriers. These dissenters from t h e&#13;
plan of the original bills say "that the&#13;
premiums should favor t o n n a g e rather&#13;
t h a n speed. These objections first&#13;
came from t h e m e n w h o a r e - i n t e r e s t e d&#13;
in b u i l d i n g up t h e commerce of the&#13;
Pacific.&#13;
r Rep. W e e k s , of Michigan, h a s introduced&#13;
a j o i n t resolution reciting the&#13;
unsettled s t a t u s of t h e people in the&#13;
islands acquired from Spain, and providing&#13;
t h a t for five years the President,&#13;
as commander-in-chief of the army and&#13;
n a v y shall c o n t i n u e military a u t h o r i t y&#13;
in.said islands, and t h a t congress shall&#13;
deal w i t h the subject at the expiration&#13;
of t h e five-year period. In t h e meantime,&#13;
it is provided t h a t reciprocity reductions&#13;
not e x c e e d i n g 23 per cent may&#13;
be made o n the products of the islands&#13;
brought t o this country.&#13;
T h e house and senate on t h e 10th&#13;
paid beautiful and impressive t r i b u t e s&#13;
to the memory of the late Vice-Presid&#13;
e n t l l o b a r t .&#13;
"AMss is As&#13;
Good as a Mc"&#13;
•&#13;
If you aft not entirely &lt;weU, yoo are 4L&#13;
JMness does not mean death's door, his''&#13;
a sense oftveariness, a " tired feeUng" a&#13;
life filled quith nameless pains and suffer-'•&#13;
ing. In 90% of cases the blood is to blame. I&#13;
Hood's SarsaparitU is Nature's corrective&#13;
for disorders of the ttood&lt; 'Remember&#13;
-Never[Disappoint*&#13;
Florida, Wait Indlea »»d central&#13;
The facilities of the Louisville ft&#13;
Nashville Railroad for h a n d l i n g t o u r -&#13;
ists and travelers destined for all&#13;
points in Florida, Cuba, P o r t o Rico,&#13;
Central America, or for Nassau, are u n -&#13;
surpassed. Double daily lines of s l e e p -&#13;
ing cars are run from Cincinnati,&#13;
Louisville, Chicago and St. L o u i s&#13;
through Jacksonville to interior F l o r -&#13;
ida points, and to Miami, T a m p a a n d&#13;
N e w Orleans, the ports of e m b a r k a t i o n&#13;
for the countries mentioned. For folders,&#13;
etc., write Jackson Smith, D . P.&#13;
A., Cincinnati, O.&#13;
Tbingg l i e Could Be member.&#13;
T o u r i s t — H o w m a n y children haT«&#13;
you, Mr. Green? Farmer Green (doubtfully)—&#13;
Well, now, I dunno exactly.&#13;
There's Bob, an' Jack, an' Alice—wife*&#13;
h o w m a n y children are there? Mrg,&#13;
Green—Seven; five boys and t w o girls.&#13;
Tourist—A fine family and a fine f a r m ,&#13;
Mr. Green. You've a large stock, I&#13;
presume. Farmer—Aye! I've 173 head&#13;
of cattle, 8 horses, 781 s h e e p and 27&#13;
pigs. T h e n , there's 315 g e e s e , 18 t u r -&#13;
k e y s an* j u s t 259 fowls.&#13;
AH APPEAL TO TOMASITY&#13;
GENERALLY.&#13;
We need your assistance in announc*&#13;
i n g to the world the greatest remedy&#13;
that Science h a s . ever produced, a n d&#13;
you need our assistance to secure relief&#13;
for yourself and friends t h r o u g h&#13;
Swanson's "©-DROPS."&#13;
A R E M E D Y S U P R E M E .&#13;
A s surely as the American N a v y h a s&#13;
conquered and will conquer all t h a t&#13;
opposes it, so will "5-DROP3" unfailingly&#13;
conquer all disease like R h e u -&#13;
matism, Sciatica, Neuralgia, K i d n e ?&#13;
Troubles, Lumbago, Catarrh of all&#13;
kinds, Asthma, Dyspepsia,- B a c k a c h e ,&#13;
Sleeplessness, Nervousness, Heavt-&#13;
Weaknes's, Toothache. Earache, Creeping&#13;
Numbness, Bronchitis, etc., or a n y&#13;
disease for which we recommend J t .&#13;
"6-DROPS" is Ahe name and the dose.&#13;
Trial bottles 25c. Large bottles, containing&#13;
300 doses, $1.00 prepaid by m a l l&#13;
or express. S i x bottles for $5.00. W h y&#13;
suffer pain and agony when for suchsmall&#13;
a m o u n t you can obtain the relief&#13;
for which you have been so l o n g&#13;
waiting? Don't wait! Write n o w , . a n d&#13;
the Swanson Rheumatic Cure Co., 164&#13;
Lake St., Chicago, 111., will i m m e -&#13;
diately give your order attention.&#13;
From t h e standpoint of t h e b u l l d o g ,&#13;
this is a very quarrelsome world.&#13;
I m p o r t a n t t o M o t h e r s .&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA.&#13;
a eafc and surer remedy for infants and children,&#13;
and eee that it&#13;
Beam the&#13;
Signature of&#13;
In TJea For Over 30 Years.&#13;
The Kind You Have Always Bought.&#13;
ffi&amp;&amp;&amp;x&#13;
_ It t a k e s religion w i t h s u n s h i n e i n i t&#13;
to attract a child.&#13;
Lane's Family Medicine.,&#13;
Moves t h e b o w e l s each d a y . I n order&#13;
t o be h e a l t h y t h i s is necessary. A c t s&#13;
g e n t l y o n t h e liver and k i d n e y s . Cures&#13;
sick headache. Price 25'and 50c.&#13;
W i n k i n g a t sin w i l l soon r u i n t h e&#13;
eye-sight.&#13;
T H E GRIP CUBE THAT DOES C U B S .&#13;
Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets removes&#13;
the cause that produces La Grippe. 13. W.&#13;
Grove's signature is on each box. 25c&#13;
T H E MARKETS.&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
New York— Cattle Sheeo Lamb*&#13;
Bcstffractes M TiX^il KS »4 .SO W 65&#13;
Lower grade* 3 75^4 3J 3UI 5 7o&#13;
Chicago:—&#13;
Best jiratles...&#13;
Lower kjradjs.&#13;
.5 4*??6 40&#13;
.4 UOifci 0J&#13;
. 3 ~:VT?I4 ::&gt;&#13;
.-2 SJ&amp;S ;3&#13;
D*tro£—&#13;
Best Krau. •* • • •&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
Buffalo—&#13;
Best grades 4 03ft5 01&#13;
Lower grades.. .-1 lo&amp;S (P&#13;
Cincinnati—&#13;
Best prades 5 STVfio 7¾&#13;
Lower grades. .4 :Jx&amp;4 6&amp;&#13;
PtttaburK—&#13;
Besttrrades. ...SWasSS&#13;
Lower grades . .4 2S&amp;5 w)&#13;
4 »0&#13;
4 4J&#13;
ft 00&#13;
4 2J&#13;
4 &amp;&gt;&#13;
4 40&#13;
4 00&#13;
3 7 J&#13;
4 6'&gt;&#13;
4 4 ^&#13;
0 2%&#13;
4 5J&#13;
ft W&#13;
6 b)&#13;
-8 3V&#13;
tt 15&#13;
5 7 5&#13;
6 50&#13;
6 10&#13;
5&amp;'&gt;&#13;
HOSTS&#13;
14 8..&#13;
1 75&#13;
4 7c&#13;
4 4:&#13;
4 7J&#13;
4 3o&#13;
4 7ft&#13;
4 4J&#13;
-I .¾&#13;
4 n&#13;
*&#13;
4 ft]&#13;
4 4(&#13;
G R A I N , ETC.&#13;
Now York&#13;
Chicago&#13;
*D«troU&#13;
Toledo&#13;
Ctftclnamtl&#13;
Pittsburg&#13;
Buffalo&#13;
Wheat.&#13;
No. 4 r^l&#13;
?J®7J&#13;
« * &amp; »&#13;
7l@7t&#13;
?J&lt;&amp;70&#13;
Corn,&#13;
No. 2 mix&#13;
4084(¼&#13;
33®33H&#13;
34®34fc&#13;
S3®33*&#13;
Oats.&#13;
No. 2 white&#13;
24&amp;S4&#13;
27^-27&#13;
34&amp;34H&#13;
S9@39&#13;
•Detroit—Hay. No. t Timothy, 118 00 per ton.&#13;
Potatoes, 50o per bu. Live, Poultry, lpnns&#13;
chicken*, Be per lb; fowl*, 7c: turkeys. 10j;&#13;
duck*. 9c E«r*, Ntrictly fre*h. 80c per dozoa&#13;
Butter, best dairy. sMo per lb; creamery, VOo.&#13;
Some very large trees bear very littler&#13;
fruit. .&#13;
' •* Mlat*&gt;* &lt;&#13;
puff&#13;
EARED&#13;
CORN&#13;
1 tMiMw.wrUwt.OTrnwau&#13;
ttooii* torn frowlag, yMdtac ta&#13;
VM, la HlnnaxHa, «00 tnu.pr»tr«.;&#13;
B I O P O U R OATS&#13;
mataMtBM)&#13;
S P E L T Z&#13;
SO bst. par Mr*. Grta*«rtgi_&#13;
fc&amp;dharfued talaaideortba Marat I&#13;
B A R L E Y , B E A K O L E U ,&#13;
JUWI 111 bo*. In K.Y. Wo*i«rfeU&#13;
K A P E *&amp;*. A TON&#13;
Olrts rtoU, groan tad far caiUa,&#13;
•b««p, iwiaa, poultry, «tc.. ttlOa.&#13;
• ion. Waaoll BiM-unifcaaf U»&#13;
Rape Med oaad in tht V. 9.&#13;
BBOMTJS INEKMT7S&#13;
Graateat graaa «a atria. Grow* t&gt; |&#13;
parftotto* tn A stark* — l y f c w a .&#13;
Saliar n r r u U It I&#13;
T H E MILLION DOLZJUI&#13;
y*t*t«lJ th« M H tftlkad 9t pa&gt;&#13;
tato an atria, aad SaUar S i x&#13;
jVaakat beA »iU Mk« J M Hah.!&#13;
Urftti grow at PMataaa aai&#13;
Fare Saada la tfca warid.&#13;
T B G E T A B L E S E E M&#13;
I Lartaat, ahofaaat Mat to U. U ,&#13;
1 Oatoo Saad, Me. lb. ftSaryiktaht&#13;
varrtttadtagraw. K pigs aw**!&#13;
Uatt TtptaMaajpaatpalaV fMt&gt;&#13;
. A FOJ* 1 0 * •TAMPt&#13;
; tkta »«41««, tra stall «r«a» SaaS&#13;
OMtkag ao410 &gt;iga Taflai Sa*4 "i IMKI | JoHNAS/diSiSEEDCa&#13;
LA CROSSE WIS.&#13;
P l S O ' S r i i R t F&#13;
U S&#13;
tottme. rap.&#13;
C O.N S L f M P T l O N , I&#13;
U S&#13;
1i&#13;
**»•&#13;
•~....&#13;
J&#13;
—^4- •TftMrflrr1,:&#13;
4&#13;
f&#13;
/:&#13;
HI&gt;Ut fittrimnj g)fejrafoft.&#13;
f. L. ANDREWS € O t T O « .&#13;
THURSDAY, JAN. 18,-MOO.&#13;
FARM JOURNAL&#13;
I * « 3 a t p r o m Now t o D e c . 1903&#13;
*" NEARLY 5 Y E A R S .&#13;
By special arrangement with the&#13;
publishers of the FARM JOURNAL&#13;
we are enabled to offer t^iat paper&#13;
to ever subscriber who pay a for&#13;
the DISPATCH one year ahead, for&#13;
only $1, both papers for the price&#13;
of ours only; our paper one year&#13;
and the Farm Journal from now&#13;
to Dec, 1903, nearly five years.&#13;
The Farm Journal is an old established&#13;
paper, enjoying great&#13;
popularity, one of the best and&#13;
roost useful farm papers published.&#13;
SST'This offer should be accepted&#13;
without delay.&#13;
P.-A. Siuler puaranfees every bot&#13;
tie ot Cbamberlins Cough Remedy and&#13;
will refund the money tc any one who&#13;
is not falsified alter uwi^tWe -thirds&#13;
of the contents. This is the best remedy&#13;
iu the world for la grippe cougbs,&#13;
colds, croop and whooping cough and&#13;
is pleasant and safe to take. It prevents&#13;
any tendency of a cold to result&#13;
in pneumonia. t rnar.-l&#13;
Monday, t h e condenced milk&#13;
factory here received 125,&lt;K59 lbs~~~&#13;
of milk the largest amount for an v&#13;
single day in the history of the&#13;
institution. . That amount of&#13;
milk at the present price, 101.20,&#13;
Means $1,500.71,to the milk producers,&#13;
in a siugle day. The daily'&#13;
average is nearly 90,000 pounds.&#13;
The company is building an addion&#13;
to the factory, 30x37 feet, for&#13;
a sugar room—Republican.&#13;
By BAILEYj SMITH.&#13;
T .Arranged by M R S . W. C A R U N .&#13;
C O N T I N U E D .&#13;
". _ i —=•&#13;
C o n c l u d e d .&#13;
Sept. 20th 1899.&#13;
Inside of three weeks the Yukon&#13;
will be closed for Navigation.&#13;
It freezes hard every night aud&#13;
our season of rocking will soon&#13;
close. Labor will be in demand&#13;
and wages" good til is winter. For&#13;
the first time I saw a bulletin—&#13;
"Miueis Wanted." When winter&#13;
work begins-½ L the mines there&#13;
W. C- T. UEdited-&#13;
by^the W. C. T. U. of Fincknej.&#13;
wo Rtirht to u n m e t * w i l 1 b e n o unemployed in Dawson.&#13;
A woman lovely in lace, form and The amount of machinery coming&#13;
temper will always have triendi bat j into Dawson is astonishing,&#13;
one. who would be attractive must J themers-pumps and hydraulic makeep&#13;
her health. If she is weak, wckly' c h i u e r y b y t h e bo^t io a d g &lt; The&#13;
^| iag. ^&gt;ne-doo't need nrtfn|T years&#13;
in here to make a fortune, if they&#13;
can once get on their feet with&#13;
money to buy paying property.&#13;
Propenty that has been well prospected&#13;
and paying are good investments.&#13;
They usually bring&#13;
good prices, yet it is the best and&#13;
quickest way to fortune.&#13;
Mr. Kroenert (who"bought in&#13;
with me) had some money this&#13;
spring and purchased Gold Hill&#13;
property, buying one fourth interest&#13;
in one claim and a half inand&#13;
all run down, she will be nervous future methods of mining in here&#13;
. . will be completely revolutionized.&#13;
ft&#13;
The Elephant and Python.&#13;
Dr. Lewis Albert banks tells&#13;
the following story, which has a&#13;
most important lesson, especially&#13;
for you ng peopfe:&#13;
"About six months ago a baby&#13;
elephant wag brought over from&#13;
Burmah and made a summer tour,&#13;
extending into the late autumn,&#13;
with a traveling show. Then i(;&#13;
Was sent to the Brooklyn boardinghouse&#13;
to spend the winter,&#13;
The elephant took a ba&lt;l cold and&#13;
the landlord dosed him with&#13;
whiskey and quinine from a demijohn^&#13;
The elephant did not like&#13;
the ^tqubr at first, but soon&#13;
acquired the habit, and the other&#13;
night, feeling thirsty, he knocked&#13;
the head off the demijohn, which&#13;
had been left in his quarters, and-f*ad manures,&#13;
sucked out all there was left. _&#13;
There was not enough to make&#13;
him "dead" drunk, but just&#13;
enongh to make him feel big, and&#13;
want to br°ak something aud have&#13;
a great time. I n his hilarity he&#13;
and irritable. If she has constipation&#13;
or kidney trouble, her impure blood .... . . . . . . , ,&#13;
will cause pimples, blotches or skin W h l l e W ^ i n g last spring *&#13;
eruptions and a wretched complexion, hauled, one, the only product, the&#13;
Electric bitters is the best medicine in other t h e chief luxury—gold&#13;
the world to regulate stomach, liver and whiskey, in greater quantities&#13;
and kidneys and so purify the blood, than I ever expect to again. F o r&#13;
It tfives sinnicr nerves, bright eyet, nearly a week I hauled whiskey&#13;
smooth velvety skin, rich complexion. t o t t i e Q{\t Forks up Bonanza&#13;
It m'11 make a good looking, charminfr-a b ( m t i c miles. I hauled two&#13;
woman of a run down, invalid. Only , j * j i i , • ™u,„ ^.c ™rt„&#13;
«A . » . « . , -*—, x loads of 50c at P. A. Sigler s drug store; -i - . . g.orl d d-u s, t .„in value ,o f o,v er r. one million of dollars, and a box&#13;
We quFoatrem etrhs'eIn sfotiltluotwe.i ng from LCof mBmauekrc eb, ilvlas lufeo r8 7t5h0e,0 0B0a. nk of&#13;
The Farmers' Guide, 'published at&#13;
Indianapolis, Indiana: "Mr. Cal.&#13;
Hussleman, writer of Echo Farm&#13;
Notes, is a farmer and aairyman.&#13;
He is known in*every township in&#13;
ludiana, having lectured from&#13;
one to five time^ in every county&#13;
in lixliana and whose services are&#13;
During this last summer nearly&#13;
all kinds of vegetables have been&#13;
raised here, beets, turnips, peas&#13;
grow 7 ft higbl and covered with&#13;
pods, radishes\pnjly 10c a bunch,&#13;
lettuce, kale, mustard and cabbage&#13;
.potatoes tried-*i&amp; an ex perm en t&#13;
terest in an adjoining dlaim. They&#13;
put men to work and opened u p&#13;
the greund, taking out money by&#13;
the POUND. He put his money .in&#13;
more property adjoining.aad now&#13;
owns half interest in ^evau-claims&#13;
on Gold Hill. He left last month&#13;
for Seattle to _buy machinery.&#13;
When he left he told me his banner&#13;
claim was turning out * 1,0()()&#13;
per day and thajfc he. had paid for&#13;
all his property out of that claim.&#13;
I now intend to stay with this&#13;
c a m p - a few years for there are&#13;
opportunities not found in the&#13;
states. The Klondike district is&#13;
being recognized as the richest&#13;
placers known. The Cape Nomt&gt;&#13;
tJiscovery„on-the coast, near St.&#13;
Michaels, made this spring, promises&#13;
to be another Kloudike. They&#13;
are principally summer diggings,&#13;
which is an important\fejfturtV&#13;
their lavor, as there is no&#13;
tion of children t o another; not&#13;
being subject to sale or inoumberence.&#13;
I t is a fine place and to keep i t&#13;
up in as fine shape aa it is under&#13;
with its orchards and shade trees&#13;
growing larger with age, would be&#13;
but a small part of the duty we&#13;
owe you, Father and M of her, for&#13;
^he-heme so pleasant to us ~*JMW-~&#13;
ren in our younger days.&#13;
T h e K u d .&#13;
A .. and iaised very fine ones. Oats j w o o d a l o n * t h e co*9fc- The&#13;
sought by more states than our . . . ' , countrv is hlpak AnH h»rrpn »n&lt;i&#13;
s&gt; • ' _ / . , , • and timothy hay were also grown i country is Dieas ana Darren, ana&#13;
own. We is one of the best farm. .—« ., •, .. , , the winter IH «fwpr« nwinu'tn fh«&#13;
, . . . . YV here the moss and timber have I u e ™iIli;er 1S severe owiu^..to tne&#13;
writers and lectures in America. , , , ^, . • , , ; u ^ i , w;T1rln «nrl Hrrfrimr a.^w&#13;
xs—TJ r- . . , been burned oft, the ground thaws n i ft" W l n c l 8 a n a a r m i n g snow,&#13;
Mr. Jdussleman is one of our state - , , ., .. • . , : ul i r ,rnifi |11r.pfl m f l n in th«ir Hfll,flr&#13;
, a n ( j the B01i 1g very rich. 0Ul fe01(1 J" res men in tneir eager&#13;
speakers expected at our county; , , , . , nnronirnf fnr.h,,ioi&gt;nii«A «iww.i„&#13;
in«Hr,ir« F«l»r,v«rv » «nH 3 H Mother you always write hop- P u r 8 U l t &lt;* fortune and no obshcle&#13;
institute February 4 ana o. t i e , , / . . . iH en (»roDf u t nrUr fK^ ^.,^^,.,^&#13;
ing I will soon make a fortune l s s o ^ r e a t bufc w h a t t h H enterpriswill&#13;
talk about tillage, fertilizers&#13;
The one day iu-and come hoim?. Well it ^egins ing Yankee will overcome.&#13;
H l » Mffe W a s 8 a r * 4&#13;
Mr, J. £. Lilly, a prominent cjtiiei&#13;
of Hannibal, Mo., latery bad a wonder,&#13;
j'ttl deliverance from a frightlal death.&#13;
la telling of it he says: "I was takes&#13;
with typhoid fever, that ran into pnea*&#13;
raonia. My lungs became hardened*&#13;
1 was so weak I could not even set np&#13;
in bed. I expected to die soon of eon*&#13;
sumption, when I heard of Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery. One bottle pave, relief.&#13;
I continued to use and ant&#13;
now well and strong and I oanl&#13;
say too much in its praise/' This mar*&#13;
vrtlous medicine is the surest and&#13;
quickest cure in the world for&gt; ail&#13;
throat and lung trouble. Regular&#13;
sizes 50c and $1. Trial bottles free at&#13;
P. A Siller's drug store; every bottle&#13;
guaranteed.&#13;
A $4.00 BOOK FOR 7SctS.&#13;
~ T'ao Farmers' Encyclopedia.&#13;
Everythlnfpertainiiif'to&#13;
the affairs&#13;
of the farm,&#13;
h o a a e b o l d and&#13;
stock raislne. Embraces&#13;
articles on&#13;
the horse,, the col v .&#13;
horse hubits, diseases&#13;
of the noree,&#13;
the farm, grasses,"&#13;
fruit culture, dairying.&#13;
cookery.health,&#13;
cattle, Bhet'p.swine,&#13;
poultry, t&lt;-i», the&#13;
dng, t(iilef&gt;~B6fial&#13;
lite, etc., etc one&#13;
of the most comp&#13;
l e t o EJJCVCIO-&#13;
|&gt;e.diuM in existence. -&#13;
A large book, 8x5&gt;£&#13;
x 1% inches. 6^6&#13;
pages, fully illustrated,&#13;
bound in&#13;
f;reen cloth bindng&#13;
and equal to&#13;
other books costing&#13;
rln0. If you desire this book send us our special&#13;
otl'iT priri'. $0.75, and *i.2l) extra for pwtnge p.nd&#13;
we will forward the book to you. If it is nut Fatibfactory&#13;
return it and we will exchange it or refund&#13;
v'our tiiom'y.' Send for our special illustrated catalogue,&#13;
quoting the lowest prices on books, FREE&#13;
We'can save you money. Address all orders to&#13;
» T H E WERNER COMPANY,&#13;
fubhihcn and Mannfactnreri. AkfOn , OhlQ.i&#13;
• T h.- ' V . r r i r , ••!,,-,,.,• n u muphlv relint •(.-. |— IMitor&#13;
A FREE PATTERN C»ruerd oiwltbno gMr*lepchtelod* )ptala t»eT*t rayo 4ra blllwuraitbu«itrlo. nBte. auOtiifHugl Uciowt, Utatt, artUtla, exquiilw and itrlctlj up-to-date d«alfa»&#13;
stitutes will he oondnctodiy Jlon. | t o , o n k a s i f &lt; J 5 m e f o r i i » e h a &lt; 3 ^ - ^ ° «^J^Siyot r e a d i n g ^ -&#13;
Peter VoorhieB, of Poniac, B t | p w tpsmile ..n meaiid jny small &gt; r this year.Magiu^e. of all&#13;
Fowlerville, January 23rd, P i n c k . : investment l a s ^ J u n e in mining -publication, are eent in and the&#13;
ney-Janu»*y-24th, Bj-lghtoti January&#13;
' 25th.&#13;
over-turbed a glass-covered case&#13;
in which there was a twenty-foot&#13;
python a-sleep. The big snake&#13;
was angry when fie waked&#13;
up, and with a vicious sparkle in&#13;
liis little eyes, he went for that&#13;
tipsy elephant and coiled himself&#13;
around its 'body.&#13;
As the coils grew tense about&#13;
the elephant trumpeted in agony,&#13;
and struggled to shake thepython&#13;
R E W A R D . '&#13;
We The undHrsr^n^d d r u g g i s t ? , off-J p e r t y .&#13;
er a - ewa.'d :,f 5 0 cenU to a n y person&#13;
wh?rrin; chases of us, t w o 25&lt;&#13;
properity is going to lay the fouii- C0A^ papers come in every week.&#13;
. . . , „ , , T , rpi «i • • i Dr«MmakIngr «conomlM, fancy work, household hlnU&#13;
dation for a start. Through July 4 h e m*" service is very good. ^ ¾ ¾ ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ ^ ^ % ¾ ^&#13;
and August we took out ¢11,000] Although^Dawson was only three&#13;
the purchase price of the pro-! y e a r s old this last June yet it is&#13;
As we work into the hill, I ^1 1 ^6 a Metropolitan town with a&#13;
getting into deeper ground our' telephone system to all the main&#13;
off, but the snake had neither&#13;
mercy nor fear.&#13;
The boardinghouse keeper was&#13;
awakened by the noise and rushed&#13;
in club in .hand. He saw the peril&#13;
of the elephant, and when t h e&#13;
-BBftke-raised his head angerly at&#13;
the intrusion he hit it a savage&#13;
blow. Tthe coils loosened and&#13;
the python fell to the floor. The&#13;
elephant gasped and fell likewise.&#13;
Its ribs had been crushed in, and&#13;
in half an hour it was dead. T h e&#13;
gnalie was put back into fts box,&#13;
and in an hour it was dead also.&#13;
The empty demijohn in the corner&#13;
told the cause of the tragedy."&#13;
DOES IT PAY TO BUY CHEAP?&#13;
A clu-ap ivmcdy fur coughs an,d colds is&#13;
•nli ri^ht hut yoiTwant something that will&#13;
i i i i i v e iind pure the more severe results of&#13;
i&lt;•lu: Tiuhi«8. "What alrnll you do? Go to&#13;
'•nimci und jnore regular climate? Yes,&#13;
if i &lt;&gt;--il&gt;l*-; if not possible for you, then in'j&#13;
i Mini inne take the ONLY remedy that has&#13;
I &lt; &lt;n introouced in all civilized countries&#13;
V' n i-ucerBtj in severe throat and lung&#13;
null i s . '•Ji&lt;«chee,8 German Syrup." It&#13;
) ••&lt;&lt; i nlv heuln and stimulates the tissues to&#13;
af-Uaxt«t'*-M-anttrHkH BiIters r a i d e r s ,&#13;
if it fails to &lt;iure cons^ipHtitjn, bilious&#13;
rjHss, sick-beadriche, JHundif.'H, los&gt; o f&#13;
appetite, sour storaauhe, dyspepsia,&#13;
tiver c o m p l a i n t , nr a n y of t h e dis»'asHs&#13;
for which it is r e c o m m e n d e d . Pcice&#13;
25 c^nfs for either ablets or liquid.&#13;
We will also refund the t m n e y on o n e&#13;
package of either i t il fails t o g i v e&#13;
oxes pay 6tre_flK_L^rriW8 deeper aud rich-} creeks, a telegraph line connect-&#13;
FUolQr iltaydllle«sh, ,mTclhrlacw ". e»ttlrel»ct « nnodt talttutll*n cehdl lbdyr ttnh.e oTwh *ott m«••a&gt;a other p»a*rnj Have DO equal for atyle and perfect fit&#13;
-( satisfaction,&#13;
P. A. S i l l e r ,&#13;
W. B. Darrow,&#13;
J.G. SAYLES&#13;
- P 4 a i n f f e f d 7 i V I i c h .&#13;
Funeral&#13;
Director&#13;
and .&#13;
Bmbalmei**&#13;
R e s i d e r \ c e I m i l e n o r t h o f v i l l a g e .&#13;
S t a t e T e l e p h o n e C o n n e c t i o n .&#13;
AJI c a l l * p r o m p t l y a n s w e r e d .&#13;
MS CALL&#13;
4 t BAZAR* L fATTERNS&#13;
er. The ten days we worked in l-^g" DaWfeon'with Skegway, a pro-&#13;
June we cleaned up $650.00;' P°3e ^ m^ter or electric car line to&#13;
through July 83,400 and in A u g - t u e principal creeks, eclectric&#13;
ust $7,000; so you can see how our j lights and other modern improvpay&#13;
increases as we work into the orients which make a progressive&#13;
channel. I expect to clean up' ^ wide-a-wake mining camp.&#13;
from five to seven thousand by j : I t a l a o supports &amp;v* papers rangnext&#13;
spring's clean u p when I ] i»g in prices from47 J o $24 per . — — ^ ^ ^ ^ . . ^ ^ ^ ^ . ^ . ^&#13;
shall try to buy more of the! yeaT- T h e o u * P«* of gold this' '^r^^^rtfV^^^nil^iSt&#13;
ground. Weexp-ct to take' out j y e a r f r o m t h e Klondfke, will not ** &lt;" 1 ^ ^ i ^ ^ \ * e ^ ^ ; n A t ^ * ' ^ r ^&#13;
from 40 to HO thousand this w i n - ! b e l e 8 s t h a u 2QX millions—that&#13;
ter. The ground we have every j w o u l ( 1 b e about 40;Jons of native&#13;
reason to believe, will produce i ^olc1' J f anv one tliinks they can&#13;
not less than £80,000 and possibly&#13;
double that. The claims each&#13;
side a'nd ahead of us are being&#13;
worked. We started on the rim of&#13;
the hill nothing below us, but have&#13;
T H E McCALL COMPANY,&#13;
* I M ( I Writ Hth Strfot. . • • N»w T«rk City. S . T*&#13;
carry off a fortune in gold if.given&#13;
an opportunity should t r y about&#13;
$10,000 for a starter (40 ib^).&#13;
Mother you write you think&#13;
neither Edd or I care for farming,&#13;
forced up the work nearly across 11- hardly know; my iieas of ii^e&#13;
the claim, with pay dirt the whole farm and life in the country have&#13;
distance, so with paying property changed since I came to this&#13;
each side and ahead of us we can&#13;
rest contented that all our ground&#13;
barren mountainous country. I&#13;
believe that when I have made&#13;
Werner's Dictionary of Syncnym&amp;&amp; Antonyms,&#13;
KytlioiGgy and Familiar Phrases.&#13;
A'book thm shoujd be fn the vert&#13;
nocket of every t&gt;crson, beOfcUM It&#13;
t'jlis you the right word to use.&#13;
No Two Words in the EnfrUpJi&#13;
Language Have Exactly tbe&#13;
Same significance. To express&#13;
tho j«rocise meaning that one intends&#13;
to convey a dictionary of&#13;
Synonyxna is needed to avoid repetition.&#13;
The Btrongest figure of&#13;
speech is antithesis. In this dictionary&#13;
the appended Antonyms&#13;
will, therefore, be found extremely&#13;
valuable. Contains many other&#13;
features such aa Mythology,&#13;
&lt;Jrrt/nv the perm disease,%.ut allays inflam- f eign P h r a s a f ^ o f f • ' U l M t t a ^ a M e m o r y&#13;
»...»«., c a u s e a ^ r expectoration, gives ^ ¾ ^ 1 ¾ ^ ¾ ^&#13;
rfii (\ nitlits rest, and cures the patient, cloth binding and sent postpaid for $0.25. Pull&#13;
a&lt; L ..&gt; x&gt; J ^ L. Leather gilt 'edge, $0.40, postpaid. Order at&#13;
Jl vy one bottle. Recomendetf many years 0 0 0 ^ ^ 8 ^ ^ ^ ^ 1 ^ 0 0 0 ^ ^ ^ 6 , ^ .&#13;
by aJi druggists in tbe world. Sample botahead&#13;
is pay. This mpnth will i'Juoney_ enough in this c-puutry&#13;
end the rocking season and no that I would like to live on the&#13;
more gold will be cleaned u p un-farm, though, like father, mill&#13;
til next spring. ,Some of the men ' work suits me- better. No I&#13;
are now cutting^ wood and when | Wouldn't like to. think that the&#13;
the frost stops the summer work-|-^anD would ever pass out of the&#13;
we will build our traui-road*r so family. The old English and&#13;
}«* at F. A. Sigler's.&#13;
we can run our dirt to the creek,&#13;
sluice it next summer, build our&#13;
cabin and get ready to commence&#13;
running tunnels and drifting out&#13;
d i r t We will take, out dirt all&#13;
winter and ' pije it up. I n the&#13;
spring rnn'it rlown to the creek&#13;
and si nice it, which is much faster&#13;
German custom of keeping landed&#13;
estates in the family name has&#13;
much tp commend it, as it is a&#13;
monument of the family history&#13;
marks to younger g^r&gt;^r^j^nfit&#13;
Address all orders to&#13;
T H E W E R N E R C O M P A N Y , 4 V - 4 . , , . . - . ,&#13;
Anon, Omia, than the old primitive way of rock-&#13;
For my part I should like to see&#13;
the farm left in such a manner,&#13;
that it will pass from one genera-&#13;
AND STEAMSHIP UNESt&#13;
Popuidr roul'- i..r Ann u i » ) i , 'l'i&gt;-&#13;
ledo and points East, South, and tot&#13;
Howell, Owo^so, Aim*, Mt Pi^a-Hnt&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse Oity H'IHI&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W.H . HKNNETT,&#13;
\ (». F . A . TolMh.&#13;
EXPERIENC1&#13;
TqADt M A R K S&#13;
D E S I G N S&#13;
CO^YWJGHTV A c&#13;
Anyone sending % •v-ptoh anri (iof&gt;r;)ii &gt;n mat&#13;
QnloklT aa^flruln rur pinion free .«I ether aa&#13;
fiiventlnn H nrohn»&gt;lv i&gt; ic tub,*: &lt; • unMK. Mon«StrictIy&lt;vmf11f&gt;nn,i! 11 iihlhiMik on Titteav&#13;
•entfree—Ul'lont mf&gt;i). «• 'or sJHiiriiiL'tMtcn»8&#13;
and keeps sacrectlSFe old land V aiw^^sStS^^fe^r^V,1""^^ '" "'co&lt;** Scientific Jlmcricattr A hnnrtw&gt;me(y tlln^tmied wnekir !&lt;j«nre«t flOPcniaMon&#13;
of any sdonntlo loarn«|. T«rm«&gt; fT«)—&#13;
fr*j*inr;r ; rfooaarr mmoonnttbh s. IL 8old c »11 r\9***mi*r%. SUNN &amp; Co I«I&#13;
Branob te»l8f»&#13;
ji&#13;
-*&#13;
^^IJItoja.t i » r » j .&#13;
V 7,&#13;
I&#13;
• 1 .&#13;
• " ' • ' - -&#13;
^ w&#13;
r ,w&#13;
] *&#13;
•J*&#13;
-..* . - ^&#13;
£•;•&#13;
t ..... . 1 - .&#13;
T '&#13;
Facts to Be member.&#13;
The original and genuine Red Pills&#13;
a r e Knill's Ked PjHs tor Wan people&#13;
a t 25c boi, the women's remedy.&#13;
Don't pay/50 cants.&#13;
You can work when they work,&#13;
never pripe or make you sick, h'uill's&#13;
White liivnr'PilU. Bowel KM«uKt,orV&#13;
Xweoty tive doses, 25 cents.&#13;
Pleasant, safe and sore are Km 1 ••&#13;
Black Diarrbcea Pills. Cures summer&#13;
coniplaints, dysentery and all pains of&#13;
the atomnob and bowels Only 25&#13;
Cents box.&#13;
Nfrirtfti tttue Kid,ney Pill cpre backache,&#13;
etc. Only 25 cents box.&#13;
Pure, s-Waet stomachs and breaths&#13;
are made by takinp Knill's Dyspepsia&#13;
Tablets. They will cure indigestion,&#13;
correi-t all stomach trouble)* destroys&#13;
all fnul prases tor 25c box Best ana&#13;
cheapest. Guarrantaed bv your drupgest,&#13;
. Will Curl eft, Dexter.&#13;
VV. B. DarroW, Pmck'ney,&#13;
IHEGPEAT&#13;
RESTORATIVE.&#13;
Bar-Ben Is the jrreatest known IV. TRADEMARK&#13;
nerve tonic and blood purifier. • ^ *"*"••*"••&#13;
It creates solid flesh, muscle and STRENGTH,&#13;
clears the brain, makes the blood pure and rich,&#13;
and causes a general feeling of health, power&#13;
and renewed vitality, while the generative organs&#13;
are helped to regain their normal povjfers, and&#13;
the sufferer is quickly made conscious ui direct&#13;
beheflt^Qne box will work wonders, six Bhould&#13;
perfeetar.cure. 80 cts. A BOX; 6 boxes, $2.50. For&#13;
sale by druggists everywhere, or mailed, sealed,&#13;
on receipt of -prtro: Address DRS. BARTON&#13;
«**«&gt; BENSON. B a r ^ n Block, Cleveland. O&#13;
For Bale by&#13;
F. A. SIGLEB, Druggis&#13;
P i n c k n e y , - i c h .&#13;
Bill J u d s o n , t h e P i n g r e e p u s h&#13;
of W a s h t e n a w c o u n t y , s a y s t h a t&#13;
t h e f a r m e r s a r e g o i n g t o s w e e p&#13;
M i c h i g a n n e x t fall in t h e elections.&#13;
Bill m a y be r i g h t , b u t if&#13;
t h e f a r m e r s vote as a u n i t , i t will&#13;
be t h e first t i m e in t h e i r history.&#13;
T h e f a r m i n g class, however, i s&#13;
a w a k e n i n g to t h e realization t h a t&#13;
it has t h e balance of power, a n d it&#13;
m a y h a v e decided to use it. I t is&#13;
a difficult m a t t e r for t h e average&#13;
voter to c u t away from p a r t y lines&#13;
a n d t h e f a r m e r is n o exception,&#13;
b u t if h e is wise t h i s year, he will&#13;
have a plain u n d e r s t a n d i n g of&#13;
what he is to expect from t h e several&#13;
c a n d i d a t e s , and t h e n see t h a t&#13;
he g e t s w h a t h e e x p e c t s — F e n t o n&#13;
I n d e p e n d e n t .&#13;
ANOER80H FARMERS CLUB.&#13;
, It has 1ve*en demonstrated repeatedly&#13;
in every state in the Union and -in&#13;
many foreipn countries that tjbamberlainls&#13;
Coupb Remedy is a certain preventive&#13;
and cure for croup. It has&#13;
b.icome the universal remedy lor that&#13;
The first meeting of the Anderson&#13;
Farmer's Club tor the year 2900 was&#13;
held at the borne of M»\ and Mrs.&#13;
.Samuel Ptaeeway, Jan. 13th.&#13;
A goodly number were present, and&#13;
after an excellent dinner the meeting&#13;
was called to order by Pres., P. W.&#13;
Allison. The invocation was offered&#13;
by Tbos, "Howlett, 'after which the&#13;
company joined in sinpinp "America."&#13;
The business of the meeting was then&#13;
transacted. The necessary committees&#13;
were appointed, and it was decided to&#13;
have an oyster dinner at the next&#13;
meeting.&#13;
The next in order was *he report&#13;
from the delegates, Mr. and Mrs. 0. V.&#13;
Van Winkle, ot the State Club Meeting,&#13;
held at Lansing, Dec. 12 and 13,&#13;
1899 Mis, Edna Webb then ptfve a&#13;
recitation, after which Miss Edith&#13;
Wood executed an instrumental solo.&#13;
Miss Kittie Hoff then santf a solo,&#13;
which was followed by a recitation,&#13;
"The White Man's Burden," by Miss&#13;
Mabel Hartsuff.&#13;
The subject, "How to secure a catch&#13;
of clover seed," was then discussed.&#13;
T«ls«alc I r a p d M i&#13;
An grand, bat skiu eruptions rob&#13;
life of joy. Backlen'* arnica lalve&#13;
cures them; also old, r u n n i n g and&#13;
fever tores, ulcers, boils, felons, corns,&#13;
warts, cots, bruises, burns, scflds,&#13;
chapped hands, chilblains, best pile&#13;
care.on earth, drives oat pains and&#13;
aches. Only 25c a box; cure guaranteed.&#13;
Sold by P . A. Sigter, druggist.&#13;
T h e o b s e r v a n t e d i t o r h a s t h e&#13;
t h i n g figured o u t t h i s way: W h e n ! relief in a very short time. The sales&#13;
disease. M V. Fishery of Liberty, W.&#13;
Va., only repeats what has been said j Z Hartsuff said he had tried different&#13;
around the ulobe when he writes: "I ways; one method wajs to sow on t t u&#13;
have used Chamberlain's Couifh Remedy&#13;
in my family for several years&#13;
and always with perfect, success. We&#13;
believe that it. is not only the le*t&#13;
coui/h remedy, but that it. is a suie&#13;
oure for croup. U has saved the lives&#13;
of our children a ' number of t i m e s "&#13;
This remedy is for sale by b\ A. Sitfler,&#13;
Druggist. *&#13;
. ;&#13;
LAST&#13;
PERFECT FOREVER.&#13;
SCALES Or&gt;p&lt;u Plated&#13;
All Steel Levers,&#13;
Combination Beam.&#13;
Catalogue Free.&#13;
Address,&#13;
wheat, and alter the ground settled,&#13;
dragged it; another method was to&#13;
sow on corn stubble, cultivate both&#13;
ways and dra^r, but with neither had&#13;
he met with success. At another time&#13;
ber-plowed and dragged the land and&#13;
you see a m a n d i g g i n g in t h e g a r -&#13;
den very slowly, s t o p p i n g often to&#13;
r e s t a n d c u s s i n g occasionly, i t i s&#13;
safe to say h i s wife g o t h i m to&#13;
w o r k ; b u t if h e is digsring l i k e a&#13;
good fellow", n e v e r s t o p p i n g t o&#13;
rest, a n d w h i s t l i n g a p o p u l a r a i r&#13;
h e is after fish bait.&#13;
Dr;Cidy,s Condition Powders are&#13;
ju%t what a bor-.re needs when in bad&#13;
condition, 1\)nic, blood purifier and&#13;
vermifuge. They are not food but&#13;
medicine and the be*t in use to put a&#13;
Havriasr . Great Mam mu Cl»auai*er&gt;&#13;
a i n ' t Coach fUuaedf.&#13;
Manager Martin, of the Peorsoir&#13;
drugstore, informs us that be is hav*&#13;
ing a great run on Chamberlain's&#13;
Cough Remedy. He sells ti&gt;e bottles&#13;
of that medicine to one or any other&#13;
kind, and it gives great satisfaction.&#13;
In these days of la grippe there is&#13;
nothing like Chamberlain's Cough&#13;
Remedy to stop the cough, heal up&#13;
the sore throat and limps and gives&#13;
are growinur, and all who try i t are&#13;
pleased with its prompt action.—South&#13;
Chicago Daily Calumet. For sale by&#13;
F. A. Siflrler, druggist.&#13;
i i . ' , . J&#13;
PUBLISHED KVKHY THURSDAY X &gt; i M . s o By.&#13;
FRAM^L ANJiSvVS&#13;
Editor and "Proprietor,&#13;
Subscription Price $1 tu Advance&#13;
Entered at the PoatoJlctt it I ' I A ^ M / , Michigan,&#13;
as second-class matter.&#13;
Advertising ratea made ( a o v n o a application.&#13;
Easiness Cards, $IM per /bar,&#13;
*• • • , ¾&#13;
t*V&#13;
I^eatn and marriage notices paolisaed nred.&#13;
, • i - . n - n r Announcements of entertainments may Ua yald&#13;
bOi se in p r i m e c o n d i t i o n . PriCP &lt;SOC f0r, if desired, by presenting the oiflce witn tick-&#13;
« U f n.w.L.ai.a p n , J Q i u „ p \ 5;.^ | eta of admission, in ewe aetata are uot orou^nt&#13;
per p a c k a g e . t o r ^a,a b y b . A . » J g - t l o tneortice, regular rates will »won*r&lt;ed.&#13;
I All matter in local notice •olumn will be -nam&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or t'ra -.tiua thereof, for eicb&#13;
insertion. Where no tlu« ^ sp^cidtid, ill notices&#13;
I will be inserted until irdor-d lidconUnaed, and&#13;
I will !&gt;ecoATS-d 'or*c :ordia,'ly. JT* vU cn-tni^es&#13;
! jf advertiseiaentd MUST rea h caiso nceaa early&#13;
u ruBSOAr morninj; to insure an inaertion the&#13;
tame week.&#13;
S u b s c r i b e for t h e D i s p a t c h .&#13;
I want to let. th-i people who suffer&#13;
from rheumatism and siatica know&#13;
that Chamberlain's Pain Halm relieved&#13;
me after a number of other medicines&#13;
and a dncfor had failed&#13;
the best liniment I have ever&#13;
sowed in the spring but rereived no i of—J A. Dod^en, Alpharetta, Ga.,&#13;
return tne first year, but the nextyear I Ttn&gt;u»ands have been cured of rheuhad&#13;
a good catch He believed if wet mrrisui bv this remedy. One appticacould&#13;
uat rain when we ought that tion relieves the pain. For sale by F .&#13;
JOB PKIJ/IIJVG /&#13;
\ In all its brancued, a specialty. vVe bare all kindf&#13;
! and the lateet styles ol Cyyv, etc., wuicb enables&#13;
j in Co execute all Kinds &gt;&gt;f work, sued &lt;w ttjoka,&#13;
T,. I Painplete, testers, Pro^rauiines, Bill tfeadd, Note&#13;
i i . . - i s I Lieada, atateiaenta, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., in&#13;
k n o w n ' 9 t t Po r i°r s ! l yl t ». ^POQ tbe^bortejit notice. PrlcetM&#13;
1 o v ad ^ood wort can 0« loan.&#13;
I'l.iii' &gt;-,4v-uiv &lt;&amp;.)S-e*.&#13;
J O N E S or B I N G H A M T O N ,&#13;
BIN&amp;HAMTON N. Ytbt-&#13;
re w m!d be no trouble in securing&#13;
a catch of clover seed. Mrs. Stowe&#13;
said she bad heard of someone who&#13;
I prepared their ground as tor summer&#13;
fallow, ihen sowed clover seed the first&#13;
year with bo result, but- continued&#13;
this method two or three times&#13;
At*Higl*»r, Dru:/gi-rr&#13;
O n l y two a u i m a l s e a t t o b a c c o&#13;
—a l a r g e g r e e n worm a n d m a n .&#13;
T h e worm c a n ' t h e l p i t — E x .&#13;
, 1 ^ 1 . . . . » , , « « « 1 « , &lt; « M M I I I I I » • ! ! I ' l l l l l l M I I M I M I t BIGGLE BOOKS A Farm.Library of unequalled value—Practical*&#13;
Up-to-date, Concise and Comprehensive—Handsomely&#13;
Printed and Beautifully Illustrated.&#13;
B y J A C O B B I Q Q L B&#13;
No. 1—BIGQLE HORSE BOOK.&#13;
All about Horses—a Common-Senst Treatise, with o*er&#13;
74 illustrations. a standard work. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 2—BIQQLB BERRY BOOK&#13;
All about arrowing Small Fruits—read and learn how ,&#13;
contains 43 colored Hie-like reproductions of all lending&#13;
varieties and 100 other illustrations. Price, 50 Cent*.&#13;
. 3-BIOOtE-POtJLTRY BOOK&#13;
All about Poultry ; the best Poultry Book in existence &lt;&#13;
tells everything ; with23 colored hfe-like reproductions&#13;
of nil the principal breeds; with 103 other illustrations.&#13;
U p o n ! B l a m a r k N I r o n I f r r r *&#13;
the sanie piece of ground and t hen se- ^ w a s the result of bis splendid health.&#13;
cured a thick, fine catch. F. W. Alii- [indomitable will and tremendous&#13;
son said be had the best luck with j energy are not found where stomach,&#13;
seed'sown in the rnud, in March, y.j liver, kidneys and bowels are out of i&#13;
THE VILLAGE' DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
P K B S D I S ; ..„., . . . « „ . . . . _ Uejx. Mclntyro&#13;
TitUdi'e.j.5 ^. IJ. ' i'n-&gt; upd *u, AUred* .IIJIIM,&#13;
Uanitfl liicd.irdd, --io. BowjiiU, .Saaiuei&#13;
I Sykee, K. L). Jonnson.&#13;
! (JLEUK ..«»;".;i.«« K. U. Teeple&#13;
TutASaiieu W. E. Murphj&#13;
W, A. Carr&#13;
j STKKBT IJOMHIddfOSBkt . , , J . &gt;Ioak£.&#13;
I MAIMAUL —.A. E. iir I * J .&#13;
i HKALTH Jt'fioBn . . . . . . L)r. ti. K". Sifter&#13;
A. C4rr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
iVX rtev. Cuas. .Siui,&gt;dou, (j.+dC&gt;r. s-icvita every&#13;
LEAI._SIOLBB, riuut.&#13;
Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
Mo. 4—BIQGLE COW BOOK&#13;
All about Cows and the Dairy Business ; having a great&#13;
sale; contains 8 colored life-like reproductions of each&#13;
• breed, with 132 other illustrations. Price, go Cents.&#13;
No. 5—BIQQLB SWINE BOOK&#13;
Just out. All about IIORS—Breeding, Feeding, Butchery,&#13;
Disea.«s, etc. Contains over 80 beautiful halftones&#13;
and other engravings. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
The BIQQLB BOOKS areuniqne.original.usefuT—you never"&#13;
saw anything like them—so practical, soseusiblc. They&#13;
are having an enormous sale—East, West, North ana&#13;
South. Every one who keeps a Horse, Cow. Hog or&#13;
. Chicken, or grows Small Fruits, ought to send right&#13;
away for the BIQGLE BOOKS. The FARM JOURNAL Is your paper, made for you anoVnot a misfit. It is 33 y e a n&#13;
old; it is the great boiled-down, hit-the-nail-on-the-head,—&#13;
quit-after-yon have-said-it, Farm and Household paper i a&#13;
the world—the biggest paper ofits size in the United Statee_&#13;
of A. mcTica—having over a million or ' a-half regular readers.&#13;
Any ONE of the HIGGLE BOOKS, and the rARM JOURNAL&#13;
0 YBAK5 (remainder of 1899,1900, 1901, 1903 and—1903) will be sent by mail&#13;
*o any address lur A DOU^AR BILL.&#13;
Sample of FARM JOURNAL and circular describing '. ^OLB BOOKS fret.&#13;
WTlatBft ATKINSON. F A J U K&#13;
CHAb * 'SNXiNS. . J U R N A L&#13;
«-», 1 , 1 , n-A*~ I f »«•-. m „ » « *-u«o-. ~~„\;t;aB ! Sunday uiormnt; at UMo, »a4 dvory Sunday&#13;
Flaceway fitted the ground the same o r a e r 1T J o u v v a Q l tnese quantiei 1 eveD&gt;ng a t r:jdo'clock. i'ray«r .ueetimi r&amp;urB*&#13;
as fir other crops and nevrr lailed.' " U the success they brinsr, use Dr. | f*y"^jia«-, Suad*y *c.iU.&gt;i * i . . . . - rf ****•&#13;
A t o n e time afterint; a rye crop, he ! King's New Life Pills. They derelop '&#13;
vin-&#13;
2r&gt; at K A. Siguier's drug store&#13;
prepared the groiind and before win- *vwry power of brain and body. Only (\^ON UKretvE.G cA. riwO.N iAtiLce CplalUsttoirU, U.s ervice every&#13;
J W ANTE1&gt;—SE V tkhJu* RRUllU&#13;
ter had clo^ref lar^e enough to pa&gt;-&#13;
ture, but this was a wef fall At another&#13;
time he cultivated well, solved&#13;
the seed in the spring arid bad a wood&#13;
crop. Tbos Howlett thought that&#13;
with plenty of rain, it did nor matter&#13;
what rime we SO'WHJL. hut land whi.-h tiou permanent. G * r _ a t o m i c ^&#13;
had been snhj-cted to cultivation tor H L J ^ b a n y t m . t | h M ( n I t if,.|#&#13;
pood many years lacjeed soin^ natural -work conducted at hoot* R*#»r*-n«»*. i-'neletnent&#13;
which was n^ce&gt;&gt;a,rv to the tioaesetlf-addm«w&gt;rf •laiap^j •r*»«j1.j&gt;t. J m&#13;
production of clover. He also sai.d DoMrtrrov "vp*x&lt; '•»»-» &lt;&lt; 1V1.-^.-,.&#13;
that be secured no hetter ri-&lt;nirs when — ^ — — ^ - — — — . ^ - — —&#13;
usinif plaster A A. Stove said 'lie&#13;
knew of H case where upon a pirt of a&#13;
fi^lf* l'lrt ^e_rd_ was sown anour t vice HS&#13;
thick as upon 1 he rernaind-r, ^nd wlu-ie&#13;
sown thi'je r were WHS a pood &gt;M-op wtnle&#13;
upon the rest it failed. Mr. Howie J;&#13;
and Mr Hartsuff 1&gt;oth sowed about one&#13;
bushel on six acre-, an 1 Mr Younplove&#13;
sowel one-half bush 1 in :.H n&#13;
acres and—pot a very, pretty catch.&#13;
n m Shies bad expermeuted with&#13;
plaster upon nearly every crop raised&#13;
upon the farm, but had received no hands for the Collction of Taxes—I will be&#13;
Sunday morning »t LU:;i&gt;&gt; tul ivjry &gt;iu lty&#13;
evening at 7:6c j'ci &gt;a. 1'rayer ineetinij Ttmrsday&#13;
e v e n i n g . &gt;aaiay aciiuul ^t closa of nornina&#13;
service. It. li. feeiJlo\?_L j&lt;.. ti&gt;di itead, Sac&#13;
A N D H U N K W r ptnm* t, r e [ u o ^nt ^ uov. .*. J. Uo.n.ujrf.jrl. .'*«•&gt;.• *jrino«&#13;
• 8 as Managers in this and i l w !&gt;v c&gt;uu- e v 8 r i ' Sunday. Low mass at 7:;«/o'clock&#13;
_ . ^WM» . 1 higli mass witu aermou at J\lo i. m. Uttticuiiiai&#13;
lies, balery P M ) I y«ti/ ami xpencvea, I at:i:0up. ui., vesporaanuDeurttlJctiori &gt;it ?: &lt;(» ^. u.&#13;
JBtraJt, bono-firle, 00 aaora, 00 I**.-,. r•••»;. j '&#13;
3001£JI£S,_ ~&#13;
rjlhe A. O. H. Society &gt;f tin-* ,iti':J, n u n v/^r.y&#13;
I vjri.a L'-u.my i:ii *[;;• iCsiiV, " • 1 -t * &gt; •• g uos .&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL. DETROIT&#13;
AMERICAN Alio EUROPEAN PLAN,&#13;
j LT'PW'OUrU Lti.\(iUE. Meets dvery Suii'lay&#13;
&gt; EieveaiOk,' at ii:'&gt;( otiloc* in tn•* »1. 0. '.i.irj.i. V&#13;
i cordial ta^itati »u ts ottutilt! 1 .•&gt; .'Virvoij, -i»p»»-&#13;
• cially-youUi{ people. ^1 ra. Stella iraium I're^&#13;
ma TO 93 eo mi. 00 TO ma.00&#13;
SlNQLM MMAL3. 6 0 0 &gt; UP TO DATM GAP**&#13;
\V\S L ^ l ) - T i i e S u b s c r i p t i o n&#13;
J u e o u the D I S P A T C H .&#13;
t&#13;
Business Loqals.&#13;
1 1 1 t i ^ i i v.&gt; • t i i l . U * ' ) i - ) U . i l ' t ' i - . l i a t .&#13;
i^/i 14-4 ever-v s.i 1 I i^- ..- &gt; ii 1^ ,L »: it 'rMtl'it,&#13;
Miss ^tt.i Jarp«iu-»r; v*cr»iar/. "&lt;lc*. /. V. t*:^.&#13;
I&gt;UE V. (\. r. U. m'.'ts t!ii* :irsr «\-i 11? of .5.40ti&#13;
iiontli at i: 1 [),01. it t Ttf :n u&gt; o;' i)p. I b\&#13;
Siller. -dvT'ryotic' i-it&lt;jr*sr »d i 1 tjii^'riao* i i&#13;
coaitiullv iavit-1 Mrs. '^eai Si,'lur, i\vs; .Irs,&#13;
Etta Diirfee, Secretary.&#13;
.•/"ft&#13;
! &lt; • • • '&#13;
4&#13;
. . • ' . * •&#13;
, ^ r&#13;
tr&#13;
I&#13;
»'&#13;
Trie C. T. A. anti B. Society of this o'ace, \tt-nt&#13;
eve/y third Sataruay evening in ta-* fr. Vfit«&#13;
thew iiall. John Donohue, Presiaent.&#13;
Notice to Tax Payers MN IU UTS O F WACU A li J*C s.&#13;
eeteverv Priday evening on or oafore fall&#13;
Tl lliiee TL,&gt;o**'nin, .tu,i.'i.&lt;» Tt a-ixr KR..lIlL 1is* nn&gt;oww Imn mmvy o f t&amp;e moon at their hall iu the Swarthout bld&lt;. ; visiting brothers ^re cordiilly invited*-.-. ,&#13;
CUAS. CAMPBELL, Sir Knight Oommandet&#13;
t * * * * * * * * * * * - -&#13;
PHZLAXBLPHZA I&#13;
benefit from its use. p. \V . A l l i e n&#13;
apreed with Mr. Sales in this, an i Mr.&#13;
^lace-way al*o saw no ^ood from i's&#13;
:it the i'lucku'-y E x . B m k during business&#13;
hours to receive the s a m e .&#13;
use upon corn. Mr." Wood thoupht&#13;
ashes pteferat'le to plaster upon corn&#13;
and then sj oke of sorrel as a fertilizer.&#13;
He said he had a summer fallow covered-&#13;
wit b sorrel, which he plowed under&#13;
when in blossom, then kept, the ;&#13;
pround tMvlrivated cle^n and raised&#13;
Livingston Lods'e, Xo.,"", ^ t V. M. K^'-i^r&#13;
Caujuiunioation [\iesday evenin,', &gt;u or o^t'ors&#13;
I thetull o? the maoti. AlexAu.ler' -lcltityre, A'. «1.&#13;
K. H. Temple. Twp. Treasurer.4—^=^- — ~ = — 1 " ROER OF EASriSliX St'Att ine^tseach month&#13;
0' tnn Friday evening follo^vi i&lt; tu'-* ~~- " Fo r » . « l e . A A.M. ineetia^. AAA. MARY USAO, W. M.&#13;
Cheap. &lt;x two horsepower and prinder \/\ A D I E S O F T U E MACI:ABEBS. Meat every is&#13;
combined, in pood repair&#13;
C W.. Brown.&#13;
PetteysTille Hills.&#13;
L I have j ut in a new corn and cob&#13;
the best wheat that he raised upon i crusher and thoroughly vepiired the&#13;
the field, excepting where the pround j Mill. Farmers can now pet their&#13;
had beeu manured • j prindint? done, in a superior manner&#13;
At the next meetinp, "The' .Primary , and on the shortest notice.&#13;
School Money, its Origin, Distribution 1 " Wm. Hooker,&#13;
and U&gt;e." will be discu&gt;sed, and the -&#13;
annual election of officers will t i k e i ^,T&#13;
place. The next m etinp will be held ^ s&#13;
at the home of A. G. Wilson, tfeb.'lb.&#13;
j T A T E o f MICHIGAN, Co.ntv of U»inijstor»&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachmomu at i:M) p in. &amp;}&#13;
K. 1). I'. M. nail. ViiiMa^ -i;.it.!.-« J »r ii.iay &gt;i&#13;
vited. " Li LA Cox IWAV Lady Com.&#13;
1 KNiGUTS OK TrtK LJVAJk i U iRi&gt;&#13;
uae -t every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in tue &amp;.. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at iYioo'ulocs. All Visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.,&#13;
t*. O. JACKSON, Capt. (fenf&#13;
^&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
t a session of tke Probate Court for said counj&#13;
ty. held at the Probate Office in" the village of&#13;
COR, S K C . | Howtll, on Monday, the 8th day of Jan., in ths&#13;
j year one thousand nine hundred.&#13;
. , , . , , . Present: A Ibird M. Davis, Judge of Probate&#13;
My son his been troubled for y e a r s j the matter of the estate T&gt;f&#13;
with chronic diarrhoea. Sometime-! _ OBORAK w. BROWM deceased.&#13;
6n reading and filing the petition, duly veritte&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. 0- C. L, S1QLER M, O&#13;
DAS. SIjLtfr&amp;-SI-iLK.'&#13;
Pnysici* is and Har'e &lt; is. vil jails prompt!&#13;
attended to iiv »r i:&lt;ftr. O fl^n on Matnttr&#13;
Pinokney, Mich.&#13;
J)R. A. EGREfiM.&#13;
. DENTIST-Eyery Fridaj; and on Thura-&#13;
[ day when having appointments. Office over&#13;
I o I Siirler'e i&gt;rus store.&#13;
a^'o T persuaded him to take some of&#13;
Oliamherlin's Coliri, Cholra* and Diarrhoer&#13;
Ile.nedyV. After usinp two bottles&#13;
of 25-tent size he was cured. I&#13;
pive this testimonial, boping someone&#13;
similarly erTecte'd may read it and be&#13;
benefited—Thomas C. Bower, Glencoe.&#13;
0. Far-sale bv F. A. Sipler, draofjjist&#13;
PATENTS GUARANTEED&#13;
Our fee returned if we f.iiL Any one sendtaa?&#13;
S ubscribe £oy Dispatch&#13;
of Sarnh Brown, prayinu that adminlstraik&#13;
of .«nid .estate may bo srranted to herself or some&#13;
othorsniUhle person. sketch and description of any invention wiL&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Tuesdftg, the Gth ' promptly receive our opinion free ccmcenriaa;&#13;
dav of Feb. next, at 10 o'el .ck in ltni fthJMlnii 111 ^ patentability of same. " How to Obtain a&#13;
,aid . ^ Offioe, be s i g n e d t c ^ S ^ o t S g ^ h 5 2 4 8 ¾ ^ ¾ JmTSfSS^&#13;
said petition. \fc.-&lt; . ' I Patents taken out tlivouch ua rcceive^Mciol&#13;
U ts farther ordered that a oopy o f l k » e * &lt; i s &gt; ^ I ? ^ ¾ ? * ^ ! i W c h a , r g e • 1 ^ , 1 ,'1 UK- P A T E . * ! I ^ f 5 ° * % "&#13;
" r w R w ^ . . * an illuatralea and widely circulated joanuia&gt;&#13;
' consulted by -Manufacturer* and Investors.&#13;
Send for sample copy FREI. Addxaas,&#13;
poblished tn the PISCKNRT DISPATCH&#13;
er printed and circulating In said count&#13;
successive-weeks previous to said&#13;
A A m a b M» D a n s ,&#13;
t-5 Judga of Probata,&#13;
VICTOR J . EVANS * CSKT-7"^&#13;
(Pmtcot Attorney;*,)&#13;
•alltflng, *A9HmVTQHt D. «,&#13;
|t..&#13;
1»&#13;
*P*P* • &lt; . . . . - . . . - &gt; » . — • - ~ -&#13;
^mm^^^&#13;
,¾&#13;
*.ii:'"v.i.:v&#13;
V4-* M : - . &lt; * • &gt;&#13;
f.'i' !•'''&#13;
?'.:•*&#13;
ijfcSA'-.V*"*^'' 1 !•"&#13;
1 £=&#13;
§inthqe]) gigfiatih:&#13;
r&#13;
FBAXK L. ANDBEWS, Publisher*&#13;
•INCKNEY, • " - MIGOIOAH.&#13;
u. •. • ' " • I l i l ' I *&#13;
It would be a blessing if the whisky&#13;
trust trusted nobody.&#13;
Truth-ts the grandest word in the&#13;
language, but few can discover it.&#13;
The Product of the Late Special&#13;
Session.&#13;
The fellow that kicks the most about&#13;
tuxes is the one who pays none at all.&#13;
\ irrim-n-r •&#13;
All women are bern equal-r-but some&#13;
of them spoil it by marrying worthless&#13;
men. ]&#13;
Yon can. never convince a man that&#13;
a luncheon can be as satisfying as a&#13;
dinner.&#13;
Michigan's fighting parson is now to&#13;
spar for charity. But he has not been&#13;
reported as turning the other cheek.&#13;
A Chicago woman dreamed of burglars&#13;
and awoke to find them in her&#13;
room. In other words, it was "no&#13;
dream."&#13;
A child feels that life is worth living&#13;
when it is allowed to drive without&#13;
some grown-up holding the reins&#13;
back of it.&#13;
Fashion has ordered womankind to&#13;
again wear high-heeled shoes. This-&#13;
Is not the sole offense of the fussy old&#13;
dame, either.&#13;
If a woman has but one gray hair in&#13;
her head, it is going to show just at&#13;
the time when she is trytog^to- impress&#13;
some one that Bhe is younger&#13;
than she really is.&#13;
Judge Shiras of Iowa has decided&#13;
that a married woman cannot be compelled&#13;
J.qi_ attend .school. _It __is always&#13;
cheerful to learn of common sense being&#13;
used on the bench.&#13;
When one does discover a grateful"&#13;
woman, &amp;he appears-to be a veritable&#13;
rara avis, and is regarded as possessing&#13;
an unusually fine character, whereas&#13;
she only has the decency to be properly&#13;
appreciative.&#13;
LAWS THAT WERE ENACTED.&#13;
The Mett of the BeMlon'i Work W « | on&#13;
Special Aets and Resolution*—»40,-&#13;
^000 for t h e Soldier*—Mothiac That&#13;
the,. Governor Wanted w a s Done.&#13;
Queen Victoria, it is said, is manifesting&#13;
deep interest in Mrs. Kruger,&#13;
and has asked many questions concerning&#13;
"Oom Paul's" wife and her influence&#13;
'"with her shrewd but warlike&#13;
spouse. The South African bloodshed&#13;
may not be stopped through, the good&#13;
offices of two aged, kindly and most&#13;
estimable women. Had the Transvaal&#13;
question been left to the queen and&#13;
Paul Kruger's wife for decision in the&#13;
first place the present struggle might&#13;
have been averted.&#13;
According to perfectly reliable reports&#13;
from the seat of war the Boers&#13;
are quarreling among themselves and&#13;
the British are suffering from typhoid&#13;
fever; the Kaffirs are rising against&#13;
the Boers and the Cape Dutch against&#13;
the British; 2,000 Boers were killed at ^ u , Q ,»* lwViea ,n me legislative&#13;
Modder river, this loss crushing the--SfH-f1 1 ^.^ f o r l 'l e ,.p e r i o d ending June&#13;
t n n t spirits of the survivors, and 5,000 Brit y of- the suec^edin* vefir ami th^&#13;
ish fell at Colenso, thus breaking the&#13;
hearts of Buller's army. Meanwhile&#13;
both Boer and Briton sit calmly iii&#13;
their trenches and wonder why the fate&#13;
of Ananias does not overtake various&#13;
war correspondents of unlimited imagination.&#13;
y •&#13;
AN ACT:to make available an Appropriation&#13;
to lurntsh new butlers to replace&#13;
those now in use at the Michigan Soldiers'&#13;
Home, being act number one hun-&#13;
„ aruu beveaty-iuur, Public Acts of&#13;
eighteen hunured ninety-riiine. approved&#13;
June i w e i u y - t m e e , eighteen hundred&#13;
ninety-nine, for ine foLow.ng purposes,&#13;
viz.: Tne trection of a two-siory .doner&#13;
House; ihe erection of a UricK &lt; Chimney;,&#13;
uie pwruirtt- and selling oi boiiord,&#13;
inciud.ng oieeennig to connect same wuli&#13;
SinuKe black; piped ana connections;&#13;
one new engine uu&lt;l ono new dynamo.&#13;
The i-eopks of in© btaio of .uiomgun&#13;
enact;&#13;
section 1. That the sum of fifteen thousand&#13;
dollars appropriated u&gt; section one&#13;
of aci numbeied one hunurou sevcniyfour,&#13;
public acta ot eighteen hunured&#13;
nlneiy-uihe, approved June iwenty-imve,&#13;
eighteen huniued ninety-nine, ue and tno&#13;
same i*&gt; hereby raauo avaiiuole icy- purposes&#13;
anu amounts atf iouov\s: 1'or tne&#13;
erection of one two-stoiy ijoiier house,&#13;
threo' tnousand dollars; lor tne ert-ction&#13;
of one blieK chlijiney, hi teen hundred&#13;
dollars; ior,.lhe purenase oi new sieaui&#13;
boilers and setting oi yanie, mcluaing&#13;
breeching to connect boilers witn s;no«iestack,&#13;
six thousand seven hundred fifty&#13;
dollars; ror ldpes and connections, two&#13;
thousand d o n a i s ; lor tne purcnase o£&#13;
one new engule, one tnousand dollars,&#13;
and for the purchase of one new dynamo,&#13;
seven hundred ttfty dinars;. _ Provided,&#13;
T h a t if tne amount designated in this section&#13;
for any of the purposes stated be&#13;
Insufficient to complete the work oa purchases,&#13;
any surplus remaining after tae&#13;
completion of t n u o t n e r work or purchases&#13;
irpecined in l i a s section may be&#13;
used in"" the account or accounts where&#13;
such deficiency exists, the Intent, of this&#13;
proviso oeing to mai^e m e entire fifteen&#13;
thousand uodars available lor the purpose&#13;
stated herein.&#13;
Section 2. The amount appropriated by&#13;
the said act" number one hundred seventy-&#13;
four shall be paid out of the general&#13;
fund in the State Treasury to the treasurer&#13;
of the Michigan Soldiers' Home at&#13;
such times and m SUCH amounts as tne&#13;
general accounting laws of tne- Stale&#13;
prescribe and the disbursing oniecr shall&#13;
render his accounts to the Auditor-General&#13;
thereunder. , o This act is ordered to take Immediate&#13;
eft'ect.-&#13;
Approved December 21, 1S1)9.&#13;
AX ACT to amend section two of act&#13;
number one hundred forty-two of tne&#13;
laws of eighteen hundred-ninety-nine,&#13;
entitled "An act to repeal section eight&#13;
of act nuniyer two huiuiren six of tne&#13;
laws of eighteen hundred eighty-one,&#13;
entitled 'An a c t ' t o provide for the Uni-"&#13;
form regulation of certain Slate Institutions,&#13;
and amendments tiiereto, be-&#13;
' ing section two thousand two hundred&#13;
thirty of the Compiled Laws of eighteen&#13;
hundred ninety-seven, and to provide&#13;
for a change from the Calendar&#13;
to the F i s c a r y e a r for ail Limited and&#13;
Standing Appropriations where the specific&#13;
act of the appropriation does not&#13;
so provide." ^,- .&#13;
The People of the State of Michigan&#13;
•enact:&#13;
Section 1. That section two of act number&#13;
one hundred forty-two of the laws of&#13;
eighteen hundred nmetv^hihe. entitled&#13;
"An act to provide for tne uniform regulation&#13;
of certain State institutions, and&#13;
amendments thereto, being section two&#13;
thousand two hundred thirty, of the&#13;
compiled laws of eighteen hundred ninety-&#13;
seven, and to provide for a c h a n g e '&#13;
from the 'calendar to the fiscal year fpr&#13;
all limited and standing appropriations&#13;
where the specific act of the appropriation&#13;
does tint so provide" be amended to&#13;
read as follows:&#13;
- Section 2. The Auditor-General shah&#13;
keep all accounts with ~ appropriations&#13;
made for any State institution or" board&#13;
by fiscal years*, and, whenever provision&#13;
therefor is not contained in the act making&#13;
the appropriation, and the tax for&#13;
m m l r i g tne same is provided In the specific&#13;
appropriation bill, the appropriation&#13;
met by such tax levied Jn the legislative&#13;
e&#13;
In 1813 Napoleon in order to increase—&#13;
the popularity of an issue of&#13;
6-franc pieces, announced that several&#13;
bonds redeemable at 5,000 francs each&#13;
had been inserted in coins of the issue.&#13;
Dispatches from Binghamton, N. Y.,&#13;
state that J. W. Hoban who opened a&#13;
^saloon recently in Waverly, took a 5-&#13;
franc piece over the bar.' Having read&#13;
of Napoleon's announcement, and noticing&#13;
the date on the coin, he opened&#13;
the latter and found a slip of paper&#13;
which, presented at a French bank&#13;
through the banking house of Roger&#13;
Ryan, was cashed for $11,500, the&#13;
amount of the bond "withT interest to&#13;
date.&#13;
The Muncie High School of Muncle.&#13;
Ind., is self-governing and in control&#13;
of the student*. The governing board&#13;
consists of a president, who must be&#13;
a student elected by popular vote, the&#13;
superintendent of public schools, the&#13;
principal of the High School, a member&#13;
of the school board, a woman member&#13;
of the faculty and one member&#13;
chosen from each of the high school&#13;
grades. Five student vice-presidents&#13;
are the heads of as many departments.&#13;
All questions of government are&#13;
brought before the board, on which&#13;
students hold" the controlling Tote.&#13;
The regular studies and study hours,&#13;
except where they may conflict with&#13;
some department law, are controlled&#13;
by the teachers, as usual A company&#13;
of uniformed High School cadets" Is&#13;
supported*; tennis, football, basket-ball&#13;
and baseball teams are kept up and&#13;
field day sports are directed The as*,&#13;
sociation also keeps up a flee and&#13;
mandolin dob and a dramatic club. A&#13;
dramatic cluTT manager and property&#13;
tax levied in the succeeding vear shall&#13;
be appropriated for the period ending&#13;
June thirty • f l o w i n g .&#13;
Provided. T^Jtt nothing-herein contained&#13;
shall affect the appropriations heretofore&#13;
made for tho University of Michigan.&#13;
And Provided Further, That nothing&#13;
herein contained shall affect t h e -pro visions&#13;
of section four of act number riftynne&#13;
of the laws of eighteen hundred ninety-&#13;
nine.&#13;
effTelciit.s act is^ordcred to take immediate&#13;
Approved December 21.--1S99.&#13;
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION' relative&#13;
to the Appointment of-Lewis M. Miller&#13;
as Commissioner on the Revision of the&#13;
United States Statutes.&#13;
tVhereas, There is; a proposition pending&#13;
before the Congress' of_the Unitee*&#13;
States for the appointment of a commission&#13;
for a revision ot tlie statutes, which&#13;
on account of the general demand for&#13;
^uch a revision, will probably become -u&#13;
law; therefore, .—&#13;
Resolved, by the House (the Senate concurring).&#13;
That our Senators and Representatives&#13;
in Congress are requested to use&#13;
their best endeuvors to secure the appointment,&#13;
as n member of said comraiseion,&#13;
of Lewis M. f i l l e r of this State&#13;
whose ability has been s.o markedly evidenced&#13;
by his work on the annotated compilation&#13;
of the genertrhstatutes recently&#13;
completed and placed in the hands of tht&#13;
people of this State, who unanlmousi&gt;&#13;
declare the work invaluable and hitherto&#13;
unrivaled in its ^excellencies, and so per«&#13;
feet as to leave nothing further t o be desired;&#13;
and,&#13;
Resolved." T h a t we earnestly request&#13;
President McKinley^ In case of the passage&#13;
of t h e bill directing the said revision,&#13;
to appoint the said Lewis M. Miller to b^&#13;
one of the commissioners to prepare the&#13;
text for said revision, believing a s we do&#13;
that his services on said commission will&#13;
be as valuable to the people of the United&#13;
States as they have proved to be to tne&#13;
people of the State of Michigan.&#13;
Resolved, That ccpieg of this resolution&#13;
bdee n«t enMt cbKvi ntlheey Saonrdr Hounrr «Snefn aHtotartsP atnod P rR.-eapi -&#13;
resentatives in Congress.&#13;
Approved J a n u a r y 3, 1900.&#13;
AN ACT to amend section one of&#13;
act nurftber four hundred forty-five of&#13;
the local acts .of eighteen hundred ninety-&#13;
nine, entitled. "An Act to authorize&#13;
the City of Grand Rapids, in the County&#13;
of Kent arxl State of Michigan, to&#13;
borrow money to be expended in the&#13;
conetruction of a bridge across Grand&#13;
River at Bridge Street in said city, approved&#13;
June fifteenth, eighteen hundred&#13;
ninety-nine."&#13;
The People of the State of Michigan&#13;
enact:&#13;
Section 1. That section one of act number&#13;
four hundred forty-five of the local&#13;
acts of eighteen hundred nlnety^nlne, entitled,&#13;
"An Act to authorise the City of&#13;
Grand Rapids, In the Count; of Kent, and&#13;
State of Michigan, to borrow money to&#13;
be expended I n the construction of a&#13;
bridge across Grand River at Brld&#13;
4M&amp; - * » „ 1 * - * i&#13;
: : • '&#13;
• ^ - . r ««a _pTgpenj 8 - t ^ . m , a l d city, approved June iftmaii&#13;
are among the officers. Ts» AM- Teenth. eighteen nuhared nin&amp;ty-r&#13;
tralian baijot 1« used, • aineaded so a* to read as follows:&#13;
Section 2. That tho City" of Grund Rap-&#13;
Ids, in tho County of Kent, and Stat* of&#13;
Michigan, is hereby authorised and empowered&#13;
to borrow money on the faith&#13;
and credit of the city, and to issue bonds&#13;
therefor to an amount not to exceed one&#13;
hundred fifty thousand dollars, whioh&#13;
shall be expended in construction of a&#13;
.bridge acroes Grand River at Bridge&#13;
street in said city: Provided, That a majority&#13;
of the electors of Bald city voting&#13;
on the Question at any special or regular&#13;
election at which said question of bonding&#13;
shall be submitted shall so determine in&#13;
compliance with the provisions of this&#13;
act. and not otherwise.&#13;
This act is ordered to take immediate effect.&#13;
Approved January 5, 1900.&#13;
JOINT K F « o / HTION empowering the&#13;
Attorney-General to investigate and&#13;
bring such legal proceedings as the law&#13;
may warrant to recover the value of&#13;
property alleged to have been fraudulently&#13;
obtained from the State upon the&#13;
sale of certain Military Goods and Supplies,&#13;
and to reimbu»*se the Rtatfl for&#13;
d a m a g e s occasioned by a fraud alleged&#13;
to have been perpetrated upon the State&#13;
In the sale and purchase of Military&#13;
Goods and Supplies.&#13;
Whereas, (It Is alleged t h a t in the sale&#13;
of certain Military goods and supplies of&#13;
the state of Michigan made by the milit&#13;
a r y board [of this State on or about the&#13;
thirtieth,- dky of J u n e last, and lrr the&#13;
subsequent purchase of military goods&#13;
and supplies by said military board for&#13;
the National Guard of said State, certain&#13;
frauds have been perpetrated by whichthe&#13;
State of Michigan Is alleged to have&#13;
suffered damages in a large amount,&#13;
Rcsrdwd. That tho Attorney-General of&#13;
this State be and is horeby empowered to&#13;
in vest lea to, and to bring such legal proceedings&#13;
as ho may deem beat, and to protect&#13;
the interests of the State in all defalcation&#13;
matters, and the Auditor-General&#13;
of this State 13 hereby directed to draw&#13;
his w a r r a n t upon the. • treasurer of this&#13;
State upon proper vouchers therefor,&#13;
signed by said-Attorney-General, for the&#13;
payment, of all costs necessitated herein,&#13;
a n d the treasurer Is hereby directed to&#13;
pay said w a r r a n t out of any moneys In&#13;
the treasury" not otherwise appropriated.&#13;
Approved J a n u a r y 8, 1&amp;X).&#13;
AN ACT to authorize' the City of Ionia tn&#13;
Borrow Thirty Thousand Dollar? and to&#13;
issue the Bonds of the city therefor to&#13;
pav outstanding City Bonds.&#13;
Tho People of the S l a t e - o f Michigan&#13;
enact:&#13;
Section 1. T h a t for the purpose of redeeming&#13;
and retiring thirty thousand dollars&#13;
worth of water bonds of the City ot&#13;
Ionia, outstanding and issued in the year&#13;
eighteen hundred eighty-three, the City&#13;
of Ionia, be and is hereby authorized,&#13;
acting through and by the common council&#13;
of said city, to borrow thirty thousand&#13;
dollars on the credit of the city at n&#13;
jate— of -interest not exceeding four per&#13;
cent per a n n u m a'nd* to issue the bonds ot&#13;
the 5-aid oily therefor. '&#13;
Sec 2. The amount of each bond, place&#13;
of pavment of principal a n d interest, tlmo&#13;
and condition of payment and time o.&#13;
maturity" is left to the discretion of tne&#13;
common council of the said city.&#13;
This act is ordered to take immediate&#13;
effect. ^ A&#13;
Approved J a n u a r y 8, 19C0.&#13;
T ; h e ^ o p l e of the S t a t e of Michigan&#13;
e n a c t :&#13;
r e l i e f of s i c k&#13;
I":&#13;
l 3-&#13;
to pay sueh. claims for the .&#13;
disabled and needy ex-soldiers, sailors&#13;
a n d ' m a r i n e s of the late Spanlsh-Amerieajj,&#13;
war as may be properly audited, allowed&#13;
and filed with paid Auditor General on&#13;
or before the thirty-first day of .January,&#13;
nineteen hundred, by virtue of act ni«nber&#13;
one hundred thirty-four of the laws&#13;
of eighteen hundred ninety-nine, entitled&#13;
"An act for the relief of slek, • disabled&#13;
and needy ex-soldiers, sailors and marines&#13;
of the late Spanish-American war," the&#13;
be paid out under this act, and no claims&#13;
shall be paid hereunder until after the&#13;
t'nirtv-tirst day of J a n u a r y , nine-teen hundred,&#13;
nor until all claims to be allowed&#13;
hereunder shall have been presented to&#13;
the Auditor General, and if the amount&#13;
herein appropriated is not sufficient to&#13;
pay all of said claims the Auditor General&#13;
is authorized to divide said fund among&#13;
said claimants proportionately according&#13;
to the amount of said claims, paying to&#13;
each claimant his pro r a t a share thereof,&#13;
or In his discretion in such proportion .as&#13;
shall be determined by him to~bc Just and&#13;
equitable. . '&#13;
This act is ordered to take immediate&#13;
effect..&#13;
Approved J a n u a r y 8, 1900.&#13;
AN ACT to authorize the Township&#13;
P.oard of the Township of Springwells,&#13;
in the County of Wayne, to borrow a&#13;
sum of money not to exceed twenty&#13;
thousand dollars in the year nineteen&#13;
hundred, for the! purpose of paying its&#13;
proportion of the cost of constructing a&#13;
Rridge over the Rouge River on Fort&#13;
Str^et.in said Township, and to pay the&#13;
present outstanding obligations and indebtedness&#13;
of-said Township, and to issue&#13;
Bonds therefor. "&#13;
The People* of the State of Michigan&#13;
enact:&#13;
Section ,1, The township board of the&#13;
Township of Springw"ells, in the County&#13;
of W a y n e shall have tho authority and&#13;
power, and is hereby authorized and empowered&#13;
to borrow, money on the faith&#13;
an5 credit of said township and issue&#13;
bonds -therefor in a sum not to exceed&#13;
twenty thousand dollars" in the year nineteen&#13;
hundred, for the purpose of paying&#13;
its proportion of the cost of constructing&#13;
a bridge over the Rouge .River,,on Fort&#13;
Street, in said township, and to pay the&#13;
present outstanding obligations and indebtedness&#13;
of said township, and Issue&#13;
bonds therefor: Provided, T h a t a majority&#13;
of the quailiied electors of said township,&#13;
voting at an annual or special election,&#13;
to be called in compliance with&#13;
c h a p t e r nineteen of Howell's Annotated&#13;
Statutes of Michigan and t h e acts amendatory&#13;
thereto, shall vote In favor of such&#13;
loan or bond Issue in the manner therein&#13;
specified and not otherwise.&#13;
Sec. ?. If such bond issue or lo'an shall&#13;
be authorized bv a majority of said qualified&#13;
electors, said bonds sh?ll be issued&#13;
in denominations of five hundred dollars&#13;
each, and shall be payable at such times&#13;
and a m o u n t s at any time within twenty&#13;
years from the date of the issue as fixed&#13;
and determined by said township board, and&#13;
wTCn 11 ral« of htlerest not exceeding four&#13;
per cent per annum, and such bonds shall&#13;
be signed by the supervisor and clerk of&#13;
said township, and be negotiated by and&#13;
under the direction of the township&#13;
board of said township, and the money&#13;
arising from the sale thereof shall be appropriated&#13;
In such m a n n e r as said township&#13;
board shall determine for the purpose&#13;
aforesaid and not otherwise, tfhd the&#13;
said township board shall have the power,&#13;
ond It shall be Its duty to raise by taxation&#13;
upon the taxable property of said&#13;
township such sum or sums as shall be&#13;
sufficient to pay the a m o u n t of said bonds&#13;
and the interest thcron as fast as the&#13;
same shall become due, a s hereinbefore&#13;
stated.&#13;
Sec. 3. The vote upon such pr6poslt!on&#13;
fchall be printed by ballot and shall be in&#13;
the following words:&#13;
For the issue of township bonds.&#13;
Yes. ( )&#13;
For the issue of township bonds.&#13;
No ( ) ^&#13;
This act is ordered to take Immediate&#13;
effect. - '~-"\&#13;
Approved January 8, 1300. \&#13;
AN ACT to repeal act number four hundred&#13;
seventeen of the Local Acts -»f&#13;
eighteen hundred ninety-nine, entitled;&#13;
" A n Act to ohange the naja&amp;.jilJ[iMz.&#13;
tlonal school district n u m b e r two of Piymouth&#13;
and Novl townships in th,e counties&#13;
of Wayne and Oakland, in the&#13;
State of Michigan, to fractional school&#13;
district number one of NorthvlUe and&#13;
Novi townships and to add new territory&#13;
thereto."&#13;
TrW people of the State of Michigan enact:&#13;
Section 1. That act number four hundred&#13;
seventeen of the Local Acts of eighteen&#13;
hundred ninety-nine, entitled, ','An&#13;
Act to change the name of fractional&#13;
school district number two of Plymouth&#13;
and Novi townships In the counties of&#13;
Wayne, and Oakland, in the State of&#13;
Michigan, to fractional school dlsmct&#13;
number *&gt;no of Northvflle and Novl townships&#13;
and to add new territory thereto,"&#13;
} be and the same Is hereby repealed.&#13;
This, a c t is ordered to t a k e immediate&#13;
effect.&#13;
Approved J a n u a r y 8, 1900.&#13;
OljE BUDGET OF Ftj£&#13;
SOME GOOD J O K E 9 , OTUOiWALAND&#13;
SELECTED.&#13;
CASUALTIES.&#13;
Holland, Mich.-^AU carg of the Holland&#13;
&amp; Lake Michigan electric railway,&#13;
numbering ten, one motor-power&#13;
snow plow, and car barn wjere destroyed&#13;
by fire.&#13;
Corneto, Italy—In a collision Mrs.&#13;
Alexander Herininger, an American,&#13;
who was a passenger on the Calais&#13;
express train, was injured.&#13;
Ripley, Mich.—Fire destroyed the&#13;
fsundry, office, pattern-shop and one&#13;
warehouse of the Portage Lake machine&#13;
works. Loss, $85,000; insurance,&#13;
§40,000.&#13;
Louisville, Ky.—Mrs. 'Mary Theobold,&#13;
aged 58, was burned to death and&#13;
her daughter, Lucinda, aged 2S, was so&#13;
badly burned she cannot live, by the&#13;
explosion of aTawp.—~:&gt; - _&#13;
Warren, Ohio—Jonathan Thompson&#13;
was "killed and Thomas Wilson was fatally&#13;
injured by a Pittsburg &amp; Painesville&#13;
train.&#13;
Dassel, Minn.—Fire destroyed the&#13;
business section. Loss exceeds 550,000.&#13;
' d a n h Treatment.&#13;
"My dea*. ll ttiougfct they'1*ad aoql-&#13;
\WML fcbrpbral p\mifl&amp;in'etft" ft thenavy."&#13;
"They have."&#13;
"Does that apply to yachts, too ?"&#13;
"I suppose it does. What are yo*&#13;
driving at?"&#13;
"Why, I noticed that In a recent racw&#13;
oft Newport one of the yachts was&#13;
steered so badly that her spankerstruck&#13;
a buoy."—Cleveland Plain 'Dealer.&#13;
• i . ..&#13;
CRIME.&#13;
Spencer, Neb.—M. Jacoby jshot and&#13;
killed Miltcn Nelson and killed himself.&#13;
Mcpherson, Kan.—Worried over the&#13;
incarceration of her husband on a&#13;
charge of drunkenness, Mrs. Joseph&#13;
Christie murdered her two children,&#13;
cut her own throat and then set fire&#13;
to her home.&#13;
Philadelphia,—The trial of the alleged&#13;
Pennsylvania legislative bribers,&#13;
growing out of t-enator Quay's Te-eiec-&#13;
Uon, has been postponed until March&#13;
22. v ^&#13;
MISCELLANEOUS.&#13;
Springfield, -111.—Horse3 in south&#13;
Shelby county are dying from a, disease&#13;
pronounced by state veterinarians to be&#13;
contagious glanders.&#13;
Wishington.-Brig.-Gen. James H.&#13;
Wilson has written a letter from Cuba&#13;
to the adjutant general, in which he&#13;
vigorously denies having said .that he&#13;
v/vould1 not serve under Jlov. Wood.&#13;
Saginaw, Mich.—The purchase of the&#13;
McCassy Brothers' washboard factory&#13;
in Cincinnati by the Saginaw Manufacturing&#13;
company is said to'be the beginning&#13;
of a consolidatidn of the washboard&#13;
manufacturing business,&#13;
Newcastle, Eng.—The United States&#13;
cruiser Albany completed her endurance&#13;
trial with the following result:&#13;
Average speed per hour, 19:54 knots;&#13;
revolutions, 149; horse-power, 5,624;&#13;
coal consumed, 144 tons per twentyfour&#13;
hours.&#13;
Denver, Colo.—Thomas Linton, one&#13;
of the most prominent Masons in the&#13;
United States, died. He was born in&#13;
England in 1828. He has been tyler o£-&#13;
the Masonic grand lodge of Colorado&#13;
since 1873.&#13;
Chillicothc, Mo.—The Nelson Kneasa&#13;
Monument association has been organized&#13;
for the purpose of "erecting a monument&#13;
over the grave of Nelson Kneass,&#13;
the musical author of "Ben Bolt."&#13;
Paris.—The manager and artist of&#13;
the paper La Caricature, who published&#13;
a cartoon grossly caricaturing&#13;
Queen Victoria, were acquitted of the&#13;
charge of outraging public morals.&#13;
Washington.—Congressman Prince&#13;
introduced a bill in the house asking&#13;
for an appropriation of not less than&#13;
$100,000 for a government postofflce&#13;
building at Sterling, 111.&#13;
Washington.—The president sent to&#13;
the senate the nominations of Henry&#13;
L. Howison, Albert Kautz, George C.&#13;
Remey and Norman H. Farquhar as&#13;
rear admirals.&#13;
Washington—Rev. Benaiah L.Whitman,&#13;
president of Columbia university,&#13;
has tendered his resignation to accept&#13;
the pastorate of Calvary Baptist&#13;
church, Philadelphia^&#13;
Winnipeg, Man. — Manitoba's new&#13;
cabinet was sworn in by Lieut. Gov.&#13;
Patterson.&#13;
Morris, 111.—John Holderman, one&#13;
ot the first settlers of Grundy county,&#13;
Ifcd at his home, aged 72 years.&#13;
English business men in Paris are&#13;
being boycotted because of England's&#13;
talk of boycotting the exposition.&#13;
The soil of Egypt at the present day&#13;
is tilled by exactly the same kind of&#13;
plow that was used 5,000 years ago.&#13;
Normandy fishermen complain of the&#13;
^udden appearance of cuttlefish, which&#13;
arc: making inroads on the fisheries.&#13;
Tho length of the world's railways is&#13;
more than seventeen times the circumference&#13;
of the earth at the equator.&#13;
Monument* to mark the boundary&#13;
line between the federal district and&#13;
the state of liexlcq are to be erected&#13;
shortly.&#13;
His Kind of Courage.&#13;
"I want yotl to pull a tootii, but not&#13;
with gas. That costs too much!"&#13;
"Well, you're a brave man. Show me&#13;
the tooth."&#13;
"Wait a minute. My mother-in-law&#13;
will be here right away. It's fcer&#13;
tooth."--Der Floh.&#13;
- , &lt;? ' :&#13;
The Leftsless Ajje.&#13;
"It's a 'lessless age," remarked Simpers.&#13;
• •-- T&#13;
"What do you mean?"i inquired&#13;
Galeae&#13;
"Here's a couple who entered upon&#13;
a loveless marriage, drove away in a&#13;
horseless carriage and received all&#13;
their congratulations by wireless telegraphy."—&#13;
Philadelphia North American.&#13;
Vh%y Qot Together.&#13;
"Papa," said little four-year-old Margie,&#13;
"I think you 'are just tne nicest&#13;
man in the whole 'World."&#13;
"And I think you are- the nicest littla&#13;
girl in the world," replied her father.&#13;
" 'Course I am,".said MaTgie. "Ain't&#13;
it queer how such nice pedple happen&#13;
to get into the same family?*'—Sydney&#13;
Town and,-Country Journal.&#13;
Lack.&#13;
"They say," he*said, "that it is no&#13;
longer fashionable to attach to. wedding&#13;
presents the cards pt the People who&#13;
give them."&#13;
"Then," she declared, "I'm going t©&#13;
take back that $20 picture I intended&#13;
to give Nell Waterson, and get her a&#13;
solid silver teaspoon."—ChicagoTimes-&#13;
Herald.&#13;
Old Time Dexterity.&#13;
Joe Ker—The earlier watches were&#13;
much cleverer timepieces than those of&#13;
^he present.&#13;
Jacques—How so? ,&#13;
Joe Ker—They marked the time with&#13;
only one hand.—Jewelers' Weekly. I&#13;
Neighborly Ties&#13;
"The telephone is a great sochl factor."&#13;
"That's so. We wouldn't have caMec]&#13;
_on those people next door at ail if we&#13;
hadn't wanted to use their telephone.'*&#13;
—Chicago Record.&#13;
A Careful Mother.&#13;
Teach,er-^What do you know of the&gt;&#13;
microbe family?&#13;
Little Maude—Please, ma'aqL_ipam»,&#13;
ma has forbidden us to gossip about&#13;
fother people's family affairs.—Exchange.&#13;
The Difference.&#13;
"Detectives in real life are not a bit&#13;
like the story-book detectives."&#13;
"That's so," said the man who hasn't&#13;
any s a voir faire whatever. "The storybook&#13;
detective invariably catches hitman&#13;
sooner ox later."—Washington&#13;
Star.&#13;
A Variety of Quip», QUm »nfl I / o o U * .&#13;
to Cana* • Stnile -rr Flotsam and&#13;
J e t m m from *&amp;• Xl*l« of Humor—&#13;
Witty Sajlsff*&#13;
..J.&#13;
— i&#13;
" N \&#13;
^ • • l i n i i l ^ i •••«&lt; | | V rrzsm \'JHfimirtHKM.:Jf^\ • •"tRWiiT-- W &lt;-V«M-'*W&#13;
r. f&#13;
*—m*m*m&#13;
AP^^W *fw$m&#13;
'i '••:•• - . . ' ! • - * . . 1 . $&#13;
^ .&#13;
•W- "',--&#13;
THtfSlWy;Q(F:ABET.&#13;
T h r e e , . J p h n j i t e ^ s a t * t ^ - t # t t * - t * $ | f t - - a a a d a r n ? "&#13;
r i - i ^ i r 1 ^ - • **.^ ' • ! « ! • o v e r l o o k i n g , 0 ^ r ink, , TT hh e* •ostkroaftaerr.as " S i r ! " c r i ed t h * l a d y .&#13;
w e r e w a l t z i n g w i t h a l l t h e p o e t r y # o l&#13;
t h e i r r h y t h m i c m o t i o n t o t h e d u l c e t&#13;
s t r a i n s of ' t W "Tzigane b a n d , a n d a&#13;
s m a l l c r o w d of p e o p l e , l i k e o u r thre&lt;&#13;
J o h n n i e s , w a t e h e d t h e m , n o t i n g t h e&#13;
s p e c i a l g r a c e of o n e a n d t h e s c a r c e l y&#13;
h i d d e n c l u m s i n e s s of a n o t h e r .&#13;
T h e h a l l , w a s g u l l o f j i g h t , a n d t h e&#13;
e l e c t r i c g l o w } a m p * w e r e r e f l e c t e d f r o m&#13;
t h e r e a l ioe floor.. T h e -gay . d r e s s e s of&#13;
t h e l a d i e s , t h e r e d a n d w h i t e C a n a d i a n&#13;
c o s t u m e s o f t h e a t t e n d a n t s , h e l p e d t o&#13;
m a k e a p r e t t y a n d e x h i l a r a t i n g s p e c -&#13;
t a c l e , w h i c h o u r t h r e e J o h n n i e s w e r e&#13;
d r i n k i n g i n .&#13;
Tw.0. of. t h e m w e r e y o u n g J o h n n i e s ,&#13;
a n d &amp; e t h i r d w a s a n o l d J o h n n y . T h e&#13;
y o u n g m e n w e r e a c q u a i n t a n c e s ; t h e&#13;
e l d e s t o n e , w a s a s t r a n g e r t o t h e o t h e r&#13;
t w o . T h e y h a d m e t ^ a t t h e r i n k f o r&#13;
t h e first t i m e , e x c h a n g i n g a s a l u t a t i o n&#13;
. a s t h e y s a t o v e r a g l a s s of. w i n e a n d&#13;
w a t c h e d t h e s c e n e . T h e ~ c o n v e r s a t i o n »&#13;
g r o w i n g u p o n t h e m , h a d r e s u l t e d i n a n&#13;
i n t e r c h a n g e of c a r d a . T h e m o s t a n -&#13;
c i e n t J o h n n y w a s H o b e r t R i c h a r d s , a c -&#13;
c o r d i n g t o h i s p a s t e b o a r d : T h e o t h e r&#13;
t w o w e r e A l g e r n o n D u k e a n d M o w b r a y&#13;
S m i t h .&#13;
" T h e r e ' s o n e o r t w o d e c e n t g i r l s&#13;
h e r e , " a s s e r t e d M o w b r a y .&#13;
" D e c e n t ? T h e r e ' s s o m e d e c n e d fine&#13;
f r o c k s a b o u t , if y o u w a n t m y o p i n i o n .&#13;
W h a t d o y o u s a y ? " S o s a i d A l g e r n o n .&#13;
"I a m e n t i r e l y o f y o u r o p i n i o n , " c o i n -&#13;
c i d e d t h e e l d e r l y p e r s o n , a s h e s i p p e d&#13;
h i s 'WinQ.&#13;
" L o o k a t t h a t o n e , n o w , " p u r s u e d&#13;
AIgy.;; J ! a e p r e t t y a s a picture.""&#13;
" A n d n e a r l y a s w e l l p a i n t e d , " s a i d&#13;
Mr. R i c h a r d s .&#13;
" Y o u ' r e a c y n i c , " l a u g h e d M o w b r a y .&#13;
" Y o u d o n ' t l i k e w o m e n . "&#13;
" N o t i n t h e a g g r e g a t e . T h e r e a r e&#13;
o n e o r two. t h a t I k u o w t h a t I a m&#13;
r a t h e r f o n d of."&#13;
" N o w , a s for m e / * s a i d M o w b r a y ,&#13;
" I ' m f o n d of t h e w h o l e c r e w , f a i r a n d&#13;
d a r k , h a n d s o m e a n d p l a i n , d e m u r e a n d&#13;
s l a s h i n g , o l d a n d y o u n g . "&#13;
" A g a y L o t h a r i o , " c h i m e d i n A l g y .&#13;
" W e l l , w h a t d o y o u s a y t o t h i s ? "&#13;
" T h i s " w a s a c h a r m i n g c r e a t u r e ,&#13;
d a i n t y of ngjire,-exquisitelyL_CQs.tumed,&#13;
a n d w i t h t h e h e a l t h y g l o w of e x e r c i s e&#13;
u p o n h e r p r e t t y f a c e . S h e w a s j u s t&#13;
l e a v i n g t h e ice floor, a n d a n a t t e n d a n t&#13;
- Y O U ' V E W O N , " H E S A I D .&#13;
t o o k eff h e r s k a t e s a s s h e s a t d o w n&#13;
a t a t a b l e r a t h e r c l o s e , t o t h e t h r e e&#13;
J o h n n i e s .&#13;
B u t |&#13;
A r e y o u t i r e d w i t h y o u r s k a t i n g .&#13;
•*•*»&#13;
• ' T h a n k y o u , " e a i d t h e l a d y .&#13;
M o w b r a y d i d n o t m o v e a w a y .&#13;
Oh, I d o n ' t w i s h t o i n t r u d e - * - — "&#13;
T h e n p l e a s e d o n o t . "&#13;
'I'm su^re I b e g y o u r pardon^" fU.&#13;
Ihe b o w ^ d c o l d l y . Arid M o w b r a y&#13;
r e t i r e d w i t h h i s t a i l b e t w e e n h i s l e g s .&#13;
"Itfc m y t u r n , " s a i d t h e e l d e r l y J o h n -&#13;
nie, w i t h a s a r d o n i c g r i n / T h e o t h e r&#13;
t w o l a u g h e d g l e e f u l l y a s t h e y w a t c h e d&#13;
h i m . H e c r o s s e d t o t h e l a d y , s p o k e t o&#13;
h e r — s h e s m i l e d — h e s a t d o w n - ^ a n d h e&#13;
c a l l e d t h e w a i t e r . ^ &gt; '&#13;
" W e ' r e d o n e ! " c r i e d A l g y a n d ^ o w -&#13;
b r a y . T h e y r o s e i n d i s m a y .&#13;
" D o n ' t g o , " c r i e d Mr. R i c h a r d s t o&#13;
t h e m . "I h a v e o r d e r e d a b o t t l e o f&#13;
w i n e a t y o u r e x p e n s e * I'll l e t y o u off&#13;
t h e o t h e r b o t t l e s . O n e w i l l b e e n o u g h&#13;
f o r a l e s s o n . "&#13;
A l g y b e c k o n e d h i m . o v e r t o t h e m .&#13;
" Y o u ' v e f a i r l y w o n , " h e s a i d , " a n d w e&#13;
g i v e i n . , B u t w h o Is t h e l a d y ? "&#13;
- ' " M y w i f e , " a n s w e r e d Mr. R i c h a r d s ,&#13;
w i t h h i s b l a n d e s t s m i l e , a s h e r e s u m e d&#13;
h i s s e a t a n d p r e p a r e d t o c o n s u m o t h e&#13;
s p o i l s of c o n q u e s t . — A l l y S l o p e r .&#13;
DAIMTE AND SHAKESPEARE.&#13;
S i n g u l a r P a r a l l e l W h i c h S e e m * t o H a v e&#13;
E s c a p e d C o m m e n t a t o r * .&#13;
I w i s h t o p o i n t o u t a s i n g u l a r p a r a l -&#13;
l e l w h i c h , s o f a r a s I k n o w , h a s e s - '&#13;
c a p e d t h e - a t t e n t i o n of S h a k e s p e a r e a n&#13;
c o m m e n t a t o r s , s a y s t h e A t h e n a e u m .&#13;
T h e s e s q u i p e d a l i a n w o r d q u o t e d b y&#13;
C o s t a r d i n " L o v e ' s L a b o r L o s t " ( A c t&#13;
V . , s c e n e 1 ) , "I m a r v e l t h y m a s t e r h a s t&#13;
n o t e a t e n t h e e f o r a w o r d ; for t h o u&#13;
a r e n o t s o l e n g b y t h e h e a d a s h o n o r i -&#13;
flcabilitudinitatibus," s e e m s t o h a v e&#13;
b e e n t a k e n f r o m D a n t e ' s " D e V u l g a r i&#13;
E l o q u i o " ( B o o k II., c h a p t e r 7 ) . D a n t e ,&#13;
s p e a k i n g of w o r d s w h o s e e x c e s s i v e&#13;
l e n g t h f o r b i d s t h e i r u s e In t h e c a n -&#13;
z o n e , g i v e s a s a n i n s t a n c e " i l l u d h e n -&#13;
o r i f l c a b i l l t u d i n i t a t e , q u o d d u o d e n a p e r -&#13;
flcitur s y l l a b a i n v u l g a r i , e t i n g r a m -&#13;
m a t i c a t r e d e n a p e r f l c i t u r i n d u o b u s&#13;
o b l l q u i s . " (I q u o t e f r o m D r . M o o r e ' s&#13;
t e x t of D a n t e , O x f o r d , 1897, p. 396.&gt;&#13;
T h e c o i n c i d e n c e i s t o o r e m a r k a b l e t o&#13;
h a v e b e e n t h e r e s u l t of p u r e a c c i d e n t .&#13;
I t w i l l be o b s e r v e d t h a t S h a k e s p e a r e ,&#13;
or t h e p e r s o n s t o w h o m h e w a s I n -&#13;
d e b t e d T o r £ h e w o r d , t u r n e d D a n t e ' s&#13;
I t a l i a n w o r d i n t o i t s L a t i n f o r m ("in.&#13;
g r a m m a t l c a " ) , a n d g a i n e d a n a d d i t i o n -&#13;
a l s y l l a b l e by t h e u s e of. o n e of t h e&#13;
o b l i q u e c a s e s r e f e r r e d t o . I s i t p o s s i -&#13;
b l e thdt: S h a k e s p s a r e h a d a c t u a l l y&#13;
s o m e " a c q u a i n t a n c e w i t h D a n t e ' s&#13;
t r e a t i s e , e i t h e r in t h e I t a l i a n t r a n s l a -&#13;
t i o n cf " T r i s s i n o , " p u b l i s h e d , i n 1529,&#13;
o r In t h e - - L a t i n t e x t , ' w h i c h a p p e a r e d&#13;
f o r t h e first t i m e i n P a t r i 3 in 1577?&#13;
T h e l a t t e r m u s t h a v e b e e n a n i n t e r e s t -&#13;
i n g l i t e r a r y n o v e l t y i n t h e t i m e of&#13;
S h a k e s p e a r e ' s y o ^ t h a n d e a r l y m a n -&#13;
h o o d , a n d w h i l e o u r p o e t ' s g e n i u s w a s&#13;
s t i l l in i t s l y r i c a l s t a g e , a n d h e w a s&#13;
e n g a g e d in t h e c o m p o s i t i o n of " L o v e ' s&#13;
L a b o r L o s t " ( v e r y p o s s i b l y t h e e a r l i -&#13;
e s t of a l l h i s c o m e d i e s ) , h e m a y w e l l&#13;
h a v e t a k e n -a p l e a s u r e in t h e I t a l i a n&#13;
-poet's c u r i o u 3 anil e l a b o r a t e r u l e s f e r -&#13;
tile m a k i n g of c a n z e n i , a s D o n A r -&#13;
n ; a d o a n d S i r N a t h a n i e l a n d M a s t e r&#13;
H o l o f e r n r s w o u l d m o s t c e r t a i n l y h a v e&#13;
d o n e . It i s o b v i o u s t o r e m a r k t h a t t h e&#13;
p l a y s h o w s s o m e a c q u a i n t a n c e o n&#13;
S h a k e s p e a r e ' s p a r t w i t h b o t h L a t i n&#13;
a n d I t a l i a n .&#13;
Missouri's PonlIryv.. _&#13;
W h e n t h e s t a t e s t a t i s t i c i a n a t J e f f e r -&#13;
s o n C i t y c o m p l e t e d h i s c o m p i l a t i o n o f&#13;
t h e s u r p l u s p r o d u c t s of M i s s o u r i r e -&#13;
c e n t l y h e d i s c o v e r e d t h a t t h e g r e a t e s t&#13;
g a i n o f t h e y e a r w a s i n p o u l t r y , s a y s&#13;
S t . L o u i a G l o b e - D e m o c r a t . H i s r e t u r n s&#13;
of s h i p m e n t s s h o w e d t h a t t h e M i s s o u r i&#13;
h e n h a d c a u s e t o c a c k l e l o u d l y . O n e&#13;
h e a r s a g r e a t d e a l t h e s e d a y s a b o u t&#13;
M i s s o u r i ' s b o o m i n g z i n c a n d l e a d i n -&#13;
d u s t r i e s . A l l t h a t i s c l a i m e d f o r t h e s e&#13;
w e a l t h - p r o d u c i n g f a c t o r s I s w s l l&#13;
founded-. B u t w h a t t r i b u t e i s d u e t h e&#13;
h e n w h e n it Is r e a l i z e d t h a t t h e p o u l t r y&#13;
s h i p p e d by r a i l i n M i s s o u r i l a s t y e a r&#13;
e x c e e d e d i n v a l u e t h e z i n c o r e , w h i l e&#13;
t h e e g g s w e n t t h e l e a d o r e $26,000 b e t -&#13;
t e r ? F u r t h e r m o r e , i n t h e . c a s e of t h e&#13;
p o u l t r y a n d e g g s , t h e s e s h i p m e n t s w e r e&#13;
t h e s u r p l u s a f t e r t h e h o m e c o n s u m p -&#13;
t i o n h a d b e e n s a t i s f i e d . A n d it i s&#13;
c l a i m e d t h a t f u l l y h a l f t h e c h i c k e n s&#13;
a n d e g g s p r o d u c e d i n t h e s t a t e d o . n o t&#13;
find t h e w a y t o m a r k e t b y r a i l .&#13;
T h e figures a r e a m a z i n g . T h e p o u l -&#13;
t r y p r o d u c t s h i p p e d a n d s o l d l a s t y e a r&#13;
a m o u n t e d t o o v e r 70,000,000 p o u n d s . I t&#13;
r e a l i z e d t h e , p r o d u c e r s a t first p r i c e&#13;
$4,900,000. t h e e g g s s h i p p e d w e r e 33,-&#13;
935,000 d o z e n s , a n d t h e y b r o u g h t t o t h e&#13;
p e o p l e w h o g a t h e r e d t h e m f r o m t h e&#13;
n e s t s $3,393,000. p o u l t r y a n d e g g s t o -&#13;
g e t h e r y i e l d e d t o t h e f a r m e r s of M i s -&#13;
s o u r i , a f t e r t h e i r o w n t a b l e s h a d beem&#13;
s u p p l i e d , $8,298,000. W h y ! T h e t w o&#13;
g r e a t i t e m s of a g r i c u l t u r a l g a i n f o r&#13;
M i s s o u r i lant y e a r , c a t t l e a n d h o g s ,&#13;
r e a l i z e d , r e s p e c t i v e l y , $34,000,000 a n d&#13;
$36,000,000 e a c h , o n l y a b o u t f o u r t i m e s&#13;
w h a t t h e p o u l t r y did. A n d t h e y c o n -&#13;
s u m e d t h e c o r n c r o p , of 190,000,000&#13;
b u s h e l s , a n d k e p t a c o n s i d e r a b l e p r o -&#13;
p o r t i o n of t h e ^farmers of t h e s t a t e&#13;
d o i n g c h o r e s f r o m d a y l i g h t t o d a r k a l l&#13;
w i n t e r . W b w e i s t h e f a r m e r w h o c a n&#13;
figure t h e c o s t o f h i s flock of c h i c k e n s ?&#13;
T h e p o u l t r y p r o d u c t Is t h e " v e l v e t " of&#13;
t h e f a r m .&#13;
T h e p o u l t r y p r o d u c t of M i s s o u r i&#13;
g a i n e d 20,000,000 p o u n d s l a s t y e a r ,&#13;
w h i c h m e a n t $1,500,000. A n d t h e p r o d -&#13;
u c t t h i s y e a r w i l l . s c p r e a n o t a b l e a d -&#13;
v a n c e , t h e b u y e r s a n d s h i p p e r s s a y .&#13;
Profitable M a n a g e m e n t of S h e e p .&#13;
L e t e w e s d r o p t h e i r first l a m b s a f t e r&#13;
w a r m w e a t h e r a n d g r a s s h a v e c o m e&#13;
In t h e s p r i n g . G r a s s i s t h e b e s t m i l k&#13;
p r o d u c e T r - a n d y o u n g e w e s n e e d it—to^&#13;
e n a b l e t h e m t o n o u r i s h t h e i r l a m b s&#13;
M a r v e l o u s Siberian Horses.&#13;
S i b e r i a n h o r s e s , t h e s m a l l , h a r d y&#13;
b r e e d of t h e s t e p p e s , a r e w o r k e d u p&#13;
t o t h e l a s t o u n c e i n t h e m , o n g o o d r o a d&#13;
o r bad, a n d w h e n t h e y r e a c h t h e w e l -&#13;
c o m e p o s t h o u s e a r e t i e d u p u n d e r a&#13;
m e r e l e a n - t o , a n d t h e r e l e f t a l l i n a&#13;
l a t h e r t o f r e e z e stiff u n t i l t h e i r t e r m of&#13;
s e r v i c e c o m e s r o u n d a g a i n . On t a k i n g&#13;
t h e m o u t f o r a n o t h e r s t a g e , t h e d r i v e r ,&#13;
w h o s e w h i p h a s a s o r t of s a w - t o o t h a r -&#13;
r a n g e m e n t affixed t o o n e e n d o n t h e&#13;
s i d e of t h e s t o c k " o p p o s i t e t h e l a s h ,&#13;
r o u g h l y s c r a p e s - , off. t h e h o a r f r o s t s&#13;
w h i c h h a s t h i c k l y i n c r u s t e d t h e i r l e g s ,&#13;
a n d i n d e e d t h e i r w h o l e b o d i e s . A t&#13;
first t h e p o o r b e a s t s w a l k w i t h t h e&#13;
g a i t o f a D u t c h d o l l , b u t , a s t h e d r i v e r&#13;
s a y s , h© " s o o n w a r m s t h e m u p . "&#13;
A n o t h e r p e c u l i a r i t y o f t h e s e s t e e d s i s&#13;
t h a t the^r a l w a y s g e t a p a i l f u i o r m o r e&#13;
Of i c e - c o l d w a t e r t o d r i n k b e f o r e s t a r t -&#13;
i n g o u t f o r t h e i r " t r i c k " o n t h e p o s t -&#13;
r o a d , w i i n t h e r e s u l t t h a t t h e y t r e m b l e&#13;
a l l o v e r in a- m a n n e r p i t i a b l e t o s e e ,&#13;
b u t o t h e r w i s e s e e m t o b e o n l y t h e&#13;
" W h a t d o I s a y t o t h a t ? " c r i e d M o w -&#13;
b r a y . "It's p e r f e c t i o n ; I w i s h I c o u l d&#13;
c a t c h h e r e y e . "&#13;
" S h e w o u l d n o t n o t i c e y o u , " s a i d Mr.&#13;
R i c h a r d s .&#13;
"I'd l i k e t o a t t r a c t h e r a t t e n t i o n , "&#13;
s a i d A l g y .&#13;
" A n d s h e w o u l d n ' t n o t i c e y o u , " r e -&#13;
m a r k e d Mr. R i c h a r d s .&#13;
" Y o u w o u l d n ' t m a k e a b e t ? "&#13;
"I'll b e t y o u . "&#13;
T h e l a s t t w o r e m a r k s w e r e f r o m t h e&#13;
y o u n g J o h n n i e s . Mr. R i c h a r d s s m i l e d .&#13;
" W h a t i s t h e b e t t o b e ? "&#13;
" D o y o u ^ f a f i c f y o u r s e l f ? " a s k e d&#13;
A l g y . " W ^ a r e / y o u n g e r t h a n y o u .&#13;
B u t I'll b e t ^ D a a ' b o t t l e t h a t I m a k e&#13;
f r i e n d s w i t h I h e l a d y . "&#13;
" A n d r i l bet t h e s a m e , " s a i d M o w -&#13;
b r a y .&#13;
" D o n e ! " c r i e d Mr. R i c h a r d s . "I'll&#13;
t a k e b o t h - b e t s , a n d I'll w a g e r t w o&#13;
m o r e b o t t l e s t h a t ; a f t e r t h e l a d y h a s m o r e flt f o r t h e i r w o r k&#13;
c u t y o u b o t h , s h e w i l l m a k e f r i e n d s&#13;
w i t h m e . "&#13;
T h e t w o j u n i o r s l a u g h e d a t t h e c o n -&#13;
c e i t of t h e o l d J o h n n i e , w h o s m i l e d&#13;
g r i m l y a n d s a t b a c k i n h i s c h a i r , w h i l e&#13;
A l g y s a u n t e r e d a c r o s s t o w h e r e t h e&#13;
l a d y s a t , d r u m m i n g h e r g l o v e d fingers&#13;
o n a m a r b l e t a b l e t o p .&#13;
" M a y I h a v e t h e p l e a s u r e of o r d e r -&#13;
i n g a n y t h i n g f o r y o u ? " A l g y a s k e d x&#13;
w i t h h i s v e r y b e s t b o w . T h e l a d y&#13;
s t a r e d a t h i m i n m u t e i n q u i r y . T h e n&#13;
s h e t u r n e d a w a y q u i e t l y . " W a i t e r , "&#13;
s h e c a l l e d , " k i n d l y b r i n g m e a g l a s s of&#13;
w a t e r ! "&#13;
A l g y m a d e a t o u r of t h e r i n k , a n d ,&#13;
b y £ r o u n d a b o u t p a s s a g e , c a m e b a c k&#13;
t o h i s t a b l e , c r e s t f a l l e n .&#13;
" T h e c u t direct^* r e m a r k e d „ Mr.&#13;
R i c h a r d s . "I l o o k l i k e w i n n i n g : * '&#13;
J u s t - t i i c n ^ i h a J a d y d r o p p e d h e r p r o -&#13;
g r a m m e o f t h e m u s i c . " T h a t ' s r m y&#13;
c h a n c e ! " . c r i e d M o w b r a y , ' a n d h e&#13;
d a s h e d a c r o s s t o t h e t a b l e , l i f t e d t h e&#13;
c a r d a n d p r e s e n t e d i t w i t h a flourish.&#13;
s a t i s f a c t o r i l y , s a y s a n e x c h a n g e . F r o m&#13;
t h e l a t e w e a n e d l a m b 3 I w o u l d r e n e w&#13;
t h e b r e e d i n g flock, for I b e l i e v e i t w i l l&#13;
be m u c h m o r e s a t i s f a c t o r y , - f o r m a n y&#13;
r e a s o n s , t o g r o w o n e ' s o w n e w e s .&#13;
T h o s e l a m b s , of c o u r s e , s h o u l d be of&#13;
t h e b r e a d d e s i r e d in t h e p e r m a n e n t&#13;
flock, a n d f o r -them I s h o u l d u s e a&#13;
m a t u r e r a m . T h e m a l e l a m b s of t h i s&#13;
c r o p m a y b e s e n t t o t h e m u t t o n m a r -&#13;
k e t a t 10 a n d 12 m o n t h s of a g e . If&#13;
M e r i n o s , t h e y w i l l s e l l b e t t e r w h e n&#13;
s h o r n t h a n i n full fleece.&#13;
W h e t h e r t o b r e e d t h e e w e s ' f o r a&#13;
s e c o n d c r o p of e w e l a m b s or n o t s h o u l d&#13;
be d e t e r m i n e d by t h e n e e d of m o r e&#13;
- ^ e w e s . U n d e r a w e l l - e s t a b l i s h e d flock&#13;
o n t h i s p l a n , t w o c r o p s of l a m b s of&#13;
t h i s c l a s s w o n W - b e - - r e q u i r e d — t o - * e e p -&#13;
u p t h e n u m b e r of t h e e n t i r e flock. T h e&#13;
second" or t h i r d c r o p of l a m b s f r o m&#13;
a n y c l a s s of e w e s I s h o u l d h a v e&#13;
w e a n e d in M a r c h .&#13;
T h e a g e a t w h i c h a e w e s h o u l d d r o p&#13;
her first l a m b d e p e n d s s o m e w h a t u p o n&#13;
t h e b r e e d , b u t m o r e u p o n t h e c a r e s h e&#13;
h a s b e e n g i v e n . W h e n t h e y h a v e b e e n&#13;
p u s h e d t o r a p i d m a t u r i t y , e w e s m a y&#13;
r a i s e a l a m b a t 2 y e a r s of a g e . B u t&#13;
t h e y s h o u l d b e f e d s o a s t o continue"&#13;
t o g r o w d u r i n g t h e i r t h i r d a n d f o u r t h&#13;
y e a r s , w h i c h t h e y w i l l d o a f t e r t h i s&#13;
t e m p o r a r y c h e c k . If t h e w o o l w i l l a p -&#13;
p r o x i m a t e l y p a y f o r t h e i r k e e p i n g , I&#13;
p r e f e r t h e y s h o u l d n o t r a i s e a l a m b&#13;
u n t i l 3 y e a r s o l d . R a i s i n g a l a m b w i l l&#13;
r e d u c e t h e fleece 20 per c e n t i n w e i g h t&#13;
a n d t h e p o s s i b l e c a r c a s s w e i g h t a b o u t&#13;
10 p e r c e n t . H e n c e , a I a m b r a i s e d b e -&#13;
f o r e t h e e w e i s m a t u r e i s n o t e n t i r e&#13;
g a i n . W i t h h e r first l a m b a t 3 y e a r s&#13;
of a g o , a e w e m a y r a i s e f o u r l a m b s a n d&#13;
be p u t u p o n t h e m a r k e t h e r s e l f fat a t&#13;
6 y e a r s of a g e .&#13;
T o o O b l i g i n g .&#13;
The. a m e e r of A f g h a n i s t a n m u s t&#13;
s u r e l y b e a v e r y o b l i g i n g m a n , if a&#13;
s t o r y t o l d of h i m b e t r u e . x N o t - ' m a n y&#13;
y e a r s a g o a q u e e n ' s m e s s e n g e r o r s o m e&#13;
o t h e r offlcia) w a 3 o n h i s w a y t o Cab&#13;
u l , w h e n h e had' t h e m i s f o r t u n e t o b e&#13;
r o b b e d . H e w a s 1 i n h o w a y i n j u r e d by&#13;
vthe r o b b e r s , b u t t h e B r i t i s h g o v e r n - '&#13;
m e n t p r e f e r r e d a c o m p l a i n t , w h i c h&#13;
c a m e d u l y t o t h e k n o w l e d g e o f t h e&#13;
a m e e r . N o r e p l y w a s r e c e i v e d , a n d t h e&#13;
m o n t h s ' pftSSedT A t ' l a s t -'the a m e e r&#13;
w r o t e , a n d h i s l e t t e r s h o w e d t h e e a r -&#13;
n e s t n e s s of h i s d e s i r e t o o b l i g e t h e&#13;
q u e e n . " T h e m a t t e r y o u m e n t i o n , "&#13;
s a i d t h e l e t t e r , " h a s b e e n t h o r o u g h l y&#13;
i n v e s t i g a t e d , a n d n o t o n l y h a v e t h e&#13;
r o b b e r s of y o u r m e s s e n g e r b e e n p u t t c&#13;
^death, b u t a l l t h e i r c h i l d r e n , a s \pelr*&#13;
a s t h e i r f a t h e r s a n d g r a n d f a t h e r s . I&#13;
h o p e t h i s - w i l l g i v e s a t i s f a c t i o n t o h e r&#13;
m a j e s t y t h e queen-." N e v e r t h e l e s s i t i s&#13;
d o u b t f u l if i t did.&#13;
T w i n L a m b s .&#13;
It i s t h e d e s i r e of s h e e p - g r o w e r s&#13;
n o w a d a y s t o i n c r e a s e t h e i r flocks a s&#13;
r a p i d l y a s p o s s i b l e , a s s h e e p n o t o n l y&#13;
b r i n g a betteY p r i c e t h a n t h e y did t w o&#13;
or t h r e e y e a r s a g o , b u t a r e l i k e l y t o&#13;
d o s o for s o m e t i m e t o c o m e , s a y s t h e&#13;
F a r m e r . O n e of t h e w a y s t o i n c r e a s e&#13;
t h e flock r a p i d l y i s t o s e c u r e a- b u c k&#13;
f r o m s o m e of t h e l a r g e , s t r o n g a n d&#13;
c o a r s e - w o o l e d b r e e d s . T h e D o r s e t ,&#13;
S h r o p s h i r e , C o t s w o l d a n d L i n c o l n&#13;
b r e e d s of s h e e p h a v e f o r a g e 3 b e e n&#13;
bred b y t h e i r E n g l i s h o r i g i n a t o r s t o&#13;
p r o d u c e t w i n s . If t h e y a r e b r e d w i t h&#13;
t h o s e of t h e s a m e b r e e d , p r o b a b l y t w o -&#13;
t h i r d s o r t h r e e - f o u r t h s of t h e e w e s w i l l&#13;
b e a r t w i n s . A s t h e s e t w i n s w e r e a l -&#13;
w a y s f a v o r e d b y b r e e d e r s , t h e t e n -&#13;
d e n c y t o p r o d u c e t w i n s w a s i n c r e a s e d .&#13;
V e r y r a r e l y h a v e w e h e a r d of t h e&#13;
M e r i n o w h e n i n t e r - b r e d p r o d u c i n g&#13;
t w i n s . B u t if t h e r e s h o u l d b e , s u c h a&#13;
c a s e s u c h t w i n s o u g h t t o b e u s e d a s&#13;
b r e e d e r s , a s i t i s a v a l u a b l e c h a r a c -&#13;
t e r i s t i c a n d e n a b l e s t h e s h e e p - g r o w e r&#13;
t o i n c r e a s e h i s flock v e r y r a p i d l y . I n&#13;
t h e o l d e n _ t i m e s w h e n s h e e p d r o p p e d&#13;
t h e i r l a m b s i n t h e fields i n e a r l y&#13;
s p r i n g a b o u t t h o o n l y a d v a n t a g e of&#13;
t w i n l a m b 3 w a s t o k e e p t h e e w e s i n&#13;
m i l k s h o u l d o n e - o f t h e t w i n s d i e .&#13;
C l o v e r h a y i s t h e g r e a t s t a n d a r d of&#13;
r o u g h f e e d f o r t h o d a i r y c o w .&#13;
A N e w Sea F o r t .&#13;
T h e r e I s a l u s t y y o u n g c i t y g r o w -&#13;
i n g u p d o w n in T e x a s w h i c h i s a t t r a c t -&#13;
i n g w i d e s p r e a d a t t e n t i o n . I t i s B a&#13;
F o r t e , l o c a t e d a t t h e h e a d o f G a l v e s -&#13;
t o n B a y . I t i s b e i n g m a d e t h e g r e a t&#13;
s e a p o r t o f t h e Gulf o f M e x i c o , t h e&#13;
m e e t i n g p l a c e o f rail a n d w a t e r w a y s&#13;
f o r t h e v a s t c o m m e r c e of t h e , w e s t&#13;
T h e s a v i n g t o w e s t e r n s h i p p e r s v i a&#13;
t h i s e x p o r t o u t l e t w i l l r u n i n t o m i l -&#13;
l i o n s a n n u a l l y . T h e c i t y h a s t h e m o s t&#13;
m a g n i f i c e n t n a t u r a l p o r t . o n t h e s o u t h -&#13;
e r n c o a s t o f t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s a n d o n e&#13;
of t h e b e s t i n t h e w o r l d . T h e&#13;
U. S. g o v e r n m e n t i s c o m p l e t i n g&#13;
a d e e p w a t e r c h a n n e l t h r o u g h t h e b a y&#13;
t o t h e g u l f , w h i c h w i l l s o o n b r i n g t h e&#13;
J a r g e s t o c e a n l i n e r s t o L a P o r t e d o c k s&#13;
a n d w h a r f s .&#13;
W h e n y o u p r a y d o n ' t f o r g e t t h o s e&#13;
w h o t r e a t y o u d e s p i t e f u l l y .&#13;
N o t h i n g i s g a i n e d b y s t a r v i n g t h e&#13;
s o u l t o f e e d t h e b o d y .&#13;
How** T h i s *&#13;
We offer One Hundred Dollars reward for any&#13;
ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's&#13;
Catarrh Cure.&#13;
P. j7&lt;3HENEY &amp; C O ^ r o p s . , Toledo. 0 .&#13;
We, the undersigned, ^ v e known P. J.&#13;
Cheney for the last 15 years and believe him&#13;
perfectly honorable in all business transactions&#13;
and financially able to carry oat any obligations&#13;
made by their nrm. x West &amp; Truax. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo*&#13;
0.; Walding, Kinnan &amp; Marvin, Wholesale&#13;
Druggists. Toledo, Ohio.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting&#13;
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces&#13;
of the system. Testimonials sent' free. Price&#13;
75c per bottle. Sold by all druggists.&#13;
Hall's Family P l u s are the best.&#13;
A w o l f i n s h e e p ' s c l o t h i n g i s n o n e&#13;
t h e l e s s a w o l f .&#13;
T h e r e I s a Class of P e o p l e&#13;
W h o a r e i n j u r e d b y t h e u s e o f c o f f e e .&#13;
R e c e n t l y t h e r e , h a s b e e n p l a c e d i n a l l&#13;
t h e g r o c e r y s t o r e s a n e w p r e p a r a t i o n&#13;
c a l l e d G R A I N - O , m a d e of p u r e g r a i n s ,&#13;
t h a t t a k e s t h e p l a c e of c o f f e e . T h e m o s t&#13;
d e l i c a t e s t o m a c h r e c e i v e s . i t w i t h o u t&#13;
d i s t r e s s , a n d b u t f e w c a n t e l l i t f r o m&#13;
coffee. I t d o e s n o t c o s t o v e r o n e - f o u r t h&#13;
a s m u c h . C h i l d r e n m a y d r i n k i t w i t h&#13;
g r e a t b e n e f i t . 15 c e n t s a n d 25 c e n t s&#13;
p e r p a c k a g e . T r y i t . A s k f o r G R A I N - O .&#13;
E v e r y t e m p t a t i o n r e s i s t e d i s a t r o u -&#13;
b l e e s c a p e d .&#13;
I am&#13;
JPastSo&#13;
and Not&#13;
a Gray Hair&#13;
"I tare nacd Ayef'a Hiir&#13;
Vigor for a great many yctn,&#13;
tad although I am past eighty&#13;
years of age, vet i have not a sray&#13;
hair in my head."—Ceo. Ycllott,&#13;
Towson, Md., Aug. 3, 1899.&#13;
Have You&#13;
Lost It?&#13;
C o u g h i n g Leads to Consumption.&#13;
K e m p ' s B a l s a m w i l l s t o p t h e c o u g h&#13;
at o n c e . G o t o 3'our d r u g g i s t t o d a y&#13;
a n d g e t a s a m p l e b o t t l e f r e e . S o l d i n&#13;
25 a n d 50 c e n t b o t t l e s . G o a t o n c e ; d e -&#13;
l a y s a r e _ d a n g e r o u s . •_&#13;
T h e r e s t of C h r i s t i s f o r a l l W h o w i l l&#13;
g i v e u p s i n .&#13;
R e l i a b l e H e l p W a n t e d&#13;
(Either sex.) The Humanitarian Home andtSanltaflum&#13;
for Invalid* and Health Seekers, Incorporared&#13;
Send 12c In stamp* fur full Information. Address&#13;
J. H. Teitlebauua, Treasurer, Las Yegaa, N". M.&#13;
We mean all that rich, dark&#13;
color your hair used to have.&#13;
But there is no need of mourning&#13;
over it, for you can £nd it&#13;
Ayer's Hair Vigor always restores&#13;
color to gray hair. We&#13;
know exactly what we are saying&#13;
when we use that word&#13;
" always."&#13;
It makes the hair grow heavy&#13;
and long, too; takes out every&#13;
hit of dandruff, and stops falling&#13;
of the hair. Keep k on&#13;
your dressing table ana use it&#13;
every day. SI.M «bottle, AII dnoisu.&#13;
M4&#13;
•••• t&#13;
wM • 1&#13;
* *&#13;
Write the Doctor&#13;
If you do not obtain all the benefits yoa&#13;
desire from the use of the Vigor, write&#13;
the Doctor about it. He will tell yoa just&#13;
the right thing to do, and will send you&#13;
his book-on-tSe Hair and-Scalp if you&#13;
request it. Address,&#13;
Dr. J. C. AYEB, Lowell, Mass.&#13;
God has called many men to preach the gospel,&#13;
but none to defend it*&#13;
it dieted wuh ;TboniDMrs Eyt Watfi. •oteaiea, use&#13;
DROPSY,&#13;
Children Like It S w e e t e n e d .&#13;
Lightning Hot Drops cures complaints of oalldreu;&#13;
25c. All druggists. Herb Med. a&gt;.-. SprlngtleM, O.&#13;
NEW DISCOVERY; gives&#13;
quick relief and carei wont&#13;
cases. Book of testimonials and 10 DATS' treatment&#13;
rajnu PB. H. H. «RKEJ'8 BOSS. R»» I . I U M U , 6«.&#13;
M F i l C I A i l ' O H N w . i n o B H i s ,&#13;
| l d l 9 l \ / l l W a s h i n g t o n , D . C.&#13;
The man who lives a lie&#13;
hounds on his track.&#13;
has a pack of blood-&#13;
Mrs* Winslow's, S o o t h i n g Synrp.&#13;
For children teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflammation&#13;
, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. e 4i4&#13;
Has thexndorsemeni of the&#13;
U. S. Government and oil&#13;
tho Leading Railroad*.&#13;
Too many start to follow Christ who stop at&#13;
the hrst cross-roads. -^&#13;
T h e L a r g e s t In t h o World.&#13;
•Walter lUker &amp; Co. Ltd.. Dorchester. Mass-..*^&#13;
the largest Mm. of Cocoa and Chocolate In the world.&#13;
Every man helps the devil who talks one way&#13;
and lives another.&#13;
I believe Piso's Cure is the only rriedieine tk^t&#13;
will cure consumption,—Anna M. Koss, William&#13;
sport, Pa., Nov. 12, 1895.&#13;
CHEAP FARMS&#13;
00 YOU WWT t HOKE?&#13;
I H O . O d d A C R E S I m P ^ e d and unimproved&#13;
I U V 1 U U U f t w n C d fanning land* to l.e divided&#13;
and sold on long time and easy p a y m e n t s , a little&#13;
each year. Come and see us or write, THE THUMAN&#13;
MOSS STATE BAXK, Sanilac Center, Mich., or&#13;
The Truman Moss Estate.Crosweli. Sanilac Co.,Mich.&#13;
The best place for a Christian is whece Cod&#13;
heeds him most.&#13;
Brown's Teething Cordial secures rest for&#13;
the parents, as well as the babies.&#13;
No man who truly follows Christ ever has to&#13;
stand alone.&#13;
QThe best news ever told in this world was that&#13;
God is love.&#13;
MI MIWOnDOUARK™&#13;
Most talked of&#13;
Catalog t&#13;
I T ' S tori&#13;
Largest form&#13;
potato on earth J Oar&#13;
tells—so also about&#13;
Weeks&#13;
vegetable&#13;
Sal-&#13;
Potato,&#13;
seed..: '.-^- ^ r S&#13;
growers In U.S. Potatoes, $1.20 andi&#13;
upabbL Send this notice and 6c I&#13;
•Uatp for Big Caeatof. waa&#13;
IJ0HNA.SAHERSEED(HACR7&#13;
MURDEROUS MICROBES&#13;
Breeding and Feeding&#13;
Human Intestines. in&#13;
A N e w P o w e r f u l Germ D e s t r o y e r Discovered—&#13;
How Microbes Are Killed&#13;
w h i l e You Sleep.&#13;
MILLIONS&#13;
ptolive&#13;
and&#13;
Millions of microbes, bacteria&#13;
maines, d i s e a s e - g e r m s of every kind&#13;
and breed and feed In the s t o m a c h&#13;
bowels.&#13;
For their propagation it Is only n e c e s -&#13;
s a r y for the liver and intestines t o bec&#13;
o m e lazy and o p e r a t e irregularly.&#13;
Modern s c i e n c e has been at work to find&#13;
a m e a n s of killing1 microbes, a n * the m o s t&#13;
s u c c e s s f u l g e r m destroyer of all Is C a s -&#13;
carets Candy Cathartic. T h e y&#13;
bacteria w h e r e v e r they find them, are an&#13;
tlseptic. stop sour s t o m a c h , m a k e the&#13;
liver lively, the blood pure, the b o w e l s&#13;
regular, e v e r y t h i n g as it should be.&#13;
Go buy and try Cascarets to-day. It's&#13;
w h a t t h e y do. not w h a t w e s a y they'll do,&#13;
t h a t proves their merit. All druggists,&#13;
10c, 25c. or 50c. or mailed for price. Sond&#13;
for booklet a n d Trer sample. Address, T h e&#13;
Sterling R e m e d y Co., C h i c a g o ; Montreal,&#13;
Can.; or N e w York.&#13;
Thia-4s the C A S C A R E T t a b -&#13;
let. E v e r y tablet of the only&#13;
genuine C a s c a r e t s bears the&#13;
m a g i c letters "C C C." Look&#13;
at the tablet before you buy,&#13;
and b e w a r e of frauds, Imitations&#13;
and s u b s t i t u t e s .&#13;
of acres of choice agricultural&#13;
L A N D S now&#13;
opened for settlement&#13;
in Western Canada.&#13;
Here is grown the celebrated&#13;
NO. t HARD&#13;
WHEAT, which brings the highest price in the&#13;
markets of the world; thousands of cattle are&#13;
fattened for market without being fed grain,&#13;
and wlthoutajday's shelter. Send for Information&#13;
and secure a free home in Western Canada.&#13;
Write the Superintendent of Immigrationi Ottawa,&#13;
or address the undersigned, who will mall&#13;
you atlases, pamphlets, e t c , free of c o s t M.&#13;
V. Mclnnes, No. 1 Merrill Block, Detroit, Mich.;&#13;
James Grieve, Mt. Pleasant, Mich., Or D. L.&#13;
Caven. Bad Axe. Mich.&#13;
LlPORTE TEXAS&#13;
u a n . ; or s&#13;
Situated on Galveston&#13;
Bay, is&#13;
ftestined to be the&#13;
s l a u g h t e r I n o S T PROSPEROUS CITY on the Gulf of Mexico&#13;
It possesses unexcelled NATURAL advantages&#13;
-.vhich coupled with tho BACKINOof wealthy and&#13;
Influential men assures a brilliant future. The&#13;
IT. 8. Government is now speeding a large&#13;
iiuount of money in Harbor improvements.&#13;
La Porto Is the natural seaport for tne broil-&#13;
jets of the entire Middle, Northern and Western&#13;
States and for Houston, the great railroad&#13;
center of Texas.&#13;
Excursions at reduced rates will be ran twice a&#13;
FLEITUE&amp;RAA JTUXRSE? afnc 7d fPu1tBllB panrAticPuSl'a rDs EtSo CRIPTIVE&#13;
AMERICAN LAND CO.,&#13;
CrUCAOO&#13;
There is such a thing as having religion in the&#13;
head and not in the heart.&#13;
138 Madison St.,&#13;
W. N. U—DETROIT—NO. 3—1900&#13;
* • • • • • ' • 1 ' ' . . . .&#13;
Kbea A o s w e r t t g A d v e r t t s e a e n t s U t t t t y&#13;
Wctttioe This f a p e f .&#13;
One Day Dyspepsia Cure&#13;
KASKOLATABLETS&#13;
a&#13;
t i,-&#13;
pts.&#13;
/&#13;
&lt;.£*•&#13;
m T -mrri&#13;
&amp; -¾% ^iiTH" *-^&gt;*»— Wf ^ • ^ : : y v \ w ^ ^ ' - ; ' - : , ^ ? y ' ^ ' ' * ; t&#13;
»*fe'&gt;&#13;
ft&#13;
r*"-*-:r.vi&#13;
V :''•'•'&#13;
*f.r&#13;
sfc&#13;
&lt;\&#13;
:¾&#13;
fifc&#13;
r"&#13;
* •&#13;
PLANFIELD.&#13;
C. Iuglee visited in Dansville&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Quite a number in this vicinity&#13;
are suffering with yellow jaundice.&#13;
The Misses Grace and Georgia&#13;
Gardner, Ella Murphy and Mrs.&#13;
S. E. Barton attended a meeting&#13;
of the Anderson Farmer's Club&#13;
at Sam'l PlacewRys last Saturday.&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
Jessie Bennett is very sick.&#13;
..Mrs. H. DeWolf is entertaining&#13;
A series of Special meetings are a sister from Howell.&#13;
being held at the M. P. church&#13;
this week.&#13;
Mrs. Jnmes Grossman returned&#13;
last week from a visit in William* £ a r m to work.&#13;
GREGORY.&#13;
Remember the farmers' club at&#13;
Z. Hartenffe Saturday at 1 p. m.&#13;
Mi88 Ella Johnson of Detroit, is&#13;
visiting her sister, Mrs. S. Denton.&#13;
The Wcmans' Mission Circle&#13;
meets with Mrs. Anna Moon at&#13;
2:30 p. m. Friday.&#13;
Frenfan Gone has disposed of&#13;
his dray property to his brother&#13;
Geo- and contemplates taking a&#13;
&lt;**+&#13;
Grant Macomber has just mov- eton.&#13;
ed into the squrae houBe. next to&#13;
M. Topping's,&#13;
Amos Ward and Will Ward are&#13;
in Milan owing to the seriowillneps&#13;
of their father.^&#13;
The following officers have been&#13;
elected in the K. O. T. M. for the&#13;
ensuiug year:&#13;
Coir. B W. Harford&#13;
Lieut. Com. J. M. Koster&#13;
Ren. Keeper E L. Topping&#13;
Fin. K^per S G Topping&#13;
Mrs. James Starks has gone to&#13;
California to spend the rest of the&#13;
winter.&#13;
The Maccabees held their installation&#13;
of officers Tuesday evening&#13;
of this week.&#13;
Mrs. Ruth Chapman is quite ill&#13;
and her daughters, Mrs. Silas&#13;
Barton, of near Pinckney, and&#13;
Mrs. Fred Stowe, of Unadilla, are&#13;
with her most of the time.&#13;
The Central Lyceum bureau&#13;
have substituted the Uncle Josh&#13;
Chaplain'&#13;
Phy.&#13;
Snriit.&#13;
Ut M.ofG.&#13;
2nd "&#13;
SnnMnel&#13;
Picket&#13;
Ed. Cuipman&#13;
W. J. Wright&#13;
J. G. Sayles&#13;
Silas Wesson&#13;
Grant Kimel&#13;
L Peferspn\&#13;
Ehh. Smitb&#13;
Old Mrs. Royce died last Sun- Picture Play Co. for Rev. J. J.&#13;
day at the home of her sou Burton Lewis who diBsapoiuted us and&#13;
of this village- The funeral was failed to give reason why.&#13;
hel(l Tuesday, at the Episcopal&#13;
EA6T_MARI0N.&#13;
The School Board held a private&#13;
session last weefc^-—-&#13;
JMrs. Elliottttnd-son are preparing&#13;
to move to Grand T ravers.&#13;
Fred Fish of east Putnam&#13;
called on Elder Pierce last week.&#13;
It is paid that several families&#13;
have taken their children out of&#13;
church.&#13;
R v. Harvey Pearce and wife of&#13;
Carlton, will ^ive an elocutionary&#13;
entertainment at the M. E. church&#13;
next Friday evening. Mrs. Pearce&#13;
is a graduate of the Noble school&#13;
or elocution of Detroit, and liec&#13;
recitations will be both classical&#13;
and comic. Mr. Pearce furnishes&#13;
entertainment in t-ongs. Admission,&#13;
10 cents, for benefit of the.&#13;
pastor.&#13;
The special Christmas number&#13;
of "Book «»f Trains" issued by the&#13;
Lakf Short &amp; Michigan Southern j&#13;
By., is rot only a most beaut;ful&#13;
j ANDERSON.&#13;
Tbe»Mi88es Facia Hinchey and&#13;
Blanche Martin are sicV with the&#13;
measles,&#13;
MPS. 15. W. Martin spent a few&#13;
days last we^k with her father-inlaw&#13;
at Chibon.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Merrill visited&#13;
at Dave .Bennett's in Marion&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Bullis spent&#13;
the last of last w^ek with relatives&#13;
at Chu'bbs Corners.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. U. Placeway,&#13;
of East Putnam, visited at Samuel&#13;
Placeway's on Tuesday. -&#13;
Cards are out for tije celebration&#13;
school.&#13;
meeting next Sunday e o m a n v ^ &gt; 0 ( 1 t i r i n g about Christ-'Jan. 23.&#13;
Topic, "Send Me," Mrs mas. The publicat ion contains a| Mrs. J. R. Dunning received a&#13;
ciioTc^ collection of poetry and telegram QU Wednesday last* of&#13;
prose from favorite authors; also.a the death of her sister-in-law, Mrs,&#13;
charming story of Christmas eve, Qeo. Burch, of Chidago.&#13;
C. E.&#13;
evening.&#13;
Morgan leader. ~~&#13;
Miss Nella Mortenson of Pinckney&#13;
visited her sister Mrs. J.&#13;
Brigham last week.&#13;
The Ladies Aid society for this&#13;
month will be on Thursday of this&#13;
week at Mrs. Morgan's. Dinner&#13;
from one to fonr.&#13;
A Session of the County School&#13;
Examiners was held at the school&#13;
4iouse last Friday. They found&#13;
no cause to revoke the Certificate&#13;
mi&#13;
of Mr. Roosa and he continues to&#13;
teach*&#13;
and valuable souvenir of th* day, of the golden wedding of Mr. and&#13;
ImVno where ban ever been found Mrs. C. E. Bullis on Tuesday,&#13;
and it is beautifully and profusely&#13;
illustrated with half-tones, etchings,&#13;
crayon and pen and ink eff-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Smith were&#13;
called to Ann Arbor Tuesday last&#13;
to attend the funeral of a cousin&#13;
ectsHiH from original drawings. | o f M r s : Smith, Joseph Brownell.&#13;
Mr. A. G. Wilson had the mis-&#13;
BRILUANT8.&#13;
flelf-conquest Is the truest royalty.&#13;
Religion and reason never disagree.&#13;
Bigotry it not peculiar to religion.&#13;
Many a Ood-se ' affliction has "been&#13;
a bridle to cheek ,-iesumption.&#13;
Even in private we are •ftrhear'd by&#13;
God.&#13;
Notoriety is cheap to get, but dear to&#13;
keep.&#13;
Love is the one universal badge of&#13;
the Christian.&#13;
Chrtet did for man what the Creator&#13;
did for matter.&#13;
There is nothing truly "Gotf-foreaken"&#13;
in the world.&#13;
Love's flowers are our feelings; its&#13;
fruits are our deeds.&#13;
It is better to go home on foot than&#13;
to pi Icon In a palace car.&#13;
It 19 always ea4|r to recognise a&#13;
debtor than a creditor.&#13;
The fairest joys bloom where the&#13;
bitterest tears have fallen.&#13;
It does not change the truth to look&#13;
at it with colored g.asses.&#13;
The great wonder is not His miracles,&#13;
but the miracle of Uimael£&#13;
God cannot help th'j aman who does&#13;
not feel the need of Hb' kelp.&#13;
Some men will not worship God because&#13;
Gtfd will not worship them.&#13;
It is the goodness you are looking&#13;
for in others that will fill your own&#13;
life.&#13;
A society gentleman is often a man&#13;
with white hands and a black heart&#13;
The man cannot help being an optimist&#13;
who is looking to God all the&#13;
time.&#13;
The secret Christian will either fail&#13;
to be a secret, or he will fail to be a&#13;
Christian.&#13;
"' The fleeting smile of the world may&#13;
be (purchased at the price of eternal&#13;
tear 8.&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
Wednesday,&#13;
January, 24th,&#13;
Farmers' Institute&#13;
At Pinckney opera house.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Simpson was called to&#13;
Mt. Clemens Tuesday, by the illneS3 of&#13;
her daughter.&#13;
On page 5 will be found the com&#13;
plete laws as enacted by the last session&#13;
ot the legislature.&#13;
—Mrs. H. fj7~Br\aa^ and daagfrtwr,&#13;
Mrt.K. H.Crane it spending ftht&#13;
week with her parents at Hartlind,&#13;
E. H. Teeple and wife ware gnafti&#13;
of C. D."Bennett and wife, of Howell,&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Percy G. Teeple and daughter&#13;
started Monday morning for their r&#13;
home in Marquette.&#13;
Rev. Harray Pearce and wife of&#13;
Carleton, were the gutati of R. H«&#13;
Teeple and wife the first of the week,&#13;
S. J. Wallace started the first of the&#13;
week for Sberiden. where he will&#13;
spend a few weeks buying and shipping&#13;
stock.&#13;
About fourteen of the schoolmates&#13;
of Miss Mae fteason, gave ber a surprise&#13;
and spent a very pleasant evening,&#13;
Monday.&#13;
The Detroit telephone Co.. and the&#13;
New State telephone Co. were gobbled&#13;
up by the Michigan telephone Co. the&#13;
first of the week—trust.&#13;
There will be a chicken pie social at&#13;
the home of Mr, Roy, near'Anderson,&#13;
on Fnd; y evening, Jan 26. For a ,&#13;
good time&gt;and lots to eat, all come.&#13;
Many ot our patrons are remember&#13;
ing us with the small amounts due us,&#13;
Thanks friends, we are glad you remember&#13;
that Fek 1 u not far off.&#13;
Let us bear irom many, more4during&#13;
the next two weeks.&#13;
GHO Reason, Jr., is on tbe road for&#13;
th** celebrated "Air Lisrhf,"' the Una&#13;
of Reason &amp; tfhehan having the agency&#13;
tor Livingston and Otktaod; counties.&#13;
The machine in their s'oregives&#13;
the best of satisfaction at less than&#13;
half the cost of kerosene.&#13;
The following are the officers or the&#13;
Cong'l Sunday school Tor the ensuing&#13;
year: Supt.', R H. Teeple; 2nd Supt^&#13;
Ki 11 ie H off; Srd~So^t7, Mrs. H. W.&#13;
Oroloot; Seo'y, VlaM Swarthout; Ast.&#13;
Ser'y, Kittie Grieve; Treas., Arthur&#13;
Swarthout; Organist, Etta Carpeoter;&#13;
Ast Iva Placeway; Librarian, Mauds&#13;
Richmond&#13;
A copy of the book can be obtain&#13;
_ee for four centu i 1 postage by applying&#13;
to A. J. Smith, G. P. &amp; T.&#13;
A., Cleveland, Ohio.&#13;
bet-&#13;
. PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
MTB. C . M ^mith is some&#13;
ter at this writing.&#13;
Charley Bristol and wife are&#13;
yisitiug his father J. Bristol this&#13;
week.&#13;
- MesdamesF. L. Andrews and&#13;
H. G. Biiggs of Pinckney were&#13;
here Wednesday to attend -the&#13;
funeral of Frank Kirk.&#13;
Meetings are being held at the&#13;
M. E. church every evening under&#13;
the direction of evangelist&#13;
Gliddon of Grand Rapids.&#13;
Frank Kirk died at «his home&#13;
here Sunday evening after one&#13;
weeks illness, of JPhneumonia,&#13;
aged 47 years. The funeral was&#13;
held at the M. E. church Wednesday,&#13;
Jan. 17, Rev. 0. Sanborn&#13;
officiating. The remains were taken&#13;
to Howell for burial.&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
Ri&lt;hard May was in Howell&#13;
one da/last week.&#13;
Kirk Van Winkle and wife were&#13;
in Howell JSunday.&#13;
Bert Hadley of Unadilla visited&#13;
at Silas Braton's Sunday.&#13;
Miss MabJe Tripp who has been&#13;
visiting ber mother in this place&#13;
returned to Detroit Tuesday, -the&#13;
16th;:&#13;
Andrew Murphy who was&#13;
•evere y injnred by a falling tree&#13;
a shou time ago is slowly recovering.&#13;
Edwc.d KenD€dy is home from&#13;
Marshall, Mich where he has been&#13;
•Dperintending the construction&#13;
•f a railroad. '&#13;
Do you take cold with&#13;
every c h a n g e in t h e&#13;
weather? Does your throat&#13;
feel raw ? And do sharp&#13;
pains dart through your&#13;
chest? —&#13;
Don't you know the— are&#13;
danger signals which point&#13;
to pneumonia, bronchitis, or&#13;
consumption Itself ?&#13;
If you are ailing and* have&#13;
lost flesh lately, they are&#13;
certainly danger signals. The&#13;
question for you to decide is,&#13;
••Have 1 the vitality to throw&#13;
off these diseases?"&#13;
Don't wait to try SCOTTS&#13;
EMULSION "as a last resort."&#13;
There Is no remedy&#13;
equal to it for fortifying the&#13;
system. Prevention Is easy*&#13;
Scott's&#13;
Emulsion&#13;
prevents consumption and&#13;
hosts of other diseases which&#13;
attack the weak and those&#13;
with poor blood.&#13;
SCOTT'S EMULSION la&#13;
the one standard remedy for&#13;
Inflamed throats and lungs,&#13;
tnchttlsjtnd consumption.&#13;
It is a food medJcine&#13;
of renarkahjapower* A&#13;
food, because l£ nojjrtsbeetlie&#13;
body; and a medicine, because&#13;
It corrects diseased&#13;
conditions.&#13;
Secandat^^alldniffiMi&#13;
SCOTT &amp; BOW**, OMmiatt, Nrtr Yoifc&#13;
fortuue on Friday last while&#13;
bieaking ice in his water tank, to&#13;
slip aud fall across the tank iu&#13;
sucbr a way as to break two ribs.&#13;
Alwavft So.&#13;
The telegraph editor looked r.p&#13;
with a pleased grin. "Well, its turned&#13;
out in the same old way."&#13;
"What's turned out in the same old&#13;
way?" asked the club reporter who&#13;
had happened in a few minutes before.&#13;
"Another flrs with people killed and&#13;
frantic women Jumping from the windows&#13;
In OmahA this time,"&#13;
"What do you mean?" inquired the&#13;
enb, and stopped filling his pipe, the&#13;
last rpminder of the days when he was&#13;
a freshman at college.&#13;
"T mean," went on the telegraph editor,&#13;
trying the nitfof his fountain pen&#13;
on the blotter, "that great disasters always&#13;
enme in bunches. When there&#13;
is a had fire in New York one day&#13;
__there_ia sure-tn^be another somewhere&#13;
else within a-week. When one big&#13;
man dies another i« sure to drop off&#13;
within a week, and when one kind of&#13;
suicide occurs there are sure to be half&#13;
a dozen similar cases within ten days.&#13;
When Tiiietgert chopped up his wife I&#13;
knew there'd he another sausage maker&#13;
do the same thing before long. And&#13;
wasn't there? Of course there was.&#13;
There's one held now for a similar&#13;
crime in New York •&#13;
When one ship goes down another&#13;
•follows it. 1 am so dead certain of&#13;
the succession of disasters that whenever&#13;
something big happens 1 offer&#13;
odds on another disaster orcurrinj&#13;
within a week. You see If there 1st&#13;
another hotel fire before long."&#13;
The cub smiled and resumed piling&#13;
his pipe .&#13;
"So yon don't believe me/ huh?"&#13;
went on the old man. "Welf yot just&#13;
look over the file for the \wi year and&#13;
see for yourself how things run."&#13;
And the cub did, and^wo days later&#13;
he said to the telegraph edUor: "By&#13;
Jove, old man. you a/e right. Curious,&#13;
ain't' it?"&#13;
"No," was the/eply; "It's commonplace."&#13;
-&#13;
[ To Rent&#13;
i My house, barn and garden spot at&#13;
Mrs. F. L. Andrews, were in Parshall OhnMis Corners; I ALSO h*ve a brood&#13;
ville the first of the week . mnre for xale MR-*. 8 ELLIOTT.&#13;
Closing Out&#13;
Bvery^Gfoak&#13;
In f he Store This Week.&#13;
Wednesday and Thurcday&#13;
THIS WEEK&#13;
Saturday&#13;
' . . , , " , &gt; • • &gt; ' '&#13;
•'•• . ! V -&#13;
\t&#13;
~\&#13;
Any Cloth[ Jacketo^Cape A ^ ^ # 0 0&#13;
Any Cloth Jacket/or Cape 3 4 # G 0&#13;
These are our entire stock&#13;
of Fine Fall Garments in value&#13;
$10, $12.50, $15, 18.&#13;
j&#13;
f-V,') ••'&#13;
At Constant'no^e there is an autograph&#13;
letter which is claimed to have&#13;
been ,wrlt.tem by the hand of th« HaTiotlr.&#13;
whose nu'hfnt'c'tv •hut- 1»eea&#13;
etoutly defended for eenturle*.&#13;
" Colored children are much more&#13;
sensitive to neat th«n &lt;rh»t* c^ldrea,&#13;
which pr^baWy means that their&#13;
power of dhwrtmlnat'on--!* r*&gt;*eh t&gt;ei&#13;
ter. end not that tb»y mffe- more&#13;
fMBI HMO.&#13;
The quicker you come the&#13;
better the selection you can get.&#13;
Yours respectfully,&#13;
L. H. FIELD.&#13;
Jackson, Mich&#13;
— . ' &lt; *&#13;
r'</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Note</name>
          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36683">
              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6418">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch January 18, 1900</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6419">
                <text>January 18, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6420">
                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6421">
                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6422">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6423">
                <text>1900-01-18</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6424">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="15">
        <name>newspaper</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="16">
        <name>pinckney dispatch</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="928" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="856">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/f5a6b0707874a8ccc6d2105e7f23b4fb.pdf</src>
        <authentication>23a0294a5973b2a306786b220e8465e2</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="9">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1621">
                  <text>Newspaper</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1630">
                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="57">
          <name>Hidden Search Text</name>
          <description>Enter Search Text that is always hidden except to edit.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32195">
              <text>P I N C K N E Y ; L I V I N G S T O N CO.,UIICHM T H U R S D A Y , J A N . 25.1900. No. 4.&#13;
L O C A L N E W S .&#13;
• 1&#13;
1 -r&#13;
I&#13;
II&#13;
/ ^&#13;
,&#13;
\ The January thaw got here just&#13;
the same.&#13;
Miss Kittle Grieve spent the last of&#13;
last week with her brother Fred, and&#13;
family, of Bast Putnaagu _. .&#13;
Miss Anna Harris and Casper Vol-&#13;
Tbe thaw caught cold.&#13;
The weather bureau promised this&#13;
cold wave—so did Hicks.&#13;
ft. A. Sigler and son Cecil, were in-&#13;
Howell Tuesday.&#13;
Wm Thurston is the happy father of&#13;
a girl since Sunday last.&#13;
On* dealer in Chelsea has shipped&#13;
mer were married a t S t . Alary s 50 car loads of onions since last fall.&#13;
The --&#13;
SurDrise&#13;
Store,&#13;
Speak&#13;
Prices That&#13;
for Themselves.&#13;
per yard 04&#13;
05&#13;
[Brush Eiitf** binding&#13;
])ress Stays&#13;
Card of hooks and eyes&#13;
Saxony yarn* p^r hkein 05&#13;
Germantnwn zephyrs per skein 06&#13;
Ladies' Fleeie lined Hose 10&#13;
Children's heavv fleece In'd hose 10, 15&#13;
Men's heavy cotton socks 05&#13;
Ladie*' hdkfs. 5, 10, 15, 25&#13;
Children's lidkls&#13;
M en V t u r U ey red hdkTs.&#13;
Paper napkins&#13;
Music rolls&#13;
Men's henvv over shirts&#13;
Men's and hoys' wristlets&#13;
•tooth brushes&#13;
Shoe brushes&#13;
~ ,, W. J . Harrison and wife who&#13;
02 and 0 S T ^ e n y i s i t i n K her motlrer Mrs. D,&#13;
01&#13;
05&#13;
per doz 05&#13;
25,49&#13;
45&#13;
10&#13;
5,10,15&#13;
10, 15, 20, 25&#13;
Shavinir brushes&#13;
Good heavy suspenders&#13;
Shoe s &lt;les&#13;
25o door mat and scraper&#13;
-florae whip^&#13;
5,10&#13;
10, 15, 25&#13;
10,15&#13;
10&#13;
10-&#13;
05&#13;
05.07&#13;
03,04&#13;
05&#13;
Enameline slove polish&#13;
Lamp burners&#13;
Lamp chimnev&#13;
IfHlnz:c+or-hfw-pttw- —&#13;
Iv( ry Soap&#13;
•3&#13;
We carry a complete line,&#13;
of Hosiery, Stationery, Pocket&#13;
Books, Hair Pins and Hair&#13;
Ornaments.&#13;
Our two stores enable us&#13;
to give you the greatest value&#13;
for your money—why pay&#13;
more.&#13;
Come and ge.t our prices,&#13;
then&#13;
MATCH US IF YOU CAN.&#13;
church on Wednesday of Jhis week.&#13;
Quite a large party from here at*&#13;
tended the play and dance a t ' Dexter&#13;
on Friday evening last. They report&#13;
a good time.&#13;
The Misses Mame Sigler, Iva Halstead&#13;
and Lillian Boyle were the&#13;
guests of Miss Edith Wood of Anderson&#13;
over Sunday. _ .&#13;
A young mail lost his life near Leslie&#13;
last week by skating into a hole&#13;
where the ice had been taken out and&#13;
no signals placed.&#13;
There will be a chicken pie social a t&#13;
the home of Mr. Roy, near Anderson,&#13;
on F n d t y evening, J a n . 26. For a&#13;
good time and lots to eat, all-come.&#13;
Norman the little son of A. D. BennettoifJiowel)&#13;
cauin near drowning&#13;
in Thompson's lake, Howell, one day&#13;
last week. He Was rescued by ice&#13;
cutters.&#13;
have&#13;
K,&#13;
Ewen in this place tor a i e w weeks&#13;
returned to their home in No. Dak.&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Our time for offering t h e Farm&#13;
Journal lor five years and tbe DISPATCH&#13;
one year for $1 is limited.&#13;
These who desire to accept this ofler&#13;
bad better not delay too long.&#13;
Rev. F r . Coraerford was a t Bunker&#13;
Hill Sunday and opened J h e 40-bour&#13;
devotions there. Rev. F r . Conley or&#13;
-W'iliiamston officiated in St. Mary's&#13;
church here during his absence. '&#13;
Mr and M r s . R&gt; M. Glann have&#13;
been visiting in Wayne Co, the past&#13;
week whew t d e v ' a t t e n d e d the 60th&#13;
&gt;&#13;
wedding anniversary of their uncle&#13;
attdftunt Mr. and Mrs. Ri-.hard Bird I p —*-&#13;
, | book&#13;
event occured on&#13;
Yours for trade,&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN, Prop.&#13;
Bowman Block, Pinckney.&#13;
B E R T WELLAVAN&#13;
Manager of Pinckney Store.&#13;
Howell Store, next to P . O.&#13;
of Romulus which&#13;
the 20th.&#13;
0. E Bullis of Anderson sailed out&#13;
jMonday morning to secure a turkey&#13;
per par 04j.for their 50rh anniversary teast. He&#13;
saw the bird he wanted, drew a bead&#13;
and fired. When the smoke cleared&#13;
away.be found that he bad killed two1&#13;
turkeys and a chicken and thought&#13;
that was luck enough for one day so&#13;
did not t r y again.&#13;
John I). McPherson, who has been&#13;
in the employ of William McPherson&#13;
&amp; Sons for the past tw.enty years,&#13;
severer! his connection in that capacity&#13;
Monday evening and Jtias started out&#13;
with a view of seclecting a place to&#13;
embark in business for himself. His"&#13;
ma^y friends wish the best of success&#13;
to follow him—Democrat.&#13;
We hear nearly everyone of our&#13;
subscribers who receive t h e Farm&#13;
Journal, say that it is the best farm&#13;
paper tbey ever saw. I t contains&#13;
more matters boiled down and in&#13;
reasonable shape than any other farm&#13;
Journal published. And do you&#13;
know! we furnish the DISPATCH 1 year&#13;
and the Farm J o u r n a l from now until&#13;
the close ot 1904—nearly 5 yeais—&#13;
for only $ 1 . .&#13;
Next April supervisors will be compelled&#13;
to swear each property&#13;
owner to a statement of his taxable,&#13;
property. In addition to this, the&#13;
former will be suplied by tbe tax commissioner&#13;
with slips showing&#13;
every live mortgage on property and&#13;
will be required to report these&#13;
to tbe commissioner. These&#13;
remedies, together with .our criminal&#13;
laws for perjury in rv &lt; king false statements&#13;
to assessors, ».r« expected to&#13;
to work a revolution iu the matter of&#13;
assessments. Next spring the .supervisors—&#13;
will also have advice^ from&#13;
the state commission as to tbe in*&#13;
crease or,-decrease in values of real&#13;
estate shown by investigation to be&#13;
necessary to reach true oath value.&#13;
C. P. Sykes &amp; Son are in Pontiac&#13;
again this week doing a job of plumbing.&#13;
Mrs. Richard Baker and Miss Mollie&#13;
Kelley visited their sister Mrs. Wm.&#13;
McQuillian tbe last of last week. ~% '•&#13;
Mrs Ina D. Poole and son, Howard,&#13;
of Genoa, spent the latter part of last&#13;
we*k with Geo. Poole and family of&#13;
Unadilla.&#13;
.lames Lyman, of Jackson, was in&#13;
town the *Krst of tbe week. He is&#13;
buving hickory for a bu«ri?y concern&#13;
of tbe Cential City.&#13;
Jerome Peterson, wife and granddaughter&#13;
of Brighton, were guests of&#13;
H. G. Bribers, wife and other relatives&#13;
here tbe last ot last week&#13;
Jas Fitzsimmons, Frank Parker&#13;
and Howard Reason, left this place&#13;
Monday morning tor t « O. P , to&#13;
work 'or the Mtrh,Cen. Ry. Cn, cutting&#13;
timber on their lands there.&#13;
We are in receipt of the mid winter&#13;
number of the Los Angles, Gal, Times&#13;
which i* a fine addition of 86 pawres&#13;
and i* in the interest of the developemept&#13;
Of the Pacific coast.&#13;
The Columbian Dramatic Club had&#13;
a cood audience at, Dexter, Friday&#13;
evening last not with s^andin^ the&#13;
weather was auainht theru They&#13;
brought home a uood balance in the&#13;
treasury.&#13;
In the year 1898 the tree surer of Livingston&#13;
county paid spirrow order&gt;jto&#13;
the amount of $1064 45, in rhe year&#13;
1899. $624.97, Something likn half&#13;
the $624 97 has be^n pnid to one man&#13;
alone in. Putnam township.&#13;
The colored work in Hmgle Berry&#13;
Ts~ an it rune nee a»d rrr&#13;
growers. It shows the leading b^t&#13;
We desire to secure at least 100 new subscribers during the next&#13;
few weeks and therefore make the liberal offer of&#13;
T h r e e M o n t h s f o r 1 5 C e n f s V&#13;
Tbe DISPATCH is strictly a local paper, issued in the interest of&#13;
Pinckney and the surrounding country. We endeavor to give all of&#13;
the news especially that which is of interest to the farmer. During&#13;
the next few weeks will occur several farmers' clubs and institutes,&#13;
complete reports-of which will be given In the DISPATCH. This of&#13;
course will include the report of the one-day institute in Pinckney&#13;
Jan. 24, and tbe two-day institute in Howell, FeHJ|2, 3. These reports&#13;
alone will be worth more than the ..subscription price. Those&#13;
who pay $1 in advance will receive tha DISPATCH one year and the&#13;
Farm Journal nearlyJLie years FKEE.&#13;
Hand in your name today. Trial subscriptions stopped when&#13;
time expires. ~&#13;
If you already take the paper, send it to your son or some friend&#13;
for three months—they will enjoy it.&#13;
-*r A l w a y s at it.&#13;
A* What"?&#13;
Selling Goods of course.&#13;
^While the holiday trade is always a harvest for some&#13;
—and w« gret our share—our trade always remains good&#13;
the year around. The reason is that we sell the 'best staple&#13;
goods for the least money. People today are^not looking&#13;
for CHEAP goods but GOOD goods cheap.&#13;
The following are some of our lines:&#13;
iTFTTy ! _ _ !&#13;
Drugs and Medicines.&#13;
A full and complete line.&#13;
ries t r u e to size shape and color. They&#13;
were first carelully panned hy^an—FX^&#13;
erienced artist, and then tepmriucfd&#13;
by lithography at a co:-l of over on*&#13;
thousand dollars Aside from Th^&#13;
color work there are. scores ot ivpro&#13;
duotions made directly from photographs&#13;
of berries, so that the render&#13;
may have an accurate id«a of thnm.&#13;
The price is 50 cent*, free l&gt;y mail;&#13;
address the publishers, Wilmer Atkinson&#13;
Co., Philadelphia.&#13;
Hamburg and Putnam Farmer's Club.&#13;
School Supplies. Fancy Articles.&#13;
Books, Tablets, Pencils Pens, Celluloid Goods, Hdkf., Cuff&#13;
Ink and j and Coilor Boxes.&#13;
E x a m i n a t i o n B l a n k s . T h e y m a k e fine b i r t h d a y gift*.&#13;
The Putnam and Hamburg Farmers&#13;
Cluo will meet with Mr and Mrs. J ,&#13;
W Placeway Jan. 27, 1900 The fulowintf&#13;
is the program:&#13;
Singing by all&#13;
Seclect Reading&#13;
Inst. Music&#13;
Recitation&#13;
Solo&#13;
Paper&#13;
Ins. Music&#13;
Recitation&#13;
Solo&#13;
Reading&#13;
Solo&#13;
Recitation&#13;
Duet&#13;
G. Lambertson&#13;
Maud Cufy&#13;
Alma McCluskey&#13;
. Iva Placeway&#13;
H. F. Kice&#13;
Grace Lake&#13;
Raymond Kennedy&#13;
Nettie Hall&#13;
Mrs. E. Kennedy&#13;
Albert Mills&#13;
Iva Placeway&#13;
H. F . Kice and wife&#13;
To Rent&#13;
My house, barn and garden spot at&#13;
Chubbs Corners; I also have a brood&#13;
mare for sale. MBS. S. ELLIOTT.&#13;
Notice&#13;
*¥e farmers and fruit growers. I am&#13;
again in this vicinity in the interest&#13;
of I. ilgenfritzs' Sons, nursery of Monroe.&#13;
We hope we pleased you well&#13;
enough last year to have you save&#13;
your orders for as.&#13;
y BtJBT RODOBRS.&#13;
MofteytoLOAB.&#13;
Having aooepted »g—agency for&#13;
loaning money, 1 am prepared to&#13;
make loans on Baal Estate, at a low&#13;
rate ot interest. Inquire at the Pi;&#13;
ney Exchange Bank.&#13;
G l r o c k e r y .&#13;
A full line of* •.-—-*&#13;
Plain and Pancy ware.!&#13;
... A fine line of Lamps.&#13;
Groceries.&#13;
W e carry a line&#13;
of the bes^r in t o w n .&#13;
Prices a r e right.&#13;
Wall Paper.&#13;
Our sales the past y e a r w e r e far ahead of&#13;
our expectations, and this season w e will be&#13;
better prepared than e v e r to give values.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
We must ask all our Customers to settle&#13;
all Aceouats aai Nates that are due, before&#13;
Jan. 1,1900.&#13;
f—&#13;
Hoping to see yon all in time so we can&#13;
balance our boak* before taking our annual&#13;
inventory, Jan. 1,1900, either by Note or&#13;
Cv ash. i&#13;
.V ^&#13;
V&#13;
Respectfully lours,&#13;
TEEPLE &gt; CA DWELL.&#13;
•«.&amp;«&#13;
*. - • hi&#13;
v&#13;
• \&#13;
- * . • • * •&#13;
/&#13;
' WOra.v^BWMMWOiWuatf^v:-&#13;
m0 wm:.v m • • ) • « • • • &gt; « a M M M &gt; ' " f H ' M ' ' t p T *£.**• i» mini ««*•• mM»»fr« HfrpViilHi i » ^ iw {»"&gt;*• 4 M •^''•"•f'w^sissaK - I » L -&#13;
'*•'•?•'&#13;
*v-&#13;
?tfr"&#13;
&lt; 0 '••-'•;&#13;
v&gt;&gt; e'&#13;
1&#13;
*jft...&#13;
i&#13;
• ; ;&#13;
A&#13;
EVENTS OE THE WEEK&#13;
N OUR G R E A T S T A T E R E L A T E D&#13;
IN A BRIEF F O R M .&#13;
Oxford Method'sts are Enjoying m Genuine&#13;
Church Row—Michigan'* Sevr&#13;
1 Retaliatory Law Prumiie* a Revenue&#13;
of 819,000 or «10,000 a Year.&#13;
Corporation Department a Paying One.&#13;
The corporation department of the&#13;
secretary of state's office transacted an&#13;
unusually large volume of business&#13;
during the yea* 1$99. An examination&#13;
of the books discloses the fact that articles&#13;
of incorporation of 726 new corporations&#13;
were received for filing*,&#13;
while 76 corporations filed amendments&#13;
increasing their capital stock. The&#13;
new incorporations were of the following&#13;
classes: Mercantile and manufacturing,&#13;
4;}'*; mining, 44; religious assoc&#13;
i a t i o n s , 43; street and electric railways,&#13;
18; telephone, 13; publishing, 15;&#13;
banks, 8; railroads. 7; gas, 7; navigation&#13;
and transportation, -5; electric&#13;
light, 8; miscellaneous, 126. During&#13;
the year, 43.» mercantile and manufacturing&#13;
corporations riled notices of dissolution,&#13;
and 1% were stricken from&#13;
the records on information that the companies&#13;
had ceased to exist. Annual reports&#13;
were filed as follows; Merchantile&#13;
and manufacturing companies,&#13;
l,(lSl;-chari table societies, 31; street&#13;
railway companies, G; ti-ansportation&#13;
companies, 77; publishing companies.&#13;
21; miscellaneous, 70. The aggregate&#13;
authorized capital stock of the corporations&#13;
filing articles during the year is&#13;
¢332,219,000. That the department is a&#13;
paying one is demonstrated by the fact,&#13;
that it collected fees aggregating $171,-&#13;
100.81 during the year, Of this total,&#13;
•$166,902.78 were franchise fees, 82,742.20&#13;
recording and filing fees, and $1,455.83&#13;
fees for certified copies'.&#13;
* — &gt;&#13;
Church Row at Oxford.&#13;
A fist-SgEt was narrowly averted in&#13;
the Sunday school rooms of the M. E.&#13;
church at Oxford on the 11th. In 1898&#13;
Rev. Mr. Lowrey was placed in charge&#13;
of the church there/ He did not prove&#13;
•acceptable to a majority of the members&#13;
of the society, and much ill-feeling&#13;
was expressed when the conference&#13;
1aStc year, dispite protests, returned&#13;
Mr. Lowrey to that charge again.&#13;
Trouble has been brewing for some&#13;
time and the climax came on the 14th,&#13;
•when .the reverend gentleman demanded&#13;
the resignation of the Sunday&#13;
school superintendent, simply because&#13;
tie refused to demand the resignation&#13;
»of a certain lady teacher, whom Mr.&#13;
Lowrey considered was not eligible to&#13;
teach a Sunday school class because&#13;
4i\\&amp; was not a member of the church.&#13;
It is feared that if the pastor is not removed&#13;
the societjr will become completely&#13;
disrupted. The row is the talk&#13;
•of the town.&#13;
AhHronillnjr Cashier Caught.&#13;
Clifford A. England, former cashier&#13;
of the Warren-Scharf Asphalt Go., of&#13;
Detroit, who is alleged to have embezzled&#13;
$10,000 from the company in August,&#13;
1897, and for whose apprehension&#13;
a reward of $1,000 was offered, w a s arrested&#13;
in Chicago on the evening of&#13;
the 19th. England being confidential&#13;
agent, book-keeper and cashier of the&#13;
above firm he experiedced no difficulty&#13;
in securing the money from a local&#13;
bank by means of depositing a check,&#13;
drawing another and having it cashed.&#13;
When arrested he acknowledge his&#13;
crime and said he would return to Detroit&#13;
and suffer the penalty. He and&#13;
his wife visited many points of interest&#13;
in Europe and then traveled in Asia,&#13;
coming back to Chicago by w a y of San&#13;
Francisco. Shortly after reaching Chicago&#13;
he secured a position as manager&#13;
in John McLelland's wholesale furniture&#13;
store, which position he was still&#13;
holding when arrested. England was&#13;
a young man of exemplary habits and&#13;
made^ua^ny friends, and had the confidence&#13;
of his employers. His downfall&#13;
is attributed.to.his wife.&#13;
- Mrs. England is a woman with a history.&#13;
She was formerly Miss Dorothy&#13;
Winifred Smart, daughter of llehry&#13;
Smart of Cleveland. Trior to Sept. (&gt;,&#13;
1890, she lived at the Hotel Renaud,&#13;
Detroit, with a man named White, who&#13;
was, or pretended to be a traveling mau&#13;
from Cleveland. They lived as man&#13;
and wife, and their behavior was such&#13;
as not to arouse the slightest suspicions&#13;
on the part of either the proprietors&#13;
or guests. After living quietly,&#13;
there for eight months, White paid the&#13;
bill, and the two moved out.&#13;
mm&#13;
A Test Case of Process Butter.&#13;
State Food Commissioner Grosvenor&#13;
on the 17th made complaint against&#13;
Rollin G. Phelps, agent for Armour &amp;&#13;
Co. of Chicago, on the eharge of selling&#13;
what is known as process butter»_with--&#13;
out complying with the state law in&#13;
the matter of labeling packages. This&#13;
will be-atest case. Michigan w a s one&#13;
of the six states in 1899 to pass laws&#13;
regulating the sale of this kind of butter,&#13;
at the instigation of the National&#13;
Association of State Dairy and Food&#13;
Commissioners. Heretofore it has been&#13;
impossible for chemists to tell the difference&#13;
between process butter an/1&#13;
dairy or creamery. Michigan chemists^&#13;
however, claim, to have found an infallible&#13;
test. Process butter has been on&#13;
the market for 10 years* The most of&#13;
it is manufactured in Chicago, one firm&#13;
there sending in thousands of pounds&#13;
during the year. It is the product of&#13;
cheap dairy butter that has spoiled,&#13;
melted up and churned again in new&#13;
milk. If the food department carries&#13;
its point, similar suits will be started&#13;
all oyer the state.&#13;
Michigan Will Retaliate.&#13;
The fire insurance companies that&#13;
are now beginning to file their annual&#13;
reports and pay their taxes preparatory&#13;
to having their Michigan licenses renewed,&#13;
are. discovering that the last&#13;
legislature enacted a retaliatory law&#13;
that promises to yield the state a revenue&#13;
of between §12.000 and $15,000 a&#13;
year. This law. provides for retaliating&#13;
on the companies of all states that&#13;
charge Michigan companies a fee for&#13;
agents' licenses. Heretofore Michigan&#13;
has not charged such a fee. The Phoe-'&#13;
nix of Connecticut has just paid a retaliatory&#13;
fee eqnal tb 20 per cent of its&#13;
annual tax. The fee ranges from $2 to&#13;
¢10 per agent in the various "states, and&#13;
this is what they will have to pay&#13;
Michigan. _&#13;
m'&#13;
.Northvllle's Churches Over 50 yearn Old&#13;
Northville has four church buildings,&#13;
each of which is at least 54 years old.&#13;
The edifice in which the Presbyterians&#13;
first worshiped, was built in 1835 and&#13;
was the first meeting house in the&#13;
place. It is now used as a private&#13;
dwelling. In 1839 the Methodists completed&#13;
and dedicated a church that was&#13;
the most-commodious building of the&#13;
kind for miles around. The Catholics&#13;
now own it and hold occasional services&#13;
therein. The Baptist people built a&#13;
church in 1843 and the same is in use j ^&#13;
today. Twice they have had to enlarge&#13;
the building to meet the needs of the&#13;
congregation. T h e youngest of the&#13;
.quartet is the new Presbyterian church.&#13;
This structure was finished in 1846.&#13;
Another ¢70,000 Blaze In Detroit.&#13;
Shortly after midnight on the 17th&#13;
fire was discovered in the building occupied&#13;
by the Mutual Storage Co. at&#13;
36-40 Woodward avenue, Detroit, and&#13;
atoout $70,000 worth of property was&#13;
•destroyed before the. .fire was extinguished.&#13;
The loss was divided among&#13;
the following firms: Mutual Storage&#13;
X'o., $30,000; ^Schneider &amp; Sieder, $3,000;&#13;
Valentine Schroeder, $12,000; Gebhard&#13;
jpaper Co., $10,000; building, $10,000;&#13;
Sleier &amp; Schuknecht, $2,000; minor&#13;
Josses, $3,000. The loss was fully cov-&#13;
«red by insurance,&#13;
Made a Fine Showing,&#13;
The annual meeting of the Hillsdale&#13;
County Agricultural society was held&#13;
in Hillsdale on the 16th, and disclosed&#13;
a pleasant condition of affairs to the&#13;
retiring anfl succeeding officers. The&#13;
society received and disbursed during&#13;
the last year 814,270, leaving a balance&#13;
on hand at this date of $109.62, after&#13;
reducing the indebtedness daring the&#13;
year by the sum of $1,560.18. The next&#13;
fair will be held Oct. 1-5.&#13;
M I C H I G A N NEWS I T E M S .&#13;
The/ Have Flentr of gnow Mow.&#13;
Snow has fallen at Benzonia the past&#13;
tfew days and the lumbermen-arc maki&#13;
n g hurried preparations to move their&#13;
logs and bark.. Near Ben2onia thousands&#13;
of corthFof hemlock bark were&#13;
i&gt;ecled last summer and held for winter&#13;
tauling to the_raiIroad. Laek of snow&#13;
tiad prevented any lumbering operations,&#13;
and lumbermen bad begWn t o&#13;
/ear there was going to be^iro sotow.&#13;
A test shaft is being put down at&#13;
Maple Rapids in the hopes of finding&#13;
coal.&#13;
Holly's new cement factory w i l l be&#13;
located either at Brush lake or Rapallu&#13;
lake.&#13;
l Menominee wants a- deaf and dumb&#13;
school in connection with t h e public&#13;
schools.&#13;
' Ludington boasts of a centenarian&#13;
who has passed the century mark by&#13;
six years.&#13;
A new Congregational church w a s&#13;
organized at Warren on the 15th with&#13;
16 members.&#13;
During 1899, 85 divorce cases were&#13;
begun in Calhoun county and 51 decrees&#13;
were granted.&#13;
The Pere Marquette will continue&#13;
the sale of family mileage books the&#13;
same as in the past.&#13;
Allegan jsolers will decide at the&#13;
springs election whether they want&#13;
local option or notv&#13;
&lt;iNiles now has an Improvement association.&#13;
Already the association has&#13;
six factories in view.&#13;
There were 10 boiler explosions in&#13;
this state last year, and 16 people-were&#13;
killed and 10 wounded.&#13;
It is reported that 600 conversions&#13;
were the fruits of the Chapman revival&#13;
meetings at Kalamazoo.&#13;
It is said that farmers in Kalamazoo&#13;
county will refuse to grow sugar Wets&#13;
for less than $5 per ton.&#13;
Dowagiac's Commercial club is negotiating&#13;
for the establishing of a mummoth&#13;
canning factory there.&#13;
A movement is on foot at Lansing&#13;
which will eventually result in the&#13;
placing of all wires underground.&#13;
For the year ending Dec. 31," pauper&#13;
orders have been paid, by St. Joseph&#13;
county to the amount of $9,476.60.&#13;
The Kalamazoo city council has&#13;
passed resolutions of sympathy for the&#13;
Boers in their struggle against England.&#13;
- (&#13;
T h e totaHtptrbcr «ttt of Menominee&#13;
for the year 1899 was 366,427.000 f e e t .&#13;
Prices have increased nearly 40 per&#13;
ceaL&#13;
Cadillac has paidxiff the last of the&#13;
indebtedness on the local schools, and&#13;
JIQW the erection of a new city hall is&#13;
being discussed.&#13;
A thief entered the bar, room of the&#13;
Hotel Harris a t Newberry some time&#13;
during the night of the 10th and stole&#13;
$123 from the till.&#13;
Romeo can have a cheese factorynif&#13;
the farmers in the vicinity will eontract&#13;
to supply the milk of enough&#13;
cows to keep it going.&#13;
Work will soon begin on the erection&#13;
of the new buildings for the new&#13;
creamery package manufactory which&#13;
is to be located at Dowagiac.&#13;
The Bay City sugar factories on the&#13;
15th paid out $113,000 for beets delivered&#13;
during December. They will run&#13;
through January and February.&#13;
Plainwell has been having a milk&#13;
famine, the milk men being obliged to&#13;
make long trips through the. country&#13;
and then cut their customers short in&#13;
many cases.&#13;
The Catholic society of Durand will&#13;
soon begin to hold services in its new&#13;
church, which has just been completed'.&#13;
It is a 84,000 edifice. It has pot yet&#13;
been dedicated.&#13;
Niles is at present exp3riencing a religious&#13;
bpoui. over 50 people being converted&#13;
in less than a week. A Miss&#13;
Downey,' an evangelist, of Evanston,&#13;
111. is holding forth there.&#13;
The municipal ownership~ofelectric&#13;
lighting plants has proved a success at&#13;
Coldwater, the month of December being&#13;
the most profitable of any since&#13;
the concern changed hands. —&#13;
-Four carloads of bird's-eye maple logs&#13;
were shipped from Menominee to New.&#13;
York, destined for England. The lumber&#13;
from the logs is to be used for the&#13;
interior finish of a nobleman's house.&#13;
The people of Hastings, as well as&#13;
the farmers of the vicinity.^ know&#13;
what is good for themselves, and are&#13;
putting in all their spare time this&#13;
winter improving the roads around&#13;
. those parts.&#13;
Mason county farmers have heard of&#13;
the benefits of rural free mail delivery&#13;
as established in the southern and eastern&#13;
portions of the state, and are making&#13;
efforts to have a route or t w o put&#13;
into operation there.&#13;
Proceedings were commenced in the&#13;
^supreme court on the 15th to test the&#13;
validity of the act of the last legislature&#13;
providing for the examination and&#13;
licensing of barbers. Fred S. Wass, of&#13;
Benton Harbor, is the complainant.&#13;
A cement factory is said to be a sure&#13;
thing for Rogers City'the coming season,&#13;
it being expected that work on&#13;
the plant will begin early in the spring.&#13;
The men who are behind the project&#13;
have secured control of 3,000—acres of&#13;
fine marl lands in the vicinity.&#13;
About a month ago the village of&#13;
Ludington purchased the local water&#13;
works, pTant at a cost of $110.000. Now&#13;
a special election will be held on Feb.&#13;
5 for the purpose of voting on the&#13;
proposition t o bond for $25,000 t o buy&#13;
or build an electric lighting plant.&#13;
-The unprecedented-lack of ^now4athe&#13;
lumber woods, and the consequent&#13;
inability to get out timber is liaving&#13;
its.effect on the paper mills along the&#13;
Menominee river, some of which are&#13;
said to have already shut down on account&#13;
of the impossibility of securing&#13;
the pulp wood from which the paper is&#13;
made.&#13;
AT HOME AND ABROAD&#13;
A S U M M A R Y OP THE N E W S FOR&#13;
THE WEEK BY WIRE.&#13;
Kentucky hat Another Horrible Shooting&#13;
Tragedy, to Her Credit and aa a&#13;
Remit the Lives of Three Fromln-&#13;
Men Wer« sacrificed.&#13;
•hooting Affray in Kentucky.&#13;
A shocking tragedy in which the&#13;
lives of three prominent men were sacrificed&#13;
and that of a fourth hangs by a&#13;
slender thread, while t w o others miraculously&#13;
escaped with painful injuries,&#13;
occurred at Frankfort, Ky., on the&#13;
16th. The principals in the tragedy&#13;
were ex-Congressman David G. .Colson,&#13;
of Middlesboro, and Lieut. Ethelbert&#13;
Scott, of Somerset. Scott was shot six&#13;
times by Colson and almost instantly&#13;
killed. Luther W. Demarre, assistant&#13;
postmaster at Shelbyville, an innocent&#13;
bystander, was shot three times and&#13;
died instantly, ^Charles Julian, another&#13;
bystander, was shoT and died a&#13;
half hour later, and Capt. B. B. Golden,&#13;
of Barboursville, comnionwealth's attorney,&#13;
~of the 27th judicial district,&#13;
was shot in the back and in not expected&#13;
to survive. Col. Colson himself&#13;
Was shot twice in the arm. Harry Mc-&#13;
Ewing, of Louisville, w a s shot in the&#13;
foot and W. O. Ridpath, of Chicago,&#13;
sustained a broken leg by the lifeless&#13;
'orm of Scott falling against him as it&#13;
rolled down the stairway. The tragedy&#13;
is one of the most sensational in the&#13;
history of "the dark and bloody&#13;
ground."- -The killing occurred in the&#13;
lobby of the Capital hotel, the principal&#13;
hostelry of the state capital, the&#13;
joom being well filled at the time with&#13;
politicians and others who were there&#13;
attending the contests for state officers&#13;
before the legislature.&#13;
Van Buren is a prohibition county,&#13;
but just across the line in Cass connty&#13;
a saloon has been established, and it is&#13;
stated by the Dowagiac Republican,&#13;
with all due regard for the truth, (?)&#13;
that already the residents of Decatur,&#13;
two or three miles distant, have worn&#13;
a path two feet deep between their&#13;
town and the thirst parlor.&#13;
The governor the other day discovered&#13;
that the law was changed last&#13;
winter limiting him to 10,000 copies of&#13;
his message at state expense. He had&#13;
been used to striking off about 30,000&#13;
for the edification of the people in the&#13;
state. He said a few things, but ordered&#13;
the usual number and will pay&#13;
for them out of his own pocket.&#13;
An idea of the magnitude pf the marriage&#13;
business which w a s worked up&#13;
at St. Joseph last year by the excursion&#13;
boat lines running between there and&#13;
Chicago may be had from the fact that&#13;
the number of marriage licenses issued&#13;
in 1899 in Berrien county, where St.&#13;
Joseph is located, was nearly 2,500.&#13;
while in the neighboring courity of&#13;
Cass there were only 221 applications&#13;
The Michigan (Bell) Telephone company&#13;
has purchased controlling interest&#13;
in the Detroit and New State Telephone&#13;
companies. The companies will&#13;
not be consolidated at present any&#13;
further than the perfection of a working&#13;
agreement by which there wilt be&#13;
no throat cutting between the companies.&#13;
There will be n o change in&#13;
the present rates, and the company announce&#13;
that they are willing to make&#13;
25-year conntracts at the prevailing&#13;
prices.&#13;
Among other things that Quartermaster-&#13;
General White left behind him.&#13;
which will have a tendency to keep his&#13;
memory-green so long as he remains&#13;
away, is an unpaid printers~^bill. He&#13;
had an 80-page pamphlet printed,&#13;
which contained letters from generals,&#13;
colonels and commissioned officers gen*&#13;
Raaala und Japan May Scrap. ,&#13;
"War between Russia and Japan is&#13;
looked for as inevitable by the naval&#13;
officers of those countries who have&#13;
been nearest the probable scene of future&#13;
operations," said Lieut. Romanoff&#13;
of the imperial Russian navy, who arrived&#13;
in Chicago recently. * The lieutenant&#13;
has just completed a. three&#13;
years' cruise in Asiatic waters on the&#13;
Russian battleship Sissoi Teliky, and&#13;
is,on his way to St. Petersburg. Just&#13;
how soon such a war may begin it is&#13;
difficult to say, but events little short&#13;
of miraculous must occur to avert it.&#13;
The Japanese are building warships as&#13;
rapidly as possible, in anticipation of&#13;
the outbreak of hostilities and Russia&#13;
is strengthening her navy as fast as&#13;
she can. That Russia must have a&#13;
naval base between Port Arthur and&#13;
Vladivostock is conceded, and that" she&#13;
will try to get one in Korea is certain&#13;
In the event of suqh a war it is considered&#13;
probable in Russian -naval circles&#13;
that Russia .will have the aid of&#13;
Germany and that England will take&#13;
the other side. European war w i l l&#13;
follow the outbreak of hostilities be="&#13;
tween Russia and Japan.&#13;
T R A N S V A A L WAR I T E M S .&#13;
&gt; • •». s r - HW» v.* : v-.?. .&#13;
,J J.' Q. C. V a n Den Bosch, of Mish-&#13;
-awaka,- IncL, recently received a letter&#13;
fitoura frfiend at fcim'by the name of&#13;
JXeinrkh Van Der Riep, a young lawyer,&#13;
w h o resides; in P^retoria. Among&#13;
other things he says: "When trouble&#13;
began here I joined J6«bwri?ti fprces. I&#13;
was wounded in the fight at Elandslaagte&#13;
b u t am recovering. Tnte1 subject&#13;
that makes every humane, soldier tremble&#13;
with rage k the manner in w h i c h&#13;
the British t w a t our wounded and prisoners.&#13;
I wish above all things thai the&#13;
world might k n o w how completely&#13;
these scoundrels violate all - conventional&#13;
and humanitarian laws.&#13;
How they butchered wounded soldiers&#13;
with their lances, cruelly maltreated&#13;
prisoners, and that in direct&#13;
contrast with the so-called 'stupid&#13;
Boers,' who are treating their EngH|frx&#13;
prisoners and wounded with the greatest&#13;
kindness "&#13;
A British dispatch says the forward&#13;
movement fpr the relief of Ladysmith&#13;
began on Wednesday, Jan. 10, from&#13;
Frepe and Chieveley. Lord Dundonald's&#13;
mounted brigade, with the 5th&#13;
brigade, under Gen. Hart, comprising&#13;
the Dublins, the Connaughts,, the Iniskillens&#13;
and the Borden regiment, proceeded&#13;
northwesterly to Springfield.&#13;
The position had previously been thoroughly&#13;
reconnoitered/ A few milea&#13;
outside of Frere, Lord Dundonald&#13;
passed targets erected by the Boers t o&#13;
represent a force advancing in skirmishing&#13;
order. Evidently the Boers&#13;
had been firing at these from the adjacent&#13;
hill^. Lord Dundonald pushed&#13;
on, and as the main column advanced&#13;
it was notified that Springfield was not&#13;
occupied by Boers, and that the 5th&#13;
brigade had taken possession.&#13;
A dispatch from Gen. Duller dated&#13;
Jan. 21 says the British wounded i n&#13;
the battle of the 20th numbered 11&#13;
officers, one of whom died, and 279 noncommissioned&#13;
officers and men. The&#13;
British also lost t w o killed, two missing&#13;
and 12 wounded in a reconnaissance&#13;
on the. same date. The^iJoegr casualties&#13;
is not given.&#13;
Six big Cruesot guns and 5^0 tons of&#13;
shells were landed from the HVench&#13;
steamer Girondo, about the middle Of&#13;
last month under the noses of t w o&#13;
ish warships and were , dispatched&#13;
Pretoria, causing much rejoicing at the&gt;&#13;
ease with which contraband of war can&#13;
run the blockade.&#13;
It is announced that ex-Consul Ma*&#13;
crum, of Pretoria, is a bearer of a letter&#13;
to President MeKinley from President&#13;
Kruger, in which the latter proposes&#13;
peace terms based upon the status quo,&#13;
with complete independence and a&#13;
""Seven years' franchise.&#13;
Geo. W. Van Siclen, of New York,&#13;
treasurer of the American Transvaal&#13;
fund, says not a single day passes but&#13;
what from 10 to 20 able-bodied young&#13;
men apply in person to him to be sent&#13;
to South Africa to fight on the Boer&#13;
side.&#13;
Anglo-Germao Opposition.&#13;
Both Great Britain and Germany&#13;
have formally served notice that they&#13;
will protest against fortification of the&#13;
Nicaragua canal jf that waterway be&#13;
constructed by the American government.&#13;
Three notices were filed by&#13;
Ambassadors Pauncefote and Von Holleben.&#13;
It is believed both France and&#13;
Russia, and perhaps other marine powers,&#13;
will join in the protest if the&#13;
United States persists in constructing&#13;
the canal upon the basis provided in&#13;
the bill reported from the house committe&#13;
on interstate and foreign commerce&#13;
and agreed to with some .additions&#13;
by the senate committee on mteroceanic&#13;
canal.&#13;
WAR N O T E S ,&#13;
ner in which he equipped and cared for&#13;
the Michigan troops at Camp Eaton;&#13;
and on leaving so suddenly forgot to&#13;
settle for the same. "&#13;
Killed the Jailer and Escaped.&#13;
County Jailer Alfred Henry, while&#13;
feeding the prisoners in the Howell&#13;
county jail at West Plains, Mo., on the&#13;
17th, was overpowered and killed by&#13;
two prisoners, Ben Richardson and-Ed.&#13;
Grady. Richardson was under sentence&#13;
to the penitentiary for burglary and is&#13;
an escaped convict from the Tennessee&#13;
penitentiary. Henry had gone to the&#13;
jail to feed the prisoners, and. not returning&#13;
to his home at the accustomed&#13;
time, his wife became anxious and sent&#13;
a neighbor in search of him. His body&#13;
was found in a pool of blood on the&#13;
jail floor. The prisoners had escaped&#13;
and locked the door after them.&#13;
C. 9. Capital to be Invested In Russia.&#13;
Thomas Smith, consul of the United&#13;
States art Moscow, returned to Russia&#13;
on the 16th, after a short stay in this&#13;
country, with authority from three or&#13;
four manufacturing concerns here to&#13;
negotiate the preliminary steps for the&#13;
building of American manufacturing&#13;
plants In Moscow and St. Petersburg,&#13;
to cost $6,000,000. Mr. Smith said that&#13;
the plans of the American manufacturers&#13;
who'Win invade Russia with American&#13;
machinery and ideas within the&#13;
next 12 months involve an expenditure&#13;
of $15,000,000. l&#13;
Electricians Off for Belgium.&#13;
The Western Electric Co. of Chicago,&#13;
on the 18th sent 72 of its most skilled&#13;
operatives to its_plant in , Belgium,&#13;
which has been furnished throughout&#13;
with American machinery. It i s&#13;
for the purpose of teaching natiye_&#13;
erally, commending him for the man«-_workmen*the uses of inis .machinery&#13;
and the manner of constructing telephone&#13;
and other electrical devices after&#13;
American methods ttfat the' men are'&#13;
sent.&#13;
The presence at Manila of Archbishop&#13;
Chapelle, the apostolic delegate to&#13;
the Philippines, is greatly stirrings the&#13;
Catholics of all nationalities. They Filipinos&#13;
have gained the impression that&#13;
Mgr. Chapelle came as the joint agent&#13;
of President MeKinley and the pope to&#13;
reinstate the friars in their former&#13;
power. Mgr. Chapelle denies this, and&#13;
Catholics of all sections are petitioning&#13;
Mgr. Chapelle and Maj.-Gen. Otis&#13;
against the friars returning to their&#13;
parishes. To quell the excitement,&#13;
Maj.-Gen^X)tis"consentetl to the publication&#13;
in. the local newspapers of a&#13;
statement which he had made to a delegation&#13;
of Filipinos as follows: 4,If the&#13;
church authorities assign friars to&#13;
churches who are obnoxious to the people,&#13;
they will not be compelled to accept&#13;
them. The individual liberty&#13;
guaranteed by the American constitution&#13;
will not be denied t h e Filipinos,&#13;
and the government will not force upon&#13;
them any ecclesiastical denomination&#13;
contrary to their wishes."&#13;
A large number of claims for pensions&#13;
are being received by the pension office&#13;
as a result of the Spanish war. Statistics&#13;
prepared by the bureau show that&#13;
the percentage of applications from&#13;
volunteers is much larger than from&#13;
the regulars^ The. battle of San Juan&#13;
was selected by the bureau as a basis&#13;
for calculations, as the greatest number&#13;
of casualties occurred there. There&#13;
were 192 regulars killed, 1,077 wounded&#13;
and 55 missing. Claims for pension&#13;
from-the-regular army number 2,7*2.&#13;
At that battle 34 volunteers were&#13;
killed, 177 wounded, and 45 missing.&#13;
The claims for pensions from volunteers&#13;
number 3,558. There were 33&#13;
regiments of regulars and three regular&#13;
batteries engaged in this fight as&#13;
against nine regiments of volunteers.&#13;
The escort of 50 men of Co. C, aoth ,&#13;
regiment, Lieut. Ralston commanding,&#13;
which w a s ambushed near Pina, consisted&#13;
of 50 convalescents from the hospital,&#13;
w h o were going to rejoin'the&#13;
regiment. The insurgents hid in the&#13;
bushes along the road and opened fire&#13;
upon the pack train from their sides.&#13;
In addition to their casualties, they&#13;
were compelled to abandon the ^rain,&#13;
which consisted of 22 horses. The 1*4^&#13;
ter, with their packs all fell into the&#13;
hands of the insurgents, w h o pursued&#13;
the retreating escort for three miles&#13;
along the road, until the Americans&#13;
were reinforced. / -~--&#13;
X&#13;
t* •&#13;
•^i - 4 * i - v&#13;
Vr ' t_ „..., 'i&#13;
L.&#13;
•&#13;
\&#13;
i&#13;
1&#13;
ii&#13;
&amp; HIS WORD OF HONORl&#13;
A Tale o£ the Blue and the Gray*&#13;
BYE WERNER.&#13;
Copyright, 18M, by Robert Bonner's SOD*.&#13;
m&#13;
CHAPTER VII.—(Coitinu«4.)&#13;
HI* tflJQfti wan the courteous yet decided^&#13;
QQS prf a man accustomed to see&#13;
his mejJ)i»J,i«thMity mognized with.&#13;
out opposition, Edward had not in*&#13;
tended to enter the sick chamber,&#13;
where he would be obliged to meet&#13;
Florence, but the plainly Intimated request&#13;
that he should remain outside&#13;
nettled,him. He^glanced haughtily at&#13;
the doctor and replied witfv evident&#13;
coldness.&#13;
"The physician aiways has the right&#13;
to Command in such cases. I will&#13;
submit, but shall expect'speedy news&#13;
of ray uncle's health."&#13;
He gave the necessary orders to the&#13;
servant, who was still in the room,&#13;
and then turned to Thompson again.&#13;
The doctor was ushered through several&#13;
apartments no less richly furnished&#13;
than the drawing-room, then&#13;
the man opened a door veiled by a&#13;
heavy portiere and permitted the physician&#13;
to enter, while he himself reV&#13;
mained behind.&#13;
CHAPTER VHI.&#13;
Here, too, a subdued twilight reigned,&#13;
and in the dusk the newcomer at&#13;
first perceived only the, white figure&#13;
kneeling beside the bed, with her face&#13;
buried in the pillows. The sick man&#13;
himself appeared to be in a sort of&#13;
stupor, and, at the end of the room,&#13;
Ralph was busied with some medicine.&#13;
After convincing himself by a&#13;
hurried glance that the door had again&#13;
closed behind bim^ Doctor Blackwood&#13;
approached the kneeling girl, bent&#13;
down to her and said, in a low tone,&#13;
-with marked emphasis:&#13;
"Miss Harrison!"&#13;
She slowly raised her pale, tear--&#13;
stained face, The voice seemed to&#13;
arouse some memory, her eyes rested&#13;
lnqulripgly upon the stranger's features&#13;
for a lew seconds, then a start-&#13;
-led cry escaped her lips. —&#13;
"And now for the living," he continued.&#13;
"Calm yourself. Another life&#13;
is at stake, as dear to you as the one&#13;
now vanishing."&#13;
"William?" cried the young girl, in&#13;
terror. "Is his life threatened? They&#13;
concealed it from me. They spoke&#13;
only of imprisonment. For heaven'*}&#13;
sake, tell me the truth!"&#13;
"First of all, you must tell me what&#13;
has happened. I have just arrived, and&#13;
know none of the particulars." . i&#13;
Takins her hand,, he led her to the&#13;
window, where Florence, in hurried,&#13;
breathless whispers, informed him of&#13;
what had occurred. I&#13;
Maxwell listened silently.withcut interrupting&#13;
her. Not until she had&#13;
finished her story did he ask a few&#13;
brief, direct questions.&#13;
"Is Captain Wilson stiU in Springfield?"&#13;
"No. I heard from Ralph that herode*&#13;
away half an hour ago."&#13;
VAnd when do you expect your family&#13;
physician and the real Doctor&#13;
Blackwood?"&#13;
"Toward evening. They witl not&#13;
arrive ^before seven o'clock."&#13;
"Well, then, we shall have a few&#13;
hours at our disposal. Can you rely&#13;
upon this old man? Implicitly?"&#13;
"Ralph was the friend and confidant&#13;
of my childhood. . He is devoted&#13;
to me with all his soul, and will do&#13;
anything to save William. Won't you,&#13;
Ralph?"&#13;
She had summoned the old servant&#13;
by a gesture. He laid his hand upon&#13;
his heart. ' " ' .&#13;
"Yes, Miss Florence—anytling."&#13;
Maxwell looked keenly at him a few&#13;
minutes, and seemed satisfied.&#13;
"Miss Harrison's.lover is ta be rescued,"&#13;
he said. "Will you help us?"&#13;
"Yes, master, as much as I can."&#13;
"Then first inform Mr. Harrison&#13;
that I must remain here for the present,&#13;
as his uncle's death may take&#13;
the verge of fainting, rallied^ her&#13;
strength. Her voice still trembled yet&#13;
thrilled with kindling energy as she&#13;
replied:&#13;
"I am not so weak as you imagine.&#13;
I have courage for anything where&#13;
William is concerned. Tell me what&#13;
I am to do."&#13;
"For the present you must remain&#13;
quietly here, but be ready to respond&#13;
at any moment if I call you. This&#13;
room has another' door, I see; so I&#13;
can leave it, unobserved, while I am&#13;
supposed to be engaged in my professional&#13;
duties. After the message I&#13;
sent to Mr. Harrison, he will probably&#13;
remain near, expecting further news."&#13;
"But if he doesn't—if he discovers&#13;
and surprises you—if the doctors&#13;
should arrive a few hours earlier—"&#13;
"Yes, but one must not take the&#13;
.*ifs' into account in such enterprises,"&#13;
said Maxwell, carelessly. "Several&#13;
hundred 4ifs' menaced me when I rode&#13;
after that obstinate William, yet here&#13;
I am, and my identity is wholly unsuspected,&#13;
which is • enough for the&#13;
beginning."&#13;
He again approached the sick bed,&#13;
.where his prediction was being fulfilled.&#13;
Death was approaching slowly&#13;
but calmly and without suffering, and&#13;
he silently beckoned to the daughter&#13;
to resume her place.&#13;
KNEELING BESIDE THE BED.&#13;
"Doctor Maxwell! Is it you?"&#13;
"Hush! Don't mention my name!"&#13;
said Maxwell in a low, impressive&#13;
tone. "I pass here as Doctor Blackwood,&#13;
and we are not alone."&#13;
He glanced significantly at the^ negro,&#13;
whose attention had been attracted;&#13;
but Florence made an eager gesture&#13;
of dissent.&#13;
"Ralph Is faithful and discreet. You&#13;
need fear mrireachery from him. I&#13;
will answer for that"&#13;
"So much the better. But, first:&#13;
What has happened here? I am looking&#13;
for William. Isn't he in Springfield?"-&#13;
"Yes, he is here, buta prisoner, be-&#13;
- trayed by Edward, and Just at the moment&#13;
they dragged him away from me&#13;
this severe, perhaps fatal attack, came&#13;
on. Doctor Maxwell, will my father&#13;
die?"&#13;
John Maxwell did not answer the despairing&#13;
question at once. The first&#13;
glance at Harrison had told him that&#13;
it must be in the affirmative, but he&#13;
- bent over the patient, felt of his&#13;
pulse and placed his hand upon his&#13;
heart It was a short but careful examination;&#13;
° "•" ' "&#13;
"Yes, Miss Harrison/' he said at&#13;
last "It is useless to withhold the&#13;
truth; you must face it; but the&#13;
Struggle is over, and the end will be&#13;
painless. , He ' will probably not recover&#13;
his consciousness."&#13;
Florence, sobbing aloud, covered her&#13;
fact with both hands; but Maxwell&#13;
allowed her no time to give way to&#13;
- Iter grief.&#13;
place at any moment. But I must re-&#13;
CHAPTERIX.&#13;
Edward Harrison had, of course,&#13;
taken every precaution to prevent any&#13;
attempt at escape or rescue. He had&#13;
been forced to yield to Captain Wil-,&#13;
son's demand for suitable accommodations&#13;
for his prisoner and his refusal&#13;
to adopt other measures—indeed, the&#13;
latter would have been superfluous*&#13;
William* was in the charge of his most&#13;
bitter enemy, nd he guarded him better&#13;
than any jailer.&#13;
In a" side-Wing of the building, at&#13;
the end of a long passage, was a room&#13;
where many Valuable articles were&#13;
kept during the absence of the owners.&#13;
The only entrance was through&#13;
a strong door with a double lock, and&#13;
the t&gt;ne window, which also opened&#13;
upon the passage, was protected by an&#13;
iron grating, which, though not heavy,&#13;
was remarkably strong. In "addition,&#13;
the corridor was closed by a second&#13;
door, and Edward kept the keys of&#13;
both in his pocket. No assistance&#13;
could come from outside, and her&#13;
cousin knew only too well that Florence&#13;
had njpt the energy to attempt to&#13;
free the prisoner, at least in her&#13;
father's dying hour; .&#13;
William paced Sup and down the&#13;
close, gloomy room in the most intense&#13;
excitement. So this was the end&#13;
of the fooihardy ride which he had&#13;
undertaken in defiance of every warning.&#13;
Tpue, he had thought of two alternatives&#13;
only—success or death in&#13;
honorable" conflict; and Colonel Burney,,&#13;
too, had had no other idea when&#13;
he uttered the fateful words: "Dead or&#13;
dishonored.'" There was a third:&#13;
"Captured!"&#13;
True, this captivity meant death.&#13;
The young officer did not deceive himself&#13;
concerning his fate; but little&#13;
as he feared death, his blood boiled&#13;
in fierce rebellion at the thought of&#13;
beting sentenced as a spy. Anything&#13;
save this shameful doom. There was&#13;
one bright ray of hope for him: He&#13;
trusted in the honour of the Confederates.&#13;
Unless Edward Harrison&#13;
could hoodwink them into believing&#13;
him a spy, he seemed reasonably safe.&#13;
Then came the thought of Florence,&#13;
who would now be left wholly without&#13;
protection. How would she endure&#13;
the terrible event, and what would befall&#13;
her after her father's death? Edward,&#13;
as the sole male relative, would&#13;
also be the guardian an4-protector of&#13;
the young girl, who would be absolutely&#13;
in this scoundrel's power. Wil-&#13;
_ Ham clenched his hand's in helpless&#13;
fury, and a Tow groan escaped his lips.&#13;
Suddenly he started.—Ha fancied&#13;
Then find out for me in what part of&#13;
house Lieutenant Roland is imprlson-&#13;
„ed and whether it is possible to reach&#13;
TTim unseen. This can easily be learned&#13;
from the servants; but be careful&#13;
to rouse no suspiciqn."&#13;
Ralph's face showed that he clearly&#13;
understood the importance of the commission.&#13;
He promised in a whisper&#13;
to obey exactly, and then glided noiselessly&#13;
out of the room. Maxwell again&#13;
turned to Florence, who seemed somewhat&#13;
sustained by his presence.&#13;
"Do you really mean to try to reach&#13;
William?" she asked. "Suppose that&#13;
you should be discovered and recognized&#13;
as his friend?"&#13;
John shrugged his shoulders.&#13;
"Then we shall probably be shot together.&#13;
Yes, Miss Harrison, a fainting&#13;
fit will be quite superfluous here&#13;
and cannot serve us in the least. If&#13;
you are not resolute, the game will be&#13;
lost; and -I tell you frankly that it&#13;
is a matter of life and death. We&#13;
shall undoubtedly be considered spies,&#13;
and your cousin will certainly do&#13;
nothing to clear up the error. This&#13;
Is the exact state of the case. Will&#13;
you lie here, fainting, while it 1B decided,&#13;
or will you do what you can to&#13;
help?"&#13;
These blunt words fulfilled their purpose.&#13;
What William, with all his consideration&#13;
and tenderness, had failed&#13;
to do, his friend's-sharpness accomplished.&#13;
Florence, who was really on i&#13;
quest him not to enter the sick cham&#13;
ber. Miss Florence does not wish it. J t n a t ^e n e a r ( i h i s n a m e s p oken by&#13;
some one close at hand. Of course it&#13;
must be a delusion, yet he stood still&#13;
and involuntarily glanced toward the&#13;
window. The voice reached him again.&#13;
This time more distinctly.&#13;
"William! Don't you hear?"&#13;
With a sudden spring, the young&#13;
man reached the somewhat high window,&#13;
behind whose gratings the outlines&#13;
of a human figure were now visible.&#13;
,&#13;
"John—you? Impossible! It can't&#13;
be!"&#13;
"I have the honor, however, to be&#13;
myself," was the reply. "Good evening,&#13;
Will!"&#13;
"But how did you get to Springfield?&#13;
How did you hear of my fate?&#13;
How did you succeed in making your&#13;
way here?"&#13;
, "Don't be in such a hurry. Put&#13;
your questions slowly, in regular order,&#13;
and I'll answer in the same way.&#13;
We shall have'plenty of leisure for it;&#13;
it will~be some time before I can saw&#13;
through this confounded iron grating."&#13;
The faint sound of a file showed that&#13;
the rescuer was really at work, and&#13;
at the noise fresh hope and courage&#13;
filled the young officer's soul. Freedom!&#13;
Rescued He could nave shout'&#13;
ed for joy at the bare thought, as If&#13;
the rescue had already been accomplished.&#13;
•&gt;&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
C O N G R E S S I O N A L N O T E S .&#13;
The administration shrinks from applying&#13;
the retaliatory clause in the&#13;
Dingiey tariff law to Canadian lumber,&#13;
because the province of Ontaria will&#13;
not let Michigan owners of stumpage&#13;
in that province take their logs home&#13;
to saw. Secretary Gage, who was believed&#13;
to favor that proposition, faced&#13;
the other way when Senator McMillan&#13;
and BUTTOWB. &lt;md Rep. Crump and&#13;
Fordney asked him on the 15th to exercise&#13;
his retaliatory powers under law.&#13;
He said he did not believe the Dingiey&#13;
law was broad enough to allow him to&#13;
do so, and that he did not see how he&#13;
could give it so generous a construction.&#13;
He said he felt they should go to congress&#13;
for their relief. The four urged&#13;
that Ontario's action amounted to con*&#13;
fiscation of property; that timber was&#13;
bought with the full understanding&#13;
that it was to be sawed in the United&#13;
States and that owners of it were entitled&#13;
to the protection of this~government&#13;
in so flagrant a violation of a&#13;
plain contract. If the matter was to&#13;
again go to congress it would mean to&#13;
great a del-ay, and Secretary Gage finally&#13;
agreed to take the matter up in&#13;
cabinet meeting.&#13;
The house slate, so far as Michigan&#13;
is concerned, is made up as follows:&#13;
Mr. Corliss, tally clerk, Frank H.&#13;
Waketfeld, Detroit, $3,000; Henry C.&#13;
Smith, a page, Mr. Allen, of Morenci,&#13;
8900; Mr. Gardner, assistant doorkeeper,&#13;
B. W. Kennedy, Grand Ledge, 82,000;&#13;
Mr. Hamilton, clerk in folding room,&#13;
not yet selected, but probably of Barry&#13;
county, 81,200; Wm. Alden Smith, assistant&#13;
sergeant-at-arms, Cal. E. S.&#13;
Pierce* Grand Rapids, 82,000; Samuel&#13;
W. Smith, locksmith of congress, W. C.&#13;
Jones, Detroit, 81,440; Mr. Weeks, postoffice&#13;
clerk, Silas F. Scott, 81,200, and&#13;
chaplain, Rev. Henry N. Couden, Port&#13;
Huron,-£900; Mr. Fordney, policeman,&#13;
H. A. Savage, Saginaw, 81,000; Mr. Bishop,&#13;
assistant librarian, Roswell F.&#13;
Bishop, Ludington, S1,S00; Mr. Cump,&#13;
messenger, not yet selected, 81,000; Mr.&#13;
Mesick, reading clerk, D. E. Alward,&#13;
Clare, 83.600; Mr. Shelden. policeman,&#13;
iJamesb'C'onnell, Si.000; late lieuteuant&#13;
34th Michigan infantry.&#13;
Secretary Gage on the 17th informed&#13;
(Senator McMillan of a decision that&#13;
the Dinglej- law as it stands will not&#13;
warrant attempting" retaliation on Canada&#13;
for Ontario's prohibition of the exportation&#13;
of sawlogs. The attitude of&#13;
the cabinet against stirring up the&#13;
British government over the matter&#13;
must have been pretty firm, as Senator&#13;
McMillan said he did not believe the&#13;
plan to^ask the state department to&#13;
proceed against the British government&#13;
for confiscation of property promised&#13;
any hope of relief.&#13;
Mr. Burton, of Ohio, on the 18th introduced&#13;
a resolution, calling upon the&#13;
secretary of war to furnish the house&#13;
of representatives all correspondence&#13;
and reports now on file in the war department&#13;
pertaining to a proposed&#13;
power canal projected by the Michigan&#13;
Lake &amp; Superior Power Co., to be constructed&#13;
in the state of Michigan from&#13;
Lake Superior, above St. Mary's Rapids,&#13;
to a point below said .rapids.&#13;
The special committee of the house&#13;
investigating the case of Brighum II.&#13;
Roberts, of Utah, on the 17th reached&#13;
conclusions. On the polygamous status&#13;
of Mr. Roberts the committee was&#13;
unanimous and agreed. on a formal&#13;
statement of facts. The report* of the&#13;
committee is expected on the 20th, and&#13;
the house will take up the subject,&#13;
probably not later than the 23d.&#13;
Rep. Payne, of New York, chairman&#13;
of .the ways and means committee of&#13;
the house and iloor leader of the majority,&#13;
on the llJth introduced in the&#13;
.house a.bill to extend the customs and&#13;
internal revenue laws of the United&#13;
States over the island of Puerto Rico.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
The house committee on election of&#13;
the President and Vice-President on the&#13;
17th agreed on a favorable report on&#13;
the joint resolution for an amendment&#13;
to the constitution for the election of&#13;
United States senators by the direct&#13;
vote of the people.&#13;
The urgency appropriation measure,&#13;
appropriating S45.000,000 for disabled&#13;
soldiers, widows and orphans of the&#13;
late Spanish-American war, passed the&#13;
house »n the 17th.&#13;
44 Take Time by&#13;
The Forelock*+&#13;
Won't «**# untilsickness overtakes yotu&#13;
When that tired feeling* the first rheumatic&#13;
pain* the first vjamings of impure&#13;
blood are manifest, take Hood's Sarsap*?&#13;
rUla and you vM rescue your health and&#13;
probably save a serious sickness, 5Br sure&#13;
to get Hood's, because&#13;
tftbodA &amp;&#13;
T h e m e n w h o a r e a l w a y s m a k i n g&#13;
f o o l s of t h e m s e l v e s m a y he g i v e n o n e&#13;
credit mark. T h e y a r e n o t a p t t o&#13;
m a k e fools of others.&#13;
I t i s h i s m o n e y rather than t h e poll-*&#13;
tician h i m s e l f t h a t h a s t h e h a b i t o f&#13;
g e t t i n g In t h e h a n d s o f , h i s &lt; friends&#13;
about caucus time.—Chicago Dispatch.&#13;
Sellable Help Wanted&#13;
(Either sex.) The Humanitarian Home sad Ssnifat*&#13;
lum for Invalids and Health Seekers, Incorporated&#13;
Send 12c In stamps for full Information. Address&#13;
J. H. TelUebauaj, Treasurer, Las Vegas, N. 1L&#13;
How many saw Peter denying his liord, who&#13;
didn't see him when he was weeping bitterly.&#13;
Some people who are in the social swim find it&#13;
difficult to keep their heads above water.&#13;
TO CURE A COLD I N ONE DAT,&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. AH&#13;
druggists refund the money if it fails to etfre.&#13;
25c. £ . W. Grove's signature on each box.&#13;
There is nothing like the word of God for&#13;
ohanging a dark prospect into a bright one.&#13;
Era FermaneDOjCujtrtl. Kofita or BervoasneM aflat&#13;
t day's u u of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restore*.&#13;
Send for F R E E S3.00 trial bottle and treatise.&#13;
Da. B. H. J&amp;UNX. Ltd.. 931 Arch St., Philadelphia. Pa&gt;&#13;
Science is continually having to reconsider he*&#13;
declarations, but Christ made no mistakes.-&#13;
Mrs* Winslow's Soothing: Syrup.&#13;
For children teething, softens the game, reduces tn»&#13;
flammaUon, allays pain, cures wind colic. » c a bottle.&#13;
Take care of the pennies and your heirs wil*&#13;
not have a care until they are penniless.&#13;
For More Than a Century&#13;
Baker's Chocolate has been the standard. Made only&#13;
by Walter Baker &amp; Co. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass.&#13;
If the birds destroy insects and worms for you*&#13;
why sLou'.d they not have a-little fruit?&#13;
1 never used so quick a cure as Piso's Care fo»&#13;
Consumption—J. B. Palmer, Box 1171, Seattle,&#13;
Wash., Nov. 25. 18½.&#13;
Conscience makes cowards of us all, or else*&#13;
cowardice'makes us conscientious.&#13;
Brown's Teethtnx Cordial is warranted*&#13;
ami is never returned us worthless.&#13;
A cement of ashes, salt and water is excellent&#13;
for filling the cracks of stoves. i&#13;
c Nearly alUunds_of garden peas will yield better&#13;
if planted reasonably deep.&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
New York— Cattle Sheep Lamb* fTop*&#13;
Best grades 14 5.¾¾¾ .V) . *4 » #6 75 f4 9'i&#13;
LowergraUes.,.3 tKXtf.4 2&gt; 3 5J 6 0J 173&#13;
Chicago—&#13;
Best grades 5 2"*ft6 40 5 03&#13;
Lower grades. .4 U0&amp;4 W 4 M)&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Best prudes.... .3 75@4 60 1 51&#13;
Lower grades. •.- 5U&lt;£3 "o 3 23&#13;
Buffalo—&#13;
Best grades 3 »@J 35 5 0)&#13;
Lower grades.. .3 2o$4 o; 4 40&#13;
Cincinnati—&#13;
Best grades 5 35^5 75 AV&gt;&#13;
Lowergrades...4 40£5 a a SO&#13;
n t U b a r s j —&#13;
Best grades 5 503« W 4 80&#13;
Lower grades.. 4 2S®5 00 4 25&#13;
6 40&#13;
4 65&#13;
61»&#13;
5 5J&#13;
6 4)&#13;
b 80&#13;
&lt;&#13;
ft 23&#13;
b 4J&#13;
6 f t&#13;
600&#13;
4 75&#13;
4 45&#13;
4 75&#13;
4 25&#13;
80&#13;
50&#13;
65&#13;
35&#13;
475&#13;
4 40&#13;
G R A I N , E T C&#13;
Wheat. Corn,&#13;
No. 2 red No. 2 mix&#13;
New York&#13;
Chicago&#13;
'Dotrott&#13;
Tolotfo&#13;
Ctaolaaatt&#13;
Plttabmrc&#13;
653657.&#13;
7 0 # 7 J *&#13;
d9®63_&#13;
7J®71&#13;
71Q71*&#13;
40&amp;4JH&#13;
» $ 3 3 *&#13;
&amp; &amp; S 2 *&#13;
S3Q32&#13;
*&amp;S3&#13;
stasjtt&#13;
sans**&#13;
Oats.&#13;
No. 2 white&#13;
2*a.&gt;3*&#13;
27^27 ft&#13;
•©asirtisf&#13;
•Detroit—Hay. No. 1 Timothy, lis 00 per too.&#13;
Potatoes,' 48c per bu. Live Poultry, spring&#13;
cBlekeaa, 7e per lb; fowU, S J : turkey*. So;&#13;
ducks. So. E m strictly fresh, Ito per doseo.&#13;
Butter, best ds4rf» 1*J per lb; creamery, tte&gt;&#13;
&lt;&#13;
; -&#13;
For Sick&#13;
Mfofiteif&#13;
First—the mediclno that&#13;
holds the rooord for%tho&#13;
largest number of absolute&#13;
Cures of female His&#13;
Is Lydla Em Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound*&#13;
Second—Mrsm Pfnkham&#13;
can show by her letter&#13;
files In Lynn that a million&#13;
women have been&#13;
restored to health by her&#13;
medicine and advices&#13;
Third Ail letters to Mrs.&#13;
Plnkham are received,&#13;
opened, read and answered&#13;
by women only*&#13;
This fast Is certified to by&#13;
the mayor and postmaster&#13;
of Lynn and others of—&#13;
Hrfrsm Plnkham's own ohym&#13;
Write for free book containing&#13;
these oertlflcatesm&#13;
Every ailing woman Is&#13;
Invited to write to Mrs.&#13;
Plnkham and get her advice&#13;
free of charge*&#13;
Lvdis. E. Plnkham Med. Co., Lynn* Mass.&#13;
PARALYSIS Locomotor Ataxia eea&#13;
quered at task Doctor*&#13;
p o n i e d . 8perlallaU&#13;
amazed at recovery of patienu thought Inrurab)*. ky&#13;
OR. CHASE'S BLOOD AND NERV£ FOOD.&#13;
Write m« about your case. Advice and proof or evrea&#13;
DR. CHASK. Ui X. 1Mb St.. PHILADELPHIA, rib&#13;
F O R E V E R Y H O U S E K E E P E R .&#13;
The G#xo Selfhestfug Flat Iron and Btore&gt;&#13;
taabitied is,* new lnTsnttoa o f great Yfjas*&#13;
to housekeeper*. ItgiTestmytMrtdsslTsdt&#13;
is odorless, safe, simple, complete; s * r e s&#13;
time, labor, health, twt S cents n s t o s f t&#13;
all &lt; U T . I t appeals t o everyooe. OttSw&#13;
Md itisiXKttspensihle, A s p n l T i i n i v&#13;
• E B T W U A * . A n y o a * c a n Ma if* Am&#13;
irastitttiom will peqr y e a . O H F L A T&#13;
ION CO.. Kii.sMHoo. Stoca.&#13;
/&#13;
/&#13;
'••mjua*. — ^tv\ytm sfc*s»wsfcej*fc»i»i» •• t i • ' • , • » , * - • - * - - •JWi*&#13;
5 r i ^ # ' ; ; ••'"• - ' • ' . ' • ' • • • • • • • • • • • . . . . .&#13;
in 1« in « ' ,1 iiJWtWhQ^WHp m III i l i . n i •!«&gt;! I | i l l&#13;
•»•• ..|.».|i«»'&gt; , IH.^IIII .i i n^Tt'i T;'I»; " » . 'l"»l,T.',?S''Tir**,T&#13;
"^yii't'M »n'«n»U^"iiyii i »» «&lt;iiii i ii »i .i i 'ir.inn.o , i .11». ,1 ,,1,.'—&lt;««fp)^C^i»w«i,w»U i »iin n« ''inv'l HI iin»tiii&lt;ii&gt;ijjnnii.niJ.mBHB_iii \t ' " n * 1 : ^ ' ' * * * y ''*'l l ,"»W(M&gt;'wWW'^*fc,^Bpl , , l *l **'f*^**P'««»0^*illllj&#13;
* : • • ; • : • . : " ,,4&lt;"i'-' ,&#13;
rv.&#13;
# :&#13;
• &gt; *&#13;
j ;• '&#13;
t"&#13;
| f&#13;
*&#13;
• f *&#13;
v"&#13;
i ,&#13;
®he gincltiug f tejwtoh.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS , - EDITOR.&#13;
THTTRvSDAY, J AN. 25, 1900,&#13;
i&#13;
UNAMLLA FARMER'S CLUB.&#13;
This Paper&#13;
One Year.&#13;
Farm Journal&#13;
5 Year?.&#13;
PAY UP AND GET BOTH PAPERS AT PRICE&#13;
OF ONE.&#13;
We w a n t t o tfet 10() n e w s u b -&#13;
s c r i b e r s t o o u r p a p e r , a n d a r e g o -&#13;
i n g to d o i t if we c a n ; we t h e r e -&#13;
fore c o n t i n u e o u r a r r a n g e m e n t&#13;
with t h e F a r m J o u r n a l by w h i c h&#13;
we cnn eend t W PlNCKKEY D i s -&#13;
FATCH o n e y e a r a n d t h e F a r m&#13;
J o u r n e l 5 years, b o t h for $1.00.&#13;
A n d w e m a k e t h e s a m e offer t o all&#13;
old t-ubscribers w h o will p a y all&#13;
a r r e a r a g e s a n d o n e y e a r i n a d -&#13;
vance.&#13;
You k n o w w h a t o u r p a p e r is,&#13;
and t h e F a r m J o u r u a l is a g e m —&#13;
practical, p r o g r e s s i v e — a clean,&#13;
T h e U n a d i l l a F a r m e r s ' C l u b&#13;
h e ld tlnm' first a n n u a l m e e t i n g&#13;
a n d election of officers on S a t u r -&#13;
day last a t t h e home""of M r . a n d&#13;
Mrs. Z. Hartsuff. A large n u m -&#13;
b e r were p r e s e n t a n d a t 2 o'clock&#13;
P r e s . H o w l e t t called t h e c l u b t o&#13;
o r d e r a n d opened by . singing, « u d&#13;
p r a y e r by R e v . Whitfield. T h i s&#13;
was followed by t h e election of&#13;
officers which resulted as follows:&#13;
President, Thos Howlett&#13;
Vice i»r-t'B., ' Z. Hartsuff&#13;
Secretary, Emory Glenn&#13;
Treat-unr, Win. Sales&#13;
Cor. Secretary, Fred SStowe&#13;
T h e following c o m m i t t e e w a s&#13;
a p p o i n t e d with i n s t r u c t i o n s t o a r&#13;
SoUtor'ft Setter&#13;
*5TOV{V TiCoxvo\»\u.&#13;
O n B o a r d V. S. T r a n s p o r t ;&#13;
H O N O L U L U , H . I , D E C , 10, '99.&#13;
A s I s a t on deck t h i s a f t e r n o o n&#13;
r e a d i n g a F r e e P r e s s — w e e k old—&#13;
my t h o u g h t s w a n d e r back t o h o m e&#13;
and f r i e n d s , — t h o u s a n d s of miles&#13;
away. 1 t h i n k of y o u a u d says t o&#13;
myself, +'11 write B o b a n d h e r e&#13;
goes. !&#13;
S u p p o s e y o u will b e s u r p r i s e d&#13;
to h e a r I am once more back i n&#13;
A FREE PATTERN&#13;
irteat, JaSoTwUftiraaTstrtetfrtgtssata 4m&amp;*&#13;
MAGAZINE' YEAR&#13;
t h e a r m y b u t after my Cubiau&#13;
r a n g e a p r o g r a m for two m o n t h s : ! * « p I could n o t settle down u n t i l&#13;
F r a n k B i r u i e , W m . P y p e r , O t t o&#13;
Arnold.&#13;
F r a n k B i r n i e then gave a talk&#13;
I saw t h e P h i l l i p i n e s , so after I&#13;
rested u p for a few weeks I re-inlisted,&#13;
was a s s i g u e d t o t h e 42ud&#13;
on " C l o v e r HS a feed a n d fertiliz-11»f. given a S e r g e a n c y a n d a t&#13;
er." H e said clover has been used ouce settled down t o t h e r o u t i n e&#13;
as a fertilizer for a good m a n y | of a r m y life for a n o t h e r t w o years&#13;
years. E v e n in tlie history of u n l e s s sooner d i s c h a r g e d o r killed.&#13;
G r e e c e a n d R o m e they used g r e e n I n o u r % r i p from Buffalo N . Y.&#13;
. . , , "*„iT ""# p l a n t s for fertilizer. W e have S a n F r a u c i s c o , o u r t r a i n w a s&#13;
honest, useful p a p e r — r u l l of f , , , , .• , , - n , r&gt; , XTT&#13;
*• * n * i - „.• n ^ know edge that clover itself, w a s wrecked at Castle Rock W y o .&#13;
g u m p t i o n , f u n of s u u s h i n e , w i t h ; , , . , . « ^ ' • w * 3 w u 1&#13;
^ • w , , ^ used Rs a fertilizer over 300 y e a r s We w e n t down a b i g e m b a n k m e n t&#13;
i m m e n s e circulation a m o n g t h e ! J , . , , . , . ,, •&#13;
. ° ago. I n t h e old couutry I never a n d t h e cars s m a s h e d i n t o k i n d -&#13;
best p e o p l e e v e r y w h e r e . Y o u , k l ] e w c l ( ) V e r f o f f t i l Q n e t r o M e l i n ^ w o o d b u U e 8 c a p e d u u h a r m - j&#13;
o u g h t to t a k e it. | seems to be. in g e t t i n g a catch of ed so I take t h a t as a sign I a m&#13;
~~ QUESTION ANSWERED^ U e e d ; b u t this qnesiion WH* well g o i n g t o g o t h r o u g h safely. A m&#13;
Yes. August Flower still has the largest'discussed at t h e Andersou...Club. feeling flue. W e sailed from S a n&#13;
gale of any medicine in the civilized world, j I h a v e liadjiocd luck i n / s e e d i n g F r a n c i s c o o n T h a n k s g i v i n g d a y '&#13;
your mothers and grar.dmothtrs never with oats, HIHO with cdrn. Clover a n d ha&lt;l a most delightful voyage j&#13;
thought of using anything else for Indjgw- i s c } a 8 ^ ( ] a s H . . , ^ . , HlHt benrs - « e a calm a n d very plesant&#13;
tion or Biliousness. T)octors were Scarce, , . - ., , , . . . rv i.i • * i.u 1 A- . . . t . V o p pods, a n d this &lt;•lH^^ &lt; f plants ah- weather. On t h e e v e n i n g of t h e 1&#13;
and they seldom herd or Appedicitis, iNer- f &gt; r « t j c&#13;
vous Prostration or Htart failure, etc. I s o r b s n i t r o g e n h i Li liie Hir a n d e i g h t h d a y o u t Sighted o u r first&#13;
They used August Flower to clean out the j t h a t is what is needed Did n o t land, t h e Hawaiian A r c h i p e l a g o ,&#13;
system and stop fermentation of undigested I believe t h a t a n \ v\ lh&lt; fertilizers W e land a t r H o n o l u l u for a few!&#13;
-&gt; food, regulate the-ciion of the liver, stim-1 ftdverlige(1 . p ^ . ^ : , , , , IIH' , . | o v e P i ( U y s r e s t , to coal a n d provision&#13;
W i t h clover as a fertilizer we g e t tlie boat". T h e y call t h i s g r o u p of&#13;
ing dull and bad with headaches and other i b n t little weed seed T h i s is all islands t h e " P e a r l of t h e Pacific";&#13;
aches. You only peed a few doses of [very good, but.how a r e a e to ^ e t x , u c h h a s BejBn said a n d w r i t t e n&#13;
t h e a r c h i p e l a g o e m b r a c i n g a n area ^ , ^ ^ , ^ , 1 ^ ^ ^ ^ 5 ¾ ¾ } ¾ ¾ ¾&#13;
of m o r e t h a n 50 miles, a n d a s t h e ^ i ^ f ^ ^ ^ &amp; X i J S &amp; ^ X S&#13;
a p p r o a c h e s to i t a r e t h r o u g h&#13;
beautiful groves of o r a n g e , lemon&#13;
a n d b a n a n a a t r e e s , it w a s most&#13;
delightful. S o m e of t h e boys cont&#13;
i n u e d t h e " t r i p t o t h e clouds'* (an&#13;
t o M t . K o n a h u a n u i w h i c h is 4,(&#13;
feet i n h i g h t b u t I h a d climed _ ^ - .-. mMlttttmaM*~&#13;
e n o u g h for o n e d a y a n d t u r n e d J ^ ^ S ^ ^ S S t f S w S s s *&#13;
back t o t h e city. H e r e I visited&#13;
t h e P a l i o r p u b l i c p a r k w h i c h is&#13;
s i m p l y a g a r d e n of E d e n filled&#13;
with a most g o r g e o u s a r r a y of&#13;
f e r n s , p l a n t s a n d s h r u b b e r y of all&#13;
v a r i e t i e s k n o w n t o t h e ... ,&#13;
M e r e surf b a t h i n g is also enjoyed T H E MCCALL C O M P A N Y ,&#13;
to its best. T h e b e a c h is onmpoa* * — w ™ " » _ ^&#13;
ed of p u r e w h i t e s"and a n d slopes! j +~\ ^ A \T \ C T C&#13;
g e n t l y d o w n while t h e w a t e r h a s ; J * V - J . - ^ ^ x " * X L-» L v O&#13;
MS CALL&#13;
M BAZAR* " FATTERNS i. EnittT sut toMtbar Only «0 fcnd ll «•»** • • ' ^ r i ^ i f&#13;
t r o p i C 8 . Khe r.P SoldVn M*rly e/«ry city »njttov^or by «01.&#13;
. , AA lor them. AbiolutelytaryUwtmiAo^^*!"*&#13;
ulate the nervous and organic action of the&#13;
system, and that is all they took when feel-&#13;
Green's August Flower, in liquid form, to&#13;
make you satisfied there is nothing serious&#13;
the matter with you. Sample bottle at&#13;
F. A. Sigler'fl.&#13;
. . • # • « -&#13;
Tt is a curious property of the compounds&#13;
of tellurium thnt they havp a&#13;
putrid and unbearable odor. London&#13;
phvcMeians have taken advantage of&#13;
.this f;»ct in prescribing: it for feminine&#13;
patients whom they wish to temporarily&#13;
isolate from society.&#13;
When the Dominion' liner" Labrador&#13;
went to pieees on the coast of&#13;
Fcotland a large part of her cargo.&#13;
which, c-nsieted o-f. app'es. driit"d&#13;
a-hore otl the islands of Mull and&#13;
loan. From these thousands of&#13;
sprouts have sprung up and the thriftv&#13;
islanders are busy transplanting&#13;
them.&#13;
Fingers aTeraltred-at a high-price in&#13;
Australia. A Mefhourne boy of eieht&#13;
had his fingers crushed in a gate at&#13;
ta level crossing and one had to bo»&#13;
•amputated. An action on his behalf&#13;
was brought against the State railway&#13;
department.- The jury awfarded the&#13;
full amount claimed. $5,000.&#13;
A bridge composed wholly of telegraph&#13;
who was buit over the Jhelum&#13;
river at Kohala. in the Punjab, in the&#13;
place nf a bridge which was swept&#13;
by the floods in 1892. A similar*&#13;
t h e c l o v e r — I tliii-k • we need to .about H o n o l u l u , t h i s metropolis&#13;
sow r y e , b u c k w h e a t o r some nimi- of t h e Mid-Pacific, b u t i t is imposl&#13;
a r c r o p , plow it u n d e r a n d y e t sible for e i t h e r w r i t e r or a r t i s t t o&#13;
t h e vegetable m a t t e r back i n t o the_ begin to d o it justice, t h o u g h&#13;
g r o u n d which is needed for t h e nTany have tried. H e r e we experg&#13;
r o w t h of clover. T h i n k t h a t t h e ienced t h e first r e a l taste of t h e&#13;
clover is w o r t h as much for feed tropics, a l t h o u g h s u r r o u n d e d on&#13;
as a fertilizer, b u t have n o t y o t a 1 1 s i d e s " S b y ^ J J n g l i s h s p e a k i n g&#13;
time to discuss t h a t point today. P ' ^ p l e still o n e feels t h a t h e is i n -&#13;
Mr^ H o w l e t t was to discuss t h e&#13;
q u e s t i o n , b u t t h o u g h t ~ M r . B i r n i e&#13;
h a d covered t h e subject e n t i r e l y .&#13;
d e e d in a foreign clime. T h e&#13;
H a w a i i a n islands a b o u t t w e n t y i n&#13;
all a r e of volcanic origin. - T h e&#13;
\&#13;
T h e talk was followed by a vocal d i s t r i b u t i n g c e n t r e is H o n o l u l u ,&#13;
solo b y M i s s I n e z Marshall. which h a s a beautiful laud locked&#13;
Mrs. E . J . H a r r i s then r ^ a d a h a r b o r sufficiently 'Targe to.accom-^&#13;
fine p a p e r , " T h e W o m a n P r o b - i ' 1 a t * s t e a m e r s of t h e l a r g e s t tonlem."&#13;
I t was an excellent p a p e r i m « e w h i c h ' l i e a l o n ^ s i d e o f&#13;
a n d was discussed b"j Mrs. R. R, w h a r v e s d u r i n g t h e i r stay here. |&#13;
W o o d w o r t h . T h i s w a s followed A f t e r o u r fransport w a s m a d e&#13;
by a s o n g b y Mr. a n d Mrs. G a t e s , f««t to t h e dock, we were inform- (&#13;
s o l o b y F . L . A n d r e w s , a n d tf song ed t h a t d u r i n g o u r stay h e r e — |&#13;
by M a s t e r H e n r y Bowman. a b o u t 10 days—we would be given :&#13;
T h e t r e a s u r e r s r e p o r t was t h e n s h o r e leave from 10 a. m. t o 1 1 m&#13;
r e a d a n d accepted, s h o w i n g t h a t m - a n d w e ftt 0 U f " e began t o form&#13;
t h e c l u b h a s a balance to t h e i r p l a n s to see i s m u c h as possible&#13;
c r e d i t of over *8.00., A c o m m i t t e e o | j [ f e ^ n try. T h e city prop.• j&#13;
of ladies, u p o n m a k i n g iuvestiga- u a s a population of a b o u t 30,000 a&#13;
bridge wasVonstructed'durlng the"lirst | tions, r e p o r t e d t h a t t h e c o m i n g -great m a n y o t w h o m a r e Ameri-i&#13;
Soudan campaign over the Kokora j y e a r t h e y should serve n o refresh- c a n s a n d E u r o p e a n s a n d t h e E n - j&#13;
m e n t s w i t h t h e exceptions of o n e glish l a n g u a g e is a l m o s t univers-;&#13;
\ a n d u n d e r s t o o d&#13;
The first I&#13;
river for military purposes.&#13;
Miss Jane L. Ruchan, a young wo- | , b a n n n e t a t t*ne election of ally spoken&#13;
man of Southern Pines. N. C . has dis- a n n u a l o a n q u e t , at t n e eiecnon O I J • • H ;&#13;
"vered a new field of industry for officers; t h e r e p o r t w a s adopted, t h r o u g h o u t t h e g r o u p .&#13;
wvmen in grape-packing. As the&#13;
grape season lasts only a few weeks,&#13;
in order tQ make Tt payrshe contracts&#13;
with various vineyards and has a&#13;
corps of' experienced girl workers&#13;
trained by herself.&#13;
It has heen demonstrated repfcafedly&#13;
in every state in the tjnion %nd in&#13;
many forpiirm conn tries* that Uhamher-&#13;
Iain's ronj?4» }?emedy i« a certain prevnntive&#13;
and ^nre^or cronp. It has&#13;
become MIH n n i v e r ^ l remedy ior that.&#13;
dweasM \1 V Fisher, of L^erty^ W.&#13;
Va., »«nly repeats what, has been said&#13;
a r o n n d t h e wrlohe vyh^n he write^: ' ' I&#13;
have us^d ('Humherlain's (^outrh Remedy&#13;
in my Kmily for several years&#13;
and alway* with perfect success. We&#13;
hftlieve that i», is not only the I e»|&#13;
p.oouh rnmedy, hut that if is a suie&#13;
inre tor cronp. It hag saved th« lives&#13;
y/ of onr children H nni.nber nt* t i m e s "&#13;
This remedy is f*»r sale by b\ A. Sitffer.&#13;
Driitftfi&gt;t.&#13;
one m o n t h a t t h e hall iu Uuadflla&#13;
* ; '"If*''&#13;
F. A Sitfler ^uarnnteHs every hot&#13;
level c a n b e seeu all t h e . s u r r o u n d -&#13;
| i n g c o u n t r y a most beautiful&#13;
I sight. F r o m P u n c h Bowl Hill I&#13;
climbed Mt. T a n t l u s 2,000 feet&#13;
above s e a level, from which is o b -&#13;
t a i n e d t h e best possible view of&#13;
Werner's Dictionary of Synonyms &amp; Antonyms,&#13;
Mythology and Familiar Pbrases. .&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL, DETROIT&#13;
AMKMtCAfi AMO WHO**** PLAM,&gt;&#13;
j$m TO %» mo 0I.OOTO0M.OO t&#13;
U* TO OATMOAPM9&#13;
T h e r € h i b adjourned to m » e t i n place I visited w a s P u n c h Bowl&#13;
HTTlT T h i s is a n e x t i n c t c r a t o r&#13;
a n d only a b o u t 20 m i n u e t s walk&#13;
t.i, e ot. nC.h amo. e.rh. ns „C ouw,h „R emed,y and, from .o u r, t r anspor t . Pr om i t s ! A ...S - , .&#13;
„,,, . ( . / . . . s u m m i t a b o u t ol)0 feet above sea&#13;
will refund toe money tc any one who&#13;
is not salsified alter Usin^j two thirds&#13;
ot the contents." This is the he^t remedy&#13;
in the world tor la grippe coughs,&#13;
colds, croop and whooping cou^h and&#13;
is pleasant and safe to take. It prevents&#13;
any tendency of a cold to result&#13;
in pneumouin. t mar.-l&#13;
The .society of total nhstainer^ just&#13;
formed in Vienna Is the first ever estahlishrd&#13;
in Austria. Kveryhody&#13;
drinks in Aitstrla.. An Auatrlan baby&#13;
l.'O.ginjj to &lt;=ip heer nt the age- ~f three&#13;
months, and, as it grows up. learns to&#13;
ronsTime the Hnuor. tn ever-increasing&#13;
qttantity until, when a ful'-growa&#13;
Kman. he can drink tt by the gallon.&#13;
A steel hlrd's nest was recently acqui.&#13;
e,d~by. the mueeum of Soleure; in&#13;
Switzerland. Soleure has an extensive&#13;
watch and clock factory, and thin&#13;
metal filings are c-ntfnually being"&#13;
| swept into the roads with the waste&#13;
from the yorkshop»-• Of—these two&#13;
wagtails built a ne^t, which was"&#13;
cared after their brood bad flown.&#13;
a delightful mild t e m p e r a t u r e . I t&#13;
is n e e d l e s s t o a d d I took a d i p .&#13;
O n r e t u r n i n g t o t h e boat I found&#13;
I was slated for " S e r g e a n t of t h e&#13;
G u a r d " t o - m o r r o w so I will n o t&#13;
see s h o r e a g a i n for 48 h o u r s .&#13;
I have fiuised m y trick of g u a r d&#13;
a n d fatigue d u t y — o n c e m o r e I&#13;
a m off t o see t h e s i g h t s a s notice&#13;
is posted we leave d a y after tom&#13;
o r r o w . I j o i n e d a p a r t y going&#13;
t o see t h e m o s t wonderfull s i g h t&#13;
o n t h e i s l a n d — t h e volcano K i l -&#13;
auea. W e g o h o r s e back over t h e&#13;
new g o v e r n m e n t road, a s s e n d i n g&#13;
to a h i g h t of 4,000 feet b u t s o adm&#13;
i r a b l e i s t h e g r a d e t h a t o u r&#13;
horses g o a t a s w e e p i n g t r o t&#13;
n e a r l y t h e e n t i r e distance, p a s s i n g&#13;
t h r o u g h scenes of tropical magnifi&#13;
c e n c e t h a t fairly b e g g a r d i s c r i p -&#13;
tion. T h i s volcano is called t h e&#13;
place of endless" fire, a n d never&#13;
was a n a m e m o r e fittingly b e -&#13;
stowed. I m a g i n e a J a k e whose&#13;
fires a r e n e v e r q u e n c h e d a fiery&#13;
sea with waves like those of t h e&#13;
ocean t o s s i n g t o a n d fro, t h r o w i n g&#13;
u p m o l t e d lava i n t o t h e a i r t h e&#13;
d a s h i n g of g r e a t b r e a k e r s o n t h e&#13;
beech b u t b r e a k e r s of l i v i n g fire&#13;
i n s t e a d of water, a n d t h e n only&#13;
t h e faintest c o n c e p t i o n of t h e&#13;
g r a n d a w e - i n s p i r i n g s i g h t c a n b e&#13;
conceived. I t is n e e d l e s s for m e&#13;
to s a y — I will r e m e m b e r it t o m y&#13;
d i e i u g day. S t r a n g e a s i t m a y&#13;
seem, t h e c l i m a t e n e a r t h e volc&#13;
a n o w a s n o t d i s a g r e e a b l e a n d&#13;
t h « y say t h e n i g h t s a r e very&#13;
chilly.&#13;
W e l l o u r stay h e r e is u p a n d&#13;
w i t h a m i n g l e d feeling of p l e a s u r e&#13;
a u d r e g r e t , I " o n c e more* g o on&#13;
b o a r d for a r u n of 10 o r 12 d a y s&#13;
t h r o u g h t h e " s u m m e r s e a s " t o&#13;
J a p a n . W e will l a n d a t T o k i o&#13;
w h e r e all b a n d s g o a s h o r e t o&#13;
s t r e t c h o u r legs a n d i n c i d e n t l y d o&#13;
a little d r i l l i n g I will w r i t e y o u&#13;
a g a i n from t h e r e ,&#13;
I want to let t,h* people who suffer&#13;
from rheumatism and siatica know&#13;
that Chamberlain's Pain Balm relieved&#13;
me after a number of other medi&#13;
cines and a doctor bad failed. It. is&#13;
the best liniment 1 have ever known&#13;
of—J. A. Dodiron, Alpharetta, Ga.&#13;
Thousands have been cured of rhedmrtigin&#13;
by this remedy. One application&#13;
relieves the pain. For sale by&#13;
A. Sigler,.Drutfflist.&#13;
P l a i n f i e l d , M i c h .&#13;
Funeral&#13;
Director&#13;
and&#13;
&amp;mb Imer.&#13;
R e s i d e n c e t m i l e n o r t h of v i l l a g e .&#13;
S t a l e Tcl-.vph \n*. C o n e c t l o n .&#13;
All c a l l s o p i '»o lv i t s w p d.&#13;
ijifhanarv&#13;
A book that should be in the vest&#13;
pocket of every person, because it&#13;
tttils you the right word to use.&#13;
Wo Two Words in the English&#13;
Language Have Exactly the&#13;
Same Significance. To express&#13;
the precise meaning .that one intend!&#13;
To convej_a-4EHcfcionary of*&#13;
Synonyms is needed to avoid repetition.&#13;
The rtningent figure of&#13;
speech Is antithesis. In this dictionary&#13;
the appended Antonyms&#13;
will, therefore,; be found extremely&#13;
valuable. Contains many other&#13;
features such as Mythology,&#13;
Familiar Allusions and Fot-&#13;
•tfB Phrasas, prof, toilette's Memory&#13;
System, "The Art of Never Forgetting," etc..&#13;
etc. This wonderful little book bound In a neat&#13;
eloth binding and sent postpaid for $0.26. Full&#13;
Leather, gUl edge, $0.40. postpaid. Order at&#13;
e. Send tor our large book catalogue, free.&#13;
Addreasall orders to&#13;
THE WERNER COMPANY, j&#13;
AO0M, OBQ,&#13;
Sealed Blda,&#13;
We the undersigned Superintendents of&#13;
the poor in and for Livingston County&#13;
Mich., will receive Sealed bids and&#13;
Hpplications for Keeper of the Livingston&#13;
C*&gt;uflty_4&gt;ooT^farm-up to February l»UiJ&#13;
IdUU, said bids and applications shall state&#13;
\tages wanted including board for one&#13;
year. Age of man and wife and number&#13;
in family properly signed by applicant and&#13;
residence.&#13;
The said superintendenU reserve the&#13;
right to reject any or al) bide.&#13;
Ail applications to be Addressed to&#13;
Amos Winega* Secretary,. Bowel I, Mich.,&#13;
Dated January 22, It00.&#13;
Henry Dammana 1 Bopte.&#13;
K. A. Kphn '&#13;
Amos Wlnrgar TI the&#13;
Poor.&#13;
uiUficftfriOTS&#13;
May b e nicely cured b y u s i n g&#13;
EUREKA CJRN CURE.&#13;
I t c u r e s t h e T o e C o r n sure.&#13;
I t cure* hard o r HoftrCorus.&#13;
• I t cupel* a n y IJunimis.&#13;
I t cured all Callous Places.&#13;
A n d without pain o r i n c o u v e u -&#13;
i £ n c ' .&#13;
P r i c O i l y OjCents.&#13;
B y ^ • • J u r n M a i l .&#13;
A g e n t s -\ it..,l vr't'f for t e r m s .&#13;
Addies*. G'JUK:{\ "UTI'PLY H O D ' S E ,&#13;
I ' i s n ' k n e v , M u M ) .&#13;
Sana a a) s i Falll&#13;
IUJ00 liljlllsh JuuUilDDul r&#13;
Rail fond Guide.&#13;
ttranri IViiMk Rutlwav System.&#13;
Timn Trt^« f in «rtc! Nov 19, 1«99.&#13;
»1. /\. L -MVHION WESTBOUND.&#13;
No 27 Pamrtn.'i.f. PontUo t«v4ack4ua,&#13;
conin'rtion from Detroit 9 l 4 i a&#13;
No."i9 P^^uai-r, ** &gt;iti i' 11 fiCk-&gt;»*\. &gt;:i&gt;i&gt;. &lt;n.-&#13;
No. 39 has through ooa«:li tnna Detroit to J axon?—&#13;
No. 43 Mixed. Lenox to'.Uck^on&#13;
oonnpctimi from Detroit 4 4 5 p m&#13;
h\&lt;'\ OI'NIi&#13;
No 30 P&amp;Men »*r to PnnM'ac nn&lt;\ Dmroit A IS p la&#13;
No. 88 Pas»nnsr»*r.-laxon'o Detroit, S:t*ia.m.&#13;
No 29 HH&lt; lhr&gt;n&gt;jh &lt;roncii fr &gt; n l^tan to Detroit&#13;
No 44 Mixpvl •&lt;&gt; t ontiafi and L'enox 7 55 H &lt;n&#13;
All trains &lt;1silv «»xo&gt;»pt ^unriay.&#13;
No 44 connection at I'ontlnc-tor Detroit and&#13;
for t tt« west on D A M RK&#13;
W. j ! yi»«k. Air^nt, Plncltnev&#13;
AND STEAMSHIP LINES*&#13;
Populnr routn tor Ann AihM, Toledo&#13;
and points East, JSoutb, &lt;vnd ,lor&#13;
Howell, OvVD^so, AUna, Vft Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, VlanisleejiT.rHver.s« City a n d&#13;
points in Northwestern MiVhi^an;&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
=S! • i&#13;
50 YEARS&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
DtSIGfNt&#13;
CO^VRIQHT* A o .&#13;
Anyone tending a sketch and deecrlpttoo ssaf&#13;
tnfeklv aaneruin onr opinion free whether a s&#13;
mventlon \n probahly patenuble. ComranntflSt*&#13;
ttonsstrletlyoonfldentlal. Handbook on ~ '&#13;
OI&lt;tft*t agenrv 'or necorln&#13;
thronah k&#13;
special notice* without obarve, In th« Scientific Hmerkatu r.-'Aee lbaatkndmso oiBf ealyny U i &gt;» fowr noatL INN 4; CO&#13;
sent free. "Oldest agency for necunnepatente,&#13;
I Patents taken through Ifnnn ft Co, i&#13;
Tenn*,|ts&gt;&#13;
^ -&#13;
9 v&#13;
. &gt;&#13;
^ t ^ ^ ^^^^t^gggtmmammmmtmEdatt&#13;
. : &gt;&#13;
Vl v 4|*cr* to&lt;$euicDii*r.&#13;
Tbe original and jrennine Hed Pili-&#13;
Are KniU'e&amp;ed PtiiB tor v\ »n i*&gt;&lt;&gt;|n.&#13;
at 2$p» be*, - ton womon'e remedy.&#13;
)&gt;on't pay K&gt; cents.&#13;
Yon cbD Work when they work.&#13;
fcHvur i m p * o f make yoo *ick, Knih"&#13;
^ B i t w L t v H r M i s . Bowel,t&lt;«», »(ir&#13;
Twenty" live doses, 25 cents.&#13;
^ P l e a s a n t , weTe and ware are h i . I&#13;
Uiack OianUce* Pills. C»n*n SUIIHIIH&#13;
toruptomN, dysentery and all pains of&#13;
the Mtomuub and bowels Only 25&#13;
( f l i t s b o x .&#13;
Km 11'» H&gt;UH Kidney Pill core back&#13;
Ache. et&lt;- Only 25 cents box.&#13;
I'm»-. *« eet stomachs and breatbf&#13;
i n iiiriiir1 L&lt;y t&amp;kjnjf Knill's Py^pepsin&#13;
'I'a*'!. i-&#13;
PHUNNYGRAPilC&#13;
rori't &lt; t&#13;
ttll tnul&#13;
( httH DH&gt;&#13;
af*-st&#13;
They will cure indiueshon,&#13;
all stomach trouble*,^destroy.*&#13;
wHbes tor 25c box. Best ana&#13;
t Quarrantaed l&lt;v youi dru^&#13;
Will Curletr, pexter.&#13;
W B. Harrow, Pincknwy.&#13;
THE GBEAT&#13;
f$£STOHATIVE.&#13;
Bar-Ben is the greatest known • ^. TRASS MASK.&#13;
nerve tonic and blood purifier. * — * •&#13;
It creates solid flesh, muscle and STRENGTH.&#13;
Clears the brain, makes the blood pure and rich,&#13;
and causes a general feeling of health, power&#13;
and renewed vitality, while the generative organs&#13;
are helped to regain their normal powers, and&#13;
the suffe.rer is quickly made conscious uf direct&#13;
benefit. One box will work wonders, six should&#13;
perfect a cure. 60 cts. A BOX.; fi boxes, $2.50. For&#13;
aale by druggists everywhere, or mailed, sealed,&#13;
e n receipt of p-* e. Address DRS. BARTON&#13;
.AND BENSON 494 ^ar-Ben Block, Cleveland, 0&#13;
1 o r s a l e b y&#13;
K A. S I G L E R , D r u g g i s t&#13;
liny, - - 2 1 k U .&#13;
There are two things In this life for&#13;
which a man is never prepared—^twiiis;&#13;
Don't blame the farmer for looking&#13;
all dragged out; niB work is often har&#13;
rowing.&#13;
Of all wise words from a woman's&#13;
pen, the wisest are these, leave the&#13;
pants to men.&#13;
Inquiring Boy to H1e Mother—"M"&#13;
wjKit did the moths eat before Adam&#13;
and" Eve wore clothes"&#13;
"Ma, the minister to coming."&#13;
"What m^kes vou think so? "Hid y»-u&#13;
see him?" "No, but I saw pa take the&#13;
parrot and lock it up In the stable."&#13;
A Now York divorce lawyer adver-'&#13;
tlses: "Hymeneal inconipaiibilities as&#13;
si eclalties de icately ajdjuste 1. T i s&#13;
plavery to detain the jiand after the&#13;
heart hath fled." ]&#13;
"Ft&gt;me mea," said Uncle Ebon.&#13;
"vJluidn* hab no trTjrrttjs 'tall 'bout get&#13;
t*n' rich ef dey held on ae tight to de&#13;
money dey earns a dey does to demorey&#13;
dey borrows."&#13;
"Is there any difference between&#13;
•slrk' and 'ill?' " «'Why, it's just like&#13;
t U - : the man who gets SICK sende tor&#13;
a d ctor. while the man who becomes&#13;
il ^-mrr.ohs a-Dhvsidau."&#13;
We&#13;
apree&#13;
cent b&#13;
%4M l € K .&#13;
ibe undersigned, do ' hereby&#13;
' refund the money on. a 50&#13;
ttle of Down's Filixirifit does&#13;
n o t e He anv cou^li, cold, whooping&#13;
c o o g *, or throat trouble. We also&#13;
fluaruitee Down's Klixir to&#13;
som »tion, when used according to directions,&#13;
or money back A tu'l dose&#13;
on i/oinvr to i ed and small doses during&#13;
tbe day will cure the most severe&#13;
colt, and stop the most distressing&#13;
coitfb,&#13;
F. \ . Siuler,&#13;
W. B. Darrow,&#13;
LAST&#13;
PERFECT FOREVER.&#13;
SCALES Coppei Plated&#13;
All Steel Levers,&#13;
Combination Beam,&#13;
Catalogue Free.&#13;
Address, JoNCS OP BlffOHAMTON, «&#13;
BINQHAHTON. N. y.&#13;
. , I, H I M M I M I I W I M » » — » — • — — • — • &lt; BIGGL«MP A Farm Library of unequalled value—Practical*&#13;
Up-to-date, Concise and Comprehensive—Handsomely&#13;
Printed and Beautifully Illustrated.&#13;
B y J A C O B fftOQLB&#13;
N o . l - B I Q G L E HORSE BOOK&#13;
All about Horses—a Common-Sense Treatise, with over&#13;
— _ 74 illustrations . a standard work. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 2—BlOQLE BERRY BOOK&#13;
* All about growing Small P r u U a ^ e a d and learn bow ,&#13;
contains 43 colored Hie-like reproductions of all leading&#13;
varieties and 100 otlier illustrations.—Price, 50 Cent*,&#13;
No. 3—BKKJLE POULTRY BOOK&#13;
All about Poultry ; the best Poultry Book in existence % tells everything ; with 33 colored life-like reproductions&#13;
of all the principal breeds; with 103 other illustration*.&#13;
Price, 50 Cents,&#13;
No. 4—BKKJLE COW BOOK&#13;
All about Cows nfcd the Dairy Business ; having a great&#13;
sale; contain* S colored life-like reproductions ofeach&#13;
• biL-ed, with 132 otiier illustrations. Price,50Cents.&#13;
No. 5—BIGGLG S W I N E BOOK&#13;
Just out. A11 about HOBS— Breeding, Feeding, Butchtry,&#13;
Disea.es, itc. Contains over 80 beautiful halftones&#13;
and oturr- engravings. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
TheBIGOLE BOOKS are uniqiie.original.useful—you never&#13;
s i w anything 1 iVe them—so practical, so sensible. They&#13;
/ ' a r e having n enormous sale^-East, West, North and&#13;
South. Everv one who keeps a Horse, Cow, Hog or&#13;
Chicken, or grows Small Fruits, ought to send right&#13;
a w a y for the BiOQLB BOOKS. The FARM JOURNAL I s your paper, made for you and not a misfit. It is 3a years&#13;
old; k is the trreat boiled-down, hit-the-nail-on-the-head,—&#13;
quit-after-yon-have-said-n, Farm and Household paper i n&#13;
the world—the biggest paper o f i t s size in the Dn-lted State*&#13;
c ' Vmeriea^-having over a million ar-'a-half regular read*&#13;
Any OWB Of tbe BIGGLE BOORS, and UK r ARM JOURNAL&#13;
• YBAR5 (remainder of 1899, i960, 1901, 290a and 1903J will be lent by mail&#13;
*© any address lor A DOLLAR BILL.&#13;
8ampteofPARMJOlJRNALandcirciilar&lt;kfcr!bing ^JOLBBOOKS*ea&gt;&#13;
Address, F A J U r ' ^ I J l t K A Z ,&#13;
y PHZLAISLTKA I&#13;
1 &gt;•••! 1 - •—mm**Miiimmx—i&#13;
W I L M t t aTKlWSOJI.&#13;
CBA» « J M K I X a .&#13;
PUBLIC SIGNS UNHEEDED.&#13;
Caution* a n d WarnlnajTb** A r « DMrefrard*&#13;
• d i t i M t i n liluftn.&#13;
"Anybody who make* a study of the&#13;
various phaees of metropolitan life,"&#13;
said the wide-awake man. 'can veatily&#13;
that while all the rules and regulations&#13;
pas ed up in well-known places&#13;
for the guidance of the public are supposed&#13;
to be vested with the sanctity if&#13;
genuine laws, many of ihem are in&#13;
reality nothing more nbr leae than&#13;
gigantic bluffs. The tfniikltiated. as a&#13;
rule, are unable to detect the gold from&#13;
the droes and unwittingly put all on&#13;
the same toasis, but the ljnan with experience&#13;
can tell at a glance wjiichmeans&#13;
business and whicn does n*:&#13;
"Perhaps the cten with which the&#13;
public te most fami iar is the one seen&#13;
in restaurants warn ng patrons that&#13;
the management will not he responsl&#13;
ble for h. t6j wraps and umbrellas.&#13;
This notice 1B all very well in a wav&#13;
and really does good service, inasmuch&#13;
as it predisposes people to be ,. inofe&#13;
careful of their be.ongings than the&gt;&#13;
would be were there nothing' in sig|it&#13;
to remind them of the penal.y lack bf&#13;
vigilance frequently exacts.. But .jll&#13;
you should be so luckless as to suffer&#13;
the loss: of either of .he above mentioned&#13;
articles, and cared to push the&#13;
matter, the proprietor would probably&#13;
make good the loss, nine times out of&#13;
ten. notwithstanding the placard to&#13;
the contrary.&#13;
'Hotels are equally prodigal of aseertions&#13;
which are not founded on tne&#13;
solid rock of truths as you will find&#13;
out if you ever attempt to test them.&#13;
pure ron l n t h e s e L o f r u l e s f o u n d i n e a Q n r ° ° m&#13;
^ r H of these big hostelriee many houses insert&#13;
a Clause to the effect that the&#13;
host will be in nowise responsible for&#13;
a gupst'e mail, jy/et in spite of this&#13;
declaration. I know for a fact that the&gt;&#13;
proprietor of a jiroadway hotel recent&#13;
ly paid one wb^an a neat little cum of&#13;
money which she said had been sent&#13;
her in a letter which hid been lost^&#13;
through the carelessness of the clerh.&#13;
The man did this, too, without any&#13;
positive proof tha' the woman haa&#13;
lost the money. He settled rather&#13;
than run the risk of having ftfbuble.&#13;
"Another bluff is found;In the elevators&#13;
of many big buildings. A goodly&#13;
number of theee lifts are decorated&#13;
with a notice informing passengers&#13;
that if they do not call their floor before&#13;
reaching it. the elevator positively&#13;
will not re'nm to the landing after&#13;
having passed it, to let the dilatory&#13;
offender off Kvery e i e v a o r boy. every&#13;
Janitor and every real estate afcent&#13;
firmly belives he means what he say?,&#13;
when the notice is put up, yet the man&#13;
le, a sorry tactician, indeed, who cannot&#13;
get whisked up or down the heient&#13;
of a half story and put off on the doelred&#13;
floor&#13;
"Passengers on street cars and elevated&#13;
railroads, encounter a variety of&#13;
bluffs. They are positively forbidden&#13;
to stand on front pla'forms, yet they&#13;
calmly Ignore the order. Thev are&#13;
forbidden to expectorate on^he floors,&#13;
yet to the regret of every fair-minded&#13;
person, some of them do that. too. On&#13;
tome of the lines the cars are fitted&#13;
"out witn a"sign half a yard long in-&#13;
[ forming passengers that if they do not_&#13;
get their transfers when paying their&#13;
fare, or at certain dnsignated places,&#13;
the conductor will not furnish them&#13;
with passes. But this also, is a blurt&#13;
and the conductor who adheres to that&#13;
rule is a hardened villain.&#13;
"There are many places-, such as libraries&#13;
and museums, where it is an*&#13;
nounced in glaring let ere that 'silence&#13;
must be preserved here,' yet scores of&#13;
inconsiderate, thoughtless people come&#13;
into -these places daily, who not oniy&#13;
talk, but raises their vorces to a ««hnei;&#13;
when so doing. It isn't right, of&#13;
course, but they do it. because the sign&#13;
is a bluff.&#13;
^Scarcely a day passes that a m;in&#13;
In business does not get into stores&#13;
and factories and offices where the notice,&#13;
'No admittance' stares him in&#13;
the face. If he is a timid man he will&#13;
stajf out, but many people who have&#13;
not a particle of business there work&#13;
their way in behind those closed doors&#13;
lor that is only anbthef bluff.&#13;
"I am a regular caller at a select&#13;
book and art store up town where the&#13;
visitor is told in polite but forcible&#13;
language that thereVire books ln certain&#13;
parts of the store which he must&#13;
not handle, yet those same books uro&#13;
turned1 inside out d*ily. This 'Pon'tr&#13;
touch' sign is quite common—and likewise&#13;
quite useless. Florists display&#13;
it, and jewelers and 'he custqrilans of.&#13;
all treasure houses, but it&gt;I/wem into&#13;
any of those places with the feeing&#13;
that I wanted to 'touch/'! should do so&#13;
with the assnrance^rbat even thou eh&#13;
detected in the transgression I would&#13;
be pretty sur? &gt;o be granted immunity&#13;
from punishment.&#13;
"Then there-rs another bluff that we.&#13;
all know about This is the notice&#13;
seen ih jrJMcp bni dings forbidding beggars,&#13;
peddltrs ami ven book agents&#13;
from jpu;su ne trri; Tallin.? within.&#13;
In *splte o f t h a t order' there are few&#13;
downtown buildings where agents of&#13;
all sorts and even beggars do not ply&#13;
their vocation undisturbed. The&#13;
theatres put up a big bluff too, against&#13;
those who buy standing room. The&#13;
ushers bluntly and decjdedly forbid&#13;
these devotees of artistic drama to&#13;
rest their weary bones on the steps in&#13;
the aisles, yet these devotes produce&#13;
bluff for bluff they are pretty sure to&#13;
sit through the greater part of the performance&#13;
and no power known to the&#13;
theatre usher is going to dislodge them&#13;
from their lowly but impregnable position.&#13;
"Then, there is the 'No smoking'&#13;
bljiG. The places wherevmen are forbidden&#13;
to lndu'ge in this pleasure are&#13;
legon. yet the places where they really&#13;
do refrain from smoking are very&#13;
few. Thii 1st of apparent limitations&#13;
to the public's powers and privileges&#13;
mipht be clontinued indefinitely. There&#13;
are a thousand and one .things we are&#13;
told in emphruic i&gt;nd even threatening&#13;
terms we must or we must not do,&#13;
but tbe majority of those 'nstruc'ions&#13;
are found *o he nothing but good big&#13;
bluffs which can be counterbalanced b^&#13;
equal aggre-^ivene^s. Why, If : you&#13;
have a mind to and go about it in the&#13;
right way, yuu can even walk on th«&#13;
grpss, rnd nobody will stop you, for&#13;
under te t in ti cumstances the familiar&#13;
Keep off' Mgn ie also a bluff.&#13;
S u b s c r i b e for t h e D i s p a t c h .&#13;
D r . O i d y s Condition Powd«rs are&#13;
ju't what a hor*« needs when in bad&#13;
condition. Tonic, blood pnrifier and&#13;
vermifuge. T h e y ^ a r e not food hut&#13;
medicine and the bes^ in use to put a&#13;
Intseiti prime condition. Prio&lt;» 25c&#13;
rf&gt;r package For salo by P A. Sip;-&#13;
rW!&#13;
i m i i m&#13;
AHTSD-tiEVttRAL B E I Q H I&#13;
AKD HONEST P I F U M fc&gt; represent&#13;
1H as Manager* in thi* and eloce by conntie*.&#13;
Salary 1009 a year and vxpencea,&#13;
Strait, bono-fide, • » a n t e , no lest, Pon.&#13;
lion permanent. Oar lesevenoas, acy&#13;
keak la any tvwa. It b *asJaly office&#13;
jwork coadopted at aeeae. Eeteienm. EJV.&#13;
alee* ealfcadditend *taaaye&lt;l emeeloun, T u&#13;
boMtmoii OenvAjn. D w r . t , OtrrcAao..&#13;
a«Maai*n*****nM*****a**BB***************a***B**i&#13;
H t t T f t i t T * O r e w t • * • • • * Clai laia&gt;« Cettejh H«oaeer*&#13;
Manager Martin, of tbe Pearson&#13;
draff store, informs a s that be is having&#13;
a great ron on Chamowl&amp;ta'ft&#13;
Couffh Remedy. He s*lU rive bottles&#13;
of that medicine to ope or any other&#13;
kind, and it sriv^s trreat satisfaction.&#13;
In these days of la ttrippe there is&#13;
nothing like Chamberlain's Ciutrh&#13;
Remedy to stop the coa^h, heal u p&#13;
the sorn throat and lungs and wives&#13;
relief in a very short time. Tbe sales&#13;
are growing, and all who try it ate&#13;
pieaand with its p r unpt action.—-Sonfh&#13;
Chicago-Daily-Calumet, f o r aal« l&gt;y&#13;
F. A. Sigler, drutf«i*t.&#13;
iSbe |UK^IU4 J m u ; i&#13;
P 0 B U S H B D BVKRT T H O U D i Y M • Y&#13;
F R A N ^ L A N i i ^ N V s&#13;
Editor and Thtoprittor&#13;
Subscription Price $1 in Advaac^&#13;
Saterea at tae Postodlco *c Pmcicady, 41cai/t ,&#13;
as aecond-claas maiter.&#13;
Advertising rata* made CQOWD OQ applioati&lt;»&#13;
Baslnesa Cards; |4.t)u per y*jar.&#13;
P«atb aad marriage itocicea paiiiidii(»&gt;) cr« .&#13;
Annouacatnente of enterlalaaieata nay D« ^ %.d&#13;
for, if desired, by presenting the odlce Wita tic ••-&#13;
etsof adaiUsion. la c***ticiceia*re an &gt;r &gt; i r '.&#13;
to the otii'ce, regular rates will oe oaAr^ed,&#13;
• All matter in local notice column vrlii t&gt;e :a^. ^&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for ea*:u&#13;
insertion. Vvtiere ao time it specided, Aii aotice*&#13;
will be inserted until &gt;rder«d usciutiaaed, *ad&#13;
will be caarg'*d for ac -ordin ;ly, W \X\ catn&lt;«»a&#13;
at adrerUeemeate MUAf rea:h caisoJice a* early&#13;
aa TccsDAr morning to insure an insertion thn&#13;
tame week.&#13;
JOS P&amp;fjVlfjYG/&#13;
In all its brandies, a specialty. We haveatllund*&#13;
an/1 the latest dtyiee of Type, etc., wuich eaauiea&#13;
IU to execute all Kinds ot work, sucQ *» UuuKd,&#13;
Pamplete, foatere, erograinmee, Bill deada, Now&#13;
Heads, statements, Cards, Auction BilU, etc, in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest aotice. Prices aa&#13;
o v as good wof ^ can oe l.jua.&#13;
Trill ^iLLAdh' DirtcCFJK/.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBKS U.f;- . &lt; M . ...m. Uex. ^Iclutyre&#13;
Daniel Uicharda, .eo. riaw.mu, -jnua^l&#13;
.Sykee, K. L). Johnson.&#13;
I J L B H K . . . . ...~. ^ . t4. t i . Teepl^&#13;
W. E, Murphy&#13;
Vsausaott .— .„. W, A. C^rr&#13;
STRBBT OuajiissioNkSii J. .vIoaKri.&#13;
MAUSAUL ....A. E, .Ji &gt; * i&#13;
tfKALTH JPP'ioen .,, Jr. il. K. Si^i^r&#13;
ATToaNtr ..,^. ...^, ..^^, ...^, vV. A.. Oirr&#13;
A_$4.00 BOOK FOR ?5cts.&#13;
The Farmers' Encyclopedia.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
M&#13;
C&#13;
Everythlnffpertainiiifto&#13;
the affair*&#13;
of the farm,&#13;
h o u s e h o l d and&#13;
stock raisiar. Embraces&#13;
articles on&#13;
tlie hor?e, the colt,&#13;
horse habits, diseases&#13;
of the horse,&#13;
the farm, grasses,&#13;
fruit culture, dairying.&#13;
cookery,health,&#13;
cattle, sheep.swine,&#13;
poultry( Ixes, the&#13;
dog, toilet, social&#13;
life, etc., etc. One&#13;
of the most comp&#13;
l e t e E n c y c l o - . at 3:0u p&#13;
pedias in existence.&#13;
A large book, 8x5)£&#13;
x 1¾ inches. 636&#13;
pages, fully illustrated,&#13;
bound in&#13;
green cloth bind&#13;
araoiJisir cPioHJPAL. odUi&lt;cti.&#13;
ttav. Cha^. Sim^dou, p*dtor. s^rvica m* &gt;&#13;
Sunday mormon at l^:iio, *ad every Sanliy&#13;
evening at 7:0« o'clock. Pcayermeetia^ faursdtty&#13;
eveaiaifa. ^uuday dc.;ooi 41 ^loee at JI &gt;ruing&#13;
service. LBAT. ^IOLBK, Supt.&#13;
^ONlirtBGAflUNAL CHUUCE.&#13;
Kev. C W. Rice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning *t l0:aa &lt;iud ^yefy ^ i t i . .&#13;
evening at T:0C j'cl Kk. Prayer meeting ftiurs&#13;
day .evenings, s a a i i y school at close ot u &gt;r 1^&#13;
ihi;service, it. il, Teeple, Sai&gt;i. tioid iteai, n e&#13;
J T . v l M t f ' S 'JAfrfObtO CetUttOd-.&#13;
O Kev. .vl. J. Ooinairfrtord, ('*dt.jr Mcvt^i*'&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:3U o'clock&#13;
high mass witu sermou At ^ :-lu a. m. C*tecuidiq.&#13;
iu., vespersanuoeaedictioD at 7:-K1 \&gt;./i-.&#13;
SOCIETIES.&#13;
m g and equal to&#13;
other books costing&#13;
$1.00. If you desire this book send us our special&#13;
offer price, $0.7V.and tU-'A) extra for postage and&#13;
we will forward the book to you. If it is not satisfactory&#13;
return it and we will exchange it or refund&#13;
your money. Send for our special illustrated catalogue,&#13;
quoting the lowest prices on books, FRZE&#13;
We can save you money. Address all orders to&#13;
THE WERNER COMPANY,&#13;
ra%U*fe«rs and ManrnfActnrers. Akron, OhlO,&#13;
[The.W'emer Company is thoroughly reliable.)—Edito*&#13;
rphe A. 0 . d. Society J£ tuu pi*&lt;;*,' u-wn w-+ryr&#13;
X, thir&lt;i H el l i / &gt; i c a d / r , »l.tuu&gt; itil&#13;
Jjaa I ' a o m / . i a 1 ilicjtC^ny, '• &gt; 1 &gt;t • &gt;-rg.&lt;..i.&#13;
Lj'PvVOKrd LE.wGUE.&#13;
Etfeveninx at &amp;M oclocfci'Q IQ-»&#13;
VLeets every&#13;
vt. •&gt;. J 1 i r : 4&#13;
cordial mvitati-jo is e£tea&gt;le i :,i ev.jry &gt;.u, »&#13;
daily youn&lt; people. Mrs. Stella cirAUAua &lt;*r^&#13;
Sun 1 iy&#13;
v&#13;
r\ t .¾ i •* n v v /i A J •: v v"»i v) u •; r v;: - . [ wt.&#13;
\J[ i%* everv yd 1 l.iv *v J iia,' (t k &gt;i V -a l 1;,&#13;
Miss i-Hta la.t() uit^r; ^.vru.irr, &lt;lf&lt;. ' V. C,'. •&#13;
—i&#13;
\V V N r i i t&gt;' - t'-it* S u b s c r i p t i o n&#13;
ihie o n ttie D I S P A T C H .&#13;
Business Locals&#13;
Ii'HE V. 0. V. U. meita the tirii -VI Uy tt &lt;&#13;
..:a&gt;«Jath"&gt;Sl iA p. a. it t ie D a - i 0 ' Jr. 1&#13;
Siller. .iveryoat 1 iUr^jt-»d i i t&lt;* a.t.T mc&#13;
c.oadially iuvit-* 1 vlr^. 'jea! Si,'ler, *r •*; _&#13;
Etta Durtee, Secretary.&#13;
The C'. T. A and tf. s o c i e ^&#13;
evety third Saturuay evet)in&gt;{&#13;
tbew dAll.&#13;
jf this o'ace, a •&#13;
in t i e t'r 4 »&#13;
I oho Uodohue, Preeid&gt;vnt,&#13;
Notice to Tax I'ayers&#13;
T h e Tivw.nshus P t x ii&gt;l! .A 11 &gt;w in m y&#13;
hands for the Coilcii ni (if T a x e s — 1 will be&#13;
at the Pimrknt-v, .Bx. l i u i k d a r i n g busioeas&#13;
hoars to receive tlit* s a m e .&#13;
KZ NKtUTS OV U ACCAUKBS.&#13;
Meet everv Kriday es-eaiag tu &gt;c i&gt;ei»re cjti&#13;
of the moou *t their hall iu the Swarthout bld^.&#13;
Viaitinn brothers ire i\&gt;rdially iovited.&#13;
CUAS. UVMPBKLL, Sir Knight Ouiainaodni&#13;
f ivltt»{8t&gt;»aJLod1ie, So. T1', * \. &lt; » i ' i ' s '&#13;
R. l|/."I\-rj&gt;L\ Twp. Treasurer, j —&#13;
J j Coinuiuuicucioa PuesilAy eveoia^, &gt;a »r o-vtor &gt;&#13;
thet'ull of the &lt;a&lt;Mii. Aiexiaier vlclutyre, A'. *l.&#13;
y&#13;
*•««• s « i e ,&#13;
Ohe^rj, A t\v"&gt; li)r--r»p ) v^r and grinder&#13;
cpmliined. in ^0^,-) i-^pair.&#13;
0 W. Brown.&#13;
ROER OK KASrETRS srA'cTmeetaeach moatn&#13;
V^ th»» Prldiy ev^ain^ t&gt;&gt;ll.»vii&lt; taa re^aur K.&#13;
iA.M. lueetiu^. vltu. HAKY ttSAO, &gt;V. &gt;f.&#13;
Vly son has he*n troubled for years&#13;
with chronic diarrhoea. Sometime&#13;
jatfo I pHrsnaded linn to fake some of&#13;
Cbamtverlitrs Colic, Chnlrea and Diarrhoer&#13;
R^m-^dy. A'ftnr usingr t w o but»&#13;
ties oi 25-«y»nt sizrt he was cured. I&#13;
Hive this trtstiinnuJA1. hoping nomeotfe&#13;
similarly «rf-ot«d tntv"T«ad it. and be&#13;
benHtited—Thomas ' BowarlGlencoe.&#13;
0 . Por sate 'w P V SivfUr, ira^^iat&#13;
Petteysrille Hills.&#13;
I have'f ut in u new corn and cob&#13;
crnsher and t.loro.i/hly r^piired the&#13;
Mill. . Fanners c^n now ifet tbeir&#13;
grinding don*»- in A supnnor manner&#13;
and on the shortest notice.&#13;
Wm. Hooker.&#13;
i _ . .&#13;
Sobecribe lor Dispatoh&#13;
^ T A T K o f MlCHKrA^. County of Uvia&lt;ston&#13;
M a session of the ProSata Court for said county,&#13;
held at the Probate Office in tho village of&#13;
Howell, on Monday, the Sth day of Jan., in the&#13;
year one thousand nine hundred.&#13;
Present: Albird M. l*avie, Judge of Probate: In&#13;
the matter ef the estate or&#13;
GSOR«K W. BROWN deceased.&#13;
On reading and ftlinc the petltioh. duly verified&#13;
of Sarah Brown, prayinx that administration i&#13;
of said estate may be granted to herself or some j&#13;
other suitable person. !&#13;
Thereupon n is ordered that Tuesday, the 6th&#13;
day of Feb. next, at 10 o'el &gt;ck in tbe forenoon, a t&#13;
raid Probate Office, be aaeigned for tbe hearing of&#13;
saidpKlUon.&#13;
It I* farther ordered that a copy of this order b a&#13;
pvbUshet} in in* PXNCKHBT DISPATCH, a new***?.&#13;
• r ^ r U t e d and circulating in said county, tore*&#13;
»c*e**t^ week* previona to aaid day of haarlAg.&#13;
^ Axarao M. Dana,&#13;
*•* - . Judg*of ProbM*,&#13;
LA DIE- OP THE MACCABEUS, ile^t every Is.&#13;
and ird Saturday of eachtuoath at i:M) p ui. a?&#13;
fck.. •», 1'. \l. tiMi. V*HI.IL1&lt; +.*tjc- : &gt;r li ill v&lt;. ( i *&#13;
vi led LILA CONIWAif Lady Com.&#13;
1 KNuiH TS or TUB LOYAL GU v R )&#13;
meet every second vVedneaOay&#13;
evening of every month in the si. O&#13;
T. M. Hall At ,*:J.io'clock. All viaitia^&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
&lt;-. G. JACKSON, Capt. (ten.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. 0- C. L, SlOLER M, 0&#13;
•MS. SULfitx &lt;&amp; SIJLER,&#13;
Physicia is aui -iar re &lt; is. All calls pro.aptl '&#13;
attended to itv »r u&lt;hr. j,) Qm 00 H%In •ur&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN&#13;
PENTIST-Eyery Frida); and on Thar*,&#13;
day Mhen having appointments. Office or*r&#13;
Sigler's Drutt Store.&#13;
ee retixreed If we fail. Any one (&#13;
aketch and description of a n y invention&#13;
promptly receive our opinion' free concerning&#13;
the patentability of same. " How to Obtsin a&#13;
P a t e n t ^ sent upon request Patents" s e c w r "&#13;
-through op advertised for sale at our expense.&#13;
Patents taken out through u s receive&#13;
tt*ffe«»,withottt charge, hi T H * PArarr ]&#13;
an lllnstrated and widely circulated&#13;
consuttad'by lrsnufacturers and Inveatt&#13;
•cad for sample copy r a i t . Addraaa,&#13;
VJOTOR J. CVAftw A OO. ,&#13;
{PmUmtAttatmer*,)&#13;
M M t a g , %VAtvllN«rOlls | a&#13;
&lt;~$S&#13;
.^:^--&#13;
'/&#13;
mmmmm*&gt;:&lt;uv&lt;«-f " itf&lt;Pj .,1111 . - , « ! &gt; • 1» Ml V ji.nl'riliiii p i . i if in • • • II'I n'ni I n'«i&#13;
' . • * v , 1 - ; : • ' • • • ; i&gt; • ••• » . • •&#13;
i n , . . »»ii| ' MiiTijwi i-ii: w f r i i &amp; f f * l 1 i|i i,ii,ui,«n t ' 11 M&#13;
II •«&gt; i n . " &gt;|lii i n IWI.'I&#13;
• |.«.i.\;.iw ,•,"• i.i..»,i n "if ....'• , ^iijfr^ww.wi^-.i'iww'ii •• &gt; » I ' I . I i«. 1 &gt;•»»!«&gt;• " »|».i&gt;rLi»ii». t » 4 ^ y t &gt; f y « « - m * ~ ^ , | t J V ^ J ^ ^ • * t T ^ ^ J g ! f t J ? l f i S&#13;
v ,- • '•••"•,, /- iv:v_. , •"''"•;"" ^'; • .,'. , ' \ \ y. •"• ?.; -'yi; v .•r*1^' ••'•' -'^r ,-V-'»v"',;y':"t: " r ^ •^•••'^.^"•••VT •';„; vj,-.-v - f -, ,•;&#13;
, - T&#13;
siji'i' ' •• ' • ' •&#13;
SHT-Y&#13;
I&#13;
i -&#13;
14.&#13;
J '&#13;
• • .&#13;
ffimkieg Hi§y*Uh&#13;
v&#13;
PIKOKNEY,&#13;
L. ANDREWS, Publisher*&#13;
- " • MICHIGAN,&#13;
It takes u.e lone fisherman to reel ofl&#13;
a catchy yarn.&#13;
Nervousness i« tae bud and lunacy&#13;
c&amp;e flower in full bloom.&#13;
The British charge pell-mell, and th«&#13;
Boers continue to shell well&#13;
The advance agent isn't necessarily&#13;
a forward man, but he usually is.&#13;
The individual who frequently goes&#13;
on a tear is seldom, able to pay the rent.&#13;
TALMAGE'S SERMON.&#13;
T H E GREATEST SOLDIER O F ALL&#13;
TIME, THE TEXT,&#13;
"There Shall Not Any Man Be Able to&#13;
Stand Before Thee All the Day* of&#13;
Thy Lire," Joshua 1:5 — To the&#13;
Boldler Boys.&#13;
Taking a drop and taking a tumble&#13;
are not synonymous, but one may lead&#13;
to the other. '&#13;
Religion may hkve its drawbacks,&#13;
but the backslider^ are generally the&#13;
victims.&#13;
The happening of the unexpected&#13;
never worries people who are not prepared&#13;
for anything in particular.&#13;
If a man made no good resolution&#13;
New Year's day he would be quite&#13;
lonesome, having none to break.&#13;
A New Jersey boy swallowed a small&#13;
reptile. This is worse than swallowing&#13;
those Boston sea serpent stories.'&#13;
It is said that a man's declining&#13;
years begin at 50; but a woman's never&#13;
begin while there is an eligible man in&#13;
sight.&#13;
Chicago lady fanciers are to have a&#13;
pet dog club. Under no circumstances&#13;
will they hold a joint session with the&#13;
cat club.&#13;
Political issues a^e born in the&#13;
hearts of the people, but the politicians&#13;
keep right oh manufacturing the&#13;
spurious article. *&#13;
The Boers have nojabjectjon ,to the"&#13;
open door, but they dont' want the&#13;
whole world coming In and sleeping&#13;
in the best bed. r ,&#13;
Cavalrymen scouting in Luzon -the&#13;
other day killed thirteen Filipinos.&#13;
And yet some scientific people say that&#13;
the number thirteen is not unlucky. .&#13;
A curious man bent over the.swiftry&#13;
flowing Citicago river so fondly that he&#13;
fell in. Free baths should be strictly&#13;
"prohibited in the river, admitting that&#13;
the temptation is how very strong.&#13;
A series of experiments made ax Kiel&#13;
during the last two years have shown&#13;
that of all metals used in ship-building&#13;
an amalgam of iron and zinc is&#13;
least subject to deterioration from the&#13;
influence of sea water. —&#13;
Fifty short, practical dairy rules for&#13;
the production and handling of puremilk,&#13;
printed on large cardboards,&#13;
have been distributed by the tens of&#13;
thousands among American farmers by&#13;
the Bureau of Animal Industry.&#13;
For the most part when the general&#13;
of an army starts out in conflict he&#13;
would like to have a small battle in&#13;
order that he may get his courago up&#13;
and he may rally his troops and get&#13;
them drilled for greater conflicts; but&#13;
this first undertaking of Jdfshua was&#13;
greater than the leveling of Fort Pulaski,&#13;
or the thundering down of Gibraltar,&#13;
or the overthrow of the Bastille.&#13;
It was the crossing of the Jordan at&#13;
the time of the spring freshet. The&#13;
snows of Mount Lebanon had just&#13;
been melting and they poured down&#13;
into the valley, and the whole valley&#13;
was a raging torrent. So the Canaan-&#13;
Ites stand on one bank and they look&#13;
across and see Joshua and the Israelites,&#13;
and they laugh and say: "Aha!&#13;
aha! they cannot disturb us until the&#13;
freshets fall; it is Impossible for them&#13;
to reach us.". But after awhile they&#13;
look across the water and they see a&#13;
movement in the army of Joshua. They&#13;
say, "What's the matter now? ' Why,&#13;
there must be a panic among these&#13;
troops, and, they are going to fly, or&#13;
perhaps they are going to try tomarch&#13;
across the river Jordan. Joshua is a&#13;
lunatic," But Joshua, the chieftain or&#13;
the t e u , looks at his army and cries:&#13;
"Forward, march!" and they start for&#13;
the bank of the Jordan,&#13;
One mile ahead go two priests carrying&#13;
a glittering box four feet long&#13;
and two feet wide. It is the Ark of the&#13;
Covenant. And they come down, and&#13;
no sooner do they just touch the rltu of&#13;
the water with their feet, than by an&#13;
Almighty flat, Jordan parts. The army&#13;
of Joshua marches right on Without&#13;
getting their feet wet, over the bottom&#13;
of the river, a path cf. chalk and broken&#13;
Shells and pebbles, until they can&#13;
getFto the other bank. Then they lay&#13;
hold of the oleanders and tamarisks&#13;
and no sooner Tiave they reached the&#13;
bank thirty or. forty feet high, and_&#13;
having gained the other ,bank, they&#13;
clap their shields and their cymbals.&#13;
and sing the praises of the God of&#13;
Joshua. Eut no sooner have they&#13;
reached the bank than the waters begin&#13;
to dash and roar, and with a terrific&#13;
rush they*break loose from their&#13;
strange anchorage. Out yonder they&#13;
have stopped, thirty miles up yonder&#13;
they halted. On this side the waters&#13;
roll off toward the salt sea. But as&#13;
the hand of the Lord God is taken&#13;
away from the thus uplifted waters—&#13;
waters perhaps uplifted half a mile—&#13;
as the Almighty hand is taken away,&#13;
those waters rush down, and some or&#13;
the unbelieving. Israelites say: "Alas,&#13;
alas, what a misfortune! Why could&#13;
not those waters have stayed parted?&#13;
Because perhaps we- may want to go&#13;
In Siam the liquid measure used is&#13;
derived from a cocoanut shell, which&#13;
is capable of holding 830 tamarind&#13;
seeds, and 20 of these units equal a capacity&#13;
of a wooden bucket. In dry&#13;
measure, 830 tamarind seeds make 1&#13;
"k'anahn" and 25 "k'anahn" make 1&#13;
"sat," or bamboo basket; "^W^sat""&#13;
make 1 "kwien," or cart. This is an&#13;
example of the primitive origin of most&#13;
units of weights and measures.&#13;
Santo Domingo, hep.ving of the coming&#13;
of French warships as collectors,&#13;
concluded ' to pay that bill for 20,000&#13;
francs. If it is all the same to the&#13;
warships, however, she would like to&#13;
be let off from paying an apology.&#13;
Santo Domingo, Nicaragua and some of&#13;
the other Central American republics&#13;
will learn after awhile_thatit is easier,&#13;
simpler and far more pleasant to pay&#13;
their debts promptly than to have them&#13;
collected at the cannon's mouth.&#13;
\:J&#13;
The recent decision of the Supreme&#13;
court of Massachusetts in the case of&#13;
tho Attorney General vs. Henry Bigelow&#13;
Williams holds that the law limiting&#13;
the "height of buildings • around&#13;
Copley Sqnare, Boston, to ninety feet.&#13;
, is constitutional. The court said: "We&#13;
hold that the ^tatnte gives rights in&#13;
the nature of an easement over land*&#13;
facing Copley .Square, which easement&#13;
is annexed to the square for the benefit&#13;
cf the public, for whose use and enjoyment&#13;
Copley Square was laid out; and&#13;
that these rights are similar in their&#13;
nature to rights in highways, in great&#13;
ponds, and in navigable waters of the&#13;
commonwealth."' The broad view&#13;
which the court took is indicated&#13;
by the following expression,-&#13;
appearing in the opinion: The&#13;
grounds of Copley Square "are to be&#13;
enjoyed, by the people who use them;&#13;
they are-txpected to minister not only&#13;
to the grosser senses, but also to the&#13;
love of the beautiful in nature, in the&#13;
• a r l t d forms which the change in sea.&#13;
bring**&#13;
back. Oh, Lord, we are engaged in a&#13;
risky business. Those Canaanltes may&#13;
eat us up. How if we want to so&#13;
back? Would it not have been a more&#13;
complete miracle if the Lord had part&#13;
ed tho waters to let us come through&#13;
and kept them parted to let us go&#13;
back if we are defeated?" My frienCs,&#13;
God makes no provision for a Christian's&#13;
retreat. He clears the path all&#13;
the way to Canaan. To go back is to&#13;
die. The same gatekeeper that swings&#13;
back the amethystine and crystailir.e&#13;
gate of the^Jordan to let Israe^-r&gt;a*s&#13;
through, now swing shut the amethystine&#13;
and crystalline gate cf the Jordan&#13;
to keep the Israelites from going&#13;
back. 1 declare it in &gt;our hearing to- |&#13;
day, victory ahead, water forty fee;&#13;
deep in- the rear. Triumph ahead,&#13;
Canaan ^ahead; behind yon death and&#13;
darkness and woe and hell. But you&#13;
say, "Why didn't those Canaanites,&#13;
when they had such r. splendiu chance&#13;
—standing en top of the bank thirty&#13;
But. this is no place ior the host to&#13;
stop. Joshua gives the command.&#13;
"Forward, march!" In the distance&#13;
there is a long grove of trees, and at&#13;
the end of the grove is a city. It is a&#13;
city of arbors, a city with walls, seeming&#13;
to reach the heavens, to buttress&#13;
the very sky. It'is the great metropolis&#13;
that commands the mountain pass.&#13;
It is Jericho. That city was afterward&#13;
captured by Pompey, and,it was&#13;
afterward captured by Herod the^ Great,&#13;
and it was afterward captured by the&#13;
Mohammedans; but this campaign the&#13;
Lord plans. There shall be no swords,&#13;
no .shields, no battering ram. There&#13;
shall'only be one weapon of war, and&#13;
that a ram's horn. The horn of the&#13;
slain ram was sometimes taken and&#13;
holes were punctured J n it, and then&#13;
the musician would put* the instrument&#13;
to his lips, and he would run his fingers&#13;
over this rude musical instrument,&#13;
and make a great deal of sweet harmony&#13;
for the people. This was the&#13;
only kind of weapon. Seven .priests&#13;
were to take these rude rustical musical&#13;
instruments, and they were to go&#13;
around the, city every day for six days&#13;
—once a day for six days, and then on&#13;
the seventh day they were to go around&#13;
blowing these rude musical instruments&#13;
seven times, and then at the&#13;
close of the seventh blowing of the&#13;
rams' horns on the seventh day the&#13;
peroration of the whole scene, was to&#13;
be a about at. which those great walls&#13;
should tumble from capstone to base.&#13;
Joshua's troops may not halt here.&#13;
The commands is: "Forward, march!"&#13;
There Is the city of Ai; it must be&#13;
taken. How- shall it be taken? A&#13;
scouting party comes back and says:&#13;
"Joshua, we can do that without you;&#13;
It Is going to be a very easy job; you&#13;
just stay here while we go and capture&#13;
it.1' They march with a small&#13;
regiment in front of that city. The&#13;
men of Ai look at them and give one&#13;
yell and the Israelites run like reindeers.&#13;
The northern troops at Bull&#13;
Run did not make such rapid time as&#13;
these Israelites and the Canaanites&#13;
after them. They never cut such a&#13;
sorry figure as when they were on the&#13;
retreat. Anybody that goes out in the&#13;
battles of God with only half a force,&#13;
instead of your taking the men of Ai&#13;
the men of Ai will take you. Look at&#13;
the church of God on the retreat The&#13;
Bornesian cannibals ate up Munson,&#13;
the missionary. "Falls back!" said a&#13;
great many Christian people—"Fall&#13;
back, oh church of Qodi Borneo will&#13;
never be taken. Don't you see the&#13;
Bornesian cannibals have eaten up&#13;
Munson, the missionary?" Tyndall delivers&#13;
his lecture at the University of&#13;
Glasgow, and a great many good people&#13;
say: "Fall back, oh church of God!&#13;
Don't you see that Christian philosophy&#13;
is going to be overcome by worldly&#13;
philosophy? Fall back!" Geology&#13;
plunges its crowbar intj the mountains,&#13;
and there are a great many people&#13;
who say: "Scientific investigation&#13;
is going to overthrow the Mosaic account&#13;
of the creation. Fall back!"&#13;
Friends of God have never had any&#13;
right to fall back.&#13;
Joshua falls on his face in chagrin.&#13;
It is the only time you ever see the&#13;
back of his head. He falls on his face&#13;
and begins to whine, and- he says:&#13;
"Oh, Lord God, waerefore hast thou&#13;
at all brought this people over Jordan&#13;
to deliver us into the hands of the&#13;
Amorites, to destroy us? Would to&#13;
God*we had been-content and dwelt on&#13;
the other side of the Jordan! For the&#13;
Canaanites and all the inhabitants of&#13;
the land shall hear of it, and shall environ&#13;
us ar.ound and cut off our name&#13;
from the face of the earth."&#13;
I am very glad that Joshua said that.&#13;
Before it seemed as if he were a supernatural&#13;
being, and. therefore could&#13;
not be an example to us; but I And&#13;
he j^s a man, he is only a man. Just&#13;
as sometimes you find a man under&#13;
severe opposition, or in bad state of&#13;
physical health, or worn out with overwork,&#13;
lying down and sighing about&#13;
everything being defeated. I am encouraged&#13;
when I hear thi3 cry of&#13;
Joshua as he lies in the dust.&#13;
God comes and rouses him^ How&#13;
does he rouse him By compl^e,ntary&#13;
apostrophe? No, He says: "Get thee&#13;
up. Wherefore liest thou upon thy&#13;
face?" Joshua rises, and I warrant&#13;
you, with ?. mortified look. But his'&#13;
old courage comes back. The fact was,&#13;
that was not his battle. If'he had b?en&#13;
in it he would have gone on to victory.&#13;
He-gathers his troops around him and&#13;
says: "Now let us go and capture the&#13;
city of Ai; let us go up right away."&#13;
They march on. He puts a major-^&#13;
,ity of the troops behind a ledge of&#13;
rocks in the night, and then- he sends&#13;
a comparatively small battalion up&#13;
in front of the city. The men of Ai&#13;
come out with a shout. This battalion&#13;
in stfategem falls back and falls back,&#13;
and when the men of Ai have left ^the&#13;
city and are in pursuit of this scattered,&#13;
or seemingly, scattered battalion,&#13;
.Joshua stands on a rock—I see his&#13;
locks flying in the wind as he points&#13;
his spear toward the doomed city, and&#13;
that is the signal. The men rush out&#13;
from behind the rocks and take the&#13;
city, and it is put to the torch, and&#13;
these Israelites in the city march down&#13;
and the flying battalion of Israelites&#13;
return, and between these two waves&#13;
of Israelitish prowess gain the victory;&#13;
and while I see the curling smoke of&#13;
that "destroyed city on the sky, and&#13;
while 1 hear the huzza of the Israelites&#13;
and the groan of the Canaanites,&#13;
Joshua hears something louder than it&#13;
all, ringirfg and echoing through' his&#13;
soul: "There shall not any man be&#13;
able to stand before thee in all the "day3&#13;
of thy life." \&#13;
But this is no place for" the host of&#13;
Joshua to stop. "Forward, march!"&#13;
cries Joshua to the troops. There is&#13;
the city of Gibeon. It has put itself&#13;
under the protection of Joshua. They&#13;
sent word: "There are five kings after&#13;
us; they are going to destroy us; send&#13;
troops quick'; send us help right away.'&#13;
Joshua has a three days' march more&#13;
than double quick. On the morning&#13;
of the third day he is before the enemy/&#13;
There are two long lines lof battle.&#13;
The battle open* with great slaughter,&#13;
but the Canaanites soon discover something.&#13;
They say: "That i3 Joshua;&#13;
that is the man who conquered the&#13;
spring freshet and knocked down the&#13;
stone wall and destroyed the city of&#13;
Ai. There is no use fighting." 'And&#13;
they sound a retreat, and as they begin&#13;
to retreat Joshua and his host spring&#13;
upon them like a panther, pursuing&#13;
them over the rocks, and as, these&#13;
Canaanites with sprained ankles and&#13;
gashed foreheads retreat, the catapults&#13;
of the sky pour a volley of hailstones&#13;
into the valley, and all the artillery of&#13;
the heavens with bullets of iron pounds&#13;
the Canaanites against the ledges of&#13;
Beth-boroih .&#13;
"Oh!" says Joshua, "this is surely a&#13;
victory." "But do you not see the sun&#13;
is going down? Those Amorites are&#13;
going to get away after all, and they&#13;
will come up some other time and&#13;
bother us and perhaps destroy us."&#13;
See the sun is going-down. Oh, for a&#13;
longer day than has'evec been seen In&#13;
this climate! What ia the matter with&#13;
Joshua? Has he fallen in an apoplectic&#13;
fit? No. He is in prayer. Look&#13;
out when a good man makes the Lord&#13;
his ally. Joshua raises his face, radiant&#13;
with prayer, and looks at the descending&#13;
sun over Gibeon, and at the&#13;
faint crescent of the moon, for you&#13;
know the queen of the night will sometimes&#13;
linger around the palaces of the&#13;
day. Pointing one hand at the descending&#13;
sun and the other at the faint&#13;
crescent of the moon, in the name ef&#13;
God who shapes the worlds and moves&#13;
the worlds, he cries: "Sun, stand thou&#13;
still upon Gibeon; and thou, moon, In&#13;
the'valley of Ajalon." And they stood&#13;
still. Whether it was by refraction of&#13;
the sun's rays, or by the stopping of&#13;
the whole planetary system, I do not&#13;
know, and I do not care. I leave It to&#13;
the Christian scientists and the infidel&#13;
scientists to settle that question, while&#13;
I tell-you I have seen the same thing.&#13;
"What!" say you, "not the sun .standing&#13;
still?" Yes. The same miracle is&#13;
performed nowadays. The wicked do&#13;
not live out half their day, and the&#13;
sun sets at noon. But let a man sta'rt&#13;
out and battle for God, and the truth,&#13;
and against sin, and. the day of his usefulness&#13;
is prolonged, and prolonged,&#13;
and prolonged.&#13;
But It is Urne for Joshua to go home.&#13;
He is lio'years old. Washington went&#13;
down the Potomac, and at Mount Vernon&#13;
closed his days. Wellington died&#13;
peacefully at Apsley house. Now,&#13;
where shall Joshua rest? Why, he is&#13;
-to have his greatest battle now. "After&#13;
110 years be has to meet a king who&#13;
has more subjects than all the present&#13;
population of the earth, 'his throne a&#13;
pyramid of skulls, his parterre-- the&#13;
graveyards and cemeteries of the&#13;
world, his chariot t h e world's hearse—&#13;
the King of Terrors. But if this is&#13;
Joshua's greatest battle, it is going&#13;
to be Joshua's greatest victory. He&#13;
gathers his frfends around him and&#13;
gives his valedictory.&#13;
And as you have heard a grandfather,&#13;
or a great-grandfather, seated&#13;
by the evening fire, tell of Monmouth,&#13;
or Yorktown, and then lift the crutch&#13;
or staff as though it were a musket, to&#13;
fight, and show how the old battles&#13;
were won—so Joshua _ gathers his&#13;
friends around his dying couch, and&#13;
he tells them the story of what he has&#13;
been through, and as he lies.there, his&#13;
white locks snowing down on his wrink-,&#13;
led forehead, I wonder if God has kept&#13;
his promise all the way through—the&#13;
promise of the text. As he lies there&#13;
he tells the story one, two" or three&#13;
times over—and he answers: "I go the&#13;
way of all the earth, and not one word&#13;
of the promise has failed, not one word&#13;
thereof has failed."/ And he turns to&#13;
his family: as a dying parent will, and&#13;
says: "Choose now whom you will&#13;
serve, the God of Israel, or the God of&#13;
the Amorites. As for me and ray house,&#13;
we will serve the Lord," A dying&#13;
parent cannot be reckless 'or thoughtless&#13;
in regard to his children. Consent&#13;
to part with them at the door of the&#13;
tomb we cannot. By the cradle in&#13;
which their infancy was-rocked,,by the&#13;
bosom on which they first lay, by the&#13;
blood of the covenant, by the God of&#13;
Joshua, it shall not be. We will not&#13;
part, we-cannot "part. "Jehovah Jlreh,.,&#13;
we take thee at thy-promiso: "I wijl'&#13;
be a God to thee and thy seed after&#13;
thee." £-.rV&#13;
Dead, th-^ old chieftain must be laid&#13;
out&#13;
sacred body is ov?r 110 vears of age&#13;
Lay him out\ stretch out those feet&#13;
that walked dky shod ths parted Jordan.&#13;
Close thcvse rips -which helped&#13;
blow the blast at which the walls of&#13;
Jericho fell. Fol^ the arm that lifted&#13;
the spear toward the doomed city of AI.&#13;
Fold it,right over the heart that exultfd&#13;
when the five kings fell. • B u t&#13;
where shall we g«fc\ tho burnished&#13;
granite for the headstone and the footstone?&#13;
I bethink myself now.' I&#13;
imagine that for the head it shall be&#13;
the sun that stood still upon Gibeon,&#13;
and for the foot, the moon\that stood&#13;
still in the valley of Ajalon.&#13;
A MINNESOTA PARMER&#13;
Doe* Well In Weetern Canada.&#13;
Yirden, Man., Now4.'8, 1891. '&#13;
,Hon. Clifford SlftQA. Minister of the*&#13;
Interior, Ottawa; Canada—Sir: Thlnk-f&#13;
iqg that my fcrpdrletice in Manitoba.&#13;
might be both useful and Interesting;&#13;
to my fellaw-counfryfcen in the Unlteil&#13;
States who. may ft tookinf to Manitoba&#13;
and the &gt; neffnwfet w?tH the i n -&#13;
tention of settling there, I have much,&#13;
pleasure in stating tha* through la*:&#13;
formation received frqm Mjr. W. F.:&#13;
McCreary, hnmtg«at«?n commissioners&#13;
at Winnipeg, f was induced to visit1&#13;
cauea upon Mr. McCreary he scared no»&#13;
bains to give me ah /the information,&#13;
*fc' J n W8» PPSftesaJtoxL, the,, result of&#13;
which was that 1 came here w i t b a -&#13;
letter of introduction from him'to the&#13;
secretary of the Virden £o$rd of&#13;
Trade. That gentleman provided m a ,&#13;
with a competent land guided and,&#13;
although there was considerable snow&#13;
OB the ground, I had no difficulty in&#13;
selecting three homesteads for myself&#13;
and sons. Having made the necessary&#13;
homestead entries at the land office in&#13;
iirandon, I returned to my home in&#13;
Lyon county, Minnesota, and came back&#13;
here in May following, accompanied&#13;
by one of my boys, bringing with us&#13;
two teams of horses, implements, etc.&#13;
Our first work was to erect a temporary&#13;
shanty and stable, after which&#13;
we broke and leveled seventy-five&#13;
acres and put up thirty tons of hay.&#13;
I went back to Minnesota about*July&#13;
20, leaving my son here. I returned&#13;
in October, bringing my family with&#13;
me. I found that the land we had&#13;
acquired was of good quaiity, being&#13;
a strong clay loam with clay subsoil.&#13;
Last spring I sowed 100 acres in wheat&#13;
and fifty acres in oats and barley.&#13;
(Seventy-five acres of this grain was&#13;
sowed on "go-back" plowed last&#13;
spring.) My crop was thrashed in&#13;
October, the result being over ZJSiO&#13;
bushels of grain in all. Wheat averaged&#13;
fifteen bushels per acre and&#13;
graded No. 1 hard, but that which was&#13;
sown on lund other than sod ("goback")&#13;
went twenty four and one-half&#13;
bushels per acre.&#13;
To say that I am well pleased with&#13;
the result of my first year's farming&#13;
operations in Manitoba does not adequately&#13;
express .my feelingsr and I&#13;
have no hesitation in advising 'those&#13;
who are living in districts where, land&#13;
is high In price to come out here, If&#13;
they are willing to do a fair amount&#13;
cf work.&#13;
• • &lt;&#13;
v&#13;
J , -..,&#13;
two! elevators. I h i s summer I erected&#13;
a dwelling house of native stone and&#13;
bought a half-section of land- adjoining&#13;
our homesteads, for which I paid&#13;
a very moQerate price. There are still&#13;
some homesteads in this district,, and&#13;
land of fine quality can^be purchased&#13;
from the Canadian Pacific Railway&#13;
company at 13.50 per acre on liberal&#13;
terms. Good water is generally found&#13;
at a depth of from fifteen to twenty&#13;
feet. I have 175 acres ready for crop&#13;
next year.&#13;
The cost of living here is about the&#13;
3ame a s in southern Minnesota. Some&#13;
commodities are higher and others&#13;
lower in price, but the average—ifabout&#13;
the same. I remain, your obedient&#13;
servant. (Signed.)&#13;
JACOB REICHERT.&#13;
AHlttle boy usefl~to crnsrr fienvers to»&#13;
obtain their color, and would then&#13;
paint all sorts of pictures on the white&#13;
walls of his father's cottage in the' Tyrol.&#13;
He became known to the world&#13;
later on as the great artist Titian.&#13;
Seaport of tho South.&#13;
It has long been evident that the&#13;
rapidly increasing movement of grain&#13;
and merchandise towards the south-&#13;
Handle him verv gentlv; that k e r n s e a b o a r d would. demand an in-&#13;
" p crease of shipping facilities on the&#13;
Mexican Gulf; The most promising&#13;
seaport-city is La Porte, at *he head of&#13;
ualveston Bay. Peculiar natural advantages&#13;
surround LaPorte,-notably its&#13;
being the fartherest inland seaport on&#13;
.Itlui-Gulf, having high dry land with&#13;
perfect drainage and the purest artesian&#13;
water, a climate unsurpassed in&#13;
the south and an. attractive city site.&#13;
The American Land Co., 188 Madison&#13;
street, Chicago, is interested at La-&#13;
Porte and announces the first general&#13;
sale of property will bo held Feby.&#13;
14-17, 1900^ v • .{• ;;&#13;
War Upon Bad Seeds. \&#13;
The agricultural department has&#13;
constructed a new building at Washington&#13;
to be used solely for testing&#13;
seeds of all kinds, in order t o afford&#13;
protection against dishonest dealers.&#13;
Recent tests gave remarkable results.&#13;
Meadow-foxtail seed from Germany,&#13;
costing 35 cents a pound, was adulterated&#13;
more than 70 per c,ent with seed&#13;
worth only 10 cents a pound. Orchard&#13;
grass, purchased in the open market,&#13;
was more than half bad. Some crimson&#13;
clover, similarly purchased, was&#13;
98 per cent bad.&#13;
a -&#13;
God goes with th.o mail who i© willing&#13;
to take a hard place.&#13;
Th&lt; ri is no virtue in doing1 right simply&#13;
because we have to.&#13;
A Word of Warn log-.&#13;
From the Chicago News: Wife—&#13;
I'm going to run across the street just&#13;
a minute to bid Mrs. Jones good-by.&#13;
Husbandrr^Well, you'll have to hurry,&#13;
The train leaves Tn three hours.&#13;
Not Very Conioltiiff.&#13;
Simkins—Cheer up, old man. There's&#13;
just as good fish in the sea as ever&#13;
were caught. Timkins—Perhaps there&#13;
are; but what's a fellow to do when&#13;
he's out of bau?—Chicago News.&#13;
' Good counsel rejected returns to enrich&#13;
the giver's bosom.&#13;
Deafneia Cannot Be Carey,&#13;
by )oc»l applications, as they cannot reach the&#13;
diseased portion of the ear. There Is only one&#13;
way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional&#13;
remedies. Deafness is caused by an&#13;
Inflamed condition of the mucus lining of the&#13;
Eustachian Tube. When this tube Is inflamed&#13;
you have a rumbling sound or imperfeot hearinp.&#13;
and when It is entirely closed deafness is&#13;
the result, and unless the inflammatipn can bo&#13;
taken out and this tube restored to ftw normal&#13;
nclondition, hearing will be destroyed forever;. Z r 5 a s e s o u t °* t e n a r 0 caused by cataixh,&#13;
which Is nothing but an Inflamed condition of&#13;
the mucus surfaces.&#13;
We.*ill give One Hundred Dollars for any case&#13;
of Deaftfess (caused by catarrh) that cannot&#13;
be cured by Hair* Catawh^Curax Sead Jor&#13;
circuiars,\free. ^ / . . " *&#13;
o ,.w \ F.J. CHENEY A CC&lt; Toledo, Qt&#13;
Sold by Etomrists. 7hP * -- y~ -&#13;
Hall's Pwofly puis are Upbeat.&#13;
Misfortunes and imprudence are often&#13;
twins. \ ,•"&#13;
A dollar neve^ troys much for a sijngy&#13;
man.'&#13;
v / /&#13;
/&#13;
-½ • I**" l:&#13;
Tha Land ef ttre«d and Batter.&#13;
is the title of a newXillustrated pamphlet&#13;
just issued by the Chicago, Milwaukee&#13;
ft S t Paul Railway, relating&#13;
more especially to the land along, the&#13;
new line it is now building tbJctaglfc&#13;
Bon Homme and.Charlea Mix counties&#13;
In South Dakota. It will be found very&#13;
Interesting reading. A copy\w?ll bemailed&#13;
free on receipt of 2-cedt stami&#13;
for poetag*. Address Geo. H. »&#13;
General PeasengerL Agent, Chici&#13;
7=&#13;
N?^&#13;
f-*:•',;••:&#13;
' **!&#13;
•,i»'&gt;•'!'•&#13;
VM&#13;
* » »&#13;
r l fcid t h*A coogh for six&#13;
week* ind coutd not Ind tny&#13;
relief whatever. I read what a&#13;
wonderful remedy Aycr'sCHfrry&#13;
Pectoral was for coughs and I&#13;
bought a bottle. Before I had&#13;
taken a quarter of it my cough&#13;
had entirely left me."—L Hawn,&#13;
Newington, Oat., May 3,1899.&#13;
Quickly&#13;
Cures Colds&#13;
Neglected colds always lead&#13;
to something serious. They&#13;
run into chronic bronchitis which&#13;
pulls down your general health&#13;
and deprives you of sleep; or&#13;
they end in genuine consumption&#13;
with all its uncertain results.&#13;
Don't wait, but take Ayer's&#13;
Cherry Pectoral just_as.soon as&#13;
you begin to, cough. A few&#13;
doses will cure you then. But&#13;
it cures old colds, too, only it&#13;
takes a little more time. We&#13;
refer to such diseases as bronchitis,&#13;
asthma, whooping-cough,&#13;
consumption, and hard winter&#13;
coughs.&#13;
If you've just taken cold A 25 cent bottle&#13;
is all you'll need. For harder cases a&#13;
60 cent "bottle ia better. For chronic&#13;
troubles, and to keep on hand, the 91.00&#13;
bottle la moat economical.&#13;
T h e m a n w i l l b e w e l l o c c u p i e d w h o s e&#13;
first a i m i n l i f e i s t o d o G o d ' s w i l l .&#13;
M y p r o f e s s i o n a l r e p u t a t i o n w a s a t&#13;
s t a k e . I h a d , t h r e e m o n t h s b e f o r e t h e&#13;
d a t e o f w h i c h I w r i t e , p e r m i t t e d a n o -&#13;
t o r i o u s d e s p e r a d o t o e s c a p e f r o m m y&#13;
c h a r g e , a n d I w a s d i s t i n c t l y o u t o f&#13;
f a v o r w i t h t h e d e p a r t m e n t . I h a d a&#13;
p e c u l i a r s u p e r s t i t i o n a b o u t t h e a d r o i t&#13;
c r i m i n a l w h o s e r u s e h a d o u t w i t t e d m e .&#13;
H e w a s t a l l , 'alert a n d g r a c e f u l , w i t h&#13;
a f a c e t h a t r e m i n d e d m e s t r o n g l y o f&#13;
t h e p i c t u r e s I h a d s e e n of, E d g a r A .&#13;
P o e . H e h a d a n i n s i n u a t i n g m a n n e r&#13;
a n d t h e m o s t m u s i c a l v o i c e J e v e r&#13;
h e a r d . H i s p r o f e s s i o n w a s s a f e - b r e a k -&#13;
i n g . I h a d o n c e a p p r e h e n d e d t h e m a n , -&#13;
a n d , c u r i o u s l y e n o u g h , it w a s t h e r e -&#13;
s u l t o f m y first a s s i g n m e n t t o d e t e c t -&#13;
i v e w o r k . H e h a d , a s a r e s u l t , s e r v e d&#13;
• a t e r m o f s e v e n y e a r s i n t h e p e n i t e n -&#13;
t i a r y .&#13;
It c h a n c e d t h a t d u r i n g h i s r e s i d e n c e&#13;
t h e r e I m e t h i m s e v e r a l t i m e s a n d o n&#13;
e a c h o c c a s i o n h e h a d r e g a r d e d m e _ w i t h&#13;
a l o o k t h a t w a s n o n e t h e l e s s s i n i s t e r&#13;
b e c a u s e i t w a s h a l f j o c u l a r . T h e&#13;
m a n ' s l o o k w a s a m e n a c e . I k n e w h e&#13;
w a s t h i n k i n g t h a t h e w o u l d b e r e -&#13;
v e n g e d , a n d I w a s s u r e t h a t o n l y t h e&#13;
m o s t c o n c l u s i v e of r e v e n g e s w o u l d&#13;
s a t i s f y h i m . I n o t h e r w o r d s , t h i s m a n&#13;
w a s d e t e r m i n e d t o h a v e m y l i f e . I&#13;
a l w a y s f a c e d h i m w i t h a l o o k a s d a r k&#13;
a s t h a t w h i c h h e g a v e m e , f o r t h e i n -&#13;
t e n t i o n i n m y s o u l w a s n o l e s s r e l e n t -&#13;
l e s s t h a n h i s o w n . W e w e r e d o o m e d ,&#13;
a s I f e l t i n m y a p p r e h e n s i v e s o u l , t o&#13;
s t a n d o p p o s e d i n s o m e h i d e o u s t r a g -&#13;
e d y .&#13;
W h e n , t h r e e y e a r s a f t e r h i s r e l e a s e ,&#13;
h e a g a i n I n c u r r e d t h e d i s p l e a s u r e of&#13;
t h e l a w / 1 t r a v e l e d 6,()00 m i l e s i n m y&#13;
s e a r c h f o r h i m , a n d d i s c o v e r e d h i m a t&#13;
l e n g t h - i n I n d i a n t e r r i t o r y . H o w h e&#13;
o u t w i t t e d m e o n o u r w a y b a c k t o C h i -&#13;
c a g o i s a s t o r y I h a v e n o i n c l i n a t i o n&#13;
t o t e l l .&#13;
It w a s , t h e r e f o r e , w i t h m i x e d f e e l -&#13;
i n g s t h a t I l e a r n e d fxojoL-the c h i e f o f&#13;
o u r a g e n c y o f t h e n a t u r e of m y c o m -&#13;
m i s s i o n . H e t o l d m e t h a t i n f o r m a t i o n&#13;
h a d b e e n b r o u g h t h i m of a n a t t e m p t&#13;
t o b e m a d e t h a t n i g h t u p o n t h e s a f e&#13;
of t h e M c P h e r s b n I n v e s t m e n t c o m p a n y ;&#13;
T h e p l o t h a d b e e n o v e r h e a r d b y a n e c -&#13;
c e n t r i c r e p o r t e r f o r o n e of t h e d a i l y&#13;
p a p e r s , w h o s e b u s i n e s s h a d t a k e n h i m&#13;
i n t o s o m e s o r r y r e s o r t . F r o m t h e d e -&#13;
s c r i p t i o n w h i c h t h e y o u n g m a n g a v e&#13;
of t h e t h r e e c o n s p i r a t o r s t h e c h i e f h a d&#13;
n o difficulty i n e s t a b l i s h i n g t h e i r i d e n -&#13;
T t i l H e a l t h a n d P l e a s u r e R e s o r t s&#13;
Of T e x a s , M e x i c o , A r i z o n a a n d C a l i -&#13;
f o r n i a a r e q u i c k l y a n d c o m f o r t a b l y&#13;
r e a c h e d v i a t h e S o u t h e r n Pacific C o m -&#13;
p a n y ' s S u n s e t R o u t e . " D a i l y t h r o u g h&#13;
s e r v i c e f r o m N e w O r l e a n s ~ t o Sarr~&#13;
'» F r a n c i s c o v i a H o u s t o n , S a n A n t o n i o ,&#13;
E l P a s o a n d L o s A n g e l e s . S p e c i a l&#13;
s e m i - w e e k l y s e r v i c e , S u n s e t L i m i t e d&#13;
f r o m N e w ' O r l e a n s M o n d a y s a n d&#13;
T h u r s d a y s , c o m p o s e d o f Buffet S m o k -&#13;
i n g Car, c o n t a i n i n g B a t h Roon*» a n d&#13;
r B a r b e r S h o p , D r a w i n g R o o m C o m p a r t -&#13;
m e n t Oar, r e g u l a r P u l l m a n S l e e p e r s ,&#13;
a n d D i n i n g C a r ( m e a l s a l a c a r t e ) , a B -&#13;
of t h e l a t e s t d e s i g n a n d m o 9 t l u x u r i -&#13;
o u s l y a p p o i n t e d . D i r e c t c o n n e c t i o n s&#13;
m a d e a t N e w O r l e a n s f r o m a l l p o i n t s .&#13;
N o r t h a n d E a s t , D e t a i l e d i n f o r m a -&#13;
t i o n c h e e r f u l l y f u r n i s h e d b y W . G.&#13;
N e i m y e r , G. W . A., S o . P a c . Co., 238&#13;
C l a r k S t . , C h i c a g o ; W . H. C o n n o r ,&#13;
C o m ' l A g t , C h a m b e r C o m m e r c e B l d g . ,&#13;
C i n c i n n a t i , 0 . , W . J. B e r g , T r a v . P a s s .&#13;
f A g t . , 220 E l l i c o t t S q u a r e , B u f f a l o ,&#13;
N . Y.&#13;
B e t t e r b e a l a m p i n t h e h o u s e t h a n&#13;
t r y t o b e aTstar "in t h e s k y ,&#13;
Go to your grocer to-day&#13;
and get a 15c. package 01&#13;
Grain-0&#13;
It takes the place of coffee&#13;
at i the cost.&#13;
Made from pure grains it,&#13;
is nourishing and healthful.&#13;
Insist that yonr grocer gives yoa GRAI5-0.&#13;
Aocept no imitation.&#13;
(alzer't Rape&#13;
rivet Rich,&#13;
treea ^ V- ^&#13;
a&#13;
iei&#13;
FARM SEEDS&#13;
Spelts—&#13;
What la It I&#13;
CaUlos&#13;
telle.&#13;
Bator's Seats anttamtttft la Pitta*. v » J&#13;
l?F)tlMm Ultor? K.Troy, P*.. aiteai*«i Uw wwM/&#13;
MbMoott, Wl§., ITS bat. terltr; mmin.Un*?.&#13;
BtdWIag, Minn., byarowint SftfbuH. Salter teare Br Mr*, ir To« deabt, writ* th*w. W. wttk t. gala&#13;
JOS at v euiwmwi. twwtlll mJ M trial&#13;
10 DOLLARS WORTH POU 10©.&#13;
• pan of r*r* farm MM*. Ban Buk^tha I*ara4&#13;
Oata—Satns.prodariasaOaaia. M I M 4 I H I Bay&#13;
f*t acta—abo*« oauaad barlay. Broouu Ia«ra4a&#13;
—to. ffcaieti pan oa tar tit; JW#«r aay« «•.&#13;
Rap*. Barlai-ariteat, «... laalostaa owe ataa*&#13;
•ib Pint. Frnliaad Bart Cautoa. ulltaeaU&#13;
•tost HaUartGr*atllllll«a Dollar&#13;
Potala, all nu&lt;]*4 St 10a. poataga j&#13;
- mraly wort* ft* to tataatarl.&#13;
Ml ftat.at»l.«a bbl. aaa *P^—^.&#13;
PtSBSe ^aMrW. » »•« awTTnt toaata- ^ f S j S&#13;
•sad t B t O ^ a ^ a j i ^ l l i l ^ r f S ^ C a U k i f&#13;
4le**if..t ow8iatkls.e ^r** 32fjwmfwSaB^_•!w••n•is»&lt; *«•&#13;
THKEE KNAVES&#13;
AND A TRUMP.&#13;
C R O U C H I N G O N T H E F L O O R ,&#13;
t i t y . T h e f o r e m o s t of t h e m w a s ray&#13;
foe, P a y s o n W e a t h e r b y — f o r , t h o u g h h e&#13;
b a d m a n y a l i a s e s , t h i s I b e l i e v e t o h a v e&#13;
b e e n h i s t r u e n a m e . T h e s e c o n d w a s a&#13;
m u l a t t o , W a s h i n g t o n B r o w n , a m a n&#13;
of m u c h i n t e l l i g e n c e a n d r e c k l e s s c o u r -&#13;
age,' w h o t o o k h i s d e s t i n y b y t h e t h r o a t&#13;
a n d m a d e a n o u t l a w of h i m s e l f r a t h e r&#13;
t h a n c o u r t f a v o r of a w o r l d w h i c h&#13;
w o u l d , a t b e s t , h a v e s h o w n h i m o n l y&#13;
c o n t e m p t . T h e t h i r d r a s c a l , w a s a n o l d -&#13;
t i m e c u l p r i t , G e o r g e B u r k e , a t h i c k -&#13;
n e c k e d , l o w - b r o w e d f e l l o w , w h o w a s&#13;
b o r n t o c r i m e .&#13;
" H o w m a n y m e n d o y o u w a n t ? "&#13;
a s k e d t h e c h i e f o f m e .&#13;
" T w o . "&#13;
" B u t w o u l d i t n o t b e w i s e t o o u t -&#13;
n u m b e r y o u r a d v e r s a r i e s ? T h e y a r e&#13;
d e s p e r a t e m e n . "&#13;
I t h o u g h t ' o f P a y s o n W e a t h e r b y ' s s i -&#13;
l e n t c h a l l e n g e , a n d f o r m e d a r e s o l v e&#13;
t o m e e t h i m w i t h o u t o d d s .&#13;
W e e x p e c t e d t o b e b e f o r e h a n d w i t h&#13;
o u r m e n , a n d w i t h G r a y s o n , t h e r e -&#13;
p o r t e r w h o h a d g i v e n u s t h e i n f o r m a -&#13;
t i o n , w e r e a t t h e s p o t a q u a r t e r o f a n&#13;
h o u r b e f o r e t h e t i m e W e a t h e r b y ^had&#13;
a p p o i n t e d . B u t t o o u r c h a g r i n w e&#13;
f o u n d t h e r e a r w i n d o w of t h e j&gt;lace&#13;
w i t h o u t a s q u a r e o f g l a s s . M y e v i l&#13;
l u c k s t i l l h e l d . T h e s a f e - b l o w e r s w e r e&#13;
w i t h i n . W i t h m e w e r e J a m e s B i g e t o w ,&#13;
a y o u n g f e l l o w , f r e s h t o a d e t e c t i v e ' s&#13;
l i t * a n d N e l s o n G r e e n , a g r i z z l e d v e t -&#13;
e r a n , c a u t i o u s a s a c a t , a n d a m a n&#13;
n o t e d f o r - h i s l i g h t n i n g - s w i f t m o t i o n s .&#13;
T h e y a n d . t h e r e p o r t e r f o l l o w e d m e&#13;
t h r o u g h t h e w i n d o w . A f e w s t e p s&#13;
m o r e r e v e a l e d t o m e t h e f a c t t h a t t h e&#13;
d o o r o f t h e o u t e r v a u l t h a d a l r e a d y&#13;
b e e n f o r c e d . ' v&#13;
I m o t i o n e d t h e r e p o r t e r t o s t a n d&#13;
b a c k tn«J m y _ _ m e n a n d _ I e n t e r e d t h e&#13;
V a u l t , w h i c h w a s a n i r o n r o o m 1 6 x 1 6&#13;
f e e t J* e f e e ^ a n d o c c u p i e d b y a h e a v y&#13;
t a b k a n d t w o c h a i r s . O p p o s i t e t h e&#13;
d o o r w a s t h e s a f e p r o p e r , a n d b e f o r e&#13;
t h i s t h r e e m e n - k n e l t , a l l d e s p e r a t e l y&#13;
. o c c u p i e d . &gt;&#13;
I h a d n o t i c e d w h i l e I s t o o d i n t h e&#13;
d a r k a l l e y w i t h o u t t h a t t h e r e w a s a&#13;
r i s i n g s t o r m , a n d n o w a s u d d e n e x -&#13;
c e s s i v e g u s t of w i n d b l e w s h u t t h e&#13;
i r o n d o o r o f t h e v a u l t w i t h a r e p o r t&#13;
a s l o u d a s t h a t o f a n e x p l o s i o n . O n a&#13;
of tfce, m e n — i t w a s W e a t h e r b y — c r i e d&#13;
o u t i n t e r r o r a n d l e a p e d a w a y f r o m&#13;
c e r t a i n l i t t l e b o x - l i k e c o n t r i v a n c e s&#13;
w h i c h l a y b e s i d e h i m o n t h e floor. H e&#13;
( b o u g h t t h e c o n c u s s i o n w o u l d e x p l o d e&#13;
t h e d y n a m i t e . T h e n h e s a w u s , s t a n d -&#13;
i n g t o g e t h e r , o u r r e v o l v e r s a i m e d , a n d ,&#13;
r e c o g n i z i n g m e , g a v e a l i t t l e c l u c k w i t h&#13;
h i s t o n g u e a n d s m i l e d c y n i c a l l y a s h e&#13;
t h r e w u p h i s h a n d s i n t o k e n of t h e&#13;
f a c t t h a t h e r e c o g n i z e d t h e s i t u a t i o n .&#13;
H i s c o n f e d e r a t e s g l a n c e d u p , s a w u s ,&#13;
a n d c o w e r e d w h e r e t h e y w e r e , b u t o n e&#13;
of t h e m - m a n a g e d t o e x t i n g u i s h t h e&#13;
l a n t e r n b y w h o s e l i g h t t h e y h a d b e e n&#13;
w o r k i n g , a n d t h e y w e r e p o s s e s s e d o f&#13;
t h e v a n t a g e of s h a d o w . I h e a r d t h e&#13;
c l i c k of tjheir r e v o l v e r s , a n d , r e a l i z i n g&#13;
t h a t t h e l i g h t I c a r r i e d m a d e u s f a i r&#13;
t a r g e t s , I p u t i t o u t . H a l f a s e c o n d&#13;
l a t e r a b u l l e t c l a t t e r e d a g a i n s t t h e w a l l&#13;
b e h i n d m e . I d r o p p e d t o t h e floor, a n d&#13;
t h e m e n w i t h m e f o l l o w e d m y e x a m p l e .&#13;
T h e n I h e a r d a c l a t t e r i n g a t t h e d o o r ,&#13;
a n d k n e w t h a t G r a y s o n , t h e r e p o r t e r ,&#13;
w a s t r y i n g t o g e t i n t o u s . B u t t h o u g h&#13;
t h e l o c k m u s t h a v e b e e n f o r c e d , y e t i t&#13;
did n o t y i e l d t o i t s m a n i p u l a t i o n s , a n d&#13;
p r e s e n t l y a l l w a s s i l e n t&#13;
T h e n t h e u n e x p e c t e d h a p p e n e d .&#13;
T h r o u g h a t i n y b a r r e d w i n d o w , h i g h&#13;
in t h e w a l l , a flash of w h i t e l i g h t n i n g&#13;
g l e a m e d , a n d ' w e s a w t h a t o u r f o e s ,&#13;
l i k e o u r s e l v e s / w e r e c r o u c h i n g o n t h e&#13;
floor. G r e e n fired, a n d a g r o a n f o l -&#13;
l o w e d t h e r e p o r t of h i s r e v o l v e r . F o r&#13;
s o m e r e a s o n w h i c h I s h a l l n e v e r b e&#13;
a b l e t o e x p l a i n , W e a t h e r b y a n d I d i d&#13;
n o t s h o o t . H i s s m i l i n g , i n s o l e n t f a c e&#13;
m e n a c e d m e , a n d I l o o k e d b a c k w i t h&#13;
w h a t defiance*"! c o u l d .&#13;
W e a l l W a i t e d f o r t h e n e x t flash o f&#13;
l i g h t n i n g , n o t d r a w i n g a n a u d i b l e&#13;
b r e a t h . N e v e r d i d s i l e n c e s e e m s o&#13;
. c o m p l e t e t o m e a s i n t h a t l i t t l e r o o m&#13;
w h e r e s i x d e s p e r a t e m e n w a i t e d i n&#13;
d a r k n e s s t o d o e a c h o t h e r t o t h e d e a t h .&#13;
If I c o u l d h a v e h e a r d a s i g h I s h o u l d&#13;
h a v e fired. I h a v e k n o w n w o u n d s a n d&#13;
t h e s u r g e o n ' s p r o b e , b u t t h e p a i n o f&#13;
t h a t s i l e n c e d i s c o u n t e d t h e m .&#13;
I c r a w l e d a l o n g t h e e d g e o f t h e w a l l&#13;
t h a t I m i g h t b e i n a n u n e x p e c t e d p l a c e&#13;
b y t h e n e x t l i g h t n i n g g l e a m , k e e p i n g&#13;
m y r e v o l v e r j u s t i n a d v a n c e of m y&#13;
n o s e . W h e n t h e e n v - e l o p i n g flash c a m e&#13;
it r e v e a l e d t h e e y e s o f P a y s o n W e a t h -&#13;
e r b y n o t s i x i n c h e s f r o m m i n e . W G&#13;
b o t h i n v o l u n t a r i l y r e c o i l e d ; w e b o t h&#13;
fired. A b i t of i c e s e e m e d t o g r a z e m y&#13;
h e a d , a n d t h e n I f e i t a w a r m fluid&#13;
d a m p e n i n g m y c h e e k . B i g e l o w c r i e d&#13;
o u t s u d d e n l y , a n d I w a s g u i l t y of a n&#13;
a u d i b l e g r o a n of a n x i e t y f o r h i m .&#13;
A g a i n w e w a i t e d — I c a n n o t tell t h e&#13;
l e n g t h o f t i m e . I t w a s n o m o r e t o&#13;
b e m e a s u r e d t h a t a h a s h e e s h d r e a m .&#13;
T h e n o u t o f t h e s i l e n c e c a m e a v i b r a n t ,&#13;
h y s t e r i c a l s h r i e k . P a y s o n W e a t h e r b y&#13;
h a d n o t l o o k e d l i k e E d g a r A . P o e f o r&#13;
n o t h i n g . H i s d e l i c a t e l y w r o u g h t o r -&#13;
g a n i z a t i o n T e v u l t e d a g a i n s t t h e s t r a i n&#13;
u p o n it. H e s o b b e d a n d l a u g h e d . H e&#13;
w a s a m a d m a n .&#13;
4^his h o r r o r a f f e c t e d u s a l l s i m i l a r l y .&#13;
W e w e r e w a r y , b u t w e s u s p e n d e d h o s -&#13;
t i l i t i e s . W e w e r e o n o u r g u a r d l e s t&#13;
t h i s e m o t i o n a l m a n i a c s h o u l d d a s h - e u * -&#13;
b r a i n s o u t o r h i s o w n a g a i n s t t h e i r o n&#13;
w a l l s . &gt;&#13;
T h e h a s h e e s h d r e a m r e a c h e d o u t l i k e&#13;
t h e b e g i n n i n g of e t e r n i t y , a n d w e b e -&#13;
g a n t o s u f f e r f o r a l a c k of o x y g e n .&#13;
T h e n c a m e a b a t t e r i n g a t t h e d o o r a n d&#13;
I s t a g g e r e d o u t , d r e n c h e d i n b l o o d&#13;
f r o m m y w o u n d . S o m e o n e h e l p e d m e&#13;
up, a n d I h e a r d l a t e r t h a t i t w a s P a y -&#13;
s o n W e a t h e r b y .&#13;
- W n e n , s i x w e e k s l a t e r , I c a m e o u t of&#13;
t h e h o s p i t a l , t h e y t o l d m e h e w a s i n&#13;
a cell a t K a n k a k e e . A s f o r m e , I&#13;
g a v e u p t h e d e t e c t i v e p r o f e s s i o n . I&#13;
h a d b e e n a f a i l u r e a t It. B u t I h a r e&#13;
t h e c o m f o r t of t h e r e f l e c t i o n t h a t i f&#13;
P a y s o n W e a t h e r b y d e f e a t e d m e , I d e -&#13;
f e a t e d h i m n o l e s s .&#13;
N o " P r o p e r t y " Etcapca.&#13;
O v e r t h e a u d i e n c e r e s t s a s e t t l e d , i m -&#13;
m o v a b l e s t i l l n e s s , u n b r o k e n e v e n b y a&#13;
s i g h . N o e x p r e s s i o n r e f e r a b l e t o s o r -&#13;
r o w , s y m p a t h y , j o y o r t e a r s l i g h t e n s&#13;
t h e b l a n k , d e a d w a l l s o f t h e f a c e s . T h e&#13;
C h i n a m a n i s i m p r e g n a b l e . O n l y o n c e&#13;
d o h i s e y e s c h a n g e , a n d t h a t i s w h i l e&#13;
t h e p r o p e r t y m a n i s o n t h e s t a g e , a n d&#13;
h e i s n e v e r off. T h e C h i n e s e p r o p e r t y&#13;
m a n s e e s h i s d u t y t o t h e m a n a g e m e n t ,&#13;
a n d p u t s i t i n t o p r a c t i c a l effect, N o&#13;
" p r o p e r t y " s h a l l e s c a p e h i m . H e g a t h -&#13;
e r s all t h i n g s b y t h e w a y . W h e n t h e&#13;
C h i n e s e R o m e o s l a y s T y b a l t t h e p r o p -&#13;
e r t y m a n s t e p s o n t o t h e s t a g e , g a t h -&#13;
e r s u p T y b a l t ' s s w o r d , c a p a n d c l o a k&#13;
a n d t h i n g s a n d w a l k s off w i t h t h e m .&#13;
H e w o u l d e n t e r M a c b e t h ' s b a n q u e t h a l l&#13;
w h i l e . t h e w e a k - k n e e d m o n a r c h w a s&#13;
e x e r c i s i n g B a n q u o ' s g h o s t , g a t h e r u p&#13;
t h e g o b l e t s a n d p l a t e s i n o n e a r m a n d&#13;
M a w b e t h ' s c h a i r w i t h - t h e . o t h e r , a n d&#13;
' c a r r y t h e m a w a y . H e w o u l d p l u c k t h e&#13;
r o s e s f r o m E l a i n e ' s b r e a s t ; h e w o u l d&#13;
t a k e t h e d a g g e r f r o m J u l i e t ' s d e a d&#13;
h a n d ; h e w o u l d i n t e r r u p t H a m l e t ' s&#13;
s o l i l o q u y i n t h e c h u r c h y a r d w i t h a r e -&#13;
q u e s t f o r Y o r l c k ' s s k u l l , a n d h e w o u l d&#13;
I n t e r p o s e i n t h e m u r d e r o f D e e d e m p n a&#13;
t o r e m o v e t h e p i l l o w s f r o m h e r h e a d . —&#13;
L e s l i e ' s W e e k l y .&#13;
/ - — ' " ~ '&#13;
N o t , W o r t h W h i l e .&#13;
H e ^ - N o ; I n e v e r r e a d b o o k s t h a t a r e&#13;
t a f t e d - a b o u t . S h e — B u t w h y n o t ? H e&#13;
— I t t a k e ? s o m u c h effort t o e x p l a i n If&#13;
I t t o a ' t I l k a t h e m . — P u c k .&#13;
WOMEN OF THE UNITED STATES&#13;
Regard Peruna as Their Shield Against Catarrh.&#13;
Coughs, Colds, Grip and Catarrhal Diseases.&#13;
MRS. BELVA A. L0CKW00D, LATE CANDIDATE FOR THE PRESIDENCY.&#13;
M r s . B e l v a L o c k w o o d , t h e e m i n e n t b a r r i s t e r , o f W a s h i n g t o n , D . C , i s t h «&#13;
o n l y w o m a n w h o h a s e v e r b e e n a c a n d i d a t e f o r t h e P r e s i d e n c y o f t h e U n i t e d&#13;
S t a t eft S h e i s t h e b e s t k n o w n w o m a n i n A m e r i c a . A s t h e p i o n e e r o f h e r s e x&#13;
i n t h e l e g a l p r o f e s s i o n s h e h a s g a t h e r e d f a m e a n d f o r t u n e . I n a l e t t e r t o The*&#13;
P e r u n a M e d i c i n e C o m p a n y , s h e s a y s :&#13;
"/ have used your Perunm both tor myself and my mother, Mrs*&#13;
Hannah J. Bennett, now in ber 88th year, and I find it an invaluable&#13;
remedy for cold, catarrh, hay fever and kindred diseases; also a good&#13;
tonic for feeble and old people, or those run down and with nerves&#13;
unstrung. it Yours truly, Belva A. Lockwood.&#13;
C a t a r r h m a y a t t a c k a n y o r g a n o f t h e b o d y . W o m e n a r e e s p e c i a l l y l i a b l e t o&#13;
c a t a r r h o f t h e peLvic o r g a n s . T h e r e a r e o n e h u n d r e d c a s e s of c a t a r r h o f t h a&#13;
p e l v i c o r g a n s t o o n e o f c a t a r r h o f t h e h e a d . M o s t p e o p l e t h i n k , b e c a u s e t h e y&#13;
h a v e n o c a t a r r h of t h e h e a d , t h e y h a v e n o c a t a r r h a t a l l . T h i s i s a g r e a t m i s t a k e ,&#13;
a n d i s t h e c a u s e o f m a n y c a s e s o f s i c k n e s s a n d d e a t h . " H e a l t h a n d . B e a u t y " s e n t&#13;
f r e e t o W o m e n o n l y , b y T h e P e r u n a M e d i c i n e ^ o . , C o l u m b u s , O h i o .&#13;
S o m a H e n Ara So Mean.&#13;
M r s W a l k e r ( t o h e r h u s b a n d , w h o i s&#13;
Dearly a s l e e p ) — O , N o r m a n , i s t h e l a m p&#13;
o u t i n t h e d i n i n g r o o m ? N o r m a n —&#13;
D o n ' t k n o w , b u t I'll t a k e c h a n c e s o n it.&#13;
It w e n t o u t b e f o r e I c a m e t o b e d , a n d&#13;
I h a v e n ' t h e a r d i t c o m e i n . — N e w Y o r k&#13;
W o r l d .&#13;
D O Y D U&#13;
D.onr DELAY&#13;
BALSAM&#13;
THE&#13;
It Cures Colds, Couqhs. Sore Throat, Croup. In*&#13;
Ruenza. Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Asthma.&#13;
A certain cute for ConsamptionirxJirat stages,&#13;
and a sure relief in advanced stagesT Use at once.&#13;
You will see the excellent effect after taking the&#13;
first dose- Sold by dealers everywhere. Large&#13;
bottles 25 cents and SO cents.&#13;
n D n D C V N E W DISCOVERY; gives&#13;
1 # | \ ^ ^ kr ^ 9 I quick relief and cure* worstcases.&#13;
Boole gf te/Hfmontals and 10 DATS* treatment&#13;
rax*, DR. H. H. flam's soss, *»x a. AU— U . O*.&#13;
ARTERS1NK&#13;
. Just as cheap a s poor ink.&#13;
Get your Pension&#13;
DOUBLE QUICK&#13;
Write C APT. O'FARRELL, Pension A r e n t ,&#13;
1425 New York Avenue. WASHINGTON. 0.&lt;a&gt;&#13;
PENSIONS&#13;
M«&gt;«t smoked in A few hoars with&#13;
KRAUSERS' LIQUI0 EXTRACT OF SMOKE.&#13;
liiad* from hickory wood. . Cheaper, cJemaeAj&#13;
•weeter, Aad sur*r than the-old way. S«rtd for&#13;
circular. L.ivUAl'»UU A liliO^ MlU«a,ra*&#13;
CHEAP FARMS&#13;
DO rOU WUTI HONE? I A A A A A A P D P Q Improved and unimproved&#13;
IVW4IIUU H U i l C d farming land* t&lt;» be divided&#13;
and sold on long time and easy p a y m e n t s , a little&#13;
each year. Come and see us or write. THE TBUMAK&#13;
MOSS STATE BANK, tanllac Center, Mich., or&#13;
The Truman Moss Estate.Croswell. Sanilac Co.,Mich.&#13;
TOURIST&#13;
TO&#13;
CALIFORNIA V I A&#13;
JPJrlWA§flaK&#13;
Y o u w i l l p r a c t i c e g o o d e c o n o m y I n&#13;
writing&#13;
C. 8. CRANE, C. P. A T. A., St. Louis,&#13;
for Dartlculare.&#13;
MILLIONS&#13;
of acres of choice agricultural&#13;
LANDS-nowopened&#13;
for settlement&#13;
la Western Canada.&#13;
Here is grown the celebrated&#13;
NO. 1 HARD&#13;
WHEAT, which brings the highest price in too&#13;
markets of the world; thousands of cattle are&gt;&#13;
fattened for marked without being fed grain,&#13;
and without a day's shelter. Send for information&#13;
and secure a free home in Western Canada.&#13;
Write the Superintendent of Immigration. Ottawa,&#13;
or address the undersigned, who will mail&#13;
you atlases, pamphlets, etc.. free of cost. M.&#13;
V. Mclnnes, No. 1 MerriirBlock, Detroit, Mich.;&#13;
James Grieve. Mt. Pleasant, Mich., pr D. I *&#13;
Caven. Bad Axe. M&lt;ch.&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • : Personally&#13;
I Conducted&#13;
I California&#13;
Excursions&#13;
Via the Santa P e Route.&#13;
Three times a week from Chicago&#13;
-and Kanaas Clly.&#13;
Twloe a week from St. Paul and&#13;
Minneapolia&#13;
Once a week from S t Louts and&#13;
Bo*ton. •&#13;
In improved wlde-vertibuled&#13;
Pullman tourist sleeping c a n .&#13;
Better than ever before, a t lowest&#13;
possible rates.&#13;
Experienced excursion conductors.&#13;
Also dally eertioe between Chicago&#13;
and California.&#13;
Correspondence solicited.&#13;
T . A . Q f t A O Y ,&#13;
Manage* CaHforafa Tourist terrlee,&#13;
Tee Ateklsaa. Toaeba ft Sasta Pe Railway&#13;
1 » Adams Street, CHICAGO.&#13;
••&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
r&#13;
FOR 14 CENTS&#13;
La Qroasa llarkatLatSaca, lie&#13;
StrawberrFMalon, lBo&#13;
RadUl&#13;
&gt; We wiah to gain thisyaar SKLpOO '&#13;
new oastoxaera, and Easce offer I&#13;
t Pkg. Citr Gardea Beat, 10* |&#13;
LI Pkg.Karl'at Emerald Cncnatberlte&#13;
h&#13;
1 " UDayRadUh.&#13;
1 M Early Rip* Cabbage. 100&#13;
1 - Karly Diaaer Oaioa? 10©&#13;
S - Brilliant Flower Balds, 15e&#13;
Wartfc S)1.0O, f w 14 out*. f O o&#13;
Above 10 Pkgs. worth tLOO, w« will&#13;
mail yoa free, together with oar&#13;
great Catalog, tailing all about&#13;
SALItl 8 aUllrW IftUil PtTATt&#13;
upon racalpt of this a e t l c e i U e .&#13;
stampa. W e invite yourtrada, and&#13;
; know whaa yoa onoe try 8*1 s er&gt;*&#13;
t e e e d a yoa will aavtr do without.&#13;
• M O * Prixoaon Salae*** l»ee— rareat&#13;
earl leat Ton a to Q iaat on aartb. « t t «&#13;
90MM A. SALZXK SUO CO., LA t BOSML Wig.&#13;
LlPORTE TEXAS Situated at the&#13;
h e a d e r Qalveston&#13;
Bey, to de»- | W &gt; I H M I B H B M ^&#13;
tinedtobetha HOST PROSPEROUS CITY on the&#13;
G ulf of Mexico. I t possesses unequaled natural&#13;
advantages, geographically and from every point&#13;
of view. Its future a s a great olty is assured.&#13;
The U. S. Government ia now spending- a large&#13;
amount of s&amp;oney In Harbor improvements.&#13;
La Porte is the natural seaport for the products&#13;
of the entire Middle. Northern and w e s t -&#13;
ern s t a t e s and for Houston, the great railroad&#13;
center of Texas.&#13;
Excursion* at reduced rates will be run twloe a&#13;
month. Write for FREE HAPS, DCSCRJPTIVB&#13;
UTBRATURE and full particular* to&#13;
AMERICAN LAND CO.,&#13;
188 ftvawtso* 8t*»* •• • - - CHICAOa&#13;
W. N . U . — D E T R O I T — N O , 4 - - 1 OOP&#13;
toe* Atsuertag Mverttseaaeits I M S&#13;
\&#13;
•?~» /&#13;
X&#13;
EAST MARION.&#13;
Tom Richards was home from&#13;
Detroit over last Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. J. B. Allen, of Howell, visited&#13;
her daughter the first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
The neighborhood had quite a&#13;
scare over the ravines of a drunken&#13;
man one night last week.&#13;
Manning and Edd Hoisel and&#13;
Emmet Watson are- attending&#13;
school in the Hause district.&#13;
I. S. P. Johnson and wife, of&#13;
Pinckney, visited with Elder&#13;
Pierce and family last week.&#13;
C. E. meeting next Sabbath&#13;
evening, Miss Jennie Montague,&#13;
leader. Topic:—"Simon and Us."&#13;
EA&amp;T PUTNAM.&#13;
The C. E. Society cleared six&#13;
dollars at their social last week.&#13;
Mesdames G. W. and E. D.&#13;
Brown are visiting in Oak Grove.&#13;
Guy Hall spent the last of last&#13;
week visiting relatives in Fpwlerville&#13;
and WUliamston.&#13;
Hanson Lake of Ithaca is the&#13;
guest of his brother R. W. and,&#13;
other relatives iu this place.&#13;
Mesdames Mortimer Twitchel&#13;
and Arthur Schoenhals of Hamburg,&#13;
spent Tuesday with Mrs. J .&#13;
R.Hal).&#13;
UNADILLA&#13;
J. D. Coulton of Jackson was&#13;
in town over Sunday.&#13;
John Dunning and Gertrude&#13;
Mills are on the sick list.&#13;
Herman Reed visited friends in&#13;
Howell Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Will Stowe visited friends in&#13;
Brighton last Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Wm. Pyper and A. C. Watson&#13;
made a business trip to Waterloo&#13;
Monday.&#13;
The union meetings are being&#13;
carried on in the M. E. church&#13;
this week.&#13;
Kittie Livemore returned last&#13;
week from a week's visit with relatives&#13;
in Ionia.&#13;
Rose Glenn of North Lake&#13;
spent a few days last week with&#13;
Gertrude Webb.&#13;
Geo. Cooper"of Mt. Pleasant is&#13;
s pending a few days with her sister&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Goodwin.&#13;
Airs. Mary Ives returned last&#13;
Saturday from a two weeks visit&#13;
-with friends in Banroft.&#13;
Wm. Sales s^avo a paper at&#13;
the ^owlerville meeting of the&#13;
Farmers Instilute Tuesday of this&#13;
week.&#13;
The Ladies Aid of the , Presby-&#13;
NORTH HAMBURGMrs.&#13;
M, Davis.is on the gain.&#13;
Mrs. Clareuce Carpenter is vis&#13;
iting near Dexter. v!&#13;
Charles Hull txpects) to soon&#13;
move on his aunt's farm, Mrs.&#13;
Sears, near Aim Arbor.&#13;
Mrs. Jarvis is spending the&#13;
winter with her daughter in the&#13;
northern part of the state.&#13;
Miss Lillian Boyle and Miss Iva&#13;
Halstead are spending a few weeks&#13;
with relatives in Le&gt;lin.&#13;
FARMER8' INSTITUTE.&#13;
A Good Attendance, and Much Interest,&#13;
The Farmers' Institute&#13;
vertised iu the DISPATCH&#13;
which was adlast&#13;
week, was&#13;
nure from stock to keep land up to the&#13;
standard. A man can run hit farm in a&#13;
diversified way forms a broader experience&#13;
than the one who follows just one line,&#13;
this makes them mrrow. In our diversified&#13;
farming we m ist use our brain as&#13;
well aa our brawn. We mast know how to&#13;
select a farm and Low to plan it so as to get&#13;
the most out of it. Stock it with "general&#13;
purpose" horses, cows, tools, etc.&#13;
As there was no discussion on this subheld&#13;
in the opera house. Weduesday, and ject Miss Iva Placeway gave a recitation,&#13;
considering the weather was largely attend- j 4&lt;Tfae F a r m e r » 8 N e e t | 8 a n d Rehire .&#13;
ed, about 100 being present at the morning&#13;
session.&#13;
The meeting was called to order by the&#13;
local manager, C. M. Wood, and opened&#13;
by singing "America," by the audience,&#13;
and invocation by Rev. K. H. Crane. The&#13;
i ments," by Hon. Wm. Ball. Not every&#13;
! man who can hold ar plow, feed hogs or&#13;
milk a cow is a farmer. To be a farmer&#13;
is something more. He must do all of&#13;
, these to be sure, but he must also be a bus-&#13;
. . iness man. He must improve on everyaddress&#13;
o( welcome WHS given by Hon. O. | ^ M o f e ^ ^ ^ o f 8 f l l r m e r t0(lay&gt;&#13;
W. Teeple. Although I am not a farmer t h a n e y e r b e f o f e a n d fae ^ k § e p OQ i m .&#13;
by trade, I am one by proxy; or may be p r o v i n g f o r m 0 r e w U 1 b e ^ ^ i n t h e&#13;
classed as a "little" farmer. We welcome , „ CT ., w _ _u „4 # l _ , j _&#13;
you to our model village. We hope what&#13;
ou listen to, today, may prove a benefit to&#13;
you. ' ;&#13;
Address by Hon. Peter Voorheis, Of&#13;
Pontine, subject, "Live Stock on the Farm&#13;
and the mue-a n*s of .I mip- rov»uin«g „.I,kti.^"* I aa mr.! How many farmers know how much it very much interested in the subject, as I f J •&#13;
see .tuh e n^eedi ofc -i~m pr-o. vem~.~en~t*. TIt* i:«s. g„.»e»t- costs to make one pr ound of pr ork or butteri,&#13;
future. He must know what the world requires&#13;
and work to meet the requirement.&#13;
He must be a lawyer; doctor, and preacher&#13;
—at least he must be a moral man. He&#13;
must be a botanist and understand some&#13;
chemistry.&#13;
ting to be so that the farmer must understand&#13;
a reasonable amount of chemistry in&#13;
shape, with ihe f&lt; llowing officers:&#13;
Prea., Fred Jarvis; Vice Pres , R.&#13;
C. Haddock; Sec, Edessa Black;&#13;
Treas., Emil Stewart; Organist,&#13;
Grace Nash.&#13;
Miss Grace Nanh spent part of order to succeed as a farmer; to know how&#13;
the week with her sister, Mrs.' *&gt; increase the fertility of the farm. We&#13;
Hendee, at Chubb'* Corners. j mu*c keeP l'"e T? t0 ^1 7 * *?*'&#13;
I Now what kind of stock shall we keep on&#13;
North H a m b u i g C. E. society t h e f H r m ? T 1 ) a t depends upon what is&#13;
are Starting the new. year in good wanted of the stock, as there is a difference&#13;
in breeds for different purposes; but&#13;
all should be uf the best breed for the purpose,&#13;
and keep them :&lt;s pure as possible.&#13;
I advocate, fur general purpose, the Short&#13;
Horn. You may have cows that will bring&#13;
you in more money in milk, but when you&#13;
come to turn off ihey will not bring much&#13;
of anything. Cows are not all of the stock&#13;
that it pays to keep on a farm. A good&#13;
many keep sheep to advantage but in tbis&#13;
there should be the same object—to&#13;
keep a pure breed I can keep iiogs very&#13;
cheaply and make them pay. I have a&#13;
silo and during the summer bring the hogs&#13;
along on rape, clover etc. and in winter on&#13;
silo feed among the cows.&#13;
One more kind of live stock I wish to&#13;
speak of and that is our boys and girls.&#13;
We often spend to much time thinking&#13;
what we'shall feed and do for our stock&#13;
and forget to think of the boys and girls.&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
The cold weather must have frozen&#13;
some of onr correspondents ink tbis&#13;
week. —&#13;
Miss Myrtilla Reason is now one of&#13;
the "hello" girts in a telephone office&#13;
in Detroit--&#13;
Kirk Van Winkle was in Detroit&#13;
the first of tbe week attending the&#13;
grand lodge F. &amp; A. M. He was a&#13;
delegate from the lodge here.&#13;
A father in Detroit was competed&#13;
to pay a judgement of over a $1000 on&#13;
account of n&gt; &gt;&lt;o V careless use of a&#13;
tov trie. Rifles are nil riirbt in their&#13;
plac*?, but thejr p'a&lt;'e is not in the&#13;
i hands of "don't oar*11 youngsters, who&#13;
are found in ev^ty town, tms one not&#13;
excepted /&#13;
terian church will hold a business&#13;
meeting in their hall Wednesday&#13;
afternoon Jan 31.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs Chas. Hudson returned&#13;
to Grand Ledge last week&#13;
after an extended visit with relatives&#13;
here and at Dansville.&#13;
The Ollapodrida club meet at&#13;
L. H. Hadleys last Suturday night&#13;
a good time was enjoyed by all&#13;
who attended. The next meeting&#13;
will be held at Will Sales Saturday&#13;
evening Jan. 27. The program&#13;
will consist of a debate on the&#13;
English Boer Question.&#13;
« &amp; • •&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Chas. Hoff Jr. sports a bran&#13;
new buggy.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs Fred Merrill were&#13;
in Iosco on Tuesday of this week.&#13;
Will Singleton spent the past&#13;
week with his sister near Munith.&#13;
Mrs. Kirk Van Winkle is spends&#13;
ing a few days with her parents&#13;
here.^&#13;
Mrs. Charles Woodworth, of&#13;
Gregory, called on friends here&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Bennett, of&#13;
B o well, were guests of. her parents&#13;
over*Sunday. *&#13;
The Misses Mame Sigler, Lillian&#13;
Boyle and Iva Halstead spent&#13;
Sunday at C M . Wood's.&#13;
Several from this place attended&#13;
the Unadilla Farmers' Club at&#13;
Z. A. HartsufFs on Saturday last.&#13;
There will be a chicken pie social&#13;
at theJuun* of Mr. L. Boy,&#13;
Friday evening of this week. Supper&#13;
10 cents. Everybody iavited.&#13;
If yon want all-the news subscribe&#13;
for the DISPATCH.&#13;
Thin, pale, an&amp;mic jirls&#13;
; ! need a fatty food to enrich&#13;
their blood, jive color to&#13;
their cheeks and restore their&#13;
health and strength, it Is&#13;
safe to say that they nearly&#13;
all reject fat with their food.&#13;
beef or mutton. These questions must be&#13;
met and answered by the successful farmer&#13;
of today and the future. Boys, study this,&#13;
for you will be required to know it if you&#13;
succeed. The farmer should not raise auy&#13;
animal that will not pay for good breeding&#13;
and care. Half of the success of tbe ani.&#13;
mat is in the blood—the rest is in the-care.&#13;
The well bred anirral we like to care for—&#13;
the mongrel we kick out of the way. Do&#13;
not keep more than you can keep well.&#13;
The time has come when we must pay attention&#13;
to these things if we sueceed. Why&#13;
raise wheat when we k%ow it does not pay.&#13;
The man who succeeds the best with stock&#13;
is the one who is with it the most of the&#13;
time. If other lines of business were carried&#13;
on in the same manner as farming it&#13;
would be bankrupt in six months. If your&#13;
farm gives you a living as you run it it will&#13;
give good dividends if taken care of and&#13;
handled properly. The man who tries to&#13;
fun the government and lets the farm run&#13;
itself, never will succeed. Stay at home,&#13;
care for the farm and the farm will care&#13;
for you.&#13;
Every farmer boy will not be a farmer or&#13;
the farmer's girl a farmer's wife. They&#13;
should be educated so that they may fill&#13;
them. They hare many advantages over&#13;
the yonng people of the city. Give them&#13;
an education rather than money. They&#13;
cannot lose that bnt they can squander&#13;
property—leave them an education if&#13;
nothing more.&#13;
Too much land it plowed OTery year for&#13;
crops. We must not put in more crops&#13;
than we want and cat take care of to gel&#13;
the most out of.&#13;
I do not believe that the farmers of this&#13;
county read euough good farm Journals.&#13;
Smoke and chew tobacco less and furnish&#13;
your family with good reading. You have&#13;
got a good many good ideas here this&#13;
afternoon but will you profit by them. If&#13;
you have got anything out of the meeting&#13;
go home and practice it, as it will be for&#13;
your good,&#13;
The paper "Tratasporation" by Prof.&#13;
Sterling of Howell, was read by Rev. C.&#13;
W. Rice, Mr. Sterling not being able to be&#13;
present. The paper has been read and&#13;
commented on before so we only say it was&#13;
excellent.&#13;
The whole meeting was a success from&#13;
begining to end and much enthusiasm was&#13;
shown. At the afternoon session nearly&#13;
400 people crowded into the opera house&#13;
and remained to the close. -&#13;
M M M M R U i H M M M M a i l M a&#13;
z&#13;
pi&#13;
cw&#13;
CO&#13;
IP&#13;
©&#13;
Z&#13;
0&#13;
r&#13;
•&lt;&#13;
They are our future rulers and farmers *n7 position respectably that may fall, to&#13;
and we mnst watch them. From our doehas)&#13;
3"&#13;
•3 ft&#13;
ft 2 .©&#13;
3&#13;
r* oi&#13;
3"&#13;
*&#13;
%&#13;
s.&#13;
B&#13;
Li&#13;
o&#13;
1&#13;
tors and lawyers up to our presidents the&#13;
most of them came from the farm and it&#13;
stands us in hand to bring up and train our&#13;
boys and girls right.&#13;
Kev. Simpson led in the discussion.&#13;
Said he was interested in the talk especially&#13;
the latter part of it. Thought i t just&#13;
Finishing Up The&#13;
Red Mark&#13;
StQbSiOH&#13;
— COO L I V E R O I L&#13;
mHHYPOPHOSPMTESOFUMEiSOOA&#13;
is exactly what they require; \&#13;
it not only jives them the im-;;&#13;
portent element (cod-liver oil)&#13;
in a palatable and easily digested&#13;
form, but also the hypophosphites&#13;
which are sovakaabSc&#13;
in nervous disorders that&#13;
usually accompany anaemia.&#13;
SCOTTS EMULSION b a&#13;
I fatty food that is more easily&#13;
$ digested than any other form&#13;
of fat. A certain amount of&#13;
flesh is necessary for health.&#13;
You can get it in this way.&#13;
We have known per*&#13;
sons to gain a pound a&#13;
day while taking it# ~&#13;
$oc. ami $1.00, «11 drugfkta,' '&#13;
SCOTT &amp; BOWNE, OttttitU, New Y**.&#13;
and righTTo look after, the live stock but&#13;
we must not neglect the boys and-girls.&#13;
AFTERKOOK SESSION.&#13;
The afternoon session was opened by&#13;
singing the last two verses of "America"&#13;
and the opening of the question box. How&#13;
and when is the best time to de-horn cattle&#13;
—Either fall or spring but not to late in&#13;
the spring. The most humane way is when&#13;
they are small calces, with caustic potash.&#13;
What is the most profitable age to sell&#13;
fatting cattle—Mr. Ball. As soon as they t t&#13;
can be gotten in a saleable condition to Red Mark Prices, and when this sale is over you will prob*&#13;
weigh aboutT200 lbs.&#13;
How to secure a catch of clovermy&#13;
ground and sowed the seed and in&#13;
i the fall mowed ddwn the weeds to form a&#13;
i covering. Mr. Bail goes over the wheat&#13;
field where the wheat has been taken with&#13;
| a seed drill or dray and sow clover.&#13;
; Do you deam it profitable to feed silage&#13;
| unless engaged in dairying. Yes, think&#13;
silage profitable to feed to any stock. Mr.&#13;
j Beach—A neighbor feed silage to lambs&#13;
1 and never raised better lambs or cheaper&#13;
and they were ready for market sooner.&#13;
| ' Is it profitsbtefo have hedge-fence? No.&#13;
i What is the best way to preserve fence&#13;
I posts—Mr. Wood, in '61, dipped fence&#13;
posts in tar and I of them are stand ing&#13;
to-day. The posts were green^jswamp-oak.&#13;
Would you advise a farmer who is makiug&#13;
butter-making a business, to raise Short&#13;
Horns—We give satisfaction to our customers&#13;
with Short Horn butter, but if your&#13;
customers want Jf.rBey butter, supply them.&#13;
| What is the cost of a silo that will hold&#13;
20 acres of corn—Thfs depends upon how&#13;
good you make the silo; knew one man&#13;
whu built one from timber taken from his&#13;
woods. He thought it cheaper than a&#13;
bough ten one. A 100-ton silo ran be put&#13;
up for $100.&#13;
How can we as farmers' clubs secure a&#13;
traveling library? Write h Mrs. Spencer,&#13;
state librarian, Lansing; think/h costs (5&#13;
for membership. y&#13;
Tha-question of wheat and iron was&#13;
Not many days left now for you to buy gdods at&#13;
tark Prices, and when this sale is over you will probr—&#13;
fitted! abty n o ^ again for yearsMfrnrsuch chances tcr buy good&#13;
goods so cheap.&#13;
We have been making prices to draw to this sale&#13;
from[far.. - People'have. paid railroad fare from places 40&#13;
miles away, and have said it was money in their pocket to&#13;
travel even further ~to get) the benefit of such sale prices.&#13;
There are grand good bargains *in every department&#13;
of'this store and you find everything e^r^rine just aa&#13;
represented./ "^&#13;
Any Cloak in Our Stock Now $4.00.&#13;
•^•aiAi.n. ••!'«. , *sh* at&#13;
thrown out as one not profitable tor farm&#13;
ers discussion.&#13;
"Diversified farming," by Mr. Vorheis.&#13;
There are but few "special" farmers, so&#13;
this question is very apropos. There are&#13;
some who think they can make a specialty&#13;
of grain and use commercial fertiliser,&#13;
bat tbjsjk thai the farm must hare the ma* ' . v^jr""-&#13;
Come in to get a share of these 5ed Mark reductions.&#13;
Only a few days more.&#13;
Yours respectfully,&#13;
L. H. FIELD.&#13;
Jftduno, MJcfe.&#13;
V.&#13;
J —&#13;
b+»J</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Note</name>
          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36684">
              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6425">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch January 25, 1900</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6426">
                <text>January 25, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6427">
                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6428">
                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6429">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6430">
                <text>1900-01-25</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6431">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="15">
        <name>newspaper</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="16">
        <name>pinckney dispatch</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="929" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="857">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/5bec6077ec67cbd3704056bb87063c4c.pdf</src>
        <authentication>1ee4fa2b0e2c8df34780ff58444812ea</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="9">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1621">
                  <text>Newspaper</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1630">
                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="57">
          <name>Hidden Search Text</name>
          <description>Enter Search Text that is always hidden except to edit.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32196">
              <text>VOL. xvin.&#13;
r&#13;
mm.&#13;
• • ' • • • • • • ' ' - '••• ' j , : f i&#13;
; V ;&gt;•/-•'•'•'&lt;.'&#13;
PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, FEB. 1,1900.&#13;
•n*&#13;
r;,#.&#13;
No. 5 .&#13;
/:, i&#13;
r The--&#13;
Surprise&#13;
Store,&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
*. *-&#13;
State Farmers' Institute.&#13;
Prices That&#13;
Speak for Themselves.&#13;
Brush Edge bfhding per yard 04&#13;
Dress Stays 05&#13;
Velveteen binding per bunch, 10&#13;
Uard of hooks and eyes 02 and 03&#13;
Saxony yarn . per skein 05&#13;
Germantown zephyrs per skeinj)6&#13;
Ladies' Fleece-lined Hose 10&#13;
Cbildren'3 heavy fleece In'd hose 10, 15&#13;
MenV heavy cotton socks 05&#13;
Xadies' hdkfs. 5,10, 15, 25&#13;
Children's hdkfs.&#13;
Men's turkey red hdkfs.&#13;
Paper napkins&#13;
Music rolls&#13;
Men's heavy over shirts&#13;
Men's and boys' wristlet*&#13;
Tooth brushes&#13;
Bhofi-feruihes&#13;
Shaving brushes 5.10&#13;
Good heavy suspenders 10,15, 25&#13;
01&#13;
05&#13;
per doz 05&#13;
25,49&#13;
45&#13;
10&#13;
5, 10,15&#13;
10,1MKU!5&#13;
Shoe soles&#13;
25c door mat and scraper&#13;
Horse whips&#13;
10,15&#13;
10&#13;
——.—m&#13;
05&#13;
05.07&#13;
03,04&#13;
05&#13;
per par 04&#13;
Enameline stove polish&#13;
Lamp burners&#13;
Lamp chimney&#13;
10 doz. clothes pins&#13;
Ivory 3oap&#13;
We carry a complete line&#13;
of Hosiery, Stationery, Pocket&#13;
Books, Hair Pins and Hair&#13;
Ornaments.&#13;
Our two stores enable us&#13;
to give you the greatest value&#13;
for your money—why pay&#13;
more.&#13;
"Come and get our prices,&#13;
then&#13;
MATCH US IF YOU CAN.&#13;
Yours for trade,&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN, Prop.&#13;
Bowman'Block, Pinckney.&#13;
B E R T W E L L M A N&#13;
Manage* of Pinokney Store.&#13;
Howell Store, next to P . O.&#13;
Feb. 1.&#13;
This is "Cupids" month.&#13;
Get your Valentines ready.&#13;
The K. O. T. M. installed their officers&#13;
on Friday evening last.&#13;
An Oceola township farmer has 27&#13;
cows which bring him $8 per day formilk.&#13;
Frank Wright and wife, ot Jackson,&#13;
are spending a few weefcs with relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Sumner Simpson and a Mr, Hall, of&#13;
Handy, were guests of E. J. Briggs&#13;
the last of last week.&#13;
There is talk of rural mail delivery&#13;
north and east of Howell. The route&#13;
will comprise 25 miles.&#13;
No school in the Grammar, Intermediate&#13;
and Primary rooms, Monday,&#13;
as it was impossible to heat them comfortably.&#13;
Mrs. Frank Wright and son Frank&#13;
wero called to Waterloo, the first of&#13;
the week, on account of the death of&#13;
her mother.&#13;
A little child belonging to Mrs.&#13;
Isaac King, of Waterloo, died on Sunday&#13;
evening last. The funeral was&#13;
held on Tuesday.&#13;
Nearly twenty of the young friends&#13;
of Fred Campbell gave him a party at&#13;
his home on Thursday evening, and&#13;
and report a rousing time.&#13;
On Monday of last week the milk&#13;
factory took in 130,027 pounds of&#13;
milk. This was- worth $1,563.24 to&#13;
the farmers of the county.&#13;
Livingston county now has a Demociatic&#13;
club of over 700 members. W.&#13;
H. S, Wood ia president, E. C. Shields&#13;
secretary and GrAT. Newman treasurer.&#13;
The February term of circuit court&#13;
opens in Howell on Monday, Feb. 5.&#13;
We see the names of WmT"L&gt;ock±ng&#13;
r&#13;
and W. D, Thompson as Jurors from&#13;
this township.&#13;
L. M. Teeple has purchased two&#13;
dray lines in Vassar, he went Monday&#13;
night to take charge of them. His&#13;
family will go later. Here is to your&#13;
success Lloyd.,&#13;
C. Jacobs brought to town Monday,&#13;
ten fall lambs (born about the time of&#13;
our first snow storm) for wich he received&#13;
$3.00 per head. We%air' this&#13;
quick returns.&#13;
Our' patrons have our thanks&#13;
for responding so quickly to our&#13;
call for settlement. There are still&#13;
a few others from whom we, would&#13;
like to hear from.&#13;
The DISPATCH has received many&#13;
compliments upon its report of the&#13;
Farmers' Institute held here on Wednesday&#13;
of last week. It being our&#13;
press day, many did not look for so full&#13;
a report,&#13;
The DISPATCH was one week ahead&#13;
of mpst papers in this vicinity in the&#13;
publishing the laws enacted by the&#13;
last session of the legislature. We&#13;
do not believe in playing "second&#13;
fiddle" anyway.&#13;
We are in receipt of the Gratiot&#13;
Journal in which is an article exposing&#13;
a Spiritualistic Medium. One was&#13;
giving a seance at Ithaca, and was&#13;
caught by one*of the boys, the lights&#13;
turned on, and the "spirit" proved to&#13;
be flesh and blood.&#13;
i n our mention last week, of the&#13;
way MrTWood treated fence-posts, we&#13;
simply said tar when it should have&#13;
read coal tar. Mr. Wood informs us&#13;
that, thiy should be dipped in when&#13;
the tar is hot, and ne cousiders it one&#13;
of the best preseryities of tence-posts&#13;
and well worth trying.&#13;
On page 8, plainly visible, is the&#13;
advT of F. H. Nix * 3on, photographers.&#13;
We have seen ome of the work&#13;
of these gentlemen and can say that it&#13;
is equal to any we have ever seen anywhere.&#13;
Their groupings ancj posin^s&#13;
are excellent, and their work is the&#13;
-wortof artists. -They open the gailery&#13;
on Saturday of this week. . _&#13;
A Two-Day Meeting at&#13;
Howell Friday and Saturday, Feb. 2-3.&#13;
On Friday and Saturday of this&#13;
week, the Stata Farmers' Institute&#13;
will meet in the court room at Howell.&#13;
A good program bas been-arranged&#13;
and a large attendance is&#13;
looked for. Every farmer in the&#13;
countv, who can possibly do so, should&#13;
attend.&#13;
P30GRAM.&#13;
FRIDAY MORNING, FKBBUABY ?.&#13;
Duet Mr. and Mri. Fred Bucknell&#13;
Invocation.&#13;
Remarks by president of institute society&#13;
Sheep and clover L. W. Oviatt&#13;
., Discussion.&#13;
Citizenship S. M. Yerkee&#13;
Discussion.&#13;
_ AFTERNOON. •&#13;
Music. Stale? Qaartett&#13;
Quizzing box.&#13;
The general purpose cow .Prof, C. D. Smith&#13;
Discussion.&#13;
Music Staley Quartett&#13;
Horse ani Horsemanship..Dr. G. W. Waterman&#13;
Discussion.&#13;
Solo G. B. Hosley&#13;
EVENING.&#13;
Solo, Emll Bode&#13;
A balance ration for man.. .Mrs. Emma Campbell&#13;
Recitation Miss Ella-Winegar&#13;
Home Sanitation Dr. Henry B. Baker&#13;
Muaio&#13;
SITUBPAY MORNING, FSBBUABY 3.&#13;
Music&#13;
Invocation.&#13;
Fertilizers and manures.. Cal. Husselman&#13;
. Discussion.&#13;
When papa's sick...» Miss Florence Allison&#13;
Fattening pigs and Iambs .E. W. Oviatt&#13;
Discussion. •&gt;'&#13;
Solo. ;&#13;
Trusts...... Fred Richter&#13;
Business Meeting.&#13;
Reports of committees.&#13;
Secretary and treasurer's reports.&#13;
AFTERNOON.&#13;
Report of Dayfoot monument comtrittee.......r&#13;
O. W. Sexton&#13;
Farm drains F. L. Andrews&#13;
Tillage ...Cal Husselman&#13;
Quizzing boz. ,&#13;
Solo H. O. Hill&#13;
Diseases of domestic animals and hygiene of -&#13;
the stable Dr. U. W. Waterman&#13;
Discussion.&#13;
MuTtcr.&#13;
J i l l 111 n 1 U t 111 1 Ail 111» It Ml 1111 i *»1 i m t n i H i *&#13;
Gome to the&#13;
Dispatch Office&#13;
P i n c k n e y * M i c h . ,&#13;
P O P&#13;
Letter Heads,&#13;
E n v e l o p e s ,&#13;
C a r d s , E t c .&#13;
P r i c e s Right.&#13;
I f f f T T T I T T I H l I T M T T T T f T T T T U I I I I T I T f l l T f f T i m&#13;
i&#13;
Jul&#13;
Program for woman's section of&#13;
Farmers' Institute at the Baptist&#13;
church Saturday afternoon.&#13;
1:30 r. TT --,&#13;
Singing—America- '"&#13;
Prayer.&#13;
Recitation MIBS Eva Houghteling&#13;
Paper Mrs. Frank Backus&#13;
Music Nora Howe, Edith and Etbel Peavy&#13;
Recitation Mrs. Mae Batchelor&#13;
What is best Mrs. Emma A. Campbell&#13;
Speakers.&#13;
Mrs. Emma Campbell, Ypsilanti. furnished by the&#13;
' state board of agriculture.&#13;
Local Speaker,&#13;
.Mrs. Frank Backus Marion&#13;
Joseph Sykes is on the sick list.&#13;
Almost a blizzard the first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs, Will Mercer,&#13;
Jan. 25, a son.&#13;
Geo. Reason Jr. was in Stockbridge&#13;
Monbay onabusiness.&#13;
Geo. Schoenhals, of Genoa, was in&#13;
town the first ot the week.&#13;
James and Richard Harris are cut'&#13;
ting wood for John Watson of Marion.&#13;
Miss Gertrude Snedioor, of Howell,&#13;
was a guest of Mrs. Geo. Green the&#13;
past week.&#13;
John Fohey spent Saturday and&#13;
Sunday with his daughter, Veronica,&#13;
in Ann.Arbor.&#13;
Now is the time to get those magazines&#13;
bound as the volume has closed.&#13;
Call and see our work.&#13;
Cards are out announcing a party&#13;
to be given by the Youug Peoples'&#13;
Club of this place, at the Tuamey&#13;
House, Feb. 9.&#13;
E. A. Bowman has consented to let&#13;
! Bert Wellman issue premium tickets&#13;
' with trade. These tickets have won&#13;
| a good deal of trade for the store *t&#13;
Howell. The tickets will be redeemed&#13;
at either store.&#13;
On Friday afternoon- last, the Lady&#13;
Maccabees held a special meeting and&#13;
installed their officers. While the&#13;
meeting was not an open one, each&#13;
member had the privilege of inviting&#13;
a lady friend, and there were, about&#13;
70 present. After the installation a&#13;
Banqnet was spead and an hour was&#13;
spent in a social manner, much to the'&#13;
benefit of the order.&#13;
Always at it.&#13;
At What?&#13;
Selling Goods of course.&#13;
O&#13;
%&#13;
While the holiday trade is always a harvest for some&#13;
—and we get our share—our trade always remains good&#13;
the year around^—The reason is that we sell the best stapie&#13;
goods for the least money. People today are not looking&#13;
for CHEAP goods but GOOD goods cheap.&#13;
The following^are-so-me-ef-ettr facs:&#13;
Drugs and Medicines.&#13;
A fulr and complete line.&#13;
School Supplies*&#13;
Books, Tablets, PcncHs Pens,&#13;
Ink and&#13;
Examination Blanks.&#13;
Crockery.&#13;
A full line of&#13;
, Plain and Pancy ware.&#13;
A fine line of Lamps.&#13;
Fancy Articles*&#13;
Celluloid Goods, Hdkf., Cuff&#13;
and Collor Box. s.&#13;
T h e y m a k e f i n e b i r t h d a y g i f t s .&#13;
Groceries.&#13;
We carry a line&#13;
of the best in town.&#13;
Prices are right.&#13;
Wall Paper.&#13;
Our sales the past year were far ahead of&#13;
our expectations, and this season we will be&#13;
better prepared than ever to give values.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
Di-ng-glst.&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
General Hardware,&#13;
Have as complete an assortment of heavy and shelf hardware&#13;
as can be found in^4b£ county, and 1900 finds us&#13;
more thoroughly equipped than ev3r before.&#13;
u*&lt;&#13;
K&#13;
M .&#13;
Builders Hardware a Specialty.&#13;
Doors and Common Sash always in stock.^&#13;
Complete line of Buggies, Wagons and&#13;
Heating Stoves, Ranges, ood Stovesu&#13;
Wood and Coal.. yr f'h&#13;
r&#13;
• • « ' ? •&#13;
w&gt;.&#13;
UEVENTS&#13;
OF THE WEEK&#13;
N OUR GREAT S T A T E R E L A T E D&#13;
IN A BRIEF FORM.&#13;
%&#13;
When the Report pt the Statft Tax CotemtMlon&#13;
la Ka*e PabUc it Will Furnish&#13;
Some Startling Information Beg-&#13;
ardlng Unjust Method* of Taxation*&#13;
MICHIGAN N E W S ITEMS.&#13;
Anolher Way of Stealing From the State*&#13;
The state tax commission, in/ pursuance&#13;
of its^duties of investigating the&#13;
system of assessed valuation and taxation&#13;
of the state, has already been&#13;
through 55 out of the 83 counties, in&#13;
the state. Two-thirds of this work is&#13;
done, and from a brief survey of a&#13;
small portion of the field covered by&#13;
the Commission, there, is no question&#13;
that when the report is finally made&#13;
to Gov. Pingree, or to the next legislature&#13;
when it meets, will prove&#13;
most startling. Apparently hundreds&#13;
of millions of dollars' worth of property,*&#13;
both real and personal, is escaping&#13;
taxation yearly, owing to the most&#13;
flagrant neglect of the assessing officers&#13;
of the townships and counties&#13;
throughout the state.' At Muskegon a&#13;
millionaire was found who was paying&#13;
taxes on 81,000 worth of property when&#13;
the same was actually worth 5000,000.&#13;
Since the' special session of the legislature&#13;
adjourned, the commission have&#13;
investigated the assessing system of&#13;
eight or ten new counties. Instance&#13;
after instance has been found where&#13;
the large property owner is escaping&#13;
taxation altogether, and where county&#13;
after county is assessed for only from&#13;
25 to 33 per cent of its real property&#13;
value, and escapes its just proportion&#13;
of the state tax where other counties&#13;
aro assessed for from 60 to 80 per cent&#13;
of property1 value and are bearing an&#13;
undue proportion of the cost of operating&#13;
the state.&#13;
Eau Claire wants a grist mill and&#13;
w«,nts it bad.&#13;
Manistee suffered a fire loss of 814,-&#13;
000 on the 26th.&#13;
Three new rural mail routes arc soon&#13;
to be established at Albion.&#13;
South Haven will vote on the proposition&#13;
to bond for electric lights.&#13;
An electric line from Flint to Long&#13;
Lake and Fenton is being agitated.&#13;
The free mail delivery service will be&#13;
established at Wyandotte on Feb. 1.&#13;
Lawrence is to have a local board of&#13;
trade and improvement association.&#13;
The Maryland Fidelity &amp; Deposit Co.&#13;
denies liability under Gen. White's&#13;
bond*.&#13;
Slippery Corners, five miles north of&#13;
Mt. Clemens, was wiped out by fire on&#13;
the 25th.&#13;
At tho union revival services just&#13;
:2 persons were&#13;
To Fight the Bell Mooopoly.&#13;
The Independent telephone companies&#13;
of Muskegon, Saranac, Lansing,&#13;
Union of Gratiot and Isabella counties,&#13;
Alma and Vestaburg, Traverse City,&#13;
jana county, Howard City^ Adrian,&#13;
Kalamazoo, Grand Haven, McBrides,&#13;
Benton Harbor, Lake Odessa, Sunfield,&#13;
Reed City, Battle Creek, Dowagiac, St.&#13;
Johns, Cassopolis, Jackson, Charlotte,&#13;
Kalkaska, Owosso and Shipscwana,&#13;
Ind., were represented at a meeting&#13;
held at Grand Rapids OH the 23d. Saginaw&#13;
and South Haven companies sent&#13;
assurances of co-operation. The representatives&#13;
of the companies discussed&#13;
plans of defense against the Bell monopoly&#13;
and expressed a determination&#13;
to' stand together and continue the&#13;
fight.&#13;
Some Counties are Rhy.&#13;
Kent county, which pays the second&#13;
largest tax of any county in the state,&#13;
-has—not yet made any- remittance of&#13;
taxes received by the county treasurer&#13;
up to Jan. 15, as'the statute requires.&#13;
No return has yet been made by&#13;
Houghton county, which pays the third&#13;
largest state tax. A number of smaller&#13;
counties are also shy, but on the whole&#13;
the taxes have come in more promptly&#13;
this year than ever before. About 81,-&#13;
'300,000 has been received during tho&#13;
past 10 days, and the balance in the&#13;
state treusury at the close of business&#13;
on the, 25th was $1,¢28,017.60.&#13;
closed at Charlotte&#13;
converted.&#13;
Five business places at Traverse City&#13;
were scorched to the extent of 820,000&#13;
on the 24th.&#13;
Tho Ogemaw county treasurer has&#13;
paid out 8141 bounty for the killing of&#13;
47 wildcats.&#13;
The Brighton Breeders' association,&#13;
composed of 20 stockholders, has been&#13;
formed there.&#13;
During 189ft, 85 divorce cases were&#13;
begun in Calhoun county and 51 decrees&#13;
were granted.&#13;
The cooper shop at Reading was destroyed&#13;
by fire on the 25th, entailing a&#13;
loss of 85,000.&#13;
A gang" °f sheep thieves that has&#13;
been operating in Berrien county has&#13;
been rounded up.&#13;
A bone fide boom is on at South&#13;
Haven—there is not an. empty store to&#13;
be folffid in town. r"&#13;
Benton Harbor is to have an overall&#13;
manufactory which will give employment&#13;
to 500 hands.&#13;
Muskegon has been struck by the revival&#13;
of the roller skating craze, and a&#13;
rink has been opened.&#13;
An Oxford man is the possessor of a&#13;
hen which has laid a double-yolk egg&#13;
every day for a week. — ^&#13;
Fine beds of marl^have been found at&#13;
Cass City and the prospects for a cement&#13;
factory are good.&#13;
The output of the beet sugar factory&#13;
at Alma was 3,500,000 pounds, made&#13;
from 10,267 tons of beets.&#13;
A county bar association&#13;
formed by the attorneys of&#13;
county on Lincoln's birthday.&#13;
Rev. J. J. Axtell, of Royal Oak, has&#13;
decided to leave that village and make&#13;
Battle Creek his headquarters.&#13;
Of the 17 deaths in Tekonsha village&#13;
and township tl\iring 1899 seven were&#13;
of persons over 70 years of age.&#13;
will be&#13;
Calhoun&#13;
A Detroit gentleman has offeredT^to&#13;
buy any or all of the stock of the New&#13;
State Telephone Co, at 46 cents j^Cvthe&#13;
dollar. \&#13;
Mew Appointees on Military Board.&#13;
Gov. Pingree" on the 24th named the&#13;
men who are to take the places of the&#13;
members of the state military board&#13;
who retired as a result of the findings&#13;
of the grand jury of Ingham county.&#13;
The appointees announced are as follows:&#13;
Quartermaster-general, O'Brien&#13;
Atkinson, Detroit; assistant quartermaster-&#13;
general, Ford Starring, Detroit;&#13;
inspector-general, Fred. W. rGreen,&#13;
Ypsilanti.&#13;
Regular Session Expense*.&#13;
According to the records in the auditor-&#13;
general's office at Lansing, the cost&#13;
of the last regular sesssion of the legislature&#13;
was 8174,549.42. This includes&#13;
per diein, mileage, stationery and committee&#13;
expeniturcs. aside from the cost&#13;
of heating and lighting A great deal&#13;
of 'money was .spent on legislative&#13;
junkets. One of the most significant&#13;
items is that for employes of the senate,&#13;
whose per diem mileage and stationery&#13;
aggregated 820,431.90, while that of&#13;
the 32.senators was only $18,592.30.&#13;
Marine City to Detroit.&#13;
A portion of the bridge across Belle&#13;
river on the Detroit, Mt. Clemens &amp;'&#13;
Marine City Electric railway is being&#13;
placed in position at MarincCity. With&#13;
the feed and trolley wires all up between&#13;
Mt. Clemens and Marine City,&#13;
and the large electric power house at&#13;
,Ncw Baltimore approaching completion,&#13;
this road ought to /,oon be running&#13;
through electric cars between&#13;
Marine City and Detroit.&#13;
•&#13;
An Unpleasant Joke.&#13;
A young, married man of St. Joseph&#13;
got up the other morning and played a&#13;
good joke on himself. ^ He lit the fire&#13;
and got breakfast all ready and tiicu&#13;
went to hi3 bedroom and invited his&#13;
wife to breakfast, when he glanced at'&#13;
the clock and notice.'', that it was only&#13;
2:30 o'clock. Breakfast was postponed&#13;
for four hours.&#13;
TheJ33d anniversary" of the admissiob&#13;
of this state into the union was cele*&#13;
brated at Washington on the evening&#13;
of Jan, 25. /&#13;
Frank B. Rosevelt, of Keeler, wants&#13;
Dr, S. Stevens, of Dowagiac, to p:.y&#13;
him 810,000 for alleged alienation of&#13;
his wife's affections.&#13;
"The Montcalm Telephone Co. will&#13;
shortly be consolidated w i t h the Alma&#13;
company. The former has connections&#13;
with 40 different towns.&#13;
Reading has finally purchased a site&#13;
for her water works pumping station.&#13;
The test well sunk on the land has resulted&#13;
most successfully.&#13;
In a Lapeer household is a&#13;
which hasheen in the family&#13;
flatiron&#13;
for 280&#13;
The anti-saloon league in Hillsdale&#13;
cocintyia preparing to give the liquor&#13;
element a battle at the coming election.&#13;
years, having been brought over from&#13;
England i n the Mayflower.&#13;
A Detroit firm will erect a pickle&#13;
faetory at Bloomingdalc. Contracts&#13;
have been made with farmers for raising&#13;
200 acres of cucumbers.&#13;
The school for the blind at Lansing&#13;
is n o w open again, the diphtheria patien^&#13;
Jtaving recovered and the quarantine&#13;
of the institution raised.&#13;
The Otsego Base Ball association has&#13;
filed articles of ineorporatian_&amp;t Lansing&#13;
and will eclipse all former efforts&#13;
in that line the coming season.&#13;
A proposition to bond the city of&#13;
Muskegon for $40,000 to build a municipal&#13;
electric lighting plant, will be&#13;
submitted to the voters in the spring.&#13;
According to the county clerk's report&#13;
there were 82 divorce cases be«&#13;
gun in Genesee county last year, 61: decrees&#13;
being granted and three refused.&#13;
The young business men of Paw Paw&#13;
have organized a local board of trade&#13;
and improvement association^and will&#13;
now do some hustling for shops and&#13;
factories. &lt;&#13;
Hastings can have a pickle, factory, a&#13;
branch of a big eastern institution, if&#13;
the farmers of the vicinity will guarantee&#13;
to grow enough cucumbers to make&#13;
it a success.&#13;
Lyman Ogden. of Union township,1&#13;
Branch county, has a horse 33 years&#13;
old that is as spry as a&#13;
The horse seems good&#13;
3 cars more. '&#13;
There is something in the atmosphere&#13;
at Richmond, evidently, which&#13;
is conducive to longevity, for 21 of the&#13;
1,000 residents of that burg are over SO&#13;
years of age.&#13;
3-year-old&#13;
foY a score&#13;
colt,&#13;
of&#13;
The supreme court has confirmed the&#13;
conviction of Otto L. Luttermoser. of&#13;
Springwells township, Wayne county.&#13;
He was convicted of raising several&#13;
township orders from 83.75 to 813,75.&#13;
A wreck occurred on the M. C. railroad&#13;
at Standish late on the 24th. One&#13;
train crashed into another, demolishing&#13;
a caboose, two freight cars and an&#13;
engine. Loss, 810,000. No one was&#13;
hurt.&#13;
Twice inside of six months the dam&#13;
across the Pine river at Milbrook has&#13;
given away. The first time the dam&#13;
went out it cost the taxpayers 81,000,&#13;
while the accident on the 23d will cost&#13;
8500 more.&#13;
Recalcitrant members of the Methodist&#13;
church at Oxford, who are opposed&#13;
to Rev. Lowry, will try a freezeout&#13;
game, and say they will furnish no&#13;
more fuel and light while be remains&#13;
pastor of Zuc church.&#13;
Four wooden store buildings valued&#13;
at 818,000 was destroyed by fire at&#13;
Muskegon at an early hour in the&#13;
morning on the 24th. Heroic work by&#13;
the firemen saved the buildings on the&#13;
opposite side of the street.&#13;
The voters of Springwells township,&#13;
Wayne county, on the 24th decided by&#13;
ballot to bond the township for $20,-&#13;
000. The bonds will be issued at once,&#13;
and it is expected will all be taken by&#13;
residents of the township.&#13;
The farmers in the vicinity of Holly&#13;
report that the wheat crop is in very&#13;
poor condition. While the ground has&#13;
not frozen and thawed enough to do&#13;
any damage, the wheat seems to be of&#13;
a yellow, dead appearance.&#13;
Tha Port Huron Salt Co. has filed&#13;
articles of incorporation with the&#13;
county clerk. The stock has been divided&#13;
into 35,000 shares at 810 per&#13;
share. Just 8190,750 of the 8350,000&#13;
capital stock has been paid in.&#13;
By the explosion of a tinner's gasoline&#13;
pot in the plumbing shop of Beyer&#13;
&amp; Reisig, at Monroe, on the 23d, Mr.&#13;
Reisig and a young man were badly&#13;
burned about the head and arms, but&#13;
their injuries are not dangerous&#13;
The Uline &amp; Yarian Manufacturing&#13;
Co., of Nappanee, Ind., has decided to&#13;
move its stave, heading, box manufacturing&#13;
plant and machine shop to&#13;
Berrien Springs. It will furnish employment&#13;
to 30 men the year around.&#13;
A big plaster company is going to remove&#13;
to Grand Rapids from Kansas&#13;
City, where it is now located. It will&#13;
give employment to 75 or 100 men, and&#13;
comes to the second city without the&#13;
payment of a bonus or other inducement.&#13;
Two miners named Kratt and Sweet&#13;
dropped nearly 2.000 feet in the Atlantic&#13;
mine at HoughtorTorrthe 22d. The&#13;
accident was caused through another&#13;
accident at the engine house disabling&#13;
the hoist. Both men were horribly&#13;
mangled. They leave large families.&#13;
The Prohibition convcntlcm~for~tlie&#13;
3d congressional district has_been called&#13;
to m(jet at Albion, Feb. 9, to select&#13;
delegates to the state Prohibition convention,,&#13;
and nominate a candidate for&#13;
congress. This is the first convention&#13;
called in this vicinity for the coming&#13;
campaign.&#13;
For some time past some person has&#13;
been committing all kinds of depredations&#13;
in the vicinity of Burlington.&#13;
The/dimax was reached a few nights&#13;
ago when shades and ornamental trees&#13;
were girdled, street lamps ^ broken,*&#13;
windows at the school house broken,&#13;
and other school property maliciously&#13;
destroyed.&#13;
Default has been made in the libel&#13;
suit of Gov. Pingree against the Port&#13;
Huron Times, no declaration having&#13;
been filed in the case within the time&#13;
limit fixed by the statute. The suit,&#13;
however, can be renewed on the governor's&#13;
behalf by the payment of the&#13;
costs which accrued up to the time the&#13;
default was taken. _&#13;
Here's a peculiar verdict rendered by&#13;
a conorner's jury at Houghton in an&#13;
accident in which t w o men were killed&#13;
at the Atlantic mine recently; "By&#13;
the evidence given w e attach no blame&#13;
to anyone. It was purely an accident,&#13;
for whom no* one is accountable. We&#13;
recommend the company to employ in&#13;
the future competent engineers.'' ^&#13;
The route of the proposed Detroit&#13;
and Toledo electric railroad is now&#13;
practically completed and the first, assurance&#13;
of settled weather will see the&#13;
work of grading and laying of tracks&#13;
rushed to a speedy finish, as the company&#13;
propose to have a finished and&#13;
fully equipped road ready for the summer&#13;
passenger business between Toledo&#13;
and Monroe.&#13;
Geo. A. Nye. for the past five years&#13;
manager of Alderman Tony Weiler's&#13;
saloon in Detroit, was on the 25th convicted&#13;
of perjury in the recorder's&#13;
court. He swore falsely to secure, the&#13;
acquittal of Johns, McLaughlin and&#13;
Lyle, whq are each serving&gt;20 years-in&#13;
Jackson prison for having assaulted&#13;
and robbed Nelson Cunningham in Detroit&#13;
last February.&#13;
News was received on the 24th to the&#13;
effect that John Smith, aged 27, a former&#13;
resident of Detroit, was devoured&#13;
,by—wolves about eight miles from&#13;
Prcsque Isle. That Smith fought desperately&#13;
for his life is shown by the&#13;
surroundings. The deep snow was&#13;
trampled down and painted crimson&#13;
with blood, and a dead carcass of a&#13;
wolf lay within a few feet of the man's&#13;
body.&#13;
iT HOME AND ABE0AD&#13;
S U M M A R Y OF T H 1 N E W S FOR&#13;
THE WEEK BY WIRE.&#13;
Professor Recummeudi That **«**«»_.&#13;
Antl-Toxln Stations be Established&#13;
by toe United States to Prevent tfee&#13;
Possible Spread of Bnboulo Plague.&#13;
CONGRESSIONAL NOTES.&#13;
&lt;• People Dying of Scurvy.&#13;
The war department has made public&#13;
»31 important report from Capt. W. R.&#13;
Abererombie, second infantry, who&#13;
commanded the Copper river exploring&#13;
expedition in Alaska last season. The&#13;
:hief topic treated in the report is the&#13;
laying out of the great trans-Alaskan&#13;
military route from Port Valdez,&#13;
Alaska, to Port Egbert, on the Yukon.&#13;
While engaged in this work the officer&#13;
was charged to ta"ke note of the mineral&#13;
resources of th/country, of its adaptability&#13;
for agriculture and stock raising&#13;
and the fuel and food products for man&#13;
and animal. Capt. Abercrombie arrivedait&#13;
Valdez, the starting point of&#13;
the expedition, on the 21st of April, being&#13;
received by a motley crowd which&#13;
had just come across the Valdez glacier&#13;
from the Copper river valley. He&#13;
found that hundreds of people were dying&#13;
of starvation and scurvy in the Copper&#13;
river country. "" The people at&#13;
Valdez were in a most pitiable condition,&#13;
crowded in miserable huts like&#13;
ardines in a box. There were no facilities&#13;
for bathing; most of the sufferers&#13;
had scurvy, and not a few frost bitten&#13;
hands, faces and feet. The tops of&#13;
Did rubber boots and strips of gunny&#13;
sacks made shoes and socks for many&#13;
of them. The stench was intolerable&#13;
and 70 per cent of the inmates of the&#13;
huts were mentally deranged. This&#13;
was common to those whom a fear of&#13;
scurvy had driven over the glacier,&#13;
where so many had perished by freeze&#13;
ing to death.&#13;
Prepare for the Pleague.&#13;
Dr. Edwin Klebs, professor of pathology&#13;
in the post guaduate medic*!&#13;
school, at Chicago, thinks ^he United&#13;
States government shouldfake the precaution&#13;
to prepare for a visit from the&#13;
bubonic plague. He points out as significant&#13;
that France, Germany, Russia&#13;
and Italy ^re making Pasteur antitoxin&#13;
and suggests that the United&#13;
States department of agriculture be&#13;
Authorized by congress to establish&#13;
serum stations at once i a islands in the&#13;
Pacific and Atlantic oceans and perhaps&#13;
the great lakes. Prof. Klebs' idea came&#13;
from his careful watch of the spread of&#13;
the disease, and the fact that in 1896 in&#13;
Canton and Amoy, China, the administration&#13;
of the Pasteur anti-toxin reduced&#13;
the- death rate from 00 per cent&#13;
to 0.6 per cent. It require.s a year to&#13;
perfect the anti-toxins.&#13;
Another Shooting AlTray in Tieorgla.&#13;
Two Negroes shot to death and two&#13;
white men badly wounded was the resjalt&#13;
of an attempt to arrest a Negro&#13;
murderer at Macon, Ga., on the 22d.&#13;
J. II. Butler, colored, is the man who&#13;
did the most of the shooting and who&#13;
was himself shot to death. Butler&#13;
threatened to kill a Negro, woman and&#13;
when a policeman attempted to arrest&#13;
him he began to shoot. The Negro ran&#13;
up one of the busiest streets in Macon,&#13;
pistol in hand, shooting at everybody&#13;
in sig"ht. The sound of the shooting&#13;
attracted a number of policemen an d&#13;
citizens. When Butler fell wounded&#13;
five policemen and 15 citizens were&#13;
shooting at him. Three bullets went&#13;
completely through his body and there&#13;
were other wounds.&#13;
Pension StatUtlcs.&#13;
Pension Commissioner Evans has&#13;
given out the following statement, giving&#13;
the number of pensioners borne on&#13;
the rolls on account of each of the wars&#13;
of the United States: On account of&#13;
the revolutionary war, four widows&#13;
and seven daughters; war of 1812, one&#13;
survivor, 1,998 widows; Indian wars,&#13;
1832 to 1842, 1,656 survivors and 3,88.9&#13;
widows; Mexican war, 9,204 survivors&#13;
and 8,175 widows. Granted since 1861&#13;
under general law, 321,555 invatid and&#13;
92,901 widows and other dependents;&#13;
under law of 1890, invalids, 420,912;&#13;
widows and dependents, 130,226.&#13;
Had to Make .Good His Offer.&#13;
David Rutherfood, of Kokomo, Ind.,&#13;
was awarded a judgment of 81,000 in&#13;
the circuit court against David Hi ley&#13;
for the saving of the latter's wife from&#13;
drowning. During a flood last spring&#13;
Hiley and his wife were swept off a&#13;
bridge by a torrent. Hiley reached&#13;
land and offered $1,000 for the rescue&#13;
of his wife. Rutherford, after a long&#13;
struggle, brought the woman ashore,&#13;
but Hiley, who is a wealthy farmer,&#13;
refused to pay the reward. Rutherford&#13;
sued and the jury allowed him the&#13;
full amount.&#13;
Kansas Gov. Wants Capital Punishment.&#13;
Gov. Stanley, of Kansas, will recommend&#13;
to the next legislature that the&#13;
crimes act, fixing the punishment for&#13;
murder, be amended so that the jury&#13;
shall decide that Question and the jury&#13;
having fixed the/punishment, the governor's&#13;
only duty shall be to execute&#13;
its judgment./ This would restore in&#13;
Kansas capital punishment for murderT&#13;
which the present law practically abolishes.&#13;
The recent double lynching at&#13;
FKlScott is believed to have influenced&#13;
the governor.&#13;
A meeting most important to the&#13;
brewing interests convened on t h e&#13;
afternoon of fbe 2,od in the. committee&#13;
room on public buildings and grounds&#13;
•to formulate-,plans gpr the pushing of&#13;
the Babcock bill, which effects* every&#13;
brewer in the country. This bill proposes&#13;
to do away with what Is known&#13;
as the one-eight and oh#*sixth&gt; of a barrel&#13;
cask, leaving only the quarter, half&#13;
and barrel sixes. The revenue officials&#13;
do not object to the measure, and the&#13;
representatives of St. LouU, Cincinnati,&#13;
Milwaukee, Detroit, Buffalo and Rochester,&#13;
with other large eastern cities,&#13;
are planning to rush the bill through.&#13;
It will simply relieve the brewers of&#13;
handling the two sizes of casks alluded&#13;
to, and is of great importance, to them.&#13;
The case of Brigham H. Roberts, the&#13;
mormon representative-elect from Utah,&#13;
which has occupied so much of the attention&#13;
of the house since the assembling&#13;
of congress, was decided on the&#13;
25th by the adoption to exclude him by&#13;
a vote of 268 to 50. The exact language&#13;
of the resolution was as follows: "That&#13;
under the facts and circumstances of&#13;
the case, Brigham H. Roberts, representative-&#13;
elect from the state of Utah,&#13;
ought not to have or hold a seat in the&#13;
house of representatives, and that the&#13;
seat to which he was elected is hereby&#13;
declared vacant."&#13;
The reports of the committee on privileges&#13;
and elections in the case of M. S.&#13;
Quay, who claims a seat in the United&#13;
States senate on the strength of an appointment&#13;
from the governor of Pennsylvania&#13;
were presented in the senate&#13;
on the 23d. The majority report, opposing&#13;
the seating of Mr. Quay, was&#13;
signed by Senators Caffery, Pettus,&#13;
Turley, Harris and Burrows.&#13;
The house committee on Indian affairs&#13;
on the ^ 25th ordered a favorable&#13;
report upon the Indian: appropriation&#13;
' bill. It carries 87,2,50,000. The agreements&#13;
with the Kaws, Comanches and&#13;
Apaches are confirmed. A provision is&#13;
inserted for the relief of the Pottawattomies.&#13;
The appropriation for the&#13;
Dawes commission is increased to §300,-&#13;
; ooo.&#13;
The senate committee on'public lands&#13;
on the 22d reported favorably Senator&#13;
Warren's bill granting 850,000 acres in&#13;
Wyoming for the benefit of the State&#13;
Soldiers and Sailors' home of that state,&#13;
and a bill granting the abandoned Fort&#13;
Hays military reservation to the state&#13;
of Kansas for a branch agricultural&#13;
college.&#13;
Secretary Gage has sent his estimate&#13;
to congress of the expense for collection&#13;
of customs in Michigan districts&#13;
during the year ending June 30, 1901,&#13;
as follows:* Detroit, $4)9,935; Grand&#13;
Haven, 87^740; Grand Rapids, $5,237;&#13;
Marquette, $20,430; Port Huron, $50,753.&#13;
The cabinet on the 23d discussed~nt&#13;
length the Puerto Rican situation. The&#13;
opinion is unanimous in the cabinet&#13;
that free trade with' the islaniTor~a&#13;
nominal duty is essential to prevent&#13;
widespread business disaster among all&#13;
classes of its people.&#13;
President McKinley recommends that&#13;
the bill for $40,370 for cable repairs,&#13;
presented by tho ('nfra, Suhitia.rinn T V I » .&#13;
graph Co., a British incorporation, be&#13;
paid. The cable was cut by American&#13;
forces during the war with Spain.&#13;
The President has approved a recommendation&#13;
by the secretary of war&#13;
that a portion of the peninsula in&#13;
Alaska embracing part of Point Spencer^&#13;
be reserved for public use.&#13;
The success of the negotiations insti-.&#13;
tuted by Secretary Hay with a view to •&#13;
insuring the u open door" for American&#13;
trade in China, may be regarded as assured.&#13;
The question of a government cable&#13;
across the Pacific was considered by&#13;
the house committee on interstate andforeign&#13;
commerce on the 23d.&#13;
WAR NOTES.&#13;
• A •&#13;
r \&#13;
\&#13;
&lt;&#13;
*&#13;
Gen. Otis reported to the war department&#13;
on the 24th that the western&#13;
coast of the island pjt Panay is now&#13;
open for trade and that the coast of&#13;
Laguna de Bay and the neighboring&#13;
sections of the country will also be&#13;
opened to unrestricted traffic within a&#13;
week. He also reports several minor&#13;
engagements with the Filipinos, in&#13;
which American arms meet with the&#13;
usual success. The enemy lost heavily&#13;
and a large amount of arms and ammunition&#13;
was captured.&#13;
The newly-appointed law reform&#13;
commission at Havana will begin work&#13;
almost immediately. Among the principal&#13;
innovations will be the establishment&#13;
of police correctional courts, presided&#13;
over by salarie'd judges. The&#13;
judicial system throughout the island&#13;
will be made to lend itself to the speedy&#13;
handling of cases in order that justice&#13;
may be obtained without delay. At&#13;
the same time facility to appeal will be&#13;
granted.&#13;
Gov.-Oen. Wood, of Cuba, ( w h o is&#13;
making a tour of inspection of the&#13;
island says a noticeable feature of the&#13;
provinces visited w a s t h e i a c k of publio&#13;
work. He does not believe it wise to&#13;
supply the people with oxen and farm*&#13;
ing incitements on credit, thinking it&#13;
would be better to give them public&#13;
work and let tho men save enough to&#13;
purchase the necessary farming&#13;
utensils.&#13;
Gen. John Rv Brooke, formerly g o v&#13;
ernor-geheraPbf CtfbaT arrived in Washington&#13;
ou the evening of the 23d. W was accompanied by his wife and Capt.&#13;
J a m e s l ^ Dean.&#13;
^::f':'*;*yw'-'« •••iWWW^'' : f r / ' - | f ' ^ ' ; ' ' ^ - ¾ ^ -'••'"'*^/^•,' ^ ' f f i ^ r ^ I " ? ! ' . ^ ^ ^&#13;
* H !&#13;
'^&#13;
"v, •&gt;J.;!fl&#13;
" '&lt;!&#13;
1555&#13;
. •&#13;
g/flS WrO£P OF HON OR, %&#13;
JjJ A trie oi the Blue and the Gray, /J\&#13;
^ *y# WEWVEfc (ft&#13;
ty Copyright. ISM, by Robert Banner's Sons. ' j r t |&#13;
CHAPTER IX^CCoatlnued;)&#13;
*'So 70a h a w reached this point of&#13;
success!v Maxwell continued, in his&#13;
dry way. "tea, my dear Will, it&#13;
doesn't "always answer to run one's&#13;
head against a wall; this time the&#13;
maaonry' remained Arm. You have&#13;
tangible proof of it, since your progress&#13;
is impeded. You were raging up&#13;
and down like a caged lion."&#13;
"Do you want to mock me even in&#13;
this terrible situation?" cried Roland,&#13;
Impetuously. "You do not know how&#13;
I was disarmed or what'it I3 to meet&#13;
with base treachery in the house&#13;
where one seeks happiness and love!"&#13;
"Didn't I warn you against this&#13;
Edward, though I knew him only from&#13;
your description? Ho was traveling&#13;
when I called on the Harrisons, with&#13;
you—luckily!, Had I had the honor&#13;
of his, personal acquaintance, the&#13;
whole plan would have been impossible.&#13;
I pass here for the eminently respectable&#13;
Doctor Blackwood and, as&#13;
.that worthy man, have been received&#13;
with the utmost courtesy. Were it&#13;
known that instead of medicine I was&#13;
engaged in the iron business at present,&#13;
the courtesy would probably end&#13;
promptly—on both sides I I shall shoot&#13;
this noble Mr. Harrison with the utmost&#13;
composure if he takes it Into&#13;
his head to enter the corridor. Besides,&#13;
Ralph is mounting guard at the&#13;
outside door, to which fortunately a&#13;
second key was found, and will give&#13;
us a sign if dagger is approaching."&#13;
"But, afe least, tell me how it was&#13;
possible for you to accomplish all this&#13;
in a single half hour, for you cannot&#13;
have been here longer. You went to&#13;
the outposts?"&#13;
"Where Lieutenant Davis had again&#13;
created an entirely unnecessary alarm.&#13;
There is no appearance of fsvep*- Two&#13;
hurry, it must be admitted. Mr. Harrison&#13;
wished, under any circumstances,&#13;
to become a Benedict today."&#13;
"The magistrate? So he has really&#13;
come? I should like to wring his&#13;
neck!"&#13;
"You will please refrain from that,"&#13;
said Maxwell, reprovingly. "Mr.&#13;
Thompson, is a good friend of mine,&#13;
whom I hold in great esteem. It was&#13;
he who originated -the peerless idea&#13;
of considering me Doctor Blackwood.&#13;
I won't have his neck wrung on any&#13;
account, and it would be very impractical*&#13;
on your part. A justice is&#13;
an extremely important character. For&#13;
instance, he is absolutely necessary&#13;
at your wedding."&#13;
"My wedding?" repeated William,&#13;
in amazement. "What do you mean?"&#13;
"Why, I think the best plan will be&#13;
to wind up the business on the spot.&#13;
You want to marry under any circumstances.&#13;
The bride, the magistrate&#13;
and the witnesses are all here, so I&#13;
don't see what is to prevent you except&#13;
this confounded iron grating,&#13;
which I shall finally cut through. If&#13;
Florence i,s your wife, you can take&#13;
her with you to some place of security,&#13;
then your amiable cousin can l:eep&#13;
house here as he chooses. He can't&#13;
wholly ruin the plantation or carry&#13;
off the buildings; and, as soon as the&#13;
war, i3 over, you can assert your wife's&#13;
claim."&#13;
"But, John, have you gone daft?&#13;
Such a.plan in the house where Edward&#13;
rules and will summon all the&#13;
servants to his aid the instant we appear.&#13;
He did so just no*v, at the time&#13;
of my arrest."&#13;
"Pshaw, the servants! They are&#13;
only negroes, and not one will lift.his'&#13;
hand against us as soon as we say&#13;
THE FILE HAD WORKED UNWEARIEDLY.&#13;
cases of sunstroke,which were not even&#13;
severe, and will probably terminate&#13;
favorably. I've had the men removed&#13;
to the hospital and sent a, report to&#13;
the colonel. Davis' introduction obtained&#13;
for1 me the loan of a suit of&#13;
civilian's clothes from the owner of&#13;
the adjoining plantation, and, as I&#13;
wanted to profit by the beautiful afternoon,&#13;
,and my leave, of. absenoo, I&#13;
rode to Springfield."&#13;
' The accompaniment to this story,&#13;
told in the most matter-of-fact tone,&#13;
was/the low, harsh grating of the file,&#13;
which the speaker was diligently using.&#13;
The whole affair was thoroughly&#13;
characteristic of John Maxwell.&#13;
Any one else would have done everything&#13;
in his power to keep his friend&#13;
from such a venture, and, when all&#13;
failed, would at least have been anxious&#13;
and troubled about him. John&#13;
did nefther. He considered the former&#13;
useless, the latter superfluous; but,&#13;
without wasting another word, he rode&#13;
straight into the jaws of danger after&#13;
his man and considered it the&#13;
simplest and most natural thing in&#13;
the worjd:&#13;
William' stood close by the window,&#13;
breathlessly watching the work of liberation,&#13;
as well as the dim light of&#13;
the room permitted. He could do nothing&#13;
to help.&#13;
"Have you talked with Florence?"&#13;
he asked. "Does she know your plan?&#13;
She Is now alone at her father's death&#13;
bed—alone with "the scoundrel who&#13;
betrayed me!"&#13;
[ardly, for I have forbidden him&#13;
to enter the sick chamber; and besides,&#13;
he has a visitor-r-the magistrate&#13;
from the city, who was summoned&#13;
feere for the wedding. They are in a&#13;
we are officers in the Union army. The&#13;
fellows are constantly coming in&#13;
throngs to seek protection with us.&#13;
You were not known to them, or else&#13;
they Were afraid of Captain'•Wilsun.&#13;
and Harrison. The servants are not&#13;
to be feared.^-JJ11 undertake to deal&#13;
with the justice and his companion. So&#13;
no one is left except your beloved future&#13;
relative—and he must be made&#13;
harmless."&#13;
"You mean that we are to attack&#13;
him in his room?"&#13;
"Nor that is too uncertain, and&#13;
will create an unnecessary stir in the&#13;
house. I have a better plan. As&#13;
soon as you are at- liberty, Ralph&#13;
shall announce, apparently in great&#13;
trepidation, that his young mistress&#13;
has suddenly disappeared. He has&#13;
locked for her in vain. Of course, she&#13;
can bo only in one. place. Harrison&#13;
will rush here as fast as possible to&#13;
frustrate the attempt at liberation,&#13;
and we shall have him in our hands.&#13;
Then he can occupy the place which&#13;
he so^kindly selected for you, and you*&#13;
can use his marriage contract—the&#13;
simplest exchange possible."&#13;
"But that is a partial deception," replied&#13;
William. "Am I secretly, craftily,&#13;
to steal a right which was promJ&#13;
ised me openly in the presence of all&#13;
the world? Am I to urge Florence to&#13;
a marriage in this terrible hour which&#13;
robs her of a father—"&#13;
"Stop, Will! My patience is being&#13;
exhausted!" Maxwell angrily intend&#13;
rupted. "Don't bother .me again with&#13;
your German slowness and stupidity,&#13;
or I'll leave you behind bolts and bars.&#13;
One can't lead, good fortune straight&#13;
to your arms. You must first inspect&#13;
it on all sides—subject it to a critical&#13;
examination—to ascertain Whether It&#13;
is thoroughly ideal and free from&#13;
earthly dross; and meanwhile the&#13;
light, airy thing flutters out of your&#13;
hands. In short, do you want to slurry&#13;
Florence or not?"&#13;
"Of course I do. But—"&#13;
"Very well, then, the matter is settled.&#13;
Leave the rest to me. True,&#13;
it's abominable to expect a best man&#13;
first to drag the bridegroom from behind&#13;
so many iron bars, but you must&#13;
have some unusual circumstance connected&#13;
with it. One thing more; Of&#13;
course you have no weapons."&#13;
"Should I have been captured otherwise?&#13;
I certainly would not have surrendered&#13;
with arms in my hands,"&#13;
"I anticipated that and concealed&#13;
two pistols about me. There, now I've&#13;
finished. Try your strength and see&#13;
if you can tear out the grating."&#13;
The file had worked unweariedly all&#13;
the time, had cut through the larger&#13;
portion of the grating and loosened the&#13;
rest, but the iron still held. William&#13;
tugged and shook in vain, and there&#13;
was no more time to lose. But the&#13;
consciousness of danger lent the&#13;
young man unnatural strength. After&#13;
a few unsuccessful efforts he 'again&#13;
seized the grating and, with a last,&#13;
violent struggle, wrenched it from its&#13;
fastenings. The opening was made;&#13;
nnd, after a few anxious moments, Roland&#13;
had forced his way through, and&#13;
was standing ift the co.'ridor beside&#13;
his friend.&#13;
"Here!" said the latter, laconically,&#13;
handing him a revolver and grasping&#13;
a second pistol himself. "Now I'll instruct&#13;
Ralph." v&#13;
William uttered a sigh of relief&#13;
when he found himself free and felt&#13;
the weapon in his hand.&#13;
"I thaiik you, John!" he cried enthusiastically&#13;
after his retreating&#13;
friend. "You are right. We two will&#13;
rule the whole household."&#13;
"Yes, that is just to your taste!"&#13;
returned Maxwell, tartly. "This time&#13;
we feally must run our heads against&#13;
the wall, and if it happens to stand&#13;
firmer than we expect, it will cost us&#13;
our lives. You have arranged matters&#13;
so that we have no choice. But&#13;
keep quiet! Harrison niay come'at&#13;
any moment; the fighting"witl begin,&#13;
and—you will play the principal role,&#13;
again."&#13;
D««p W a t e r Port*.&#13;
The growing interest in deep water&#13;
seaports and cheap transportation by&#13;
water, gives added importance to the&#13;
building up of the city of La Porte&#13;
Texas. The high, dry ground of La-&#13;
Porte is in direct contrast with the&#13;
greater portion of the Mexican Gulf&#13;
Coast. Marshes, malaria and fevers are&#13;
unknown. La Porte is to be formally&#13;
"opened" and introduced to the public&#13;
February 14 to 17, when it is expected&#13;
a great crowd of Northern and Texas&#13;
people will be on hand to inspect the&#13;
much talked of new seaport of the Gulf.&#13;
So great is the interest shown that the&#13;
American Land Co., 188 Madison S t ,&#13;
Chicago, acting as Northern Manager,&#13;
is deluged with letters of inquiry.&#13;
How much praying is done in public&#13;
that God isn't expected to hear.&#13;
WANTED 50O&#13;
Men, "Women and Children in the city to try the&#13;
best and cheupewt preparations ever offered the&#13;
public. You don't take any chances in trying&#13;
them, as your drutfsrist guarantees Knill's Red&#13;
Pills for Wan People. ' P a l e and Weak," the&#13;
women's remedy of the day (the only genuine).&#13;
Kr ill's White Liver Pills, the great Liver Invifc'-&#13;
orator, System Renovator and Bowel Regulator,&#13;
25 doses, £jc. You can work while they work.&#13;
Never ^ripe or make you sick, IynHl's Klue Kidney&#13;
Pills curt all K'idaey Ills, Backache, etc.&#13;
Knill's DysvK'psiii Tablets cure Indigestion, correct&#13;
all Stomach Troubles, destroy all foul^ases,&#13;
make pure sweet stomachs'and breaths. 'To do&#13;
as advertised or money refunded. The only&#13;
guaranteed preparations' on the market. Koill's&#13;
Pills or Tablets cost i5&lt;\ Half price of ushers.&#13;
Busy&#13;
Woman&#13;
Is Mrs** Plnkham. HOP&#13;
great correspondence Is&#13;
under her own supervision*&#13;
We would allr"lov&lt;r God more, if we&#13;
would only trust him more.&#13;
CHAPTER X.&#13;
Mean-while the justice and'bis' clerkwere&#13;
seated at a well-spread table in&#13;
the dining-room, which also , looked&#13;
out upon the garden. Edward could&#13;
not send the gentlemen, who had taken&#13;
the long ride in vain, back to the&#13;
city immediately; so he had invited&#13;
them to dinner. Mr. Thompson could&#13;
not find words enough to express his&#13;
regret and sympathy for the sorrow&#13;
^verhanjing- the household, but, hesaw&#13;
no reason why he should not have&#13;
a comfortable meal on that acount.&#13;
He thought it perfectly natural that&#13;
Edward should excuse himself and remain&#13;
in the drawing-room. No one&#13;
could teel offended, with the grief^&#13;
stricken nephew, but he himself discussed&#13;
all the more eagerly the good&#13;
things set befor* him, and was ably&#13;
supported by his clerk.'"&#13;
The old gentleman only regretted&#13;
Doctor Blackwood's absence, arid admired&#13;
the sense of duty which would&#13;
not permit him even to appear at din-&#13;
K.ner. Ho was just ^giving his factotum&#13;
a discourse concerning this distinguished&#13;
physician, at the/ same time&#13;
helping himself to a large piece -of&#13;
roa^t meat. His factotum listened&#13;
raos^ dutifully and took a still larger&#13;
clice\ when the subject of the conversation&#13;
suddenly entered.&#13;
"AhAthero you are, Doctor Blackwood&#13;
!"\cried the judge. "Sit down.&#13;
Unfortunately you have come a little&#13;
STATS or Oino, CITV OF TOLEDO, I&#13;
LrcAs COUNT v, fs*&#13;
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the&#13;
senior partner of the flrm of F. J. Cheney &amp; Co.,&#13;
doing business in the City of Toledo, County&#13;
and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay&#13;
the sum ot ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for&#13;
each and every ease of Catarrh that cannot be&#13;
cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. ,&#13;
FRANK J. CHENEY.&#13;
Sworn to before me and subscribed In my&#13;
presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 188».&#13;
r e . . , n A. W. GLEASON,&#13;
1&amp;*AL.J_ Notary Public&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure 4s taken internally, and&#13;
acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces&#13;
of the system. Send for testimonials,'free.&#13;
F. J. CHENEY &amp; CO., Toledo, O.&#13;
Sold by Druggists, 75c.&#13;
Hall's Family Pills are the best&#13;
Every women on this&#13;
continent should understand&#13;
that she oan wrke&#13;
freely to Mrs* Plnkhem&#13;
about her physical condition&#13;
because Mrs* Pinkham&#13;
Is&#13;
A woman and because Mrs, Pink"&#13;
ham never Violates* confidence&#13;
and because she&#13;
knows more about the Ilia&#13;
of women than* any other&#13;
person In this country*&#13;
Lydla E* Plnkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound has&#13;
cured a million sick women*&#13;
Every neighborhood*&#13;
almost every&#13;
family, contains women&#13;
relieved of pain by this&#13;
great medicine*&#13;
A lie is a l w a y s a n e n e m y , n o m a t t o r&#13;
Low f r i e n d l y i t m a y look.&#13;
Lxno'i Family Merticlne.&#13;
M o v e s t h e b o w e l s e a c h d a y . I n o r d e r&#13;
t o be h e a l t h y t h i s is n e c e s s a r y . A c t s&#13;
g e n t l y on t h e liver a n d k i d n e y s . C u r e s&#13;
sick h e a d a c h e . P r i c e 23 a n d 50c.&#13;
E v e r y c o n v e r t e d m a n is a living- proof&#13;
t h a t t h e B i b l e is t r u e . . '&#13;
T H E G R I P CUBiq T H A T DOES CURE.&#13;
Laxative Kromo Quinine Tablets removes&#13;
the &lt;cause that produces La Grippe. K. W.&#13;
Grove's signiLurrf is on each box. 'ZZJ C.&#13;
Try tflvinff all your troubles to the Lard, and&#13;
see how light they will become.&#13;
Mrs. Winslow's S o o t h i n g Syrnp.&#13;
For children teething, soften^ the puma, reduces In*&#13;
ilainuiatlon, allays pain.curea wind colic 2^c a botuo.&#13;
God needs Daniels, and Josephs, and £tl*ftbs&#13;
to-day, as much as he ever did. .&#13;
Perhaps it's the Indigestion of Starchy&#13;
Foods that troubles you. Why not try a&#13;
' remedv prepared especially for that kind&#13;
of Indigestion.&#13;
15 cents en the Money-backif-&#13;
not-satisfactory-plan will&#13;
purchase a box. if ft © if n i A assess!!1&#13;
• » * » ^ » » ^ " ™ " " edy thatdixests&#13;
1.000 times its weipht of starch, most&#13;
Dy&gt;pepsia euretf are failures because they&#13;
do not digest this class of food. Kaskola&#13;
cntatains the meritorious elements of the&#13;
old treatment combined wiih tho new&#13;
di.-covery.&#13;
Price 15 cents all druggists&#13;
or of the makers.&#13;
THE P. L. AB3EY CO., Kalamazoo, Mfch.&#13;
_ Ijaker'a Chocolate a n d Cocoa. ^ —&#13;
—Look for tin- rlctrrre of "La RelU» Choeolatiuru."&#13;
It is ou every 'g^nuini' package.&#13;
g f l P * A *+t&#13;
run i^ ui&#13;
The man who thinks his sin will never and&#13;
him out has deceived himself.&#13;
Piso's Cure for Consumption i^ our only modicine&#13;
for eouirhs and colds,- Mrs. C. Beltz," 43y ^th&#13;
Ave. Denvt".-. ('i)l.. N'ov.y is^i. •&#13;
Time is wastcs.1 in tryinu to make a trotter out&#13;
of a horse with a broken l;v.&#13;
No cross babies or sick babivs in families that&#13;
use Brown'.s Teething Cordial.&#13;
If we try to please everybody, we shall soon&#13;
have the respect of nobody.&#13;
Do what you c:\xi do well, arid you will soon be&#13;
able to do much better.&#13;
' We wish to gain this jear SOObOOP'&#13;
new customers, and hence offer '&#13;
I Pkg. Cttr Garden Beet, lOo&#13;
LI Pkg Earl'tft Emerald Cncnmberlfio&#13;
" La Cxoee* Market Lettno«,16o&#13;
Strawberry Melon, 16o&#13;
11 Day Radisb, lOo&#13;
Karly Ripe Cabbage, loo&#13;
KariT Dinner Onion, 10c&#13;
a * Brilliant Flower Seeds, 16c&#13;
Werth »1.00tJfrr-14 Cteta.—fEBD&#13;
AboTelo Pkgs. worth SLOOjrewill&#13;
mail you free, together fftth oar&#13;
gTeat Catalog,telling ail about&#13;
SALIEI S MILLION DOLLAR POTATO&#13;
npor. receipt of thiA notice £ l 4 c .&#13;
atamp*. We invite,7ourtrade, and&#13;
k know when yon once try Smlzer'a&#13;
•seeds you will never do wit hoot.&#13;
' • t o o Prizes on Salter's 1»y0—rarest&#13;
earliest Tomato Giant on earth. »••—&#13;
JO M.I A. &amp;ILZKR BIXS CO., LA CROSdK. WIS.&#13;
W. N. U. — D E T R O I T - - N O . 5 — 1 9 0 0&#13;
late. We\ have had the roast serv-&#13;
-ear ^&#13;
The doctor bowed in the most&#13;
charming manner, and signed to the&#13;
servant, who had just brought in the&#13;
dishes, to leavis the room. .&#13;
"Thank you. I am very sorry to disturb&#13;
you, but theVe is a business matter&#13;
to be settled, which admits of no&#13;
delay." \&#13;
"A business affair? Is there a will&#13;
to be made?" \&#13;
"No, on the contrary, the matter&#13;
concerns a wedding.'^ \&#13;
Mr. Thompson dropped^ his knife&#13;
and fork and stared at the speaker in&#13;
the utmost astonishment.&#13;
"The ceremony is put off. Mr. Harrison&#13;
told rae himself that he was&#13;
compelled to defer it for the present."&#13;
"Certainly, and he will probably do&#13;
so altogether; but another person has&#13;
taken his place—Mr. "William Roland."&#13;
"What? What did you call him?"&#13;
"William Roland. The circumstances&#13;
have entirely changed, and unfortunately&#13;
I have not time to explain them&#13;
to ypu in detail. But, in the name of&#13;
the betrothed couple, I beg of you to&#13;
perform the wedding ceremony at&#13;
once."&#13;
The magistrate leaned back in Jijs&#13;
chair, assuming a dignified attitude&#13;
and a solemn, official manner.-&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
Pbilfi^RS&#13;
I! " • " -4in ': f &gt;v&#13;
Vegetable Preparationfor Assimilating&#13;
ttteFcod andBeg ulating&#13;
the Stoiuaete andBowels of&#13;
/(.H1LDRKN&#13;
Promotes Digestion.Cteer fulness&#13;
and Rest.Con tains neither&#13;
OpiufluMorphine twrMUsfat&#13;
N O T XAHLGX&gt;TIC .&#13;
For Infants and Children.&#13;
•V'"'&lt;£|&#13;
•'^1&#13;
H!&#13;
M ~4&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought m&#13;
i-a|&#13;
/Vnsaiss SeUjttx.&#13;
SauM *&#13;
Aperfecl Remedy for Constipation,&#13;
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea&#13;
Worms .Convulsions Jevenshness&#13;
and L o s s OF SLEEP.&#13;
Facsimile Signature of&#13;
X E W ' Y D R K .&#13;
i&#13;
It is impossible that an ill-natured&#13;
man can have a public spirit; for how&#13;
should he love ten thousand men who&#13;
has never loved one.&#13;
VI h r&gt; uosis-j-jc J N I S I?&#13;
WRAPPER.&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORIA&#13;
r&#13;
. /&#13;
®fa f incttiueg Stepatcfc.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS EDITOR.&#13;
THURSDAY, FEB. 1, 1900.&#13;
This Paper&#13;
One Year.&#13;
Farm Journal&#13;
5 Years.&#13;
PAY UP AND GET BOTH PAPERS AT PRICE&#13;
OF ONE.&#13;
We want to get 100. new subscribers&#13;
to our papeY, and are going&#13;
to do it if we can; we therefore&#13;
continue our arrangement&#13;
with the Farm Journal by which&#13;
we can send the PINCKNEY D I S -&#13;
PATCH one year and the Farm&#13;
Journel 5 years, both for $1.00.&#13;
And we make the same offer to all&#13;
old subscribers who will pay all&#13;
arrearages, and one year in ad*&#13;
vance.&#13;
You know what our paper is,&#13;
a n d t h e Farm Journal is a gem—&#13;
practical, progressive—a clean,&#13;
honest, useful paper—full of&#13;
gumption, full of suushine, with&#13;
immense circulation^ among the&#13;
best people everywhere You&#13;
ought to take it.&#13;
DOES IT PAY TO BUY CHEAP?&#13;
A chesp remedy for coughs and colds is&#13;
all right .but you want something that will&#13;
relieve and cure the more severe resultB of&#13;
lung trubles. What shall you do? Go to&#13;
warmer and more regular climate? Yes,&#13;
if possible; if not possible for you, then in&#13;
eather case take the ONLY remedy that has&#13;
been introduced in all civilized countries&#13;
with success in severe throat and lung&#13;
trubles, '-Boschee's German Syrup." It&#13;
not only heals" arid •stimulates the tissues to&#13;
destroy the germ disease, but allays inflammation,&#13;
causes easy expectoration, gives a&#13;
good liights rest, and cures the patient-&#13;
Try one bottle. Ktconiended-many years&#13;
;by all druggists in the world. Sample botles&#13;
at F . A. Siglrr's.&#13;
Hamburg and Putnam Fanner's Clua.&#13;
Eight thousand manuscripts&#13;
were received by The - Ladies&#13;
Home Journal during the year&#13;
just closed. Each was given a&#13;
careful reading, but out of the enfire&#13;
number only—eighty were&#13;
found worthy of publication. The&#13;
Manuscript Bureau of The Ladies&#13;
Home Journal is operated at a&#13;
large eexxppeennccee,, but the hope dt&#13;
discovering new writers or aspir&#13;
ants with developed talent war 1&#13;
rents the outlay. It can be seen&#13;
that the articles secured by sueh&#13;
a careful winnowing process&#13;
brings the cost up to and above&#13;
the" remuneration paid our best&#13;
writers.&#13;
The first meetina; of the Putnam&#13;
and Hamburg Farmers' Club for&#13;
1900 met with Mr. and Mrs. J. W.&#13;
Place way, Saturday last.&#13;
The meeting was called to order&#13;
by the president, and the Club&#13;
joined in singing "America."&#13;
On account of the lateness of&#13;
the hour the committees were appointed,&#13;
and a report from the&#13;
delegate to Lansing was given,&#13;
then adjourned for dinner.&#13;
After dinner the program opened&#13;
by an instrumental solo by&#13;
Grace Nash, followed by a reading&#13;
by G. P. Lambertson. A song&#13;
by Iva Placeway, followed by a&#13;
paper, "Road Building" by H. F.&#13;
Kice. He said there should be&#13;
more attention paid to our road&#13;
building, because the demand jtor&#13;
better roads is increasing, and in&#13;
order to bring about this change&#13;
we should place the best men of&#13;
the township on the ticket regardless&#13;
of politics. John Chambers&#13;
led in the discussion—I think the&#13;
farmers should talk over the matter&#13;
of road building on election&#13;
day with the oVerseerof roads and&#13;
then hpve the law enforced. If&#13;
one or two prosecutions were&#13;
made in the township I do not&#13;
think-we would not have much&#13;
trouble. Chas.= Brown thought if&#13;
we practice at home what we come&#13;
here to preach, it would be better&#13;
all-around. If every path-master&#13;
would study the best method for&#13;
grading and graveling, the condition&#13;
of the roads would be improved.&#13;
Miss VauEleet thought&#13;
that more attention should be&#13;
paid to noxious weeds by the road&#13;
side, and there would be if the&#13;
men had'to walk along the road&#13;
in skirts and low shoes.&#13;
A recitation by Raymond Kennedy,&#13;
a song by Albert Mills, was&#13;
folowed by a reading, "Choosing&#13;
an occupation," by Mrs. Kennedy.&#13;
A recitation by Iva Placeway, a&#13;
duet by Mr. and Mrs. H. Kice&#13;
was greatly appreciated by the&#13;
Club. The question box was next&#13;
in order. "What is the best fence&#13;
to build, all things considering,"&#13;
was given Mr* Bfit&amp;rs to answer,&#13;
and he will answer at the next&#13;
It has been demonstrated repeatedly&#13;
in evftvy state in the Union and in&#13;
many foreign countries that Chamberlain's&#13;
Cough lleniedy is a certain preventive&#13;
a n d cure for croup. I t has&#13;
become t h e universal remedy lor tliat&#13;
disease. M. V. Fisher, of Liberty, \Y&#13;
m e e t i n g .&#13;
Why should not tire president&#13;
of the club appoint a committee&#13;
tc get free mail delivery from&#13;
Pi nckney? Jobn Chanibers—A&#13;
good many towns have succeeded&#13;
in gettmg free mail delivery; a&#13;
petition sent to congressman&#13;
Smith is the better plan.&#13;
"Are farmers educating them-"&#13;
selves fast enough to compete with&#13;
educational advances in other organizations&#13;
against farmers?" H.&#13;
Schoenhals—I do not tnink ' they&#13;
are. If farmers would take more&#13;
Va., only repeats what has been baid | | p a i n 8 i n going to caucus and putaround&#13;
the ge1lo' be wh*n he writes:*'! t i n g g o o d m e n i n t o o f f i c e t j j e y&#13;
have used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy&#13;
in my family for several ^years.&#13;
.and always with perfect success. We&#13;
believe that it is not only the lest&#13;
couplrremedy, but tbat it is a sure&#13;
cure tor croup. It has saved the lives&#13;
of our children a number of times."&#13;
This remedy is for sale by F. A. Sigler,&#13;
DruggistT&#13;
We have received a copy of an&#13;
illustrated paper called "The&#13;
Corn Belt," a clean, well printed&#13;
and highly interesting publication&#13;
containing many pictures and description&#13;
of W estern farms. There&#13;
is nothing cheap about this paper&#13;
and we congratulate the Chicago&#13;
publishers on their good work.&#13;
men into office&#13;
would do away with more trusts&#13;
than by any other method.&#13;
F. A. Rigler guarantees every bottle&#13;
of Chamberlins Cough Remedy and&#13;
_wi 11 refund the money to any one wtio&#13;
is not sataified after using two thirds&#13;
of the contents.. This is the best remedy&#13;
in the fcorld for la grippe coughs,&#13;
colds, troop and whooping eongh and}bottles&#13;
is pleasant and safe to take. It prevents&#13;
any tendency of a cold to result&#13;
in pneumonia. t mar.-l&#13;
Messrs.,Chambers, Lambertson,&#13;
Coniway, Kice and Briggs were&#13;
appointed as a committee to circulate&#13;
a petitson for the purpose&#13;
of securing free mail delivery.&#13;
The-Club then adjourned to&#13;
meet the last Saturday in February&#13;
at P. W. Com ways.&#13;
Cor. Sect'y.&#13;
Council Proceedings.&#13;
For The Tillage of Pincknejr.&#13;
Regular. Dec. 4, 1899.&#13;
Council convened and was called&#13;
to order by Pres. Mclntyre.&#13;
Present:—Trustees Richards,&#13;
Bowman, Thompson, Sykes, Johnson&#13;
and Monks. Absent, none.&#13;
-Minutes of previous meeting&#13;
read and approved.&#13;
Highway Com. report read and&#13;
accepted.&#13;
J . Monks, labor and team, $34.8t&gt;&#13;
A. Monks, " " «.00&#13;
S. Grimes, " 2.76&#13;
J.Chalker, " 8.13&#13;
' G . W . Hoff, " 63&#13;
Mark "Wilson, " 3.75&#13;
Teeple &amp; Cad well tile and naih* 8.00&#13;
Dud Grieve, cartage .10&#13;
__, 61.23&#13;
The following contingent bills&#13;
were read and approved:&#13;
Francis Carr Oct. services $ 8.05&#13;
" " Nov. " 8.55&#13;
P. Monroe, services 1.67&#13;
Teeple &amp; Cadwell, rope .15-&#13;
Reason &amp; Shehan, oil 3.50&#13;
21.92&#13;
Resignation of marshal Brown&#13;
read and accepted. Pres. appointed&#13;
P. Monroe for balance of term.&#13;
Appointment sustained.&#13;
Mr. Monroe was then sworn in&#13;
by Justice Carr.&#13;
Upcn-motion council adjourned.&#13;
R. H . T E E P L E , Clerk.&#13;
Regular, Jan. 1, 1900.&#13;
Council-convened and called to&#13;
order by Pres. Mclntyre.&#13;
Present:—trustees Richards and&#13;
Johnson. Absent:—Sykes, Bowman,&#13;
Monks, Thompson.&#13;
There being no quorum present&#13;
council adjourned until next regular.&#13;
R. H. T E E P £ E , Clerk.&#13;
A C a r d .&#13;
We, t h e undersigned, do hereby&#13;
agree to refund the money on a 50-&#13;
cent hot-He &lt;- of Green's W a r r a n t e d&#13;
S y r u p of T a r if it fails to cure y o u r&#13;
cough or_colvi/ We also # u a r a n t e o a&#13;
25-cent bottle to prove satisfactory or&#13;
money refunded. t-30&#13;
Will 13. Darrow.&#13;
"Joshua fixod our next • conpro.&gt;s-J&#13;
man." "Wl:;it did he do?" "He \vn»t'&#13;
to Him for' $:i so ho couid replace 1/)(--&#13;
garden seed thai, didn't grow!""—CT.icago&#13;
Record.&#13;
Warden (to condemned mnn, p-il'ns&#13;
his last breakfast—Will you have K KT.I&#13;
ham and r.^gs? Cund; mned m a : i - - \&#13;
couple of os^s, pie ise ,1mt no ham. IL&#13;
gives one indite, tioiv—Tii-Bits.&#13;
- -There isnro better medicine tor t h e&#13;
babies than ChambertahaV Cough&#13;
Remedy. I t s pleasant taste and&#13;
p r o m p t and effectual cures make it a&#13;
favorite with mothers and small children.&#13;
I t quickly cures their coughs&#13;
and colds, preventing p n e u m o n i a or&#13;
other serious consequences. I t also&#13;
cures croup a n d has been used i n tens&#13;
of thousands of cases without-a single&#13;
failure so far as we have been able to&#13;
learu. It not only cures croup, b u t&#13;
when given as soon as t h e croupy&#13;
cough appears, will prevent t h e attack.&#13;
I n cases of whooping cough it&#13;
liquefies the tou^h mucus, m a k i n g it&#13;
easier to expectorate; a n d lessens the&#13;
severity and frequnc'y of t h e paroxysms&#13;
of coughing, thus d e p r i v i n g that&#13;
disease of all dangerous consequences.&#13;
For sale by F . A. Sigler, D r u g g i s t .&#13;
OF INTEREST.&#13;
T t e r e a r e E&gt;\000 Hebrews In Italy.&#13;
PoUoa ivy. lb DIM- of Uic tiu'iiures to&#13;
t o l l .&#13;
There are 8],&gt;U0 iual misu'rr. In&#13;
France.&#13;
Peoria distilleries u*» 40,000 bushels&#13;
of c &gt;rn dally.&#13;
Only six persons out of a thousand&#13;
reach the age of sixty-five.&#13;
One-fourth of the earth's population&#13;
dies before reaching t h e age ot seventeen.&#13;
A resident of New Zealand haa patented&#13;
a liquid for branding cattle&#13;
which can be applied with a brush.&#13;
A Wealeyan preacuer named&#13;
Houldsworth. who had preached for&#13;
eighty years, died recently in the Halifax&#13;
(JSng.) almshouse aged ninetyfour-&#13;
years.&#13;
In a single year the value of canaries&#13;
raised in Germany is estimated at&#13;
$250,000 and t h e greater part of thir?&#13;
sum goes into the pockets of the very&#13;
poor.&#13;
The London underground railroad is&#13;
losing popularity. During the last&#13;
half year t h e falling off in t h e number&#13;
of passengers carried amounted to&#13;
300,000.&#13;
Ecuador produces nearly one-third&#13;
of the entire cacao used in t h e world.&#13;
T h e total ie estimated at 75,000 tons.&#13;
The average crop of Ecuador is about&#13;
22,000 tons. . . —&#13;
Materials for dynamo a n d motor&#13;
manufacture have risen I n a year all&#13;
the way from eleven per cent, for cast&#13;
steel to forty per cent, for field copper&#13;
and forty-seven per cent, for brass.&#13;
A physician h a s decided that the&#13;
habit women have of holding their&#13;
ekirts up to escape t h e dust of the&#13;
street results in the- enlargement of&#13;
the wrist used in this process.&#13;
The shipment of t w o wives by express,&#13;
from Issa'quah, Wash., to tlieir&#13;
husbands at Dawson City by the Nugget&#13;
Express company is something of&#13;
a novelty in t h e express business.&#13;
Although there are In Iceland 70,-&#13;
,927 people they are so free from crime&#13;
that only one policeman is kept and&#13;
euch a thing as a jail is unknown.&#13;
Equal suffrage prevails in the island-&#13;
The gravestone over t h e burial place&#13;
of J o h n Foster, almanac maker, in&#13;
the old burying ground at Dorchester,&#13;
Mass., hears the inscription which was&#13;
dictated by himself: "Skill Wae His&#13;
Cash."&#13;
On a marble slab in t h e parish&#13;
church of Tetbury. Gloucestershire, is&#13;
inscribed: "In a vault underneath lie&#13;
several of the Saunderees, late of this&#13;
.parish. Particulars t h e last day will&#13;
disclose. Amen."&#13;
Many physicians nowadays refuse tc^&#13;
believe there is eucti a thing as by"-"&#13;
drophohia. and t l r se who ,do believe&#13;
in it assert that not in one case in a&#13;
thousand is a person bitten by a dog&#13;
in any danger of it.&#13;
After some improvements had been&#13;
made in North Capitol street-, Washington,&#13;
I). C , it was discovered that&#13;
the workmen had thoughtlessly made&#13;
away with a historic stone set ' in&#13;
place by George Washington.&#13;
A FREE PATTERN&#13;
MS CALLS&#13;
MAGAZINE YEAR&#13;
sDhMorMt mataokrlBlefV s cmoBujtmwlia st,o *falcnac,y • »w&lt;&gt;o. 'k.*buobu«Mi-ribi&gt;o#ld * «h•l«»•t»j OiOjfi0o.y«*rij. Udya*aatSW*&amp;Ud. ••adCorUrm*&#13;
tfaoirn laatdrlllessh, "m citntiots ". KolLfe'lc*t wnod* Hattttla*in cehdi ltdjyr ecnh&lt;.. uTi.h- aat »oa«r othar patterns. Hat* no equal f»ni.yle »n&lt;i p.ii\n.r. ot&#13;
MS CAUL&#13;
J*&#13;
E»»llr put together Onlr »0 and )5 •'*! • •• &lt;•;•••»• "ori*&#13;
holier. Sold la nearly every city a'ui *• •••..-•&gt;!• n i-^&#13;
A«k tet them, Ab*ohit«)jr-very latest &gt;H -^-^^ iiii&lt; s THE McCALL COMl»A\Y,&#13;
U I - U I W « t 14th 8tr»*t. - - • • *•* t . ri. Cif/i *• *•&#13;
J. G. SAYLES&#13;
Plainfield, Mich.&#13;
Funeral&#13;
Director&#13;
and&#13;
Emb«j)mer«&#13;
R e s i d e n c e i m l l e n o r t h of vl! ( i&lt;v&#13;
S t a t e T e l e p h o n e Conne&lt;-.lion.&#13;
A l l c a l l s p r o m p t l y a n s w i : - f , i .&#13;
( (&#13;
W A N T E D - T h e Subscription&#13;
due .on, the DISPATCH.&#13;
Sealed Bids.&#13;
We the undersigned Superintendents of&#13;
the poor in and for Livingston County&#13;
Mich., will receive Sealed bida and&#13;
applications for Keeper of the Livingston&#13;
County poor farm up to February_15th-&#13;
1900, said bids ;ind applications shall state&#13;
wages wanted including board for one&#13;
year. Age of man and wife and number&#13;
in family properly signed by applicant and&#13;
residence.&#13;
The said superintendents reserve the&#13;
right to reject any or all bids.&#13;
All applications to be Addressed to&#13;
mos Wineg*r Secretary, Howell, Midi.&#13;
Dated January 22, ]!JOO.&#13;
Henry Darnmann j Supts.&#13;
E. A. Kuhn &gt; &lt;&gt;l' ilif&#13;
Amos Winegar ) Poor.&#13;
"!%?&lt;'./&#13;
An Editor'* Life Naved by C h a m b e r '&#13;
l a i n ' * C o u v h Bemedjr&#13;
During the early p a r t ot October,&#13;
1896,1 contracted a bad, cold which&#13;
settled on my lungs and i^as neglected&#13;
until I feared t h a t consumption&#13;
bad appeared in an incipienVfetate. I&#13;
was constantly coughing a n d t r y i n g&#13;
to expel something which I ••.ooid not.&#13;
I became alarmed a n d ' after giving&#13;
the-iocal doctors a trial bought a bottle&#13;
of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy&#13;
and t h e result w a s immediate im»&#13;
provement, and after 1 l a d used t h r e e&#13;
my lungs were restored t o&#13;
^001 W E S T » « ^ ?&#13;
' ' 7 " A- • • » ' .&#13;
their healthy state.—B. S.-EdgArda,&#13;
Publisher of Tbe Review, Wyat, 111.&#13;
For sale by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
The best farm lands in the world lie west of the&#13;
Mississippi River. In that country are. great opportunities&#13;
to establish homes and become prosperous. Reliable&#13;
information, beautiful pictures of farms]~t&gt;ut1d»ngs and&#13;
stock, together with descriptions and letters from owners&#13;
giving thefr experience, can be had by sending 25 cents&#13;
in postage for a year's subscription to America's great&#13;
illustrated monthly farm paper,&#13;
0RN BELT," 209 Adam Strait,&#13;
CHICAGO/ILL.&#13;
25c&#13;
YOUR ICRES'INXOHHS&#13;
May be nicely cured bv i; ;:&gt;."&#13;
EUREKA CORN CORE.&#13;
It cures thij Tfte CV:-ii s:ir&lt;.'.&#13;
I t cures hard or soft &lt;.\&gt;ruh.&#13;
It cnre$ any-BiuiiuTj:.&#13;
I t cures all Callous i.S&lt;••.•*.&#13;
And without pain or i-u-c^jj v«.»hience.&#13;
P i ' i c e O n l y 1 0 C e n t s .&#13;
By Return Mail.&#13;
Agents wanted—write - • • &lt;&gt;nm%.&#13;
Address, ECHKKA Sri'ri.^ Vf.i7'Tp7"&#13;
Pinckney. ^fi(i c i i .&#13;
, ;t.«;i ;i«a.t&#13;
'I, -f. i r » ;&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
Urand Trunk RalhyVo v-m,.;:;.&#13;
Time Table in effect, No.&#13;
. M. A. L. DIVISIOy-\V7&gt; I !;f)[-\!t.&#13;
No. 27 PMSen^er. Pontiao to .) :&gt;» iv '&#13;
' connection from l&gt; i.. .i i\ ;i »&#13;
No. 29 Paaaenzer, Ponttac to S.w; - ; ' u&#13;
No. 29 has ihrougn coacti troni !» ::,-u • ^.l.x.ni.&#13;
No. 48 Mixed, Lenox to Jackn . i \&#13;
connection from ]i- :'v i.}'/ ^ m&#13;
EAST£0I::SU&#13;
No. 80 Passenger to Pontiac ami i) &gt;•••,:-&#13;
No. 28 PasonnRer, Jaxon to I&gt;ot r&lt;. i •&#13;
No. 28 has through coacd from ) '.':'• i. m .&#13;
i ' i''';'oit&#13;
No. 4¥Mxe*Tto Wntiac andT^ iT7 ; : / , - ^ ^&#13;
All trains dally^xcept Snntla;-.&#13;
No44 connection at Pontlac for l'"ir.lr ., i&#13;
• for tho w. •' '\ i' .•. &gt;i fj j ;&#13;
W. J. Black. Aunf r i ' '".'i-v&#13;
AND STZAMSHIP L.'M.SI'opular&#13;
routn tnr Ann Ar^ur. T o -&#13;
if»do'aud points Ea&gt;t. So-iili, ,-.i\-l for&#13;
Howftll, Owosso, Alma, V&lt;&gt; !';...i .int&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Trayo: *'.:.- m d&#13;
points in N o r t h w e s t e r n Is,:.T—77" n,&#13;
w. H. n&#13;
G. 1 ' . .•-. i. i iy&#13;
T R A D E Mftfi .s&#13;
C O P Y R I G H T * &amp;C Anyone sendlncr'a nketch and li.^oru-'tl.m ,oaf&#13;
Qnlckly ascertain onr opinion ti ti- w fit-'M.' i*&#13;
mvontlon is prhhably pntentKhl". 0,ii.:nn-.;^&#13;
UoniBtrictly ronfldentlal. HanULx.ok .»« I';, ut«&#13;
sent f TOO. Oldest nsency for Htriru.K ivno . &lt;.&#13;
Patont* takon thromih Mum, t (j"-i'&lt;:&gt;o)ra&#13;
vtialnotUe, without charge. \v, i !if&gt; ... &gt; Scientific flmerican. Ai lhaattnodna ootfn ealnr yi lsluciietvnatitfeicd kwm«renknlrl.. lTaerrsmemn., $ c8* %w ir: f onr months, |L Borabyail nowsci.^aV&#13;
'VI&#13;
- » N&#13;
m*m /. mi&#13;
fP' ••*£•"•••' A'I'M.&#13;
^15118¾¾&#13;
, • • ' . . ' • ' • • • / - • ' " - h - . - ' i ••' •' * ! ' ' \ V : *»*r -' ' ''-&lt;•. '', '. ' .,'' ' V ' ' ' . ,-'",&#13;
| (&#13;
- ; •&#13;
to Jtamember.&#13;
1 an$ genuine Bed Pills&#13;
4W»&amp;MU&gt;£»d Fills for W a n people&#13;
atwBwfr^wtv the woraons remedy^&#13;
4urt&#13;
Diarr&#13;
^xsents.&#13;
w o r k when thuey work,&#13;
(Jr make yon sick, KnilTs&#13;
ills. Bowel Hei?ul*tor.&#13;
868, 25 cents.&#13;
e and sure are Kni'lv&#13;
a Pilfs. Cures summer&#13;
ntery and all pains of&#13;
nd bowels. Only 25&#13;
Kidney Pill cure back-&#13;
25 cents box.&#13;
stomachs and breaths&#13;
^mm&gt;&gt;jrJStiby will cure $di*estibn,&#13;
;orrji#B|^toaiacb troubles, destroys&#13;
i l l J B p j U y A t o r 25c box. Best and&#13;
jh^ffiiktjMfflarrantaed by your dru#-&#13;
r n r ^ f t S L r r» Will Ourlett, Dexter.&#13;
B. Darrowj Pinckney.&#13;
HERE AND T H E R E&#13;
'&gt;is «.' ;&#13;
&gt;H»i witti-ujiu&#13;
6&amp;BAT&#13;
WSTOR'&#13;
ATIWS.&#13;
Pur-Hen is the greatest known&#13;
Xjew-v totiiu jiiui blood purifier;&#13;
It I'vaNMfc'RhTitf^'ttfih, muscle and STRENGTH,&#13;
cle:i:'« thu Ix^u, flakes the blood pure and rich,&#13;
and causes a Keneral feeling of health, power&#13;
and rcnywDioiifcaJity, while the generative organs&#13;
are helped to regain their normal powers, nnj&#13;
XUm niiljViLL Ja q-mrflrly made conscious of direc*&#13;
ben 'it. '.. '.i. box will work wonders, six j=hoi:ki&#13;
P«J&lt;^tJ4&lt;«f«\ 'fiP^ts.A BOX; 6boxes, $2,W. Y„\&#13;
80¾ arsdr»gtitiifjBVerywhere, or mailed. s&lt;&gt;^ ]&lt;"•',,&#13;
TRADE MAI'.K.&#13;
Many of the students at Russian&#13;
universities are mendicants who solicit&#13;
alms and wear cast-off garment*.&#13;
Herman beer is being driven out of&#13;
Formosa by the product of Japanese&#13;
brpweries*'. which la cheaper and better&#13;
suited to the climate.&#13;
The number of paying ,sub!Jcrlption&amp;&#13;
to the Zionist cause new exceeds 100.-&#13;
000. and $1,000,000 has been subscribed&#13;
toward the Colonial bank.&#13;
Thanks chiefly to the uae of thje serum&#13;
treatment, the mortality In Prussia&#13;
from diphtheria has been reduced from&#13;
a rate of 15.5 per 10,000 in the years&#13;
1Rfi5'-1R04. to 7.6 and 6.2 ia the years&#13;
1896 and 1897.&#13;
When potatoes were first introduced&#13;
in Oerm^ny they were for a long time,&#13;
like tomatoes, cultivated merely as a&#13;
curiosity. No one ate them, even piss&#13;
refusing them. To-day eastern Germany&#13;
could hardly get on without potatoes.&#13;
The French surgeon, Dr. Doyen, has&#13;
exhibited to numerous doctors and students&#13;
at the Kiel University cinematograph&#13;
pictures shtiwing various surgical&#13;
operations. The doctor advocates&#13;
the tree ofsuch" pictures fartrm education&#13;
of students, saying they are mor&amp;&#13;
effective than the most elaborately&#13;
written description.&#13;
A lad of Rhayader, Wales, while&#13;
looking for foxes on the hills -fie ofhpr&#13;
day, discovered a gold ring, a gold arm&#13;
let, and a gold neekl t. Mr. Reed of&#13;
the British museum, pronounces the&#13;
article to be distinctly Celtic, of exquisite&#13;
workmanship, and of great antiquity—&#13;
at least 1,000 years old. According&#13;
to the law of treasure trove,&#13;
the boy will receive the full antiquarian&#13;
value of the articles less :'0 per&#13;
cent.&#13;
MONTHLY REPORT&#13;
Of the Pinckney Public Schools for the&#13;
month ending Jan. 26, 1900.&#13;
HIGH SCHOOL DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whole number of pupils 45.&#13;
Total days attendance 772.&#13;
Average attendance 41.&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 64.&#13;
Number of days taught 19.&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOB TABDY,&#13;
Casper Culhane Ross Read,&#13;
Sidney Sprout * Desde Daley&#13;
Leah Thompson Eva Smith&#13;
STEPHEN DURFEE, Supt.&#13;
D r . C a d y a Condition Powders are&#13;
fust what a horso needs when in bad&#13;
condition. Tonic, blood purifier and&#13;
vermifuge. They are not, food but&#13;
medicine and the best in use tojjput a&#13;
horse in prime condition. Price 25c&#13;
per package. For sale by P. A. Sigler.&#13;
GRAMMAR DEPARTMENT.&#13;
N u m b e r of pupils&#13;
T o t a l attendance&#13;
T o t a l tardiness&#13;
D a i l y * t t e n d a n c e&#13;
N u m b e r days taught&#13;
24&#13;
4 4 1&#13;
55&#13;
22£&#13;
20&#13;
WAyNE HOTEL, DETROIT&#13;
AMERICAN AMD EUROPEAN PLAN,&#13;
02 TO 09.BO 01.OO TO 0S.OO&#13;
QlttQUm MMAL9. COC. UP TO DAT* GAP mm&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
ElJery D u r f e e E t h e l D u r f e e&#13;
E v a Grimes F r e d R e a d&#13;
C. L . G M M E S , T e a c h e r .&#13;
INTERMEDIATE DEPARTMENT.&#13;
W h o l e number of d a y s taught 20&#13;
Total number days attendance 383J&#13;
A v e r a g e daily a t t e n d a n c e 19.17&#13;
W h o l e number b e l o n g i n g 20&#13;
A g g r e g a t e tardiness 36&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY&#13;
L u c y Jeffreys M a r y L y n c h&#13;
R u e l Cad well Orpha H e u d e e&#13;
F l o r e n c e R e a s o n N o r m a V a u g h n&#13;
E D I T H C A R R , T e a c h e r .&#13;
"Thy kingdom/ come" will not be&#13;
answered until you let It come in your&#13;
own heart. .&lt;***&#13;
~~Tlhe iman who wants to work for&#13;
God doesn't have to go to an employ-&#13;
( ment agency. &gt;&#13;
Religious worship is dying out. People&#13;
too often go to Church to be entertained.&#13;
f&#13;
The sermon that is born in the&#13;
preacher's heart makes- itself at home&#13;
in the hearer's.&#13;
If no one finds fault with you. remember&#13;
that nobody notices the dirt&#13;
on a poker.&#13;
Many preachers think they are&#13;
brave because they whip God's saints&#13;
and let the devil alone.&#13;
^ • * ^ — ,&#13;
Business Locals.&#13;
or/rfRelfctfjfcflj ririce. Address DUS. HAiri'O.1-&#13;
l»HtfS&lt;*V liar-Den UlovL, Cleveland., O&#13;
Fo* sale by&#13;
&lt;'YF..A. SIGLEB, Druggist&#13;
^ - ^ Mich.&#13;
LAST&#13;
PERFECT FORCVEH«&gt;&#13;
SCALES Coppei Plated •V-v-&#13;
All Steel Levers, &lt;&#13;
Combination Beam.*&#13;
Catalogue Free.&#13;
Address, J o N C S OP BlNGHAMTON,&#13;
8INGHAMTON. N.&#13;
I W M I i m M I ' l l l l l l l I I I I I I I I I M l l M H m r l l l l H U M H K I l l l l l l l l l l l » I M I &gt; l | BIGGLE -BOOKS A Farm Library of unequalled value—Practical*&#13;
Up-to-date, Concise and Comprehensive—Handsomely&#13;
Printed and Beautifully Illustrated.&#13;
By JACOB BIGGLE&#13;
PRIMARY DEPARTMENT.&#13;
W h e l e number of days taught , 20&#13;
Total number of d a y s attendance ^457.5&#13;
A v e r a g e daily attendance 22.9&#13;
W h o l e number b e l o n g i n g - 25&#13;
A g g r e g a t e tardiness &gt; 29&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
L l o y d Grimes R o y Moran&#13;
Millard Darrow T h o m a s M o r a n&#13;
K a t e Brogan H e l e n R e a s o n&#13;
L o l a Moran L u c y Cook&#13;
C l a u d e B l a c k&#13;
J E S S I E G R E E N , T e a c h e r .&#13;
I think I will go crazy with pain&#13;
were it not tor Chamberlain's Pain&#13;
Balm," writes Air. VV. H, Stapleton,&#13;
He'rminie, Pa. &gt;rl have been afflicted&#13;
No. 1—BIQQLE HORSE BOOK&#13;
All about Horses—a Common-Sense Treatise, with over&#13;
74 illustrations , a standard work. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 2—BIQQLE BERRY BOOK&#13;
All about growing Small Fruits—jead and learn how ,&#13;
contains 43 colored lite-like reproductions of all lending&#13;
varieties'and 100 other illustrations. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 3—BIQQLaJ'OULTRV BOOK&#13;
with rheumatism for seyeral years -antlhave&#13;
tried remedies without number,&#13;
but fain Balm is the best medicine I&#13;
have got hold of." One application&#13;
relieves the pain. For sale by F. A.&#13;
Sigler. Druggist.&#13;
All about Poultry ; the best l'oultry Book in existence*&#13;
tells everythinpr ;* with23 colored life-like reproductions&#13;
of all the principal breeds; with 103 other illustration*.&#13;
Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 4—BIQGLE COW BOOK&#13;
All about Cows and the Dairy Business ; having a great&#13;
sale; contains 8 colored life-like reproductions of each&#13;
• breed, with 132 other illustrations. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
No. 5—BIQGLB SWINE BOOK&#13;
Just out. All about Hof^—Breeding, Feeding, Butch*&#13;
ery, Diseases, etc. Contains over 80 beautiful half*&#13;
tones and other engravings. Price, 50 Cents.&#13;
TheBKKJLE BOOKS are uniqtie.origmal.useful—you never&#13;
saw anything like them—so practical, so sensible. They&#13;
are having an enormous sale—East, West, North and&#13;
South. Every one "who keeps a Horse, Cow, Hog or&#13;
Chicken, or grows Small Fruits, ought to send right&#13;
away for the BIGGLE BOOKS. The FARMJ0URNAL Is your paper, made for you and not a misfit. It ts 2a years)&#13;
old; it is the great boiled-down, hit-the-nail-on-the-head,—&#13;
quit-after-yott .have-said-it, Farm and Household paper in&#13;
tne^or^^the^igi^st'pap^rrofits size in the United States&#13;
of America—having over a million a" •': a-half regular readers.&#13;
&lt; n AapCHE Of the BIGGLE BOOKS, and the rARM JOURNAL :&#13;
A*-VBAUB ftanainder o f 1899,1900, JQOI, 190a and 2903) will be sent by mail&#13;
*a any address for A DOLLAR BILL.&#13;
4-»~" g*lfi»stotf&gt;ARM JOURNAL and circalar describing . . O L E BOOKS free.&#13;
Address, P A R K ^ U - R P J j r L .&#13;
P H I L A L B L P B X A I&#13;
T — TT- I ' - ' f T l H I I I&#13;
p.jsmuvB.&#13;
» » » * • . . . &gt; . x &gt; 111111111 n » « i&#13;
4 ^-*^i c .7.,&gt; &gt;V"'- :\,V; ^ ^ - ^ , - -—' . . , &lt; - \ • * . ' l ? r * * ~ - * -&#13;
,e*\'.o&#13;
•.i ••.!&gt; ! 0 . ( H : O t.&gt;&#13;
ftiitu-v^:-..- t ill-st m-pfcantile Vn.ildins; in thf&gt; world. Vc have t ^ 6&#13;
OVtr a,soo,ooo ciK;.u •';'.&lt;*rs. &amp;S\J.ren hundred clrrks ..re conS: ,ly- l^T".&#13;
i IA ;'!'\;v vd filliiif; out-of-town ortiers. 1 •••&#13;
n • • - - • \ - \ $&#13;
-•01&gt;^ E R A L C A T A L O C \J E is thr buck of the •peopl-r —it-rirottvs J J\.^&#13;
, « W h « l ^ M l l | ; P r i c - • \ •"• . .. ov.-r I.. ,*i pa cb, u'.ooo illustrattc.i . a :-...1 W ; f&#13;
I !'5&gt;ij|^,qc;^ i^'s'^v'P1'011^ ' • • :t ' " --"fs. . It costs •;: ceiits to print ar&gt;ci -sail ' * f j £ J&#13;
I A ^ t t l n i v . ^ t - ' - ' . v ' V i , . - •.''. ••;,•.,: .&gt;i\c. S E N D Kli-'TEEN C E N T S ta^ioyv \ i* ' f&#13;
'&gt;" m'la^i'''''*'?*"'' : ' " " ' • ;- y ' • :t ••••^Y'V^VI:, with nil charges prepaid. t':^/E_.&#13;
*f n'&gt;ri&#13;
v t { f V \ « / i ^ &gt; ^ &amp; r i"5 /..it-litgan A»e,snd MsdisonCtno.&#13;
»k.».l &lt;7-M{VJ CJ iUt C H I C A G O&#13;
AN IDLE HOUR.&#13;
Tnefe aTe few things that will decide&#13;
the true success and value of any&#13;
man more than the „wav in which he&#13;
regards his own personal hu]ies. 'fir&#13;
common feeling towuia* thorn is 11 • at&#13;
they-are somethin?; to be aitainocs&#13;
either by our own exovis or by otlur&#13;
means over which wo havf no conti'ol,&#13;
but that their realization is th&gt; end.&#13;
Then: wilhetrme, without doubt, the t-v.-&#13;
j"oyment which h,as loomc:i up in the&#13;
mind as the final triumph of the aspiration.&#13;
To only a t,jw cnr.i^- rh-.1&#13;
thought that the realization of a hop.*&#13;
is the beginning of a new-responsibility,&#13;
and that the deMre and effort to&#13;
attain the form'er'should be accompanied&#13;
by an equal deMi'e and effort to&#13;
fulfill the l a t t e i w&#13;
Some (persons put so slight a value&#13;
upon their own self-respect and honesty&#13;
that they will always agree with&#13;
the last speaker, even at the expense&#13;
jgf, their own convictions. But euch.&#13;
duplicity, w.hether cunningly assumed&#13;
for a purpose or dropping into from a&#13;
feeblemrss and poverty of character^, is&#13;
utterly opposed to the frank and fearless&#13;
searcirtor^real unison of sentiment.&#13;
That ie always honorahle,o always&#13;
dignified, always loyal to its own&#13;
individuality.&#13;
Men may be divided into two classes&#13;
—who have "one thing" to do and&#13;
those who have not—these with aim,&#13;
"aira"TtfTose"'"^wtthtnrt aim, in their lives.&#13;
And practically it turns out tnat ate&#13;
most all the succe?*;, and therefore thr&gt;&#13;
greater part of the happiness, go to the&#13;
first class. The aim in life it what the&#13;
backbone is in the body. Without it&#13;
we are invertebrate—belong to some&#13;
lower order of being, not man.&#13;
No man, or woman, was ever cured&#13;
of love by-discovering the falseness of&#13;
his or her lover. The living together&#13;
for throe long, rainy days in the country&#13;
It as done more to dispel love than&#13;
all the perfidies in love that have eyer&#13;
.been co-.mitted.&#13;
tie who w a l k t h r o u g h life with an&#13;
ev.'n temper and a gentle patkn.e.&#13;
with himself, patient with others, patient&#13;
with difficulties and crosses—he&#13;
has an every day greatness beyond&#13;
that, which is won in battle or chanted&#13;
in cathedrals.&#13;
Whatever yo.ir sex or position life is&#13;
a ha»tie :n 'A Inch you are to snow your&#13;
pluck; and woe to the coward.- t&gt;e»pai&#13;
and postponement are cpwardlce^ana&#13;
defeat. Men are t o r n to succeed, not&#13;
to fail.&#13;
He who holds the balance 1« upright&#13;
and weights the path of the upri*h*&#13;
in juwticQ. Men may use false 1*1-&#13;
ances, and weigh Ufe&gt; by a w r e n t&#13;
l U s d r r d , but Qod rights all a t l i f t&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
Bran, Pine Middlings, Coarse Middlings,&#13;
Flaked Middlings and Corn,&#13;
t 7 T. READ.&#13;
To Rent&#13;
My house, barn and garden spot at&#13;
Chulibs Corners; I also have a brood&#13;
R E W A R D .&#13;
We the undersitfneid druggists, offer&#13;
a reward of 50 cents co any person&#13;
who purchases of us, two 25c boxei&#13;
of Baxter's Mandrake Bitters Tablets,&#13;
if it fails to cure constipation, biliousness,&#13;
sick-headache, jaundice, loss o(&#13;
appetite, sour storaiuhe, dyspepsia&#13;
liver complaint, or any of the disease*&#13;
for which it is recommended. Price&#13;
25 cenU for either tablets or liquid.&#13;
We will also refund the money on one&#13;
package of either if it fails to give&#13;
satisfaction,&#13;
P. \ . Sigler,&#13;
W. B. Darrow,&#13;
lite fiurinmj Ilbpatch.&#13;
PUBLISHED KyKRT THUR3DAY MOKNIXQ BT&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
jEdilotjbtnd T*roprietor.&#13;
SabecriptlonnJrice $1 In Advance.&#13;
Watered at the Poetottice at tJiacka»y, Michigan,&#13;
as aecoad-class matter.&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
Btislness CardB, $4.00 per year.&#13;
Peaiu and marriage uoticee published free.&#13;
/AnaouuceuuQte ot eatertainmeata may oe paid&#13;
•-tor, if desired, by preheating the oflice witii tick-&#13;
^ets of admiBdion. Lu case ticiec* ara HOC brought&#13;
to the office, regular rates will he. churned.&#13;
All matter in local notice column wiilbe caara&#13;
ed at .5 cents per Une or fractioa taereot, for each&#13;
iuB«?rtion. Where no dine id speciiiad, all notices,&#13;
will be inserted until ordered .li^coaciuued, aad&#13;
will b9 ouatij-id for acjordiiiiily. ^j|r" All changes&#13;
of advertisements MUST re a: a this otllce ad «arly&#13;
,aj ad Ti'K3DA.r morning to insure an iasertioa the&#13;
] suuie week.&#13;
superior styles, upon the shorteot notice.&#13;
o"V as irooi .vork. can be uoiw.&#13;
Prices as&#13;
JOS -PHI.VZI.YG&gt;&#13;
In all i t s branched, a specialty. We haveall kinds&#13;
. . , 0 „ i and the iatest styles of t'ype, dtc, waich eaables&#13;
m a r e tor Sale. MRS. 0 . iliLLIOTT. ^u»io execute all tiuds of work, sucii si BOOKS,&#13;
• ! templets, Posters, Protjrauimei, Bill Head*, Nots&#13;
\rttioft ! Heads, § Statements, Cards, Auctioa Bills, e t c . i a&#13;
To farmers and fruit growers. I am&#13;
again in this vicinity ln'tfte- interest&#13;
of I. llgenfritzs' Son^ nursery of Monroe.&#13;
We hope- vve pleased you well&#13;
eno,ugh last vear to liave you save&#13;
your orders for us.&#13;
BUKT RODGERS.&#13;
^ L L HILLS P i l ' . l J I . i ^1 itS r 1) if K /.CrtV i t o S T t l .&#13;
THK VILLAGE DIRECTORY,&#13;
r&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PUESIDS; vr&#13;
I'rtusrti^s&#13;
Daub&#13;
Money to Loan.&#13;
Having .a-icai&gt;ted v au ' agency for&#13;
loaning money, I .am prepared to&#13;
make loans on Real ~Estate, at a low&#13;
rate of interest. Inquire at tbe Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank. tf&#13;
." Alex. .Mclntyre&#13;
u. i.'n.imps ia. • Alfred Alo:i*i,&#13;
t&gt;. Johnsott,-&#13;
i ULEBK. -A.' .....~ K. H. Teeple&#13;
I rrtEA^uuuu/....-.... .n vV. E. Aiurphy&#13;
AMSBSSOK... .'... W, A,- Carr&#13;
STKBliT C o M U I a S l O N B B . . . . . . . . J . -MonkS.&#13;
M A B S ^ U L A. E. Br &gt;»a.&#13;
HhiALiu Ot-&gt;'ici5i4 Or. tl. r*. S i l l e r&#13;
ArroiuiKV.. .— \V. A. Oarr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
F o r M u l e .&#13;
Cheap, a two liorse'polv^Falaa^-^^rnder&#13;
combined, in good repair.&#13;
C. W. Brown.&#13;
vfErHuuisr EPTHCUPAL enenrcu.&#13;
8i.'vaAii durytt—ivm. Corumasa. ^.—Simm—ps1o0u:, JpJa, staeurd, —a0.i rvwo'rioyJ S.S a3n/ 9afayy&#13;
e v e m u ^ at T :00 o'clock. 'Prayer ineetiu^ i'uursday&#13;
eveuiujfs. auuday -* 1.-.: 11»•»1 at c l o s e of m^ruin^&#13;
service. L E A I . OIUL*;:;, aupt.&#13;
c Petteysrille .Hills.&#13;
I have put in a new corn and cote&#13;
crusher and thoroughly repaired the&#13;
Mill. Farmers can now get their&#13;
grinding done in a superior- manner&#13;
and on the shortest notice.&#13;
VVm. Hooker.&#13;
O T A T E o f Mt'JHL r Vtf, Coanty of Livingston&#13;
—At a session of the Probata Court f.&gt;r said c o u n -&#13;
ty, held at the Probate Otfic*» ia tht» village of&#13;
Howvll, on Moiulny, the Sth day of Jan., in the j ~&#13;
U N U r t E ^ A r i O N A L CHL'KGH.&#13;
Rev. C &gt;V. itice pastor. .Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at io:*J .tud every Sauday&#13;
eveaini? at 7:tx o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings., baaday JCUOOI at c l o s e ot moraiuii&#13;
s»erviv,e. Ji. II. Teepl*j , Saut. lioss iteajJ^Sec&#13;
^ T . .MAUV'S CATHOLIC O i l U i t O l I .&#13;
O Kev. il. J. Oomm'-»rtoi\i, Pastor. .Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low m a s s ' at 7:30 o'clock&#13;
high mass w i t u s e r m o a at L&gt;:^iu a. in. Catechism&#13;
at 6:00 p. in., vespers a a d benediction at 7:*u p . m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
r i l b e A. O. H. Society of this place, a lets every&#13;
X third S;iul.iy 1,1 tnd f r . \lit:at)&gt;v 11*11.&#13;
Joan-l'domsy au 1 A.i.a lieiiy, »J)a i t / i&gt;'^eg*tss&#13;
year one thousand nine hundred.&#13;
Present: Albird M. Davis, Jud0-e of Probate. I a&#13;
the matter of the estate of&#13;
" CTKORUE \V. BROWN deceased.&#13;
On reading and dlin*» th-&gt; pottti ia, d ily veriiUJ&#13;
o f Sarah. Brown, praying that administration&#13;
of said estate may bo granted to herself or some&#13;
otht'r suitable person.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Tuesday, the"6th&#13;
jv-PWOP.rH LEAGUE., Meets every Sdndaf&#13;
-Cievemng at 6:'W oclock in tha M. E. Caurcd. A&#13;
cordial invitation is evujadel to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. Mrs. Stella Graham Pres.&#13;
n m n r i v x ENTI&gt;;; \.v )it&#13;
Oi^.;-* evr»ry Suil.iy evj.iing ;it ;i: J&gt;. Pre*! 1 Mit,&#13;
S&gt;JiaCi":-.M^et.&#13;
n i : J &gt; . P r i . M i l : !&#13;
Misi i-Jtta Jarp^utar; Seci'-Jt.iry, Mrs. C. vv*. HUM.&#13;
T&#13;
Siller.&#13;
H E W. C. T. V. meets the first Pri lay of each&#13;
h at J: L p. 111. at t i e ti 1 a-3 of i)r. II. b\&#13;
Everyone inteMst^d ia temperance is&#13;
day of Feb. nest, at 10 o'cl ck in the forenoon.at cur+ially invited. v-Mrs. 'jeal Siller, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
gaid Probate Office, be assigned for the hearing of E i u Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
•aid petition. • ' | ~_ —&#13;
It is turtber ordered that a copy of this order be : T ' e t e ^ t h i r d ^ r n ^ e v ^ T a t !&#13;
pnl blished in the PIVI-KNEY DISPATCH, a newspap- , thew Hall. Johii"Donohue, President.&#13;
er printed and cirruhiting in sail county. thre&gt;e&#13;
successive week, previous to said day of hearing. : jQ^Meetevery Friday evening on or before full&#13;
ALBIRD M. DATIS, '&#13;
t-5 Judge of Probate,&#13;
t^ M U U T S O F MACCABEES.&#13;
k.ot&#13;
of the moon at their hall in "the Swarthont bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers .ire cordially invited.&#13;
CUAS. CAMPBELL, air Knight Commandei&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 7*, V \ A. M. K^'j'a''&#13;
! '•C ommunication T" uesd' ay evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moojju Alexander Mclntyre, W. M.&#13;
SnUpzibe £or Dispatoifc&#13;
WA.NTKD—SJSVKliAA. B H I l t l l X&#13;
ANI&gt; H O N E S T p « * &gt; ^ . t, rwpresens&#13;
W RS -Managers in this and oloee bv counties.&#13;
Salerr | 9 0 0 * r+*r and « xpencva,&#13;
jBtrait, hohc/-nd«, a o B o t e , DO less. IV.,,. 1&#13;
t i o o p e r m a a « l U Omr rttmr*u^^ ••« » T A D I E S OF THE MACCABEES. -Meat every 1st&#13;
. , . . . " " " " V t ' " ' l j a n d 3 r d aaturdavof eachuiontn at J:S0 p m. at&#13;
Ittak » - a n y town. Il b s a s i n l r .-,ffi,.«'&#13;
|UDEii OF EASrEKX.Sl'Aii meets each moath&#13;
' tae Friday evening followiag the regular F.&#13;
,1A.M. meeting, Miw. MABY RSAO, W. M.&#13;
work ooodoeted at bMM. R«forenc«. KIN&#13;
•eil-^ddrswiii steapW M^eJope, T H »&#13;
,s«irpAjnf. r&gt;»FT. *, OmrA.io.&#13;
K. t&gt;. r. M. hall.—V-Uiriug ^;steri o o r d u i i y m -&#13;
v n e d , LiL-v CONIWAV Lady Com,&#13;
DonntroT*&#13;
A :$4.00 BOOK FOR T5ctS.&#13;
. The Farmers' Encycftpflla;— 1 KNIGHTS OK T i i i LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second VVedaeattsT&#13;
evening of every moath i n the K.. O.&#13;
T. M. Hal! at 7:30 o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome. \&#13;
F. G. JACKSON1, Capt. Gsn. .&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
Everythinjrpertataineto&#13;
tne affairs&#13;
of the farm,&#13;
household and '&#13;
stock raisiae. En- !&#13;
braces articles o n&#13;
the horse, the colt.&#13;
horso huhits, diseases&#13;
o f the horst?, j&#13;
the farm, g r s » e s , I&#13;
fruit culture, dairy- j&#13;
ing.cookt'rj-.hi'aUh,&#13;
cattle, shevp.switie,&#13;
poultry, bees, t h e&#13;
H. F. SIGLER -M. D- C. L, SIGUR M, D&#13;
DK DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and S u r / e »ns. AH calls uromptl&#13;
attended today or night. Dittos o n Main str&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
DR. A. B; GREEN.&#13;
DENriM-- Eyery Fridsj; ancf on Thurs- \&#13;
d».v "h t'n having appolntmenta, Qfflcq, OTar N&#13;
f^' J ° l l e V ^ i a l ^Klw'8 Urug Store.&#13;
life, etc., e t c One - .&#13;
of the most comp&#13;
l e t e E n c y c l o -&#13;
pedias In existence.&#13;
A large-book, $x;'&gt;V;&#13;
x \% inches. Ruo&#13;
pages, fully illustrated,&#13;
bound in&#13;
94.00. If you desire this book send til our special&#13;
eflbr prloe/Jb.75, and *D.» extra tor postage and&#13;
we will fbrweJrd the book toyou. ' If it is not satis-&#13;
Iketory return It and we will exohange it or refund&#13;
Tour money. Jend &lt;br our special illustrated catajofu&#13;
«.quotlnt the lowest piiees-on books, f i l l&#13;
we can save jou money. AddrenaU orders to&#13;
• THE WERNER COMPANY* #&#13;
af WMeHmnii. A t o o n , OhUu&#13;
[Ths Wsfssr Csaseayts thsnscklr rtlkbUO-Bdttoa&#13;
PATENTS GUARANTEED&#13;
Qur fc^xcturned if we iaiL Any one sending&#13;
sketch nnd descripiion of any invention w 3&#13;
. i. , •- promptly receive our opinion free concerning&#13;
- • J ? v ^ V i , to t n e patentability of same. " How t o Obtain a&#13;
other books costipl p a t e n t " sent upon request. Patents secure*&#13;
green cloth, binding&#13;
1&#13;
through us advertised for sale at our expense.&#13;
Patents taken out through us receive rp€tU4&#13;
notice, without charge, in T H E PATKWT RBCOXJS,&#13;
a n illustrated and widely circulated ioartML&#13;
consulted by Manufacturers and Investors*&#13;
•cad for sample copy » 1 1 . Address, ,&#13;
VICTOR J . tVANt * CO. J&#13;
(AiteatAttsra«7S») •&#13;
I v e M ittlldtef, WAtHINOTOM, » • %&#13;
•N&#13;
•A&#13;
.V&#13;
^.^-,4^&#13;
.._-,. :.y_&#13;
I*&#13;
2,'', • • *&#13;
iH": $ • '&#13;
^....-,,-, ,&#13;
' ' -T" • ^ m .&#13;
^&#13;
•!v't&gt; •%\t&#13;
*}••*••&#13;
,'«:;.&#13;
^ 4 •&#13;
•s'&#13;
• * • ' • •&#13;
I&#13;
,J&#13;
. •»&#13;
F&#13;
y&#13;
:$ittduteg %'u&#13;
*t w&#13;
F B A K K L, A N D I ^ S T S , P u W U b e r ;&#13;
P I N C K N E Y , T T M^CHIGAW,&#13;
',i J&#13;
N e v e r let a confidence be forced u p o n&#13;
y o u .&#13;
W h e n a h e n r o o s t s o n a r o o s t ehe.&#13;
m u s t b e a r o o s t e r .&#13;
T h e c h a r i t y t h a t b e g i n s a t h o m e&#13;
f e r r often ends t h e r e .&#13;
T h e s u n s e t s only in tho west, b u t a n&#13;
o l d h e n i s n ' t so p a r t i c u l a r .&#13;
•One p l u m p u d d i n g o n t h e t a b l e t s&#13;
w o r t h t w o in t h e s t o m a c h . vv&#13;
M e n d e l i g h t in e v e r y t h i n g peculiar,&#13;
w h e t h e r a n a d v a n t a g e or not.&#13;
I t ' s t h e s p i r i t r a t h e r t h a n t h e price&#13;
t a g t h a t m a k e s t h e g|ft v a l u a b l e .&#13;
T h e m a n who b e t s o n t h e t o p do,?&#13;
a n d t h e b o t t o m facts s e l d o m gets leit.&#13;
A n e x c h a n g e s a y s t h e t y p h o i d g e r m&#13;
Is p a r t i c u l a r l y active. And n o t p a r -&#13;
t i c u l a r w h e r e .&#13;
A m a n ' s g a l l a n t r y c r o p s o u t w h e n&#13;
h e is e n t e r t a i n i n g a w'oman w h o is n o t&#13;
r e l a t e d t o h i m .&#13;
" ~ S o m e people you like u n t i l t h e y find&#13;
y o u out, a n d some y o u d o n ' t like u n t i l&#13;
y o u find t h e m out.&#13;
Mr. Goebel of . K e n t u c k y s a y s h e is&#13;
t o o busy t o m a r r y . H a s t h e s t a r - e y e d&#13;
g o d d e s s of r e f o r m j i l t e d h i m ?&#13;
A c r u d e t h e o r y , in t h e l a n g u a g e of&#13;
s o m e m e n , m e a n s one, w h i c h (being&#13;
n e w ) h a s n o t first o c c u r r e d to t h e m -&#13;
s e l v e s .&#13;
If you h a v e a w e a l t h y m a i d e n a u n t .&#13;
d o n ' t fail t o send h e r ~ a h a n d - p a i n t e d&#13;
c a r d d e c o r a t e d w i t h a b u n c h of forg&#13;
e t - m e - n o t s .&#13;
T h e r e a r e no t w o t h i n g s m o r e often&#13;
c o n f o u n d e d , yet m o r e perfectly dist&#13;
i n c t , t h a n liberal t o l e r a n c e a n d l a t i -&#13;
t u d i n a r i a n indifference.&#13;
T h e p o w e r of duly a p p r e c i a t i n g litt&#13;
l e t h i n g s belongs to a g r e a t m i n d ; a&#13;
n a r r o w - m i n d e d m a n h a s it not, for to&#13;
h i m t h e y a r e g r e a t t h i n g s .&#13;
M r . _ B r y a n will save himself a n n o y -&#13;
^ B C G by i s s u i n g a b u l l e t i n each m o r n -&#13;
i n g before b r e a k f a s t t e l l i n g j u s t how&#13;
h e s t a n d s on t h e silver question.&#13;
D o n ' t . o v e r w o r k yourself. _ J u s t ima&#13;
g i n e "how m i s e r a b l e you would be"'if&#13;
y o u finished all y o u r w o r k today and&#13;
h a d n o t h i n g to dt&gt; t h e rest of vour&#13;
life. _ _&#13;
If s o m e b o d y would dig a canal a n d&#13;
l e t 300,000 cubic feet a m i n u t e of good&#13;
l a k e w a t e r i n t o t h e Rio G r a n d e , you&#13;
w o u l d n ' t find a n y kick c o m i n g from&#13;
L a s Cruces.&#13;
, I t h a s ,been found t h a t the m e m -&#13;
b r a n e f o r m i n g t h e l i n i n g of a h e n ' s&#13;
e g g will serve a d m i r a b l y for _skin&#13;
g r a f t i n g , , b u t t h e i n c r e a s e d d e m a n d&#13;
t h i s will cause for eggs will only p a r&#13;
t i a l l y relieve the c v e r s u p p l y in the colds&#13;
t o r a g e w a r e h o u s e s .&#13;
Prof. S h e p h a r d s o n of t h e University&#13;
of C h i c a g o t h i n k s t h e r e is a n i n h e r e n t&#13;
sociological r e a s o n for t h e p r e v a l e n c e&#13;
of fights In K e n t u c k y . T h e professor&#13;
m a y be correct, b u t in c o n d u c t i n g his&#13;
r e s e a r c h e s u p o n t h i s difficult subject it&#13;
w o u l d be w i s e for h i m to do so a t a&#13;
d i s t a n c e . K e n t u c k i a n s do n o t like to&#13;
h a v e o u t s i d e r s mix u p in t h e i r "affairs&#13;
of h o n o r . "&#13;
Gen. Otis' l a t e s t r e p o r t of casualties&#13;
in t h e P h i l i p p i n e c a m p a i g n s h o w s t h a t&#13;
t w i c e a s m a n y A m e r i c a n soldiers have&#13;
r e c e n t l y been d r o w n e d In t h e Luzon&#13;
r i v e r s a s fen before t h o bullets of t h e&#13;
e n e m y . A course of s w i m m i n g ins&#13;
t r u c t i o n s , such a s a r e given to all r e -&#13;
c r u i t s in t h e a r m y of G e r m a n y , would&#13;
c o s t t h e w a r d e p a r t m e n t practically&#13;
n o t h i n g a n a would, by t h i s t i m e have&#13;
s a v e d m a n y v a l u a b l e lives.&#13;
A l t h o u g h two, full y e a r s h a v e been&#13;
d e v o t e &lt; r t o g r o w i n g of beets in differe&#13;
n t p a r t s of the c o u n t r y , w i t h a view&#13;
t o d e t e r m i n i n g the locations in which&#13;
b e e t s u g a r p r o d u c t i o n could be profita&#13;
b l y u n d e r t a k e n , t h e d e m a n d s u p o n&#13;
t h e d e p a r t m e n t of a g r i c u l t u r e for s a m -&#13;
p l e beet seed for t h e e n s u i n g y e a r , cont&#13;
i n u e u n d i m i n i s h e d . I t is evident t h a t ,&#13;
•with t h e n e w a n d i m p r o v i n g , o r d e r of&#13;
t h i n g s in t h e i s l a n d s w h i c h h a v e re-&#13;
• c e n t l y come into_ cfose r e l a t i o n s h i p&#13;
WITH t h e Un'lted "States; t h e r e is going&#13;
t o be a r a c e b e t w e e n c a n e and beet, in&#13;
•which c a n e s u g a r is g o i n g to closely&#13;
c o m p e t e for the position n o w held by&#13;
t h e lowly" .beet. A c c o r d i n g to some&#13;
t a b l e s p r e p a r e d by t h e t r e a s u r y d e p a r t -&#13;
m e n t beets now p r o d u c e t w o - t h i r d s of&#13;
t f c s w r l d ' r s u g a r . —&#13;
WAR PICTURES FROM TRANSVAAL&#13;
Man's Inhumanity to Man Vividly" Brought&#13;
to the Surface.&#13;
T h e Cleveland P l a i n D e a l e r is- givi&#13;
n g lessons in p e n m a n s h i p . ' H i t h e r t o&#13;
i t h a s e n d e a v o r e d t o r i g h t w r o n g .&#13;
R e p o r t s from E n g l a n d tell u s t h a t&#13;
the g r a y h a i r s of t h e beioveu" queen&#13;
i r e indeed " b e i n g b r o u g h t d o w n w i t h&#13;
sorrow to t h e g r a v e . " A l t h o u g h o t h e r&#13;
beads h a v e c o n t r i v e d a n d o t h e r h e a d s&#13;
have executed In s u c h a m a n n e r a s t o&#13;
c a r r y E n g l a n d i n t o&#13;
t h e S o u t h A f r i c a n&#13;
w a r , still t h e good&#13;
q u e e n feels t h e t e r -&#13;
rible r e s p o n s i b i l i -&#13;
ties upon h e r o w n&#13;
s h o u l d e r s .&#13;
T h i s is' p e r h a p s&#13;
t h e m o s t p a t h e t i c&#13;
i n c i d e n t of t h e w a r .&#13;
A tearful old l a d y ,&#13;
w h o s e life h a s b e e n&#13;
a plea for peace, i s&#13;
griet'-stricken w i t h&#13;
t h e t h o u g h t t h a t&#13;
h e r boys a r e d y i n g&#13;
in b a t t l e .&#13;
It is p a t h e t i c Indeed&#13;
to t u r n from&#13;
t h i s p i c t u r e of t h e&#13;
Borrowing q u e e n t o&#13;
scenes of w a r .&#13;
N i n e t e e n c e n t u r i e s&#13;
h a v e passed since&#13;
t h e P r i n c e of&#13;
P e a c e was h e r a l d e d&#13;
t o t h e world w i t h&#13;
t h e s o n g of " P e a c a&#13;
o n e a r t h , good will&#13;
t o w a r d m e n , " a n d&#13;
y e t . t o - d a y t h e d e m o n of w a r is n u m -&#13;
b e r i n g hiSTtcTIms by t h o u s a n d s .&#13;
W h e n a .report is s e n t by a c o m -&#13;
m a n d i n g officer, g i v i n g I h e n u t n b e r s of&#13;
dead, w o u n d e d a n d m i s s i n g , it \s a&#13;
solace to t h i n k t h a t but few of t h e&#13;
m i s s i n g are suffering p a i n — t h a t t h e y&#13;
a r e p r o b a b l y p r i s o n e r s . W h i l e n o t&#13;
t r e a t e d as h o n o r e d guests, t h e s e p r i s -&#13;
o n e r s a r e fed a n d protected u n t i l t h e r e&#13;
c o m e s a n e x c h a n g e « r t h e w a r is over.&#13;
One of t h e i l l u s t r a t i o n s s h o w s t h e&#13;
B r i t i s h loading the— Boer p r i s o n e r s&#13;
upon a vessel. . T h e y do n o t sail a s&#13;
cabin p a s s e n g e r s , a n d t h e cirrarters a r e&#13;
e v i d e n t l y crowded, b u t t h e y live&#13;
t h r o u g h these h a r d s h i p s and fare m u c h&#13;
b e t t e r t h a n m a n y of t h e i r b r o t h e r&#13;
Boers, who a r e in t h e i r own lines, but&#13;
a r e destined soon to be killed or&#13;
w o u n d e d in battle.&#13;
A n o t h e r p i c t u r e of s t r i k i n g reality&#13;
in t h a t s h o w i n g t h e m e t h o d of r e m o v -&#13;
ing t h e wounded from the field of battle.&#13;
L a d y s m i t h h a s been t h o r o u g h l y&#13;
invested by t h e Boevs for \veeks_41ast.&#13;
Gen. W h i t e a n d h i s g a l l a n t Tittle a r m y&#13;
a r e defending, p o t only t h e t o w n , b u t&#13;
B r i t i s h honor as wel!._ T h e n e i g h b o r -&#13;
ing hills are alive w i t h Boer a r t i l l e r y -&#13;
men, whose g u n s speak t h r o u g h n i g h t&#13;
a n d day in bitter t o n e s of h a t e . N o w&#13;
t h e g u n r e p o r t s a r e few a n d far bet&#13;
w e e n ; now t h e y come In quick succession,&#13;
t e e i n g w i t h t h e i r a n g r y voices&#13;
t h e Boers' d e t e r m i n a t i o n t h a t L a d y -&#13;
s m i t h m u s t fall. A n d all t h i s t i m e t h e&#13;
B r i t i s h bravely w a i t for the relief t h a t&#13;
does not come. Now t h e Ilring of t h e&#13;
B o e r s becomes, m o r e effective.. T h e&#13;
e n e m y h a s t a k e n some new position.&#13;
^urned, i s s i n g i n g t h e s a m e love s o n g s&#13;
s h e used t o s i n g .&#13;
T h e Fop« a n d t h e P r l u c e u .&#13;
T h e g r e a t e s t n u m b e r of p h o t o g r a p h s&#13;
sold in t h i s c o u n t r y a n d i n F r a n c e a r e&#13;
B R I N G I N G W O U N D E D B A C K TO L A D Y S M I T H .&#13;
' • , • - * ' " • &lt; • *&#13;
p o r t r a i t s of s i n g e r s a n d ' a c t r e s s e s . I n&#13;
E u r o p e ' t h e p h o t o g r a p h s of t h e p o p e&#13;
find t h e l a r g e s t s a l e , 18,000 p i c t u r e s of&#13;
h i m b e i n g sold e v e r y y e a r . T h i s d o e s&#13;
n o t i n c l u d e c h r o m o s a n d p a i n t i n g s&#13;
w h i c h also h a v e a n e n o r m o u s s a l e .&#13;
Second o n l y t o t h e p o p e i n p o p u l a r i t y&#13;
All is lost if t h e e n e m y is n o t d r i v e n&#13;
f u r t h e r back, a n d for t h a t r e a s o n t h e&#13;
c o m m a n d i n g officer o r d e r s a s o r t i e . It&#13;
is? t a k i n g a g r e a t h a z a r d , but t h e s o r t i e&#13;
must- be m a d e , a n d t h e b r a v e s t regim&#13;
e n t s - a r e selected for t h e a t t e m p t . As&#13;
t h e y proceed, m e n are c o n s t a n t l y falling,&#13;
dead or w o u n d e d .&#13;
T h e mule c a r t s , for p i c k i n g u p t h e&#13;
wounded,: follow, a n d as soon a s one is&#13;
loaded it t u r n s back a n d m o v e s&#13;
h e a v i l y over t h e r o u g h road t o t h e city.&#13;
T w o n a t i v e s w a l k beside t h e w a g o n ,&#13;
c a r r y i n g t h e R e d - C r o s s flag.&#13;
T h e faces of t h e wounded—tell- -the&#13;
s t o r y . S t u d y th^, f e a t u r e s of t h e soldier&#13;
in t h e feft of&#13;
t h e picture. Howh&#13;
i s h e a r t t h r o b b e d .&#13;
w i t h hope in t h e _&#13;
e a r l y m o r n i n g ,&#13;
w h e n he k n e w t h a t&#13;
h e would be one of&#13;
t h e a t t a c k i n g p a r -&#13;
t y . T o d a y w o u l i L b c&#13;
a n o p p o r t u n i t y for&#13;
glory, p r o m o t i o n ,&#13;
p e r h a p s even for&#13;
t h e V i c t o r i a c r o s s&#13;
of honor. B u t a&#13;
c h a n c e bullet h a d&#13;
c h a n g e d all t h i s .&#13;
H e can b e a r t h e&#13;
p h y s i c a l pain t h a t&#13;
comes from h t s&#13;
r i g h t a r m , b u t it is&#13;
h a r d t o t h i n k h e&#13;
h a s st&gt; soon b e c o m e&#13;
i n c a p a c i t a t e d for&#13;
deeds of glory.&#13;
Before h i m a r e .&#13;
l o n g w e e k s of suffering&#13;
a n d h a r d -&#13;
ship^ ,. e n d i n g p£i^&#13;
h a p s in death. And.&#13;
t h e n h i s t h o u g h t s -fly over land&#13;
a n d sea, a w a y t o " M e r r i e E n g -&#13;
l a n d , " w h e r e t h e " f o l k s " he k n o w s a r e&#13;
a n x i o u s l y w a i t i n g for n e w s f r o m t h e i r&#13;
soldier boy, a n d v h e r e i'ue little girl,&#13;
w h o p r o m i s e d to w a i t u n t i l h e r e -&#13;
F U N N Y O L D R A I L R O A D .&#13;
Cur* D r a w n b r Locomotive Which Could&#13;
Not Turn Around.&#13;
A c c o r d i n g t o Dr. W . W . S m i t h ' of&#13;
W i l l i s t p n , S. O . , t h e first r a i l r o a d i n&#13;
t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s w a s t h e S o u t h C a r o -&#13;
l i n a r a i l r o a d , a f t e r w a r d called t h e&#13;
C h a r l e s t o n £ A u g u s t a r a i l r o a d , r u n -&#13;
n i n g from C h a r l e s t o n t o A u g u s t a , a&#13;
d i s t a n c e of 140 m i l e s . T h e r o a d w a s&#13;
b e g u n in 1826 a n d c o m p l e t e d i n 1833,'&#13;
s a y s t h e A u g u s t a H e r a l d . S o m e of t h e&#13;
q u e e r t h i n g s w h i c h d i s t i n g u i s h e d it&#13;
from t h e r o a d s of t o d a y w e r e : T h e&#13;
first m o t i v e p o w e r u s e d o n t h i s r o a d&#13;
w a s w i n d , utilized in s a i l s m a d e of&#13;
c l o t h o n t h e c a r s . T h e l o c o m o t i v e s&#13;
h a d t w o s m o k e s t a c k s , one a t each end.&#13;
I n g o i n g to C h a r l e s t o n o n e of t h e&#13;
s t a c k s w a s used, a n d in c o m i n g b a c k&#13;
t h e o t h e r . T h e r e w e r e n o s p a r k a r -&#13;
r e s t e r s , a n d e v e r y b o d y a l o n g t h e r o u t e&#13;
h a d t o w a t c h h i s p r o p e r t y t o p r e v e n t&#13;
its] b e i n g b u r n e d u p . One h u n d r e d&#13;
m i l e s a d a y w a s good - t r a v e l i n g in&#13;
t h o s e d a y s . W h e n n i g h t c a m e o n all&#13;
h a n d s s t r u c k carnp a n d w a i t e d for d a y -&#13;
l i g h t t o - e c h i e i n o r d e i &gt; t o p r o c e e d . - . T h e&#13;
t r a c k w a s c o m p o s e d of ties a n d t h i r t y -&#13;
t w o - f o o t stringerSf, on w h i c h a b a n d of&#13;
iron like a c o m m o n t i r e w a s laid a n d&#13;
nailed d o w n to t h e wood. A t r a c k&#13;
w a l k e r w e n t a h e a d of t h e e n g i n e e v g r y&#13;
d a y t o k n o c k d o w n t h e " s n a k e - h e a d s "&#13;
o r n a i l h e a d s t o p r e v e n t a c c i d e n t s .&#13;
T h e d r e a d of t h e e n g i n e e r w a s t h e&#13;
" s n a k e - h e a d s " o r n a i l s p r o t r u d i n g&#13;
a b o v e t h e i r o n r a i l , f o r t h e y w e r e p r o -&#13;
lific s o u r c e s of a c c i d e n t s . T h e c o n -&#13;
d u c t o r s collected t h e fares from t h e&#13;
eutside* w a l k i n g o n b o a r d s a b o u t like&#13;
t h e o p e n s t r e e t c a r s a r e n o w a r r a n g e d .&#13;
T h e r e w e r e n o c o n v e n i e n c e s o n t h e&#13;
c a r s a s in t h i s d a y a n d t i m e . T h e c a r s&#13;
s t o p p e d a t s t a t e d i n t e r v a l s for t h e c o n -&#13;
v e n i e n c e of t h e p a s s e n g e r s . T h e m a i l&#13;
facilities w e r e m e a g e r a n d v e r y p r i m -&#13;
itive. A split s t i c k s e r v e d for a m a i l&#13;
bag, a s l e t t e r s w e r e p u t i n s t i c k s a n d&#13;
T A K I N G P P t l S O N E R S ABCfARD—CA&#13;
II. M. S. P E N E L O P E A T C A P E T O&#13;
R A N G E O F&#13;
is t h e beautiful A l e x a n d r a of W a l e s ,&#13;
w h o s e p h o t o g r a p h s sell a t t h e r a t e of&#13;
16,000 per a n n u m . T h e G e r m a n e m -&#13;
p e r o r comes n e x t w i t h a r e c o r d of 15,-&#13;
000 a year, a*d t h e czar, w h o h a t e s t o&#13;
be " s n a p s h o t , " n e v e r t h e l e s s is p i c t o r i -&#13;
P T I V E B O E R S A R E L O A D E D UPCHT&#13;
W N TO B E C A R R I E D OUT OH&#13;
H O S T I L I T I E S .&#13;
I h a n d e d u p t o t h e c o n d u c t o r , a n d w e r e&#13;
t h r o w n out t h e s a m e w a y . T h e c o u p -&#13;
ling l i n k s w e r e m a d e of wood, so t h a t&#13;
w h e n a car r a h off it w o u l d b r e a k a n d&#13;
s a v e t h e o t h e r s from running,off.&#13;
W i n t e r Tunrf.&#13;
• Should you- -desk* - i n f o r m a t i o n r e -&#13;
g a r d i n g California, A r i z o n a , T e x a s o r&#13;
Mexico, a n d t h e l o n g limit, l a w r a t e ,&#13;
r o u n d - t r i p t i c k e t s , sold t o ^'principal&#13;
p o i n t s , t h e v a r i o u s r o u t e s v i a w h i c h&#13;
t h e t i c k e t s c a n , be i m r c h a ^ o d , o r r*-&#13;
gardlng-i&gt;ne way. flm a n d secofld-claaa&#13;
r a t e s , (hi-ou^h, ^lgqpjng Cjar-- lines,&#13;
first-class a n d t o u r i s t , call ujym or a d -&#13;
d r e s s W. G. N e l m y e r , 6 e r i r l W e s t e r n&#13;
I A g e n t , S o u t h e r n Pacific Co., 238&#13;
C l a r k S t , C h i c a g o ; W. H- C o n n o r ,&#13;
C O B I T A g e n t , C h a m b e r C o m m e r c e&#13;
Bldg.*.Cincinnati, O h i o , o r k W , J , B e r g ,&#13;
T r a v . P a s s . Agt., 220 E l l i c o t t Sq., Buff&#13;
a l o , N. Y. .. ' . r j&#13;
Florida, West Indies « 0 4 Central America.&#13;
, T h e facilities of t h e LouisVille *Y&#13;
N a s h v i l l e R a i l r o a d for hand/ring tour*&#13;
JstB a n d t r a v e l e r s d e s t i n e d l o r a l l&#13;
p o i n t s in F l o r i d a , C u b a J ^ F e t t o R i c o ,&#13;
C e n t r a l A m e r i c a , o r for N ^ s a a u . ^ r e u n -&#13;
s u r p a s s e d . D o u b l e dally lines, of s l e e p -&#13;
i n g c a r s a r e Vun f r o m ' , C i n c i n n a t i ,&#13;
Louisville, C h i c a g o a n d St. L o u i s&#13;
t h r o u g h J a c k s o n v i l l e ' to i n t e r i o r F l o r -&#13;
ida p o i n t s , a n d t o M i a m i , T a m p a a n d '&#13;
N e w O l e a n s , t h e p o r t s of e m b a r k a t i o n&#13;
for t h e c o u n t r i e s n i e n t i o n e d . ' F o r folders,&#13;
etc., w r i t e J a c k s o n S m i t h , D. P .&#13;
A., C i n c i n n a t i , Oi .&#13;
•Tlie iMnd of l i r e id and 11 utter.&#13;
is t h e title of a , n e w i l l u s t r a t e d p a m p h -&#13;
l e t j u s t i s s u M by t h e C h i c a g o , .Mil-...&#13;
w a u k e e &amp; St. P a u l R a i l w a y , r e l a t i n g&#13;
m o r e especially to t h e land a l o n g t h e&#13;
n e w line it is n o w b u i l d i n g through .&#13;
Eon H o m m e a n d C h a r l e s Mix c o u n t i e s&#13;
in South D a k o t a . It will be found v e r y&#13;
i n t e r e s t i n g r e a d i n g . A cd&gt;y will be&#13;
m a i l e d free on receipt of 2-cent s t a m p&#13;
for p o s t a g e . A d d r e s s Geo. H. Heafford,&#13;
G e n e r a l P a s s e n e e r A ^ e n t . C h i c a g o , 111.&#13;
T h e devil has- a good s t a r t i n e v e r y&#13;
h o m e w h e r e t h e r e is a m o d e r a t e d r i n k e r .&#13;
Try GruJn-o! Try Graln-oi&#13;
Ask y o u r g r o c e r t o d a y t o s h o w y o u a&#13;
p a c k a g e of G R A I N - O , t h e n e w food&#13;
d r i n k t h a t t a k e s t h e p l a c e of coffee,&#13;
Tlve c h i l d r e n m a y d r i n k 4 t - - w i t h o u t i n -&#13;
j u r y a s w e l l as th*» a d u l t . All w h o t r y&#13;
it, l i k e it. G R A I N - 0 h a s t h a t r i c h s e a l&#13;
b r o w n of Mrv*ha or J a v a , b u t i t is m a d e&#13;
f r o m p u r e u 1 ins, a n d t h e m o s t d e l i c a t e&#13;
s t o m a c h r e c e i v e s i t w i t h o u t d i s t r e s s .&#13;
O n e - f o u r t h t h e p r i c e of coffee. • 15c.&#13;
a n d "5LI. p e r p a c k a g e . Sold b y a i t&#13;
g r o c e r s .&#13;
B r i n g i n g p r a y e r s c l o s e r tog-ether Is&#13;
v e r y a p t t o p u t s i n s f a r t h e r a p a r t .&#13;
Coughing L e i d s to Consumption.&#13;
K e m p ' s B a l s a m w i l l s t o p t h e c o u g h&#13;
a t once. ,G.o t o y o u r d r u g g i s t t o d a y&#13;
a n d g e t a s a m p l e b o t t l e free. Sold i n&#13;
:?"&gt; a n d 50 c e n t b o t t l e s Go a t o n c e ; d e -&#13;
l a y s a r e d a n g e r o u s .&#13;
I s n ' t it a b o u t a s wrong- t o b e w r o n g ,&#13;
a s i t is t o d o w r o n g ?&#13;
ally, p o p u l a r t o t h e extend of 14,000&#13;
p i c t u r e s a y e a r . — N e w y o r k C o m m e r -&#13;
cial A d v e r t i s e r . /&#13;
P r e m a t u r e c o n s o l a t i o n la b u t t h e&#13;
r e m e m b r a n c e o f / s o r r o w .&#13;
/ " &lt;&#13;
Court Decides CliAritr Case.&#13;
T h e S u p r e m e c o u r t held t h a t a&#13;
c h u r c h s u b s c r i p t i o n m a d e on S u n d a y is"&#13;
collectible. E. M. D o n a l d of F o r t M a d -&#13;
ison, d e f e n d a n t In a s u i t b r o u g h t "by&#13;
t h e F i r s t MGthodist E p i s c o p a l c h u r c h ,&#13;
a p p e a l e d from a s i m i l a r decision b y&#13;
t h e d i s t r i c t c o u r t . ' H i s defense w a s&#13;
t h a t t h e o b l i g a t i o n , h a v i n g been ent&#13;
e r e d i n t o eft S u n d a y , w a s Illegal, a n d&#13;
t h a t t h e r e w a s n o c o n s i d e r a t i o n . B o t h&#13;
c l a i m s were o v e r r u l e d . I n d i s c u s s i n g&#13;
- t h e case t h e c o u r t s a i d t h e object of&#13;
t h e subscription7 w a s n o t w o r l d l y g a i n ,&#13;
b u t t h e a d v a n c e of C h r i s t i a n i t y a n d t h e&#13;
b e t t e r m e n t of m o r a l s in a p a r t i c u l a r&#13;
locality. T h e sole p u r p o s e of t h e p l a i n -&#13;
tiff's s t a t u t o r y e x i s t e n c e a s a c o r p o r a t e&#13;
body w i s to do good. If so, c o n t r i b u -&#13;
t i o n s , for its s u p p o r t m u s t bo classed a s&#13;
c h a r i t y . " C h a r i t y , " said J u d g e Cooley,&#13;
" i s a c t i v e g o o d n e s s ; it is d o i n g good&#13;
t o o u r f e l l o w - m e n . " — D o s M o i n e s&#13;
( I o w a ) C o r r e s p o n d e n t N e w Y o r k J o u r -&#13;
nal.&#13;
The Horse Still jn It.&#13;
T h e l a r g e s t r i d t m j a c a d e m y In t h e&#13;
w o r l d is to be b u i l t n e a r C e n t r a l p a r k ,&#13;
N e w Y o r k . I t - v r t t - h H v e ~ 4 0 0 s t a l l s , a&#13;
r i n g - 2 0 0 x 1 0 0 feet, a n d s e a t s for a n&#13;
a u d i e n c e of 2,500. I n s t e a d of a h o r s e d&#13;
l e s s e r a , t h e r e will be. o n e of m o r e a n d&#13;
hettfer h o r s e s .&#13;
/&#13;
Dropsy treated free by Dr. H. H. Greenes&#13;
Sons, of Atlanta, Ga. The greatest dropsy&#13;
specialists in the world. Read their advertisement&#13;
in another column ob this paper.&#13;
T h e m o m e n t a lie i s b o r n , i t b e g i n s&#13;
t o r u n .&#13;
"Do Not Burn the Candle&#13;
At Both Ends/'&#13;
&lt;DonPi think you can go on drawing «wtality&#13;
from the blood for nerves, stomach,&#13;
brain And muscles, without doing something&#13;
to rcpUce it. Hood's SarsaparilU&#13;
gives nerve, mental and digestive strength&#13;
by enriching and vitalizing the blood. Thus&#13;
it helps overworked and tired people*&#13;
%(6cdS SaUa,&#13;
* • • • • • • &gt; • + • * • + + + • • • • • • • • • •&#13;
i&#13;
•••• --&#13;
i&#13;
t&#13;
t&#13;
&gt;onally&#13;
Conducted&#13;
California&#13;
Excursions&#13;
V i a t h e S a n t a Fie R o u t e .&#13;
Three times a week from Chicago&#13;
and Kansas Cily.,&#13;
Minneapolis.&#13;
Once a week from St. Louis and&#13;
Sloston.&#13;
In &gt;roproved wide-vf stibuled *&#13;
r- Pullman tourist s4eeping-c»r8. - ...&#13;
Better than ever before, at lowest&#13;
possible rates.&#13;
Experienced excursion conductors,&#13;
Also daily service between Chicago&#13;
and California.&#13;
Correspondence solicited.&#13;
T. A, GRADY,&#13;
Manage?C&amp;liforniA Tourist Service,&#13;
The Atchison. Topeka * Santa Pe Railway&#13;
109 Adams Street, CHICAGO. ,*&#13;
•&#13;
••&#13;
•&#13;
•&#13;
!&#13;
t ••••••*•••»•••••••••••»*••&#13;
TOURIST&#13;
TO&#13;
CALIFORNIA&#13;
\ V , A mH^&amp;k Y o u w i l l p r a c t i c e g o o d e c o n o m y In&#13;
w r i t i n g _ : —&#13;
0 . 8 . C R A N E , O . P . A. T . A., S t L o u i s ,&#13;
f o r D a r t l c u l a r a .&#13;
P I S C T S C U R E F O R , r o&#13;
H"- C M 1 C O N S.U M P I I O N "•&#13;
m*mim mum&#13;
...1&#13;
m&#13;
• ; ! " . •&#13;
:m *;?;: W"'iV&gt; ;'P' ^liB' "WSJiW.&#13;
Coming Out&#13;
T ^ About • yeir ago my kiif&#13;
•19 cofning out very fist I&#13;
boitgfct a bottle of Ayer'i Htir&#13;
Vigor to stop this. It not only&#13;
stopped toe falling, bat .also,&#13;
male,my.fair ppv very rapidly.&#13;
until nov it is 45 incbes in&#13;
length and very tnick."—Mrs.&#13;
A. Doydston, Atchison, Kans.,&#13;
/f Feec/s&#13;
the Hair&#13;
Hive yots ever tbougbt nrhj&#13;
yoor hair is falling out ? It is&#13;
because you are starving your&#13;
hair. If this starvation continues&#13;
your hair will continue to fall.&#13;
There is one good hair food.&#13;
It is Ayer's Hair Vigor. It goes&#13;
right to the roots of the hair&#13;
and gives them just the food&#13;
that they need. The hair stops&#13;
falling, becomes healthy, and&#13;
grows thick and long.&#13;
Ayer's Hair Vigor will do&#13;
another ~thing, also: it always&#13;
restores color to faded or gray&#13;
hair. v )I.M a kettle. All draaists.&#13;
Write the Doctor&#13;
If yon do not obtain all the benefits you&#13;
desire from the use of the Vigor, write&#13;
the Doctor about it. He will tell yon juat&#13;
the right thing to do, and -will send you&#13;
his book on the Hair and Scalp if you&#13;
request it. Address,&#13;
Dr. J. C. AVEB, Lowell, Mass.&#13;
FOR EVERY HOUSEKEEPER.&#13;
The Gem Selfheatfag Flat'Iron and Stove&#13;
combined is a new invention of great value&#13;
to housekeepers. It gives any heat desired;&#13;
is odorless, safe, simple, complete; save*&#13;
time, labor, health, fuel. 2 ceuts runs one&#13;
all day. It appeals-ta-ezfiryona. Qnca&#13;
used it is indisperisible. AGENTS WAITED&#13;
EVERYWHERE. Anyone can sell it. An&#13;
investigation "will pay you. GEM FLAT&#13;
IRON C O . , ^ .MICH.&#13;
LAPQRTE Situated af the TEXAS&#13;
head ot GiUveston&#13;
Bay. is destined&#13;
to be the HOST PROSPEROUS CITY on the&#13;
Gulf of-Mexico. It possesses unequaled natural&#13;
advantages.geographically and from every point&#13;
of view. Its future as a great city is assured.&#13;
The U. S. Government is now spending a large&#13;
amount of money In Harbor improvements.&#13;
La Porte is the natural seaport for. the products&#13;
of the entire Middle, Northern and Western'&#13;
States and for Houston, the great railroad&#13;
center of Texas.&#13;
Excursions at reduced rates will be run twice a&#13;
month. First p^neral sale ox. nron^itv i&lt;&gt;h.&#13;
14 &gt;o 17. IPOO. Write for FREE flAPS, DESCRIPTIVE&#13;
LITERATURE and full particulars&#13;
AMERICAN LAND CO.,&#13;
188 Madison St.. CHICAGO.&#13;
MOc-MUSIC-IOcs&#13;
Here are six beautiful popular and&#13;
i&#13;
S m&#13;
J standard compositions that sell J&#13;
( regularly at C5c to 60o each. We \&#13;
* wjjl wail you any. one ofjthem for 10c. -\&#13;
% An Old Virginia Cake Walk,&#13;
J Queen of the Rat Time, -&#13;
j My Sweet Heart Sue (Song), - 50c— 10c \&#13;
50c-IOc&#13;
50C-IC* I&#13;
J" Intermezzo—Cav. Rusticanna. - 50c-loc g&#13;
1 The Flatterer-Chamlnade, - - SOc-IOcJ&#13;
j La Fountain—Bohm, - - - - 40c-1Oc g&#13;
J Send 2a utaftip for our catalogue contain- i&#13;
2 i n * over 1.000 nttmbera of hLgH grade v.unI 5&#13;
p and Instrumental music at 10c the copy. 9&#13;
1C. A. SHAFEB, • DETROIT. \&#13;
MILLIONS&#13;
of acres of choice agrtcultural&#13;
LANDS now&#13;
opened for settlement&#13;
in WeBtern Canada.&#13;
Here is grown the oel-&#13;
^ ebrated NO. i HARD&#13;
WHEAT, which brings the highest price in the&#13;
markets of the world; thousands of cattle are&#13;
fattened!:tor- market without being fed grain,&#13;
and wittfboVa day's shelter. Send for informa?&#13;
tlon and secure a free home in Western Canada.&#13;
Write the Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa,&#13;
or address the undersigned, who will mall&#13;
you atlases, pamphlet*.,etc free of cost. ,M.&#13;
V. Mclnne.s, Np-l Merrill Block, Detroit, Mich.;&#13;
James Gr*ove.'m Pleasant, Mich., or D. I*&#13;
Oaven. Bod Axe. Mich.&#13;
PARALYSIS Locomotor Ataxia conquered&#13;
st last. Doctors&#13;
p n z x t e d . Special i»tt&#13;
—junsxed at.recovery of patient* thought Incurable, hy&#13;
P R C H A H K ' H B L U O b A N D N K R V E F O O D .&#13;
Write me about your ciib. Advice and proof of e'urat&#13;
nUCK, DB.(BA8X,224 N.IOth St.* PH!JUPBbraU,PA GARTERS INK Hate you totted it—&#13;
^ No other ink "Juat as good."&#13;
England Resigned—Defeat on *he&#13;
Tugela River.&#13;
BULLER'S ARMY IS THE STAKE&#13;
Hasty Retreat All That Will Save&#13;
British Eoreas from a&gt; Croahlos Blow&#13;
—Th« Boars Entrapped Warren—Bepablle's&#13;
Slight Losaea.&#13;
London, Jan. 29.—The war office has&#13;
no news of the catastrophe to Gen.&#13;
Buller's force reported from Berlin.and&#13;
discredits'the story. Neither has the&#13;
war office any explanation, at least for&#13;
publication, of the abandonment of&#13;
Spion kop, and there are no advices&#13;
In this connection from independent&#13;
sources. The disposition today Is to&#13;
regard the evacuation as not so serious&#13;
as at first thought, and commentators&#13;
are abusing the military authorities,&#13;
both at the front and at home, for publishing&#13;
hasty accounts of an incomplete,&#13;
half-understood operation, thus&#13;
alternately thrilling and depressing the&#13;
nation.&#13;
It is reported on good Transvaal authority&#13;
that Mafeklng was relieved&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Some of the Berlin papers claim&#13;
to have a cablegram from Pretoria&#13;
saying that Gen. Warren was enticed&#13;
Into Splon kop, where the Boers fell&#13;
upon him; that seventeen of his cannon&#13;
were captured and that Buller's&#13;
hasty retreat over the Tugela river&#13;
alone can save him.&#13;
E n g l a n d P e e l s R e v e r s e s K e e n l y .&#13;
Seven days of fighting have left the&#13;
main Boer positions Intact and Gen.&#13;
Buller's army 7Q6 weaker, according to&#13;
official casualty lists, which seemingly&#13;
do not include the Spion kop losses, as&#13;
those last - forwarded do not mention&#13;
Gen. Woodgate's wounding.&#13;
England is possessed by a depressing&#13;
sense of failure. Not much effort is&#13;
made, to place a happy construction&#13;
upon Gen. Buller's statement telling of&#13;
the retirement from Spion kop, and&#13;
there Is an uneasy impression abroad&#13;
that worse news is yet to come.&#13;
S u p p r e s s i n g W o r s t N e w s .&#13;
At one of the military clubs last&#13;
night the, statement passed from one&#13;
member to another that the war office&#13;
had received an unpleasant, supplementary&#13;
dispatch from Gen. Buller,&#13;
which was being, held up for twelve&#13;
hours. Spencer Wilkinson, in the&#13;
Morning Post, writes as follows of the&#13;
Spion kop loss: "This is a serious matter&#13;
and an attempt will riot here be&#13;
made to minimize it, for no greater&#13;
wrong can be done to our people at&#13;
home than to mislead them about the&#13;
significance of the events of the war.&#13;
The right way is to tell the truth as&#13;
far as we know it."&#13;
Censorship Is Close.&#13;
But facts from the neighborhood of&#13;
the Tugela are scantier than ever. The&#13;
censorship now is simply prohibitive,&#13;
and something is wrong with the cables.&#13;
The "break on the east coast lines&#13;
has been repaired, but the cable between&#13;
San Thome and Loanda, on the&#13;
west coast, is now interrupted.&#13;
M o r e Soldier* L e a v e E n g l a n d .&#13;
The last detachment of the infantry&#13;
section of the London volunteers, numbering&#13;
134 men, was entertained this&#13;
morning in Southampton, where they&#13;
embarked today for Africa. The route&#13;
from Wellington barracks to Nine&#13;
Elms station was thronged with cheering&#13;
spectators, but not in the same degree&#13;
as on previous occasions, so the&#13;
order of march was undisturbed. The&#13;
lord mayor and sheriffs accompanied&#13;
the troops to Southampton. The battery&#13;
section and ammunition column&#13;
completing the regiment will leave&#13;
Feb. 3.&#13;
B o e r s T e l l T h e i r Story'&#13;
Boer Camp, Modderspruit, Upper Tugela&#13;
River, Tuesday, Jan. 23— The&#13;
British are new endeavoring to force,&#13;
with 40,000 tro* », the Spion kop route&#13;
to Ladysmith. . The firing on Gen. Botha's&#13;
position yesterday was terrific.&#13;
The grass was fired, rocks dislodged&#13;
and trenches pierced, but the battle&#13;
was practically one-sided, the federals&#13;
only firing thirty shots. A ball from&#13;
a shell landed in Gen. Botha's pockei.&#13;
Theonly Boer casualties were some&#13;
horses wounded. The firing ceased at&#13;
dark, but was resumed this morning&#13;
in the vicinity of Ladysmith and here,&#13;
but up to noon it lacked vigor.&#13;
Parts Is Exultant.&#13;
Paris, Jan. 29.—Most of the French&#13;
papers hail with keen satisfaction the&#13;
announcement that the British have&#13;
abandoned Spion kop. The ambiguous&#13;
wording of the first dispatch has led&#13;
them to declare that the British war&#13;
office was keeping back something,&#13;
and they now insist that this dispatch&#13;
must have contained the fact that Sir&#13;
Charles Warren had abandoned the po-|&#13;
sition, and/Chat this was suppressed&#13;
by the war office. All comment upon&#13;
this "extraordinary step" and express&#13;
the .cpinlon "ffcat it is sufficient to&#13;
"drive any nation to despair." The&#13;
Matin even goes so far as to make this&#13;
Insinuation: "The British government&#13;
willingly gave the nation false&#13;
joy_ when it knew it had the truth."&#13;
T R A N S V A A L WAR ITEMS.&#13;
As Great Britain is in need of more&#13;
funds to carry on the war in South&#13;
Africa parliament will soon meet. The&#13;
cabinet, however, had been hoping for&#13;
one rallying British success to cheer&#13;
the country, and to command generous&#13;
support for fresh revenue measures.&#13;
Among these will probably be an increase&#13;
of the income tax to a shilling&#13;
in the pound, but this would only provide&#13;
the cost of five weeks' hostilities.&#13;
The duties on tobacco, alcohol, tea and&#13;
coffee are likely to be raised.&#13;
The Boer forces have started a heavy&#13;
bombardment of Kimberley. The gar*&#13;
risoo/s new gun carried five miles, but&#13;
collapsed after a few shots. A body of&#13;
200 lancers made a sortie from Ladysmithy&#13;
under cover of a heavy cannon&#13;
and s(fle fire from the forts opposite&#13;
th£ laager of Pretoria command. The&#13;
British retired with evident loss. One&#13;
Boer was wounded. A heavy cannonade&#13;
still continues.&#13;
The British claim another victory&#13;
over the Boers because Gen. Warren's&#13;
troops occupied Spion kop on the 25th,&#13;
causing" a very small garrison to flee.&#13;
The dispatch also adds that in' the attack&#13;
made by the Boers, after the British&#13;
had taken Spion 3so£, that the British&#13;
suffered a heavy loss, and that Gen.&#13;
Woodgate was dangerously wounded.&#13;
A Boer dispatch says the British left&#13;
1,500 dead on the battlefield after the&#13;
engagement at Spion kop on the 24th.&#13;
After holding the hill for a day the&#13;
British found themselves unable to&#13;
hold out against the Boers and deserted&#13;
the position in the night.&#13;
Gen." Methuen in commenting on&#13;
the military tactics and courage of the&#13;
Boers says: "The mobility of the Boers&#13;
is such that they can change front in&#13;
15 minutes, so that a flanking operation&#13;
when striking home simply meets&#13;
a new front."&#13;
The last^ direct German mails to the&#13;
Transvaal are how being returned from&#13;
Cape Town without any explanation&#13;
on the part of the British authorities.&#13;
The German press comments upon the&#13;
fact with considerable heat.&#13;
The quarters of G ens. White and&#13;
Hunter at Ladysmith were smashed by&#13;
a shot from Long Tom on the 22d. It&#13;
is not known at this writing whether&#13;
any ofrthe occupants of the building&#13;
were killed or not.&#13;
According to an English account&#13;
Ladysmith is now considered to be impregnable,&#13;
the fortifications having&#13;
been strengthened and supplies are&#13;
plentiful. /-__&#13;
A train load of beef, 750,000 pounds,&#13;
for the use of the Boers, was recently&#13;
purchased in Chicago by an agent of&#13;
the Transvaal government.&#13;
The British losses up to date. Man .&#13;
24. in killed, wounded and captured,&#13;
according to Gen. Buller's revised list,&#13;
totals 8,215 men.&#13;
The first lot of yeomanry left London&#13;
for the Transvaal on the 27th.&#13;
It is now evident that move than one&#13;
battle will have to be fought before&#13;
Buller can stretch out his hand to&#13;
White.&#13;
AL1 the bridges on tha Natal railway&#13;
and-the Laings Nek tunnel and the&#13;
, bridges on the Free State line have&#13;
hpp.n u n d e r m i n e d , s o a s t o e n a b l e t h e m&#13;
to be destroyed at a moment's notice&#13;
in the event of Boer retreat.&#13;
1 8 9 Lives Lost by F l o o d s in J a p a n .&#13;
Official reports just completed give details&#13;
of terrible inundations which destroyed&#13;
property valued at more than&#13;
six million yen in Hakkaldo province,&#13;
northern Japan, in December. Thirtyfive&#13;
towns in the district of Ishikari&#13;
were devastated. Since September no&#13;
fewer than117,288 houses have been&#13;
submerged or washed away in Hakkaldo&#13;
alone, while the total damage is&#13;
placed at 13,000,000 yen. Complete re=-&#13;
turns show that about 100 fishing&#13;
schooners and other craft were destroyed&#13;
or sunk, during the severe&#13;
storm which swept over the Japanese&#13;
coast December 23 to 25. The total&#13;
number of lives lost is placed at 189.&#13;
At Lansing there is a man who really&#13;
thinks a great deal of his dog. The&#13;
animal carried off a 10-pound roast of&#13;
beef from a local butc her shop and his&#13;
owner was called upon to pay it, whicu&#13;
he did without a murmur.&#13;
^-&#13;
T H E MARKETb.&#13;
N e w ^ o r k -&#13;
Best g r a d e s . . .&#13;
Lower grades. •&#13;
Chicago,-—&#13;
Best j r r a ^ s . . . .&#13;
Lo wergrades..&#13;
D e t r o i t —&#13;
Best grades —&#13;
Lower grades..&#13;
nufTalo—&#13;
Best grades.1...&#13;
Lower grades..&#13;
C i n c i n n a t i -&#13;
Best g r a d e s —&#13;
Lower grades..&#13;
P i t t s b u n t —&#13;
Best g r a d e s —&#13;
Lower grades.-&#13;
L I V E S T O C K *&#13;
— Cattlo Sheep Ltuntn&#13;
.84 4.iii.-S90 *5 10 47 30&#13;
.3 i&gt;m 50 3 £s&gt; 6 50&#13;
.5 2 ^ 6 -r&gt;&#13;
,4 UO^o 0J&#13;
.3 75&lt;a+70&#13;
.2 biX&amp;l 7o&#13;
500&#13;
4 b'J&#13;
R 01&#13;
4 UO&#13;
.3 MOtl 3 \ R 0)&#13;
.3 25®1 UJ 4 6)&#13;
.5 lOJJul flO&#13;
.4 tttjfcijSO&#13;
.5 50@6 03&#13;
.4 la&amp;fiu)&#13;
4 30&#13;
3 W&#13;
4 80&#13;
4 W&#13;
6 75&#13;
J»0D&#13;
6 4ft&#13;
b '»&#13;
6 8*&gt;&#13;
6 £&gt;&#13;
&lt;l 2R&#13;
b io&#13;
6 10&#13;
Hogs&#13;
94 85&#13;
1 75&#13;
4 &amp;&gt;&#13;
4 40&#13;
85&#13;
50&#13;
49R&#13;
435&#13;
47R&#13;
4 50&#13;
480&#13;
4 50&#13;
GRAIN. E T C&#13;
Wheat. Corn, * Oats.&#13;
No.2rcJ No. "J mix No. 2 whits&#13;
N a w York 74Q74H 40®4H* SX&amp;S*&#13;
C h i c a g o ft*&amp;&amp;44 3J&amp;33* 2 3 &amp; B ^&#13;
"'Detroit 73@7 S 8l@3i 28®;$&#13;
T o l e d o 71@7tH 33®33 2 ^ 3 V ,&#13;
C i n c i n n a t i 73&amp;T3 S6®3* ?&amp;&amp;!6&#13;
P i t t s b u r g 75@7&gt;S Sft&amp;M 30@3D&#13;
Bnffato 7«ft7i.\, 34*35 £»&amp;£#&#13;
•Detroltr-Hay. No, 1 Timothy, 112 03 per ton.&#13;
Potatoes, 45o per bu. Live Poultry, spring&#13;
chickens, 7o per lb; fowls. 6\J: turKeys, 9t;&#13;
ducks, 8c £ggs, striotly fresh, 17o per dozen.&#13;
Butter, cost dairy, 19o per lb; creamery, 23a&#13;
Hands and Limbs Covered with Blisters and&#13;
Great Red Blotches. Scratched Until Almost&#13;
Wild. Burned Like Fire, Sleep Impossible.&#13;
CUTICURA Remedies Bring Speedy Relief&#13;
and a Permanent Cure at a Cost of Only $2«&#13;
I was a sufferer for eight years frbm that most distressing of&#13;
all diseases, Eczema. I tried some of the best physicians in the&#13;
country, but they did me little&#13;
good. The palms of my hands&#13;
were covered and would become&#13;
inflamed ; little white Jblisters at&#13;
first would appear, then they&#13;
would peel off, leaving a red,&#13;
smooth surface which would burn&#13;
like fire and itch; well, there is&#13;
no name for it„ On the inside&#13;
of the upper part of both my&#13;
dJjmbs great red blotches, not&#13;
unlike hives, would appear, and&#13;
as soon as I became warm the&#13;
burning and itching would begin.&#13;
Night after night I would lie&#13;
awake all night and scratch and&#13;
almost go wild. I heard of CUTICURA&#13;
REMEDIES, got them and&#13;
gave them a thorough trial, and after a few applications I noticed&#13;
the redness and inflammation disappear. Before I had used&#13;
one box there was not a sign of Eczema left. I can truthfully&#13;
assert that $2.00 worth of CUTICURA REMEDIES cured me.&#13;
There has been no sign of its return anywhere upon my body&#13;
since I wrote you I was cured, nearly four years ago. Hardly a&#13;
month passes but what I receive a letter or some one calls and&#13;
wishes to know how I got cured, if I had Eczema bad, and if&#13;
the cure has been permanent, etc., etc. I always take pleasure in&#13;
enlightening them the best I can.&#13;
""JOHN D. PORTE, Pittsburg, March 1, 1899.&#13;
Of JOHN D. PORTE &amp; Co., Real Estate and Insurance,&#13;
428} Fourth Avenue, Pittsburg, Psu&#13;
The agonizing itching and burning of the skin, as in eczema, the frightful scaling,&#13;
as in psoriasis; the loss of hair-and crustiDg of the scalp, as in scalled head; the&#13;
facial disfigurement, as in pimples and ringworm, the awful suffering of infants and&#13;
the anxiety of worn-out parents, as in milk crust, tetter, and salt rheum — all demand&#13;
a remedy of almost superhuman rirtues to successfully cope with them. That&#13;
Remedies*are such stands proven beyond all douDt. No statement is made regarding&#13;
them that is not justified by the strongest evidence. The purity and sweetness,&#13;
the power to afford immediate relief, the certainty of speedy and permanent cure, the&#13;
absolute.safety and great economy, have made them the standard skin cures and&#13;
humor remedies of the civilized world. The treatment is simple, direct, agreeable,&#13;
and economical, and is adapted to the youngest infant as well as adults of every age.&#13;
Bathe the affected parts with hot water and CUTICURA SOAP to cleanse the surface&#13;
of crusts and scales, and soften the thickened cuticle. Dry, without hard rubbing,&#13;
and apply CUTICUBA Ointment freely, to allay itching, irritation, and inflammation,&#13;
and soothe and heal, and lastly take CUTICURA RESOLVENT to cool and cleanse/tn^&#13;
blood. This sweet and wholesome treatment affords instant relief, permits rest and&#13;
sleep in the severest forms of eczema and other itching, burning, and scaly humors&#13;
of the skin, scalp, and blood, and points to a speedy; permanent, and economical&#13;
cure when all other remedies and even the best physicians fail. CUTTCURA THJB&#13;
SET, price $1.25; of, CUTICCRA SOAP, 25c., CUTICURA OINTMENT, 50c., CUTICURA&#13;
RESOLVENT, 50C., sold throughout the world. " How to Cure Eczema," free ct th«&#13;
Sole Props., POTTER DKUQ AND CHEU. CORP., Boston, Mass.&#13;
MILLIONS OF MOTHERS Use CUTICURA S O A P exclusively for baby's skin, scalp, and hair. It la not only the purest&#13;
sweetest, and most refreshing of nursery soaps, bnt it contains delicate emolltenriSTopeT.&#13;
ties, obtained from CUTICURA, the pi eat skiu cure, which preserve, purifr, and beautify&#13;
the ekin, scalp, and hair, and prevent simple skin blemishes from becoming serious. For&#13;
distressing heat rashes, chafing*, inflammations, and eruptions, for crusted, itching irritations&#13;
of the s^alp, with dry, thin, and falling hair, for red, rough hands, and shapeless&#13;
nails, and a i n u ^ infantile humors, it is absolutely indisneneablo.&#13;
40 YEARS OF SUFFERING! I I C I I I I I I A I A Gentlemen: I have been sending to you for your " 5&#13;
N £ U n A R L D I A DROPS" for several parties who have'used it and w h o&#13;
*" say it is the best they ever used. One old lady has had&#13;
NEURALGIA FOR 40 Y E A R S , has tried nearly everything she could hear of&#13;
without relief until she conrmenced nsing" *45 DROPSY and now-she is^-not&#13;
troubled with the disease. Each one that has used it says it is the best remedy,&#13;
and all join in praise of "5 DROPS.'* For ^he enclosed money please&#13;
send me three larg-e bottles of "5 DROPS," one package of Pills and one&#13;
Plaster, and hurry them forward without delay.&#13;
Jan. 11, 1900. SAMUEL, SPEEGI^E, Falkville, Ala&#13;
Gentlemen: My mother, Mrs. Eliza Austin, of f | l | E | | U ftVIQU&#13;
Fremont, Wis., has'been almost an invalid for Years n i l t i l H i A I I d M&#13;
with RHEUMATISM and for the past five years has • • • • f c &gt; ^ 8 » " • • * " «&#13;
not been able to walk 40 rods until she began to use **5 DROPS," about t w o&#13;
months ago. She now walks a mile at a time and is doing- all her own work in&#13;
the house, a thing- she has not done for years. You are at&#13;
liberty to publish this testimonial, with my name and also&#13;
my mother's. Dec. 27,,l»». MRS. C. H. PURDY, Wanpaea, Wis.&#13;
Is the mewt powerful upeciftc known. Free from. opU&amp;&gt; snU njrfsctly harm less. It&#13;
rive* almoin instantaneous relief, and J* a posltire cnriTtor Rhrwmatlsm, MetattcK,&#13;
Xe«**»M»* I&gt;y*pep«l*&lt; Bneknebw, AstliBUk, lfajr J W e r , Cat&#13;
a r r h , !&gt;*» G r i p p e . Croup* Sleeplessles*. tterrousgiea*. X e r v « a « a n *&#13;
£««r»taHe_ H e a a a e h c e , Rmrwetae. T a o t h a e a c . H e a r t W M S M W . S r o p s y , M a l a r i a , C r e e p i n g Nuatbae**, e t c . , etc.&#13;
a a a &gt; V C &gt; &lt; i enable »nft&gt;rer« to rive "» DROPS" at lean a trial, we&#13;
O V U A T 9 will nend a S a c sample bottle, prepaid by mall for 1 0 « . A&#13;
•ample bottle will conrlncevna. Al»o. 1 arjre bottle* (MO aojjwi «06. * bottle* for |«.&#13;
fT»*nr v m ^ i SAM&gt;"-\&gt;S and agent* «flttmw.tSTSD|a s»»T«rrite*ju_ w r i t e ua tonlny.&#13;
8 W A N 3 Q X R H E U M A T I C C U R E CO., 1 6 0 t o 1 8 4 L%ke St.. CHICAGO. I L l f r ^&#13;
DROPS&#13;
POTATOES . 2 0 1&#13;
aBbl. t&#13;
laffeat 8eei rOTATO Orewert la Aaertea. Prtcee &amp;&#13;
t l . t v a e a , BaeraMaeteektefGrua, ClewaaOtra m&#13;
See*. Beai tab MIIN aae 19e fer cetalei »»d 11 p&#13;
ium&gt; fAi — ~ — "&#13;
gjSaaFLU.&#13;
• JOnt AjgAttXR SltD CO., LA CKOMI, WW. w*. fe&#13;
D R O P S Y N E W D'SCOVCRY. frive*&#13;
CHEAP FARMS JIO TOD WUT t WME1 A A A A f t b C C Improved and nnlniproTcd&#13;
| U U V A U n C a farmta* taads to be divided&#13;
aad told oa long time And eaajr pay inernta, a littla&#13;
each year. Come and »ee us or write. THE TBUMAK&#13;
MUSS STXTFTBANR, hanllac Center. Mich., or&#13;
TtM TniMan MOM B«Ut«.Crp»«tU. SanllM C«*,Ml«a»&#13;
ttaaea.&#13;
Babe of tet_tt monlqatuaic akn dra 1ll0e f*a*nTd8 »cu trree*a twmoenntt&#13;
•ft, ft. H. OJUtBTt MSB, Be* B. AUaata, «a,&#13;
Vbei "Answering AdTeftlsemsts&#13;
Heitkw Tais fare.&#13;
r&#13;
'V'.iTL * V''v :*•&#13;
77? .P^IT'" * '»";, '*",•;'.; '."^."••IVX " Tn"^^l ^ ^ ' ; ^ ' ' ^ . . -'&#13;
•V»"&#13;
V&#13;
*&#13;
&amp;&#13;
itf":.&#13;
PHOTOGRAPHS&#13;
We have taken possession of the Photo Gallery*formerly run by "Mr. Stark, and after h a v i n g r e f u r n i s h e d it* w i l l b e R e a d y f o r&#13;
Business Saturday* Feb 3.&#13;
We would be pleased to have you call and examine our work. You will find that we are S t r i c t l y Up-To-Date» having all the latest&#13;
styles of, work that can be secured in the larger places, and W"e G u a r a n t e e All O u r W o r k . After February 3 the gallery will be open&#13;
E v e r y D a y E x c e p t S u n d a y , while we remain here. t 't,&#13;
TO INTRODUCE OUR WORK J J f | \ j | F " (&gt; J ) P | J I P Y 1 5 « WB Wlbb MAKB OUR&#13;
Very Best, $3.00 Cabinets ^ ^ FOP $2.00p~D°"ri&#13;
V.,yK..pec„„„v. p # H # N | X &amp; S Q N #&#13;
• 4&#13;
Mrsj Win. Potterton entertained&#13;
a niece from Piuckney last week.&#13;
The milk which is beiugbrought&#13;
to the cheese factory is shipped to&#13;
ANDERSON. Howell. '&#13;
Samuel Wilsou was home from Died, Jan. 22, Jessie Bennett,&#13;
Howell over Sunday. | an old resident of this township,&#13;
The social at L. Roy's was well • at the home of his daughter, Mrs.&#13;
attended and a gded time was had. , Win. Featherly. The funeral ser-&#13;
Mesdames Eugene Smith and C. ' vices were Held Wednesday and&#13;
Stephenson, spent Sunday with'the remains buried in the Hauithek&#13;
parents iu Stockbridge.&#13;
The daughters of Mrs. J. R.&#13;
Dunning celebrated Mrs. D's 80th&#13;
birthday at the home of Mrs. .Jas&#13;
Marble, Monday.&#13;
burg cemetery.&#13;
Richard May&#13;
The friends of Hugh WylLe will j ] a s t w e e L&#13;
be son'y to learn that he is suffer&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
Will H. Gardner is on the sick&#13;
list.&#13;
was in Howell&#13;
ing from a stroke of paralysis, in&#13;
Ann Arbor where he is visiting.&#13;
Mrs, Fred Merrill visited in&#13;
Flemming and Fowlerville the&#13;
last of last week and attended the&#13;
94th birthday of Mr. Merill's&#13;
grandmother, Mrs. Fenless,&#13;
Last week Tuesdny, Jan. 23, occur.&#13;
ed thej50th anniversary of the&#13;
marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Charles&#13;
E. Bullis, of Unadilla, About 80&#13;
of their relatives and friends gathered&#13;
at their pleasant and commodious&#13;
residence to celebrate the&#13;
occasion. Mr. Bullis is 71 aud&#13;
Miss Anna Spears is a guest of&#13;
her sister, Mrs. Win. Doyle.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Barton visited&#13;
iu Stockbridge last week.&#13;
-Miss Ella Murphy spent last&#13;
Friday and Saturday with friends&#13;
in Piuckney.&#13;
Miss Edna Conner, of Wood's&#13;
Corners, called on friends in this&#13;
vicinity last week.&#13;
Miss NeH_a Gardner is taking&#13;
vocal lessons of Prof., Mrs. M. J .&#13;
Kempf, of Ann Arbor.&#13;
Glenn Gardner is an inventor&#13;
of an ice-boat, which with a nee-&#13;
Mrs. BulKs is 65 years of age and iessary breeze, will scurry across&#13;
are tlie_parents of six living child- {the-frozen waters' at an amazing&#13;
ren, Mrs. A^ G. Wilson, Mrs. M. jelip.&#13;
H. B. Gardner called on M.&#13;
Carroll of South Putnam, last&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
Clifford Tripp is home from&#13;
Stockbridge for the remainder of&#13;
the winter. ~&#13;
Several from here attended a&#13;
meeting of the Unadilla, Ollapodrida&#13;
club at W. H. Sayles.&#13;
Mrs. Richard May and Miss&#13;
Georgia Gardner visited at D.&#13;
Monks the first of the week.&#13;
Mm- O. P. Noah and Mrs. M.&#13;
Green of North #Lake, visited at&#13;
Wm. Gardners last Satui-day.&#13;
Ella Murphy taught last week&#13;
in the place of Kirk Van Winkle&#13;
js;ho was in Detroit on business.&#13;
Miss Laura ' Doyle, who has&#13;
been visiting her gpandparents iu&#13;
North Putnam, has returned home.&#13;
useful. After a few happy remarks&#13;
by L. E. Howlet, Esq., the&#13;
company dispersed and thus ended&#13;
a very pleasant day.&#13;
\&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
Fred Rice is laid up with a very&#13;
bad ankle.&#13;
• - The Maccabees will give one of&#13;
their popular balls Feb. 14,&#13;
v Mrs. Wm. Featherly is in Dixbo^&#13;
augh^visiting. her daughter.^. ?he Ladies' Guild served chickrie&#13;
supper at Royces hall on&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
A. B. Greer moved his family&#13;
to the village Monday. Mr. Greer&#13;
has charge of the cheese factory.&#13;
At the color social given by the&#13;
Maccabees last Saturday evening,&#13;
the prize was awaided to Mrs.&#13;
Bert Haight.&#13;
Tickets are being sold for a lecture&#13;
to be given by Rev. Dr. Caster&#13;
of Howell, some time in Feb.&#13;
100 tickets have to be sold before&#13;
the date will be set.&#13;
The trouble with the Hamburg&#13;
correspondent last week was not&#13;
the oold weather—it was a case of&#13;
stationery being carried around in&#13;
her father's pocket for a week.&#13;
Wasson, M m " A&#13;
Mrs. Frank Montague, Charles&#13;
Bullis Jr. and Geo. Bullis, all of&#13;
whom, with thirteen of their fourteen&#13;
grand-children, and three of&#13;
their four great-grand-children' :: M rmr+m • ^ ^&#13;
were present. The remainder of ., I flAAA I I B B B I W&#13;
the company consisted of other; I V r V V I I B B 9 I m&#13;
relatives and intimate friends. _A ' ;; ~*&#13;
most excellent and plenteous din- ] [f s p &gt; (here musLbc SOIT1C&#13;
ner was served which all enjoyed. j I trouble with its food. Well&#13;
"Relatives from Howell, Marion, babies are plump; only t h e&#13;
Pinckney, CarO and near Detroit, | * s jc k are thin. Are you sure&#13;
graced the occasion. The pres-j-J the food IS all right? ChH- t&#13;
ents were numerous, valuable and dren can't help but g r o w 3&#13;
! they must grow if their food i&#13;
nourishes them. Perhaps a ' 1 mistake was made in the&#13;
, past and as a result the digestion&#13;
is weakened. If that&#13;
: is so, don't give the baby&#13;
a lot of medicine; just use&#13;
i your every-day common&#13;
sense and help nature a : little, and the way. to do&#13;
it is to add half a teaspoonful&#13;
of scon's&#13;
EMULSION&#13;
to the baby's foe44hree or&#13;
four times a day. The gain :&#13;
will begin the very first day&#13;
you give it. 'It seems to&#13;
correct the ^digestion and&#13;
gets the baby started right:&#13;
agairu U the baby Is nurs&#13;
f ing but does not thrive, then l&#13;
I ths mother shouSd take the&#13;
emulsion.&#13;
ef?a&lt;&#13;
It will have a&#13;
; good effect both upon the;&#13;
j mother and child. Twenty&#13;
| five years proves this fad i&#13;
-,DC. and ?l.oo, «11 druggists.&#13;
r,f.OTT &amp; !)6WNE, Chemists, New Yort.&#13;
ill Ml IMMII&#13;
MARION.&#13;
Mrs. H. T. Love is reported to&#13;
be on the gain.&#13;
* Mark Betram will vacate the C.&#13;
Mitchell farm this spring.&#13;
Lewis Christler of Plainfield&#13;
spent Sunday with his sister Mrs.&#13;
J. ^ . Witty. 7&#13;
H. T. Galloway has leased the&#13;
Jas. Harger farm and will take&#13;
possession April 1.&#13;
Miss Clara Witty of Chelsea&#13;
visited friends and relatives in&#13;
Marion the past week.&#13;
F. E. Backus is getting the&#13;
material on the ground for a new&#13;
! I barn the coming summer.&#13;
Old Mr. F o s t e / of Parkers&#13;
Corners attended the quarterly&#13;
meeting Saturdayand Sunday.&#13;
Mabel Blood and a lady friend&#13;
of Whitmore'Lake, spent Saturday&#13;
with her father, A. G. Blood.&#13;
Geo-. Fowler, who has been sick&#13;
at the home of F, E. Love . for the&#13;
past two months, is able to be out&#13;
again.&#13;
Clarence Reed attended the one&#13;
day institute at Brighton, last&#13;
Thursday and spent Friday with&#13;
relatives in Plaesant Valley.&#13;
The young people held the last&#13;
Athenum at the' home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. H. G. Bncknell last Friday&#13;
evening and all report a good&#13;
time.&#13;
' Ye Editor said in last week's&#13;
paper that he guessed some of his&#13;
corxesporidence ink had-frozenas&#13;
he did not hear from some of us.&#13;
Ours did, so have to write this&#13;
week with a led pencil.&#13;
H. M. Padley is the- new president&#13;
of the Marion Farmers Club.&#13;
Their next meeting will be held&#13;
at the home of Coral Drew the&#13;
last Thursday in February and&#13;
will be a Washington Birthday&#13;
meeting.&#13;
The second quarterly meeting&#13;
of the First M. E . church of&#13;
Backusville was held Saturday&#13;
and Sunday. As our presiding&#13;
elder could n,ot be with us Rev.&#13;
A. G. Blood exchanged pulpits&#13;
with Rev. E. E. Castor D. D. of&#13;
Bowell, who preached a very helpful&#13;
sermon taking his text from&#13;
John 1:29.- '•• _&#13;
The A. Burden farm'is for sale&#13;
—a good location for some one.&#13;
S. M. Smith's people expect to&#13;
move into their new house the&#13;
coming week.&#13;
H. E. Reed attended the one&#13;
day institute at Fowlerville and&#13;
Piuckney last week.&#13;
Miss Jennie Topping spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday at home&#13;
and returned to her school in&#13;
Pleasant Valley, Monday.&#13;
The ladies met at the parsonage&#13;
last Wednesday and reorganized&#13;
the Ladies' Aid Society with the&#13;
following' officers: Pres., Mrs.&#13;
Bert Drewery; vice Pres., Mrs.&#13;
Mary Basins; Sec, Mrs. F . E.&#13;
Backus; Treas., Mrs. H. G. Bucknell.&#13;
They will meet at the home&#13;
of Mrs. Drewery, the first Wednesday&#13;
in Feb. at 10. a. m. and will&#13;
serve dinner to which the men are«|-&#13;
especially invited.&#13;
Do not "forget tfie DISPATCH Book&#13;
Bindery when you want work in that&#13;
linn. We bind everything from a receipt&#13;
to a dictionary. Call and s«e&#13;
our work. •'—&#13;
z pi&#13;
w ac v&gt; pi&#13;
T&#13;
H&#13;
0z&#13;
IP&#13;
0z r&#13;
-&lt;&#13;
^ 3"&#13;
01&#13;
3&#13;
5f&#13;
S -a&#13;
•s c&#13;
S&#13;
•5 0&#13;
T&#13;
&gt;&#13;
V&#13;
1&#13;
• If you want all the news subscribe&#13;
for the DISPATCH.&#13;
STOCK-TAKING&#13;
SALE.&#13;
The Red Mark Sale Ended Wednesday at 6 p. m,&#13;
. - • ' ! '&#13;
THE BUSY BEE M E&#13;
CLOSED ALL DAY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1st&#13;
For Inventory.&#13;
During this inventory we shall make a hunt for all&#13;
Odds and Ends'to clean up.&#13;
Friday a"nd Saturday we shall put on sale Odd Lots&#13;
and Remnants and give you a "&#13;
GreatGIeapin£-Up&#13;
Sale in Every&#13;
Department.&#13;
, ^ We cian't tell just what these lots will be now, for we&#13;
haven't got them all hunted out, but the prices we shall&#13;
put on them will be rediculously small.&#13;
You will find many bargain^ at this Inventory Sale.&#13;
~\&#13;
Yours respectfully,&#13;
L, H. F IE LU&#13;
Jaekaoo,Miob ~4&#13;
/&#13;
-A,T TZ&lt; . . ' , . ; . . '...J.'. ,'.._i..',^. . . .MU O - L ' _ . . '.- ...—•.-*. —. ^ .L. .&#13;
/</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Note</name>
          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36685">
              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6432">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch February 01, 1900</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6433">
                <text>February 01, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6434">
                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6435">
                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6436">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6437">
                <text>1900-02-01</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6438">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="15">
        <name>newspaper</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="16">
        <name>pinckney dispatch</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="930" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="858">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/0d850cc83cb2a1d35e11fad2614bf960.pdf</src>
        <authentication>89155ea7c23a53ec0ae71997930ca5ae</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="9">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1621">
                  <text>Newspaper</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1630">
                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="57">
          <name>Hidden Search Text</name>
          <description>Enter Search Text that is always hidden except to edit.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32197">
              <text>PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON OO., MICH., THURSDAY, FEB. 8/1900. No. 6.&#13;
I&#13;
Surprise&#13;
Store,&#13;
BARGAINS,&#13;
We give you big value for your money&#13;
Brush Edge binding per yard 04&#13;
Dress Stays 05&#13;
Velveteen binding per bunch, 10&#13;
Card of hooks and eyes 02 and 03&#13;
Saxony yarn per skein 05&#13;
Germantown zephyrs per skein 06&#13;
Ladies'Fleece-lined Hose 10&#13;
Children^ heavy fleece In'd hose 10,15&#13;
Men's heavy cotton soeks 05&#13;
STATE FARMERS' INSTITUTE.&#13;
HELD AT HOWELL, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY,&#13;
FEBRUARY, 2 AND 3, 1900.&#13;
All Roads Led to the County-seat Those Days.&#13;
b a r g e a n d I n t e r e s t e d C r o w d s a t E v e r y S e s s i o n .&#13;
Music rolls&#13;
Men's heavy over-shirts&#13;
Outing flanel&#13;
Bottle best black ink&#13;
Bottle red ink&#13;
Mucilage&#13;
25 good envelopes&#13;
Petroleum ielly&#13;
1 box 12 good cigars&#13;
Tooth powder&#13;
Good tar soap&#13;
25,49&#13;
45&#13;
per yd 05&#13;
03&#13;
05&#13;
03&#13;
03&#13;
04&#13;
25&#13;
05&#13;
02&#13;
Last Friday and Saturday were fine days for the farmers' institute&#13;
at Howell, and it seemed as if every farmer in the county tried&#13;
to get there. The attendance was large from start to finish and much&#13;
interest was manifested by everyone present. The one-day institutes&#13;
had woke the farmers up and the two-day meeting was a fitting close&#13;
to the work. Evidently the farmers of old Livingston county are endeavoring&#13;
to get all the good they can out of these institutes and&#13;
know that to do so they must attend and take part.&#13;
4 l l l U l U I U I l H M l l i n M U U U U t H l l l l U U U H 4&#13;
FRIDAY MORNING SESSION.&#13;
The first session was called to&#13;
order by president, Erank Crandal,&#13;
who made a few appropriate&#13;
remarks. He said there was a&#13;
class of farmers who we never&#13;
meet at the Institutes but can&#13;
meet...up town almost any day.&#13;
There is another CIBE&#13;
Now as to the clover part of the&#13;
subject. This subject is one of&#13;
the most important to the farmer&#13;
of to-day. We have taken too&#13;
much from our soil is the reason&#13;
we can not get a batch of clover&#13;
today—the soil is depleted of the&#13;
very element that clover needs.&#13;
e ai^7 The man who sells clover-from his&#13;
ways meet at_ the Institutes and farm is selling the title of that&#13;
who are too busy to come to town&#13;
more than once a week for their&#13;
are&#13;
Ivory Soap per par 04&#13;
Cocoanut cream soap 05&#13;
Good crash 4 per yd 08 10&#13;
75c Overalls 50&#13;
Gobblers outfit ; 50&#13;
Lanterns 45 64&#13;
$2 cajrvinp set $1.50&#13;
$3 dress suit case 2.00&#13;
Valises 47c to 1.50&#13;
|2.50 iron bottom trunks 1.75&#13;
No. 9 all copper tea kettles 1.10&#13;
f5.00 chamber set 3.99&#13;
Come and see our 5 and 10 cent&#13;
tables, they contain-Bargains.&#13;
E. A. Bowman haa consented to let&#13;
Bert Wellman issue premium tickets&#13;
with trade, these tickets have won a.&#13;
good deal of trade for the store at&#13;
Howell, the tickets will be redeemed&#13;
at either store.&#13;
Our two stores enable us&#13;
to give you the greatest'value&#13;
for your money—why pay&#13;
more.&#13;
Come and get our prices,&#13;
then&#13;
mictms juouxu.&#13;
Yours for trade,&#13;
E. A.Bow5fAN, Prop.&#13;
Bowman Block, Pinokney.&#13;
BERT WELLAVAN&#13;
\ Manager of Pinokney Store.&#13;
Howell Store, next to P. O.&#13;
mail—these are the ones who&#13;
bound to succeed.&#13;
Prof. C. D. Smith, of the Agricultural&#13;
College, made a few remarks&#13;
and announcements, then&#13;
the program was formally opened&#13;
with music by Mr. and Mrs. Fred&#13;
Bucknell, which was followed by&#13;
p. ayer by Rev. Dr. E. E. Caster.&#13;
Sheep and clover was the first&#13;
subject and was by L. W. Gviatt&#13;
of Bay county. I think it is a&#13;
mistake of the fathers not to have&#13;
their boys and girls attend the institute&#13;
as they are more easily to&#13;
vget out of the ruts. The sheep or&#13;
lamb is a symbol of gentleness&#13;
and love and no on e can be with&#13;
them long and not partake of their&#13;
nature—gentleness.&#13;
We "will not qtrarrei as to the&#13;
^breed of sheep as either wool or&#13;
mutton sheep can be made to pay&#13;
with good care. Do not give&#13;
away your half breeds or mongrels&#13;
but breed them u p and care for&#13;
them and bring them up to high&#13;
standard. I n our line we can&#13;
make more out of the mutton&#13;
lambs than we can out of the&#13;
wool so we hold t6 mutton sheep.&#13;
&gt; You must keep track of your&#13;
sheep—do so by a tag in the ear&#13;
and keep the number of each in a&#13;
T&gt;oo¥ and keep track of all you&#13;
receive from that sheep—either&#13;
lambs or wool—this will tall you&#13;
which sheep are paying you the&#13;
best, and which to turn off.&#13;
Make a good seclection of animals.&#13;
Many of the full-blood animals&#13;
with a pedigree, should go&#13;
to the butchers block and we&#13;
should have a better flock.&#13;
For winter keep your sheep&#13;
cool but dry. No sheep can do&#13;
farm.&#13;
The feeding pf clover is an important&#13;
feature. I do not believe&#13;
the Lord ever gave me a forkfull&#13;
of any thing on my farm to waste&#13;
and the old manner of feeding&#13;
wasted too much. I have worked a&#13;
great deal on a feed rack and find&#13;
that one of the square racks with&#13;
wingsH/O go inside so that the hay&#13;
cannot be got undex_tb:eir fmrtr-| —&#13;
Continued on P a g e Five.&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
Roy Teepie has purchased the resident&#13;
property of H. H. Swarthout in&#13;
this place.&#13;
J. D. McPherson and fter. Wm.&#13;
Service will locate in business a t&#13;
Freeport III.&#13;
Jay Shehan has been promoted&#13;
from the M. A. L. Ry. to Woodward&#13;
ave. in Detroit.&#13;
.lames Quinn of this place and Ida&#13;
Dolan of Jackson were married at that&#13;
place last 'Thursday.&#13;
A large party of the' lady friends&#13;
and neighbors of Mrs. L . M. Teepie&#13;
gave her a complete surprise last&#13;
Thursday evening. They presented&#13;
her a fine medallion. A very enjoyable&#13;
evening was spentr. She goes&#13;
this week to her new home in Vassar.&#13;
- * * - • » • -&#13;
we,l,l in , a d amp" place. I be,lie, ve a ,i.e r, s trad,e, ,th at of sp.i nn.i ng, cellar basement worm and d a m p &lt; •• ' ,, . . . . . .&#13;
a poor-place-to keep sheep; such ar etc, and followed it tor seve&#13;
place is a breeder of lice and&#13;
ticks and it costs more to feed&#13;
them than the sheep. I would&#13;
use the sheep dip to get rid of&#13;
them. Anytime of the year if&#13;
not to cold. Buy any, good "dip"&#13;
and open the wool on t h e back,&#13;
pouring in a little from an old&#13;
teapot and the application will&#13;
drive oat the pests.&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
Joseph Sykes died at his home in&#13;
this place Thursday mdrning 1as*»&#13;
aged nearly 75 years. He has not&#13;
been well for some time and the past&#13;
week was taken worse which resulted&#13;
in his death.&#13;
Mr. Sykes was born in Yorkshire,&#13;
England, April 1825, cftrae to America&#13;
in 1827 being only two years old&#13;
when the family settled in Conn.&#13;
The family remained there for about!&#13;
seven years, Coming to Pinckney,&#13;
Mich., in 1835 when it was more of a&#13;
''sight to see a horseshoe than a bear's&#13;
track. Mr. Sykes learned the clothcarding,&#13;
veral years&#13;
near Aim Arbor, when he returned to&#13;
Pinckney and in 1863 commenced to&#13;
learn the harnessmakers trade which&#13;
be has followed ever since, and for 21&#13;
years be has occupied the same shop&#13;
on West Main st.&#13;
He was well known and liked by&#13;
every one for miles around. Th'e funeral&#13;
«ervices werjLvlMrti from the S t&#13;
Mary'i church at Jam 4ftlocr on Saturday&#13;
la***-&#13;
Gome to the&#13;
Dispatch Office&#13;
Pinckneyf Mich.,&#13;
FOP&#13;
Uettcp Heads,&#13;
Envelopes,&#13;
Cards, Etc.&#13;
Prices Right.&#13;
tutlTITHllFTHHHTIIIflTIITTHIHIffllfiriUll&#13;
*«S&gt;&#13;
Always at it.&#13;
A * W h a t ?&#13;
Selling Goods of course.&#13;
W h i l e t h e noliday t r a d e is a l w a y s a h a r v e s t f o r s o m e&#13;
— a n d we g e t o u r s h &amp; r e ^ - o u r t r a d e a l w a y s r e m a i n s g o o d&#13;
t h e y e a r a r o u n d . T h e r e a s o n is t h a t we sell t h e b e s t s t a -&#13;
ple g o o d s for t h e least m o n e y . P e o p l e t o d a y a r e n o t looki&#13;
n g for CHEAP g o o d s b u t G O O D g o o d s c h e a p .&#13;
~ T h e following a r e s o m e of o u r lines:&#13;
Dfugs and Medicines.&#13;
A full a n d c o m p l e t e line.&#13;
School Supplies*&#13;
B o o k s , T a b l e t s , P e n c i l s P e n s ,&#13;
I n k a n d&#13;
E x a m i n a t i o n B l a n k s .&#13;
Fancy Articles*&#13;
C e l l u l o i d G o o d s , Hdkf., C u f f&#13;
a n d CoIIor B o x s .&#13;
Ttfey make fine birthday gifts.&#13;
Crockery. Groceries.&#13;
A full l i n e of j W e c a r r y a l i n e&#13;
P l a i n a n d F a n c y w a r e . of t h e b e s t in t o w n .&#13;
A f i n e l i n e of L a m p s . P r i c e s a r e right.&#13;
&gt;M&#13;
H a v e y o u seen o u r fine a s s o r t m e n t of&#13;
VA4.&amp;NTINES&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
General Hardware,&#13;
Have as complete an assortment of heavy and shelf hardware&#13;
as can be found in the county, and 1900 finds us&#13;
more thoroughly equipped than evar before.&#13;
Builders Hardware a Specialty.&#13;
Doors and Common Sash always in stock.&#13;
4&#13;
' " / ' * •&#13;
Complete line or Buggies, Wagons and&#13;
Heating Stoves, «. Ranges, Wood Stoves.&#13;
V •. - , ^Wood and Coal. : k&#13;
/&#13;
Sy\v-d&#13;
' * « •&#13;
' • - #&#13;
. iMftWdttMiMh* xtmtmMMHum*... . .MWiM.ii^*i».*M^MUi*^«|i|fc,^tfaB«MMw«afc • ^&#13;
fcto . ' ! • ^W^S&#13;
4 , - ^ . 1 . * - ' i&#13;
t&gt;!V /&#13;
5&#13;
II&#13;
H-&#13;
. t a e j&#13;
£?&#13;
^L&#13;
EVENTS OF THE WEEK&#13;
N O U R G R E A T S T A T E R E L A T E D&#13;
IN A B R I E F F O R M .&#13;
6 0 , 0 0 0 T o n * vof Coal P « r M o n t h Is t h a&#13;
Cpitpat of Bftehlffan's M iaes — 8 a f e&#13;
C r a o k e n g o t L i t t l e B o o t y for Their&#13;
Trouble a t Ionia.&#13;
Coal Industry In Michls/aiu.&#13;
T h e c o a l i n d u s t r y o f M i c h i g a n h a s&#13;
a s s u m e d s u c h p r o p o r t i o n s d u r i n g t h e&#13;
p a s t t w o y e a r s t h a t L a b o r C o m m i s -&#13;
s i o n e r C o x h a s f o u n d i t n e c e s s a r y a n d&#13;
d e s i r a b l e t o m a k e i t t h e s u b j e c t o f a&#13;
s p e c i a l c a n v a s s . T h e t o t a l a r e a of t h e&#13;
M i c h i g a n c o a l b a s i n c o v e r s n e a r l y 9,0&lt;)0&#13;
s q u a r e m i l e s , r u n n i n g f r o m J a c k s o n&#13;
c o u n t y o n t h e s o u t h t o R o s c o m m o n&#13;
c o u n t y o n t h e n o r t h , a n d f r o m H u r o n&#13;
' c o u n t y ori t h e e a s t t o M e c o s t a c o u n t y&#13;
o n t h e w e s t . T h i s a r e a i s p e a r - s h a p e d&#13;
w i t h i t s s t e m e n d i n J a c k s o n c o u n t y .&#13;
N o t a i l o f t h i s v a s t a r e a c o n t a i n s c o a l&#13;
i n v e i n s p r o f i t a b l e f o r w o r k i n g , b u t t h e&#13;
r i c h finds i n t h e S a g i n a w v a l l e y a r e bel&#13;
i e v e d t o b e a n i n d e x o f w h a t w i l l follow..&#13;
T h e r e a r e n o w m o r e t h a n 200,0001&#13;
a c r e s u n d e r l e a s e , t h e y i e l d p e r a c r e I&#13;
b e i n g e s t i m a t e d a t 4,500 t o n s . A t t h e I&#13;
b e g i n n i n g of t h e p r e s e n t y e a r t h e r e t&#13;
w e r e 25 m i n e s i n o p e r a t i o n ^ w h i l e _ne\y•{&#13;
s h a f t s w e r e b e i n g p r o j e c t e d i n s e v - }&#13;
o r a l p l a c e s . N i n e of t h e o p e r a t e d&#13;
m i n e s a r e l o c a t e d i n S a g i n a w&#13;
c o u n t y , s e v e n In Hay, live s m a l l o n e s in&#13;
E a t o n , t w o i n S h i a w a s s e e , a u d o n e&#13;
e a c h i n H u r o n a n d J a c k s o n . T h e&#13;
E a t o n cxninty m i n e s a r e k n o w n a s d r i f t&#13;
m i n e s , a n d d u r i n g t h e p a s t s i x m o n t h s&#13;
JUT-YO y i e l d e d a b o u t 2,500 t o n s of coal.&#13;
I t - i s s a f e t o s a y t h a t M i c h i g a n i s n o w&#13;
p r o d u c i n g 00,000 t o n s o f e o a l p e r m o n t h&#13;
a t a n a v e r a g e c o s t of SI.30 p e r t o n .&#13;
D y n a m i t e Explosion N«*r Wyandotte.&#13;
A s a r e s u l t of a s u p p o s e d l y a c c i d e n t a l&#13;
d i s c h a r g e o f 2,500 p o u n d s of d y n a m i t e&#13;
a t t h e S i b l e y s t o n e q u a r r y , t h r e e m i l e s&#13;
s o u t h of W y a n d o t t e o n t h e 3 0 t h , N e l s o n&#13;
l i u r d o , a g e d 60, w h o h a d c h a r g e of t h e&#13;
e x p l o s i v e , w a s b l o w n t o a t o m s . A f t e r&#13;
t h e e x p l o s i o n a s e a r c h f o r l i u r d o ' s r e -&#13;
m a p s w a s c o m m e n c e d , a n d t h e e n t i r e&#13;
f i n d i n g s w o u l d n o t fill a q u a r t m e a s u r e ,&#13;
a n d n o t a p a r t i c l e o f t h e s h a n t y , w h e r e&#13;
t h e d y n a m i t e w a s k e p t , c o u l d b e f o u n d .&#13;
T h e v i b r a t i o n s c a u s e d b y t h e e x p l o -&#13;
s i o n w e r e d i s t i n c t l y f e l t in D e t r o i t .&#13;
H o w o r i n w h a t m a n n e r t h e d y n a m i t e&#13;
w a s e x p l o d e d is, of c o u r s e , a m y s t e r y .&#13;
T h e r e a r e t w o t h e o r i e s a d v a n c e d O n e&#13;
i s t h a t . B u r d o i n l i g h t i n g h i s p i p e t h r e w&#13;
t h e h a l f b u r n e d m a t c h a m o n g s o m e d y -&#13;
n a m i t e c a p s l y i n g , o n t h e floor, t h e&#13;
o t h e r i s t h a t i t w a s a c a s e o f s u i c i d e .&#13;
B u r d o h a d b e e n e m p l o y e d a t t h e q u a r r y&#13;
f o r 30 y e a r s .&#13;
Safe Crackers MttUe a Poor H u n t&#13;
A g a n g of s a f e c r a c k e r s h e l d u p&#13;
N i g h t ! ' W a t c h m a n N i m s a t t h e w o r k s of&#13;
t h e I o n i a W a g o n c o m p a n y , a t I o n i a , a t&#13;
m i d n i g h t on t h e 2 y t h , b o u n d " a n d&#13;
g a g g e d h i m , t h r e w h i m o n a p i l e of&#13;
s h a v i n g s i n t h e e n g i n e r o o m , a n d t h e n&#13;
p r o c e e d e d t o b l o w o p e n t h e s a f e i n t h e&#13;
ollice. A n h o u r l a t e r , N i m s s a y s h e&#13;
h e a r d a terrific e x p l o s i o n , b u t h e w a s&#13;
s o w e l l t a k e n c a r e o f h e c o u l d n o t g i v e&#13;
a n a 4 a r m . A s t h e w o r k s a r e l o c a t e d&#13;
h a l f a m i l e f r o m t o w n , o n t h e o p e n&#13;
l o w l a n d s , a p a r t f r o m a l l c i v i l i z a t i o n ,&#13;
t h e t h i e v e s h a d i t a l l t h e i r o w n w a y .&#13;
T h e r o b b e r s , f o u r i n n u m b e r , s e c u r e d&#13;
20 c e n t s i n c a s h a n d , 8 2 0 w o r t h o f r e v e -&#13;
n u e a n d p o s t a g e s t a m p s a u d l e f t n o&#13;
c l u e . T h e r o b b e r y i s t h o u g h t t o h a v e&#13;
b e e n t h e w o r k o f a g a n g of t r a m p s&#13;
w h o h a v r e ^ i n f e s t e d t h e v i l l a g e --during&#13;
t h e p a s t m o n t h .&#13;
- ' — —»&#13;
M I C H I G A N N E W S I T E M S .&#13;
Old rtounty (Claltrm.&#13;
I n F e b r u a r y / 1 8 0 5 , t h e M i c h i g a n l e g -&#13;
i s l a t u r e f r a m e d a l a w o f f e r i n g S150&#13;
l x m n t y t o e v e r y m a n w h o s h o u l d e n l i s t&#13;
t h e r e a f t e r , b e i n g . c r e d i t e d t o a n y m i l i -&#13;
t a r y s u b d i s t r i c t . T h e l a s t c a l l w a s for&#13;
300,000 m e n a n d L u c i u s L. H i c k o x e n -&#13;
l i s t e d i n Co. C, 1 0 t h M i c h i g a n c a v a l r y .&#13;
H e w a s a K e n t c o u n t y m a n a n d w a s&#13;
d u l y c r e d i t e d t o a m i l i t a r y s u b d i s t r i c t .&#13;
H e s a y s h e d i d n o t k n o w of t h e e x i s t -&#13;
e n c e o f a b o u n t y l a w u n t i l m a n y y e a r s&#13;
a f t e r w a r d , w h e n h e p r e s e n t e d h i s c l a i m&#13;
t o t h e b o a r d of s t a t e a u d i t o r s , w h o&#13;
/ f o u n d t h a t t h e b o u n t y h a d b e e n a s -&#13;
'' s i g n e d t o C. G. W i l c o x . H i c k o x s a y s&#13;
t h e s i g n a t u r e i s a f o r g e r y a n d t h a t h e&#13;
n e v e r r e c e i v e d t h e b o u n t y . T h e b o a r d&#13;
r e c o g n i z e d t h i s , b u t r e f u s e d t o p a y u n -&#13;
t i l t h e s u p r e m e c o u r t h a d p a s s e d u p o n [&#13;
t h e b o u n t y l a w . N o w t h e s u p r e m e&#13;
c o u r t h a s i s s u e d a n o r d e r d i r e c t i n g t h e&#13;
a u d i t o r s t o s h o w c a u s e w h y h i s c l a i m&#13;
s h o u l d n o t bo p a i d . T h e r e a r e h u n -&#13;
d r e d s o f m e n i n t h e s a m e fix; uiid | f h e&#13;
s u c c e e d s i n p r e s s i n g h i s c l a i m t h r o u g h ,&#13;
i t w i l l t a k e h u n d r e d s of t h o u s a n d s o£-j&#13;
d o l l a r s t o p a y t h e m artt. ' A t t y . - l i e n .&#13;
O r e n h a s n o t y e t p r e p a r e d h i s o p i n i o n&#13;
for the-auditor_s.&#13;
A Hoy a n d » 1 , 3 0 0 Missing.&#13;
J e r e m i a h A. ( J i n n a n , a g e d IS, m e s -&#13;
s e n g e r f o r t h e D e t r o i t S a v i n g s b a n k ,&#13;
h a s b e e n m i s s i n g s i n c e n o o n o n t h e&#13;
2 0 t h , a n d s o h a s SI,300 i n c a s h . G i n n a n&#13;
h a d b e e n e m p l o y e d a t t h e b a n k for&#13;
a b o u t a y e a r , a n d h a d a l w a y s b e e n a&#13;
t r u s t e d e m p l o y e . S h o r t l y before" 1&#13;
o ' c l o c k o n t h e 2 0 t h . 1 ' e c e i v i n g T e l l e r&#13;
- J o h n Oillc't^ l e f t t h e b a n k t o g o "to&#13;
l u n c h , l e a v i n g y o u n g G i n n a n in hi.&gt;&#13;
c a g e , J list h o w l o n g t h e y o u n g mar.&#13;
r e m a i n e d t h e r e n o o n e s e e m s t o k n o w ,&#13;
b u t s h o r t l y a f t e r 1 o'clock h e w a s rep&#13;
o r t e d m i s s i n g . T h e m o n e y i n t h e&#13;
c a g e w a s c o u n t e d , a n d i t w a s f o u n d&#13;
thatr 81,300 i n b i l l s w e r e a l s o g o n e . .&#13;
L a t e r — Y o u n g G i n n a n w a s a r r e s t e d&#13;
i n C h i c a g o o n t n e a f t e r n o o n of t h e 2d.&#13;
A l l t h e m o n e y h e h a d l e f t w h e n arr&#13;
e s t e d w a s 877. T h e r e i s a w o m a n i n t h e&#13;
c a s e , b u t i n j u s t w h a t m a n n e r s h e is&#13;
c o n n e c t e d w i t h t h e a f f a i r i s n o t k n o w n&#13;
- a t t h i s w r i t i n g ^ i = — —&#13;
E m m a Stevenson Acquitted.&#13;
. M r s . E m m a S t e v e n s o n , of D e t r o i t ,&#13;
w h o w a s c h a r g e d w i t h m a n s l a u g h t e r&#13;
for s h o o t i n g J o s e p h M e r i d a n , w a s acq&#13;
u i t t e d o n t h e 3d. T h e w o m a n , t h r o u g h&#13;
her a t t o r n e y , p u t u p a p l e a of s e l f - d e -&#13;
f e n s e a n d s u c c e e d e d i n s a t i s f y i n g t h e&#13;
j u r y t h a t h e r a c t i o n i n s h o o t i n g Meritlan&#13;
w a s j u s t i f i e d . It' w i T n &gt; c rcinera-&#13;
I k n r e t T t h a t ^ t r s . S t e v e n s c m T ^ e p t a hoUse&#13;
r&gt;f q u e s t i o n a b l e r e p u t e ; t h a t M e r i d a n . a j&#13;
m a n w i t h a f a m i l y , v i s i t e d t h e r e s o r t&#13;
a n d w h i l e t h e r e w a s s h o t a n d k i l l e d .&#13;
F a r m e r s to Establish a Mall Delivery.&#13;
T h e f a r m e r s a r o u n d H o w e l l w i l l&#13;
h a v e a r u r a l m a i l d e l i v e r y sorvicp of&#13;
t h e i r o w n . T h o s e of O s c e o l a , If artl&#13;
a n d , B r i g h t o n a n d G e n o a t o w n s h i p s&#13;
h a v e e n g a g e d a c a r r i e r t o m a k e a d a i l y&#13;
d e l i v e r y f v o m H o w e l l a n d w i l l p a y h i m&#13;
t h e m s e l v e s d u r i n g t h e c o n t i n u a n c e of&#13;
t h e i r e x p e r i m e n t , w h i c h i s t o l a s t o n e&#13;
y e a r . T h e postofOce a u t h o r i t i e s w i l l&#13;
b e a s k e d t o l o o k o v e r t h e g r o u n d b e -&#13;
fore t h e y e a r i s u p , w i t h t h e i d e a of&#13;
"making1 t h e r o u t e a g o v e r n m e n t o n e .&#13;
. I r o n and Coal a t Ionia.&#13;
W h i l e b o r i n g f o r a f l o w i n g w e l l o n&#13;
t h e i a r m o f H e n r y I . i e s c e n e a r I o n i a ,&#13;
a 4 2 - i n c h v e i n of i r o n o r e w a s s t r u c k a t&#13;
6 0 f e e t A t !50 f e e t , t h e y w e n t t h r o u g h&#13;
14 i n c h e s o f s l a t e c o a l , ' t h e n t h r o u g h a&#13;
Ifi-foot v e i n of h a r d c o a l , a n d a n o t h e r&#13;
44 inches, o f s o f t c o a l , a n d u n d e r i t a l l&#13;
w a s a 7-fc*ot v e i n of A N o . I fire c l a y ,&#13;
w h i c h s t o o d t h e s e v e r e s t t e « L _ ,&#13;
C h a r l o t t e h a s a n a n t i - t r u s t c l u b .&#13;
E e r r i e n S p r i n g s i s t o h a v e e l e c t r i c&#13;
l i g h t s . -•• -&#13;
A n electric-"Vine f r o m S a g i n a w t o St.&#13;
C h a r l e s i s a s s u r e d .&#13;
G a g e t o w n M a c c a b e e s w i l l e r e c t a fine&#13;
h a l l t h e c o m i n g s u m m e r .&#13;
G o u l d C i t y . M a c k i n a w c o u n t y , suff&#13;
e r e d a S3,000 b l a z e o h , t h e 28th.&#13;
T h e f a r m e r s of L a p e e r c o u n t y a r c&#13;
"going t o f o r m a b e e t s u g ^ r c l u b .&#13;
M a r s h a l l i s t o h a v e a n e \ y h i g h s c h o o l&#13;
b u i l d i n g w h i c h w i l l c o s t $20,000.&#13;
N o r t h v i l l e i s n o w a d r y v i l l a g e , h e r&#13;
o n l y b a r b e i n g c l o s e d o n t h e 3 r s t .&#13;
A l d e n ' s n e w s c h o o l h o u s e W a s d e -&#13;
s t r o y e d b y f i r e o n t h e e v e n i n g of t h e 31st.&#13;
T h e r e w a s 81,813.144.47 i n t h e s t a t e&#13;
t r e a s u r y a t t h e c l o s e o f b u s i n e s s , J a n -&#13;
u a r y 3T.~ . ~&#13;
B o e r s y m p a t h i z e r s a t K a l a m a z o o&#13;
h a v e r a i s e d $630 f o r t h e B o e r R e d Cross&#13;
m o v e m e n t .&#13;
D u r i n g 1S99, 8;"&gt; d i v o r c e c a s e s w e r e&#13;
b e g u n i n C a l h o u n c o u n t y a n d J 1 d e c r e e s&#13;
w e r e g r a n t e d .&#13;
Cass City boast's of t h e o n l y f a c t o r y&#13;
i n t h e s t a t e w h e r e p e a h a r v e s t e r s a n d&#13;
b u n c h e r s a r e m a n u f a c t u r e d .&#13;
i S p a r t a l a d i e s a r e r a i s i n g f u n d s t o&#13;
e r e c t a fine m o n u m e n t t o t h e m e m o r y&#13;
o f s o l d i e r s a n d s a i l o r s of t h e c i v i l w a r .&#13;
F a r m e r s i n t h e v i c i n g of R o c k w o o d&#13;
s a y t h e y h a v e li-ad e n o u g h of s u g a r b e e t&#13;
r a i s i n g , a n d t h a t t h e y l o s t m o n e y .&#13;
y e a r .&#13;
I t i r e p o r t e d o n r e l i a b l e a u t h o r i t y "&#13;
t h a t t h e E r i c T e l e p h o n e Co. h a s pur-'&#13;
c h a s e d -all t h e s t o c k of t h e C e n t r a l&#13;
M i c h i g a n T e l e p h o n e Co. ,&#13;
I n t e n s e l y c o l d w e a t h e r a n d , a h e a v y&#13;
s n o w f a l l i n t h e u p p e r p e n i n s u l a&#13;
b l o c k e d r a i l r o a d traffic a n d a l l s u r f a c e&#13;
w o r k a b o u t t h e m i n e s o n t h e 31st.&#13;
T h e M i c h i g a n T e l e p h o n e c o m p a n y&#13;
w i l l a t o n c e c o n s t r u c t t w o s u b - t e l e p h o n e&#13;
s t a t i o n s in t h e e a s t e r n a n d w e s t e r n&#13;
p a r t of G r a n d R a p i d s t o c o s t §20,000.&#13;
G e o r g e H a r d i n g , of H i l l s d a l e , n o w .&#13;
e m p l o y e d b y S t a t e T r e a s u r e r S t e e l , h a s&#13;
b e e n a p p o i n t e d a s s i s t a n t c l e r k o f t h e&#13;
s e n a t e c o m m i t t e e o n t h e D i s t r i c t of&#13;
C o l u m b i a .&#13;
T h e g a m e w a r d e n ' s r e p o r t f o r J a n -&#13;
u a r y s h o w s 146 c o m p l a i n t s w i t h 62 c o n -&#13;
v i c t i o n s . H e s a y s t h o p e o p l e a r e a i d i n g&#13;
h i m i n p r o t e c t i n g t h e g a m e b y c o m p l y -&#13;
i n g w i t h t h e l a w .&#13;
F a r m e r s i n t h e v i c i n i t y of T h r e e&#13;
R i v e r s a r e t h o r o u g h l y d i s c o u r a g e d o v e r&#13;
t h e p r o s p e c t f o r a c r o p of w h e a t n e x t&#13;
K a l a m a z o o c o u n t y m u s t p a y t h e c i t y&#13;
of K a l a m a z o o t h e f u l l a m o u n t of t h e&#13;
b i l l s f o r t h e c a r e o f c o n t a g i o u s d i s e a s e&#13;
p a t i e n t s . I t w i l l b e r e m e m b e r e d t h a t&#13;
t h e s u p e r v i s o r s o u t t h e b i l l t o l e s s t h a n&#13;
o n e - h a l f , a n d t h e c i t y s u e d f o r l5he f u l l&#13;
a m o u n t w i t h t h e a b o v e r e s u l t .&#13;
T h e s a m e e n g i n e w h i c h k i l l e d F l a g -&#13;
m a n A l e x . S i m a t a r a i l r o a d c r o s s i n g&#13;
i n D e t r o i t r e c e n t l y , k i l l e d D a v i d P a t -&#13;
t e r s o n , a n o t h e r f l a g m a n , o n t h e e v e n -&#13;
i n g of t h e 31st. T h e s a m e e n g i n e e r&#13;
w a s i n charge, o n b o t h o c c a s i o n s .&#13;
T h e G r a n d H a v e n c o u n c i l o n t h e 3 0 t h&#13;
g r a n t e d a f r a n c h i s e t o t h e G r a n d R a p -&#13;
j. i d s , G r a n d H a v e n &amp; M u s k e g o n E l e c t r i c&#13;
r a i l w a y t o o p e r a t e a l i n e b e t w e e n t h a t&#13;
c i t y a n d G r a n d R a p i d s . T h e r o a d i s&#13;
e s p e e t e d t o b e i n o p e r a t i o n b y J u l y .&#13;
T h e b e e t s u g a r m a n u f a c t u r e r s d e -&#13;
c l i n e t o a g r e e t o p a y t h e f a r m e r s $5 a&#13;
t o n f o r b e e t s , b u t a r e w i l l i n g t o p a y&#13;
i 84.75 f o r 12 p e r c e n t b e e t s , p r o v i d i n g&#13;
t h e b o u n t y l a w i s d e c l a r e d v a l i d ; o t h e r -&#13;
w i s e t h e y w i l l c o n t i n u e t o p a y 84 a t o n .&#13;
On t h e 2 0 t h n e g o t i a t i o n s w e r e c l o s e d&#13;
f o r t h e s a l e o f . t h e H o m e r "creamery&#13;
p l a n t t o t h e s t o c k c o m p a n y w h i c h i s&#13;
o p e r a t i n g t h e L i t c h f i e l d b u t t e r a n d&#13;
c h e e s e f a c t o r y . T h e n e w o w n e r s w i l l&#13;
t a k e p o s s e s s i o n a n d c o m m e n c e w o r k&#13;
s o o n .&#13;
W h i l e u n d e r t h e i n f l u e n c e o f l i q u o r&#13;
T h o s . F a l v e y , of K a l a m a z o o , o n t h e&#13;
c v e i l i n g of t h e 31sc l a y d o w n in t h e&#13;
s n o w t o r e s t . W h e n f o u n d t h e f o l l o w -&#13;
i n g m o r n i n g b o t h h i s h a n d s arid f e e t&#13;
w e r e f r o z e n s o b a d l y t h a t a m p u t a t i o n&#13;
m a y b e n e c e s s a r y . J&#13;
T h e N e w a y g o I m p r o v e m e n t Co., i n&#13;
a d d i t i o n t o r e b u i l d i n g t h e d a m w h i c h&#13;
w o n t o u t l a s t f a l l , w i l l p u t i n a n o t h e r&#13;
o n e f u r t h e r u p t h e r i v e r w i t h a c a p a c i t y&#13;
of 30.000 h o r s e - p o w e r w w h i c h w i l l b e&#13;
t r a n s m i t t e d t o G r a n d R a p i d s f o r t h e&#13;
H o l l a n d e l e c t r i c r o a d .&#13;
T h e r e i s a t l e a s t o n e m a n a t O r i o n w h o&#13;
w i l l r a i s e s o m e t h i n g ^ j s i d e s s u g a r&#13;
b e e t s t h e c o m i n g s u m m e r . L a s t s e a s o n&#13;
h e p l a n t e d l i v e a c r e s t o t h a t c r o p , a n d&#13;
a f t e r - p a y i n g f o r t h e s^ed, b u t n o t t h e&#13;
l a b o r c o n n e c t e d w i t h t h e r a i s i n g V n d&#13;
liarvestT ncr of t h e b ^ t s , h e w a s / j u s t&#13;
§4.2, t o t h e g o o d .&#13;
D u r i n g t h e p a s t w i n t e r 105 b i l l s f o r&#13;
d i v o r c e w e r e filed i n I n g h a m c o u n t y ,&#13;
a n d 44 d i v o r c e s w e r e g r a n t e d . A t t h e&#13;
c l o s e of t h e y e a r t h e r e w e r e 100 d i v o r c e&#13;
c a s e s p e n d i n g i n t h e c i r c u i t c o u r t . I n&#13;
2.» o! t h e 44 e a s e s , t h e w i f e w a s t h e c o m 7&#13;
p l a i n a n t , a n d . c r u e l t y w a s t h e c h a r g e -&#13;
i n a m a j o r i t y of t h e c a s e s .&#13;
Th%jtwo l i t t l e c h i l d r e n of" M r s . E l i&#13;
G r i m o r e , of R o c k l a n d , p l a y e d w i t h&#13;
m a t c h e s o n t h e 2d a n d s e t t h e h o u s e&#13;
o n fire. T h e m o t h e r c a m e t o t h e r e s -&#13;
cue, c a r r i e d t h e m t o a p l a c e of s a f e t y&#13;
a n d t h e n r e t u r n e d a n d e x t i n g u i s h e d&#13;
t h e flames-\\mh a b u c k e t . A f e w m i n -&#13;
u t e s l a t e r s h e ' d i u u p e d - i l e a d f r o m h e a r t&#13;
f a i l u r e . .. A&#13;
R e p o r t s t o t h e s t a t e b o a r d of h e a l t h&#13;
s h o w t h a t r h e u m a t i s m , b r o n c h i t i s , i n -&#13;
fluenza, n e u r a l g i a a n d t o n s i l l i t i s , i n&#13;
t h e ofTIer n a m e d / c a u s e d t h e m o s t s i c k -&#13;
n e s s i n M i c h i g a n d u r i n g t h e p a s t w e e k .&#13;
S m a l l p o x w a s r e p o r t e d a t t h r e e p l a c e s ,&#13;
c r e b r o - s p i n a l m e n i n g i t i s a t f o u r .&#13;
w h o o p i n g c o u g h a t 30, d i p h t h e r i a a t&#13;
34, t y p h o i d f e v e r a t .r»0, s c a r l e t f e v e r a t&#13;
78, m e a s l e s a t 00, a n d c o n s u m p t i o n&#13;
I a t 177.&#13;
If c o n g r e s s w i l l a p p r o p r i a t e S"&gt;00,-&#13;
00 a s y s t e m of p n e u m a t i c t u b e s t o&#13;
(..carry m a i l s f r o m d e p o t s t o t h e p o s t -&#13;
|-oUtce a n d t h e n c e t o - t h e s u b - s t a t i o n s&#13;
I w i l l be i n s t a l l e d i n D e t r o i t b e f o r e l o n g .&#13;
i Cast i r o n t u b e s w i t h a 1 2 - i n c h — b o r e&#13;
w i l l be l a u l f o u r f e e t b e n e a t h t h e&#13;
g r o u n d a l o n g t h e p r o p o s e d r o u t e s . I t&#13;
i s e s t i m a t e d t h a t w i t h i n five m i n u t e s&#13;
a f t e r t h e a r r i v a l of s t r a i n a t t h e d e p o t ,&#13;
t h e d i s t r i b u t i n g c l e r k s w o u l d b e s o r t -&#13;
i n g t h e m a i l .&#13;
I t n o w l o o k s a s t h o u g h F r e d F o o t e ,&#13;
of F e n t o n , t h e c o n v i c t w h o i s c h a r g e d&#13;
w i t h b r e a k i n g h i s p a r o l e , w i l l b e&#13;
o b l i g e d t o s e r v e o u t h i s l i f e s e n t e n c e ,&#13;
I - s i m p l y b e c a u s e h e i s u n a b l e t o l e a v e i n -&#13;
t o x i c a n t s a l o n e . O n e of t h e c o n d i t i o n s&#13;
u p o n w h i c h Gov. R i c h p a r o l e d Foote&gt;&#13;
w a s t h a t h e s h o u l d a b s t a i n f r o m t h o&#13;
u s e of i n t o x i c a t i n g l i q u o r s . N o s u c h&#13;
p a r d o m v a s e v e r b e f o r e k n o w n i n t h i s&#13;
s t a t e . F o o t e w a s s e r v i n g a l i f e s e n -&#13;
t e n c e f o r m u r d e r i n t h e first d e g r e e .&#13;
H i s f a t e w i l l b e d e c i d e d F e b . J2.&#13;
C O N G R E S S I O N A L N O T E S .&#13;
I T h e d i p l o m a t i c a n d c o n s u l a r a p p r o -&#13;
1 p r i a t i o n b i l l w a s f i n a l l y a g r e e d o n b y&#13;
t h e h o u s e c o m m i t t e e o n f o r e i g n a f f a i r s&#13;
on t h a 1st. I t c a r r i e s a t o t a l of 81,740,-&#13;
170, a g a i n s t 81,711,533 l a s t y e a r , a n d&#13;
j 11,895,848 e s t i m a t e d b y t h e s t a t e d e -&#13;
' p a r t m e n t . T h e 8^,000 h e r e t o f o r e r e -&#13;
q u i r e d f o r U n i t e d S t a t e s p a r t i c i p a t i o n&#13;
in t h e t r i p a r t i t e g o v e r n m e n t of S a m o a&#13;
Is d r o p p e d o w i n g t o t h e p a r t i t i o n o f&#13;
t h e i s l a n d s . T h e 83,000 f o r r e p o r t s o f&#13;
t h e i n t e r c o n t i n e n t a l r a i l w a y p r o j e c t&#13;
a l s o i s o m i t t e d a s t h e w o r k h a s b e e n&#13;
w o u n d u p .&#13;
T h e h o u s e c o m m i t t e e o n t e r r i t o r i e s&#13;
p r a c t i c a l l y c o m p l e t e d t h e H a w a i i a n&#13;
b i l l o n t h e 2 9 t h . S e v e r a l i m p o r t a n t&#13;
c h a n g e s , w e r e m a d e i n t h e m e a s u r e .&#13;
T h e c h i e f of t h e s e i s t h e . s t r i k i n g o u t&#13;
o f a l l p r o p e r t y q u a l i f i c a t i o n s for e l e c -&#13;
t o r s fpr t h e s e n a t e . A n o t h e r c h a n g e&#13;
e l i m i n a t e s t h e s u p e r v i s i o n g i v e n t o t h e&#13;
s u p r e m e c o u r t o f H a w a i i o v e r e l e c t i o n s&#13;
i n t h e s e n a t e a n d h o u s e a n d m a k e s&#13;
e a c h h o u s e t h e j u d g e of i t s o w n e l e c -&#13;
t i o n s . T h e o m i s s i o n o f t h e p r o p e r t y&#13;
q u a l i f i c a t i o n f o r e l e c t o r s i s i n t h e i n -&#13;
t e r e s t of t h e n a t i v e s .&#13;
M r . C l a y t o n ( A l a . ) o n t h e 2 0 t h i n t r o -&#13;
d u c e d the*, f o l l o w i n g r e s o l u t i o n : " R e -&#13;
s o l v e d , T h a t o n J u l y 4, 1900, t h e m i l i -&#13;
t a r y a n d n a v a l f o r c e s of t h e U n i t e d&#13;
[ S t a t e s b e w i t h d r a w n f r o m t h e i s l a n d&#13;
o f C u b a a n d t h a t t h e g o v e r n m e n t&#13;
t h e r e o f be l e f t t o t h e C u b a n p e o p l e .&#13;
' R e s o l v e d , f u r t h e r , T h a t t h e P r e s i d e n t&#13;
of t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s b e , a p d h e h e r e b y&#13;
i s d i r e c t e d t o m a k e p r o c l a m a t i o n of&#13;
t h i s r e s o l u t i o n a n d "fCll p r o p e r o r d e r s&#13;
f o r t h e e x e c u t i o n t h e r e o f . "&#13;
T h e h o u s e c o m m i t t e e on" m i l e a g e o n&#13;
t h e 1st r e j e c t e d t h e c l a i m o f B r i g h a m&#13;
H. R o b e r t s , o f U t a h , for m i l e a g e i n&#13;
c o n n e c t i o n w i t h h i s c o n t e s t for a s e a t&#13;
i n t h e h o u s e . Mr. R o b e r t s p u t i n a&#13;
c l a i m for m i l e a g e f r o m S a l t L a k e C i t y&#13;
t o " W a s h i n g t o n , 2.507 m i l e s , a n d r e t u r n ,&#13;
a t t h e u s u a l r a t e of 20 c e n t s a m i l e&#13;
e a c h w a y , m a k i n g a t o t a l of 81,039.-80.&#13;
T h e h o u s e c o m m i t t e e o n m i l e a g e o n&#13;
t h e 2 9 t h d i s c u s s e d t h e c l a i m of B r i g -&#13;
ham* H. R o b e r t s f o r m i l e a g e , w h i c h&#13;
a m o u n t s t o a b o u t 81,000. A m a j o r i t y&#13;
of t h e c o m m i t t e e a r e of t h e o p i n i o n&#13;
t h a t h e i s n o t e n t i t l e d t o t h i s m o n e y ,&#13;
a s h e w a s n o t s w o r n i n g,s a m e m b e r of&#13;
t h e h o u s e .&#13;
T h e h o u s e c o m m i t t e e o n i n s u l a r aff&#13;
a i r s h a s f a v o r a b l y r e p o r t e d t h e s e n a t e&#13;
b i l l g i v i n g C u b a n v e s s e l s t h e m o s t f a v -&#13;
o r e d n a t i o n r i g h t s i n A m e r i c a n p o r t s .&#13;
' 'Ikiatc Abhors a Vact«tm."&#13;
Nothing in the nuotld sUnds stUL If&#13;
you Art iixll And strong day by &lt;Uy th*&#13;
blood supplies its tide of vigor* Jf you AM&#13;
ill, the blood is &lt;a&gt;rong And CAnies increASirig&#13;
qvAntities of diseAsed germs. You c*nnot&#13;
change Nature, but you can Aid her by&#13;
keeping the blood pure. Hood's SarsApArilU&#13;
does this AS nothing else CATU St&#13;
sure to get Hood's, because&#13;
1&#13;
J&amp;XX&amp;&#13;
Never D!wPf^jr&#13;
Tho' W a r In S o n t h Africa.&#13;
H a s ' d e m o n s t r a t e d t h e g r e a t f o r e s i g h t&#13;
of t h e B o e r s , i n a v a i l i n g t h e m s e l v e s o f&#13;
a l l t h e o p p o r t u n i t i e s i n t i m e s of p e a c e&#13;
t o p r e p a r e f o r w a r . S i m i l a r f o r e s i g h t&#13;
s h o u l d l e a d y o u to I m p r o v e t h e o p p o r -&#13;
t u n i t y of s e c u r i n g b e t t e r f a r m s t h a n&#13;
t h e i r s in thia c o u n t r y . T h e y a r e tin&#13;
l i n e of t h e C h i c a g o , M i l w a u k e e &amp; S t .&#13;
P a u l r a i l w a y in M a r i n e t t e c o u n t y , W i s -&#13;
c o n s i n , w h e r e t h e c r o p s a r e of t h e b e s t ,&#13;
w o r k p l e n t y , fine m a r k e t s , e x c e l l e n t&#13;
c l i m a t e , p u r e , soft w a t e r ; l a n d s o l d&#13;
c h e a p a n d o n l o n g t i m e . W h y r e n t »&#13;
f a r m w h e n your c a n b u y o n e f o r l e a f&#13;
t h a n y o u p a y f o r r e n t ? A d d r e s s C. &amp;&#13;
R o l l i n s , L a u d A g e n t , 161 L&amp; S a l l e S t *&#13;
C h i c a g o , 111.&#13;
Tho devil cun meet eloquence without trouble,&#13;
but he bus never been uble to stand before love.&#13;
nTbere a r e . .nrcauhcrs who do not claim&#13;
acquaintance witb Clirist outside of the pulpit.&#13;
r A-&#13;
$ 2 5 A W E E K T O A G E N T S&#13;
BeVinjj our n ;w GAS l.AMF*. A Oas Plant, llr'ehter&#13;
than electricity or Wels.liac-.li city i»ras Chcajer il-m&#13;
kcrcsene, i&gt;&gt;0 cantlle lljjht cent a day. V i*heil&#13;
brass. Fu! y jruavaateeU. Ueiicl *"&gt;. 0. T-lif tnimey&#13;
maker. Live aKenis wanted everywhere, btaudara&#13;
Gas Lamp Cu. HO M.cliluaii St., Cii"icuo'0.&#13;
A rijrbt stato of heart cannot bo maintained&#13;
without keeping a close watch on the tonyue.&#13;
FITS F»r'nanentlyCuiea. NoCts ornervottB&amp;Msan**&#13;
first day'* u&gt;o of Dr. Kline's tireat Nerve Restorer.&#13;
Send for F R E E Sid.00 trial bottle and treatise&#13;
Da. B. H. KUMK. Ltd.. 931 Arch St.. Philadelphia. Pa-&#13;
When we have a keen eye for the faults of.&#13;
others, we are apt to be blind to our own.&#13;
Baker,'!) B r e a k f a s t Cocoa&#13;
is delicious. CostsleBft thiuioneeentacup. Made&#13;
j only-toy Walter Baker &amp;Ct).LUl.,Doi,cheBter,Ma88.&#13;
-\ =4&#13;
s e a s o n . Over h a l f of i t h a s b e e n k i l l e d&#13;
b y t h e o p e n w i n t e r .&#13;
F r o m 17,800 t o n s of b e e t s t h e H o l -&#13;
l a n d S u g a r c o m p a n y m a n u f a c t u r e d 2,-&#13;
403.880 p o u n d s of s u g a r . T w o f a r m e r s&#13;
i n t h e v i c i n i t y e a c h r e c e i v e d o v e r 3500&#13;
a p i e c e f o r t h e i r b e e t s .&#13;
A c o m m i t t e e h a s b e e n a p p o i n t e d a t&#13;
C o l d w a t e r t o s o l i c i t s u b s c r i p t i o n s a g -&#13;
g r e g a t i n g - 8 1 2 , 0 0 0 a s a b o n u s f o r t h e&#13;
p r o p o s e d r a i l r o a d t o b e c o n s t r u c t e d b e -&#13;
t w e e n B e n t o n H a r b o r a n d T o l e d o .&#13;
T h e a s s e s s m e n t o n ' p e r s o n a l p r o p e r t y&#13;
i n t h e c i t y of S a g i n a w is only-$3,320,"-&#13;
000. T a x C o m m i s s i o n e r O a k m a n s a y s&#13;
t h a t five-sixths of t h e p e r s o n a l p r o p e r t y&#13;
o f t h a t c i t y e s c a p e s t a x a t i o n .&#13;
H a n c o c k i s g r o w i n g s o r a p i d l y t h a t&#13;
t h e l o c a l h i g h s c h o o l i s ' t o o s m a l l t o acc&#13;
o m o d a t e t h e p u p i l s A n a d d i t i o n w i l l&#13;
b e e r e c t e d i m m e d i a t e l y , a t a c o s t o f&#13;
$15,000, t o a c c o m o d a t e 300 m o r e p u p i l s .&#13;
M a r i n e C i t y h a s b e e n t r y i n g for a&#13;
"couple o f y e a r s t o s e c u r e a b e e t s u g a r&#13;
p l a n t , a n d t h e r e s i d e n t s t h i n k t h e y a r e&#13;
g o i n g t o g e t i t t h i s s e a s o n s u r e . T h e y&#13;
h a v e r a i s e d 8170,000 s o f a r f o r t h e p u r -&#13;
p o s e .&#13;
B R I E F N E W S P A R A G R A P H S .&#13;
A c o m p l e t e c e n s u s of a l l p e r s o n s i n&#13;
A l a s k a w i l l - s h o r t l y b e - t f t k e n . — — -&#13;
I n d i a n a p o l i s . I n d . , w a s s c o r c h e d t o&#13;
t h e e x t e n t of 8350,000 o n t h e 1st. ,&#13;
M e x i c a n s a r e p r e p a r i n g t o d e v e l o p a&#13;
rich a s p h a l t d e p o s i t n e a r T a m p i c o .&#13;
T h e r o u g h r i d e r s ' - r e u n i o n o f 1900&#13;
w i l l b e h e l d a t O k l a h o m a C i t y , J u n e 21&#13;
t o 24 i n c l u s i v e .&#13;
B y t h e b u r n i n g of a l i v e r y b a r n a t&#13;
M u h c i e , I n d . . o n t h e 1st, o n e m a n a n d&#13;
47 h o r s e s p e r i s h e d .&#13;
N e w Y o r k s u f f e r e d a fire l o s s o f&#13;
8200,000 o n t h e 1st, a n d s e v e r a l firemen&#13;
w e r e o v e r c o m e b y s m o k e a n d c o l d .&#13;
O n e o f o u r s o l d i e r b o y s i n t h e P h i l -&#13;
i p p i n e s s t o l e a h o g o n e d a y , f o r w h i c h&#13;
h e w a s i m m e d i a t e l y a r r e s t e d . A t h i s&#13;
h e a r i n g h e w a s s e n t e n c e d t o c u t e n o u g h&#13;
| w e e d t o e o o k i t . H e d i d a n d t h e p o r k e r&#13;
w a s c o o k e d f o r s u p p e r .&#13;
T h e d e t a i l s b y p r o v i n c e s of t h e p r e -&#13;
l i m i n a r y c o u n t o f t h e g r o s s p o p u l a t i o n&#13;
of C u b a h a v e b e e n a n n o u n c e d b y G e n .&#13;
,T. P. S a n g e r , i n c h a r g e of t h e c e n s u s&#13;
t a k i n g , a s f o l l o w s : P i n a r d e l R i o ,&#13;
173,082; H a v a n a , 424,811; M a n t a n z a s ,&#13;
302.402; S a n t a C l a r a , 3o0,537;' P u e r t o&#13;
T r i n c i p e , 88.237; S a n t i a g o , 327,716; t o t a l ,&#13;
1,572,845.&#13;
R m s l a ' g Latent Move.&#13;
I t i s s e m i o f f i c i a l l y a n n o u n c e d t h a t&#13;
t h e g o v e r n m e n t of R u s s i a a t t h e r e q u e s t&#13;
of t h e g o v e r n m e n t of P e r s i a , a n d i n&#13;
v i e w of t h e g o o d r e l a t i o n s b e t w e e n t h e&#13;
t w o g o v e r n m e n t s , h a s a u t h o r i z e d t h e&#13;
l o a n b a n k of P e r s i a t o t a k e u p t h e l o a n&#13;
of 22,5000,000 r o u b l e s a b o u t t o b e i s s u e d&#13;
in P e r s i a u n d e r t h e d e s i g n a t i o n of t h e&#13;
f&gt; p e r c e n t P e r s i a n g o l d l o a n t of 1900.&#13;
T h e l o a n b a n k , t h e r e f o r e , h a s c o n t r a c t e d&#13;
t o t a k e t h e l o a n , w h i c h i s r e p a y a b l e i n&#13;
75 y e a r s , g u a r a n t e e d b y a l l t h e P e r s i a n&#13;
c u s t o m s , r e c e i p t s e x c e p t t h e r e v e n u e s&#13;
of t h e c u s t o m s - o f f i c e of P a r s a n d t h e&#13;
c u s t o m h o u s e s o f t h e P e r s i a n gulf. I n&#13;
t h e e v e n t of a d e l a y i n t h e p a y m e n t s&#13;
t h e l o a n b a n k w i l l h a v e t h e r i g h t t o&#13;
c o n t r o l t h e c u s t o m h o u s e s . *There i s . a&#13;
w i d e s p r e a d i d e a i n L o n d o n t h a t t h e&#13;
P e r s i a n l o a n h a s f i n a l l y a c c o m p l i s h e d&#13;
R u s s i a ' s l o n g - l a i d p l a n s t o o b t a i n c o m -&#13;
p l e t e p o l i t i c a l a n d h n a n c i a l c o n t r o l of&#13;
P e r s i a , w i t h t h e d o u b l e o b j e c t of o u s t -&#13;
i n g t h e B r i t i s h a n d a s s u r i n g R u s s i a a n&#13;
o u t l e t o n t h e P e r s i a n g u l f .&#13;
State to N a m e P r e s i d e n t i a l Kleotors.&#13;
S e c r e t a r y D i c k , of t h e n a t i o n a l R e -&#13;
p u b l i c a n c o m m i t t e e , i s s e n d i n g o u t l e t -&#13;
t e r s t o a l l s t a t e m e m b e r s of t h e c o m -&#13;
m i t t e e r e q u e s t i n g t h a t t h e p r e s i d e n t i a l&#13;
e l e c t o r s b e i n a m e d b y t h e s t a t e a n d n o t&#13;
t h e d i s t r i c t , c o n v e n t i o n . T h e s u p r e m e&#13;
c o u r t of M a i n e h a s d e c i d e d t h a t , u n d e r&#13;
t h e A u s t r a l i a n b a l l o t s y s t e m , a m a n&#13;
m u s t b e n o m i n a t e d b y a s l a r g e a c o n -&#13;
s t i t u e n c y a s t h a t w h i c h i s n e c e s s a r y t o&#13;
e l e c t h i m . A l l d i s t r i c t p r e s i d e n t i a l&#13;
e l e c t o r s a r e v o t e d f o r i n a b u n c h b y a l l&#13;
t h e p e o p l e of t h e s t a t e , h e n c e i t w i l l b e&#13;
n e c e s s a r y t o c o m p l y w i t h t h i s c o n s t r u c -&#13;
t i o n to_ h a v e s t a t e c o n v e n t i o n s n o m i -&#13;
n a t e d . M a j . D i c k s a y s t h e e l e c t o r s w i l l&#13;
p r o b a b l y b e n a m e d b y d i s t r i c t c o n v e n -&#13;
t i o n s a s n o w , b u t s t a t e a c t i o n i s n e c e s -&#13;
s a r y t o confirm" o r r a t i f y t h e n o m i n a -&#13;
t i o n s . . T h i s r e a l l y t a k e s i t o u t of t h e&#13;
h a n d s of a n y d i s t r i c t t o n a m e i t s m a n&#13;
if t h e o t h e r s i n t h e s t a t e c o n v e n t i o n d o&#13;
n o t w a n t t h e o n e n a m e d .&#13;
The children of a millionaire can only be&#13;
sllgbtly acquainted with their father.&#13;
Mr*. W l n s l o w ' s S o o t h i n g Syrup,&#13;
For children teething, softens tho gums, reduces fa*&#13;
n&amp;mmatlon, allays pain,cures windcollo. 23oabotUa&gt;&#13;
Open the door of 5*our henrt for Christ, and he&#13;
will open the door of heaven for you.&#13;
, -* .&#13;
My doctor said I would die, but Piso's Cure for&#13;
Consumption cured me.—Amos Kitlaer, Cherry&#13;
Valley,in,,"Nov. 23, 1805. •&#13;
There is only here and there a man who praises&#13;
God half as much us he aUauld.&#13;
Brown's Teething Cordlml keeeps babies&#13;
well that are cutting teeth. Try it.&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
L I V E STOCK.&#13;
Naw York— Oattle~irheep Lamb*&#13;
Bestj*rades IJ 95&amp;*&gt; 63 Jo 73 *7 75&#13;
Lowerfjradfla.. .3 QJ&amp;i 10 4 &amp;J 6 00&#13;
C h i c a g o —&#13;
Best grades 5 1)@6 2"&gt;&#13;
Lower gradoj.. .4 o o ^ 0J&#13;
D e t r o i t —&#13;
BestKrade-i...&#13;
Ix&gt;wcr jjraies^&#13;
40&#13;
73&#13;
.3 V/®b 00 5 0)&#13;
AM&amp;1 76 4 00&#13;
B u f f a l o ^&#13;
Best prades 3 B.V$4 !T&gt; 5 40&#13;
Lower grades...3 25;$.* 0J 5 0J&#13;
Cincinnati—•&#13;
Best grades 5 2 5 , ^ 73 4 75&#13;
Lower grades.. .4 3j(&amp;4 90 3 7j&#13;
P l t t * b u r r —&#13;
Bestgrudes..-...5 4CKF&amp;6 00 ft IS&#13;
Lowergrades...4 0J&lt;&amp;4 60 4 80&#13;
7 20&#13;
5 0J&#13;
6 00&#13;
40&#13;
10&#13;
o50&#13;
5\»j&#13;
680&#13;
tltJO&#13;
Hoirs&#13;
S5 40&#13;
. 5 30&#13;
5 00&#13;
4 7.&gt;&#13;
5 05&#13;
4 Di&#13;
5 20&#13;
4 7o&#13;
4 75&#13;
4 30&#13;
4 90&#13;
460&#13;
Considering what has done will soon load us&#13;
to rejoice In what lie Avill do.&#13;
When praise is gointc up. showers of blessing&#13;
are sure to be coming down.&#13;
I K NERVES__OF WOMEN&#13;
I i j d h l E . Plnkham'g V e g e t a b l e C o m p o u n d&#13;
'•'• R e l i e v e s t h e .Suffering' f r o m Overi&#13;
r r o u g h t N e r v e s .&#13;
4 1 D E A R M R S . P I N K I I A M : - — I a m s o&#13;
g r a t e f u l f o r t h e b e n e f i t d e r i v e d f r o m&#13;
t h e u s e o f L y d i a E . P i n k h a m ' s V e g e -&#13;
t a b l e C o m p o u n d t b u t I w i s h y o u t o&#13;
p u b l i s h t h i s t e s t i m o n i a l t h a t o t h e r s&#13;
m a y k n o w t h e v a J u o of y o u r m e d i c i n e .&#13;
I w a s sufferiug" s u c h t o r t u r e s f r o m&#13;
n e r v o u s p r o s t r a t i o n t h a t&#13;
l i f e w a s a b u r d e n . I c o u l d&#13;
n e t s l e e p a t a l L a n d&#13;
w a s t o o w e a k t o&#13;
w a l k a c r o s s t h e floor&#13;
w i t h o u t a i d . T h e&#13;
d i s e a s e h a d&#13;
r e a c h e d a&#13;
c o n d i t i o n&#13;
w h e r e m y h e a r t w a s&#13;
a f f e c t e d b y i t , s o t h a t&#13;
o f t e n I c o u l d n o t l i e&#13;
d o w n a t a l l w i t h o u t&#13;
a l m o s t suffocating".&#13;
I t o o k L y d i a E .&#13;
P i n k h a m ' s V e g e -&#13;
t a b l e C o m p o u n d&#13;
a n d i t w o r k e d l i k e m a g i c . I f e e l t h a t&#13;
y o u r m e d i c i n e h a s b e e n o f i n e s t i m a b l e&#13;
b e n e f i t t o m e . " — M i s s A D E L E W I L L I A U , -&#13;
S O N , 196 N . B o u l e v a r d , A t l a n t a , Q a .&#13;
Thin, Sallow and Nervous&#13;
I I D E A R M R S . P I N K H A M I— I w a s t E i a ,&#13;
s a l l o w a n d n e r v o u s . I h a d n o t h a d&#13;
m y m e n s e s f o r o v e r a y e a r a n d a h a l f .&#13;
D o c t o r e d w i t h s e v e r a l p h y s i c i a n s i n&#13;
t o w n a n d o n e s p e c i a l i s t , b u t d i d n o t&#13;
. b e t t e r . — I finally d e c i d e d t o&#13;
G R A I N , ETC.&#13;
Wheat. Core, Oats,&#13;
No, 2 r e i No. 2 mix No. 2 white&#13;
-New York 74&amp;74X 40®4)' 29@2d«4&#13;
Chicago 63&amp;&amp;3% 33@33^ 23&amp;23H&#13;
• D e t r o i t 73&amp;7JT* 3t@34 ?S@28Vi&#13;
Toledo 7l@71'-i £X&amp;3| 23(^23¼&#13;
Cincinnati TJ^73&gt;/, 83@Sl 25^31^&#13;
P i t t s b u r g 75^7.¾¾ 33®36 &amp;X&amp;30*&#13;
Buffalo 7«&amp;?l» VK&amp;33 SSQS9%&#13;
•Detroit—Hay. No. 1 Timothy, 812 03 per ton.&#13;
Potatoes, M)o per bu. Live Poultry, spring&#13;
xshickensr 8c pcp-lb: fowls, 7c: turkey*. 10;&gt;;&#13;
ducks. 9c Egg*, strlotly fresh, 15c par doija,&#13;
Butter, beat dairy, 103 per lb; creamery, 21».&#13;
" g e t a n y . be uicr. A U U O U ^&#13;
t r y y o u r m e d i c i n e , a n d w r o t e t o y o n .&#13;
A f t e r I h a d t a k e n t h r e e b o t t l e s o f&#13;
L y d i a E . P i n k h a n V s ^ V e g e t a b l e C o m -&#13;
p o u n d a n d t h r e e o f l * l 6 o d P u r i f i e r , m y&#13;
m e n s e s r e t u r n e d , a n d I f e e l a s . w e l l&#13;
a n d s t r o n g a s I e v e r did&gt; a n d a m g a i n -&#13;
i n g flesh."—Miss L S N A G A I X E S , V i s a j i a ,&#13;
T u l a r e C o . , C a L&#13;
•MILUONDOLURPOTAT&#13;
Most talked of potato on earth! O&#13;
Catalog tell»*-«o atao about Sal*&#13;
M r l Earliest Sis Weeks' Potato.&#13;
iAiffttt farm and vegetable seed&#13;
trowantn J3&amp; Potato**, tt.20aod&#13;
opabbL Send thia notice and 5c.&#13;
•taaf tor Big OMatog. mm w^mm&#13;
6etyodrTmtRw&#13;
PENSIONS:0 UBLE QUICK WrtteCAPT. O'PARRELL. Pension Agent,&#13;
U 2 J N«w York Avenue. WASHINGTON, D . &amp;&#13;
Vbei Answering sdvertlsemeots KSftfiy&#13;
Mention This faocr.&#13;
P I S C T S C U R E FOR&#13;
WVa WHEN* AVLUSt NULS,,&#13;
k Ooogh Syrup. Taste* QooaV&#13;
tn.thn» BotdardroCTteta.&#13;
C ON :7 UN'. P T I O N&#13;
/&#13;
j.i if u» it T __!&gt;'" ..J&#13;
| U ^ i*H*ii_^&#13;
/&#13;
•rr ••vfMtf'nr&#13;
" * ' ••V"' -. • . " ' . ' : , . - . . • ' ' " • : " / ' / ' • • . • " • " . - . ' • . " • • - ' • ' . • • • ' " - " • ' - . • • • • • ' • • • -j - ' . * ' . * ' • • - . . - • • : • - - • • •&lt;.-&gt;'.•"'. - • " . ^ . ^ - ^ . , . / , ; .y,.,y,»..&#13;
&gt; • : . '&#13;
•*•&#13;
V&#13;
4&#13;
VfHIS&#13;
WORD OF HONOR*&#13;
m A Tale of the Blue and the Gray, /f\&#13;
| | i BYE WQRNER. f\\&#13;
^1 Copyright. 1804, bj* Robert Bonner's Pons.&#13;
CHAPTER X.—(Continued.)&#13;
"I hofte&gt; sir, that ypu are, not venturing&#13;
upon a jest with me, the justice&#13;
of tfce peace! How does it happen&#13;
that you have anything to do with&#13;
such matters? Who is this Roland,&#13;
and what does Mr. Harrison say to&#13;
the affair?';&#13;
"Nothing at all, because for the,&#13;
moment ho is in a very uncomfortable&#13;
situation, which prevents any protest&#13;
But, as to my authority, allow&#13;
me to show jt to you."&#13;
The barrel of a revolver was suddenly&#13;
presented to the old gentleman,&#13;
who,'with a cry of terror, fled to the&#13;
recess of the window, leaving both&#13;
dignity iind .dinner in the lurch. The&#13;
clerk, o;i .thi( contrary, who had listened&#13;
wii;h Mouth wide o^en, sat as if&#13;
paralysed with terror.&#13;
"He »! Murder! shouted&#13;
Mr. Thompson; but terror so stifled&#13;
him t.!i.&gt;t U\2 cry sounded a piteous&#13;
whimper.&#13;
"Don't scream, sir," said Maxwell,&#13;
quietly. "We can como to a friendly&#13;
agreement. As I said, the point in&#13;
question is merely a wedding. The&#13;
bridegroom is my friend, Lieutenant&#13;
William Roland. I have the pleasure&#13;
of presenting myself to you as Doctor&#13;
Jchn Maxwell, both of the Union'&#13;
army, which will arrive here in a few&#13;
hours."&#13;
"The whole Union army?*' exclaimed&#13;
Thompson, with a fresh outburst of&#13;
horror. \&#13;
"No; not the whole, army—therewould&#13;
Rcarcely be room for 'it on the&#13;
plantation—but our regiment. . I told&#13;
you during our drive that the troops&#13;
were mnrching in this direction. But&#13;
we desire, for certain reasons, to have&#13;
the ceremony performed first. The&#13;
bride and r?room are ready, and I hope&#13;
you will b?, too. I place myself at&#13;
your disposal as a, witness, your clerk&#13;
-will be the second Witness, and I suppose&#13;
you brought the marriage contract,&#13;
with you. 'We can use it at&#13;
once."&#13;
"Unprecedented ! Impossible !"&#13;
groaned the justice, who now came&#13;
"forward again. His clerk had recovered&#13;
from his stupor so far as to fly&#13;
soon as the ceremony is over. So, if&#13;
you please—"&#13;
The gentlemen* did net look as if&#13;
t;hey were inclined to follow. They&#13;
left the window with evident reluctance,&#13;
but they did leave.it and, under&#13;
Maxwell's escort, went to the&#13;
drawing-room.&#13;
Here they found William with Florence,&#13;
the latter half-bewildered T3y the&#13;
rapidity with which events had followed&#13;
each other. While waiting in&#13;
terrible anxiety for news, her imagination&#13;
conjuring up the most terrible&#13;
possibilities, Roland suddenly&#13;
stood before her, free and unharmed,&#13;
and in hurried words told her that&#13;
she must be ready to be married- at&#13;
once.&#13;
. He had at last entered -with the utmost&#13;
zeal into Maxwell's bold plan,&#13;
which ha"d "at""firs&gt; seemed "out of the&#13;
question. It was/ really the only way&#13;
to secure his bride and prevent any&#13;
later intrigues of Edward. He had&#13;
an inviolate right to claim his wife.&#13;
Happen what might in Springfield, she&#13;
belonged to him alone. The brief de:&#13;
lay which would be caused by the ceremony&#13;
was really not so dangerous as&#13;
it seemed. Captain Wilson could hardly&#13;
have reached the city, and the escort&#13;
would not arrive before evening.&#13;
The doctors were not expected for&#13;
several hours; and as for the servants,&#13;
Maxwell's judgment of them proved&#13;
correct.&#13;
CHAPTER XT.&#13;
From the moment they discovered&#13;
the identity cf the two strangers all&#13;
hostility was at an end. They .belonged&#13;
to the ranks of the "liberators."&#13;
Besides?, they loved their young&#13;
mistress as much as they feared in&#13;
Edward the stern master. The .last&#13;
few months, during which he had had&#13;
the reins ol government, had shown&#13;
the whole household what was' to be&#13;
expected from the new master. Now&#13;
he had mysteriously vanished. Perhaps&#13;
he might even be dead. But not&#13;
a hand stirred to seek or aid him.&#13;
Besides, practical John, who never&#13;
lost sight of any possibility, had t.iken&#13;
care to prevent danger from* the&#13;
LEAVING BOTH DIGNITY AND DINNER.&#13;
fmm the range of the revolver—He,&#13;
too, took refuge in the window recess,&#13;
where he vied with his employer in&#13;
tvembling.&#13;
"May I request you to let me s.ee&#13;
the document?" asked Maxwell.&#13;
"But it contains the name of Edward&#13;
Harrison," "said the magistrate,&#13;
desperately.&#13;
"We'll, erase I t and put William Roland&#13;
in its place."&#13;
"But that won't do."&#13;
"It must do! I most courteously&#13;
beg you for it."&#13;
A movement of the revolver ga,ve&#13;
this courtesy the necessary emphasis.&#13;
Mr. Thompson tried to hide behind his&#13;
clerk, and the latter, with a trembling&#13;
hand, drew out a paper which he held&#13;
like a shield toward the oppressor.&#13;
"Space for the names has been left,"&#13;
he stammered. "They were to be filled&#13;
in at Springfield."&#13;
"Excellent! Then there is nothing&#13;
n n A i . » J ^ I ^ - - . m —"V*-'&lt;-infcJii-Tmilir: T"-1iWMhlMl* " — — • • ~- — -•.-.=•»-••-•-=-—J**M I T * * - to be erased. Calm yourself; Mr.&#13;
Thompson. I assure •you^that I have&#13;
the highest regard for you, and have&#13;
told_my friend so much about you that&#13;
he, Too, holds you in great esteem.&#13;
Permit me again to apologize for disturbing&#13;
you, but there is nothing t o&#13;
prevent your continuing your meal as&#13;
few white men "who were&#13;
overseers in the fields. He had summoned&#13;
the whole establishment, and&#13;
briefly stated that the Union army was&#13;
marching in that direction; that one&#13;
regiment would arrive that evening&#13;
and hold every human being- in&#13;
Springfield to a strict account-, if a&#13;
hair of his head or Lieutenant Roland's&#13;
was harmed. The composure&#13;
with which ho related this fa fry tale&#13;
made a strong impression, and f the&#13;
rapidity of nil these incidents bewildered&#13;
them. No one ventured to raise&#13;
an objection when Maxwell ordered&#13;
the fastest horses to be harnessed and&#13;
the carriage brought round j - but all&#13;
hastened to obey, while the doctor&#13;
proceeded to exchange the courtesies&#13;
already mentioned with his esteemed&#13;
friend, Mr. Thompson.&#13;
Florence was sitting on a sofa, with&#13;
William standing beside her—both in&#13;
the greatest agitation and excitement&#13;
—when the.gentlemen entered. Doctor&#13;
Maxwell, however,"was calmness&#13;
itself, when he made the necessary introductions.&#13;
"Lieutenant Roland—the bridegroom&#13;
—you already know the, bride, JVIiss&#13;
Harrison. William, I have the/pleasure&#13;
of presenting to you the justics&#13;
of the peace, Mr. Thompson, who, with&#13;
the utmost readiness to oblige, instantly&#13;
consented to gratify your&#13;
wish.;'&#13;
Willi&amp;iri looked at the magistrate,&#13;
whose pale face and shaking knees&#13;
distinctly showed how he had been&#13;
induced to show this vaunted obligingness.&#13;
The affair, which affords&#13;
his friend a malicious satisfaction, was&#13;
extremely painful to him.&#13;
"Calm .yourself, sir," he said, approaching&#13;
him. "You are perfectly&#13;
safe. Neither you nor your companion&#13;
needs fear.' I deeply regret that&#13;
we were forced to put the request in&#13;
such a form, but the circumstances&#13;
compelled it. As soon as the wedding&#13;
is over, you* can return to the city." .&#13;
The old gentleman again breathed&#13;
freely. He had imagined the lieutenant&#13;
a far more terrible personage than&#13;
the doctor, and now he proved to be&#13;
the more humane of the two. But Mr.&#13;
Thompson preferred tp place himself&#13;
close to Miss Hairison as quickly as&#13;
possible. If he stood close by her&#13;
side, no one could fire at him.&#13;
Meanwhile, Maxwell had given the&#13;
marriage contract, which had been&#13;
handed to him. a brief, yet thorough&#13;
scrutiny, and .now .again laid it .on&#13;
the table.&#13;
"Everything is correct!" he said.&#13;
"The names are stil^ missing. Please&#13;
insert them. Mr. William Roland,—&#13;
Miss Florence Harrison! There, now&#13;
we can begin."&#13;
The magistrate had so far recovered&#13;
that he could commence the ceremony,&#13;
which was performed very&#13;
quickly, but in strict-legal form. The&#13;
usual questions were asked and answered,&#13;
the signatures were affixed,&#13;
and in less than ten minutes the wedding&#13;
was over. William, deeply moved,&#13;
clasped his young wife to his&gt;&#13;
heart. *.&#13;
Maxwell glanced 'toward the door,&#13;
where Ralph had appeared during the&#13;
last' moment, but remained standing&#13;
motionless in order not to interrupt&#13;
the ceremony. The doctor exchanged&#13;
a few"'words with him in a low tone,&#13;
then turned to the young couple.&#13;
"Mrs. Roland, please go to your&#13;
father. William, you can accompany&#13;
your wife. There is no fear that your&#13;
presence will disturb the sick man—&#13;
don't leave her alone now!"&#13;
A significant glance emphasized the&#13;
words. William understood that the&#13;
last* moments of Mr. Harrison's Plife&#13;
were at hand, and putting his arm&#13;
around his wife he led her to her&#13;
dying father.&#13;
(To be Continued.)&#13;
TryQrain-O!&#13;
Try Grain=0!&#13;
Ask you Grocer to-day to show you&#13;
a package of GRAIN-0, the new food&#13;
drink that takes tbo placo of coffee.&#13;
The children nwy drink it without&#13;
injury as well as the adult. All who&#13;
try it, like it. ' GEAIN-0 has that&#13;
rich seal brown of Mocha or Java,&#13;
but it is mode from pure grains, and&#13;
the most delicate si/omach receives it&#13;
without distress. | the price of coffee.&#13;
&gt; 15 cents and 25 cents per package.&#13;
\ Sold "by all grocers&#13;
&gt; Tastes like Coffee&#13;
[ Looks like Coffee&#13;
&gt; Insist that yonr grocer cives 70a GBAIN-0&#13;
* Accept no imitation.&#13;
FOR EVERY HOUSEKEEPER. * t&#13;
•&#13;
The Gem Selfheating Flat Iron and StiJv©&#13;
combined is a new invention of great v&amp;\ue.&#13;
to housekeepers. It gives any heat desired;&#13;
is odorless, safe, simple, complete; savea&#13;
time, labor, health, fuel. 3 cents runsime*&#13;
all day. It appeals to everyone, (ofce&#13;
used it is indispensible. AGENTS WJSITBD&#13;
EVERYWHEEE. Anyone can sell it. Art&#13;
investigation will pay you. GEM F t a T&#13;
IRON CO., KALAMAZOO, MICH.&#13;
DROPSY cases. Book of teotfinonla'rt unci 10 DAYS' tret&#13;
FliKfc. DC H. U. UBELN'3 8058. Bex K, I U M U ,&#13;
NEW DISCOVERY; giro&#13;
quick relief and cure* fUfftt&#13;
tuRnt&#13;
How a IIo&lt;&gt;r Sijjns Hi* Name.&#13;
From the London Mail: The Boer&#13;
;may be fairly good at handling a rifle,&#13;
but he is sadly deficient in his ability&#13;
to handle a pen. When the average&#13;
Bosr has to attach his name to a document&#13;
an air of importance pervades his&#13;
dwelling for several hours. The children&#13;
are constantly chided, the patient&#13;
"vro'uw"- lias a preoccupied look and&#13;
the husband himself puffs even more&#13;
vigorously than usual a t his pipe, j&#13;
Eventually a corner, of the table is&#13;
cleared and carefully wiped. The family&#13;
Bible i.s placed in posiiiori and the&#13;
.-beet of papor requiring the signature&#13;
placed upon it 'An expectant silence&#13;
falls upon the company. "Stilte!'*&#13;
cries the wife. "Stilte/ kimletjes, papa&#13;
gaat sein naam teken." ("Hush, children,&#13;
father is about to -sigh his&#13;
uame.") The family stands round openmputhed,&#13;
and all eyes gaze expectantly&#13;
upon the paper,. With arms bared&#13;
for the fray, and with, pen carefully&#13;
poised, the Boer bends to his task. The&#13;
pen is gripped firmly between his&#13;
horny fingers. In thick, ungainly&#13;
scratches, and with slow and painful&#13;
motion, the pen begins to ivork, and&#13;
at the end of, it may be four minutes,&#13;
the deed is accomplished.&#13;
Earth a Pyramid In .Shape.&#13;
Since the earth was first formed&#13;
many theories have been advanced as&#13;
to its shape and the process of its&#13;
formation^ but no one until our day&#13;
ever maintained that its form was that&#13;
rf-a-hugo pyramid.—Centurtes-ttgo--Fy--&#13;
thagoras and Aristotle declared that it&#13;
was spherical. Anaximander that it&#13;
was shaped like a column, Democritu3&#13;
that it was a concave disc and very&#13;
much resembled a huge porringer, Brapedocles&#13;
and Anaximenes that it was a&#13;
plane disk, and Zenofanes that it had&#13;
roots like a tree, which spread in all&#13;
directions far into the infinite. Now&#13;
comes J. Greene, an English scientist.&#13;
and a government official in the Sandwich&#13;
islands, .with the bold announcement&#13;
that all these ancient theories.as&#13;
well as the modern ones, are utterly&#13;
baseless, since, according to him, th.&gt;&#13;
earth has the form of a triangular pyramid,&#13;
or, in other words, of a Tegular&#13;
tetrahedron, with the apex at the south&#13;
pole and the base at the north.&#13;
IIin Favorite Barber.&#13;
Grymes—''Why do you always go to&#13;
that particular barber?" iTi-pr^u-—&#13;
"He is baldasah egg." Grymes—"What&#13;
of that?", Ukerdek—"He cannot advise&#13;
me to use a hair restorer."&#13;
Progress is not blind, and now, more&#13;
4han ever, the evolution of the race&#13;
should be guided by intellifenfr foresight,—&#13;
Rev. 0. D. Smith.&#13;
MILLIONS OF, V.'OMEN USE CUTICURA SOAP exclusively&#13;
for preserving, purifying/and beautifying the skin, for&#13;
cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the&#13;
stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and&#13;
healing red, rough, and sore hands, in the form of baths&#13;
for-ansoying i ^ ^&#13;
too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes,&#13;
for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative antiseptic&#13;
purposes which readily suggest themselves to women, and&#13;
especially mothers, and for all the purposes of the toilet,&#13;
bath, and nursery. No amount of persuasion can induce&#13;
those who have once used it to use any other, especially&#13;
for preserving and purifying the skin, scalp, and hair of&#13;
infants and children. CUTICURA SOAP combines delicate&#13;
emollient properties derived from CUTICURA, the great&#13;
skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients and the&#13;
most refresiling of flower odors. No other medicated or&#13;
toilet'soap ever compounded is to be compared with it&#13;
for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp,&#13;
hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap,&#13;
however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the&#13;
purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combiues&#13;
in 0:*E QOAP at Ore Pmce, rig., TwBifwFivE OEITTS,&#13;
the BEST skin and complexion soap, the BEST toilet and&#13;
BEJST baby soap in the world.&#13;
COMPLETE EXTERNAL AND INTERNAL TREATMENT FOR EVERY HUMOR S I . 2 5 .&#13;
consisting of CCTICUKA SOAF (88C.) , to cleanse the skin of crusts and sesJee and soften lks&gt;&#13;
thickened cuticle, CtmeuRA OixnutxT (80c.), to Instantly allay Itching, InfUwaatton. aad&#13;
Irritation, and soothe, and heal, and Ctmctm* RESOLVENT {floe), to cool and cleanse (to&#13;
»blood. A ftiXdLB SET is often sufficient to cure the most torturlhf, dtsigwing sklnVtealav&#13;
and blood humors, with loss of halK when all else falls. Sold throughout the world. Fa*"&#13;
"" PAoaAh^Ciuv.Cotr^Solerrope^Boetou. "AllaboutSkia,Scalp,AndUaU^tre*.&#13;
-.^&#13;
..a~&#13;
mmm&#13;
Wff&#13;
•J. '..i-.M'&#13;
.-5.&#13;
m&#13;
* •&#13;
( ! " ' •&#13;
^&#13;
trr&#13;
©be f inckutg Jli$patch.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS EDITOR.&#13;
THURSDAY, FEB. 8,1900.&#13;
Coal mining is considered a&#13;
most hazardous employment, but&#13;
for the past season few serious accidents&#13;
have occured. Four fatal&#13;
accidents have been reported, two&#13;
of which were the result of carelessness&#13;
on the part of those&#13;
killed. _&#13;
It has been demonstrated repeatedly&#13;
in every state in the Union and in&#13;
many foreign jcoautries tbat Chamberlain's&#13;
Cough Remedy is a certaln^preventive&#13;
and cure for croup. It has&#13;
become the universal remedy ior that&#13;
disease. M. V. Fisher, of Liberty, W.&#13;
Va., only repeats what has been said&#13;
around the globe when -he writes: "I&#13;
have used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy&#13;
in my family for several years&#13;
and always with perfect success. We&#13;
believe thaj; ft is not only the lest&#13;
cough remedy, but that it is a sure&#13;
cure tor croup? It has saved the lives&#13;
of our uhildren a number of times."&#13;
This remedy is for sal£ by F. A. Sigler,&#13;
Druggist.&#13;
Beets and sugar the two sources&#13;
of sugar today. The out put for&#13;
1899 was for cane sugar, 2,856,000&#13;
tons, for beet sugar 5,480,000 tons.&#13;
F. A. Sigler guarantee? every bottle&#13;
ot Charaberlins Cough Remedy and&#13;
will refund the money to any one who&#13;
is no;t satsified after using two thirds&#13;
of the contents. This is the best remedy&#13;
in the world for la grippe, coughs,&#13;
colds, croop and whooping cough and&#13;
is pleasant and safe to take. It prevents&#13;
any tendency of a cold to result&#13;
in pneumonia. t mar.-I&#13;
The discovery of eminence beds&#13;
of coal under a large section of&#13;
the State has opened up a business,&#13;
magnificent in proportion&#13;
and far-reaching in "its importance'&#13;
i t has placed Michigan in rank&#13;
with other states in the production&#13;
of the best article of a coal to&#13;
be used for heat and steam purposes,&#13;
tbe developement of which&#13;
but few are acquainted.&#13;
An Editor'* LifeSaVeM by ^gtaambe r»&#13;
.lain'* Cou^h Itemedy\&#13;
During the early part of October,&#13;
1896, I contracted a bad cold, which&#13;
settled on my lungs^ncT~waT neglect•&#13;
ed until I feared that consumption&#13;
had appeared in an incipient state. I&#13;
was constantly coughing ,and trying&#13;
to expel something which I &lt;tould not.&#13;
I became alarmed and after giving&#13;
the local doctors a trial bought a bottle&#13;
of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy&#13;
and the result was immediate improvement,&#13;
and after I lad used three&#13;
bottles my lungs were restored- to&#13;
their healthy state.—B. S, Edwards,&#13;
Publisher of* The Review, Wyat, 111.&#13;
For sale by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
The February issue of Conkey's&#13;
Home Journal inaugurates a new&#13;
era. This handsome magazine,&#13;
which has been sueh a welcome&#13;
visitor in^Targe~numHer ofhomes&#13;
will, in the future, be a much&#13;
more popular family magazine&#13;
than ever before. A number of&#13;
changes and improvements have&#13;
been made. Short stories by&#13;
well known authors win take the&#13;
place of some of the special departments.&#13;
Sample copies of this&#13;
handsome magazine will be* mailed&#13;
free on request. Address W.&#13;
B. Conkey Co., Chic'ago. We&#13;
have made a special arrangement&#13;
whereby we can offer Conkey's&#13;
Home Journal in combination with&#13;
T H E DISPATCH both papers for&#13;
one year for only $1.25. Send&#13;
your subscription to this office.&#13;
F think I will go craay with pain&#13;
were it not for Chamberlain's Fain&#13;
Balm," writes MrMV. H, Staple tori;&#13;
Herminie, Pa. "i have been afflicted&#13;
with rheumatism for several years and&#13;
have tried remedies without number.&#13;
but Pain Balm is the best medicine I&#13;
have got hold of." One application&#13;
relieves the pain. For sale by F. A.&#13;
Sigler, Druggist. /&#13;
STAT? FARMERS' INSTITUTE&#13;
Couiiiiued Fiona Pttfre One.&#13;
is^the best and most practical.&#13;
(He then showed a model rack).&#13;
The coarse hay left by the sheep&#13;
in these racks is taken and fed to&#13;
horses, colts, etc. aud not a spear&#13;
is wasted. *.&#13;
The next was "Citizenship,"&#13;
by S. M. Yerkes. The home is&#13;
the foundation of our government&#13;
and we should keep them&#13;
dear. Every since the time this&#13;
government was instituted -the&#13;
subject or taxation and representation&#13;
has been upermost. . The&#13;
use of the ballot is not only aprivilage&#13;
but a duty. The true life of&#13;
a«y political party lies in its primaries.&#13;
We would not let a&#13;
man on the farm go to work&#13;
without some instruction neither&#13;
should we let men be put up for&#13;
office until we know where they&#13;
stand upon the affairs that effects&#13;
us. Farmers, attend the primaries.&#13;
Discussion, C. D. Smith. The&#13;
chief danger lies in the cities. The&#13;
greater trouble is a good mauy of&#13;
our citizens are not well born. A&#13;
man should vote as his own conscience&#13;
dictates and not as his&#13;
party dictates.&#13;
Mrs. Smith, 1 believe it possible&#13;
to do away with political parties.&#13;
This is not a dark period. I believe&#13;
we are just oil the verge of a&#13;
golden age.&#13;
FRIDAY AFTERNOON SEJS8ION.&#13;
The meeting was called to order&#13;
promptly ou time by president&#13;
Crandall and the ushers collected&#13;
the questions for the quizzing&#13;
boxL Then followed a song by&#13;
the Stanley Quartette.&#13;
Question? Should the products&#13;
of the islands just added to the&#13;
U. S. be admitted free of duty.&#13;
Prof. C. D. Smith said^e did not&#13;
believe they should. If we are to&#13;
to keep on raising sugar we must&#13;
not admit tho prodnrts of Cuba&#13;
or Porto Rice as that is their&#13;
main products.&#13;
You say that much depends on&#13;
clover. How are we to get clover&#13;
to grow. Mr. Oviatt:—-We must&#13;
bring our land up to a point&#13;
where it will grow it by fertilizers&#13;
manures, etc.&#13;
"The General Purpose Cow"&#13;
by Prof. C. D. Smith of the&#13;
Agricultural College. First do&#13;
we ask, "How many are there&#13;
who keep three cows or more."&#13;
A vote showed that there were 52&#13;
farmers present who did so. Never&#13;
saw so many in any institute before&#13;
said Mr. Smith, and I like to&#13;
talk to people interested in the&#13;
subject. I shall talk of only what&#13;
has been put in practice by myself&#13;
and as long as I am superintendentPof&#13;
the State Institutes I&#13;
shall never, send a man out to&#13;
talk on any subject who does not&#13;
practice what he preaches. I&#13;
whose calves will make a good&#13;
amount of beef and still the cow&#13;
give a good amount of milk, i&#13;
know of no class of cattle who&#13;
will give so much milk and produce&#13;
as much beef as the Short&#13;
Horn.&#13;
Should I use a general purpose&#13;
olover we did not need the silo,&#13;
but when we cannot raise that we&#13;
must have silo*. Raise all the&#13;
feed you possil&gt; y can at home, but&#13;
it is impossible to do this entirely.&#13;
We used to buy bran but that is&#13;
too high at present. Last year I&#13;
experimented with sunflowers,&#13;
A Card.&#13;
We, the undersigned, do hereby&#13;
agree to refund the money on a Accent&#13;
bottle of Green's Warren ted&#13;
Syrup of Tar if it fails to cure your&#13;
cough or cold. We also guarantee a&#13;
25-cent bottle to prove satisfactory or&#13;
money refunded. t-80&#13;
Will B.Darrow.&#13;
cow? No, not if you are going to raising them among the corn and&#13;
furnish milk to the coudensery— cutting them with the enailage.&#13;
I should raise a milk producer. If i They are all used up but I cannot&#13;
"7&#13;
I am gotng to raise beef, then the&#13;
beef animal. &gt;&#13;
Hupert Wells—The general&#13;
purpose cow is, I think, the cow&#13;
for about three-fourths of the&#13;
farmers of this county.&#13;
Mr. Dunston—Have fed steers&#13;
and found that the grade Holstein&#13;
stood side by side with the grade&#13;
Short Horn.&#13;
Mr. Gilks—We have used the&#13;
Holstein beef and found it the&#13;
best we ever had. The trouble&#13;
with butchers is, that the beef&#13;
does not cut for their profit as well.&#13;
Frank Hacker—Will Mr. Smith&#13;
tell us how to select a general purpose&#13;
cow.—She should h a \ e a&#13;
good udder, a good back, heavy—&#13;
not fat hip. The general purpose&#13;
cow has a limited sphere.&#13;
This was followed by music by&#13;
by the Staley Quartett.&#13;
"The Fattening of Pigs and&#13;
Lambs," L. W. Oviatt. These&#13;
questions are rather oddly put together,&#13;
so we will drop the first&#13;
part of the question and take the&#13;
latter part. The real queston is&#13;
tell whether they were o* benefit&#13;
or not,. Silage is a feed of itself&#13;
without no supplement. I do not&#13;
believe that any root crop can&#13;
compare with silage. I n regard&#13;
to building would say that I have&#13;
seen very few dairy barns that&#13;
met my notion. I believe that a&#13;
basement barn, with good ventilation&#13;
is the best in which to keep&#13;
cows, as they must be kept warm.&#13;
The b&amp;riLshould be kept clean,&#13;
and I use a track which carries a&#13;
car through the barn and dumps&#13;
into a wagon which is immediately&#13;
taken to the field, thus leaving&#13;
the yard clean; this I think is essential.&#13;
Do not think that any amount&#13;
or kind of feed will make a difference&#13;
in the quality of niilft Toil&#13;
may increase the amount b u t / n o t&#13;
the richness. *&#13;
FRIDAY EVENING SESSION.&#13;
The evening program opened&#13;
with a sole by Emil/fSode.&#13;
Mrs. Emma Campbell, of Ypsilauti,&#13;
"A Balance Ration for&#13;
Men." You have been discussing&#13;
to produce the lambs and raise how to feed all -kinds of animals&#13;
them. I believe that there is&#13;
enough lambs lost to pay for the&#13;
investment to care for them, A&#13;
chilled lamb should be placed in&#13;
warm water. I make a'-mother&#13;
own any lamb by rack and stantioris.&#13;
Showed model.&#13;
Sore eyes—who have not had&#13;
trouble with that. We found that&#13;
to make them the best possible. I&#13;
ask, how shall we feed our children&#13;
to make them develope into&#13;
well formed and balanced men and&#13;
women. It is a well established&#13;
fact, that the food does make a&#13;
great deal of difference in a man.&#13;
No man can do his best on a onesided&#13;
diet. If we believe all of&#13;
the under lid turned under is the : what the scientists tell us, we shall&#13;
main, and I think the only cause, (find that everything but hot water&#13;
and remedy is eas"y—3urn back. contains microbes or disease. Let&#13;
Now we suppose that we have . us keep our homes sanitary and&#13;
lambs in a healthy condition. We J forget these. By getting the bulgive&#13;
our lambs a choice of grain i letins from the agricultural coland&#13;
you would be surprised how 1 lege, which can be had for t h e&#13;
soon they will begin to take to' asking, will inform the housegrain.&#13;
I get part of my lambs wise as to what each food contains&#13;
ready for market by Easter aud ; that is nutritious. Much of the&#13;
get a good price—last year as high indigestion of today is caused by&#13;
aa 20 cents per pound. jtoo much faultfinding at the din-&#13;
I never saw a lamb that would |ner table. Two-thirds of the wage&#13;
get too fat to do well. You can ^ earners money goes for someThmg&#13;
over-feed a pig but not a lamb,&#13;
we keep our lambs right on growing&#13;
until they are ready for market.&#13;
Would make my early lambs&#13;
weigh about 3Ufib by easter, and&#13;
Sealed Bids.&#13;
We the undersigned Superintendents of&#13;
the poor in and for LWingstob County&#13;
Mieh., will reeeiye Sanlett bids and&#13;
application for Keeper of (he Livingston&#13;
County poor farm up to February 15th&#13;
1900, said bids and applications shall state&#13;
wages wanted including board for one&#13;
year. Age of man and wife and number&#13;
in family properly signed by applicant and&#13;
residence.&#13;
The said superintendents reserve %he&#13;
right to reject any or all bids.&#13;
All applications to be Addressed to&#13;
Amos Winegar Secretary, Howell, Mich.&#13;
Dated January 22, 1900.&#13;
Henry Dammann ) Supti^&#13;
E. A. Kuhn \ of the&#13;
9 Amos Winegar J Poor.&#13;
J. G.SAYLES&#13;
Plainfield, Mich.&#13;
Funeral&#13;
Director&#13;
and&#13;
Esmbalmer.&#13;
R e s i d e n c e I m i l e north of v i l l a g e .&#13;
S t a t e T e l e p h o n e C o n n e c t i o n .&#13;
All c a l l s p r o m p t l y a n s w e r e d .&#13;
fif TOUR ACRES JNCORHS&#13;
May be nicely cured by using&#13;
EUREKA CORN CURL&#13;
It cures the Toe Corn sure.&#13;
I t cures hard or soft Corns.&#13;
I t cures any Bunions.&#13;
It cures all Callous Places.&#13;
And without pain or inconvenience.&#13;
[Pi ice Only 10 Cents.&#13;
B y R e t u r n M a l l .&#13;
Agents wanted—write for terms.&#13;
Address, EUREKA SUPPLY HOUSE,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
to eat. This was followed by a&#13;
solo by F. L. Andrews.&#13;
Dx. Henry_Baker, of Lansing,&#13;
was the next, on "The Diseases&#13;
that Causes most Deaths in Michigan"&#13;
and these are communicable&#13;
only about a month old. Highly | diseases. The method of educarecommended&#13;
ensilage and goo4 ! t i o n a g a i n g t t i h e s p r e a d o f d i g e a s e&#13;
feed. ! is to issue leaflets, and when adis-&#13;
Clark Keed thought that lambs | ease breaks out anywhere in the&#13;
and lamb raising was the most • state, the local health officers sends&#13;
profitable of anything we could j notice to the state health officers&#13;
raise on a'form. i who immediately send to the lo-&#13;
Bemarks by Frank Crandal— cal offiicers these leaflets, who cir-&#13;
I was in .the vicinity of Vernon culate them in the neighborhood,&#13;
shall visit his; farm andr ftnd: out- if r ^ s t season-and found that, as Mr* j when they will be read, as pes]&#13;
he is practical before I send him&#13;
out. \&#13;
We keep cows lor four important&#13;
products; milkjxcalves, manure&#13;
and carcas. Out 6f these four I i n t b a t business. Some also kept&#13;
prodncts we must maki? the cost of | fows w i t n t l i e lambs and thought&#13;
the cow the cost of ihe calves, Iifc m a d e n o difference with the&#13;
Reed said, it was a great place for j are then interested in the matter,&#13;
sheep and lambs. They were not i Since this plan has been in operaconfined&#13;
to small farms, but those I tion the death rate has been less&#13;
of 40 and 80 acres were doing well \ *ll«} 4 *? c a s e s Rf scarlet fever and&#13;
4-5 less in small-pox. The txal-kn -&#13;
their feed and interest \ o n the&#13;
money invested. \&#13;
What kind of a cow sha^ we&#13;
raise. The answer depends u^pon&#13;
which one of the products you are&#13;
going to make prominent. First,&#13;
let us suppose that the man wants&#13;
to raise milk in this case we&#13;
would advise the Holstein. If&#13;
butter is wanted, raise the Jersy.&#13;
Aiiulhm H»1 uf la i me is want beef&#13;
—they do not like to milk—make&#13;
a couple of calves do that and they&#13;
should' raise- the Short Horn, Pole&#13;
Angus and Herford.&#13;
The introduction of all these&#13;
breeds' have done a world of good.&#13;
The general purpose cow is onej&#13;
no&#13;
number kept.&#13;
R. R. Smith—I believe that&#13;
with proper care the sheep is the&#13;
best paying thing we can raise on&#13;
the farm.&#13;
Solo, by G. B. Hosley. ^&#13;
"Improved Dairying," by Frank&#13;
Hacker was the next on the progaam.&#13;
Some may think this subject&#13;
has been talked out.&#13;
The flrsi; thing is to get the cow,&#13;
and the man mnst have an eye for&#13;
the cow he wants or he may be&#13;
left; thinks that if. a man buys two&#13;
good cows ont of twenty he does&#13;
well Now the feeding for m i l t&#13;
Continnen on Next Pave.&#13;
There is no better medicine tor the&#13;
babies than Chamberlain's Cough&#13;
Remedy. Its pleasant taste * and&#13;
prompt and effectual cures make it a&#13;
favorite with mothers and small children.&#13;
It quickly cure3 their coughs&#13;
and colds, preventing pneumonia or&#13;
other serious consequences. It'also&#13;
cures croup and.has been used in tens&#13;
of thousands of cases without a single&#13;
failure so far as we have been able to&#13;
learn. It not only cures croup, but&#13;
[when givaw aa a*™ ao »Ka »&gt;/Mipy&#13;
or beef-^-I believe strongly in&#13;
cough appears, will prevfent the attack.&#13;
, In cases of whooping cough it&#13;
liquefies the toagh mncas, making it&#13;
easier to expectorate, and lessens the&#13;
severity and frequncy of the paroxyama&#13;
of Mpghinp, thai depriving that&#13;
disease of all dangerous consequences.&#13;
silos. As long m W fould' raisr For sale by P. A, Sigler, DruggUt.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
tfrand Tr^BlTBallwaTsyilemr^&#13;
Time Table In effect, NOT. », 1899.&#13;
M, A. L. DIVISION-WESTBOUND.&#13;
No ,27 Passenger. Pontiac'to Jackson&#13;
connection from Detroit 0 44 a a&#13;
^a«9oZ. ?29£ hma?s ®thr^o1upg0ht tctol»acch * tor ofmae kDaeotnr,o it6 t:o45 J pax. moa ,&#13;
No. 43 Mixed, Lenox to Jcckion&#13;
connection from Detroit 445 p m&#13;
EASThOUND&#13;
No. 30 Passenger to Pontiac and Detroit 5 15pm&#13;
N-M28&#13;
&lt;&#13;
p,ii?snn.Fer'Jaxon t o Detroit, 9:J8 a. m. Jto»g»n«#4firoftgh coach fronrJaxonw Detroit ~&#13;
No. 44 Mixed to Pontiac and Lenox 7 56 ft m&#13;
All trains dally except Sunday.&#13;
No 44 connection at Pontiac for Detroit and&#13;
for the wast on D A M B S&#13;
W. J. BlMk. Ajrent, Pinckney&#13;
fymtum&#13;
AND 8TCAM8HIP *J/Vff«t&#13;
Popular route tor Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South; and for&#13;
Howell, Owosso, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
XftADt M A R K S&#13;
Anfone •ending* «keteh and description IMT Stlon•neoanwittlyrol toavta ivoUeo rpotnraoflnlbd aeobnnltyri M poap. tienHnioatannbd mlbeo.e o kCw oonmb emPtanbtneelroaaaf*ti tent free. Oldest agenoy for •eeurtngjMtenta,&#13;
tpPeeaitaeln ntso ttiackee*n wtibthrooouath c hMarogaen, i n4 tThoe. reotfr* Scientific Anttkm eAo lhaatinodns oouf ealyn yU srootsetnvtattffldo —-•{ fov nontta, ftrSi&#13;
ssysuwi&#13;
x&#13;
K&#13;
*&#13;
A&#13;
* *&#13;
( • —&#13;
Mhi^^m^Mt^ti^kt^M^t^&#13;
, . ; H »;-• v . * ;• ,r- / &gt;:;•&#13;
&amp; ' , r&#13;
/ • ' • • —&#13;
• " T&#13;
;&#13;
r&#13;
1 _-&#13;
Facta to Bemember.&#13;
The original and gepuine Bed Pills&#13;
are Knill's Bed Pills for Wan people&#13;
at 26c box, the woraon's remedy.&#13;
Don't pay 50 cents.&#13;
I o n e&amp;n work when they work,&#13;
never gripe or make yon sick, Knill's&#13;
White Liver Pills. Bowel HeuaUtor.&#13;
.Twenty-five closes, 25 cents.&#13;
Pleasant, safe and snre are Kni'lv&#13;
Black Diarrhoea Pills. Cures summer&#13;
complaints, dysentery and all pains of&#13;
the stomach and bowels. Only 25&#13;
cents box.&#13;
Knill's Blue Kidney Pill cure backache,&#13;
etc. Only 25 cents box.&#13;
Pure, sweet stomachs and breaths&#13;
are made by taking Knill's Dyspepsia&#13;
Tablets. They will cure indigestion,&#13;
correct all stomach troubles, destroys&#13;
all foul gases for 25c box. Best and&#13;
cheapest. Guarrantaed by your dru#-&#13;
gest,————WilLCurlett, Dexter,&#13;
W. B. Darrow, Pinckney.&#13;
TRADE MABK.&#13;
MESTQRATIVE.&#13;
Bar-Ben Is the greatest known&#13;
nerve tonic and blood purifier.&#13;
II creates solid flesh, muscle and STRENGTH,&#13;
clears the brain, makes the blood pure and rich,&#13;
and causes a general feeling of health, power&#13;
and renewed vitality, while the generative organs&#13;
are helped, to,regain their normal powers, and&#13;
the sufferer is quickly made conscious of direct&#13;
benefit. One box will work wonders, six should&#13;
perfect a cure. 60 cts. A BOX; 6 boxes, $2.50. For&#13;
sale by druggists everywhere, or mailed, sealed,&#13;
o n receipt of price. Address DRS. BAKTON&#13;
AND BENSON, BawBen Block, Cleveland. 0&#13;
F o r sale by&#13;
F. A. S I G L E R , Druggist&#13;
Pinckney, - - M i c h —&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL, DETROIT&#13;
AMERICAN AMD EUROPEAN PLAN,&#13;
• 2 TCVS&gt;3.80 91.00 TO ma.OO \&#13;
Siltoum MMALS. C O O . UP T O OATM QAFMB&#13;
hnjT- ANTKi&gt;~&lt;&gt;i; V U&amp;AJL BttlUlJI&#13;
A N D H O N B S T P O T T O t, represent&#13;
v s ns Managers in this a n d sioeo by coun*&#13;
tieo. Salery 1 9 0 9 a f e a r and x p e n c e s ,&#13;
fctrait. bono-fi&lt;!e, tte M O W , n o leas. l*orl«&#13;
t i o n permanent. 0 « r references, .: if&#13;
b a n k in any town, t t b m i n l r offii*&#13;
iwork oood noted at hease. R e f e r e n c e . K11-&#13;
• i o e e e e i i . ^ dressed steraped e m i o p e . T H J S&#13;
D o a m r r o x &lt;%rn*rAjrt. f h r r r . S, O H T C A O O .&#13;
A $4.00 BOOK FOR 75ct5.&#13;
The Farmers' Encyclopedia.&#13;
E v e r y t h i n g ptrtainittf&#13;
to t h e affairs&#13;
of the f a n a .&#13;
h o u s e h o l d and&#13;
stock raising. Em-&#13;
1 articles on c l o i t ^&#13;
STATE FARMERS'INSTITUTE&#13;
was an excellent one, and was given&#13;
with an idea to get the people&#13;
to co-operate with the state t o&#13;
stamp out diseaee in their communities.&#13;
' T h e evening session&#13;
closed with music by the Aerian&#13;
Glee club.&#13;
SATUBDAY MORNING SESSION.&#13;
T h e morning session was opened&#13;
with a solo b y Mrs, Anson&#13;
Stowe, and.prayer by A. M.Wells.&#13;
T h e first subject taken u p was&#13;
"Fertilizers and Manures" by CaL&#13;
Hussleman, of I n d . I have never&#13;
been a student iii an agricultural&#13;
college—I have worked out what&#13;
little I know by experience. I live&#13;
on the same farm on which I was&#13;
born, which h a s been under tillage&#13;
since 1845. Our system was&#13;
in those days—like it is in most&#13;
sections now—to raise a crop and&#13;
sell it off the farm as soon as possible&#13;
which had the effect of depleting&#13;
the land as it does today.&#13;
I n 1870 the farm was much run&#13;
down and I decided that I must&#13;
change the system of agriculture&#13;
entirely and try to bring the farm,&#13;
back to its first fertility. I am not&#13;
going to talk of commercial fertilizer&#13;
as I do&lt;not believe that any&#13;
farm in Michigan or Indiana can&#13;
afford to buy such and use it. I&#13;
never used any only as an experiment,&#13;
and then found thaT i t did&#13;
not pay. We must, today, know&#13;
what kind of chemicals are required&#13;
by different plants. We supply&#13;
potash by using wood ashes about&#13;
80 bushels to the acre and find it&#13;
pays on muck soil. I t also pays t o&#13;
use wood asheo once in two years&#13;
on our orchards, as apples and&#13;
fruit need much potash. Besides&#13;
the above, I apply all of the stable&#13;
maeure I can get We make our&#13;
timothy, meadows pay well by top&#13;
dressing once in two years with&#13;
stable manure.&#13;
We now rotate crops as follows:&#13;
clover, wheat, then corn, anH t r y&#13;
and use u p all,the forage on t h e&#13;
farm for feed, and use the manure&#13;
derived therefrom to top-dress on&#13;
clover or timothy. Do not believe&#13;
manure should b e plowed under&#13;
until after serving as top-dressing&#13;
—thus we get its use twice.&#13;
Some one says that they have&#13;
land that will not grow, clover;&#13;
now how can we make that land&#13;
We plow and fit the l a n d&#13;
you can raise clover. T h e land&#13;
must be brought u p by vegetable&#13;
matter. I never use land plaster&#13;
only in our stables. Never use&#13;
air-slacked lime in a stable a s i t&#13;
releases the amonia and is/ injurous.&#13;
If you cannot possibly grow&#13;
clover for green manure, raise&#13;
L. D. Brokaw and E. D. Sargent&#13;
of Howell have purchased the furniture&#13;
of W. W. Knapp of that place.&#13;
F. L. Andrews was in Flint the&#13;
first of the week attending the fifth&#13;
annual meeting of the Loyal Guards.&#13;
Lynford Whited, wife and daughter&#13;
have been spending a few weeks with&#13;
cow-peas in May and £low them5Clarence Carpenter and family of&#13;
braces&#13;
the horse, the colt,&#13;
» i £ ^ 1 ½ ^ and sow it in May; I n J u n e we&#13;
eases of the horse, J '&#13;
£?M£O£:.£!££!* r m i o v e r t n e l 8 n d with a mower&#13;
fruit cultureraairy. ,-'&#13;
ing.pookery.heaith, a n ( j \e^ w e e d s and clover lay u p o n&#13;
cattle, sheep,swine,&#13;
a ^ . ^ i i e ^ i o c ^ ^ l e ground as a mulch. The sec-&#13;
« K f f most cSm* o u d y e a r d i d t h e s a m e t h i n g ' a n d&#13;
^10¾¾¾ t u e t h i r d y e a r a^arge crop of ciovx&#13;
^ ^ n c h e e f * ^ e r ^ ^ t n e r e s u ^ which we plowed&#13;
ESS, 'bSund^S u n d e r ; t n i a brought u p the land&#13;
under and then ycu can raise clover.&#13;
For forage they are no good as&#13;
nothing likes them; plow them&#13;
under in September. O u r seed&#13;
costs us about 80 cents a b u s h e l -&#13;
we buy nothing b u t a common&#13;
cow-pea. Crimson clover is tbe&#13;
thing to raise. We sow crimson&#13;
clover in J u l y in our corn, putting&#13;
it in about one inch deep. We&#13;
buy our seed from a firm in Dover,&#13;
Del. The audience then listened&#13;
to a recitation by Miss Florence&#13;
Allison, " W h e n Papa's Sick."&#13;
"The Hygiene of the Stable," by&#13;
Dr. G. W. Waterman, of Lansing,&#13;
was the next on t h e program.&#13;
Sunlight is, one of . the essentials&#13;
for a hygiene stable: You should&#13;
let lots of sunlight into the bdrn,&#13;
do not let the horse out to secure&#13;
sunlight, give in to them in t h e&#13;
stable. Sunlight will destroy all&#13;
germs. Ventilation is also o n e&#13;
of the necessities. I think a feed&#13;
sboot is a good ventillation if well&#13;
arranged. F r e s h a i r should b e&#13;
gotten into the stable as well a s&#13;
foul air takeu out. This can be&#13;
done with windows on a tube leading&#13;
through the stable with openings&#13;
on t o p so a s to avoid a&#13;
draught. Do not let the wind blow&#13;
upon the animals, this is not ventilation.&#13;
As Mr. Waterman was&#13;
to talk in the afternoon' h e made&#13;
this talk s h o r t&#13;
Fred Eichter then read a pp.per&#13;
on "Trusts," which was good, but&#13;
as this question has been discussed&#13;
in our paper many times we&#13;
only bring out a few of t h e facts&#13;
shown. There are 350 of these&#13;
blood-sucking vampires today and&#13;
among the worst are the American&#13;
Tin Plate Co., the American Steel.&#13;
&amp; Wire Co., the American Sugar&#13;
Refining Co. and the Standard&#13;
Oil Co. One of the reasons why&#13;
farmers cannot form a trust is&#13;
that their occupation is too diversified.&#13;
As it was dinner time, n o o n e&#13;
cared to discuss the subject and&#13;
an adjournment was taken.&#13;
C o n c l u d e d N e x t W e e k .&#13;
North Hamburg.&#13;
Now an electric road is to be built&#13;
from Ann Arbor via Whitmore Lake,&#13;
Hamburg. Howell and Lansing. That&#13;
is, it is built in the minds of some projector.&#13;
Over in Washtenaw county a movement&#13;
is on foot to come up to the&#13;
next republican county convention&#13;
with a farmers ticket for all county&#13;
officers.&#13;
Andy Bates and wife are now living&#13;
in what was known as the Hodgeman&#13;
bouse east of' town. He will work&#13;
for A. Mclntyre the coming season.&#13;
The remains of a Mrs. Barnes of Detroit-&#13;
were brought to tuts-place for&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
We tbe .nnaersigned, do hereby&#13;
agree to refund the money on a 50&#13;
cent bottle of Down's Elixir if it does&#13;
not care any cough, cold, whooping&#13;
cough, or throat trouble. We also&#13;
guarantee Down's Elixir to cure consumption,&#13;
when used according to directions,&#13;
or money back. A full dose&#13;
on going to bed and small {doses during&#13;
the day will cure the most severe&#13;
cold, and stop the most • distressing&#13;
cough.&#13;
Subscribe for Dispatch.&#13;
POBUSHSD KVKRT THUBSDAY KOKNINe BT&#13;
FRANK. L ANDREWS&#13;
Editor and 2*ropri*tor.&#13;
Subscription Price $1 in Advance.&#13;
Watered at tue Poetotllce at Pinckney, Michigan,&#13;
as secomi-claas matter.&#13;
Advertising ratea made known on application.&#13;
Basinesa Cards, $4.00 per ye.sr. •&#13;
r&lt;eath and marriage notices published free.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may be paid&#13;
ToTrnroesTfea, By pre sent tng the otftce. with ticlf'&#13;
h n r i a l laaf T h u r s d a y T h « t'nnpra M e t f l oi admission. In case ticseta are not brought&#13;
ounai last inursaay. ine iunerai| to t Q e o £ j i c e | X e g l l U r r a t &lt; J 8 W i U l j e c l x a r j ? e d &gt;&#13;
was held from St. Mary's church. She&#13;
was formerly Miss AJame Gibney of&#13;
Qnadilla.&#13;
Well, the ground hog saw his&#13;
shadow Keb. 2.,and we will have to&#13;
abide the consequences. Six more&#13;
weeks lik3 the past one, you have&#13;
promised us wood, bring it for we&#13;
shall need it.&#13;
Q U E S T I O N A N S W E R E D .&#13;
Y e s , August Flower still has the largest&#13;
sale of any m e d i c i n e in the civilized world.&#13;
Y o u r mothers and grandmothers never&#13;
thought of using anything else for IriHigestion&#13;
or Biliousness. t)octor6 were scarce,&#13;
and they seldom herd of Appedicitn?p~Xervous&#13;
Prostration or H e a r t failure, e t c .&#13;
T h e y used A u g u s t Flower to clean out t h e&#13;
system and stop fermentation of undigested&#13;
food, regulate the action of the liver, stimulate&#13;
the nervous and organic action of the&#13;
'system, and that is all'-they took when feeli&#13;
n g dull and bad with headaches and other&#13;
a c h e s . Y o u only need a f e w doses of&#13;
G r e e n ' s August Flower, in liquid form, to&#13;
m a k e you satisfied there is nothing serious&#13;
the m.itter with y o u . Sample bottle at&#13;
F . A . Sjgler's.&#13;
' • ' e&gt; m&#13;
Business Locals.&#13;
• All matter in local notice oolamn will be charted&#13;
at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for eacn&#13;
insertion. Where no t i m e is specified, all notices&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
• i l l be charged for accordingly. iJT"All changes&#13;
of advertisements MUST reach this otflce as early&#13;
as T U E S D A Y morning to insure an insertion t h e&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOS -pnixiixGr&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We have ail kinds&#13;
and the latest styles of Type, etc., which enables&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
o'v as yood work can be a o n e .&#13;
«.r.L BILLS P4.r\aLB K t m r o ? avBay MOMTU.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PasstrjsvT . ..—. M Alex. Mclntyre&#13;
TitusTEKs 1^. L. ruompsou, Alfred AIOUKS,&#13;
Daniel iticharda, ieo. Bowuna, Samuel&#13;
Sykes, F. D. Johnson. - ^&#13;
Cuuut.«r"fT5;:.-i-;.,.«-. R, H. Teeple&#13;
THBASCTBEB „ . . W . E. Miirphy&#13;
A^SESSOK •— W, A. Carr&#13;
STREET CoMJitssioHsa J, -Monks.&#13;
MAHSAUL A.. E, Brown.&#13;
HKALTHOPCJCBR... ,.Dr.H. r*. Si«ler&#13;
ATTOH-NKV ....MM W.vA. C a n&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
IVan,- Fine Middlings, Coarse Middlings,&#13;
Fiaked _iliddliti^s and Corn,&#13;
t 7 T. READ.&#13;
To Rent&#13;
My house, barn and garden spot at&#13;
Ohubbs Corners; I also have a brood&#13;
mare for sale. MRS rf. ELLIOTT.&#13;
VyTETtfODlST EPISCOPAL CdURCH.&#13;
iVi. ' Rev. Chas. cSimpaonT pastor. aervi;ja&gt;very&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:3&lt;', and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer uAjetlutf Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday scho-u at close of mornin-&#13;
service. LB-AJ*.Siut-fcii, Supt.&#13;
CON'lirtEGAflONAL C1IUKCH.&#13;
Rev. U. W. Rice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Pra'-errmeetinir Thurs&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
service. R. II. Teeple , S,u&gt;t. KJ-JS Head, Sec&#13;
ST. MARK'S CATHOLIC CHURCH.&#13;
Uev. M. J. Commerford. Pastor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7L3UO clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9;loa. m. Catechism&#13;
at i :00 p. in., vespersandbenediction at 7:'i0 p . m ,&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
Dr. Cady's Condition Powders are&#13;
just what a horse needs when in bad&#13;
condition, Tonic, blood purifier and&#13;
verinituge. They are not food but&#13;
medicine and the best.in use to put a&#13;
horse in prime condition. Price 25c&#13;
per package. For sale by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
Mouey to Loan.&#13;
Having accepted an agency for&#13;
loaning money, I atn prepared to 1 P.fI^&#13;
make loans on Real Estate, at a low&#13;
rate ot interest. Inquire at the Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank. tf&#13;
The A. O. H. Societv of this place, meets e v e r y&#13;
third Susi'Uv in trie Kr. Mitthew Hall.&#13;
John Tuom^y and Mikj Kelly, C)4uty Oilegites&#13;
EPWORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
evening at &amp;M oclock in the M. K. Cnurch. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyone, eapo-^-&#13;
oially young people. Mrs. Stella Oraham Prea.&#13;
H R I S T 1 \ N ENDi: VVOli S ( J J I E T Y i - M ^ t .&#13;
_ ,s everv Sund.iy ev-&gt;riin^ nt iV )). Prjsi knit,&#13;
Mias lilta Carpsmt'srj Se^rdtary, .Mrs. C. SVT, Kice.&#13;
ri^FIE W, C. T. U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
I month at 2:i'j p. m. at t le home of i)r.&#13;
ISenand0Su2Dto t 0 a Sood condition.&#13;
$4.00. i f y o u d e ^ t h i s b o o k ^ ^ t S S M " " f - d d r n o t believe thatrit pay8 t o j&#13;
offer price, $0.75* and 10.20 extra for postage and&#13;
will we forward the book to yon, ** ifiFSno?siuJ paf l ture land which we are tilling;&#13;
fttctory return it a n d w e w i l l e x c h a n g e it or refund n r t r / | n W P | h e l i A v e i n f a l l n l n w m o&#13;
vour money. Send for our special illustrated cata- u o r a o w e o e n e v e m » " p l o w i n g&#13;
ten&#13;
q^Ih±!f^^littJ^ • or summer-fallow. We c a n save y o u money. Address a u orders t o&#13;
&lt;» THE WERNER COMPANY, * 1 You can grow clover in Michi-&#13;
T - ™ ^ S - * . ^ a S S y ' g a n - i f i " » f y o n y a r e ^ o o m e d - b u t&#13;
LOST—A small locket, brilliant set&#13;
on front, fnital C. on oack, contains a&#13;
childs picture. Finder return to this&#13;
office and receive reward.&#13;
m ,'&amp;*-.. '^v&#13;
- V L i r ) ^ ' " 7 ^ &gt; ^U^Vv -,;W*r~* i ^ v ^ '&#13;
*F. H. Nix &amp; Son, the photographe-i'S,&#13;
are making a special offer for Friday&#13;
and Saturday of this week, on childrens&#13;
pictures. See their adv. on last&#13;
pa*?e.&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
S , a l l x c a , d . , Taja.\a.ajry 2 1 , 1 D C O .&#13;
a. F.&#13;
Siller, Everyone interested in temperance i s&#13;
coadially iuvited. Mrs. '^eal Siller, Prea; Mrs.&#13;
Etta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
The C. T. A. and B. Society of this place, meet&#13;
eve/y third Saturaay evening^ in the_Fr. Matthew&#13;
H a n . John Donohue'.T resident™&#13;
iv m&#13;
Lv lo&#13;
7 40 U 20&#13;
W iH| I 45&#13;
10 &lt;)•, 2 35&#13;
li) 3iv 3 04&#13;
l&gt;! 4&gt;V&#13;
U (k). :) 25&#13;
SO 4 01&#13;
t&gt; in p m&#13;
V.T0Y 5":i0&#13;
9 2H&#13;
S 5S&#13;
9 &lt;*&#13;
9 'Jt&#13;
10 05&#13;
a in&#13;
" s i t ' .&#13;
/&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
Born to James lilade and wife. Feb.&#13;
a son*&#13;
Rob! bob! has been the cry the past&#13;
day or two.&#13;
Those who want ice are putting in&#13;
srood work this week.&#13;
Born: to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Richmond,&#13;
Feb. 2, a daughter.&#13;
Miss Maine Siller is visiting Miss&#13;
Tressa Coulin, near Chelsea.&#13;
The heavy snow storm Sunday,&#13;
h,ustled the cuMers out Monday. ,&#13;
The time-table of* tbe Flint and&#13;
Pore Marquette Ry. appears on p-&gt;?e&#13;
5.&#13;
D. C. Carr, pf Fowlerville, was a&#13;
truest of bis cousin, Stephen Durfee,&#13;
the last of last week.&#13;
Miss Mary Jefferya and Miss Nellie&#13;
Mortenson spent Saturday and Sunday&#13;
with friends at Chubba Corners.&#13;
' (JOlXli KAST&#13;
Atraiui liapids&#13;
Ionia&#13;
Lansing&#13;
JHowell&#13;
rSmith Lyon&#13;
tSalem&#13;
'Plymouth&#13;
Ar Detroit :.,^ n&#13;
liOIMJ WKJST&#13;
Lv Detroit&#13;
Ply month&#13;
j&gt;alein&#13;
South Lyou&#13;
I Howell!&#13;
t I Lansing&#13;
(Ionia&#13;
Ar__ivirand .Rapids..&#13;
FRANK B i v , OEO. D E H A V E N ,&#13;
Agent, South Lyon. G. P. A., (Jran i Rapids.&#13;
,*•• m a r&#13;
FOUtVCH.&#13;
KJN IGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meetevery Friday evening, on or before fnll&#13;
6 00 J of the moon at their .hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
~ JJ7 , Visitlni; brothers are cordiailv invited.&#13;
CHA*. UiMFBELi,, Sir S n i g h t C o n i m a n d e i&#13;
Livingston Lod^e, No.7^, ? A A, M. Regular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening^oa or before&#13;
the full of the moon. Alexander Mclntyre, W. M.&#13;
RDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F .&#13;
Alas. MARY R B A D , W. M. 0&#13;
AA.M. meeting,&#13;
p m p m&#13;
1 1*),' ,lfw&gt;&#13;
(J 2.i - 1 4S t&gt; 48&#13;
9 -Hi ? OS, 7 09&#13;
10 S3, J2JJ5 T 40&#13;
11 -,'e i *&lt;i S 41&#13;
13 .*wi' 4 43 10 tW K. O. T. M. hail. Visiting sisters cordially in&#13;
1 30; .* 10 10 45 vited. LILA CosiWAjf Lady Com.&#13;
LADIES OF T H E MACCABEES. Meat every 1st&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachmonth at 3:40 p m. a t&#13;
PERFECT&#13;
SCALES&#13;
*k KNIGHTS OP THK LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:30 o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
r". G. JACKSOX, Capt'. Gen.&#13;
Copoei Plated ^ .&#13;
All steel Levers,&#13;
Combination Beam.&#13;
Catalogue Free.&#13;
Address, J O N C S OP B I N Q H A M T O N , «.&#13;
BINQNAHTON, N. Y&gt;&#13;
Werner's Dictionary of Synonyms &amp; Antonyms,&#13;
• Hy?ngiosy and Familiar Phrases.,&#13;
A book t h:i: shou Id' lx&gt; i n the vest&#13;
ix&gt;cket of t'vury person, because it&#13;
tolls you the right word tc use.&#13;
No Two Words i n t h e English&#13;
LA&amp;guage Have E x a c t l y t h e&#13;
S a m e Significance. To express&#13;
the precise meaning that one intends&#13;
to convt" n ^itctionsrv of&#13;
Synonyms is net-.i^d Nt avoid fe;&gt;&gt;&#13;
tilion. The Rlrougcst fltrme vi&#13;
slx-eoh is anlitlHsis In this dictionary&#13;
Jfre ap-vvilofl Anfojivins&#13;
" i t&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F.SiGLER M.D- ' C, L, SIOLER M, D»&#13;
DRS. SIGLER-&amp; SIGLER, '&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons. A l l calls prompt)&#13;
attended today or night. Offlce on Main sir&#13;
Pinckney, Mich. '&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
D E N T I S T - E v e r y Friday; and on Thursday&#13;
\«hen having appointments. Office over&#13;
Siiiler's Drue Store.&#13;
PATENTS GUARANTEED Our fee/eturned if we fail. Acy one •ow^itg&#13;
. _ aketch and deiorrption of any i n v e n t i o s V i 3 L &gt;-&#13;
will, jlvercfore, t»- found extremely promptly j e c e n e our opinion free &lt;»nc«HlH^to||jtiW»&#13;
valuable. Contains many other the patentability of same. "How to Obtain&#13;
irfeauires such as M y t h o l o g y , Patent" sent upon request. Patents s e a b e d&#13;
/ F a m i l i a r A l l u s i o n s a n d For- ^ through us advertised for sale at our expense.&#13;
mJMs-JKJd' U r t w t t e ' i Memory \ Patents taken out through us receive MMotai&#13;
.. The A r t of N e r e r For*ettlng,'' e t e . , . notice, without charge, in T H E P A T E N T RXCOUL,&#13;
his wondetfuV little book hoondln a neat *n illustrated and widely circulated JCMTML&#13;
binding and sent postpaid for $ 0 . 2 5. Full consulted by MatmfacturerratKl Xnvcetm.&#13;
er, gill ed«e, $0.40rpo«tpald. Order at ' " ' m^mmm&#13;
Send tor our large book catalogue, free.&#13;
Address all orders to&#13;
THE WERNER COMPAAnNrnYtV, Ovo, PWM sWMtai,&#13;
Send for sample copy r u t t . i°M|SSS,&#13;
VICTOR J . I V A N S « 04K&#13;
(PiteatAtftncrn,) &gt;&#13;
WA«HI««TOflt ft.&#13;
v '. V I ,&#13;
. ' '" ' '« .-/1&#13;
cy&#13;
»4« W " V i T 5 T M." n r-&#13;
' U: :M f&gt;\'*?^pl^:»:;»'-^: iftiV'j »***« •'FW.-:-^:,25¾ '&#13;
il'WJ'Jii'lP'1 • M l * * * ^ *&#13;
* \ ./r-V&#13;
W;w.''VV'&#13;
i.'V '•.&#13;
a * * *&#13;
Kw&#13;
IF;:&#13;
I'fit' ':^V&#13;
'•'*/:? A'-&#13;
^1¾&#13;
T V , ' •,.'..•• ^ 1 4 ¾&#13;
'? :&#13;
*x-•••••.&#13;
• »&#13;
ifct?&#13;
k'&#13;
i&#13;
^&#13;
* : •&#13;
*k'&#13;
I* i&#13;
ghuhit^S &amp;$V*hk&#13;
FBANX L. AxDnsvim PttWiahejv&#13;
PLNCKNEY, MICHIGAN,&#13;
T R A N S V A A L WAR ITEMS.&#13;
Br. Henri Muller, representative extraordinary&#13;
of tho brange Free State,&#13;
consul-general to the Netherlands at&#13;
The Hague* in regard to American volunteers&#13;
joining the Boer forces in South&#13;
Africa, in part, says: "Any person who&#13;
wants to go to South Africa must do so&#13;
on his own account and at his own&#13;
risk via Delagoa bay. I cannot pay&#13;
them any money or engage them. The&#13;
same applies to surgeons and trained&#13;
nurses. However, should such people&#13;
be sent out for love of our cause, in&#13;
case they cannot pay their own passage&#13;
money this should be done by us or by&#13;
our friends in a private capacity. It is,&#13;
of course, very possible that the two&#13;
republics, after a happy finish of the&#13;
war, will repay some of such money if&#13;
the volunteers have rendered real service,&#13;
but there is no official certainty&#13;
about this. As to money, I wilt say&#13;
that this is most urgently required for&#13;
many purposes. Therefore, 1 shall be&#13;
particularly happy if money is sent me.&#13;
It is preferred that the donors do not&#13;
Stipulate anything, but that it should&#13;
be spent for the Orange ¥r.e State&#13;
government, which request will be&#13;
very carefully- observed. I have myself&#13;
spent a small fortune already for&#13;
our just cause."&#13;
Historj' pauses for a time in South&#13;
Africa. It is one of those unsatisfactory&#13;
pauses that are nearly as trying&#13;
to British nerves as a seq\ienc&lt;?&#13;
/ o f reverses, and apparently it will terminate&#13;
only when Lord Roberts gives&#13;
the word for the forward movement&#13;
into the Free State whieh, aeeeyding-to&#13;
v.,&#13;
the most cheerful view, he will be unable&#13;
to do for a fortnight. Whether&#13;
he will permit Gen. IJuller to make another&#13;
attempt to relieve Ladysniith is&#13;
quite outside the knowledge even of&#13;
those closely connected with the war&#13;
oflice. With the troops due to arrive&#13;
next month, he majr think himself&#13;
strong enough to try two large operations.&#13;
Combining the forces under&#13;
Gen. Methuen, French and Gatacre&#13;
and .adding to them the arriving troops.&#13;
Lord Roberts would have 70,000 for the&#13;
invasion of the Free State, with 40,000&#13;
to- 50,000 guarding communications,&#13;
and 40,000 trying to rescue Ladysmith.&#13;
The public burns with1mp7StTehee~TlIaT&#13;
something should be done.&#13;
At the re-assembling of the British&#13;
—parliament oh the 30th, the queen in&#13;
her speech, in part, says: The peace&#13;
which had recently been broken"in&#13;
South Africa when last I addressed you&#13;
has,&lt; unhappily, not been restored, but&#13;
otherwise my relations with other&#13;
states are friendly. I am deeply grieved&#13;
that so many valuable lives should&#13;
have fallen a sacrifice, but I have witnessed&#13;
with pride and with heartiest&#13;
gratification the patriotic eagerness&#13;
and spontaneoiis loyalty with whieh&#13;
my subjects in all parts of my dominionshave&#13;
come forward t6 share in the&#13;
common defence of their imperial interests.&#13;
v I am confindent I shall not&#13;
look to them in vain when—Ithem&#13;
to sustain and renew their exer-'&#13;
tionS' until they have brought this&#13;
struggle for the maintenance of the&#13;
empire and the assertion of its supremacy&#13;
in South Africa to a victorious conclusion.&#13;
The Vossisehe Zeitung' says: "The&#13;
best prepared and most carefully planned&#13;
British operation during the war&#13;
has now ended in complete fiasco.&#13;
What is there now to prop up the sinking&#13;
prestige of 'world power?' To talk&#13;
about another 100,000 men is rubbish&#13;
and the few battalions' that can be&#13;
raised willnot change the issue of the&#13;
campaign."&#13;
For the present the British can do&#13;
nothing to help Ladysmith. Some experts&#13;
believe, that Gen. White will try&#13;
to cut his way out. He must either do&#13;
this or surrender, for his food supply&#13;
is almost exhausted. It is said that,&#13;
upon the fall of Ladysmith, Dr. Leyds,&#13;
of Europe, and Montague "White, in&#13;
Washington, will appeal for mediation.&#13;
There is no sign, except the anxiety&#13;
of the British cabinet, that any hostile&#13;
demonstration against England is contemplated.&#13;
Russia and France are&#13;
sure to take advantage of England's&#13;
helplessness by grabbing territory in&#13;
Asia, but the czar is living \ip to his&#13;
reputation as the foe of war at the&#13;
present time.&#13;
The latest news from South Africa&#13;
is unfavorably commented upon by the&#13;
German papers. The National Zeitung&#13;
says: "The British position around&#13;
Ladysmith is now untenable. Either&#13;
Lord Roberts must wait reinforcements&#13;
or remove his strategic center else-&#13;
.vhere, abandoning Ladysmith.1'&#13;
During the bombardment of Kimberley&#13;
on the 88th the Boers sent 380&#13;
shells into all parts of the village. The&#13;
favorite target was the hospital, but a&#13;
shrapnel shell exploded close * to a&#13;
hearse whicn^Jwas proceedrng to the&#13;
oemetery and a shell burst in the cemetery&#13;
during the funeral.&#13;
The British public seems to have&#13;
totally lost confidence in, Gen. Boiler.&#13;
The next big news is expected to be&#13;
fornisbejdjay the Boers. They have&#13;
doubled their energy in the siege of&#13;
Kimberley, and may be expected to&#13;
close in on Ladysmith i t almost any&#13;
ft&#13;
DEATH 'OF LINCOLN.&#13;
"Now he belongs to the ages."&#13;
The curtain had just been rung down&#13;
over the life of the martyred president&#13;
in that humble little room opposite the&#13;
theater where the president had, a few&#13;
hours, befortfreceived the bullet of&#13;
the assassin Booth. E. M. Stanton,&#13;
secretary of war, gave utterance to the&#13;
words quoted. How prophetic; how&#13;
true. Centuries hence the name ot&#13;
Abraham Lincoln will still retain its&#13;
•rightful place in history.&#13;
The president had been carried up&#13;
the high steps, through a narrbwt£al],&#13;
and laid, still unconscious, stiIF motionless,&#13;
on the bed of a poor, little,&#13;
commonplace^ room of a commonplace&#13;
Lodging-house, where surgeons and&#13;
physicians-gathered about in a desperate&#13;
attempt to rescue him from&#13;
death.&#13;
While the surgeons worked the news&#13;
was spreading to. the town. Every man&#13;
and woman in the theater rushed forth&#13;
to tell it. Some ran. wildly down tho&#13;
streets, exclaiming to those they met,&#13;
"The president is killed! The president&#13;
is killed!" One rushed in a ballroom&#13;
and' told it to the dancers; another,&#13;
bursting into a room where a&#13;
party pf eminent public men&#13;
were playing c&amp;rds, cried, "Lincoln&#13;
is shot!" Another, running&#13;
into the auditorium of Grover's&#13;
theater* cried, "President Lincoln has&#13;
been shot, in his private box, in Ford's&#13;
theater." Those who heard the cry&#13;
thought the man insane or drunk, but&#13;
a moment later they saw the actors&#13;
In a combat called 'from the stage, the&#13;
manager coming forward. His face was&#13;
pale his voice agonized, as he said,&#13;
"Ladies and gentlemen, I feel it my&#13;
duty to say to you that the announcement&#13;
made from the front of the theater&#13;
just now is true—President Lin,-&#13;
coln has been shot." One ran to summon&#13;
Secretary Stanton. A boy. picked&#13;
up at the door of the house where the&#13;
president lay was sent to the White&#13;
house for Robert Lincoln. The news&#13;
spread by the very force of its ov/n&#13;
horfbr, and as it spread it met other&#13;
news no leso terrible. At the same&#13;
hour that Booth had sent the ball Into&#13;
the president's brain a man had forced&#13;
his way into the house of Secretary&#13;
Seward, then lying in bed w&#13;
broken arm, and had stabbed both the&#13;
secretary and his son Frederick so seriously&#13;
that it was feared thsy would&#13;
die. In his entrance and exit he had&#13;
wounded three other members of the&#13;
household. Like Booth, he had* escaped.&#13;
Horror bred rumor, and Secretary&#13;
Stanton, too, was reported wound*&#13;
ed, wtile later H was said that Grant&#13;
had been killed on his way north.&#13;
Dread seized the town. "Rumors are&#13;
so thick.7^wrote the editor—of--tl&#13;
National Intelligencer, at 2 o'clock in&#13;
the morning, "the excitement of this&#13;
hour is so intense that we rely entirel&#13;
y upon our reporters to advise the&#13;
public of the details and result of this&#13;
night of horrors. Evidently conspirators&#13;
are among us. To what extent&#13;
does the conspiracy exist? This is a&#13;
terrible question. When -a spirit so&#13;
horrible as this is abroad, what man&#13;
is safe? We can only advise the utmost&#13;
vigilance and the most prompt&#13;
measures by the authorities. We can&#13;
only pray God to shield us, his worthy&#13;
people.. from further calamities like&#13;
these."&#13;
The civil and military authorities&#13;
prepared for attack from withiu and&#13;
without. Martial law was at once&#13;
established! The long roll was beaten;&#13;
alone seemed able to act methodically.&#13;
No man 'felt-the tragedy more than the&#13;
-grgat--w4rr~8c"cTCtaryT-Xur-no one loathe:&#13;
- W4WHBRN PANADA.&#13;
C$r«p Froapecta and Climate About Ed»&gt; .&#13;
von too, N. W. T,—fatorMtinftvXotur&#13;
•; from Mr*. 8. A* «*l*b»at «**•&#13;
of ASatoa fHtjp . -»,.&#13;
The following extract* from an Interesting&#13;
letter to the Mason City (la.)&#13;
Republican,- written Hsy Mmn-tS. A.&#13;
Brlgham, late of that place, but now ot&#13;
Ro83 Creek. Alberta. Canada, so nearly&#13;
describe most of the districts o f&#13;
Western Canada that we lake pleasure; ,&#13;
presenting same to the attention of&#13;
ur readers: * '&#13;
RosaOreek, Albert, N. W. T.( Canada*&#13;
; Aug. 7, 1899. .&#13;
Editor ifason City Republican—Dear.&#13;
Sirr We are located in the. Bejiver&#13;
Hills, 80 miles from Ft. Saskatchewan&#13;
and 50 miles from Edmonton. To the&#13;
east of these is an immense area of&#13;
bottom lands, which furnishes abundance&#13;
of hay for the settlers. It is dotted&#13;
with small lakes, the largest ot&#13;
which is called Beaver Lake, 1¾ milea&#13;
in length.&#13;
The Beaver Hills are covered with&#13;
small green willows which are easily&#13;
gotten rid of before breaking up the&#13;
land. Here and there poplar, birch .-'&#13;
and tamarack tree3 abound. Small&#13;
meadows are numerous. The soil in s&#13;
theso hills is much richer than the boiyr&#13;
torn lands, being a kind of black leaf&#13;
tamrld. There is no tough sod to&#13;
break, and it is very productive.&#13;
Wheat, orifs and barley 'do finely a^nd&#13;
vegetables are the finest th-it- ean be&#13;
grown. Potatoes especially are large&#13;
and solid, easily producing- from 200&#13;
to 300 bushels per acre, and best of all&#13;
never a "taty bug" to wrssi.le with.&#13;
Wild fruit, strawberries, gooseberries,&#13;
saskatoons (or pine berries), raspberries&#13;
and cranberries, are found in the.&#13;
hills. Small tame fruit does llnely, the&#13;
red and white currants in my garden.&#13;
are as large again as common sized&#13;
ones. *&#13;
, We have long- days during• •• the&#13;
months of June and July; one can sea&#13;
to read many evenings until 10 o'clock&#13;
in the twilight.. Some nights le3s than&#13;
3 hours of darkness, and the birds are_&#13;
singing at 2 o'clock. Then again, it&#13;
rains so easily. You look toward the&#13;
west and see a little cloud coming up,&#13;
a gentle shower follows, the sun shines&#13;
forth agajn^ and in a little while you&#13;
forget it-has rained.&#13;
" Cyclones are unknown here and the&#13;
thunder and lightning is very light. ,&#13;
We had two storms this summer accompanied&#13;
with wind and hail, but -&#13;
nothing to lodge the "grain. The average&#13;
heat is about 78 degrees. We had&#13;
three or four days .in July at 30. Th©&#13;
nights afe always cool.&#13;
The winter season is one of great activity.&#13;
All thefencing is gotten out&#13;
then and log3 for the farm buildings.&#13;
By paying 25 cents you are granted a&#13;
permit at the land office to cut logs&#13;
upon vacant lands. The roads are&#13;
good and smooth, for the snyw never&#13;
drifts, not even around the buildings,&#13;
and this is a great saving of time to&#13;
the farmer. Hay is hauled from the&#13;
bottom lands all winter long, and a&#13;
man r a n w n r k nntsWIf) pypry rifiy as^filiL&#13;
. . . • • . &amp; •&#13;
DEATH OF LINCOLN—"HE NOW&#13;
BELONGS TO THE AGES."&#13;
(From the Painting.)&#13;
exery exit from the city was guarded;&#13;
out-going trains were stopped; mounted&#13;
police and cavalry clattered up and&#13;
down the street; the forts were ordered&#13;
on the alert; guns were manned.&#13;
In the meantime there had gathered&#13;
in the house on Tenth street, vrhere&#13;
the president lay, his family physician&#13;
and intimate friends, as well as many&#13;
lnent officials. Before they&#13;
reached him it was known there was&#13;
no hope, that the wound was fatal.&#13;
They grouped themselves about tbe&#13;
bedside or in the adjoining rooms, trying&#13;
to comfort the weeping wife, or&#13;
listening awe-stricken to the steady&#13;
moaning and labored breathing of the&#13;
unconscious man, which at times could&#13;
he heard all over the house. Stanton&#13;
cabinet was by greatness of heart and&#13;
intellect go well able to comprehend&#13;
the worth of the dying president, but&#13;
no man in. that distracted night acted&#13;
with greater energy or calm. Summoning&#13;
the assistant secretary, C. A.&#13;
Dana, and a stenographer, he began&#13;
dictating orders to the authorities on&#13;
all sides, notifying them of the tragedy,&#13;
directing them what precautions&#13;
to take, what pe_r3ons_to arrest. Grant,&#13;
now returning to Washington, he di-,&#13;
rccted, should be warned tq keep close&#13;
watch on all persons who came close&#13;
to him in the cars and to see .that an&#13;
engine be sent in front of his train.&#13;
He sent out, too; £n~officiaI account of&#13;
the assassination. Today the best&#13;
brief account of the night's awful work&#13;
remains the one which Secretary Stanton&#13;
dictated within sound of the moaning&#13;
of the dying president.&#13;
And so the hours changed without&#13;
perceptible change in the president's&#13;
condition, and with only slight shifting&#13;
of the scene around him. The testimony&#13;
of those who had witnessed the&#13;
murder began to be taken in an ad-&#13;
Joining room. Occasionally the figures&#13;
at the bedside changed. Mrs. Lincoln&#13;
-caTne in at intervals, sobbing out her&#13;
grief, and then was led away. This&#13;
man went, another took his place. It&#13;
was not until daylight that there came&#13;
a perceptible change. Then the breathing&#13;
grew quieter, the face became more&#13;
calm. The doctors at Lincoln's side&#13;
knew that dissolution was hear. Their&#13;
bulletin of 6 o'clock read: "Pulse falling;"&#13;
that of 6:30, "Still failing;" that&#13;
of 7, "Symptoms of immediate dissolution,"&#13;
and then at 7:20, in the presence&#13;
of his son Robert, Secretaries Stanton^&#13;
Welles and Usher, Atty.-Gen. Speed,&#13;
Senator Sumner, Private Secretary j&#13;
Hay, Dr. Gurley, his pastor and several j&#13;
physicians and friends, Abraham" Lincoln&#13;
died. There was a prayer, and&#13;
then the solemn voice, of. Stanton&#13;
broke the stillness, "Now he belongs&#13;
to the ages."&#13;
t w o hours later the body of the&#13;
president, wrapped in an American&#13;
flag, was borne from the houso in&#13;
Tenth street, and carried through the&#13;
hushed streets,-where already thousands&#13;
of flags were at half-mast and&#13;
the gay buntings and garlands- had&#13;
been replaced by b,lack draperies; and&#13;
where tho men who for days had been!&#13;
cheering in excess of joy and relief&#13;
now stood with uncovered heads and&#13;
wet eyes. They carried him to an upper&#13;
rooailn the private apartments* of&#13;
tne white house, andr there he lay until&#13;
three days later a heart-broken people&#13;
claimed their right to look for a last&#13;
tim^esTi his face. •&#13;
as the weather is concerned. There are&#13;
cold snaps when it reaches 40 and 48&#13;
below zero, but the lack of wind prevents&#13;
one realizing it and the mouni&#13;
tains 150 miles west of us are a great&#13;
protection. Our neighbors are mostly&#13;
Canadian, Scotch, Swede, and we have&#13;
a nice sprinkling of people from the:&#13;
-states. The creeks abouad in small&#13;
fish.&#13;
Wo are now in the midst of haymaking&#13;
(Aug. 7). Wheat will not be&#13;
cut until early September, this being&#13;
a little later season thi.n common, but&#13;
the crop will be immense. 1 send you&#13;
a sample of wheat and barley—its •&#13;
height is almost even with my shoalcrcrs,&#13;
average 50 inches. New comerslacking&#13;
binders can hire their grain&#13;
cut for 75 cents per acre. Prairia&#13;
chickens are here by the thousands.&#13;
The water is good. We have a fino&#13;
well 15 feet deep. In the creeks th^&#13;
water is soft and of a yellowish color.&#13;
Npw for the drawbacks (we havethem),&#13;
but nothing very serious. The&#13;
mosquitoes are simply abominable, especially&#13;
after a shower. Then again&#13;
we are surrounded with bachelors; w©&#13;
have no tess than 18 single men in this&#13;
neighborhood, on matrimony bent&#13;
When a feminine gender of any age&#13;
between 14 and 40 visits these hills we&#13;
pity her, so great is the demand for&#13;
her company.&#13;
In conclusion, if the remainder of&#13;
our loved ones were here with us, we ,&#13;
should better enjoy life on Ross Creek/&#13;
and unless the unexpected develops,&#13;
consider this will be a pretty fair p)aco&#13;
to end our days.&#13;
MRS. S. A. BRIGHAM.&#13;
Tf our'belief is wrong, our/eternity&#13;
'Will be wrong. /&#13;
• - / • - Catarrh Cannot Be Cured&#13;
with LOCAL APPLICATION^, as they cannot&#13;
reach the seat of Che disease. Catarrh is a&#13;
blood or constitutional disease, and in order to&#13;
cure it vou must take internal remedies. Hall's&#13;
Catarrh Cure is taken/ internally, and acts&#13;
directly on tho blood -and mucous surfaces.&#13;
HoU's Catarrh Cure U not a quack medicine.&#13;
It was prescribed hy'one of the best physicians-&#13;
In this country for/years, and is a regular prescription.&#13;
It is composed of the best tonics&#13;
known, combines with the best blood purifiers,&#13;
acting directly on the mucous surfaces; The&#13;
perfect combination of the two ingredients is&#13;
whot produces such wonderful results in curing;&#13;
Catarrh./Send for testimonials, free.&#13;
P. in CHENEY &amp; CO., Props., Toledo, a&#13;
Sold^y druggists, price 75c.&#13;
Hail's Family Pills are the bosfc&#13;
A&#13;
God's mercy can no more wear out&#13;
than his love".&#13;
WANTED 800&#13;
Men, Women ond Children in tho city to try thebest&#13;
and oheopost preparations over ofleiw thepublic.&#13;
You don't take any chances in trying&#13;
them, as rout druggist guarantees Knlll's Red&#13;
Pills for waa People. "Pale and Weak," the&#13;
women's remedy of the day (the oniy genuine).&#13;
Knill'a Whito Liver Pills, the great Llvar Invigorator,&#13;
System Renovator and Bowel Regulator,&#13;
J»dowa, SJto, You oaa~work while thev. work.&#13;
Never gripe ormake you oleic. Knlll's Blue Kidney&#13;
Plus cure ail Kidney Jlls, Backache, etc.&#13;
Knlll's Dyspepsia Tablets euro Indigestion, correct&#13;
all Stomach Troubles, destroy all foul gases,&#13;
make pore sweet stomachs and breaths. To d»&#13;
as advertised or money refunded. Tbe only&#13;
guaranteed preparations on the market. KntlPa,&#13;
Tills or Tablets cost SBo. Bali prtee of others.&#13;
.'Jv*' /** '&#13;
wmmm f'i.'rtt1&#13;
;-*:v.."&#13;
V —: v .&#13;
' . v . #&#13;
; • * "&#13;
,jSS\ -^.^/:^- &gt;*', &gt;•:.-&gt;'&#13;
J*;&#13;
*#&#13;
:i '•?&gt;;&#13;
' i ^ ; ^ ^ '&#13;
'.^' .!'K&#13;
^ , ,&#13;
•J»W nan pp^asr If I. Jlfl.VJIIJRflf&#13;
• ,-ns;&#13;
; , $&#13;
•? -. ~ r&#13;
4&#13;
tfrrrAr*'&#13;
M P&#13;
s-Ss*&#13;
s»s»es*sa**sa»-*--•&#13;
Stuff!&#13;
M&#13;
What a lot of trash&#13;
is sold as cough&#13;
curps. The hollow&#13;
drum makes the&#13;
loudest noise—the&#13;
biggest advertise*&#13;
ment often covers&#13;
worthlessness.&#13;
• Sixty years of&#13;
cures and such testimony&#13;
as the followingliave&#13;
taught us&#13;
what Ayer's Cherry&#13;
Pectoral will do.&#13;
5" I had a most stubborn cough&#13;
for many years. It deprived me&#13;
of sleep and made me lose flesh&#13;
rapidly. I was treated by many&#13;
eminent physicians, but could get&#13;
no permanent relief. I then tried&#13;
Aycr's gherry Pectoral, and I began&#13;
to get better at once. I now&#13;
sleep well, my old flesh is back,&#13;
and I enjoy myself in every way&#13;
at the age of seventy-four."—R. N.&#13;
MANN, Fall Mills, Terns, F e k 7,&#13;
1899.&#13;
AT HOME AND ABBOAD&#13;
A SUMMARY OP T H E N E W S FOR&#13;
T H E WEEK BY WIRE.&#13;
Waft. OoebeJ, 0«v«rn«r KUet of Koat^&#13;
ekj, V M Sfeoft Oowa aad. Wmtmnj-&#13;
Wonndad White Walking Tkroagn&#13;
* th* Capitol Qt9mw4»*&#13;
It's the do-as-you-would-bedonc-&#13;
by cough medicine. Try&#13;
t 25-ccntbottle.&#13;
N o t 8afe&gt; to Sleep.&#13;
The black Jaguar o£ Central America&#13;
will attack any man by night or day&#13;
whom he finds lying down.&#13;
Winter Excursion*.&#13;
The Southern Pacific Company and&#13;
its connections operate the best first&#13;
and second-class service to California,&#13;
Arizona, Texas and Mexico. Through&#13;
Pullman Palace Sleepers and Tourist&#13;
Sleepers from all principal ©astern&#13;
points. Personally conducted Tourist&#13;
Excursions-from Cincinnati, Louisville,&#13;
GoatoH WimmUj auoettmbev&#13;
Wm, Goebel, the man w h o was re»&#13;
oeatly-declared goternor of Kentucky&#13;
by the contesting board, and who,&#13;
while entering the capltol grounds,&#13;
was shot down, died of his wounds at&#13;
6:44 o'clock on the' evening of the 3d.&#13;
Without regard to jwirty, the cause of&#13;
the death of Mr. Goebel is universally&#13;
deplored.&#13;
Shortly after the death of Wm.&#13;
Goebel was announced, J. C W. Beckham,&#13;
lieutenant-governor, w a s sworn&#13;
in as governor. Mr. Beckham is a&#13;
young ni|n not yet 31 years of age. In&#13;
a proclamation issued shortly after the&#13;
death of his mate, Mr. Beckham asked&#13;
the support of ail law-abiding and lawrespecting&#13;
Christian people to assist so&#13;
far as possible in restoring peace and&#13;
quiet. He also ordered the state militia&#13;
to disband.&#13;
-'"'"There is no clue at this writing as to&#13;
who Gov. Goebel's assassin was. A few&#13;
years ago Mr. Goebel shot a man by&#13;
the name of John Sanford, and it is believed&#13;
by some that the killing of&#13;
Goebel was simply to avenge Sanford's&#13;
death, and that the assassin choose the&#13;
present time, thinking the political&#13;
situation would furnish a sort of a&#13;
shield for him.&#13;
St. Louis, Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis,&#13;
Des Moines, Omaha, Kansas&#13;
City. etc. For particulars and descriptive&#13;
literature write W. G. Neimyer,&#13;
Gen'l Western Agent, 238 .Clark St.,&#13;
Chicago; W. H. Connor, Com'l Agent,&#13;
Chamber Commerce Bldg., Cincinnati,&#13;
Ohio, or W. J. Berg, Trav. Pass Agt.,&#13;
220 Elllcott Sq., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
A Alan's Sinn.&#13;
In a man's eyes his sin is never-as&#13;
great as that of his wife in finding&#13;
him out.—Atchison Globe.&#13;
C. S. and England Beached an Agreement&#13;
The United Statesand Great Britain,&#13;
it is definitely learned, have reached&#13;
an amicable agreement respecting the&#13;
Operations of the Clayton-Bulwer treaty&#13;
. as affecting the rights .of xMnstructiori&#13;
and control by the United States of&#13;
the proposed Nicaragua canal. The&#13;
result marks the termination of conferences&#13;
between the officials of the&#13;
state department and Lord Pauncefote&#13;
of fully a: year's duration, during which&#13;
a number of meetings were held-and&#13;
the subject fully discussed by thcTTrepresentatives&#13;
of the governments interested.&#13;
Great .Britain agrees to a modification&#13;
of the Clayton-Bulwer treaty&#13;
-by which she practically relinquishes&#13;
any claims respecting a dual control of&#13;
the eanal after it shall have been constructed.&#13;
The result, therefore, is to&#13;
eliminate that feature of the treaty&#13;
bearing on the subject of dual control,&#13;
and leave- the United. States free to&#13;
construct and thereafter control this&#13;
great interoceanic waterway,&#13;
' From the same authoritative quarter&#13;
it is ascertained that England has&#13;
made no demands for a quid pro quo&#13;
for h e r - abandonmrat of—-whatever&#13;
rights she may have had under the&#13;
treaty, and which she now promises to&#13;
relinquish?&#13;
Tells How He Escaped the Terrors of Many Winters&#13;
by Using Peruna*&#13;
Mr. Isaac Brock, born in BuncomteCo^ North Carolina, Marcl&#13;
Says: "I attribute my extreme old age to the use of Peruna.'&#13;
Florida, West Indies and Central America*&#13;
- The facilities of the Louisville &amp;&#13;
Nashville Railroad for handling tourists-&#13;
and travelers destined for all&#13;
points in Florida, Cuba, Porto Rico,&#13;
Central America, or for Nassau, are unsurpassed.&#13;
Double dally lines of sleeping&#13;
cars are run from Cincinnati,&#13;
Louisville, Chicago and St. Louis&#13;
through Jacksonville to interior Florida&#13;
points, and to Miami, Tampa and&#13;
New Orleans, the ports of embarkation&#13;
for the countries mentioned. For folders,&#13;
etc., write Jackson Smith. D. P.&#13;
A., Cincinnati, O.&#13;
A woman's mouth, when it is in repose,&#13;
shows her character, when it&#13;
isn't it is generally showing some other&#13;
woman's.&#13;
The&#13;
Gon. Lawton's Funeral.&#13;
remains of Mai.-Gen. ^1&#13;
NO MORE GRIPS&#13;
_ r New Line -Now-Open to&#13;
the Public.&#13;
Take the C. C. C. Cine to Certain Relief With.-&#13;
out a Grip or GriM—Fare lOc-Cet&#13;
Passage *t Any Drui Store. -&#13;
&lt;;&#13;
No more grips—Russian or any other&#13;
kind. ^&#13;
That is the verdict of the traveling public&#13;
who have grown tired after years of&#13;
experience with the grips and gripes of&#13;
pill form and liquid purgatives.&#13;
To open the bowels naturally, easily,&#13;
without disagreeable feelings or results,&#13;
has been the problem before modern science,&#13;
which has been solved in Cascareta&#13;
Candy Cathartic&#13;
Cascarets are the ideal laxative, harmless,&#13;
purely vegetable mild yet positive.&#13;
They make the liver lively, prevent sour&#13;
stomach, purify* the blood, regulate the&#13;
bowels perfectly.&#13;
They cure constipation. \Ve want you to&#13;
believe this, as it is the truth, backed by&#13;
an absolute guarantee. If Cascarets do&#13;
not cure any case of constipation, purchase&#13;
money will be refunded.&#13;
Go buy and try Cascarets to-day. It's&#13;
what they do, not what we say they do,&#13;
that proves their merit. All druggists. 10c,&#13;
26c, or 60c, or mailed for price. Send for&#13;
booklet and free sample. Address Sterling&#13;
Remedy Co., Chicago; Montreal,&#13;
Can.; or New York.&#13;
This is the CASCARET tablet.&#13;
Every tablet of the only&#13;
genuine Cascarets bears the&#13;
magic letters "C C C„" Look&#13;
at the tablet before you buy,&#13;
and&gt; beware of frauds, Imitations&#13;
and substitute*&#13;
wton&#13;
left San Francisco en route for Washington&#13;
by special train on the afternoon&#13;
of the 1st." The bodies of Major&#13;
John A. Logan and Dr. John L. Armstrong&#13;
were also taken east on the&#13;
same train. At Chicago Major Logan's&#13;
was transferred to another train for&#13;
transportation to Youngstown, 0., for&#13;
interment- The remains of Gen. Lawton&#13;
lay in state one day each at Fort&#13;
Wayne and Indianapolis, Ind., after&#13;
which they were taken to Washington&#13;
and interred in the national cemetery&#13;
at Arlington. Gen. Shafter and aide&#13;
accompanied the remains, and four of&#13;
Gen. Lawton's soldiers acted as a"guard&#13;
of hQnor. Mrs. Lawton and" four children,&#13;
Mrs, Logan and three children,&#13;
her mother Mrs. C. H. Andrews, Miss&#13;
Parmle'e and Major W. A. Tucker made&#13;
up the funeral party.&#13;
_&#13;
A Corpse Shipped as Books.&#13;
A corpse in a box marked "Books"&#13;
was found in the United States express&#13;
office at Sioux City, la., on the 31st.&#13;
The body was received on Jan. 19 from&#13;
Baltimore, Md.. addressed to J. S.&#13;
Bradford, but the express officials failed&#13;
to find him. The dead man appears to&#13;
Born before United States was&#13;
formed.&#13;
Saw 22 Presidents elected.&#13;
P&amp;rv-na has protected him&#13;
from all sudden changes.&#13;
Veteran of four wars.&#13;
Shod a horse when 99 years&#13;
old.&#13;
Isaac Brock, a citizen of McLennmm&#13;
county, lexas, has lived III yarn*&#13;
Ha now Uvea with hi* son-in-law at&#13;
Valley Mills, Texas.&#13;
la speaking of bis good health and&#13;
extreme old age, Mr. Brack says:&#13;
"After a man has lived la toe&#13;
world as long as I have, be ought&#13;
to have found out a great many&#13;
things by experience.&#13;
"One of the things I have fount!&#13;
out to my entire satisfaction Is the&#13;
proper remedy for ailments that&#13;
are due directly tq the effects ol&#13;
the climate.&#13;
"During my long life I have&#13;
known a great many remedies for&#13;
coughs, colds, catarrh and diarrhoea,&#13;
I had always supposed&#13;
these affections to be different dis*&#13;
eases, but in reading Dr. Hart*&#13;
man's books I have found out that&#13;
these affections are the same and&#13;
that they are properly coiled catarrh.&#13;
**l had several long sieges with&#13;
the grip. At first I did not know&#13;
that Peruna was a remedy for this&#13;
disease. When I heard that la&#13;
grippe was epidemic catarrh, I&#13;
tried Peruna for la grippe and&#13;
found it to be Just the thing.&#13;
**As for Dr. Hartman's remedy,&#13;
Pe-ru-na, I have found It to be the&#13;
best, if not the only, reliable rem'&#13;
edy for these affections. It has&#13;
been my standby for many years,&#13;
and I attribute my good health and&#13;
extreme old age to this remedy.&#13;
Very truly yours, 1&#13;
For a tree book on jcatarrb; address&#13;
The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus\&#13;
Ohio.&#13;
be^a-German, :"&gt;5 to 60 j'cars old. • The&#13;
only garment on the body was a shirt.&#13;
There was a frightful wound on the&#13;
back of the head, apparently made by&#13;
a blow from a blunt instrument.&#13;
Two Safe Hlowera Killed.&#13;
Quincy police officers killed two expert&#13;
safe blowers, supposed to be from&#13;
Chicago, and seriously wounded another.&#13;
The men are believed to be the&#13;
same who recently operated in Galesburg.&#13;
Freeport and other Illinois cities,&#13;
making a specialty of cracking safes in&#13;
building and loan association offices. &lt;&#13;
Mew Booklet*.&#13;
The Chicago, Milwaukee.&amp; St. Paul&#13;
railway, is issuing a series of booklets&#13;
regarding points of interest along its&#13;
lines, and if you are interested in the&#13;
western--country, or contemplating a&#13;
trip, write Geo. H* Heafford, General&#13;
Passenger A|&#13;
special publication desired, enclosing&#13;
four cents in stamps for postage.&#13;
No. 1. The Pioneer Limited.&#13;
No, 2. The Land of Bread and Butter.&#13;
No. 3. The Fox Lake Country.&#13;
No. 4. Fishing in the Great North&#13;
Woods.&#13;
No. 5. The Lake Superior Country.&#13;
No. 6. Cape Nome Gold Diggings.&#13;
No. 8. Summer Days in the Lake&#13;
Country.&#13;
No. 9. Summer Homes, 1900.&#13;
No. 10. The California of To-Day.&#13;
No. 11. The Game of. Skat.&#13;
As soon as thought finds a body it&#13;
begins trying to move the world.&#13;
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY,&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All&#13;
druggists refund the money if it fails to cure.&#13;
28c. E. W. Grove's signature on each bos.&#13;
Growth in grace is often helped^by&#13;
having the grace to say n o .&#13;
Every successful Christian life m u s t&#13;
be a life of faith.&#13;
DO YOU&#13;
COUCH&#13;
DONT D E L A Y&#13;
L T I T M P S&#13;
BALSAM&#13;
14 Drowned In a Wreck.&#13;
The German steamer Remus, from&#13;
Philadelphia, Jan. 4, Via. Dartmouth&#13;
Jan, 22, has been wrecked at Hormsriff.&#13;
near Aarhuus, Denmark, where she&#13;
was bound. Fourteen of the crew were&#13;
saved. The captain and 13 men were&#13;
drowned. The cargo is a total loss.&#13;
WAR N O T E S .&#13;
One death and five severe cases of&#13;
freezing were reported in Chicago, on&#13;
the 31st. J '_&#13;
P R E S I D E N T KRUEGER A H E A D .&#13;
Pretoria, Transvaal, South Africa,&#13;
* Dec. 7, 1899.&#13;
Messrs. Swanson Rheumatic Cure&#13;
Company^Ghieago, 111., U. S. A.—Gentlemen:&#13;
Your last shipment and communication^&#13;
received. I am very much&#13;
pleased with the Information which&#13;
you have so kindly given me.&#13;
Please find enclosed bank draft to&#13;
the amount of £412 10s. for which&#13;
send me twenty-five (25) gross of&#13;
Swanson's "5-DROPS."' Ship same as&#13;
"before ln~ordtrr~that there may Jbe n o&#13;
delay, as this medicine will be greatly&#13;
needed before it reaches us. The last&#13;
shipment is almost disposed of, as the&#13;
medical department of our army uses&#13;
large quantities. This order is entirely&#13;
for use in the army.&#13;
I have been told that our success&#13;
on the battlefield is due to a certain&#13;
extent to the use of "5-DROPS" Rheumatic&#13;
Cure, which has relieved and&#13;
prevented a great deal of suffering&#13;
among our men from Rheumatism,&#13;
Neuralgia and other acute pains caused&#13;
by exposure. Your "5-DROPS" is as&#13;
good as a Transvaal soldier!&#13;
In one of the battles, a small quantity&#13;
of "5-DROPS." together with other&#13;
medicines, was captured by the English,&#13;
which was a great loss to our&#13;
men. The Ruinecks w o n t do it again.&#13;
I am. respectfully yours,&#13;
PETER HAAS.&#13;
"5-DROPS" is the most powerful&#13;
specific known. Free from opiates and&#13;
perfectly harmless. It is a perfect cure&#13;
for Rheumatism, Sciatica, Neuralgia,&#13;
"Dyspepsia, Backache, Asthma, Catarrh,&#13;
La Grippe, Neuralgic Headache, etc.&#13;
Large si?°d bottles (300 doses). $1.00,&#13;
or three v3) bottles for $2.50. Sample&#13;
bottles 25 cents.&#13;
SWANSON RHEUMATIC CURB CO.,&#13;
M0 to 164 B. Lake S t , Chicago, I1L&#13;
It Cures Colds, CouQhs. Sore Throat. Croup, Influenza.&#13;
Whooping Cough, Bronchititand Asthma.&#13;
A certain cure for Consumption in first stages,&#13;
and a sure relief in tdvancedstages- Useat once.&#13;
You will tee the excellent effect after taking the&#13;
, first dose. Sold by dealers everywhere. Large&#13;
{ bottles 25 cents anr&lt; ^0 cuus.&#13;
W &amp; N T F D Ajrent* for a washday article&#13;
* * • • • • • 1 ^ of (treatment. Free sample for&#13;
tbejufrtag. BHAVKR, BLAKK k COMF1XY, C*4*r B a y l d } ^&#13;
£ARTERSINK Is made to give-satisf actionand&#13;
it does. Have you used it?&#13;
PARALYSIS Locomotor Ataxia conquered&#13;
at last. Doctors&#13;
p u z z l e d , Specialist*&#13;
amazed at recoyeryof pattenta thought Incurable.by&#13;
D R . C H A S E ' S B L O O D A N D N E R V K F O O D .&#13;
Write me about your case. Advice and proof 01 cures&#13;
VEXB. DB.IHASE.224 N.IOth S t . , PUiLaBaXPHU,rA&#13;
M»it f ohod in a few hour* with KRAUSERS' LIQUID EXTRACT OF SMOKE.&#13;
Blade from hickory wood. Cheaper, cleaner*&#13;
awe«ter, and »ur*r than the old way. 8»nd for&#13;
Circular. 1~ k-UAlblUi A UliO., Mill*** Fs»&#13;
MILLIONS&#13;
'k—&#13;
i«^"f\'^&#13;
EARED "'&#13;
0RN&#13;
a*w, earliest, eon wm revels*&#13;
i'»n1teeorn grewtnc, yleldtsf ia&#13;
HBU,ID MlDaMota.eOObsa. per eerV |&#13;
BIO FOVB OATS&#13;
rials* 2&amp;o bat. per sere, aas yes&#13;
saaeestthatl&#13;
SPELTS&#13;
80 bos. per tot*. Greatest greia&#13;
and hmj food UUitdeoftb* Mart)&#13;
B ABLET, BEARDLESS.&#13;
yields 1» bat. in N.Y. WosderfsU&#13;
RAPE SAe. A TOIf&#13;
Olrtt rich. frviD (sod s&gt;r eatUe,&#13;
abetp, twiaa, poultry, etc., MSSe.&#13;
s ton. We tell atsftteise e( the&#13;
Sees teed ated la the 0.8.&#13;
perfection la An*rl«a ererywhere. ,&#13;
Salter warrant* it 1&#13;
THE MILLION DOLLAB&#13;
potato 1* the moat talked of pe-1&#13;
4eto oa earth, and Salter Bli &lt;&#13;
K eeks t **&amp; will sake yon rioa..&#13;
Larffti grftwtr of Potatoes sad |&#13;
Farm Seeds la the world.&#13;
TEOETABLE ftEEM&#13;
Largest, choicest iiu la u. 8.&#13;
Omloa 8*ed. 80c. IK Sverytslst&#13;
warranted to grow. S3 pkgs ear.&#13;
Use* tegetables. piwtpetd, SIM.&#13;
_ TOR 1««. STAMPS&#13;
tfcla •sties, we nail greet Seed&#13;
Oauloff nod ISpkge ram Seed NorokUse,&#13;
_ Catalog alese. to. postage, .««*&#13;
JOHNA.SALZERSEEDCO.&#13;
LA CROSSE WIS.&#13;
-ot acres of oho ceo?r+scuiutral&#13;
LANDS nosy&#13;
opened for settlement&#13;
In Western Canuda.&#13;
Here is grown the celebrated&#13;
NO. 1 HARD&#13;
WHKA i\ which brings the highest price iu the&#13;
markets of t e world: thousands or cattle are&#13;
fattened for murket without being fed grain and&#13;
without a day's shelter. Send for information&#13;
and secure a free home in Western Canada.&#13;
Write the Superintendent of Immigration.&#13;
Ottawa, or address the undersigned, who will&#13;
r^ail vou atlases, pamnhleta, etc.. free of cost.&#13;
J. Grieve, Saginaw, Michigan, or M. V. Mclnnes,&#13;
! N.\ "2 Merrill HlocK. Detroit. Mich.&#13;
LOOK! FREE! thTe HFiInSe stH LIeGaHthLerY, ouArR NTo.I 1S2T30I CPa tBteErnL—Tm, amgandifeic eonft Gold-Finished Bnokle. Handsomely Jeweled. Can&#13;
ebde atdoj uasnty- twmaoisttt ,s tyAl- aistht raacntd- siivgen . Tdhee- able and np-to-date Belt. Don't • •nd fuassh iaonny- Money t jim Y^iir fiMnn and a-Wreea. We wm send&#13;
CHEAP FARMS&#13;
DO Y00 W1NT1 ROUE?&#13;
100,000 ACRES %222tiS}£Sa&amp; and told on long time and essay pay tnents. a little&#13;
each year. Gome and see us or write. THE TRUMAN&#13;
MOSS STATE BANK, Sanilac Ceater, Mich,, »r&#13;
The TniMR Hon tstate.Croawttl. Sanilac CO^UPCW.&#13;
When answering ads. Kindly Mettlen h s paper'&#13;
yeaouch, dpoessitgpna iad , m13a sltaerrgpeie chea ncdrseoamtioen s coafm apretd. d Desoigilnieesd, hSvE LoLur O&lt;N&gt;w iSi IdG'eHilnTg.u lSsehlel dt heamrtlti-oLy oaTrHfrCteYn d&lt;WatIlLOLe eyaocuh b. y Sreentudr nu sm thaeil 9o1n.1e0 oafn odu rw en ewwiells tp, rmomoaptt lsyt ysleisnhd and handsome No. 1330 Belts FREE.&#13;
F. A . R E E D «V C O . Jewelry C o .&#13;
209 Hudson St., New York City.&#13;
fOUR&amp;T&#13;
TO&#13;
CALIFORNIA VIA stWA$H»i j^ftTTrWs\MtVuWns\\wL&#13;
You will praotloe stood ooonorriy In&#13;
writing&#13;
O. S. CRANK, O. P. A T. A., St, Lou Is*&#13;
W.AN . U . - - DfoErT pRa0rt1icTu-l-aNr*O). . ©—lOOO&#13;
DO YOU&#13;
SPECULATE?&#13;
If so, speculate successfatty. We can males you ta cae month mora Interest&#13;
Iw^srysjaT.&#13;
argta the) same % feats.&#13;
oa kpscuiaUe*. IT IS FUKK. All pretts payable ea demand.&#13;
boaii syhoeuisr omf ownheyea tth oarn p aonmy sbaadak m warignt ap athye-)y soatmr e % &lt; * » will bay Ssadfsreur boesx&#13;
&gt; * ..~-"n&#13;
• ; , ' ( &gt; * . • " • - . .&#13;
J&#13;
J- K coJSH29&amp;,.ft. .&lt;&amp;? f ?&#13;
.v .»•*• c&#13;
r&#13;
s..&#13;
«umnm «»»»•»&gt;x&gt;iyi*Ai»ic**M«w»&gt;. -M* v,&#13;
J'&gt;... &lt; " '&#13;
. ^ f ' ^ ' j - V r 1 - - ••&gt;?.. , - . * . . t ' ' . • • ' » . ' . c . •,. '&lt;;.•:• ' . . - • • ' ! •. i , - - . . • . . , - - . . . - . . ' . ^....-. ^ . . 1::.1..... :r &lt;. . -. •••.-•' • ••• . * , , . - ., ' ' , - . - ; " • • « • , ; - • ; - — „ • «.&#13;
.' : •-. ..•„• • * &gt; \ v •„• .--. V , .• : , f ••.-'.&#13;
„•!•''-, ,;i,.' .. * •: m;m r...-&#13;
: , ' W ' • , * , • ; • • .&#13;
V " ' - ... ; / ' , •- "' &gt;*&lt;\- W,V'&#13;
, ' H • ' .&#13;
••'-. • " . * v •- "'&#13;
• ' • 1&#13;
• ' "V&#13;
vis? •••"• .-:.- &lt;?f "if&#13;
*'r&#13;
' • - v ^ , *&#13;
c-*£i*&#13;
Si-^- fe".&#13;
St&#13;
• ' * • * -&#13;
i&#13;
fa.-&#13;
i.&#13;
TC&amp;T.&#13;
£•••&#13;
» • :&#13;
'V.&#13;
J^il.--: V&#13;
v:&#13;
i: ... " -&#13;
.-: * '&#13;
PHOTOS.&#13;
I* • • • « 4 • • «&#13;
We are here and DoinS Business.&#13;
RRMBMBER THAT U n t i l P e b r u a r y 1 5 , W*WII.I.MARBOWII. Very Best, $3.00 Cabinets AnyStyie For 32.00^Do«n&#13;
^ We have all the Latest Styles of Work. .&#13;
On these days we w i l l fiive f r e e with every dozen pictures of the little ones,a large 5 0 c P h o t o B u t t o n v&#13;
Wood Want ed for Photos* Open e v e r y day e x c ept ing Sunday* .*-*——* p. H. NIX &amp; SONi&#13;
PETTEYSVILUfc&#13;
P. W. Coniway was at the county seat&#13;
last Thursday.&#13;
Work was resumed at the Schuler ice&#13;
houses last Thursday.&#13;
Martin Melvin aqd Cal Weller were in&#13;
Howell one day last week.&#13;
Eb. Smith and family, of White Oak,&#13;
visited at J. W. Phiceways over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. John Oliver, of Lansing, and Mrs.&#13;
Lathrop. of of South Lyons, are the guests&#13;
of Mrs. Alex. Mercer.&#13;
About thirty of the young friends of&#13;
.Miss Grace Nash gave her a very pleasant&#13;
surprise last Wednesday evening.&#13;
W A N T E D :&#13;
Apprentice for Millinery trade.&#13;
2w Boyle A Halstead.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLEMrs.&#13;
Smith is improving slowly.&#13;
Philip Dormire is sick with pneumonia.&#13;
The revival meetings closed last Sunday&#13;
with some success.&#13;
Miss Cora Kirk of Hartland spent the&#13;
past week with-Mrs. F. Kirk.&#13;
Joseph Dexter has been quite sick the&#13;
past week with pneumonia but is some&#13;
better at this writing.&#13;
Mr. Jud Cox and family returned to St.&#13;
Johns, this week where he- is engaged for&#13;
tfie coming year in * harness shop.&#13;
Rev. 0. Sanborn and wife of Linden&#13;
and Mrs. Peek of Mason and Mrs. Dibble&#13;
and son of near Flint visited at Geo. Cornells&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
Do not torget the DISPATCH Book&#13;
Bindery when you want work in that&#13;
linn. We bind ever-ythinpf from a receipt&#13;
to a dictionary. Call and see&#13;
our work.&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
The Loyal Guards will give a masquerade&#13;
ball Feb. 14.&#13;
Aubry Royce visited friends in Brighton&#13;
the later part of last week.&#13;
Miss Francis Dunlavy is visiting with&#13;
her grandmother at Dexter.&#13;
Our singing master Mr. £ . N. Ball is&#13;
giving his large class instructions preparatory&#13;
for a concert. ~"&#13;
There were no services at either church&#13;
last Sunday, thexsnow being so deep that&#13;
neither minister could come.&#13;
Miss Irene Ridge entertained a number&#13;
of her friends at her home last Saturday&#13;
afternoon, the occasion being her fifth&#13;
birthday.&#13;
J. L. Kisby is ihe owner of a very&#13;
valuable dog; at least J. L. thinks he is&#13;
since the canine devoured a new ^et-^of&#13;
harnesses.&#13;
The Loyal Guards of Hamburg will&#13;
give a Masquerade Ball, Wednesday evening,&#13;
Feb. 14. Ladies furnish cake. Bill&#13;
for dance 50c.&#13;
^ANDERSON.&#13;
H. Whipple spent the first of&#13;
the week in South Lyon.&#13;
Wm. Keusch, of Chelsea, spent&#13;
Sunday with his people in this&#13;
place. *&#13;
N. J. Durkee spent a couple of&#13;
days last week with relatives in&#13;
Unadilla.&#13;
Bert Goodwin, of Gregory, called&#13;
on friends in Anderson one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
K The Anderson Farmers' Club&#13;
meets at the home of Mr. and Mrs&#13;
V; A. G. Wilson, Saturday, Feb,, lty&#13;
] It is the annual electioTT^of officers.&#13;
Oyster dinner will be served&#13;
Willie Dunbar, of Unadilla,&#13;
spent the first of the week at&#13;
John Birnie's.&#13;
Fred Millar, of Gregory,&#13;
the last of last week with Arthur&#13;
Snith of this place.&#13;
A. J. May and family, and Mrs.&#13;
Nancy May, snent Tuesday with&#13;
Mrs. E. J. Durkee.&#13;
George Black and wite spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with relativet&#13;
in Webberville.&#13;
The Teachers reading circle&#13;
held at the Eaman school house,&#13;
Saturday, was lergely attended.&#13;
Frank Plummer who has been&#13;
employed with,the Michigan Central&#13;
R. R. Co., near Detroit, came&#13;
home last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Bennet, of&#13;
Marion, Mr. and Mrs. Will Bland,&#13;
of North Putnam, spent Saturday&#13;
at Fred Merrills.&#13;
Miss Edith Wood returned&#13;
home Thursday last, from a visit&#13;
with friends in Marion. She was&#13;
accompanied by Miss Mabel&#13;
Wright.&#13;
"Cub" Berdan, of Detroit, a former well&#13;
known violinist of this county, has been&#13;
granted a pension of $72 per month. He&#13;
is a victim of paresis and is a mental and&#13;
physical wreck.—TecumBeh News.&#13;
HERE AND THERE.&#13;
If you want all the news subscribe&#13;
or tbe DISPATCH.&#13;
YOU cam&#13;
Dodge Them&#13;
Did you ever try to dodge the&#13;
rain-drops? Did not succeed&#13;
very well, did you? It's just&#13;
as useless to try to escape from&#13;
the germs of consumption. You&#13;
can't do it. They are about us&#13;
on every hand and we are constantly&#13;
taking them into our&#13;
lungs.&#13;
Then why don't we all have&#13;
this disease? Simply because&#13;
these germs cannot gain a foothold&#13;
in a strong throat and&#13;
lungs. It's when these are&#13;
weak that the germs master.&#13;
The body must be well supplied&#13;
with fat The danger comes&#13;
when the blood is poor and the&#13;
body i s t h i n . If y o u r cough doea&#13;
not yield, and your throat, and&#13;
lungs feel raw and sore} you&#13;
should not delay another day*&#13;
Take Scott's&#13;
Emulsion of Cod-Liver Oil with Hypophosphites&#13;
at once. It will heal the&#13;
inflamed membranes and greatly&#13;
strengthen them as well. The&#13;
digestion becomes stronger, the&#13;
appetite better and the weight&#13;
increases. The whole body becomes&#13;
well fortified and the&#13;
germs ot consumption cannot&#13;
gain a foothold.&#13;
It's this nourishing, sustaining&#13;
and strengthening power&#13;
ot SCOTT'S EMULSION that&#13;
has made it of such value in&#13;
all wasting and exhausting&#13;
diseases.&#13;
Slag left after ftiue makmg of steel&#13;
by tine Bessemer process is uow being&#13;
into p&amp;o»pnate.&#13;
Plans are being made for the construction&#13;
of a tunnel umfer the Hoog'hly&#13;
river at Calcutta. The river at Ui*&gt;&#13;
poiirt LB about 36 feet deep, and acco d&#13;
ing to one of •tine plans the tunnsU wUi&#13;
ipass 12 feet beneath the bed of the&#13;
river. The length of the tunnel proper&#13;
will be 6,875 feet&#13;
Fingers are valued at a high price&#13;
in Australia. A Melbourne boy of-^&#13;
had 'his fingers crushed in a gate at&#13;
a' level crossing, and one had to be&#13;
amputated. An action on his behalf&#13;
was brought against the State Railway&#13;
Department. The jury awarded&#13;
the full amount claimed.. $5,000.&#13;
An English chemist recently examined&#13;
3,165 samples-of- beer, of whic'ii&#13;
421 were found to have been aduJterated,&#13;
and the fact was also discovered&#13;
that the adulteration of beer is almost&#13;
exclusively confined to London. Of 157&#13;
samples of tobacco analyzed 26 were&#13;
found to be adulterated.&#13;
Promotions in Rueaian military service&#13;
are exceedingly Blow. It -akes&#13;
from six to seven years for a capiain&#13;
to become a lieutenant colonel, and&#13;
four for a lieutenant colonel to become&#13;
a colonel. Twenty-three generals of&#13;
one brigade are over 58 years of age,&#13;
and fall under the age limit cUvuse,&#13;
and they ca:n t empire to higlher raiu.&#13;
A ingenious person residing in Little&#13;
Rock, Ark., has patented an inflatable&#13;
boat. One• get&amp; jpnto it, sits down,&#13;
fastens a sheet of Rubber about his&#13;
waist and blows tihe thing up. This&#13;
done nothing can sink i t The craft,&#13;
moreover, may be adapted for the use&#13;
of two or-more occupants if desired.&#13;
A new Swiss railway from Tfluun to&#13;
Burgdorf wus opened recently, says&#13;
tbe Engineer. The line is electrically&#13;
driven by three-phase curremts at 750&#13;
volts. Its kngith is twonty fiva miles,&#13;
Addltloal Local.&#13;
and the power is derived from the Riv&#13;
er Kander. The current is generaterJ&#13;
at Spiez ait a pressure of ;4,000 volts,&#13;
and then itransformed up to 16,001)&#13;
.volte, at wfhioh pressure it is transmitted&#13;
by overhead wires to fourteen&#13;
transformers along the line.&#13;
As the storage of bicycles in Paris&#13;
during the winter mcntihs ip expensive!,&#13;
a great many Parisians pawn their&#13;
machines in the Mont-de-Piete, or&#13;
State pawnshop. The interest paid on&#13;
the advance of money is very small,&#13;
end Is a great saving on what woulfl be&#13;
paid for storage. Besides as the pawnshops&#13;
cannot say for certain that &gt;he&#13;
bicycles will be reclaimed, they have&#13;
to keep them in good order, so that&#13;
they will fctoh a satisfactory price&#13;
6-boitM lb-ay ho nlanftd on the market.&#13;
GOOD STORIES.&#13;
joe. «ad fx.eo, •&amp; drafgfctt,&#13;
fcCOTT &amp; 80WN8, Cham** Hnr Y«&#13;
It. is niotorious, says a Christian&#13;
Commonwealth correspondent, that extempore&#13;
pireadtoersj cf the more florid&#13;
type fall into mannerisms from which&#13;
they do not easily extricate themselves.&#13;
A preacher of this type toad acquired&#13;
a trick of apostrophizing hiis&#13;
hearers a« "dear London souls" or&#13;
"dear Manchester souls," according tn&#13;
the place in wthi«h he was preaching.&#13;
In Dublin this rhetorical device was&#13;
much admired, and "dear Dublin souls"&#13;
drew tears from many eyes. But wihn'&#13;
the worthy preacher extended his tour&#13;
into the'south or Ireland, aiia^aadress^&#13;
ed his a^pea) to the "dear Cork souls,"&#13;
t.he effect was less felicitous. -&#13;
lXan Merivale, in 'hi&amp; "letters,"&#13;
quotes a remark wihich Thackeray&#13;
once made in his presence, . '*1, Kwas&#13;
much struck by a renmrK of Thackeray's&#13;
once when I was in nis company,&#13;
and huzarding some small witiclsm,&#13;
&gt;-*h)e immediately cried out, 'I beg your&#13;
pardon &amp;ir; but have you any further&#13;
use for that? I think It is worth half&#13;
a crowin.' " • ,&#13;
The Wichita Eagle says .that General&#13;
Fred Funston looked out of the car&#13;
window at a small town in Western&#13;
Kansas and saw a seething* mass of&#13;
h,umanlty~a»t&lt;the depot to do him bomor.&#13;
Turning to his wife, he said: "Two&#13;
&gt; oars ago I lectured to an audience of&#13;
r.cven in this town.&#13;
A resident of Atlanta has presented&#13;
to Admiral Dewey an autograph letter&#13;
written by Admiral Farragut, says the&#13;
Kansas Oity Star, in which ocoumi the&#13;
phrase: "That young Dewey is a very&#13;
pramieing ahap."&#13;
Comrremnan, Sam-. W. Smith hai made&#13;
up hit mind to do all in hit power to ter&#13;
cure free rural mall delivery. He thinki&#13;
the farmer ahoald hare the advantage of&#13;
free delivery at well at the cities.&#13;
Circuit court is in session at Howell.&#13;
Dan Jackson is in very poor health at&#13;
this writing.&#13;
Rev. Simpson was in Mt. Clements the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Rev. E. H. Crane has been in quite&#13;
poor health the past week.&#13;
W. S. Swarthout Mid wife visited Chas.&#13;
Rollisou's family over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Cook of Howell is a guest of her&#13;
daughter, Mrs. W. W. Barnard.&#13;
Met Chalker and Ross Hinchey started&#13;
Monday for Cadillac in quest of work.&#13;
Mrs A. J. WilheIn? is caring for.her sister&#13;
Mrs. Dailey, who, is on&gt; the sick list.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Swarthout and sister&#13;
Mabel are visiting Brighton friends this&#13;
W6€l£.&#13;
Chas. Wright and family, of North Dak.&#13;
visited at the home of his brother F. E.,&#13;
the past week.&#13;
The little son of Mr. and Mrs. F. G.&#13;
Jackson was under the doctor's care again&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Read were in Ann&#13;
Arbor, the first of the week, visiting their&#13;
daughter Ethel.&#13;
Mrs. Lucy Styles, a former well known&#13;
resident of this village, Died at her home&#13;
in Marshall, Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Henry Sellmau died at her home in&#13;
Ann Arbor, Feb. 5, and her remains were&#13;
brought to this place .and funeral held at&#13;
St. Mary's church, She was a sister of&#13;
Miss Rose Dunn. A large circle of relatives&#13;
are left to mourn their loss.&#13;
Mrs. Samuel Elliot and family have •&#13;
gone to Traverse City, where her husband&#13;
has been for some time.,&#13;
Miss Maude Swarthout, of Williamston, -&#13;
and" Claude Rollison, of Brighton, viahetf^&#13;
relatives in town Tuesday.&#13;
Miss Grace Lake and Miss Mabel Sigler&#13;
visited at the home of Mrs. Herb. Schoenhale,&#13;
in Genoa, the past week.&#13;
Mrs. A. T. Mann and son George, of&#13;
Wisconsin, were guests of her sister, Mrs.&#13;
C. V. VanWinkle, the past week.&#13;
Miss Lillie Swarthout, of Williamston,&#13;
was a guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Silas Swarthout the first of the week.&#13;
Mrs. Jerry Dunn was called to. Ann Arbor,&#13;
the first of the week by the death of&#13;
Mr. Dunn'B sister, Mrs. G. H. Sellman.&#13;
The Ladies oi the M. E. church will&#13;
serve dinner at die parsonage, Wednesday&#13;
February 14. Everyone cordially invited.&#13;
Mr. Ebenezer Kilpatriok and wife&#13;
of San Francisco visited Mr. Thoa, Carroll&#13;
and relatives of Pinckney the last part of&#13;
last week. *&#13;
Rev. J. R. Andrews, of Howell, has re*&#13;
signed and accepted a call to the first Baptist&#13;
church in Lansing. He will go about&#13;
March 1.&#13;
On Monday Drs. Sigler of this place and&#13;
Dr. Nichols, of Whitmore Lake, removed&#13;
a kidney for Mrs. Frank Spiegelberg, of&#13;
the latter place. The operation was made&#13;
on account of a malignant growtn, and in&#13;
spite of the unfavorable nature of the case,&#13;
it promises to be successful. Mrs. Spiegelberg&#13;
has an infant child 3 weeks old.&#13;
W A N T E D&#13;
Every lady in the county to know the&#13;
completeness of our Kitchen Furnishing&#13;
Department, and in order to make&#13;
it still more so we offer F R E E one of&#13;
our new patent S T E E L P A R I N G&#13;
K N I V E S , a most useful article, to&#13;
any lady who will name five articles we&#13;
do not have that pught to be i n , a&#13;
Kitchen^ Furnishing Department. We&#13;
hope we shall have t o give away a*&#13;
good many of them. .;'v&#13;
'*•&#13;
This New Knife Pleases.&#13;
F U b b Y WARRANTED.&#13;
:v&#13;
* ^&#13;
E?ery housekeeper uses a paring knife/'&#13;
And everyone ha* a preference. M*?&#13;
Some prefer one kind, someanother.it* """&#13;
$ $ • • ' • • . ; : &gt; • • • * • — . The RING PARING KNIFE is positively NEW, and $ &amp; most complete&#13;
knife for paring eyer made. WHY? Because it fits th«&amp;S&amp;/* The objections,&#13;
such as large, awkward, clumsy handles, and thi^Abeavy blades are&#13;
/entirely done away with. The RING attachment adj^tabie!. to*the middle&#13;
finger holds the knife in place without any effort on tfceTparVof the' operator,&#13;
which is one of the strong points in its favor, £*??'*.' • ; • *&#13;
Tbe new paring knife is used daily at the Boston (£o\^ug School and endorsed&#13;
by the magazine, "Table Talk," two of the h i ^ a f authorities in this&#13;
country*&#13;
* Tours res&#13;
L, H. m&amp;lft '»'* F I&#13;
u^m^^^mkm^^^^^ j &amp; i v&#13;
V'K'.'&#13;
- - ^ - ^ S J S JiI f )&#13;
• • I * '&#13;
* * • . i&#13;
iA"&#13;
; • : • #&#13;
i&#13;
•ij&#13;
mmii ^.«*n .•JL., ifc,-</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Note</name>
          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36686">
              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6439">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch February 08, 1900</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6440">
                <text>February 08, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6441">
                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6442">
                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6443">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6444">
                <text>1900-02-08</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6445">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="15">
        <name>newspaper</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="16">
        <name>pinckney dispatch</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="931" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="859">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/a24458ff31ee0bb0a306abc6d0e3346d.pdf</src>
        <authentication>ad1f89f278491de029f6191a2e5b6948</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="9">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1621">
                  <text>Newspaper</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1630">
                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="57">
          <name>Hidden Search Text</name>
          <description>Enter Search Text that is always hidden except to edit.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32198">
              <text>VOL. xvm. PINOKNBY, LIVINGSTON 00», HEOH;, THURSDAY, FEB. 15.1900. No. 7.&#13;
per yd&#13;
BARGAINS,&#13;
We give you big value for your money&#13;
Brash Edge binding per yard 04&#13;
Drees Stays 05&#13;
Velveteen binding per bunch, 10&#13;
Card of hooks and eyes 02 and OS&#13;
Saxony yarn per skein 05&#13;
Qermantown zephyrs per skein 06&#13;
Ladies' Fleece-lined Hose 10&#13;
Children's-heavy fleeoeln'd hose 10,15&#13;
Men's heavy cotton socks 05&#13;
Music rolls 25,49&#13;
Men's heavy over-shirts 45&#13;
Gating flan el&#13;
Bottle best black ink '..&#13;
Bottle red ink&#13;
Muoi|age&#13;
25 good envelopes&#13;
JPetroieum jelly&#13;
I box 12 jrood cigars&#13;
Tooth powder&#13;
Good tar soap&#13;
Ivory Soap *&#13;
Gocoanat cream soap&#13;
Good crash - _&#13;
75c Overalls " 50&#13;
Gabblers outfit 50&#13;
Lanterns 45 64&#13;
$2 carvinp set $L50&#13;
$3 dress suit case — 2.00&#13;
Valises 47c to 1.50&#13;
$2.50 iron bottom trunks 1.75&#13;
No. 9 all copper tea kettles 1.10&#13;
15.00 chamber set 3.99&#13;
Come and see our 5&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
05&#13;
03&#13;
05&#13;
03&#13;
03&#13;
04&#13;
05&#13;
02&#13;
per par 04&#13;
05&#13;
per yd 08 10&#13;
and 10 cent&#13;
tables, they contain Bargains.&#13;
— E . A. Bowman has consented to let&#13;
Bert Wellman issue premium tickets&#13;
with trade, these tickets have won a&#13;
ffood deal of trade for the store at&#13;
Howell, the tickets will be redeemed&#13;
at either ft ore.&#13;
Our two stores enable us&#13;
"to grve you the greatest value&#13;
for your money—why pay&#13;
more.&#13;
Did you get a Valentine?&#13;
Next Thursday is Washington's&#13;
Birthday.&#13;
Ed. Oonlavy oi Dexter was in town&#13;
Sunday last&#13;
Born, to 0 . Taylor and wife of So.&#13;
Lyon, the past week a son.&#13;
". Dr. N. H. Br win of Howell spent&#13;
Sunday with R. H. Erwin and family.&#13;
Mike and Will Roche spent Saturday&#13;
Sunday with friends in Banker&#13;
Hill.&#13;
Lorenzo Farnam of Ypsilanti spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with his mother&#13;
here.&#13;
Frank Isham of Oak Grove was the&#13;
guest of bis brother here the last of&#13;
last week.&#13;
James Green of the U. of M. spent&#13;
Sunday with his mother and other&#13;
friends at this place.&#13;
Mr. Amasa Leddick of Maple Rapids&#13;
visited at the home of his brother-inlaw&#13;
Geo. Poole, the past week.&#13;
The time for auctions is at hand and&#13;
we are ready to put outbillson abort&#13;
notice and at reasonable rates. Do&#13;
25j-not forget us.&#13;
Florence Andrews gave a candy pull&#13;
to several of her sciool-mates on Saturday&#13;
afternoon last in honor of her&#13;
twelfth birthday.&#13;
Almost a flood was caused last week&#13;
by the disappearance of our snow in a&#13;
rain storm. A great deal of damage&#13;
was done in some places.&#13;
We understand that the Young&#13;
Peoples party at the Tuomey house&#13;
last Friday evening was a success in&#13;
every particular. Forty-three numbers&#13;
were sold.&#13;
At the annual meeting of the&#13;
Brighton Market Fair stockholders,&#13;
last week, tbey came to the conclusion&#13;
that the fair at at that place is a thing&#13;
of the past, and that the grounds will&#13;
be offered for sale.&#13;
Come and get&#13;
then&#13;
our prices,&#13;
MATCH US IF YOU CAN.&#13;
S'&#13;
Yours for trade,&#13;
,Bk A BOWMAN, Prop.&#13;
Bowman.Block, Pinckney.&#13;
BERT WELLMAN&#13;
Manager of Pinckney Store.&#13;
Howell Store, next to P. 0 .&#13;
Bills were printed the past week at&#13;
this office, announcing a sale of personal&#13;
property on the late Geo. Brown&#13;
farm. Mrs. Brown has been appointed&#13;
administratrix and will sell the property&#13;
Feb. 21, at one p. m.&#13;
A gentleman from Detroit was in&#13;
town Monday buying up New State&#13;
telephone stock. It is reported that&#13;
tie secured about $900 worth for&#13;
which be paid about $58 per share.&#13;
Some of the local stockholders had&#13;
already sold and others prefered to&#13;
hold on and take their chances—&#13;
Dexter Leader.&#13;
D. E^ Hand, proprietor of the Electric&#13;
Granite works, of Ann Arbor, has&#13;
found two huge granite boulders on a&#13;
farm in Lima, Washtenaw Co. Their&#13;
weight is estimated at 150,000 and&#13;
350,000 pounds. Mr. Hand thinks&#13;
there are many boulders lying around&#13;
the farms of Washtenaw county&#13;
whioh would bring the farmers from&#13;
$50 to $75 apiece.&#13;
Read Below&#13;
And s e e what you can buy&#13;
at fhe Wri&amp;ht store for a little&#13;
money* on&#13;
Saturday, Feb. 17,1900.&#13;
Feb. 19, |&#13;
••Uncle Josh "&#13;
At the opera house, Pinckney.&#13;
Under management of lecture&#13;
oiation.&#13;
Rev. K. H. Crane is quite ill at this&#13;
writing.&#13;
Mrs. C. E. Richards is under the&#13;
doctor's care.&#13;
Born to F. J. Wright and wife, on&#13;
Saturd ay last a son.&#13;
You will miss a treat if you miss&#13;
hearing "Uncle Josh."&#13;
The oyster supper announced for&#13;
thelfHh has been indefinitely postponed.&#13;
The Loyal Guards took in two new&#13;
members at their regular meeting last&#13;
evening.&#13;
F.G. Jackson's store and the post&#13;
office are fitted up with the new Air&#13;
Light and it is a great improvement.&#13;
The ladies1 aid of Lakin's appointment&#13;
will serve dinner at the home of&#13;
R. M. Glenn, -Wednesday, Feb. 21.&#13;
The gentlemen cordially invited.&#13;
We were mis-informed last week in&#13;
the notice regarding the burial of&#13;
Mrs. Hemy Sell man. She was taken&#13;
to So. Lyon for burial instead of here.&#13;
The society of church workers will&#13;
hold their monthly tea at the home of&#13;
Mrs. Frank Sigler, next Wednesday,&#13;
Feb. 21, from 5 until all are served.&#13;
A cordial invitation is extended to all.&#13;
All who have not settled for their&#13;
lecture course tickets are requested to&#13;
do so at once. Every dollar is now&#13;
needed to pay for tba entertainments.&#13;
Please be prompt and settle by February&#13;
19.&#13;
There will be a county Teachers'&#13;
Association held at the central school&#13;
building. Howell, on Saturday, Feb.&#13;
24, commencing art 10:80. A good&#13;
program is arranged and every teacher&#13;
in the county is urged to attend.&#13;
Saturday's Evening News mentioned&#13;
the arrest of Walter R. Robinson,&#13;
attorney of Detroit. Some seem to&#13;
think it is the Walter C. Robinson,&#13;
whom many of our young people&#13;
know, and we feel it but justice to say&#13;
that it is not the Walter Robinson&#13;
who has made several visits here.&#13;
On'Tuesday evening of last week&#13;
the Cong'l people of Chelsea gave their&#13;
pastor, Rev. C. S. Jones and wife, a&#13;
reception and free-will-offering in the&#13;
church parlors. A fine pro?ram and&#13;
refreshments were served. The offering&#13;
amounted to $140.45. Rev. Jones&#13;
will remain with the church another&#13;
year at a salary of $1,000.&#13;
The next entertainment on the lecture&#13;
course will be Wheeler DeLong,&#13;
with his 210 pictures of the various&#13;
climactic scenes of the popular drama,&#13;
"Uncle Josh.'1. With the aid ot his&#13;
impersonations and the life size presentation&#13;
of the highly colored pictures&#13;
in quick succession, he will reproduce&#13;
this play, which has had such&#13;
a marvelous hold on the public, and&#13;
| bring it. wil.tnn tha_reachof many who&#13;
could not see it as 'presented in the&#13;
theatres-of larger cities. These pictures&#13;
were taken from life models,&#13;
posed by an experienced manager&#13;
amidst the scenes of a New England&#13;
home and with the, aid of the latest&#13;
stereopticoo apparatus will be magnified&#13;
to life size. At fbnckney opera&#13;
house, next Monday evening, Feb. 19.&#13;
19ibt Grawila|B*! 8t*ffar&#13;
22 lbs light brown Sugar&#13;
1 gallon 40c Malasses&#13;
1 " SOc&#13;
1 "••• 30c8yrup&#13;
2 lbs good bulk Soda&#13;
1 lb Eagle Baking Powder&#13;
1 lb Elastic Starch&#13;
Mb Monies Glosi Starch&#13;
$1.00&#13;
i.eo&#13;
30c&#13;
1 lb Corn Starch&#13;
1 lb XXXX Coffee&#13;
1 lb bulk Coffee&#13;
20c 11 can best Tomatoes&#13;
20o 1 " • " Peaches ,&#13;
5c&#13;
7c&#13;
7c&#13;
5c&#13;
1 gallon pure Cider Vinegar&#13;
1 dozen Tumblers&#13;
12 bars Key Soap&#13;
/ r — N . •&#13;
5c&#13;
10c&#13;
4c&#13;
7u&#13;
10c&#13;
13c&#13;
20c&#13;
25c&#13;
iuiiiiiuinuiiiiuHiniuumuuuiiiHu.&#13;
Come to the&#13;
Dispatch Office&#13;
P i n c k n e y * Mich*,&#13;
For&#13;
l*etf er Heads,&#13;
Envelopes,&#13;
Cards, E t c .&#13;
P r i c e s Right.&#13;
IttlTHTIfftUliffffHtlTTfyiTIIIfflffllfflflllf&#13;
EIGHTH GRADE EXAMINATION.&#13;
Always at if.&#13;
At What?&#13;
Selling Goods of course.&#13;
While the noliday trade is always a harvest for some&#13;
—and we get our share—our trade always remains good&#13;
the year around. The reason is that we sell the best staple&#13;
goods for the least money. People today are not looking&#13;
for CHEAP goods but GOOD goods cheap.&#13;
The following are some of our lines:&#13;
Drugs and Medicines.&#13;
A full and complete line.&#13;
&gt; V 7&#13;
School Supplies.&#13;
Books, Tablets, Pencils Pens,&#13;
Ink and&#13;
Examination Blanks.&#13;
G r o c k e r y .&#13;
A full line of&#13;
Plain and Fancy ware.&#13;
A f ine line of Lamps.&#13;
F a n c y A r t i c l e s .&#13;
Celluloid Goods, Hdkf., Cuff&#13;
and Collor Box s .&#13;
They make fine birthday gift*.&#13;
G r o c e r i e s .&#13;
W e carry a line&#13;
of the best in town.&#13;
Prices are right.&#13;
Wall Paper.&#13;
Our sales the past year were far ahead of&#13;
bur expectations, and this season we will be&#13;
better prepared than ever to give values.&#13;
* " Hi&#13;
t&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
S S&#13;
&gt; * ^ TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
General Hardware,&#13;
Have as complete an assortment of heavy and shelf hardware&#13;
as can be found in the county, and 1000 finds us&#13;
more thoroughly equipped than ev^r before.&#13;
* • ' • %&#13;
In fact evexrtttng in oar stock goes at OUT PRICES, such as&#13;
Crockery, Tinware, woodenware. Gloves, Mittens, Tobacco, etc&#13;
These price* sjs for Cash—Butter and Eggs taken at cash value.&#13;
F. E. WRIGHT.&#13;
The pupils' Eighth.Grad* examination&#13;
will be held on Saturday, March&#13;
3rd.,. 1900r. at the following places:&#13;
Gregory, Pinckney, Hamburg, Brighton,&#13;
HartHand, Howell, Oak Grore and&#13;
Fowlerville. It it hoped that every&#13;
teacher in trie coonty will encourage&#13;
bis or ber eighth grade pnpito to&lt;iwrite&#13;
this examination. Evan if a f o p l&#13;
Pbould fail, he will fed where a w a s *&#13;
nets is and will be led to remedy Ifeet&#13;
defect JurtMI. WAJ^ACE,&#13;
Co. Com. of Schools*&#13;
Builders Hardware a Specialty.&#13;
Doors and Common Sash always in stock*&#13;
Complete line ot Buggies, Wagons and&#13;
Heading Stoves, ' • ; Ranges, Wood Stove*&#13;
^y- - 1&#13;
Wood and Coal.&#13;
- ' y&#13;
•NV y&#13;
&amp; •&#13;
$ • ' •&#13;
_/&#13;
i'. - ^ - 1&#13;
: . • • ; • ' • • . , ; : • " . . . . * / • / • "&#13;
^ v ^ 1 ' • " ' . ' • • .•'&#13;
' - V A :'-.'• ; ft&#13;
**m&#13;
^ ' l i f - ' ' ^ '&#13;
iV •:«,':• '&#13;
^^fe&gt;1'*v ^ *&#13;
^^Mt'Jj'!!,' .'-''•*'''*&#13;
H P P ^ y ' * "^" "- * * •""""&#13;
^^F*1 v''1 (•«• • vw*r= •&#13;
R'^*'&gt;i--'!&#13;
B^'J'J.A^;&#13;
Btt^; '?k-\&#13;
R^y/'''^'• H K ^ ^ 1 ^ •'•'&#13;
^ H b ( -.' r - "^ i&#13;
BJI';'1 •aMS^ ",*'"' ! ^^l^B: ^^-^&#13;
^Kl^.'-r^',' .&#13;
^HB|4^A:-&#13;
HHsE&amp; 'r v ^^KKii^V&#13;
^ K ^ V *&#13;
^H&amp;KlT^' •"&#13;
•f^Htr*Jgl$ '*&#13;
B-?"-f.^*•&#13;
^ B ^ '&#13;
^ ^ B ^ i -''&#13;
Ki* "'^'&#13;
•fe'^J''''&#13;
H&amp;jf-v •'.'.,•&#13;
BpN;^ HBWT^' H ^ C i ' . , ' '&#13;
K%':' V •&#13;
H t : •••*,-'&#13;
fffic'V*1 •&#13;
M':&#13;
--¾¾ • '&#13;
?t •. • •&#13;
e*j£&#13;
V.&#13;
.'.'J-.&#13;
lit*&#13;
$"&#13;
» • ' \&#13;
*&#13;
flT&#13;
V .••:'. *&#13;
•*"S7-'',&#13;
'WW!*&#13;
' ^ ,&#13;
8¾¾¾&#13;
.&lt;V&#13;
EVENTS OF THE WEEK&#13;
' « N O U R Q f i B A T ' S T A T E R E L A T E D&#13;
IN A B R I E F F O R M .&#13;
&lt;«rfey t h e Blvtr » n d Sarbov C»mmltt««&#13;
OoD't P m a n t an Appropriation Bill&#13;
«U «Ue Praaant 8«Mlon of CongreM—&#13;
/Bad Wreck on the C. * N. W. By.&#13;
/ T h o s e Harbor and River Fnada.&#13;
T h e r e h a s b e e n some surprise this&#13;
jre&amp;rover t h e reported d e t e r m i n a t i o n&#13;
•of t h e river a n d harbor c o m m i t t e e n o t&#13;
t o p r e s e n t a n y appropriation bill dur&gt;&#13;
d n g t h e first session of con^ress.^ T h e&#13;
^ u n o u n t of funds n o w available for t h i s&#13;
.purpose i s s h o w n i n t h e f o l l o w i n g&#13;
fcable, and doubtless e x p l a i n s t h e com-&#13;
« o i t t e e s action:&#13;
Unspent Available&#13;
July 1, "W July 1. '00&#13;
Oatonogon »....« 8,613 $ 8,167&#13;
Keweenaw Point to lake.... 655.571 296,307&#13;
Marquette L a.187 ' 4.0W&#13;
Harbor of Refuge, Murquette So.i'Hi »&gt;077&#13;
Harbor of Hcfuxe, Orand&#13;
MaruLs ,. 24.754 6,607&#13;
Menominee harbor 5.7(M 14,966&#13;
•fanominoc river 17.848 88ft&#13;
S t Joseph 48.1U2 37,1)18&#13;
S t Joseph river 16 t(5&#13;
fiouthHuven., 50.171 40.547&#13;
Saugatuck ,... 0.857 'J.855&#13;
KalamuMio river 14.MU 14.U80&#13;
Holland l'.luck lake 30.928 16.9M&#13;
GmoA 4iuvea.™ - - . ^^^ gu.stfa ia.574&#13;
•Grand river.. 7B.IM7 60.59S&#13;
Muskegon 60,t«5 50,508&#13;
White hiko «,««7 3J.610&#13;
»entwator 2:&gt;.3Ti&gt; .3,916&#13;
^aldington 28.800 25,890&#13;
Manistee 30.432 26,635&#13;
Harbor of Refuge, Portage&#13;
. l a k e , 78.090 74.019&#13;
Frankfort y . . . . - ' 80,3(56 33.4(13&#13;
"Charlevotx sw,^i 20,918 18,2,¾&#13;
tetoskey . 21,170 21.170&#13;
Ship canal, Detroit and&#13;
Buffalo ,. 540,095 447579&#13;
S t Mary's river.... 911,680 888(372&#13;
Hay Lake ctmunel........... 142.281 100.000&#13;
C*ej&gt;oypan n).4i&gt;0 4.451&#13;
Alpena y.u-'i 2.940&#13;
Satujatuck river 77.riVJ 51.679&#13;
Setoewuiti? • 30,988 35, WW&#13;
Harbor ot Kcfugc, Saginaw&#13;
bay. 149,950 14/,(384&#13;
(Mouth of IJlack river. Port ,&#13;
Huron 5.875 5.875&#13;
Black river, Port Huron.... 4.782 4.782&#13;
JHnerlver. 5.837. . . 1,913&#13;
Belle river IO.IKW 4,(»9&#13;
St. Clalt Flats canal 3.&lt;XVJ 3,059&#13;
•dlaton river 7.130 --7,130&#13;
©etroit river lOO.txW 100,000&#13;
B o u ^ e river 14,245 13,619&#13;
iMonroe 5,000 4,910&#13;
Snffar Beet Raising in Michigan.&#13;
Prof. Clinton D. Smith, director of&#13;
' t h e Michigan e x p e r i m e n t station, i s&#13;
o u t w i t h a s t a t e m e n t t h a t is of mttch&#13;
i n t e r e s t t o the thousands of sugar beet&#13;
g r o w e r s of Michigan, h i s desire being&#13;
t o correct a misapprehension e x i s t i n g&#13;
i n t h e minds of a great m a n y farmers&#13;
•trho reside i n the vicinity of beet sugar&#13;
•factories. Mr. S m i t h calls attention t o&#13;
t t h c fact t h a t t h e experiment station&#13;
h&amp;iTundertaken a great many experim&#13;
e n t s in t h e g r o w i n g of sugar beets.&#13;
D u r i n g t h e past 10 years i£ h a s scatt&#13;
e r e d beet seed over t h e staJte^ and t o&#13;
a s c e r t a i n t h e quality of t h e beets pro-&#13;
-duced i t h a s tested t h e b e e t s sent i n by&#13;
•••the growers. T h e s e results warrant&#13;
^thc s t a t e m e n t t h a t good b e e t s can be&#13;
{ g r o w n in most parts of t h e states.&#13;
I n m a n y instances t h e g r o w e r s have&#13;
b e c o m e dissatisfied w i t h t h e test re-&#13;
-sult$ g i v e n t h e m b y t h e factories, and&#13;
tiave sent their beets t o t h e college.&#13;
' T h e results of t h e college analyses&#13;
thave been used a s a basis for an. att&#13;
a c k o n t h e good faith of t h e factory,&#13;
ttwei g r o w e r evidently f o r g e t t i n g that&#13;
t h e b e e t s s e n t t o t h e college—axc—in^.&#13;
'variable selected^and d o not come a n y :&#13;
•where near representing t h e crop a s i t&#13;
«ruus; and also losing s i g h t of t he fact&#13;
t h a t the beets s e n t t o t h e college are&#13;
i a l m o s t invariably dried o u t and somew&#13;
h a t withered, and that, therefore,&#13;
i t h e s t a t e m e n t of tj»e c h e m i s t regard-&#13;
^thehi, w h i l e absolutely true,, is grossly&#13;
m i s l e a d i n g t o t h e person w h o does n o t&#13;
t a k e these facts i n t o consideration.&#13;
Monthly Crop. Report.&#13;
I n t h e Michigan crop report for February&#13;
Secretary o f S t a t e Stearns s a y s&#13;
t h a t there w a s vary l i t t l e precipitation&#13;
in Michigan i n J a n u a r y u n t i l t h e lust&#13;
f e w d a y s of t h e month. T h e average&#13;
depth of bnow o n t h e 15th u l t . , i n t h e&#13;
southern counties, w a s 0.70 i n c h e s , in&#13;
the central counties 1..90 inches, a n d i n&#13;
t h e n o r t h e r n counties 3.IS inches. On&#13;
the l a s t d a y of t h e m o n t h t h e average&#13;
depth w a s 2.13 inohes -in t h e southern&#13;
counties, 1.13 inches i n t h e c e n t r a l a n d&#13;
7.4U i n c h e s i n t h e northern counties.&#13;
I n mdfet of t h e s o u t h e r n c o u n t i e s t h e&#13;
g r o u n d w a s practically bear during t h e&#13;
entire m o n t h .&#13;
I n reply t o t h e question, " H a s w h e a t&#13;
suffered injury from a n y cause d u r i n g&#13;
J a n u a r y ? " 370 correspondents i n t h e&#13;
s o u t h e r n counties a n s w e r e d "yes," a n d&#13;
95 u n o . M I n t h e central c o u n t i e s 116&#13;
correspondents answered: "yes,M a n d&#13;
35 " n o , " I n t h e northern c o u n t i e s 35&#13;
a n s w e r e d »'yes," and 30 " n o . " The.&#13;
prevailing opinion is t h a t w h e a t h a s&#13;
suffered some injury. Conditions h a v e&#13;
been unfavorable, y e t t h e outcome depends&#13;
very largely on t h e w e a t h e r t h a t&#13;
follows. T h e total number of b u s h e l s&#13;
of w h e a t reported marketed b y farmers&#13;
in January w a s 475,536. Of t h i s&#13;
total 320,289 bushels w e r e marketed i n&#13;
t h e s o u t h e r n four... tiers of counties,&#13;
123,478 i n t h e central counties, arid 21,-&#13;
769 i n t h e northern counties. T h e total&#13;
number of bushels of w h e a t reported&#13;
marketed in t h e six m o n t h s , A u g u s t t o&#13;
January, i s 3,171,026, w h i c h i s 6,680.,-&#13;
984 b u s h e l s less than reported marketed&#13;
in t h e same m o n t h s last year.&#13;
Live stock throughout t h e state is in&#13;
a fairly good condition.&#13;
HUMS . ! » • * - !,.l&lt;* mm. v'i'it-&#13;
' • # • •&#13;
• ,"iff'v * &gt; &lt; ' &lt;E^lU£,a&#13;
* i&#13;
i '•&gt;, ..-. - V&#13;
£^¾ *&#13;
r&#13;
T h e s t a t e school for t h e blind la a g a i n&#13;
in q u a r a n t i n e , 16 coses of m e a s l e s b a y&#13;
J n g developed there i a 24 h o u r s time.&#13;
N o n e o f t h e victims a r e very sick. \&#13;
Quartermaster-General A t k i n s o n s a y s&#13;
t h e r e Will b e a n e n c a m p m e n t of t h e&#13;
M i c h i g a n National Guard t h i s year,&#13;
b n t t h e date h a s n o t y e t b e e n fixed.&#13;
B y t h e premature e x p l o s i o n o f a&#13;
c h a r g e of g i a n t p o w d e r i n t h e V o l u n -&#13;
t e e r mine, near N e g a u n e e , o n t h e 8th,&#13;
o n e m a n w a s killed a n d a n o t h e r badly&#13;
injured.&#13;
Part of t h e brick w o r k&#13;
turrets of t h e n e w Masonic temple a t&#13;
Muskegon'fell o n t h e n i g h t of t h e 7th*&#13;
N o o n e V a s injured a n d t h e loss i s n o t&#13;
s e r i o u s . , '&#13;
On F e b . 20 t h e village of D o w a g i a c&#13;
w i l l vote ,on t h e proposition of b o n d i n g&#13;
for $12,000 t o aid t h e E a s t e r n A Northw&#13;
e s t e r n railroad from T o l e d o t o Bent&#13;
o n Harbor.&#13;
T h e b i g Phoenix flouring mill d a m&#13;
j u s t south of Nbrthville w e n t o u t o n&#13;
the 8th w i t h t h e big freshet, d o i n g several&#13;
thousand dollars w o r t h of damage.&#13;
AT HOcME Aflp ABB03U&#13;
t&#13;
A ^ U M ^ f A H Y O f T H E N E W 8 F p j T&#13;
Tr^B W E E K B Y WlrVg. %&#13;
o n o n e o f t h e&#13;
Amarloa't Oldaat Statesman. COOoLL Blah*&#13;
ard W. TbfOnapeon, is Dead — The&#13;
Mormons are Preparing t o Leave&#13;
Utahr-Other Items.&#13;
\&#13;
'Heavy Ralna Did Much Damage.&#13;
R e p o r t s from a l l sections o t lower&#13;
'Michigan show tliat t h e h e a v y rains of&#13;
r t h e 7 t h a n d 8 t h , w h i c h cleared t h e&#13;
g r o u n d of snow, did m u c h damage.&#13;
*The railroads are t h e heaviest losers.&#13;
B e t w e e n JSrayling and West Branch&#13;
t h e r e w a s a h e a v y w a s h o u t o n — t h e&#13;
M a c k i n a w division of t h e Michigan&#13;
^Central. T h e r e w e r e several troubles&#13;
o m e w a s h o u t s s o u t h of B a y City. T h e&#13;
jG. E . &amp; I. road north from Grand Rapi&#13;
d s w a s badly tied u p a n d i t s Muskegon&#13;
i&gt;ranch w a s also i n trouble. O n / t h e&#13;
F e r e Marquette road there w e r e / w a s h -&#13;
o u t s a t N e w a y g c v B e l d i n g and Mears.&#13;
M a n i s t e e reports t h a t a^mile beyond&#13;
B a s t Lake a landslide piled sand o n&#13;
4 h e Pere^Warquette^roadbed s i x feet&#13;
•deep for nearly 100 feet. About half a&#13;
m i l e east a similar b u t l e s s serious obs&#13;
t r u c t i o n Was found. A t Stronach&#13;
t h e r e w a s also a w a s h o u t w h i c h m a y&#13;
p r o v e i s e n o u s . At Moriey a l l t h e l o w&#13;
l a n d s w e r e inundated, doing much&#13;
d a m a g e , and a steel bridge w e s t of that&#13;
place w a s also carried a w a y .&#13;
m "&#13;
Peculiar Case at Calumet.&#13;
T h y s i c i a n s a n d l a y m e n are deeply&#13;
:puzzled by t h e peculiar case of Harriet&#13;
•Clark, a 13-year-old girl, l i v i n g i n Cal-&#13;
-timet. On t h e e v e n i n g of t h e 4th s h e&#13;
•retired in apparently perfect health.&#13;
. A n hour later strange rappings a n d&#13;
Cknoekings b e g u n i n h e r room. T h e&#13;
( g i r l became badly frightened and called&#13;
I p r assistance. Those w h o touched her&#13;
r e c e i v e d smart electrical shocks, a n d&#13;
t h e rappings increased in violence. Dr&#13;
A. O. McLeod, a p r o m i n e n t physician.&#13;
ievas summoned b u t w a s unable to~give&#13;
f reiief t o t h e girl o r s t o p t h e violent&#13;
t r a p p i n g s w h i c h constantly continued&#13;
f r o m a l l parte- of t h e room. ' T h e girl&#13;
r c o n t i n u e d i n t h e s a m e condition, and&#13;
t h e rappings, w h i c h are n o w internaltfciont,&#13;
c a n b e heard fully 100 feet away.&#13;
Thoae Spanish-American War Claims.&#13;
T h e t i m e within w h i c h additional&#13;
claims for the care and maintenance of&#13;
indigent and sick veterans of t h e Spanish-&#13;
American w a r couldblTfiled under&#13;
the terms of t h e l a w enacted a t t h e&#13;
special session of t h e legislature* expired&#13;
Jan. 31. Auditor-tJeneral D i x i s&#13;
in possession of a vast n u m b e r of claims&#13;
w h i c h are n o w b e i n g tabulated and e x -&#13;
amined. T h e l a w g i v e s t h e auditorgeneral&#13;
authority to reject claims t h a t&#13;
are m a n i f e s t l y improper, and this w i l l&#13;
be done ^SVTiTTe"!!)^ &lt;'om|nil-ii1mH—of | d u r i n g&#13;
the claims h a s not y e t been completed,&#13;
t h e indications are t h a t t h e total w i l l&#13;
exceed t h e 840,000 additional appropriated&#13;
at t h e special session- I n this&#13;
e v e n t t h e claims will be pro rated.&#13;
It will be rebuilt.&#13;
T h e contract for t h e n e w normal&#13;
school h u i l d i n g a t M t . Pleasant h a s&#13;
been awarded a Port H u r o n contractor&#13;
for $24,753. T h e structure is t o b e&#13;
completed, by .-Sept...lJL&#13;
T h e internal revenue c o l l e c t i o n s at&#13;
S a g i n a w for January a m o u n t e d t o 817,-&#13;
541.44. T h e collections for beer s t a m p s&#13;
w e r e $4,483.30; tobacco, $188.'7C, a n d&#13;
documentary, $3,207.97.&#13;
A cash bonus of $9,500 w a s subscribed&#13;
by citizens of Benton Harbor a t a m a s s&#13;
m e e t i n g o n t h e 6th, w h i c h secures t h e&#13;
rebuilding-of t h e fruit p a c k a g e factory&#13;
recently destroyed b y (ire.&#13;
H e n r y R. Winn, h e a d of t h e w e l l -&#13;
k n o w n firm of Winn &amp; Hardmond,&#13;
printers, of Detroit, e x p i r e d very sudd&#13;
e n l y while en route to h i s office o n t h e&#13;
morn.ing on the 5th. H e a r t failure.&#13;
_ Merchants of Marine City are prot&#13;
e s t i n g a g a i n s t t h e h i g h f r e i g h t . rates&#13;
t h e y are obliged t o p a y t h e railroads&#13;
from Detroit, c l a i m i n g i t costs t h e m&#13;
three times more by rail t h a n by water.&#13;
A Marlettc ina,n h a s a c o w w i t h a&#13;
reeord that h e t h i n k s can't be beaten.&#13;
the p a s t year 430 pounds of&#13;
Col. Thompson Dead.&#13;
CoL Richard W. T h o m p s o n , America's&#13;
oldest s t a t e s m a n , died a t h i s h o m e&#13;
i n Terre'Haute, I n d . . o n t h e m o r n i n g&#13;
of t h e 9th, aged 91. Deceased had s e e n&#13;
every President e x c e p t W a s h i n g t o n&#13;
and t h e Elder Adams; w a s acquainted&#13;
w i t h every President since V a n Buren's&#13;
t i m e , a n d w a s a n i n t i m a t e friend o f&#13;
Lincoln. He, w a s born i n Virginia,&#13;
J u n e 9, 1809; entered t h e I n d i a n a legislature&#13;
i n 1834; elected t o congress i n&#13;
1841; elected circuit j u d g e i n 1851, a n d&#13;
w a s secretary of t h e n a v y from 1877 t o&#13;
1881. I n 1833 Mr. T h o m p s o n made h i s .&#13;
first political speech in a n a t i o n a l campaign,&#13;
i n support o f Clay. He m a d e&#13;
s t u m p speeches in 17 presidential c a m -&#13;
paigns; h e had been a d e l e g a t e t o m o r e&#13;
n a t i o n a l conventions t h a n a n y o t h e r&#13;
l i v i n g m a n , and h a d a hand i n t h e draftteg-&#13;
ef-more national p o l i t i c a l p l a t f o r m s&#13;
t h a n a n y other man. He had been t e n -&#13;
dered more important offices t h a n a n y&#13;
other American, l i v i n g o r dead, a n d&#13;
declined in ore.&#13;
The Democratic House Without a Quorum&#13;
4- T h e Democratic l e g i s l a t u r e convened&#13;
a t Louisville on t h e 9th i n p u r s u a n c e&#13;
of t h e plaus adopted early i n t h e w e e k .&#13;
I n t h e senate 20_members, o n e more&#13;
t h a n a quorum, w e r e present. Resol&#13;
u t i o n s of respect t o t h e memory of&#13;
Gov. (xoebel were adopted a n d t h e senate&#13;
adjourned. T h e m w a s h o s e s s i o n&#13;
i n t h e house a s o n l y 49 m e m b e r s , t w o&#13;
less thart a quorum, responded t o t h e&#13;
roll cal L&#13;
Battle Creek's Prosperous Industry.&#13;
B a t t l e Creek i s becoming noted as&#13;
t h e headquarters for t h e United States&#13;
for t h e manufacture of peanut butter.&#13;
Joseph Lambert recently returned from&#13;
Virginia, where he contracted for 30&#13;
carloads of peanuts, w h i c h will be&#13;
made into butter. T h e business h a s&#13;
increased t o that e x t e n t t h a t a n e w&#13;
factory building to cost $10,000 w i l l be&#13;
erected t h i s .summer and w h e n finished&#13;
will employ 50 hands.&#13;
' Ex-Convict Charged With Murder.&#13;
P e t e r Larson w a s arrested near Palmer&#13;
o n the 8th on a charge of b e i n g&#13;
implicated in t h e d e a t h of Jos. Liquea,&#13;
jr., of N e g a u n e o . Liquea died recently&#13;
from t h e effects of, a beating, said t o&#13;
Jiave b e e n administered by Larson.&#13;
T h e prisoner w a s recently released&#13;
from Marquette prison, after serving&#13;
a t w o years' sentence for burglary.&#13;
M I C H I G A N N E W S I T E M S .&#13;
L y o n w a s visited by a $1,200-fire on&#13;
t h e 9th.&#13;
T h e business streets of D o w a g i a c a&#13;
to be paved.&#13;
There are prospects of Homer^getting&#13;
a pickle factory. /&#13;
An electric line front Toledo t o&#13;
Adrian i s being considered.&#13;
Gould City, Mackinaw county, suf- i&#13;
fered a $3,000 bla^e on t h e 28th.&#13;
Grand Rapids h a s t h u s far raised&#13;
The Boev Red Cioss&#13;
butter were made from t h e o n e cow's&#13;
milk, and she is still g i v i n g o n e pound&#13;
per day.&#13;
The'balance in t h e s t a t e treasury a t&#13;
t h e close of business o n t h e 7 t h w a s&#13;
$2,068,:179.85. T h i s h a s been exceeded&#13;
b u t once in t h e history of t h e statef"-Tn-j"Bns;land-Slam Boundary Dispute Settled,&#13;
1887, w h e n t h e balance w a s o n l y a f e w&#13;
thousand dollars greater.&#13;
., Mrs. Henrietta E.\ Rheiner, oL Detroit,&#13;
w h o killed he**-awo children a n d&#13;
made an unsuccessful a t t e m p t of killi&#13;
n g t h e third and herself, h a s been pronounced&#13;
dangerously insane a n d sentenced&#13;
t o Ionia for life or u n t i l s h e recovers.&#13;
T h e proprietors of t h e b o x a n d bask&#13;
e t factory at Bangor, t h e principal&#13;
industry of the village, w e r e preparing/&#13;
to move their plant, w h e n citizens&#13;
bought, a controlling interest inXthe&#13;
compan)' and thus saved t h e tojvn.&#13;
The trial of Henry E. Harnberger,&#13;
the youth charged w i t h ^ h e murder of&#13;
J o h n M. Iteindel in the^latter's bicycle&#13;
repair shop on Griswold street, Detroit,&#13;
o n t h e n i g h t of ^Dee. 2, 1899. w a s commenced&#13;
in the^ recorder's court o n&#13;
t h e 5th / ' ~&#13;
Farmers around Ovid w i l l have a&#13;
c h a n c e ^ t o become proficient in t h e&#13;
raising o f cucumbers, a s a s a l t i n g station&#13;
for a pickle factory i s t o b e estab-&#13;
R a h i m a n .&#13;
x n e m a p s n o w * t h a t R a h i m a n i s a, narrow&#13;
strip of moxintainous country runn&#13;
i n g froco/west t o east. Perak lies t o&#13;
the s o u t h , Kadah b o u n d s i t o n t h e&#13;
w e s t / Several Siamese p e t t y s t a t e s l i e&#13;
to tlio north and e a s t of t h e P a t a n i&#13;
/river, w h i c h flows t o t h e east coast.&#13;
T h a t c o u n t r y w a s unexplored until Mr.&#13;
S k e a t traversed i t in h i s trip t h r o u g h&#13;
Cunong Tahan. recently. T h e d i s p u t e&#13;
w a s t a k e n over b y t h e British governm&#13;
e n t , o n Perak b e c o m i n g a protected&#13;
state, a n d h a s been p e n d i n g for 3'ears.&#13;
about $0,^ tor&#13;
fund&#13;
Six^freight cars w e r e demolished in a&#13;
•eck o n t h e A n n Arbor railroad at&#13;
Lucas o n t h e 3d.&#13;
Five h o u s e s in Menominee w h e r e&#13;
cerebro spinal m e n i n g i t i s cases arc reported&#13;
h a v e been quarantined.&#13;
T w o m e n were blown t o pieces by&#13;
t h e explosion of a powder magazine a t&#13;
tue Crystal Falls m i n e on t h e 6th.&#13;
A t Marshall o n F e b . 13, t h e Maccab&#13;
e e s w i l l initiate 113 n e w members',&#13;
m a k i n g a total of 5S5 for Marshall tent.&#13;
Thos. Calvert, founder of the Calvert&#13;
L i t h o g r a p h i n g Co.. of Detroit, died at&#13;
his home i n that city o n t h e 8th, aged&#13;
"72 years.&#13;
T h e National Cooperage &amp; Woodenware&#13;
Co.'s monster p l a n t a t Escanaba&#13;
w a s destroyed by fire o n t h e 7th. Loss,&#13;
$250,000.&#13;
T h e Chelsea Manufacturing Co. h a s&#13;
been organized w i t h a paid i n capital&#13;
of $25,000. T h e concern will manufacture&#13;
s h e e t metal.&#13;
T h e business portion of t h e v i l l a g e&#13;
of Capac w a s s w e p t b y fire o n t h e&#13;
m o r n i n g of t h e 8th. and $18,000 wprth&#13;
of property w a s destroyed.&#13;
Attorney-Qeneral Ortfn holds t h a t t h e&#13;
b o u n t y a c t of 1865 W. void, t h u s t h e&#13;
state* w i l l be saved m a n y l a w s u i t s a n d&#13;
a l a r g e expenditure ot m o n e y . '&#13;
Supt. Clark, of t h e N o r t h v i l l e fish&#13;
hatchery, visited W a s h i n g t o n recently&#13;
for t h e purpose of s e c u r i n g a v&#13;
dation of t h e&#13;
hatcheries.&#13;
Northville a n d&#13;
consoli-&#13;
Dctroit&#13;
lished there w h i c h will require t h e&#13;
product of 500 acres of cucumbers t o&#13;
k e e p i t going.&#13;
The Farmers' Mutual Life Insurance&#13;
company of Macomb couuty. has elected&#13;
these officers^.President, John McKay,&#13;
of Romeo; secretary, E. W. Sutton, of&#13;
Armada; treasurer, Geo. T o w n s e n d , of&#13;
Romeo. T h e c o m p a n y + s in a flourishing&#13;
condition, r &lt;&#13;
—Hftnrv MoMorrnrt. J a c o b P. H a y n e s ,&#13;
Chas. Wellman. Clark E. Spencer and&#13;
Sidney G Jenks. of Port Huron, h a v e&#13;
been appointed as c o m m i s s i o n e r s . t o investigate&#13;
the proposed cost and practicability&#13;
of building a canal froM Lake&#13;
Huron t o Black river.&#13;
The n e w northern normal sehool a t&#13;
Marquette is t o have a $20,000 dormitory&#13;
built by J. M. L o n g y e a r and J. C.&#13;
Ayer, t h e former of M a r q u e t t e and t h e&#13;
latter of Boston, t h e same m e n w h o&#13;
g a v e the 20 acre site for t h e school. I t&#13;
•will board 100 pupils.&#13;
Mrs. Marie Butterfield Sanderson,&#13;
w h o w a s acquitted a t t h e December&#13;
term of t h e circuit court on the c h a r g e&#13;
of t h e murder of h e r aged husband. R.&#13;
S. Sanderson, b y f e e d i n g h i m pulverized&#13;
glass, left B a t t l e Creek o n t h e 7th&#13;
for Chicago, w h e r e s h e w i l l t a k e u p&#13;
her residence.&#13;
Ebenezer W h i t e , . o f Grand Rapids,&#13;
recently received a silver medal from&#13;
t h e Canadian g o v e r n m e n t for services&#13;
rendered In t h e F e n i a n raids of 1866&#13;
and 1870. H e w a s a corporal in t h e&#13;
Canadian militia a n d helped head off&#13;
t h e raiders upon both occasions in 1S66&#13;
at R i d g e w a y , and in 1870 at Welland.&#13;
T h e railroads fared w e l l in M i c h i g a n&#13;
last year. According t o a s t a t e m e n t of&#13;
e a r n i n g s issued b y Railroad Commissioner&#13;
Osborn, t h e e a r n i n g s for December,&#13;
1899, Were $3,233,368.03, o r $644,-&#13;
870.64 greater t h a n for December, 1898.&#13;
T h e a g g r e g a t e e a r n i n g s i n Michigan&#13;
last year were $36,093,112,27, an in«&#13;
crease of $4^40,795.34, or, l4Ji2 per c e n t&#13;
over 1899.&#13;
Taylor Has (liven In.&#13;
4Vm. S. Taylor, t h e Republican governor&#13;
of Kentucky, h a s a t l a s t decided&#13;
t o b r i n g t h e contest for t h e office of&#13;
governor a n d l i e u t e n a n t - g o v e r n o r . b e -&#13;
i o r e t h e federal courts for~scttlcment^-&#13;
T h e legislature i n session a t L o n d o n&#13;
w a s adjourned o n t h e 10th&#13;
— * W l M f V A A l W A * I T I M e V -&#13;
om. ^ ^ . I b i ^ i r ^ to IndW&#13;
apolia, I n d . , w i t h t h e L a w t o n f u n e r a l&#13;
p a r f t , w a i f s k e o V f o r h i s , opinion eoiiceriftag&#13;
thSp &lt;Tran£raal w a r . T h e g e n -&#13;
eral, w h o i s f o l l o w i n g t h e m o v e m e n t ! .&#13;
of BuUer towlurd L a d y s m i t h c l o s e l y ,&#13;
satth "Our B r i t i s h .-cousins were of t h e&#13;
o p i n i o n o n l y a f e w m o n t h s a g o t h a t&#13;
our l a n d o p e r a t i o n s i n t h e Spanish*&#13;
American w a r w e r e - g o i i * o n veryj&#13;
s l o w l y . H o w i s i t today w i t h t h e i r op*&#13;
e r a t l o n s a g a i n s t t h e B o e r t f ' W e s o o n&#13;
finished o u r w o r k In Cube, w h e r e w e&#13;
w e r e opposed b y o n e o f t h e g r e a t p o w -&#13;
e r s of t h e earth, T h e B o e r * a r e n o t sv&#13;
p o w e r a t a l l a n d y e t t h e work of s u b -&#13;
d u i n g t h e m s e e m s t o b e o n e of n o s m a l l&#13;
i m p o r t a n c e a n d n o t l i k e l y to h*_»«-._&#13;
c o m p l i s h e d very speedily.M&#13;
J o h n R e d m o n d , c h a i r m a * o f t h e&#13;
United Irish party, i n t h e British h o u s e&#13;
of c o m m o n s o n t h e 7 t h moved a n&#13;
a m e n d m e n t t o t h e address i n reply t o&#13;
t h e speech from the. t h r o n e , representi&#13;
n g t h a t t h e t i m e h a d arrived t o b r i n g&#13;
t h e w a r t o a n e n d o n t h e basis o f r e c -&#13;
o g n i z i n g t h e independence o f t h e&#13;
Transvaal a n d Orange Free State. I t&#13;
w a s rejected by a vote of 368 t o 66,&#13;
T h e n e w s of Gen. Buller's r e v e r s e s&#13;
h a s caused a g r e a t s e n s a t i o n at S y d n e y ,&#13;
N. S. W. Cardinal Moran, i n a r e m a r k -&#13;
able s p e e c h , h a s advocated eonseription.&#13;
i n Australia, i n v i e w of t h e possible&#13;
complications. H e t h i n k s i t m a y s o o n&#13;
become necessary t o defend Australia,&#13;
and therefore r e g r e t s t h e departure o f&#13;
the local troops.&#13;
Reports of t h e e n g a g e m e n t a t t h e&#13;
Upper T u g e l a .river on the 5th s h o w&#13;
t h a t t h e B r i t i s h l o s t heavily a t P o n t&#13;
drift, b u t took a n important^ p o s i t i o n&#13;
o n a small kopje, o n t h e Molen d r i f t&#13;
side. F o u r B o e r s w e r e killed, b u t t h e&#13;
British l o s s i s u n k n o w n . The c a n n o n -&#13;
a d i n g w a s t h e fiercest y e t experienced.&#13;
I t n o w l o o k s a s t h o u g h Gen. Roberts*&#13;
c a m p a i g n h a s opened in earnest a n d a&#13;
g e n e r a l forward m o v e m e n t s e e m s t o&#13;
have begun. B u l l e r reports t h a t duri&#13;
n g t h e first t w o d a y s fighting h i s casu&#13;
a l t i e s w e r e 23&amp;i&gt;f£Ui£rs and m e n k i l l e d&#13;
and wounded.&#13;
F r o m a / B r i t i s h , ^source i t is l e a r n e d&#13;
t h a t the/principal rations at K i m b e r -&#13;
ley^sy1 0 * J a n . 8 h a s .been horse tiesh, s o&#13;
Frankfort, and t h e opinion w a s gener-s&#13;
a l l y expressed by t h e members that/HO&#13;
trouble will occur hereafter. /&#13;
T h e l o n g s t a n d i n g boundary d i s p u t e&#13;
in t h e Malayan p e n i n s u l a b e t w e e n&#13;
Siam and Great BritajiV h a s b e e n s e t -&#13;
Tied^ T h e trouble^ arosu a b o u t t h e&#13;
frontier b e t w e e n / P e r a k a n d&#13;
r e n u g n a n t t o w o m e n and^hrldrerH&#13;
to m e e t i n m a n y have refused t o eat. T h e d e a t h&#13;
J'rate i s heavy. '&#13;
A special from Spearman's Camp,&#13;
dated F e b . 7 sayst T h e British a d v a n c e&#13;
has again been prevented, as t h e Boers&#13;
enfilade t h e m from their positions o n&#13;
Spion k o p a n d Doorm kloof. T h e&#13;
British c a s u a l t i e s n u m b e r 250.&#13;
I Lord Roberts reached Modder River&#13;
o n t h e 9 t h , and&#13;
Exodus of MormoM From Utah Home*.&#13;
A r r a n g e m e n t s for o n e of t h e b i g g e s t&#13;
colonization" schp'n*1^ QVCM- e n g i n e e r e d&#13;
in t h e w e s t have been completed a t&#13;
Cheyenne, Wyo.. w h e r e a portion o f&#13;
the B i g Horn basin i n n o r t h e r n W y o m -&#13;
ing will btf settled by Mormons.,; F o r&#13;
several years a majority of t h e M o r m o n s&#13;
in Utah h a v e felt t h a t t h e y could n o t&#13;
stand t h e persecutions of the1 G e n t i l e s ,&#13;
and w i t h the idea of g e t t i n g a w a y a n d&#13;
into a n e w country w h e r e t h e y migEt"&#13;
build their h o m e s a n e w , a r r a n g e m e n t&#13;
were made w i t h t h e W y o m i u g authorities&#13;
for the&gt; selection' o f 200,000 a c r e s&#13;
of land i n t h e B i g Horn basin under t h e&#13;
Carey aet. A c o m m i t t e e of p r o m i n e n t&#13;
Mormons i s n o w s e l e c t i n g t h i s - l a n d&#13;
along t h e S i n k i n g W a t e r river.&#13;
Germsmy to Have a Better Navy.&#13;
An American naval officer n o w i n&#13;
Berlin, w h o e n j o y s e x c e p t i o n a l advant&#13;
a g e s for g a t h e r i n g i n f o r m a t i o n reg&#13;
a r d i n g t h e German n a v y , asserts t h a t&#13;
t h e German g o v e r n m e n t h a s made a l l&#13;
the preparations n e c e s s a r y t o finish t h e&#13;
construction of t h e n e w w a r s h i p s b y&#13;
1908, instead o f 1916, a s t h e naval a u g -&#13;
m e n t a t i o n bill s e e m i n g l y provides. I n&#13;
1908 t h e German navy, according t o&#13;
this officer, w i l l h a v e 37 b a t t l e s h i p s ,&#13;
varying from 11,000 t o 13,000 t o n s , a n d&#13;
30 large and 40 small armored cruisers,&#13;
t h u s e x c e e d i n g i n fighting p o w e r t h e&#13;
navy of France. Before t h e e n d o f&#13;
1905. Germany w i l l be mistress of t h e&#13;
N o r t h sea and her fleet w i l l beat t h e&#13;
American over twofold.&#13;
ksterhaxy Again on Deck.&#13;
Maj. Comie Ferdinand W'alsin Esterhazy,&#13;
of France, t h e reputed a u t h o r of&#13;
the bordereau, w h o b r o u g h t about t h e&#13;
conviction of Capt. Alfred Dreyfus o n&#13;
charges of treason, h a s recently s h o w n&#13;
s i g n s of life b y s e n d i n g t o t h e a m n e s t y&#13;
commission of t h e s e n a t e an e n e r g e t i c&#13;
protest against a n y proposals of a m -&#13;
nesty. He even ajsks t o be prosecuted,&#13;
and indicates t h e l i n e s of t h e prosecution.&#13;
T h e Influenza w h i c h h a s spread&#13;
t h r o u g h o u t Germany n o w n u m b e r s&#13;
60,000 victims in Munich.&#13;
T w o killed a n d t w o h u r t w a s t h e res&#13;
u l t of a collision b e t w e e n t w o t w i t c h&#13;
engines in Chicago on the 7th.&#13;
upon appearing before&#13;
the troops w a s enthusiastically cheered.&#13;
Out of a patrol party of 16 British i n&#13;
t h e vicinity of R e n s b u r g oir^the 10th,&#13;
11 of thenYwere captured by t h e Boers.&#13;
D u r i n g a n e n g a g e m e n t at R e n s b u r g&#13;
on t h e 9 t h t h e Boers outflanked t h e&#13;
British and drove off 1,000 sheep.&#13;
T h e maharajah of Jaipur has .made a&#13;
donation of 100,000 rupees to t h e S o u t h&#13;
African w a r fund.&#13;
Five Boer prisoners at S i m o n s t o n&#13;
made an unsuccessful attempt a t e s c a p -&#13;
i n g on t h e 5th. *&#13;
T h e Boers n o w c o m m a n d both b r i d g e s&#13;
over t h e T u g e l a .&#13;
W A R N O T E S .&#13;
A special from W a s h i n g t o n s a y s t h a t&#13;
Maj.-Gen. E . S. Otis w i l l be d e t a c h e d&#13;
from duty as* governor-general of the&lt;&#13;
P h i l i p p i n e s and commander of t h e d e -&#13;
p a r t m e n t of t h e Pacific i m m e d i a t e l y&#13;
after t h e arrival of t h e n e w P h i l i p p i n e&#13;
commission, a n d w i l l b e ordered t o r e -&#13;
turn t o t h e U n i t e d States. This a c t i o n&#13;
w i l l be i n compliance w i t h t h e w i s h e s&#13;
of Gen. Otis, w h o h a s informed t h e&#13;
w a r d e p a r t m e n t t h a t h e i s in need o f&#13;
a respite. T h e P r e s i d e n t believes G e n .&#13;
Otis can be relieved after t h e arrival o f&#13;
t h e commission a t M a n i l a — w h i c h w i l l&#13;
occur l a t e inf April o r early i n M a y —&#13;
w i t h o u t d e t r i m e n t t o t h e interests o f&#13;
the g o v e r n m e n t . H e will be succeeded&#13;
b y t h e senior officer i n t h e i s l a n d s ,&#13;
probably Maj.-Gen. Arthur MacArthur,&#13;
w h o w i l l b e subordinate to t h e n e w&#13;
commission, w h i c h w i l l possess p l e n a r y&#13;
p o w e r s a n d w i l l b e responsible t o t h e&#13;
w a r d e p a r t m e n t . After t h e suppression&#13;
ot organized resistance/&gt;n t h e p a r t&#13;
of t h e n a t i v e s t h e archipelago w i l l b e&#13;
d i v i d e d l h t o four~gTahd military de*&#13;
partroents. J u d g e Taft, as c h a i r m a n&#13;
of t h e c o m m i s s i o n , w i l l remain in Man&#13;
i l a , t h e supreme - head of t h e archipelago,&#13;
a n d w i l l be t o all i n t e n t s a n d&#13;
purposes t h e governor, , a l t h o u g h h e&#13;
w i l l n o t have t h e t i t l e Civil affairs o f&#13;
1?ach military d e p a r t m e n t will b e adm&#13;
i n j s t e r e d ^ y a commission w h o w i l l&#13;
be i n e v e r y t h i n g b u t name governor of&#13;
t h e territory comprised In their district.&#13;
T h e i n s u r g e n t s a t t a c k e d t h e 1st bat*&#13;
talion of t h e 45th infaMry- near N i a o&#13;
recently, a n d a major aotd a c a p t a i n&#13;
w e r e w o u n d e d a n d o n e sergeant killed,,&#13;
but details of t h e e n g a g e m e n t are lade*&#13;
ing.&#13;
Brig.-Gen. Kobbe's expedition i n t h e&#13;
islands of Luzon,, L e y t e and S a m a r h a s&#13;
occupied p e r m a n e n t l y and garrisoned&#13;
n i n e t o w n s w i t h t h e 43d and 47th regiments.&#13;
T h i s has. placed on t h e marked&#13;
)80.000 b a l e s of h e m p A t h o u s a n d ins&#13;
u r g e n t s armed w i t h rifles a n d m o r e&#13;
t h a n 5,000 armed w i t h wooden s w o r d s ,&#13;
b o w s a n d arrows, w e r e e n c o u n t e r e d&#13;
d u r i n g t h e e n t i r e trip. T h e t r o o p s&#13;
killed T&amp;rJMttives, l i of whom h a d rifle*.&#13;
T b * others, w e r e villagers,&#13;
'MA^'U&lt;\: •&#13;
:»V'i&gt;j v. JMMM. rfWn&#13;
I. . '*.v&#13;
/--•V.vT?" ;'•»*,&gt;&#13;
i&#13;
t»:. ^ ¾ ^ A:vi^''•;*•'1;.*?.?&#13;
"'•' . •" • ii •••.•','' v " •.",;., i&#13;
. - • • " ' • , : " ( ; • ' . ' &gt; . , ' ' • ' , , • ' • • ' , • • • " • •&#13;
&lt;:• ,','*•'/.'.^;"*;*^-^'''V'.'-,- •«/»; .•1&gt;&gt;v-A;+fe.v&lt;'.,,:l•''*,.&gt;&lt;•• .•&#13;
: . • - ; • - * . - - * "&#13;
J „ : • • • • • • ' • • • . * - ; . ' •: -*•••+&#13;
,;' &lt; v . . *&gt;. *'"'• A*&#13;
. • ' " : ' • • • : * • . " &gt; ' ' • . .•:/;&#13;
• ' . ' . ; , . ; ^ ' :&#13;
. : ^ " • Y ' &gt; .&#13;
\ V.1'. - :'&#13;
• * » • ^ W » ii'i H I »' i * 5 # i&#13;
»»••*;,•&#13;
IHJ5 WORD OF HONOR,*&#13;
A Tale of the Slue and the Gray, jm\&#13;
Copyrlffht, WW. b/ Bobert Boroer't&#13;
r &amp; WEAVER,&#13;
art Soft*;&#13;
#&#13;
vt&#13;
.4*&#13;
CHAPTER XI.~(Contlnued.)&#13;
Maxwell remained behind; as a phy-&#13;
•iciah l i ^ WAS too famtliar with death&#13;
to, be awe*i fcr tysi. of A wan. who h a #&#13;
been atoest * granger to him and&#13;
had never possessed his sympathies.&#13;
Scarcely had the immediate relatives&#13;
left the room, when, to the magistrate's&#13;
horror,(he toqk a seat close .beside&#13;
him.&#13;
"Let me give you our warmest&#13;
thanks," ho said, in the' friendliest&#13;
tone. "Now pray order the rest of&#13;
the dinner to be served. I'll call the&#13;
waiter at once."&#13;
''* 4,No, thank you," replied the old&#13;
gentleman, .uneasily. "I lister to lejw&#13;
at once. Mr. Roland promT'N^rtrTet&#13;
us return to the city."&#13;
"Yes, the marriage will be at your&#13;
disposal in half an hour at latest. The&#13;
young- eouple, - to whom _ you will&#13;
doubtless be ready to yield precedence,&#13;
start first; and until then I shall&#13;
have the honor of entertaining you."&#13;
Mr. Thompson glanced timidly at&#13;
his neighbor's coat-pocket, where he&#13;
knew that the revolver was concealed,&#13;
but did not venture to decline* the&#13;
offered entertainment and yielded to&#13;
his fate. Fortunately he was not subjected&#13;
to too long a trial.&#13;
r Meanwhile a short but touching&#13;
scene had occurred in the sick room,&#13;
where Florence, amid burning tears,&#13;
saw her father draw his last breath.&#13;
He passed away in sleep, without regaining&#13;
consciousness. Harrison's&#13;
death broke the chain which bound his&#13;
dajighterv ______&#13;
Weak and irresolute as Florence had&#13;
seemed^ the inevitable found her calm,&#13;
and the con'sciousness of the ' peril&#13;
which every moment's delay increased&#13;
for her husband sustained her&#13;
-strength. She knelt to kiss the dead&#13;
sprang on the box himself. The carriage&#13;
dashe&lt;4_off at the horses' utmost&#13;
speed. ~&#13;
Five minutes later, the magistrate's&#13;
face appeared tin the open doorway,&#13;
and behind him the tall figure of his&#13;
clerk. Both gazed curiously and timidly&#13;
after the carriage, which was no&#13;
longer visible. Only a cloud of dust&#13;
in the distance showed that the spirited&#13;
animals were doing their duty.&#13;
"There they go!" said the justice,&#13;
drawing a long breath. "Thank heaven!&#13;
That Doctor Maxwell is Satan&#13;
incarnate!"&#13;
horrible fellow!" echoed the&#13;
clerk. "I believe he would have shot&#13;
us both down in cold blood if you&#13;
hadn't performed the ceremony."&#13;
"Yes, a horrible fellow!" repeated&#13;
Mr. Thompson. "But an original, remarkable.&#13;
gh_aractey, too; and he has a&#13;
very high regard for me. He told me&#13;
so three times."&#13;
CHAPTER XIL&#13;
It was sunset at the Union camp.&#13;
Colonel Burney had summoned all the&#13;
officers of the regiment^ to one of the&#13;
little/festivities which are often improv_&#13;
Se3 on the march or in camp.&#13;
A certain feeling of anxiety pervaded&#13;
the group. Lieutenant Roland,&#13;
though expected every minute, had not&#13;
yet arrived. The colonel had no reason&#13;
to conceal, the fact that he had&#13;
g|ven the young officer a leave of absence&#13;
or its purpose. True, dangers&#13;
and risks were everyday occurrences&#13;
in this war; people regarded them as&#13;
matters of course and wasted few&#13;
words over them, but Roland was, as&#13;
his friend expressed it, "the darling&#13;
of the regiment."&#13;
"I ought to have refused the leave,"&#13;
said Colotfel Burney, angrily. "I fear&#13;
^ .&#13;
"AH, THERE COMES WILLIAM."&#13;
man's brow and bid him farewell;&#13;
nothing now held her to Springfield.&#13;
Meanwhile William, in a low tone,&#13;
gave the old servant the necessary orders.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
"Ralph, we shall leave &lt;the care.of&#13;
your dead master in your hands. You&#13;
will render him the last services and&#13;
remain here until the funeral is over.&#13;
Then seek us at the place I have described&#13;
to you. Escape is not difficult&#13;
now', and the toad' is not 'long*&#13;
See that Edward Harrison is not found&#13;
and released before an hour has passed.&#13;
He is gagged and bound, but&#13;
there is no danger concerning hie life.&#13;
The longer you can prevent his being&#13;
xiiscovered the greater will be our&#13;
chance.of safety. If you are questioned,&#13;
you know no nrore than the other&#13;
servants and had the best intentions&#13;
in bringing the message. They cannot&#13;
help believing, you, and in vthree&#13;
days we shall expect you."&#13;
Florence had also risen and held out&#13;
her hand, to the old man.&#13;
"Farewell till we meet again, Ralph!&#13;
I cannot even attend my father to the&#13;
grave, and must leave the last offices&#13;
to be rendered by the hands of&#13;
strangers; but he will forgive me; he&#13;
knows i&amp;at. my husband's life is at&#13;
-jtake. Farewell."&#13;
The carriage bad rolled up to the&#13;
terrace outside. They avoided the way&#13;
through the ante-room, where all the&#13;
servants had assembled. William led&#13;
his wife through the drawing-room,&#13;
where Maxwett Joined them, after taking&#13;
a friendly leave of Mr. Thompson&#13;
and assuring him of his high regard.&#13;
The young couple entered,&#13;
John took the reins from the driv-&#13;
,«r'i hands* ordered him to remain and&#13;
the matter will end badly. He ought&#13;
to have been here long ago, had the&#13;
adventure proved successful." 1&#13;
"We often reconnoiter within/the&#13;
enemy's linos." o r ^ nf thp nfflrPT^ remarked,&#13;
"True, Roland is alone, but&#13;
he is less- likely to attract attention&#13;
on that account. The dangers which&#13;
threaten him on way—"&#13;
"Are the least," interrupted the colonel.&#13;
"What I fear is treachery within&#13;
the house where he believes himself&#13;
safe. He would listen to no counsel,&#13;
but I had a presentiment of evil&#13;
from the beginning."&#13;
"We won't anticipate the worst at&#13;
present," remarked another officer.&#13;
"Roland may be compelled to make a&#13;
circuit or wait for the darkness. Doctor&#13;
Maxwell has not returned, either."&#13;
"Maxwell is at the outposts; there&#13;
is no danger in that quarter. I am&#13;
glad that my fears concerning the fever&#13;
proved groundless. n The doctor&#13;
sent me the most reassuring news."&#13;
"Good evening, gentlemen!" said a&#13;
familiar voice at the door. "Thi# solemn&#13;
assemblage is probably on account&#13;
of the victory of which I heard&#13;
on my arrival. It will give an unexpected&#13;
turn to the campaign."&#13;
"And a fortunate one," replied the&#13;
colonel, beckoning Maxwell to enter.&#13;
"Sit down, doctor. We were just&#13;
speaking of your friend, who has not&#13;
yet. returned. I am beginning to bji&#13;
seriously anxious about him," /&#13;
"William is already here,"/said&#13;
Maxwell, taking the"protfered seat. "I&#13;
left him five minutes ago." Vs&#13;
"Thank heaven! So yoir met him&#13;
on the way back?" /&#13;
"No," We returned frxfei Springfield&#13;
together." \ / T&#13;
"From Springfield? What were yon&#13;
doing th«re?"&#13;
"Very different things—'some pleasant,&#13;
some disagreeable. In the first&#13;
place, I .had to bring Lieutenant Bor&#13;
land from behind iron bars, then tosecure&#13;
the worthy Mr. Harrtaon, who&#13;
wi*hed to hrand US as spies; then to&#13;
subdue all Springfield, including a&#13;
justice of the peace, and, finally, to&#13;
act as best man—all in a single hour.&#13;
I think, gentlemen, I have accomplished&#13;
the utmost amount possible within&#13;
this brief time."&#13;
The officers glanced first at one another,&#13;
then at the speaker whose love&#13;
of banter they knew, and the colonel&#13;
said disapprovingly:&#13;
"Don't jest, doctor. Such things&#13;
arc no laughing matters. If Roland&#13;
is really here, why doesn't he report&#13;
at once?"&#13;
"Because he is escorting Mrs. Roland&#13;
to his quarters. One can't blame&#13;
a man who has been married only&#13;
three hours, if he cares first for his&#13;
young wife, He will be here punctually&#13;
at sunset."&#13;
"His wife? Do you mean Miss Harrison?"&#13;
"Pardon me, I mean Mrs. Roland,&#13;
who has accompanied her husband. I&#13;
mentioned that I atte_nded the wedding."&#13;
The words sounded so plain* and&#13;
positive that doubt was no longer&#13;
possible. But Maxwell was now assailed&#13;
with questions from all sides.&#13;
Everybody pressed forward, and he&#13;
found himself compelled to relate&#13;
briefly what had happened.&#13;
"Our return was accomplished without&#13;
the least danger,'* ne said, In conclusion.&#13;
"In an elegant carriage and&#13;
accompanied by a lady, we were beyond&#13;
the pale of suspicion and reached&#13;
the outposts safely, where Lieutenant&#13;
Davis received us with the utmost&#13;
courtesy and went into raptures over&#13;
Mrs. Roland. But he is right. William&#13;
is a dare-devil and. incorrigibly&#13;
. obstinate, but we must admit that he&#13;
has good taste.? His wife is charming."&#13;
The last remark seemed to interest&#13;
the younger officers extremely. They&#13;
wanted to learn all sorts of particulars&#13;
about Mrs. Roland and wjere greatly&#13;
disappointed when, informed that the&#13;
young bride was very nYctefiT agitated&#13;
by her father's death and probably&#13;
would see little of her husband's comrades&#13;
for some time. ~&#13;
"Ah, there comes William!" he exclaimed,&#13;
interrupting himself. "Congratulate&#13;
him. He wears his new&#13;
dignity somewhat timidly."&#13;
It was ,really William, who had come&#13;
to report his return. He was warmly&#13;
greeted by all. The colonel especially&#13;
received him with great cordiality.&#13;
* "Welcome, Lieutenant Roland! Here&#13;
you are at last! Doctor Maxwell' has&#13;
already told us the whole adventure&#13;
AVOID DANOBFt.&#13;
of which you were the hero."&#13;
"Not I but John Maxwell was the&#13;
hero," said William, holding out his&#13;
hand to his fri,end with ill-repressed&#13;
emotion. "Had it not been for him, I&#13;
should have lost happiness and life.&#13;
I ^hall never forget what he did today."&#13;
'&#13;
Maxwell laughingly refused his&#13;
thanks.&#13;
"Let that pass, WilU we shall&#13;
wrangle again at the very next oppoi&gt;&#13;
tunity. Germans and Americans always&#13;
quarrel, and our armistice won't&#13;
last long. Today I risked "my life for&#13;
you; tomorrow you will, perhaps, peril&#13;
yours fo? me; so we shall be quits.&#13;
At any rate, you returned punctually&#13;
—at sunset!"&#13;
He pointed toward the window. The&#13;
sun was just sinking below the horizon;&#13;
and its last beams were fading.&#13;
"Yes, I gave my word of honor that&#13;
I would do so," said William, with&#13;
the deepest earnestness. "Eut that I&#13;
! * • Dao««r of Cmtmrv*. OintoMato »b»t&#13;
•• i. eosftftla Mweasy*&#13;
This Jostnal, although more particularly&#13;
devoted to all that interests&#13;
finance, commerce and manufacturing,&#13;
is nevertheless always awake to&#13;
the need and wants of its readers, let&#13;
the subject be what it may. We were&#13;
asked to investigate and report upon&#13;
the merits of the various catarrh remedies&#13;
on the market The production&#13;
of preparations of injurious composition&#13;
cannot, unfortunately, be stopped&#13;
or restricted at present, or until our&#13;
state legislatures can be induced to&#13;
pass such suitable and stringent laws&#13;
as will effectually prevent their appearance&#13;
on the market In the meantime,&#13;
the people must look out for&#13;
themselves.: In this matter, we have&#13;
made a most careful and painstaking&#13;
investigation, realizing the confidence&#13;
that would be placed In our reply. Our&#13;
medical staff employed to make such&#13;
investigations, were most favorably&#13;
impressed with the preparation known&#13;
as Hall'3 catarrh cure, manufactured&#13;
by F. J. Cheney &amp; Co. of Toledo, Ohio,&#13;
and agreed that this peerless remedy&#13;
deserves our highest indorsement&#13;
Many of the catarrh remedies on the&#13;
market contain•- mercury, which destroys&#13;
the sense of smell and deranges&#13;
the whole system when entering&#13;
through the mucous surfaees. From&#13;
analysis we found that-HaU^s-eatarrhcure&#13;
contains no mercury. It is taken&#13;
internally, acting directly upon the&#13;
blood and mucous surfaces of the system.&#13;
We have no interest whatever&#13;
in this matter beyond faithfully serving&#13;
our readers, and as our indorsement&#13;
is extended without reward of&#13;
any kind, and is wholly unsolicited by&#13;
this company, and will be received&#13;
with the full credence that all our&#13;
statements have met with for the past&#13;
eighteen years.—Southern Review of&#13;
Commerce.&#13;
"TP» TZ&#13;
•nb *V&#13;
• • * » P«fftS# '' •*• &lt; """"&gt;" .,'»».&#13;
The memory of man nmoSftb softback&#13;
of the time when seaport -town*&#13;
and citlea did not^e»UV fl^Yf » * £&#13;
flourish. There Is a new an* promising&#13;
one growing up down scuta wbteav&#13;
bids fair to soon enjoy great commercsv&#13;
It is La Porte, at th# *e*d of 0^1*-&#13;
veston Bay on the gulf coast of Tesasv&#13;
A magniflceiit natural laad-loekeoV&#13;
harbor already exists and extensivedocks,&#13;
wharfs and terminals are twin*&#13;
constructed. The government is todeepen&#13;
Galveston uty, affording* a 2*-&#13;
foot channel into /the splendid fraab.&#13;
water harbor bay it San Jacinto. A *&#13;
Newport News is to the Atlantic coast;&#13;
and Duluth and Superior are to the&#13;
inland seas, so La Porta'i»,to he to*&#13;
the south. ••; • \&#13;
We are rich, not in what we bav#y&#13;
bnt in-what we cannot lose.&#13;
Ther* 1« m C l » » of f « 6 &gt; l « '&#13;
Who are injured by the use of coffee..&#13;
Recently there has been placed in ati&#13;
the grocery stores a new preparation*&#13;
called GRAIN-O, made of pure&#13;
that takes the place ot coffee. The j&#13;
delicate stbn&amp;ch receives it with?&#13;
distress, and but few can tell it&#13;
coffee. It does not cost over one-feurtb&gt;&#13;
as much. Children may drink it with*&#13;
great benefit. 15 cents and 25 cents&#13;
per package. Try it. Ask for GRAIl^D.&#13;
It is harder to dine with some&#13;
than it is.to fast alone.&#13;
Coughing Lead* to CoMnmptiaa,&#13;
Kemps Balsam will stop the cor&#13;
at once. Go to your druggist t o d w&#13;
and get a sample bottle free. S o l o m&#13;
25 and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; de*&#13;
lays are dangerous.&#13;
An All-Year ftMort.&#13;
The Crescent Hotel. Eureka Springs, Ark*&#13;
yopens March 1, 1000. A most desirable, at~&#13;
y tractive and convenient resort for health&#13;
Unless you want to be poor, don't try&#13;
to keep all you get.&#13;
Whenever the flesh is on the thronef pje^'ure^kel^'Tdeal clLnate.^pure sparklhw&#13;
the devil is king.&#13;
WANTED 5 0 0&#13;
Men, Women and Children in the city to try the&#13;
best and cheapest preparations ever offered the&#13;
public. You don't take any- chances in trying&#13;
them, as your druggist guarantees Knill's Red&#13;
Pills for wan People. "Pale and Weak," the&#13;
women's remedy of the day (the only genuine).&#13;
Knill's White Liver Pills, the great Liver Invigorator,&#13;
System Renovator and Bowel Regulator,&#13;
9ft dnoAg, &lt;&amp;*&gt;_ You can work while they work.&#13;
Never gripe or make you sick, KniU's Blue Kidaey&#13;
Pills cure all Kidney Ills, Backache, etc.&#13;
KniU's Dyspepsia Tablets cure Indigestion, correct&#13;
aU Stomach Troubles, destroy all foul gases,&#13;
make pure sweet stomachs and breaths. To do&#13;
as advertised or money refunded. The only&#13;
guaranteed preparations on the market. KniU's&#13;
Pills or Tablets cost 25c. Half price of others.&#13;
The devil has no better helper than&#13;
a harmless looking lie.&#13;
&gt;.&#13;
water, best accommodations. Through Sleepers&#13;
via Frisco Line. Write for particulars to-&#13;
Manager Hotel or to any representative ft&#13;
Frisco Line. ,&#13;
Dreams.&#13;
Mr. Tucker—"I thin^ I shall give up*&#13;
my business, my dear. I might as well'&#13;
have some good out' of my money.**'&#13;
Mrs. Tucker "Oh, nbt yet, Samuel! -&#13;
Nothing- is so destructible as the&#13;
peace of Christ^*&#13;
H o w * ThUT —&#13;
We offer One Hundred Dollars regard for any&#13;
ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's&#13;
Catarrh Cure.&#13;
F. J. CHENEY &amp; CO., Props., Toledo, a&#13;
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.&#13;
Cheney for the last 16 years and believe him&#13;
perfectly honorable in all business transactions&#13;
and financially able to carry out any obUgations&#13;
made by their firm.&#13;
West &amp; Truax. Wholesale Druggists. Toledo,&#13;
P.; Welding. Rinnan &amp; Marvin. Wholesale&#13;
Druggists. Toledo, Ohio.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting&#13;
directly upon the blood and mtteous surfaces&#13;
of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price&#13;
75c per bottle. Sold by all druggists.&#13;
Hall's Family Pills are the best.&#13;
The iealg 'we borrow are the hardest&#13;
to drive away.&#13;
Important to Mothers.&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA.&#13;
a safe and sure remedy for infants and children,&#13;
and sec that it&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature of&#13;
In Use For Over 3 0 Years.&#13;
The Kind You H&amp;ve Always Bought.&#13;
But when one of us dies I shall give up*&#13;
housekeeping and see a little of tbe&gt;&#13;
world."—Brooklyn Life. Nervous&#13;
Women&#13;
ore ailing womo** Mft«r&#13;
awomanhassomiofemam^&#13;
trouble aha is oortaln to&#13;
be nervous and wretohath&#13;
With many woman that&#13;
monthly suffering is jp&#13;
great that they are /Sr&#13;
days positively Insane,&#13;
and the most diligent efforts&#13;
of ordinary treatment&#13;
are unavailing*&#13;
There is no suffering like the crucifixion&#13;
of love.&#13;
Kept it—was .able"to Keep it—1 owe&#13;
to you alone."&#13;
THE END.&#13;
Ll R a n g Chang*A Grandsons.&#13;
The two grandsons of the Chinese&#13;
statesman Li Hung Chang visited the&#13;
University of California by Invitation&#13;
of Prof. Fryer, who was acquainted&#13;
with them in China. They arrived on&#13;
the steamer China on Monday.but were&#13;
not able to land until Tuesday afternoon.&#13;
They went to the Occidental&#13;
hotel, and are staying there with Mr.&#13;
Walter Lambuth, who is escorting&#13;
them to Nashville, where they will perhaps&#13;
enter Vanderbilt university. The&#13;
young men will at first live in a private&#13;
family near the. university and&#13;
take a course to fit them for entering.&#13;
They dress in American style and have&#13;
discarded their queues. Although well&#13;
educated from a Chinese point of view&#13;
they have been studying only English&#13;
two years with a private tutpr at their&#13;
home in Nanking and Yangchow. They&#13;
have pleasing and unassuming manners,—&#13;
Oakland (Cal.) sj&amp;eclal New&#13;
York World.&#13;
THE! GRIP CURE THAT DOES CURE.&#13;
Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets removes&#13;
the cause that produces La Grippe. E. W.&#13;
Grove's signature is on each box. 25c&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkhlm's Vegetable Compound I&#13;
There are some very important lessons •which&#13;
can only be learned from a mistuke.-&#13;
Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup.&#13;
For children teething, softens the puma, reduce* Inflammation,&#13;
allays pain, cures wind colic. 23c a bottle.&#13;
The man who earns his bread finds a sweetness&#13;
in it that the loafer never knows.&#13;
Attractive Booklet Sent Free,&#13;
Cheiee Reeipiea for mak Injr Cocoa and Chocolate.&#13;
Addre8sWalterBaker&amp;Co.Lt.i.,Dorchester,MaBB.&#13;
We would all have less cause to blame others&#13;
If we had fewer faults of,our own.&#13;
We will forfeit 11.000 if any of our pubU&amp;hed&#13;
testimonials arc proven to be not genuine. THS&#13;
Piso CO., Warren, Pa.&#13;
If you knew that tomorrow would be your last&#13;
day, how would you spend this?&#13;
Brown's Teething Cordlml corrects disordered&#13;
bowels when babies are teething.&#13;
M W o i r ! "&#13;
-J Mrs. ttobbs—"What a funny name&#13;
that nurse of the young Archduko of&#13;
Austria has/'&#13;
Nobbs—"What is it?" •&#13;
Mrs. Nobh*—-"Her name is Wows*."&#13;
Nobts—,-Y?ell, every nursery ts fnU&#13;
of ^ o w \* at times, *jn't it?"—BCtf ate* i.wrt»n.&#13;
Not until we know a man's heatt have we any&#13;
right to say that We know him.&#13;
It is a mistake to call anything success that is&#13;
not aocordioi; to God's plan.&#13;
comes promptly to the&#13;
lief of these women. T t e&#13;
letters from women our§d&#13;
by H proves this* This&#13;
paper Is constantly printlag&#13;
them*&#13;
ThaadvlooofMrs*Pmkham&#13;
should also be&#13;
cured by every&#13;
woman* This oosts nothing.&#13;
Her address is Lynn*&#13;
Mass*&#13;
IN 3 OR 4 YEARS&#13;
AN INDEPENDENCE ASSURED&#13;
If you take up vow*&#13;
homes In Western Caoada,&#13;
tho land of plenty.&#13;
Illustrated pamphlet*&#13;
Riving experiences on&#13;
farmers who have be*&#13;
eomo weoTthy In jrrowing&#13;
wheat, reports.el*&#13;
delegates,' etc., and tvA&#13;
information 88 to reduoed railway rates cap to*&#13;
had" on application 10 the Superintendent efr&#13;
Immigration, Department of Interior, Ottawa,&#13;
Canada, or to J. Grieve. Saginaw. Mich., or M&#13;
V..McInncs. ^c. 3 Merrill Block. Detroit, Mid*.&#13;
PEDZ-WHAT ISITX I tr« PMiUvsly tat STM*** «trt*l aa4 straw lbs* so sarta. Bator sap&#13;
TtsM* H bM. rto6«r train than ewi sa4 4 MM ttrav ha;, btttw taaa Ua&#13;
• • ( » B l c 9ear ttata-»»©m jH* V* bas. ana ja*. Mr. Varto*.&#13;
*^^ M i i M t taatl. It'a tfc* bMt o«u «n aarih. Sttter, M7*,**&gt;&#13;
SJCare* Earliest C a m wilt rrr»i«tlouts« ••&gt;?* rr»»lt&gt;f. BaiMr aajasa.&#13;
Brvaaaa laarsato— QreatMl grut* on aarth. * t# • taas&#13;
aay i«t a m . Will flwtrUh •\trymh*r*. Salatr n n aa.&#13;
Baa*—ChaaMrt food »o earth tot aba** bogs aad «atU*. Will MSI&#13;
ia«*p at H«. alb. Cost*bst tie. a ton to jrro*- SalnrtajtMt&#13;
V&gt;iretebl««— Lartsit frower*. OSIM swa ool.r Mo. a lb.&#13;
^ M F k g s . Earliest Vajgtabtt*, postpaid, 91.00a&#13;
TMI HILLION DOLLAR POTATO&#13;
Oraaust M U M *oad«r •« aarth; •asrmo««lr proltBe; alaa&#13;
itbaa&lt; ~ "&#13;
'P&gt;'!&gt;^&#13;
1 SaaUffcLtb* aarUa* patatb&#13;
» • » l t a , I&#13;
aatth. tUpsla t f t t e j a .&#13;
A ^ Z^^r&#13;
«&amp;K^QHHA.SALZI&#13;
= a«c tata Ifatla* w* saaS&#13;
10 pkia, drala, Qraw aa4 K»?at* yarai SasuawanaSia t&gt;&#13;
m a atari, aaa jwat waa Catatat* ssfuaf yp« all abnat abaaa&#13;
Xar*8aMl*slaosv«rDtktaa»cto««ri aaatraast*. Ttsaiatk,&#13;
n, Mills*! Vsltst sad Caw baaai, waU, ass, mm&#13;
v.V~V-*-»-&#13;
''.' .«**0&#13;
M&#13;
. , : 4&#13;
- — * j&#13;
* »&#13;
il^ktaVii^L'&#13;
ri. ./•.•/•- • J ' * '&#13;
.*».&amp;" . . ? . ' ' • ! • . • ' ; ' • * »&#13;
. / - 1 - 1 1 : . . . . ^ ^ 1 , ^ : ^ : ' ' • . • - • ' • • ' • : • , i •'••;•,r"&lt; '•'WW'"- ^ v - • " v..'•.':, ; .'. '•*' &gt; ' % l • &lt;"{•&#13;
&lt; • . ' • • ] ' . , . I - , . i i ( V . ' , ^ '-,'.1 ' - , , . " • - , . , . • . - • . , • • « . 1 . , 1 , ^ . - • • • -j • i - . . . - , . ; . -&#13;
i-V-'-rv • v • "• '•'-" • — '• &lt;*••• *'•• • v • V '• ••• ..,*v,:.^' v , * •'.'• • ••"• •:» V: .-., /l':"V * / -• v.. ?r\-r • : • ..-.^-.&#13;
'&lt;&lt;•. •••v • • -—«•• -*' . . T ^ - ' W ^ — : ' •' ' '."'); '• v -; «' ' • v » •'•'s*1 : i / • ' •' v.' •- •" » ; . . •'•".- , ,."-, :,:•'?'.••''''•', •• : .;• • • /&#13;
•I.,',--,,,-.15 &gt;;-.' • ',.^' " - « . . , { ' . ' : , ' - • : r ••-. ••.&gt;,... &gt;: ^''''v'-! •';''•• ".r '"";-•• ''•-•"• "•;•»••.''' ••''••• ' •' -;\. v --^^-:,-^ -^ •:• ^ - ^ . ¾ ^&#13;
-• , \ . t : i . . . ^ 4 ^ ^ &lt; ^ : ^ - . ^ . ( • ' . ' " - •--•• *-';_' '"'.';;."•.;-,. •• * " , &gt; .---, v , v -1V. ' : ; : . ' v . " , ' ' ' „ ' . . . . ^ . . . / ,&#13;
.'/:'";.;•'' r ' : '&#13;
;&gt;**&#13;
&amp;tf&#13;
v .&#13;
5^ "-•&#13;
^ ' • V ^ . , . * ^ '&#13;
... . s&#13;
Z-'' -i*'- • l i t * - - ' •••'&#13;
' : &amp; • •&#13;
,v&#13;
r^":f- ,&gt;&#13;
^ . ¾ "-'"'••&#13;
'ft,'-1: V1,&#13;
#&#13;
tftt'J].-&#13;
«::;. -&#13;
( %&#13;
«f'/,j&#13;
r ^ j / v •'.•&#13;
TO---"&#13;
* * « : • • • • ! : • . " '&#13;
A'' • '&#13;
|*3*:':.&#13;
&gt;«£;*•&#13;
*F!*^&#13;
« &amp; •&#13;
!»?-,&#13;
5P&#13;
^ V&#13;
5 ^ , ; .&#13;
*v?.&#13;
•V-.&#13;
1 «&#13;
Si.V&#13;
si.&#13;
^ - • •&#13;
i%'&#13;
Sfw findtory "fispHtth.&#13;
rn:&#13;
f. L. ANDREWS EOiTOff.&#13;
THUBSDAY, FEB. 15,1900.&#13;
Thia Paper&#13;
One Year.&#13;
Farm Journal&#13;
5 Yeara«&#13;
w a r&#13;
PAY UP AND GET BOTH PAPERS AT PRJCE&#13;
OFOHL&#13;
We want to j&lt;et 100 new subscribers&#13;
to our paper, and are going&#13;
to do it if we can; we therefore&#13;
continue our arrangement&#13;
with the Farm Journal by which&#13;
we can send the PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
one year and the Farm&#13;
Journel 5 years, both for #1.00.&#13;
And we make the same offer to all&#13;
old subscribers who will pay all&#13;
arrearages and one year in advance.&#13;
Ton know what our paper is,&#13;
and the Farm Journal is a g e m —&#13;
practical, progressive—a clean,&#13;
honest, useful paper—full of&#13;
gumption, full of sunshine,y witn&#13;
immense circulation a m o n g the&#13;
best people everywhere. Y o u&#13;
ought to take it.&#13;
It Has been demonstrated repeatedly&#13;
in every state in the Union and in&#13;
many foreign countries that Chamberlain's&#13;
Cough Remedy is a certain preventive&#13;
and care lor croup. It has&#13;
become the universal remedy for that&#13;
disease. M. V. Fisher, of Liberty, W.&#13;
Ya., only repeats what has been said&#13;
jironnd the grobe when he writes: "I&#13;
have used Chamberlain's Cougb Remedy&#13;
in my family for several years&#13;
^Sld always with perfect success. We&#13;
believe that it. is not only the test&#13;
cough remedy, but that it is a sate&#13;
cure tor croup. It has saved the lives&#13;
of our children a numb#r of timeff*."&#13;
This remedy is for sale by h\ A. Sigler,&#13;
Druggist. ^&#13;
32 •MM ii»i»im&#13;
STAWF4Bmr»SfIfBTI&#13;
C*»clN&lt;le&lt;t Fr m l # u tymk+&#13;
SATtfBDAY AFTEBNOON 8 S 8 8 I 0 &amp;&#13;
The last session was opened by&#13;
music by the Genoa Glee Olub,&#13;
and as several questions were&#13;
handed in they were read and answered&#13;
by the one assigned.&#13;
What is the best way to handle&#13;
an Oct or -Nov. pig to .get the&#13;
most out of it? Mr. Oviatt: Keep&#13;
them warm, give plenty of feed,&#13;
not enough to fatten, give milk if&#13;
you have it and roots, corn-meal&#13;
or bran. Better plan not to raise&#13;
them at that time of the year.&#13;
Is there any known cause or&#13;
cure for goiter? Dr. Waterman&#13;
- N o .&#13;
In the absense of clover or timothy&#13;
what shalL we_ do this year&#13;
for hay? Jlr. HussTeman---Every&#13;
farmer should prepare for&#13;
9*m .-&#13;
#«"«l7t Conway&#13;
Cohoetah&#13;
Deerfield&#13;
Tyrone&#13;
HuriUnd&#13;
. Jacob Halier&#13;
O. E. C»rr&#13;
ifohn 8oyder&#13;
Lauranoe Lam on&#13;
C. D. Boutin&#13;
C. B. Marvin&#13;
H. B. Tompaon&#13;
peas,&#13;
An exchaDge says: It is stated&#13;
that, owing to the many packages&#13;
that pass through the postotBces&#13;
marked falsely as to their con-&#13;
. tents' all suspecting packages will&#13;
be examined this year with a view&#13;
of determining the proper postage&#13;
thereon. In many cases packages&#13;
are marked "no writing" and contain&#13;
letters and photographs with&#13;
—articles of merchandise placed inside.&#13;
The government hitherto&#13;
has been defrauded out of hundreds&#13;
of dollars. Now and then,&#13;
too, notes are inclosed in newspapers.&#13;
This is a very dangerous&#13;
thing to da and very foolish, as it&#13;
risks imprisonment to save a&#13;
single penny in postage.&#13;
• i - — I I I .11 ^ n - . . n — — , \&#13;
^ F. A. Sigler guarantees every bottle&#13;
of Charaberlins Cough Remedy and&#13;
will refund the money to any one who&#13;
is not satsified after using two thirds&#13;
—ot the contents. This ia the best rcmsuch&#13;
a calamity by raising&#13;
millet, etc.&#13;
What success have you had&#13;
with glutin food? Mr. Hussleman^-&#13;
We shall never*use it if we&#13;
can get anything else. We tried&#13;
it and at first thought it was all&#13;
right but we soon found our cows&#13;
were not thriving on its continued&#13;
use. Cotton seed meal is a too&#13;
highly concentrated food and our&#13;
Btock did not do well upon it&#13;
This quizzing box was a very&#13;
valuable part of the institute as it&#13;
brought out much that was of direct&#13;
benefit to the farmers of this&#13;
county. Mr. Hussleman and Mr.&#13;
Oviaite proved very efficient and&#13;
practical persons to answer all&#13;
questions. THey were by far the&#13;
best farm talkers that were ever&#13;
brought into the county.&#13;
, Thia was_followed by the report&#13;
of officers and committees. The&#13;
report of the treasurer showed up&#13;
as follows:&#13;
Bal. on hand Feb. '99 $ 5.16&#13;
Rec. from dues 27.25&#13;
Collection 1.27&#13;
Total&#13;
Total expenditures&#13;
13.75&#13;
resolutions&#13;
Bal. on hand&#13;
The committee on&#13;
reported:&#13;
Besolved:—That the farmers of&#13;
Livingston county have been benefitted&#13;
by this institute and they&#13;
should help push them along- by&#13;
not only attending but by joining.&#13;
That a vote of thanks should, be&#13;
given to ushers, singers, officers,&#13;
janitor, also to all who assisted by&#13;
joining.&#13;
The committee on nominations&#13;
reported on the following names&#13;
B. F. Batcheler&#13;
R. C. Reed&#13;
B. F, Batchler and R. 0. Reed&#13;
were then appointed as delegates&#13;
to the state round-up at Ann Arbor,&#13;
Feb. 27-28, and March 1-2.&#13;
The Dayfoot Monument committee&#13;
reported that they had&#13;
raised $106. 50, and purchased a&#13;
monument costing $100; paid 50c.&#13;
for fixing the lot and had a balance&#13;
of 16 on band, it was voted&#13;
to leave the amount with the committee&#13;
for any purpose they saw&#13;
fit&#13;
F. L. Andrews read a paper&#13;
"Farm Drains" which went to&#13;
show that the tile or open ditch&#13;
iforeisutrtibl» only drainsJjcm^the&#13;
farm. The broken gate, the unhusked&#13;
corn, tools left in the field,&#13;
etc., were all drains upon the farm.&#13;
There were also public drains.&#13;
Oal Husslemarr there gave a&#13;
talk on "Farm Tilllage^in, which&#13;
he. said; the fundamental- principle&#13;
of agriculture is to have the&#13;
soil in good condition and he&#13;
would have it thoroughly drained.&#13;
Do not think a small tile worth&#13;
putting in—would not use anything&#13;
less than three inches and&#13;
larger is better. Clover will grow&#13;
where land is well drained.^ Bo&#13;
not believe in surface drainage&#13;
under any circumstances. We&#13;
root around in the ground a good&#13;
deal, but what we want is to do it&#13;
better. Do the same amount of&#13;
work on half the ground and you&#13;
will get the^ame results, and the&#13;
other half of the ground can rest.&#13;
Good tillage means raising the&#13;
largest amount from the least&#13;
work and land possible. Good&#13;
drainage, plenty of manure and&#13;
better plowing are the things&#13;
needed. We plow* roll down and&#13;
drag immediately, never let the&#13;
land lay over night withont roll-&#13;
$33.98 ting and dragging.&#13;
20.23 j beijeve in long fields as we&#13;
save time in turning around, and&#13;
can accomplish more. We haye a&#13;
farm practically without fences,&#13;
we till one part of the farm and&#13;
pasture the other. We run o*er&#13;
our pasture land in July or August&#13;
with a sharp harrow and sow&#13;
clover seed—this keeps the pasture&#13;
well seeded.&#13;
Saving time is good tillage and&#13;
arrange fields, barns and house so&#13;
that the least time possible is required&#13;
to do the-work. '&#13;
We used to feed all forage and&#13;
grain whole, now we have our own&#13;
all feed.&#13;
Use a six-horse gasoline engine in&#13;
the barn for cutting and grinding,"&#13;
eqy in the world for la grippe, coughs,&#13;
colds, croop and whooping cough and&#13;
is pleasant and safe to take. It prevents&#13;
any tendency of a cold to result&#13;
in pneumonia. t mar.-l&#13;
which was adopted, thus electing&#13;
t ke m , — ^ P ° w e r a n&lt;^c u t °* grind&#13;
President&#13;
——Secretary&#13;
The total area of the Michigan&#13;
coal basin covers nearly 9,000&#13;
Bquare miles running from Jackson&#13;
county on the south to Roscommon&#13;
county on the north, and&#13;
extending from Huron county&#13;
on the east to Mecosta county on&#13;
the west IHs regular in sljape&#13;
like a pear with its stem end at&#13;
Jackson, the broadest part on a&#13;
line passing from Saginaw county.&#13;
Not all this vast area contains&#13;
coal in veins profitable for working,&#13;
but the rich finds in Saginaw&#13;
are an index of what will follow.&#13;
There is now over 200,000 acres&#13;
under lease,each acre estimated at&#13;
an average of 4,500 tons. A&#13;
glance will show the magnitude of&#13;
the industry.&#13;
Great opportunity ottered to food, reliabi&#13;
• men* Salary of $t&amp; per wfttk and ex*&#13;
peottt for matt with, rig to introduce oar&#13;
Poultry MixtMi and Inaeot Destroyer in&#13;
jfejeontift Send stamp. American Mff.&#13;
Co*, Terre fitatti, lad.&#13;
Executive bd.&#13;
(E. E.'Howe&#13;
-| Frank Haden&#13;
( Spencer Wood worth&#13;
VICE PRESIDENTS:&#13;
Howell,&#13;
Marion&#13;
Iosco&#13;
Unadilla&#13;
Putnam&#13;
Hamburg&#13;
Green Oak&#13;
Brighton&#13;
Oceola&#13;
S. M. Yerkes&#13;
H. W. Norton&#13;
J. E. Clements&#13;
Z. A; Hartsuff -&#13;
. Wm. Gawley&#13;
Wm. Ball&#13;
S. A. Smith&#13;
T. E.Bidwell&#13;
Chas. Hardy&#13;
There is no better medicine for the&#13;
babies than Chamberlain's Conga&#13;
Remedy. Its pleasant taste and&#13;
prompt and effectual cares make it a&#13;
favorite with mothers and emtll children.&#13;
It quickly cares their coughs&#13;
and colds, preventing pneumonia or&#13;
other serious consequences. It also&#13;
euros croup and has been used in tens&#13;
of thousands of cases without a single&#13;
failure so far as we have been able to&#13;
learn. It not only cares croup, but&#13;
when given as soon as the croupy&#13;
cough appears, will prevent :the attack,&#13;
in oases of whooping ^sough it&#13;
Hquefiesihe tough mueut, muing it&#13;
easier to eipectorate, and leetW Ore&#13;
severity and frequncy "of the&gt;»!«*•&#13;
ysmt of ooughing, that depriving that&#13;
ftatt^ of an dangerous oouequettMt.&#13;
tot salt by F. A. Sigler, Drtggiaw&#13;
and a steam engine in the dairy,&#13;
as there we need power, steam and&#13;
hot water.&#13;
We raise Stall's evergreen corn&#13;
for a soiling crop as we do not depend&#13;
upon pasture after July.&#13;
Every farmer should raise something&#13;
for August and September&#13;
feed. This was followed by a&#13;
song by the Genoa Glee Club.&#13;
Dr. Waterman then gave a talk&#13;
on "Diseases of domestic animals,&#13;
and hygiene of the stable,*' but as&#13;
it was much on tjie same line as&#13;
the talk in the. morning session&#13;
which was given in our last issue,&#13;
we will make no mention.&#13;
While this last session w&#13;
ing carried on, -the ladies held a&#13;
meeting in the Baptist church&#13;
and that large building was crowded&#13;
and we are very sorry we were&#13;
unable to get a report&#13;
• • ^&#13;
drtOAdy's Condition Powders are&#13;
just wjist a hone needs when in had'&#13;
condition, 'tonic^iood purifier and&#13;
vermifuge. They are not food'but&#13;
meolmae and the best ia use to put a&#13;
bortt la prime condition. ' Prioe 86e&#13;
^ex paakage. For-sale by f. A. 8ig-&#13;
FACTS AN* FIGUHM. . ;i.&#13;
Lille baa 71 factories employing | v c&#13;
500 persona «ecl. wbtle Paris to-4 on..&#13;
52 ot that size.&#13;
It ie estlm ted that there are in&#13;
Great BtfteU about 8,000 theatre* en&#13;
music hrJla, giving employment to&#13;
850,000 persons.&#13;
Mock fighte are common in Bng!®&lt;nseivice,&#13;
where troops are taught Uov&#13;
to VCXT -a, charge* retreat, fowm in lin&#13;
of natitid.and do ajl thi'ng* which- a&#13;
ltkaly co be awjuirtd ia actuil wa.f ire&#13;
except to kllL-the- 4?upnosed—enemy&#13;
Tk-e soldiers take great delight in it.&#13;
Adrian, Mioh., enjoys three-cent&#13;
street oar tickets. The m-nagemem&#13;
has long sold 100 tickets for *3. S:rg&#13;
fare* are a nlcke^ L.ut any oae can&#13;
buy 100 tickets for $3. And tin* company&#13;
makes money by it, for people&#13;
ride five times where tbey would once&#13;
were &lt;the tickets five cents.&#13;
According to an apparently authentic&#13;
article in a French periodical not&#13;
less than 20,000 aristocrats are at p *•&gt;-&#13;
eat confined in tine prisons at Emrope.&#13;
Russia atande firat, with ^12,000 blueblooded&#13;
law-breakers, while Italy dieserve*&#13;
to-be accorded sooorffl pQeitlcai,&#13;
i « , T&#13;
\ J&#13;
iCara.&#13;
I, the , under4tfne4» « do hereby&#13;
fgreihto refund tbe^menty" on a J50*&#13;
cent bottle of Green's,, WarrenteaV&#13;
8yrup of Tar if it fails to [euro your&#13;
cough or cold. 1 also guaraotee a&#13;
26cent bottle to prove satisfactory or&#13;
money refunded. t-90 .&#13;
Will B. Darrow.&#13;
WANTED-^The Subecriptioa&#13;
due on the DISPATCH.&#13;
J. G. SAYLES&#13;
Plalnfleld, Mich.&#13;
ber place for detaotJlon litarborin g thou&#13;
eands of noblemen.&#13;
The g^vernnBenit of New 25ealafl^d&#13;
now sends commimlcatloms by oarrier&#13;
pigeons between Aucklamd and Great&#13;
Britain is-land, a distance acroas the&#13;
waiter of thirty miles. The service te&#13;
controlled by the postofflca depaartimeinit.&#13;
1!he fee foir a single message is one&#13;
shilling, and a stamp for this amount&#13;
has &lt;to be bought-art the poetofflce.&#13;
Whien Rlcfaard Lewy, the Austrian&#13;
horn-player, was eofiecfutlng a solo at a&#13;
soiree one time, a well-known comedian&#13;
annoyed (him w*th incessant&#13;
laughter and talking. At last Lewy&#13;
turned round and said: "Look here.&#13;
6ir; I think It is very utftfair for yon&#13;
to laoigih so loudfly when I am playing.&#13;
Did you ever 'bear me laugih- wihen you&#13;
were on the stase?"&#13;
A Paris paper is authority for the&#13;
•teubememt that a new wo*d has been&#13;
initroduced 'iato the Flemish language.&#13;
St is snelpaardelooszoondeerspoorweg'&#13;
petroollrijtiuig. The etymology Is:&#13;
"Snel,"'rapid; "ipaardelooe," horseless; u«xxnidieerispoorweg," witinoKt rails;&#13;
"petorooliTiJfcurig/' d-riven by ipetroleum.&#13;
The whole word, as can be easily seen&#13;
naeamfi automobile.&#13;
The cost of operating tihc great&#13;
Steamship Oceanic is between $40,000&#13;
and $50,000 a month. The extreme&#13;
earning capacity of the Oceanic is&#13;
about $90,000 a month. When toe cost&#13;
of repairs, insuinuKfe and &lt;the deterioration&#13;
in tine value of the snip ttpelf are&#13;
taken into accoumt the proQt remnining&#13;
repreaenits oaily^ fair return on the&#13;
invastmtenit of $4,000,000.&#13;
The'Ncue Prele Presse, of Viemna.&#13;
states that lately Professor Vincense&#13;
Cervello^oL Palermo, Italy, euoceeded&#13;
im finding a.n jumifailing cure for consum&#13;
pt ion pnd proved his invention b&amp;-&#13;
fore that medicail faculty. A dfletlngnishied&#13;
mi'Honaiire in Rome, ithe Backer&#13;
Floria, is erecting In tine vicinity ot&#13;
Palermo a ito&amp;spMtal with 150 roams for&#13;
consumptives at Ms own expense to&#13;
give to '.maakiffld 4lbe bemefit of Professor&#13;
Ceryello's discovery.&#13;
LITTLE CLASSICSFuneral&#13;
—&#13;
Director&#13;
and&#13;
Embalmere&#13;
Residence I mile north of village.&#13;
Sfa t* Telephone C o n n e d to n.&#13;
All c a l U promptly answered.&#13;
SOME FACTS! BEAD THEM!&#13;
EUREKA SURE STOP TOOTHACHE POWDERS&#13;
Gives quick and sure relief.&#13;
EUREKA COMPLEXION 0IRTMERT&#13;
Removes Black-heads and Pimple*.&#13;
EUREKA CORN CURE&#13;
Cures all Corns, Bunions, and Callous&#13;
places.&#13;
EUREKA 0. K, WART REMOVER&#13;
Is certain in its results.&#13;
E a c h 1 0 c , C o i n OP S t a m p s&#13;
— 1Jy4RcTurh Mat!. ~&#13;
Agents wanted—write today.&#13;
Address, EUREKA SUPPLY HOUSE,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
%gtI&amp;M&#13;
Large bodies are far .more likely to&#13;
err than individuals. The passions are&#13;
inflamed by sympathy; uhe fear of puoir&#13;
iehment and the sense of shame are&#13;
diminished by partition. Every day&#13;
we see men do for tbieir faction wfoat&#13;
they would dile raliher than do for&#13;
themselves.—Macauley.&#13;
It seems to me that wie become more&#13;
dear one to tthe cMier, In together ad^&#13;
mjiring works of art, which speak to&#13;
Uhe soul by tbeir true grandiesur.—&#13;
Mme. de Stael.&#13;
There is in this world infinitely,&#13;
more joy th-aa pain to be feihared. if . .&#13;
you will only take your share when tt4-P0 U I » i n Northwestern Michigan&#13;
is^Set Derore you.—Ruskin. ^~&#13;
We ahould always keep a comer or&#13;
our heads open and free, that we may&#13;
make room for the opdndone of our&#13;
friends.—Joubert. "&#13;
We Waste the power in impatience&#13;
wthlch. if oHherwise employed, might&#13;
remedy toe evil.-—Willmott.&#13;
There te a period of life when our&#13;
backward movements are steps In advance.—&#13;
Rousseau.&#13;
Selfiah. people, with no •heart to&#13;
speak of, have «be best of it.—H. W.&#13;
Shaw.&#13;
We reform others unconsciously&#13;
when we walk unrigihitly.—Mme. Swetohine.&#13;
SometrxneB tears have «he weight of&#13;
words.—OvM.&#13;
Kanaka children, with their parents,&#13;
spend many hours a day rescuing&#13;
driftwood from the surf. The scarcity&#13;
of timber near the Hawaiian coast&#13;
make* the business profitable.&#13;
house of commons has met on&#13;
leven times, on various occasions,&#13;
when urgency demanded It.&#13;
The first time was in the reign of Edward&#13;
III., the last at the death of&#13;
George II.&#13;
I think Twill go crazy with pain&#13;
were it not for Chamberlain's Pain&#13;
Balm," writes Mr. W. H, Stapleton,&#13;
Henninie,Pa. f"l have been afflicted&#13;
with rheumatism for several years and&#13;
have tried remedies without number,&#13;
but Pain Balm a tfa» batfe modiojae 1&#13;
haw get, hold ot" Oae^apy&gt;tteltfon&#13;
reliefss the pain, Forstie by&#13;
Sigler, Druggist&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
ttrand Trnak Bailwar SystemT^&#13;
Leave Pinckney.&#13;
B44a&#13;
448pm&#13;
WESTBOUND.&#13;
Ho. 27 Paaeeaper. Ponliiio to /eckaon&#13;
.connection from Detroit&#13;
No-89 i ^ e i y r w . PfltttUc to Jackson, 0&#13;
No. SB baa through coach trom Detroit&#13;
No. 48 Mixed, Lenox to Jackson&#13;
"•' .connection from Detroit&#13;
EASTKOUND&#13;
No. 80 Passenger to Pontiac and Detroit 3 13pm&#13;
^¾ w P"«nnge*. J»xon to Detroit, o: w a, m.&#13;
KO. ss has through ooaou from Jaxon f&gt; Detrort&#13;
No. 44 Mixed »o Pontlao and Lenox 7 55 a m&#13;
All trains daily except Sunday.&#13;
No 44 connection at Pontine for Detroit and&#13;
.for the west on D a If R K&#13;
W. JJUaek, Agent, Pinckney&#13;
AND STEAMSHIP UNCS.&#13;
-Popular loute fpr Ann Arbor, T6-&#13;
ledo and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owosso, Alma; Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
W. H.BKNNETT,&#13;
G. P. A. Toledo&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
., ?«vaa.VLax3r a 3., 1 O O O .&#13;
rr&#13;
Ar&#13;
LT&#13;
Ar&#13;
eOIXG KAST&#13;
UrandBapida&#13;
*oma. . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . ^ . , .&#13;
^*einx . . . . . . i . . . * . . , . . ,&#13;
Sooth Lyon&#13;
Salem&#13;
Plymouth ,&#13;
Detroit&#13;
OOIKO&#13;
Detroit&#13;
P l y m o u t h . . . .&#13;
Salem • . . .&#13;
South L y o n . . .&#13;
Howell&#13;
Lansing.......&#13;
Ionia.&#13;
Grand Bapids • • « • • » • • •&#13;
a m&#13;
f 10&#13;
9I0*4&#13;
10 OS&#13;
10 86&#13;
10 46&#13;
11 00&#13;
11 ao&#13;
a m&#13;
84C&#13;
92S&#13;
988&#13;
9 49i&#13;
10 88&#13;
It 89&#13;
19 80&#13;
1 80&#13;
l&gt; in&#13;
IS OS&#13;
U 2 0&#13;
14S&#13;
98ft&#13;
8 04&#13;
8 36&#13;
4 08&#13;
p m&#13;
110&#13;
14S&#13;
908&#13;
985&#13;
830&#13;
445&#13;
5 10&#13;
p m&#13;
~588&#13;
6 09&#13;
^797&#13;
98»&#13;
J85S8 10 06&#13;
6 69&#13;
7 09&#13;
740&#13;
841&#13;
10 OS&#13;
1 0 «&#13;
PmajrxBaT, ^&#13;
Afsnt,8M«kLyon.&#13;
GBaDmHAVBN, '&#13;
* «. P. A^ Orand BapMa.&#13;
KXPBIIIINOS&#13;
*fea*'.&#13;
I&#13;
t&#13;
i&#13;
i f&#13;
TPIADC MAHHS&#13;
Dcatoita&#13;
CorvmoMTa e\a&#13;
AnansM sendteff a aketeh and&#13;
fleMOr aeosrtatn tmr optnton • _ __ .&#13;
****** ^SSSiS^S^oJ^ onr pm&#13;
root&#13;
taken tbronfli K m a cb. N&#13;
spietif nettoe. wttboot oaaan, in the&#13;
• ' • 5 • , _&#13;
¥&#13;
/~» 9&#13;
it&#13;
^-&#13;
*.&#13;
v^v*-,.&#13;
* « i •*•*•»&#13;
FOUND A GOLD MINE M M «M*f. ^ p ^ , , -^ I—* *^* ^"&#13;
rrwssjgHJB/ODLTBT YXBD.&#13;
tautt&#13;
L*#**stftte fiie&#13;
i M N U l H t f&#13;
People in the neighborhood of Creston,&#13;
Ipwa, are amased et the number of eggs&#13;
thai thii sum drives to market with.&#13;
Whenatked what was the cause of hi&#13;
feat tatagjp profile, he stated it was all&#13;
Jo a oertain compound i e was using, that&#13;
kept his bens in good condition and furaisfeed&#13;
them with the proper stimuins to&#13;
egg praduofioa/ imej*can Pqtoltry Mixta**&#13;
Is the name of it, and ia made by&#13;
Ajneriean Mfg.'Co., TernfHate, Ind.&#13;
Every man in the poultry bnsiness' is interested&#13;
in the health of his hens and&#13;
their laving capasity. In the eggs lie his&#13;
profits. This mixture is guaranteed to inerease&#13;
the production of eggs 100 per cent&#13;
or rroney refunded. It will do more ^han&#13;
three times as much as the same amount&#13;
of any other .compound. It is concenjn&#13;
fonp,and the result of years of&#13;
practical experience in the poultry business.&#13;
There is absolutely no doubt as to&#13;
what it will do, and you are invited to try&#13;
it at the expense of the company. Send&#13;
fi.00 f°r sample package and if it doesent&#13;
do the work you get your money back.&#13;
This is fair and is made to induce practical&#13;
poultrymen to give it* a trial, It is&#13;
also a sure preventive of such diseases as&#13;
the terrible cholrea and roup which create&#13;
such havoc in all parts of the country. It&#13;
acts directly on the craw and gizzard and&#13;
is a thoroughly scientific preparation.&#13;
The msnafactures - guarantee every&#13;
package or refund purchase money. If&#13;
your druggist don't sell American Poultry&#13;
Mixture he Is behind the age. * In that&#13;
case order direct from American. Manufactaring&#13;
Co., Terre Hute, Ind.&#13;
H I I ll l - » — — l ( l | ' I&#13;
BAR-BE&#13;
THE6»£AT&#13;
JksroM&#13;
AT IVE.&#13;
Bar-Ben fa the greatest known&#13;
s and blood purifier&#13;
mmmmmmmmmmmm&#13;
W; 0. Tv U&#13;
fltites by the W 0 TU^«»«Mw&#13;
&gt;MslHiislHHHHHHi»&lt;Hiiats|&#13;
United States Diatrict Attorney&#13;
Soper, of the northern district of&#13;
Indian territory, has jprohibited&#13;
the publication of whiskey aSveis&#13;
tisements in newspapers issned in&#13;
the territory, because the sal0 of&#13;
liqnor is illegal there.&#13;
A general order has been&#13;
by the Southern railway applicable&#13;
to the southern division; |that&#13;
all employees must stop using cigarettes&#13;
or resign their positions,&#13;
and that in future no one will be&#13;
employed who smokes cigarettes.&#13;
The young ladies of Fitzgerald,&#13;
Ga., have organized an anti-saloon&#13;
league. The important part of&#13;
IBT^slaiemeni oFfmidlpl^rTr-this-anbjeck.&#13;
the following: "Pledging ourselves&#13;
and one another, Hfoat however&#13;
much we may esteem any&#13;
gentleman, or may strive in other&#13;
ways to secure their reformation,&#13;
we will not receive attentions&#13;
from those whom we have reason&#13;
to believe imbibe or frequent places&#13;
where intoxicating liquors ate&#13;
sold or drank."&#13;
At a meeting of the society for&#13;
the study of life on heredity, in&#13;
New York, a few weeks ago, Dr.&#13;
A. S. Langworthy stated that most&#13;
of the neurasthenia^ (the disease&#13;
of latest date) was almost entirely&#13;
due to the use of stimulants and&#13;
narcotics. He said: "The moderate&#13;
use of alcohol and tobacco&#13;
weakens the nervous strength of&#13;
children. The offspring of the&#13;
habitual drunkard in many instances&#13;
dies early, but it is the&#13;
i | children of these men of iron will&#13;
who think they can drink what&#13;
they please that succumb to bad&#13;
habits."&#13;
iiervetouic and Wood purifier.» ^ ^ * _ * * ^&#13;
It creates solid flesh, muscle and STRENGTH,&#13;
clears tbo brain, makes the blood pure and rich,&#13;
and causes a general feeling of health, power&#13;
and renewed vitality, while the generative organs&#13;
are helped to regain their normal powers, and&#13;
-the suffererls quickly made conscious of direct&#13;
-benefit One box will work wonders, six should&#13;
perfect a cure, J 60 cts. A BOX; to boxes, $2.60. For&#13;
sale by druggists everywhere, or mailed, sealed,&#13;
on receipt/of price. Address DRS. BARTON&#13;
AMD BBKSON, Bar-Ben Block, Cleveland. O&#13;
/For sale by&#13;
/ F. A. SIGLEB, Druggist&#13;
Pinckney, - - Mich.&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL. DETROIT&#13;
AafsTJMOAJV AMD MUKOTKAN FLAM.&#13;
mm TO ^9,06 — mt.oo TOmm»oo #&#13;
UP to OATU QAtmm&#13;
ferner'sDictlonaryof^BouymsiAntoiiyms,&#13;
tiMm rit Fiomar Ptiases.&#13;
A book that should be in the vest&#13;
of every person, because it&#13;
yen the tight word to use.&#13;
I No Two Words in the English&#13;
L&amp;nrnage Have Exactly the&#13;
Same Significance. To express&#13;
the precise meaning that one in-&#13;
| tends to convey a dictionary of&#13;
i Synonyms is needed to avoid repetition.&#13;
The strongest figure of&#13;
speech is antithesis. In this dic-&#13;
Itkmary the appended Antonyms&#13;
1 will, therefore, be found extremely&#13;
[valuable. Contains many other&#13;
features such as Mythology,&#13;
Familiar Allusions and Foreign&#13;
Phrases, Prof. Lolsette's Memory&#13;
System, T h e Art of Merer Forgetting, "etc..&#13;
etc. This wonderful little book ooondln a neat&#13;
eloth binding and aentpostpaid for 10.3b. Full&#13;
Leather, girt edge, $0.40. postpaid. Order at&#13;
eoee. Send for our large book catalogue, free.&#13;
Address all orders to .&#13;
THE WERNER COMPANY,&#13;
Palttsfctrt aa* Sttsnawtartra. AXKOV, OHIO.&#13;
Asi E d i t o r * Life S a v e * by Ch M f&#13;
lariat's Cemajb. R e m e d y .&#13;
Daring the early part of % October,&#13;
1896, I contracted a bad cold whjcb&#13;
settled on my longs and was neglect*&#13;
ed nntil I feared that consatnption&#13;
had appeared in an incipient state. I&#13;
was constantly coughing and trying&#13;
to expel something which I 'wuld not.&#13;
I became alarmed and after giving&#13;
the local doctors a trial bought a bottle&#13;
of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy&#13;
and the result was immediate improvement,&#13;
and after I Lad used three&#13;
bottles my lungs were restored to&#13;
their healthy state.—B. 3. Edwards,&#13;
Publisher of The Review, Wyat, 111.&#13;
For sale by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
Subscribe for Dispatch. w•.A JfTKD—SfiVikiiJLL&#13;
AKD HOKR3T posses* *&gt;&#13;
is as Managers ia thle aas) siose&#13;
lies. Salary * » a year and&#13;
JBtrait, bono-fdt, m&#13;
£ak hi any mm. * h&#13;
(wetk ooaslswtssi at&#13;
AH0BB8OI fMJmXWCLVB.&#13;
Oy*HvOH« knndred and fifty wer*&#13;
present at the Feb. meeting of the&#13;
Anderton' Rurmert! Olnl?, wl&gt;ioh&#13;
was LeijI at the hoj»e of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs, A,. 0 . Wilson. An oyster&#13;
dinner/ was served, after which&#13;
i W jF. W.- Uliabn oaJSed the&#13;
meeting to order.&#13;
The following officers were&#13;
elected for the ensuing year:&#13;
Prea, Norman D. Wdaon; Vice&#13;
Pres7, John J. Donohne; Recording&#13;
Sec, Nora Dnrkee; Oor. Sec,&#13;
Mrs. A. A* Stowe; Treasurer,&#13;
MollieE. Wilson.&#13;
After the singing of "America"&#13;
GL M. Wood read an account of&#13;
*The Origin and Use of the Primary&#13;
School Money." The question&#13;
was then asked, "Is it profitable&#13;
to make rag carpet?' There&#13;
was a variety of opinions upon&#13;
Mrs. A. A. Stowe&#13;
said that she made 65yds which&#13;
cost her only $12.75. Mrs Eugene&#13;
Smith thought it depended upon&#13;
the room in which the carpet is&#13;
to be used. "Others thought it&#13;
unprofitable.&#13;
Several more questions were&#13;
asked among which were, "Should&#13;
the State Government help to&#13;
maintain the rural roads?" uFor&#13;
what are Farmers' Clubs?" And,&#13;
"What is the best farm fence?"&#13;
All of these were but slightly discussed.&#13;
The meeting then&#13;
adjourned to meet the second Saturday&#13;
in March at the home of E.&#13;
J. Briggs.&#13;
COB. SEC.&#13;
DOES IT PAY TO BUY CHEAP?&#13;
A chesp remedy for coughs and colds is&#13;
all right but 70a want something that will&#13;
relieve and core the more severe results of&#13;
lung trubles. What shall you do? Go to&#13;
wanner and more regular climate? Yes,&#13;
if possible; if not possible for you, then in&#13;
eather case take the ONLY remedy that has&#13;
been introduced in all civilised countries&#13;
with success in severe throat and lung&#13;
trubles, ''Boschee's German Syrup." It&#13;
not only heals and stimulates the tissues to&#13;
destroy the germ disease, but allays inflammation,&#13;
causes easy expectoration, gives a&#13;
good nights rest, and cures the patient.&#13;
Try one bottle. Recomended many years&#13;
by all druggists in the world. Sample botles&#13;
at F . A . Sigler's.&#13;
Subscribe for the Dispatch. ^&#13;
iree monthsJor_15 cents.&#13;
art inilTt Bed *&amp;• ttrtian people&#13;
at 25o—%©x, the womon's remedy.&#13;
Ooilt pay 50 cents.&#13;
Yen can work when they work,&#13;
never gripe or make you tick, KaiU't&#13;
White Liver Pills. Bowel Regulator.&#13;
rwenty-five*do»e*,,25 cents.&#13;
Plea«ant,;8Afe and sure are KnlU's&#13;
Black Diarrhoea Pills. Cure* summer&#13;
complaints, dysentery and ail pains of&#13;
the stomach and bowels. Only 25&#13;
cents box.&#13;
Knill's Bine kidaey Pill core backache,&#13;
etc. Oaly 26 cents box.&#13;
x Pure, tweet stomachs and breaths&#13;
are made by taking Knill's Dyspepsia&#13;
Tablets. They will cure indigestion,&#13;
correct all stomach troubles, destroys&#13;
all foul gases for 25c box. Best and&#13;
cheapest Gnarrantaed by your druggest&#13;
Will Uurlett, Dexter.&#13;
W. B. Darrow, Pinckney.&#13;
Business Locals.&#13;
-er eAwe^of 50 cents w**y persowwha&#13;
purchases of at,, two 3to bexet&#13;
of Baxter's Mandrake Bitten TaWeU,&#13;
if it fails to cure constipation, biliontness,&#13;
tick.headache.jaundiot, loss of&#13;
appetite, soar stomaebe, dyspepsia&#13;
liver oompltint, or any of the diseases&#13;
for which it is recommended Price&#13;
25ceatofor either tablets or liquid.&#13;
We will also refund the money on one&#13;
package of either if it fails to give&#13;
satisfaction,&#13;
P. A.8igler,&#13;
W. B. Darrow,&#13;
Ske gitttfcneg f wpatrt,&#13;
s-pBUssum avxav ruvnuur xoaanw sx&#13;
F R A N K L . A N D R E W S&#13;
JfMHr and 2+oprMor.&#13;
Babscrlpttea Price f 1 la Advenes.&#13;
Saterea at the PoatoSke at Plackaej, ktleaitiaa,&#13;
as seeoad-cUss matter.&#13;
Advertislag rates made kaowa oa application.&#13;
Bnsineae Cards. S4JD0 per yea*.&#13;
WANTED!&#13;
Reliable man for Manager of Branch&#13;
Office I wish to open in this vicinity.&#13;
Good opening for an energetic, sober&#13;
man. Kindly mention this paper&#13;
when writing.&#13;
A. T. lloBBis, CINCINNATI, 0.&#13;
Illustrated catologue 4 cts. postage.&#13;
LOST—A small locket, brilliant set&#13;
on front, inital G. on oack, contains a&#13;
childs picture. Finder return to this&#13;
office and receive reward.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
Bran, Fine Middlings, Coarse Middlings,&#13;
Flaked Middlings and Corn,&#13;
t 7 T. READ.&#13;
To Beat&#13;
My house, barn and garden spot at&#13;
Cnubb* Corners; I also have a brood&#13;
mare for sale. * Mas. S. ELLIOTT.&#13;
Money to Loan.&#13;
Having accepted an agency for&#13;
loaning money, I am prepared to&#13;
make loans on Real Estate, at a low&#13;
rate ot interest. Inquire at the Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank. tf&#13;
W A N T E D :&#13;
Apprentice for Millinery trade.&#13;
2w Boyle &amp; Halstead.&#13;
Facts That&#13;
Every Patriot&#13;
and Voter&#13;
Ought to Know.&#13;
Ready&#13;
January1st&#13;
THE 1900&#13;
Do not iorget the DISPATCH Book&#13;
Bindery when you want work in that&#13;
line. We bind everything from a receipt&#13;
to a dictionary. Call and see&#13;
our work.&#13;
If you want all the news subscribe&#13;
or the DESPATCH.&#13;
ENCYCLOPEDIA.&#13;
Every&#13;
Politician&#13;
will Want&#13;
{ a Cop* ;&#13;
Containing Full Information&#13;
Upon All Statistical Facts&#13;
and Figures*&#13;
The&#13;
New&#13;
Congress.&#13;
O T A T E of MICHIGAN, County of Uvinfrtoa-&#13;
Probate Court for said connty, estate of&#13;
GBoaes W. BBOWK deceased.&#13;
The under*! gned haying been appointed, by the&#13;
Judge of Probate of said county, commissioner*&#13;
on claims in tbe matter of said estate, and six&#13;
months from the 6th day of Feb. A. D. 1900, oar&#13;
J Ing been allowed by said Jndge of Probate to all&#13;
persons holding claims against said estate in&#13;
which to present their claiire to as for examination&#13;
and adjustment:&#13;
Notice is hereby giren that we will meet on&#13;
Monday, the seventh day of May, A. D., 1900,&#13;
and on Tneeday, the seventh day of A a goat, A. D.,&#13;
1900; atene o'clock p. m. of each day, at the&#13;
late residence in the township-of Putnam in said&#13;
county, to receive and examine each claims. v&#13;
Dated: Howell, MklL, Feb. 0, A. D. 1900.&#13;
CHASXBS W. Baown,) Commissioner*&#13;
10 Gcr HAUL, / on Claim*.&#13;
Death aed maTriage notleea published free.&#13;
jfttfBQinttflMst* of entertsi&amp;aieats may be peld^-&#13;
to», if 4estredt by presenting the ofilce with ttss*&#13;
ets of admission. Ia esse tickets are not brought&#13;
to tbe office, regular rates will be charged*&#13;
All matter in local notice colonta will be chsn*&#13;
I atfi cents per line or fraction thereof, for eeeh&#13;
Insertion. Where no UmeUspeeiAed, allnotiose&#13;
wUlbeinaerrtteedd until ordered_ diecoaonoed, and&#13;
will be charged foraccordiaglr. fia^AU changes&#13;
el advertisements XUaT reach this o(ftee ss esHj&#13;
a* TCSSDAT morning to insure an iasertloavilra&#13;
same week.&#13;
and the latest styles o f TypSt etc., which enables&#13;
all kinds of work, such as Bool&#13;
uPsa mtop leexUe,c Puotes ters, Progransnaes, BUI Eeads,H&lt;&#13;
In aU its branches, a specialty. We have all kinds&#13;
fTypS, ett&#13;
ids wet&#13;
PampleU, Fosters, Prograattaes, BI&#13;
Heads, Siatementa, Cards. Auction Bills, ete^ in&#13;
superior styles, upon the ihertest notice. Prices ss&#13;
ow as good work can be cone.&#13;
«LL BILLS PATABLB FIBS* OS I V B B r KOITTBr.&#13;
THE VILLAGE . DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PusaroBNT ._»...„»«•............Alex. Mclniyre&#13;
THUSTUS E. L. fhompson, Alfred Monks. 1 Daniel Richards, ueo. Bowman, Saorael&#13;
Sykaa, P. U. Johnson,&#13;
Cxanx..........»~. — &gt;.•«. ..^.,.,B« H. Teeple&#13;
TaBAsuBBa....^^. .«»....„»... W. E. Murphy&#13;
W.'A. Cart&#13;
,...J. Monks.&#13;
B. Brown.&#13;
HKAXTHOrnoBB ;Dr.H. P.dialer&#13;
ArroBwar...^—...^^..^-....^-».„...w*. A, Carr&#13;
ABSBSOOS ........•*•&#13;
S T B U T CoauuSsioNaa.&#13;
Mkaaami....................%.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
MBTHUD18T BPISCOPAL CHCSCH.&#13;
Bev. Cttas. Simpson, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at .10:Su, and every Sunday&#13;
Prayer meeting Thurs-&#13;
Sunday school at close of mora-&#13;
LM±L SiaLia, Supt.&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock,&#13;
day evenings,&#13;
ing service.&#13;
pOONNtUtBaBKG AflOMAL CHUBCH.&#13;
Bev; 0. W. Bice pastor. .Service every&#13;
Sundaj morning at 10:40 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Thurs&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at close of mora*&#13;
ing service. B. H. Tee pie , Supt. Boes Bead, See&#13;
it. MAKT'S tf ATHOUC CHUBCH.&#13;
O Bev. M. J. Commerford, Pastor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mas* at 7:SU o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at&#13;
atl::i 00 p.&#13;
9:30 a. m. CataebJaai&#13;
m., vespers ana benediction at 7 :S0 p. m.&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
m h e A. 0. H. Society of this place, meets every&#13;
1 third Sunday lathe Fr. Mttthew Hall.&#13;
John Taomey and Mike Kelly, County Ddegstee&#13;
Meets every Sunday&#13;
Evening at 8.-00 oelocaOn the M. S. Caurch. PWOBTH LEAGUE,&#13;
e&#13;
aordi&#13;
dally young people.&#13;
eordial invitation U extended to everyone, eag&#13;
N n . Stella Graham Pre*.&#13;
CHRISTIAN&#13;
lag* every Sunday evening at 6-M&#13;
Mlws EUa ~&#13;
E2IDEAVOB SOCIETYi-Meet.&#13;
President,&#13;
Carpenter; Secretary, Mr*. C. W. Bice.&#13;
rpHB W. C. T. U. meets the drat Friday of each&#13;
mporano*&#13;
Sigler, Pre*; Mrs.&#13;
' 1 month at 2:30 p. m. at the home of Dr. H. F.&#13;
Sigler. Bveryone interested ia temperanee is&#13;
coadlally invited. Mra.-l.eal&#13;
B t u Durfee, Secretary,&#13;
T.e C. T. A. and B. Society of thii*s place «meet&#13;
every third Saturaay evening in the Fr. Masthew&#13;
Hall. John Donohae, Freeidpnt.&#13;
KNI"GHT8 OF MACCABBBS.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CaAa.O*xFBBXi* Sir Kaight Commander&#13;
* A. MV- Begulai&#13;
on or before&#13;
rf»*M»^^.^^i^*«»&#13;
Over&#13;
600&#13;
&lt; \ ^ N ^ » » i ^ ^ ^ &gt; ^ V&#13;
PERFECTS&#13;
^ ' ^ S C A I E S , M nasea ^ (eel Levers,&#13;
Combination B«&#13;
Catalogue Free.&#13;
Address, JoKKS&#13;
Livingston Lodge, "So.7% F&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, Q&#13;
the full of the moon. Alexander MeXntyre, W. M.&#13;
V I . 0ROBR OF EASTERN STAB meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following tbo regular F.&#13;
AAJL meeting, Mas. MAKT READ, W. M.&#13;
T ADIES OF THE M A C C A B E B S . Meet every let&#13;
J j and 3rd Saturday of eachmonta at S:S0 p m. at&#13;
K7o. T . ML halL VUitiog'sisters cordially in.&#13;
vited. LiLACosrwar Lady Com:&#13;
•r:-:t&#13;
OF BlHOHABTTOfl, »&#13;
SI. TA&#13;
Complete Guide to the&#13;
Forthcoming RlecHont&#13;
of 1900.&#13;
SPECIAL \ The South African&#13;
FEATURES, i War; War in the Phil-'&#13;
**~~~*m~J ippines; The Interna-!&#13;
t:onaJ Peaot Congress; Our Nava1&#13;
and Military Establishments; Tke&#13;
Samoan Settlement; The Great&#13;
Trusts and Their Capitalization, and&#13;
many other subjects of equally vital&#13;
$4.00 BOOK FOR 75ctS.&#13;
ftfi PWffltfS'&amp;cjclop6dli.&#13;
terest 4»aS*»w*s^e%B«n*AaJ»B&gt;&#13;
A complete Bbtop of each of&#13;
(he Ships in tie American&#13;
N*vy, faEdgerStMbnfap'&#13;
l*y&gt;H&amp;oriantlS*N**y.&#13;
^o»»#w»^*»«^ THE STANDARD&#13;
AMERICAN ANNUAL. 2&#13;
TBE WORLD,&#13;
\i *V aaeet Wi&#13;
eve nlns O.&#13;
T.MTHaUat7i0o'elocfc. AUvialtlnf&#13;
Quarde welcome.&#13;
F. O. Jacacaov, Caps. Gea.&#13;
NIGHTS or rax LOYAL GUARD&#13;
et every seeoad Wodncec&#13;
of every month in the K.&#13;
aodMUO&#13;
•sboohtoyo*.&#13;
M and we wffl&#13;
taisdnf te tmp at*&#13;
fairs et* the farat&#13;
l e a s e h o l d s M&#13;
stack ndaUf. Eav&#13;
braces articles oa&#13;
tbe horse, the colt,&#13;
horse habits. dh&gt;&#13;
eases of tbe horse,&#13;
the tarns, grasKs,&#13;
fruit culture, dairy.&#13;
laa^eaohary^beahh,&#13;
poaltry, bees, the&#13;
dap toilet, social&#13;
of the most eoa&gt;&#13;
p l e t e E n c y c l o -&#13;
pedia* in existence.&#13;
A l e m b o o k , r "'&#13;
x I * inches,&#13;
pates, fully fflos*&#13;
{rated, bound In&#13;
cress cloth bind*&#13;
tsar aadeqnal to;&#13;
other books ooattna?&#13;
as oor special&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. f. 84QLER M. D- C, L, SSOLER at, O»&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physlciaoa aad Surgeoaa^^ a » esiw psaaiptl&#13;
attended to day or night. OOea oa Main ate&#13;
Piaekaey, Mich.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
f&gt;KNTIST-Every Friday; aad oa Tharsday&#13;
when haviB« aaposs*ssoaSsv OaVebver&#13;
81aler*s Drug Store.&#13;
Our fee returned if wefafl. k\uj\&#13;
ahetoh and description of any^ invention&#13;
promptly receive oatr opinion free coocerniaar,&#13;
S e pateatabiBty ofsaaae. " H o w t o O b o S *&#13;
Patent" sent upon reqaeat Fatests aecai&#13;
advertiaed ior ante at oar expense.&#13;
'',r:x'rMl&#13;
j]&#13;
* 5&#13;
«i»».&gt;^f*ni*&#13;
V&#13;
m&#13;
.- ; /r$tfr.&#13;
•• 4 *,i r&#13;
Nf:&#13;
\&#13;
» • . „ . . - . " . ' •&#13;
•••{.. •••(&#13;
_ _ ^ * M B 2 L A M B U - . ii 'Ipl&#13;
TiiewaWr«sTJi€spMPiunr» • _ ^_UL.._U..l&#13;
&amp; /.:¾&#13;
; /&#13;
' • • ' * • • ' • '&#13;
•Mr&#13;
/ •K'b •;• . .•'•' .V.-' •^••.'.sr-iV.: v '..', *:A,&#13;
*.,i,r;—^:&#13;
?fr • # * . . : • • . ' : \ : - - : . ; &gt; ' : , : « , - , . y y - • • • ; . ^ - ¾ . . , • • . • . - . . : ^ ,*• ••&gt;•$.•&gt;*:• . y v . y . - " . ' , . - • ' • , - ,&#13;
S9E a n um&#13;
' S V,:&#13;
. . . ^ : , . : ,&#13;
A :•?: ' :••.&#13;
^ ' 1 ' r ^ * ' • ,&#13;
' « / • • . ' * / • • •&#13;
I * 1 ' J . ,&#13;
r.v. •&#13;
• * •&#13;
» . &lt; - •&#13;
HP'-&#13;
ft";&#13;
#&#13;
8 J.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
»V&#13;
&gt;:—&#13;
v„&#13;
• ' • - ' /&#13;
• * = • •&#13;
' / f&#13;
Jr.&#13;
t&gt;v»&#13;
t-*4'"-' . -*uSX»i&#13;
FBAara^. ANDREWS, Pubjishejv&#13;
PIN05NEY, • ". / "'MICHIGAIT,&#13;
SB&#13;
Some pedple pass their-good resolutions&#13;
on the first reading.&#13;
A foot speaks without rejecting rfnd&#13;
a mirror reflects without speaking.&#13;
It doesn't cost anything to be polity&#13;
and it often pay a enormous dividends.&#13;
A man has the same kind of respect&#13;
for a bully that he has for a mule's&#13;
heels.&#13;
No man ever tries t o argue with his&#13;
wife after t w o years of wedded happiness.&#13;
$&#13;
The man behind the red nose has&#13;
knocked out Alabama's proposed dispensary&#13;
law.&#13;
There are times when jim crow car&#13;
legislation savors strongly of jackpot&#13;
statesmanship.&#13;
The change in Chinese emperors&#13;
would make a job for the coroner in&#13;
almost any other country.&#13;
Whenever the demand for kisses exceeds&#13;
the supply a young man is always&#13;
anxious to establish a balance of&#13;
trade.&#13;
An individual whose ideas are vague&#13;
as to his own duties usually has very&#13;
clear ideas as t o the duties of his&#13;
neighbors.&#13;
Should France and Germany intervene&#13;
in the Transvaal controversy the&#13;
act could not fail to arouse the Irish of&#13;
Senator Hoar. '&#13;
If a collision could be arranged between&#13;
the one-eyed mountaineers of&#13;
Kentucky and the three-card mountaineers&#13;
of Chicago, it would be worth&#13;
going miles to see.,&#13;
Admiral Dewey has had all sorts of&#13;
experience in boats, but something different&#13;
will come to him when he take3&#13;
that proposed trip over Chicago's all-&#13;
"mud route to the Mississippi.&#13;
Four American steamers designed&#13;
for the Pacific trade are each to be 730&#13;
feet long, with a capacity of 22,000&#13;
tons. Borne of the builders say the&#13;
transpacific l i n e n of the future will bo&#13;
1,000 feet long.&#13;
Spain has nobly vindicated in honor&#13;
and wisdom in deciding to renew and&#13;
maintain the treaty relationships&#13;
which subsisted between that country •&#13;
and the United States before the war.&#13;
Spain means, that is to say, to make&#13;
the best of its altered circumstances,&#13;
turning its face toward tbe light instead&#13;
of sulking In the shadows.&#13;
"From the frying pan Into the fire" is&#13;
one of Spain's own proverb3, whjch&#13;
happily it does not intend to adopt as&#13;
its rule of conduct.&#13;
The Puerto Rican problem presents&#13;
some difficulties, Under the colonial&#13;
6ystem of Spain, the islanders enjoyed&#13;
certain commercial privileges, in sending&#13;
their products to Spanish markets,&#13;
which they have now lost without receiving&#13;
any compensating advantage&#13;
from their connection with this country.&#13;
The result has been great poverty*&#13;
and distress. If the products of&#13;
Puerto Rico were to be admitted to&#13;
cur great markets free of duty, it&#13;
would please the Islanders, but displease&#13;
many of the tobacco and the&#13;
sugar-raisers who are afraid of this&#13;
competition. In these circumstances&#13;
the proposal has been made in Congress&#13;
to levy upon Puerto Rico goods&#13;
one-half of the regular rates of duty.&#13;
Whether Congress has a right to levy&#13;
upon them any duty is a much disputed&#13;
constitutional question. • ,-&#13;
The Brazilian minister to the United&#13;
Btaies has been endeavoring to encourage&#13;
the importation into this country&#13;
of Yerba mate or Paraguay tea, to take&#13;
the place to some extent of Chinese&#13;
tea. Yerba Mate is a stimulant used&#13;
generally throughout South American&#13;
countries. Most Americans who visit&#13;
Southerfa countries become fond of the&#13;
drink, though it seems doubtful if it&#13;
will ever take the place of tea in this&#13;
country. Our consul-general at Rio&#13;
Janeiro in a report to the state department&#13;
recommends Its use, however,,&#13;
as an excellent stimulant and&#13;
nerve tonic. "It 1¾ pre-eminently a&#13;
temperance drink," he says, "and the&#13;
temperance societies in the United&#13;
States could do a very useful work by&#13;
helping to popularise i t Yerba mate,&#13;
hjkft all the stimulating and sustaining&#13;
qualitfes of Chinese tea or of coffee,&#13;
without the detrimental ~en*ect caused&#13;
bf their constant and excessive use—&#13;
offectlon of liver and kidneys, irritation&#13;
of the nervous system, etc.—and&#13;
It' is very cheap. The great masses in&#13;
Uruguay and Argentine, Including the&#13;
famoua ganchos (cowboys) of the&#13;
pampas, who drink it constantly instead&#13;
&lt;rf water, tea or coffee, hardly&#13;
ever nte alcoholic stimulanst. IntoxJ-&#13;
«atk» to » nurt occnrrwice/thsre.&#13;
WHERE WASHINGTON LIVED.&#13;
A wealth of historic recollection hovers&#13;
about the w-rid-famous Mount&#13;
Vernon,- where Washington, the first&#13;
president of the American republic,&#13;
lived and died. The magnificent old&#13;
estate on the banks of the Potomac&#13;
river, but a short distance from the&#13;
capital city,' annually attracts thousands&#13;
of visitors from all over the&#13;
earth—visitors whose chief aim when&#13;
coming i o Washington for the first&#13;
time is to look upon the spot where&#13;
the "Father of His Country" spent his&#13;
life. No one could conceive a more&#13;
charming spot for the'location of a&#13;
mansion at once so grand and so historic.&#13;
High above the southern bank&#13;
of the river Potomac the estate is located.&#13;
It rests on the nighesT'part. of&#13;
the hilly territory which characterizes&#13;
the vicinity, and the mansion with its&#13;
barns and surrounding buildings is&#13;
half hidden from the gaze of river pilgrims&#13;
by stately trees which have&#13;
stood there .scores upon scores of&#13;
years. Closely trimmed lawns and&#13;
carefully pruned shrubbery give an&#13;
added touch of beauty to the environments&#13;
of the old-time mansion and the&#13;
snug-clipped hedges which surround&#13;
the court at the rear of the house remind&#13;
one strongly of the days gone by.&#13;
Mount Vernon is an imposing relic&#13;
of the century past; a reminder of the&#13;
days when colonial architecture was at&#13;
its height. Eight tall pillars guard the&#13;
broad piazza at the front of the house,&#13;
and a picturesque balustrade of latticework&#13;
ornaments the edge of-the piazza&#13;
roof. From the front veranda one may&#13;
catch a glimpse of the silent river as it&#13;
THE RESIDENCE OF WASHINGTON.&#13;
sweeps onward t o tbe sea. The rear&#13;
of the mansion is typical-of old Southern&#13;
days. A broad courtyard,witb gravel&#13;
walks and well-kept lawns, stretches&#13;
away from the white-painted juansion&#13;
to the woodland at the rear.* Roomy&#13;
horse sheds extend back from the main&#13;
building on either side, and lead the&#13;
eye to where greenhouse and immaculate&#13;
dairy aad carriage sheds stand.&#13;
The hothouse is stocked with the rarest&#13;
of plants, and is one of the points of&#13;
Interest which always attracts visitors.&#13;
The stable wherein is kept the famous&#13;
chariot in which Washington rode is&#13;
another attraction^ for the excursionists,&#13;
and although the coach is fast&#13;
dropping I n t o j i state of dilapidation,&#13;
and is so 8haky~that no one is allowed&#13;
to touch it, it remains a point of great&#13;
j. A F O t t M B r ^ M B B l g A N S A Y S .&#13;
9t&gt;oahl*4 l h i t » M H « i M i M i l •#*&gt;&#13;
Ifom Th»* Doubled Ttecir Stock. '&#13;
The following letter, written by Mr./&#13;
|Jcht* ,C*nvnings*of Wetaekiwln, A K&#13;
I b e m * Cafcads, formerly e£ W a s h i n g&#13;
Ion, to a friend In the United £ U t s « v&#13;
is only one of at hundred simUa±~eaas«».&#13;
and what was done by Mr. Cummiaf*&#13;
can more easily- be done today by any&#13;
tfood, sober and industrious farmer&#13;
^ o r n i n ^ n ? ^ ^ 'WfcUvWi £ ? * * J* *»&#13;
I n B e s # W n ; Y o u ^ w a i t toJtnjaw how X&#13;
got alone since I came into Northern&#13;
A l p e r t a ? 7 * am" happy to InftrisPyou.&#13;
t h a i I am not aahamedvto tflfc, r °&#13;
We located five mttes northeast o f&#13;
Wetaskiwfc;1 '• lett Farxnlhgt'on/ Wash.,&#13;
ton the 29th dayjof May, driving-*tt &amp; e&#13;
ttwav, ,^ We tkad. * i w ^ . t^i buA&lt;L our&#13;
log house the first fall, ana t o . make&#13;
us comfortable for the family and&#13;
t9ck^ We then built four stables, 18x&#13;
2Q inside, so that we cduld put everything&#13;
inside them when the cold got&#13;
down to the fifties, and worked &lt; hard&#13;
Setting up. the stables, and got through&#13;
ubbiu?: on the 1st' o£ December;J,J&gt;ut»&#13;
to our surprise, we had 1^0" Use'for tbo.&#13;
stables only for the' milk; cow and t w o&#13;
spans of horses. The balance of the&#13;
horses lived on the prairie all winter,&#13;
and took care of themselves. The doors&#13;
ef-two stahiea were teft-open for them&#13;
to go into in a cold time, but they&#13;
would not do it, but stayed out on the&#13;
prairie the coldest night we had and&#13;
looked as spry as crickets.&#13;
I can go ten rods back of my hoiise&#13;
and count ten residents. I know all&#13;
of their circumstances. Every one1 of&#13;
them have doubled their cultivated&#13;
land, and doubled their animalB, and&#13;
a great deal more. All of us are com*&#13;
paratively out of debt and an unusually&#13;
big crop to thresh and prospects of&#13;
a fair price, and I expect we are aa&#13;
well contented a lot of people a s there&#13;
is to be found from Florida to t h e&#13;
Klondike. ^&#13;
My son bought two pounds of twine&#13;
to the acre, and when we started1'to&#13;
bind some barley we found that i n -&#13;
stead of taking two pounds to the aire,&#13;
it was taking nearly five pounds. Then&#13;
you ought to have seen him hitch up it&#13;
team and make for town fdr lod'pound*&#13;
more. I cannot say how it will thresh^&#13;
All I can say is that it is well-headed&#13;
and takes an enormous amount oi&#13;
twine.&#13;
The man will always be busy trhi&#13;
truly follows Christ.&#13;
. „ g^g.g g&gt;aml)y Medicine.&#13;
Moves the bowels eachr-&lt;lay. I n ordei&#13;
to be healthy this is necessary. Act!&#13;
gently on the liver and kidneys. Cnref&#13;
sick headache. Price 25 and 50c.&#13;
THE COURTYARD.&#13;
interest nevertheless. Down near the&#13;
steamboat landing, where the crowds of&#13;
sightseers are landed from the river&#13;
steamers, is the tomb wherein are interred&#13;
the remains of Washington and&#13;
his wife, the caskets encased in marble&#13;
sarcophagi, and kept from the public&#13;
by means of iron bars over the&#13;
doorway of the otherwise open tomb.&#13;
The interior of the mansion is filled&#13;
with relics of the gre^t man who lived&#13;
there, and from papers in his own&#13;
handwriting to the bed on which he&#13;
died, mementoes of Washington are&#13;
everywhere.&#13;
Followed No Creed.&#13;
One of the most characteristic of&#13;
Washington's traits one that a student&#13;
of his character expects to find, is&#13;
the indifference with which he treated&#13;
religious controversy. He was the&#13;
most tolerant of men. Tom Paine,&#13;
hounded to death by priests and people,&#13;
never received anything but real&#13;
kindness from him, and although in a&#13;
fit of "righteous anger" he spurned the&#13;
dedication of the deist's famous or&#13;
infamous attack on Christianity, going&#13;
even s o far as to order the public&#13;
hangman t o burn the book, it is doubtful&#13;
if in his heart he cherished any real&#13;
disdain. He had been born and bred&#13;
in the Established Church; it never&#13;
occurred to him to inquire' into the&#13;
why and wherefore of any religious&#13;
dogma. This easy-going tolerance perhaps&#13;
contributed as much as anything&#13;
to his success; for even as he was not&#13;
sufficiently orthodox an Episcopalian&#13;
to antagonize the sects, s o his brpad,&#13;
all-embracing-Christianity could torgive&#13;
even the unbeliever. And it is&#13;
not indubitable that he had not&#13;
thought Some men have there been&#13;
whose greatness has lain in that they&#13;
held their tongue.&#13;
The Washington Monument.&#13;
Oh, pure, white Bhaft upspringing to&#13;
the light&#13;
With one grand leap. of heavenwardreaching&#13;
might,&#13;
Calmly against the blue forevermore&#13;
Lift thou the changeless type of souls&#13;
that soar&#13;
Above the common dust of sordid'&#13;
strife N&#13;
Into the radiant ether of a life&#13;
Shepherded by the vastness of eternity!&#13;
A hero's quickening spirit llfteth thee&#13;
Unto the skies that claim thee for their&#13;
own:&#13;
In those vast fields of light, sublime,&#13;
~~ alone,&#13;
High commune.holdest thou with the&#13;
&gt; young day,&#13;
With sunset's glowing heart ere twilight&#13;
gray&#13;
Hath stilled its throbbing fires, and&#13;
with dim night&#13;
That folds thee softly in the silver&#13;
light&#13;
Of many a dreaming moon. In majesty.&#13;
Serene, like the great name enshrined&#13;
in thee, •&#13;
Thou dost defy the all-destroying&#13;
years.&#13;
Smite with thy still rebuke our craven&#13;
fears!&#13;
Point us forever to the highest height,&#13;
And in our nation's peril-hoiirs shine&#13;
white&#13;
With thy mute witness to the undying&#13;
power&#13;
Of the high soul that lives above the&#13;
hour!&#13;
—Juha, Larned, in the February Scribner'&#13;
9.&#13;
H O U S E OP A N C E S T O R S .&#13;
Many deaths are reported from&#13;
plague in Japan.&#13;
thi&#13;
44A Thread Every Pay&#13;
Makes a Skein in a Year/9&#13;
One smsll iXsepse jqerm carried by ihe&#13;
blood through 4he system «o&gt;rf/ convert *&#13;
healthy human body to a condition of Itf&#13;
VAlidism. ~'tt'n6f*ajiit until you are bedridden;&#13;
Keep your blood pure and life-gh*&#13;
ing all the time. Hood's SarsaparilUk&#13;
accomplishes this as nothing else can, &lt;&#13;
ZGwteSi&#13;
LlPORTE&#13;
Sitmvtcd lit, th? TEXAS head or Galveston&#13;
Bay, is de*&#13;
tmed to be tbo HOST PROSPEROUS CITY on tha&#13;
Gulf of MezWo. It possesses tu&gt;equf4Md'jjatural&#13;
adrantages.KCograpbically«nafrom every point&#13;
of view. IU fftture as a i^eat city Js assured,&#13;
Tho U. S. Government is now spending a large&#13;
amount of money in Harbor improvements.&#13;
La Porte Is the natura' seaport for tne products&#13;
of the entire Middle, Northern and Western&#13;
States and for Houston, the great railroad&#13;
(center 61 Tfexa*. •. 15" &gt; R. • * i i&#13;
Excursions at reduced rates -win be run twioea&#13;
month. Write for FREE nAPS, DE&amp;CKlPTIVli&#13;
LITERATURE and full particulars to&#13;
AMERICAN LAND CO.,&#13;
188 MadlM* St, CMTCAOa&#13;
for fur OLD SOLDIERS Union soldiers and widows of soldftrs wsWmade&#13;
homestead entries before June 33,1874 of^letf than&#13;
leoacres (no matter if abandoned or ^elidnulshedX&#13;
tfthey have not sold their additional hotofcstead&#13;
rights, should address with fall particular*, g i v&#13;
tag district, 8tc S m r &gt;. MCT, WMJfcltfr » 6.&#13;
I M S lUIHJttalUli Patent* advertised&#13;
#MS&gt; -tor dianu.&#13;
Frew arftfte* — ^.^SAtMtebmtr., 4B«d for&#13;
Inventor's mmer. MILO » . 8 T « V « * • « 3 0 *&#13;
Established tsH. an i4«*-at., WMninst&#13;
Branca OfWear Ckfoa*e, Cfevaiasd sad&#13;
•61&#13;
The illustration shows the old Sulgrave&#13;
manor house, in Northamptonshire,&#13;
the English ancestral home ox&#13;
George Washington. The coat of arms&#13;
used by Washington may be descried&#13;
over the doorway. No attempt has&#13;
been made t o restore the house, though&#13;
It is cared for and kept from wilful&#13;
destruction.&#13;
44&gt;attolt.&#13;
/^AirreittiMK&#13;
DftOPSY cases. Dook of tsstlmool&#13;
r a s * a a . a.«. easts* aoss. a** 1&#13;
LMM'S&#13;
N!W DISCOVERY* River&#13;
^ „ aolcfc relief sad our—worst&#13;
testimootsis sad la a&amp;is* treatment&#13;
a&gt; AUSMs, 8e*&#13;
Tftoat Csady, one of tbe best conf aettoar&#13;
eltsts, subtle speakers, #a. Send&#13;
Me to Lamb Mfg. Co^ Ottawa, Canada, for ajpple bos.&#13;
I&#13;
V&#13;
&gt;&#13;
.iisi A i i i ^ ? I ^ : ; V A ^ , ^ ^ ^ iilfttAsass^ssaaMaassSss^sMisesasi SBBBBslsliJ • &amp; - . ^ ...^2^1,^^^..:^ ^^t^m**«**iJS^.^, \ .-.«.&gt; iMm&#13;
•5jm sjmwmyrm1 m*-,«m fi ^ ^ ^ P TT;&#13;
-Try ^ • ;&#13;
•,"•. '•'. WW&#13;
ii&#13;
mmnmmw^mmwyaumjmmMsrm^ *rm}_&#13;
v- i-:&#13;
:\y&#13;
• IflJf&#13;
;&amp;•:&#13;
:rv' i,'&#13;
^ ^ ' - • ' - • ^ ^&#13;
.^/.&#13;
,'.! #&#13;
-I'lV.&#13;
W ^ w j&#13;
&gt;v,v-&#13;
, v , , ^ . . , ^ ,&#13;
r,&#13;
&gt;*-if&gt;&#13;
•''• T&#13;
* .'&#13;
•/. XiDOfl:&#13;
II * « • " ft * - * *5* &gt;»&#13;
I 1 . . &lt; . J »&lt; I, ears&#13;
er&#13;
C O N G R E S S I O N A L NOTftS.&#13;
1&#13;
"Itin now •eventy-tir© y«tti&#13;
4 $p t&amp;4 tnr hiif 43 as (kfk i t&#13;
h w a twcflty-lvc ycirs tap.&#13;
People uj I look tt lent to.it&#13;
mt»cY younger tain I i s . I&#13;
would be entirely biM or tnowwarte&#13;
if it were not for TOW&#13;
Hair Vigor."—Mrs. Anns&#13;
Lawrence, CKkigo, III, Dec&#13;
2 2 , 1090.&#13;
/s Yours&#13;
Snow-white ?&#13;
There is no getting around&#13;
such a testimonial as this. Yon&#13;
can't read it over without being&#13;
convinced. These persons do&#13;
not misrepresent for their testimonials&#13;
are all unsolicited.&#13;
Ayer's Hair Vigor restores&#13;
color to gray hair every time.&#13;
And it is a wonderful food to&#13;
the hair, making it grow rich&#13;
and heavy, and keeping it soft&#13;
and glossy all the time, ^ It is&#13;
also an elegant pressing.&#13;
S1.M a bottle. AU dragglsts.&#13;
Write the doctor&#13;
If you do not obtain all the benefits yon&#13;
desire from the use of the Vigor, write&#13;
the Doctor about it. He will tell you just&#13;
tfce right thing toUo, and will send you&#13;
bis book on the Hair and Scalp if you&#13;
request it. Address,&#13;
Dr. J. C. A Y E B , Lowell, Mass.&#13;
JSwtt&#13;
Highest 6ra.e Moderate Prices \&#13;
\&#13;
Schaeffer&#13;
Pianos&#13;
Secured only Diploma of Hooot&#13;
Paris ExpoaHho, t67Q.&#13;
BEST VALUE BECAUSE OP&#13;
Beauty of design,&#13;
Powerful singing quality of t o n e ,&#13;
Extreme durability.&#13;
Write for catalogue and prices.&#13;
Schatff or Piano Hfg. Co.&#13;
215 Wabasff Ave.,&#13;
CHICAGO.&#13;
U S M N i I 1 N M M '&#13;
FOR EVERY H O U S E K E E P E R .&#13;
The Gem Jfclfheeting Flat Iron and Stove&#13;
combined is a new invention of great value&#13;
to housekeepers. It gives any heat desired;&#13;
is odorless, safe, simple, complete; saves&#13;
tixnerlabor, health, fuel. 2 cents runs one&#13;
all. day. It appeals to everyone. Onoe&#13;
used it if indispensible. Assures WAXTXD&#13;
EVSBTWHXSB. Anyone can. sell it. An&#13;
investigation will pay 700. GEM FLAT&#13;
TROTH CO., KALAJSAZOO, MICH.&#13;
FOR 14 CENTS &gt; We wish to sala this 14&#13;
a s * aastisjurs, and h«&#13;
' ~ l.iBItFGanl&#13;
a m i&#13;
arly Rip* Cabbage, foe&#13;
{_" Brilfi*ntfl«w»rSiida, lfte&#13;
Worth ei.ee, tw 1* — u. f £ 8&#13;
Above 10 Pkts. worth SL«, we will&#13;
mall you Crea, toe ether with our&#13;
grrre«aatt Ouaatualioo&gt;c,, ttastiflilnngc aallll aafbtooaa*r&#13;
ipoa raejtptef this a e i f e a A 1 4 4&#13;
- Te. W e awitsyoartrads,&#13;
when yea. ones try tfrai a s&#13;
a-yoa wtu aevw do wiihio ut.&#13;
at staacsw ucawsssVwis,&#13;
ThexPhAUpplfte,question atfein oepnpled&#13;
the attention, of^ the .house on^the&#13;
0th, With a sliq&amp;t disgresWon concerning&#13;
the w a r i n South AfHca. y b ^ f e a t -&#13;
ure of the debate was the speech of M^.&#13;
W i ^ a m s ^Mia*,), w h o presented an a?:&#13;
gument against the annexation of the&#13;
Philippines, which attracted much attention.&#13;
I t w a s devoted almost entirely&#13;
to the commercial aspects of the&#13;
acquisition. holdipg^hMttieebewje-ption&#13;
of the island woald be. ultimately ruinous&#13;
to th«_ Aasejicaa producecs of-eotton,&#13;
rice, tobacco, hemp:' m&amp; sugar.&#13;
Mr, Morris (Mirw) made a n •xhanstive&#13;
legal argxatnent in support o i t h e right&#13;
to hold and govern the islands, The&#13;
other speakers were Messrs. Gibson&#13;
(Tenn,), W. A. and H. Cv Smith (Mich.),&#13;
Corcoran (Mb.), and Neville (Neb.).&#13;
A special from Washington says that&#13;
convinced that * sufficient number of&#13;
votes have been pledged to seat Matthew&#13;
8. Quay as senator from Pennsylvania,&#13;
his opponents are now seeking&#13;
to keep him out by preventing consideration&#13;
of his case. When the currency&#13;
bill is out of the w a y a n effort&#13;
will be made to sidetrack the Quay&#13;
case by pressing the Puerto Hican bill,&#13;
Mr. Quay's opponents arguing that this&#13;
and other matters of great national&#13;
importance should not be allowed to&#13;
suffer 1&gt;ecause t&gt;f -a contest over one&#13;
man's seat in the senate.&#13;
A largo delegation from Alaska is at&#13;
Washington for the purpose of urging&#13;
congress to enact some legislation under&#13;
which a government may be, organized&#13;
in that territory. They want&#13;
authority to organize municipal governments,&#13;
under which they will be&#13;
able to establish better sanitary conditions,&#13;
construct roads, support&#13;
schools, -postoftices, prisons, etc., which&#13;
they content should be done before the&#13;
x'ush to the gold fields in the spring.&#13;
Senator Penrose on the 7th introduced&#13;
a resolution in the senate requesting&#13;
the President to detail so&#13;
many naval vessels as in his judgment&#13;
may be necessary to maintain a strict&#13;
neutrality and maintain our commercial&#13;
rights in Portuguese waters ib&#13;
iSouth Africa during the progress of&#13;
the British-Boer war.&#13;
* Religious bodies crowded the rooms&#13;
of the house committee on judiciary on&#13;
the^tith,. and urged that the constitution&#13;
be so amended as to prohibit polygamy&#13;
in the United States. It is understood&#13;
that the Mormons are now&#13;
propagating their faith everysshere,&#13;
hence the need of a law to suppress it&#13;
-altogether. &gt;&#13;
The state department has been assured&#13;
by the German government that&#13;
the Samoan treaty, which was ratified&#13;
by the United States senate, will received&#13;
the ratification of the bundesrath&#13;
and reichstag w i t h m a week;&#13;
There is practically no opposition to&#13;
the treaty in Germany.&#13;
The President 0» the 0th appointed&#13;
OUR NEW YORK LETTER,&#13;
latest DaveieiimeVt*^&#13;
• A M MMfcatfta W. L DOUGLAS&#13;
HMSIE&#13;
WoSSttSK*''!&#13;
Tka&#13;
lorsedbv&#13;
IjQejQugQQ&#13;
haveW. L.&#13;
stamped ea bottoss. Take 4&#13;
ao substitute chimed to be&#13;
as food. Your dealer&#13;
should keep then—if,&#13;
aoVwe win send a pair ,&#13;
onvecetet of price and sea. _&#13;
extra lor csmafa. Stsis'ldad ef .&#13;
sise, aadwidthj piste or cap tee. Cat free.&#13;
• » e Ise "T^kySr^ss^ss^^aj SBWMSSBA W n i SBWw"*^e^psej SWB»S^SW&#13;
1 - aaewefrif&#13;
lUatiot IWi rajMk&#13;
Tth introduced a bill for *the acquirement&#13;
of the Erie canal by the United&#13;
States government and its enlargement&#13;
to a capacity sufficient for the largest&#13;
vessels of war, at a cost not to exceed&#13;
$^,000,000.&#13;
Until the financial measure now&#13;
pending before the senate shall have&#13;
been disposed of finally, it will be considered&#13;
by that body every legislative&#13;
day to the exclusion of all except purely&#13;
routine business. '&#13;
The subcommittee has favorably reported&#13;
to the ways and means commit-,&#13;
tee of the house the bill making the&#13;
quarter-barrel revenue stamrj the&#13;
smallest to be issued by the treasury&#13;
for beer. -.&#13;
Adelbert S. Hay, the new U. S. consul&#13;
at Pretoria w a s received by the&#13;
Transvaal government on the 5th, and&#13;
created an excellent impression, it is&#13;
said.&#13;
The plague is gaining headway at&#13;
Manila, 12 cases are reported on one&#13;
street, and the outbreak has caused&#13;
much excitement.&#13;
T H E MARKETS.&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
New York— Cattle Sheep Lamta&#13;
Best grades....&#13;
Lowei-grade*..&#13;
Ulile»»;o—&#13;
Best grade-*....&#13;
Lowertfrode*..&#13;
D e t r o i t -&#13;
Best jjraaes...&#13;
Lower irradea..&#13;
B u f f a l o -&#13;
Best grades...&#13;
Lower ftrados.&#13;
H &lt;*)do 50 t6 80&#13;
.J i)J^4 bJ 3 5J&#13;
.5 S5®6 10 5 75&#13;
Bogs&#13;
17 55 fS 40&#13;
.3 7 3 @ * SO 4 4 1&#13;
.3 8ia* 3-» b n&#13;
.3 Ji»4 UJ S 26&#13;
Cloeinnatl—&#13;
^Waat grades 5 Xxjh5 75 5 60&#13;
&lt; Lower grades... 4 Mke)4 *&gt; 4 »&#13;
Flttsbarg—&#13;
Best grade:* 9 4006 99 ft HO&#13;
Lower Mrudea.. .4 m&amp;t 7u . &lt; » '&#13;
7 00&#13;
tt UJ&#13;
6 70&#13;
7 SO&#13;
\&#13;
7 »&#13;
6 » v&#13;
725&#13;
1 &lt;y&gt;&#13;
5 10&#13;
475&#13;
5 15&#13;
4«o&#13;
5 20&#13;
4»&gt;&#13;
500&#13;
405&#13;
530&#13;
5 10&#13;
New York&#13;
Chicago&#13;
"Detroit&#13;
Toledo&#13;
Cincinnati&#13;
Pittsburg&#13;
Buffalo&#13;
GRAIN.&#13;
Wheat,&#13;
No. 2 red&#13;
- 7C&lt;a7*JH&#13;
Tigris&#13;
73®7oVt&#13;
?4&amp;?&lt;*&#13;
KTC.&#13;
Corn,&#13;
No. i mix&#13;
41Q41 ,&#13;
m&amp;%&#13;
3JQ3IU&#13;
84«J3t&#13;
Oats.&#13;
No. 2 white&#13;
S80»&#13;
S3s)i3H&#13;
2 4 ^ 4&#13;
sodso&#13;
•Detroit-Hay. No. 1 Timothy, $lt 09 per toa.&#13;
Potatoes, 50c per bu. Live Poultry, spring&#13;
chickens, sc per lb: fowls, 7o: turkeys, I0o;&#13;
ducks, 10a Kggs, strictly f reaa, 15c per dosea&#13;
Dutter, best dairy, 199 per lb; creamery, tfe&#13;
N i w York/Jtiftr 6, MOO.&#13;
A very great deal has hean aald and&#13;
printed a b o p t ^ ' U a u i d Air* sttxd the&gt; Snder haa been thjrt up to tfc*9»«*«n.t&#13;
10 no one ha*, ao far aa tha.fen^ral&#13;
public is aware* succeeded la lntfeAvi*&#13;
HiV it as as' active commercial agent;&#13;
ao to speajc It has been looked upon&#13;
rather aa a curiosity than as something&#13;
of real commercial importance.&#13;
A t leaat that la what X had supposed&#13;
until a fet&gt; diya ageft B u t just recently&#13;
it has been demonstrated to me&#13;
and to many others here in New York,&#13;
that the marvelous inventions of Professor&#13;
O&amp;as, E. Tripler are being actually&#13;
put to the most Important and&#13;
practical uses. At this very moment&#13;
at the Tripler Works and Laboratory,&#13;
in West 8Mh street, this city, "Liquid&#13;
Air" is being made In large quantities&#13;
daily at a very small coat, and it is&#13;
being sold to all the leading hospitals&#13;
in "Greater New York," where its use&#13;
has already proven of the highest&#13;
value.&#13;
, Its use is an economical power for&#13;
navigation, for stationary engines, and&#13;
for all' purposes requiring large and&#13;
cheap power, is'fully assured because&#13;
of the extreme cheapness with which&#13;
it can be made by the Tripler process,&#13;
and already very many large users of&#13;
power are inquiring of the Tripler&#13;
Liquid Air Co. as to making arrangements&#13;
for its use at their works. Numerous&#13;
applications for such privileges&#13;
to use it are coming in to the Company's&#13;
New York office, No. 11 B'way,&#13;
daily. But these gentlemen have decided&#13;
to not consider these propositions&#13;
until after the installation of the&#13;
plants which they are nojiLputting up&#13;
at the Paris Exposition and in London,&#13;
Hng.&#13;
Applications from every state in the&#13;
union as well as from many foreign&#13;
countries, have been received by the&#13;
Parent Co. here, for permission to organize&#13;
local companies to make and&#13;
sell Tripler Liquid Air, and it is the&#13;
policy of the Parent Co. to dispose of&#13;
their rights in the several states and&#13;
abroad to companies of high financial&#13;
standing, retaining a large controlling&#13;
interest in each subsidiary' company.&#13;
Thus the stockholders of t h e Parent&#13;
Co. will become the owners of a majority&#13;
of the stock in alt these minor&#13;
companies, and receive enormous dividends&#13;
in consequence. This is the&#13;
same policy, that was pursued so successfully&#13;
by the Parent Bell Telephone&#13;
Co., and all the world k n o y s the pecuniary&#13;
results.' '•&#13;
The use of "Liquid Air" for refrigerating&#13;
purposes alone will bring in&#13;
many millions to the Tripler Co., as&#13;
every refrigerating plant will, eventually&#13;
adopt it because of its superiori&#13;
t y in every way to that of the present&#13;
ways of refrigerating, and its economy&#13;
as well.&#13;
A limited amount of stock will be&#13;
offered to the public, in a few days, and&#13;
subscriptions will be received by the&#13;
Parent Co. for shares at $5 per share.&#13;
I really do not know of a more conservative&#13;
investment than this, with&#13;
the prospect of so large and so certain&#13;
HTvidends. It is a rare chance.&#13;
T R A D E A N D I N D U S T R Y .&#13;
Judjg-e Wm. II. Taft, of Cincinnati, and&#13;
United Stutes judge of the 6th judicial&#13;
circuit, to be president of the new Philippine&#13;
commission. Judge Taft's place&#13;
ou the bench will be filjed by the appointment&#13;
of Judge Henry F. Severens,&#13;
of Kalamazoo. - Vienna's street railway system cost&#13;
Rep. McClellan,-of New York, on the_-|40,ooo,OOO, and it is-esthnated that it&#13;
Last year's sales of German toys In&#13;
Great Britain amounted to over | 9 , -&#13;
500,000.&#13;
will pay for itself in ten years.&#13;
The bakers' union predicts that before&#13;
many months every loaf in Minneapolis&#13;
will bear the union label.&#13;
The corporation of West Ham, England,&#13;
will spend $8,450,000 for worklngmen's&#13;
houses and lodging-houses.&#13;
The report of the Wisconsin state&#13;
railroad commissioner shows that&#13;
nearly 25,000 men are employed on&#13;
railroads in the state.&#13;
A steamer between American and&#13;
Turkish ports and an agricultural exposition&#13;
and warehouse for American&#13;
goods at Constantinople are about to&#13;
be established.&#13;
The Scotch Miners' federation has&#13;
given notice to the Coal Masters' association&#13;
for an advance on Feb. 1 of 9d&#13;
per day, which would raise their wages&#13;
to the maximum.&#13;
Profits from cotton mills at Oldham,&#13;
Rochdale and Ashton, England, for&#13;
1S99 amounted to $1,050,000. The&#13;
spindles represented were 6,000,000,&#13;
and the capital employed 23,750,000.&#13;
American bottles are preferred to all&#13;
others for the export trade, especially&#13;
in warm climates where American and&#13;
English goods' come into competition.&#13;
The American glass is said t o be better-&#13;
annealed.&#13;
The state labor bureau of Minnesota&#13;
has completed its inspection of the&#13;
second inspection district, which covets&#13;
twenty-one towns in fourteen connties.&#13;
The returns deal with 1,652&#13;
workers in 242 shops, of which 1,530&#13;
were men, 114 women, 8 boys and no&#13;
girte. A rough average shows that the&#13;
hulk of these employes receive *L50&#13;
per day, while the general average for&#13;
.Minneapolis Is $&amp;&#13;
P R O G R E S S A N D REFORM.&#13;
The new plant of the Union Settlement,&#13;
for philanthropic • work, which&#13;
has just been opened fn Harlem, is* one&#13;
of the finest in New York, and cost&#13;
over $40,000.&#13;
The Sunday School association h a t&#13;
now seven different .meetings every&#13;
week in New York City for tcathera.&#13;
at which the lesson for the ensuing&#13;
Sunday Is tattght T&#13;
*&#13;
Save Your Hair with&#13;
Shampoos of&#13;
And light dressings of CUTICURA, purest of&#13;
emollient skin cures. This treatment at onoe&#13;
stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales* and^&#13;
dandruff, soothes irritated, itching surfaces, f&#13;
stimulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots f with energy and nourishment, and makes the •&#13;
hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy&#13;
scalp when all else fails.&#13;
Millions of Women&#13;
Use CTJTICTJRA S O A P exclusively for preserving, purifying, and beautifying&#13;
the akin, for cleansingthe scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping&#13;
of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and healing, red, rough, and&#13;
sore ha/ids, in the form of baths fpr annoying irritations and chafings, or ,&#13;
too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weak* £.&#13;
nesses, and for many antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves] v&#13;
t o women, and especially mothers, and for all the purposes of "the toilet, •&#13;
bath, and nursery. No amount of persuasion can induce those who have onoe)&#13;
used it to use any other, especially for preserving and purifying the skill,&#13;
scalp, and hair of Infants and children. CUTICUBA S O A P combines delicate&#13;
emollient properties derived from CUTICUBA, the great skin cure, with t h e&#13;
purest of cleansing Ingredients, and the most refreshing of flower odors. N o&#13;
other medicated soap ever compounded is to be compared with it for preserving,&#13;
purifying, and beautifying the akin, scalp, hair, and hands. No&gt;&#13;
other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, Is to be compared&#13;
with tffor all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines,&#13;
in O N E S O A P at O N * P R I C E , viz., T W E N T T - F I V E C E N T S , the BEST.&#13;
skin and complexion soap, the BEST toilet and BEST baby soap in the world.&#13;
All that has been said of ConcuaA SOA* may be said with even greater emphasis&#13;
of CtrricoBA. Ointment, the most delicate, and yet most effective of emollients, and&#13;
neatest of skin cures. Its use in connection withCuricuaA 8OAJ&gt; (as per diiectieas&#13;
Sound each package), in the "Owa NIOHT Cuaa roa Sosa HAWD*," In t t e&#13;
"IHSTAHT KaLiiyTsaATiimjrr »oa DisnauniKQ IxcHntos A X » ISJUTATIOIIS/*&#13;
and in many uses too nuteerous to mention, is sufficient to prove it* superiority&#13;
over all othvr preparations for the skin.&#13;
*«U.M w«ewi CoMtett Eitsm) aie lateral! Trwtutt tor i m Hwrf&#13;
m i a » H V H l M mm - , - 1 - . ^ .often tb* thieksosd enttck, CtrrtouaA Onmunrr (set.). -&#13;
^ • * - f c _ to tasssatly alUy itebtng, laftsmsasUoa, and irrtuttos* sad tooths sad&#13;
,•*!&gt;&#13;
T h # S e t , S I . 8 6 S a T M d C i m c u i u I U U O L T W T ( M e . ;&#13;
AstaMUSSVtooftstt soBetonttoears the nwf* ^ « " 1 » * « _&#13;
£ 2 ^ &lt; 5 U M ! tounors. with loss of hair, wfcso sA • * • Mis. Pwl-im&#13;
s ^ . S ^ P r S J ^ B ^ o n T " A » abort uJiW^flssJAaad Hair-IM*.&#13;
ItM,*poci»Ute»acctssftmy. Wec&amp;asMS»yout»ons»amo ataBM&gt;rsl&amp;t«r««t&#13;
oo jrvar moos? UMM say bank will pay 70« la a yosr. Stt wfU bay t jOsS&#13;
••s^sof wlMatorcoraastf ssarstatMsatMSeaai*. Ssad tor oar boost ; on •oMoiaUoo. IT i s PKKS. All «to«is psyohH on asmaad. J- *• coJS«8«L*. S8.7 Chioacov&#13;
DO YOU&#13;
SPECULATE?&#13;
BBBBMjMW FABMS&#13;
p i D A I YCIC LL°occoom,aoottoorr AAtt*axxiua *eo*n•*' ™ * " W M T k HOME 1&#13;
ojasrsd at last.' Doctors I f t A A s l f t s \ M s ? f t Improred **d aatapreved&#13;
p« a s l e d» Specialists IWWjWWW A w f C w ttming taads to bo drrfdod&#13;
asnsssd at raopysry of pat»«sJsUx^|biteottTabjo,^r: sad soldoaloatlTms sod — a y pavys—nsa. a Tito*&#13;
Wrtasmo about yoar ease. Adrleaaad&#13;
taasT aa.csAsa.as4 n,ietit r- —&#13;
irab)o, by :&#13;
WOOD.&#13;
©t&lt;&#13;
IA&#13;
us or wrtM. THITBUMAX&#13;
M O e / W A T K ' B ASrX**B*all«o Centsr. slfcb., sr&#13;
' ; ? • ' - %*:*&#13;
*'*-. •i'OA&#13;
^?Bm}% * * •&#13;
;v^f'«i:&#13;
^ g s ^ ^ l T s f l M j I t t ^ t l t l i i t f i w . N . U . - D E T R O i T - . N 0 . 7 - l » O a&#13;
&lt;J&#13;
/&#13;
mmmm m&#13;
• * •&gt;&#13;
i)&#13;
cfc:&#13;
t&#13;
•m^mi^iiigmk&#13;
ft*"&#13;
Vtt&#13;
.,^.^,-^.-., • vy.»&#13;
.Kv^i :^-:^- ^ &amp;;;'(;''* v&amp;&#13;
,&lt;! V iv s;&#13;
• &lt;&#13;
V.Vi&#13;
,V"fii $ ? * ^ !&#13;
r _ T&#13;
1^1^¾¾¾&#13;
:m «iV»&#13;
.'" 'jLjfrl' :^ '#." **»&gt;: .-1-4&#13;
:P.&#13;
^;i .V ••'•.'*'.&#13;
hi'."., ' • • • ' . . ' •&#13;
, *?; • . : ? ; . '•&#13;
^ ' ' • . ' ^ . • • • '&#13;
e l&#13;
*9&#13;
f'ty^'v,&#13;
1¾&#13;
»•*?.•'&#13;
' * :&#13;
"w'r&#13;
- &amp; • • •&#13;
m&#13;
»"*. •&#13;
We will continue to make our&#13;
Best, $3.00 Photos For $2.00 ~'«--&#13;
x • , . . .. -* One week longer, or Until February 2Z&gt;&#13;
Look at our samples of Pinckney people and see if you can duplicate the work any where for the price.&#13;
Open every day excepting Sunday. v«ry Reapectf uiiy, p ; • • 1 U I V X^ ftQW&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
Mrs. Win. Featherly wasin Howell&#13;
on Monday.&#13;
Singing school will be on Thursday&#13;
night this week.&#13;
Mrs, Cluey Day of Brighton is visit&#13;
ing with her daughter Mr*. A. Hutchison.&#13;
Mrs. Kate Hntchison visited relatives&#13;
in Brighton on Monday of this&#13;
week.&#13;
Mr. Floyd Oliver of Ann Arbor&#13;
spent the past week at the home of&#13;
.las. Eliott.&#13;
Mrs. W. G. Cook of Brighton was&#13;
balled here last week by the illness ot&#13;
her cousin.&#13;
Martin Sogers has the charge of&#13;
shipping the milk to Howell for the&#13;
* next four weeks.&#13;
The Ladies Aid held a special meeting&#13;
at the home of Mrs. Pottertgn on&#13;
Tuesday afternoon this week.&#13;
Mr. A. B. Green went to Lansing&#13;
Monday to attend the fonr Weeks&#13;
special course in cheese making, begin?&#13;
ng Tuesday at the M. A. C.&#13;
The house, on Martin Rogers farm&#13;
caught fire one evening last week&#13;
while the occupants were away but&#13;
their'timely return prevented any&#13;
serious damage.&#13;
While felling trees on Wednesday&#13;
afternoon of last week Roy Cross man&#13;
was struck by a flying limb. For_atime&#13;
his life was dispaired of, but he&#13;
is now slowly improving.&#13;
T O C U R E A COLD IN O N E D A Y&#13;
TAKE LAXATIV* BKOMO QUIXOTE TABLKT*. All&#13;
draggiets refund the money if it falla to care.&#13;
E. W. GROVE'S signature Is on each box. 86c&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
Tbos. Stackable visited friends here&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
• B. Mann of North Lake is working&#13;
Hbr-aV. VanWinkle. ——J&#13;
Mr. Foster Chapman of Gillroan 111.&#13;
is visiting at S. E. Bartons.&#13;
Master Luke Doyle, son of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. James Doyle, is critically ill.&#13;
E. VanWinKleis somewhat under&#13;
the weather owing to an attack of the&#13;
grip.&#13;
Jacob Mask who formerly worked&#13;
for C. V. Van Winkle is working tor&#13;
F. Reason.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Kennedy and son Emmet&#13;
of Stock bridge visited friends here&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Llewellyn Chalker of&#13;
Fowlerville, visited at James Doyle's&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Several from here attended the&#13;
meeting of the Anderson farmers' dak -&#13;
at A. G. Wilson's Saturday.&#13;
James Spears and daughter Anna,&#13;
of North Putnam, visited at James&#13;
Doyle's the first of the week.&#13;
Miss Jennie Abbot of Argentine is&#13;
visiting at Mrsf Lottie fietcheler's.&#13;
Mr. Wimbles has sold his farm just&#13;
west of here to parties from Con way.&#13;
Perrie Towle has taken a farm near&#13;
Davisburg^nd will move there in the&#13;
spring.&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Miss Gertrude Webb visited friends&#13;
in Dexter over Sunday.&#13;
Ghas. Hartsuffand wife visited his&#13;
brother in Lyndon last Friday.&#13;
Tbos. Budd and wife of Stock bridge&#13;
visited her parents here over Sunday.&#13;
Volney Chapman from near Chicago&#13;
is visiting friends and relatives near&#13;
here.&#13;
The next meeting of the Ollopodrida&#13;
club will be held at A. C. Watson's&#13;
Saturday evening.&#13;
The ladies'aid of the M. £. church&#13;
gave a social at the residence of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Allie Holmes, Wednesday&#13;
evening, Feb. 14.&#13;
A telegram was received Sunday&#13;
from Fittsford Mich., stating that the&#13;
mother of Rev. Palmer was dead. She&#13;
was injoredrabout two weeks ago by a&#13;
fall. Mr. Palnj'.r. wife and son Archie,&#13;
attended the funeral:&#13;
Miss Anna Mae Di hi will give a&#13;
recital at the M. E. church of this&#13;
place, Tuesday evening, Ma^ 20, under&#13;
the auspices of the C. E. society.&#13;
Program will consist of comic, pathetic&#13;
and dramatic recitations, monologues&#13;
and Grecian posings in costume&#13;
representing the world's famous statuary&#13;
and paintings. Admission, 10 and&#13;
15 cents.&#13;
Agents on salary of $15.00 per week and&#13;
expenses; the greatest agent seller ever&#13;
produced; every stock and poultry raiser&#13;
buys it on sight. Hustlers wanted. Reference.&#13;
Address, with stamp, American&#13;
Mfg. Co., Terre Haute, Ind.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLEJoseph&#13;
Dexter is improving in&#13;
health.&#13;
Philip Dormire is some better at&#13;
this writing.&#13;
The ladies' aid met in the basement&#13;
of the church Wednesday.'&#13;
Miss Edith White returned to HoweHon&#13;
Snnday last, to work.&#13;
Several from here attended the funeral&#13;
of D. MeCarty, at Fenton Mon-&#13;
L. M. Harris was in Ljealie on business&#13;
last week.&#13;
L. B. Boepcke was in Chelsea on *&#13;
business Monday.&#13;
Hubert Lane visited friends near&#13;
Howell last week. &lt;&#13;
J. P. Couiion of Jackson, was in&#13;
town o w Snnday. &lt;-••* * - '&#13;
Mrs.Secor of Defroifift visiting her&#13;
son Will at tbts plajB. p:&#13;
A. C. Watson made a business trip&#13;
to Jackson last Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs. Edd. Joslyn of near Howell,&#13;
visited her father-in-law D. M. over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Melvjn Hartsuff and family of Waterloo,&#13;
visited his father here one day&#13;
last waek.&#13;
Chas Wood worth and wife of Gregory,&#13;
visited at H. Barnum's last week&#13;
W ed oesd ay.&#13;
John Dunning, L. B. Roepcke and&#13;
Wm. Pyper have had phones put into&#13;
&gt;m* ••H I t H « P — | H H l M K H | »&#13;
I Thai Cough&#13;
Hangs on&#13;
You have used all&#13;
sorts of cough remedies&#13;
but it does not&#13;
yield; it is too de;ep&#13;
seated. It may wear&#13;
itself out in time, but&#13;
it is more liable to&#13;
produce la grippe,&#13;
pneumonia or a serious&#13;
throat affection.&#13;
You need something&#13;
that will give you&#13;
strength and build&#13;
up the body.&#13;
SCOTIA&#13;
EMULSION&#13;
will do thhr when everything&#13;
else fails. There is no doubt&#13;
about it It nourishes, I&#13;
: strengthens, builds up and 1&#13;
makes the body strong and&#13;
healthy, not only to throw i&#13;
off this hard cough, but to&#13;
fortify the system against&#13;
further attacks. If you are&#13;
run down or emaciated you&#13;
should certainly take this&#13;
nourishing fooef medicine.&#13;
50c and Ss.ee, all drugfiata.&#13;
SCOTT*0OWN8, Owmteu, Ntw Yoriu&#13;
*m&lt; m* III 11 Mil&#13;
their residences. .&#13;
Miss Bernice Allyn of North Lake,&#13;
has been sewing for Mrs. A. C. Watson&#13;
the past week.&#13;
The young people of this vicinity&#13;
gave an enjoyable surprise to Don Mc&#13;
Call last Friday night.&#13;
The Hon. Wm. Ball of Hamburg,&#13;
will address the Unadilla farmers'&#13;
club on Saturday, Feb. 17, health permitting.&#13;
In this case most of the program&#13;
as printed will be left out.&#13;
The following is the program for&#13;
the Unadilla farmers1 club to be held&#13;
in the Presbyterian ball, Saturday,&#13;
Feb. 17, commencing at,l p. m.&#13;
Song. .•.TTTTTTVTT-.* .... .by the Club&#13;
Paper Mrs, ^haw. Wn^ffwth -&#13;
a Thft Woman nf the Nineteenth Century."&#13;
Discussion, Mesdames Harris, Howlett&#13;
and Marshall&#13;
Solo. ..Mrs. Lottie Farrel&#13;
Recitation Mabel Hartsuff&#13;
" I . . . . R u t h Pyper&#13;
Short Hnrpw on the Farm, Otto Arnold&#13;
Discussion led by S. Barton&#13;
Music •&#13;
Since&#13;
GREGORY.&#13;
Monday a, m. Mm McClear&#13;
widow of Torence McClear Sr. has&#13;
been quite sick.&#13;
Rev. Monk, formerly of this place,&#13;
has accepted a, call to the Baptist&#13;
church, at Lake Genoa Wis.&#13;
Dr. W. J, Wright is very sick with&#13;
pneumonia at this writing. His&#13;
mother and sister of Stockbridge are&#13;
with him.&#13;
All fonr of the sick at. Fred Whitehead's&#13;
are gaining. The pneumonia&#13;
cases of Mr. W. Mrs.' W. and Mrs.&#13;
Barrett gaining more slowly than the&#13;
others.&#13;
ANDER80N.&#13;
Mrs. John Biraie ja-on the sick list.&#13;
Chas. Hon* Jr. spent the first of the&#13;
week with relatives in Hand v.&#13;
N. D. Wilson spent Sunday with&#13;
relatives at Chubb's Corners.&#13;
Miss Josie May spent the first of the&#13;
week with her cousin, Nora Durkee.&#13;
Harry Singleton and wife of Gregory,&#13;
spent Wednesday of last week&#13;
with C. A. Frost. t .&#13;
The pupils of the Anderson school&#13;
are preparing for an exibition the&#13;
last day of school.&#13;
Frank Chapman of Fowlerville, was&#13;
in Anderson Monday looking after the&#13;
interests of bis farm.&#13;
Miss Mary Kane of near Parker's&#13;
Corners, spans Sunday at the home of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Merrill.&#13;
The many friends of Lneim WUtenwill&#13;
be sorry to hear that he is suffering&#13;
from hemmorage of the lungi m&#13;
Oklahoma.&#13;
The ladies' aid met at L. Boy's on&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
C. D. Bennettand wife of Howell,&#13;
visited at J as. Marble's Sunday.&#13;
Frank Burden of Marion, called on&#13;
friends in this place one day last week.&#13;
The Misses Mabel and Ethel Montague&#13;
of Chubh's Corners, spent Saturday&#13;
and Sunday with their grandparents,&#13;
C. E. Bullis and wife.&#13;
NORTH HAMBURGThe&#13;
Van Fleet family spent Wednesday&#13;
with I. W. Hart, in Marion. /&#13;
W. fl. Place way and family spent&#13;
Sunday at the home of J. D. VanFleet.&#13;
H. F. Kice, wife and daughter Florence,&#13;
8pent Tuesday with James Van&#13;
Horn, —&#13;
Miss Maude and Lillian Swarthout&#13;
have returned to their home in Williamston.&#13;
&lt;jtecr. L. HTXH is- spending a tew&#13;
months with bis son, Prof. L^C. Hull,&#13;
in Brooklyn, N. Y. ^_&#13;
M. T. Kelley has organized a rugby&#13;
team in North Hamburg school dis.&#13;
trict No. 7. We expect they will challenge&#13;
the U. of M. in the near future.&#13;
The North Hamburg and East Putnam&#13;
C. E societies have been invited&#13;
to hold a union meeting with'Chuck's&#13;
Corners society next Sunday evening.&#13;
Jopic: J'The sin of liquor selling; how&#13;
end.it." Jtev. N.'.W. Pierce leader.&#13;
Supscribe for the DISPATCH—three&#13;
months for 15c, until Maroh 1.&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
Miss G. L. Martin is visiting her&#13;
sister in Grand Rapids.&#13;
L. C. Goodrich of Ann Arbor, was&#13;
the guest of his mother here, the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
We added thirteen new names to&#13;
our list the past week without any soliciting.&#13;
A good many are sending&#13;
the paper to friends as a weekly letter&#13;
trom home. From now until Marok&#13;
1, we will accept 15c for a 3 months&#13;
trial.&#13;
Prof. Smith, of the Agricultural&#13;
college, has iust completed the program&#13;
for the fifth annual round-up&#13;
farmers' institute, which will be held&#13;
in Ann Arbor Feb. 27 28 and March&#13;
1-2. The array of prominent speakers,&#13;
the subjects to be discussed and&#13;
the prospects for a large attendance,&#13;
owing to- the half-fare rate granted by&#13;
all railroads of the state, give promise&#13;
of making this the best institute ever&#13;
held in the state.&#13;
The play of "Uncle Josh" is one of&#13;
the brightest, most lovable and laughable&#13;
comedies ever written, in three&#13;
acts it depicts the adventures of unsophisticated,&#13;
big-hearted "Joshua&#13;
Whitcomb"in Boston and his quiet&#13;
New England home. Almost every&#13;
sentence contains a hearty laugh, and&#13;
the others are full of pathos—a happy&#13;
mingling of laughter and tears. At&#13;
the Pinckney opera house, Monday&#13;
evening, Feb. 19. y —&#13;
Htve^&#13;
The New Spring Goods are&#13;
Daily Arriving.&#13;
The New Dress Goods are ijo.&#13;
New Wash Goods, such as Ginghams* Dimities,&#13;
Madras Cloths and Percales, are&#13;
already opened.&#13;
New Embroideries. Insertions* Edges and&#13;
All-Overs in great variety are now on&#13;
sale.&#13;
New Carpets, more attractive than in any&#13;
former years, are worthy of particular&#13;
attention.&#13;
We are laying our plans to make this year&#13;
1900 the largest business year we have&#13;
ever known.&#13;
The more goods we can sell you the cheaper&#13;
we can sell them. Dosn't that look&#13;
reasonable?&#13;
TLie&#13;
Tours respectfully,&#13;
EL F I E LD,&#13;
Jftoksoa, Miofc,&#13;
/&#13;
'•*-,V;^:&#13;
I&#13;
4&#13;
M&#13;
I&#13;
\&#13;
-1&#13;
!&#13;
lib ^j^Stiilmim r' i mulm • iirifrftiniff in</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Note</name>
          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36687">
              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6446">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch February 15, 1900</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6447">
                <text>February 15, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6448">
                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6449">
                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6450">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6451">
                <text>1900-02-15</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6452">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="15">
        <name>newspaper</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="16">
        <name>pinckney dispatch</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="932" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="860">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/3804c6ba44d5586406423e9e55701bc3.pdf</src>
        <authentication>250b9d9c62d77d67018bfbda47e578ea</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="9">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1621">
                  <text>Newspaper</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1630">
                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="57">
          <name>Hidden Search Text</name>
          <description>Enter Search Text that is always hidden except to edit.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32199">
              <text>VOL. xvin. PINOKNEY, LIVINOSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, FEB. 98,.1900. No. 8.&#13;
- *&#13;
The--&#13;
Surprise&#13;
Store,&#13;
BARGAINS,&#13;
We give you big value for your money&#13;
Children's bdkfs&#13;
Box moaraing pins&#13;
Paper pine&#13;
8:g661 Writing pens&#13;
Thimbles&#13;
Pair good shoe laces&#13;
Tablets, (70 pages) 1&#13;
Oard Patent books and eyes&#13;
Dozen best safety pins&#13;
Spool machine thread&#13;
25 Gold eye needles&#13;
Spool darning cotton&#13;
Shelf papers per bunch 2&#13;
Tboth brush&#13;
Ourling iron&#13;
Box assorted hair pins&#13;
Pair wool arm bands&#13;
Bottle ?ood ink&#13;
25 gnod Envfllnpfla 3&#13;
F*p«)r best pins&#13;
Yard Brush edge binding&#13;
Petroleum jelly&#13;
No. 2 lamp chimney&#13;
Iiory soap per bar&#13;
Spool crochet, cotton 4&#13;
Spool Giant thread&#13;
Set dress stays&#13;
Pair dress shields&#13;
Boys' Jack knife&#13;
Leather washers&#13;
Enameled pint cap&#13;
Box dominoes&#13;
Curry comb&#13;
Cattle cards&#13;
No. 1 lamp burner&#13;
Lantern globe&#13;
Bottle amonia&#13;
Mouth oraan&#13;
Small frying pan&#13;
5&#13;
E. A. Bowman has consented to let&#13;
Bert Well man issue premium tickets&#13;
with trade, these tickets have won a&#13;
good deal of trade for the store at&#13;
Howell, the tickets will be redeemed&#13;
at either store.&#13;
Our two stores enable us&#13;
to give you the greatest value&#13;
for your money—why pay&#13;
more.&#13;
Come and get our prices,&#13;
then&#13;
MATCH US IF YOU CAN.&#13;
Yours for trade,&#13;
E;rA.T3^WMAN, Prop.&#13;
Bowman'Block, Pincknej.&#13;
BERT WELLAVAN&#13;
Manager of Pinckney Store.&#13;
Howell Store, next to P. 0 .&#13;
• &amp;&#13;
/&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
Feb. 22 1900.&#13;
Washington Birthday.&#13;
Fine weather the past week.&#13;
Lent begins nest ' W ednesday.&#13;
Mrs. F. H. Smith is visiting in Lansing.&#13;
S. T. Grimes of Howell was home&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
No school today— Washington's&#13;
Birthday.&#13;
K. H. Crane, who has been quite&#13;
sick is much better.&#13;
This office has been busy the past&#13;
week getting out school cards.&#13;
Carl Sykes started Monday for&#13;
West Branch to do a job of plumbing.&#13;
F. H. Nix &amp; Son the photographers&#13;
wish to call special attention to their&#13;
adv. this week.&#13;
Mrs. F. L. Andrews is spending a&#13;
couple of weeks with relatives in Flint&#13;
and Millington.&#13;
Washtenaw county poli tit ions are&#13;
talking of a farmers ticket for the&#13;
next county election.&#13;
Miss Grace Lake spent the past&#13;
week with her sister, Mrs. Herbert&#13;
Schoenhals, of Genoa.&#13;
Mrs. F. A. Sigler has been under&#13;
the doctor's care the past week, but is&#13;
better at this writing.&#13;
Do not fail to read onr 'Business&#13;
Pointers" each week—you may find&#13;
just what you want there.&#13;
S, G. Topping and wife, of Plainfield&#13;
were guests of H. D. Grieve and&#13;
family the first, of the week.&#13;
The new paymaster of the Loyal&#13;
Guards, Guy L. Teeple, made out-his&#13;
first report Monday without there&#13;
being a suspension.&#13;
Several Masons went over to Chelsea&#13;
Tuesday evening to assist in making&#13;
Rev. C. S. Jones a full-fledged&#13;
Mason. They report an excellent&#13;
time.&#13;
The members of the Loyal Guards&#13;
who were present at their meeting&#13;
last week enjoyed a basket of popcorn&#13;
balls sent in by Mrs. F. L. Andrews.&#13;
Cards were issued from this office the&#13;
past week for a masquerade ball to be&#13;
given by the Batchelors' club at the&#13;
Tuomey House on Friday Evening&#13;
of this week.&#13;
Owing to un-for seen difficulties the&#13;
Anderson farmer's club will not hold&#13;
their next meeting—at E. J. Briggs'&#13;
bat at the home of V. G. Dinkle. Let&#13;
everyone bear the change in mind.&#13;
The class of 1901 organized one day&#13;
last week with officers as follows:&#13;
President, Will Dunbar; Vice Pres.,&#13;
Chas. Poole; Secretary and Treasurer,&#13;
Miss Maude Richmond. The class at&#13;
present has only four members—two&#13;
girls and two boys.&#13;
We often wonder how it was&#13;
that our- grandparents, knowing nothing&#13;
of microbes, bacoilli, germs sernm&#13;
and modern sanitation and hygiene,&#13;
managed to eat three square meals a&#13;
day, raise a brood of a dozen children&#13;
and live to be four score.&#13;
A man's home paper is worth more&#13;
to him than any other because it&#13;
gives him more facts and local news,&#13;
besides working for tke best interests&#13;
of the home community. When you&#13;
subscribe for your borne paper and&#13;
pay for it, you increase the'editor's&#13;
ability to work for the development of&#13;
your own community.&#13;
The opera house was well filled&#13;
Monday evening to listen to "Uncle&#13;
Josh" picture play, and after two&#13;
hours of continued entertainment all&#13;
went hojje well pleased. Many who&#13;
have ?een "Unoie Josh" played in the&#13;
larger theaters pronounced this better.&#13;
The illustrated aonfi* werfe something&#13;
new for most of the people here and&#13;
were highly appreciate-! at was Mitts&#13;
Be«ie Dainty DeLong in "Serpentina^'&#13;
Anyone who missed «eeing the enier- A-' —•—•»% n x % treat, /&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Grieve visited I&#13;
in Plaind«j t Sunday.&#13;
Mesdamea Geo. and *loyd Reason&#13;
visited in Detroit this week.&#13;
Airs. Daley of Irsco is the guest of&#13;
her sister Mrs. A. J. Wilhelm.&#13;
Messrs Brown and Lieth of Howell,&#13;
spent Sunday with friends here.&#13;
Miss Emma Reason is in Detroit&#13;
visiting her brother and sister.&#13;
Chas. O'Connor, of Howell, called&#13;
upon bis daughters here Sunday.&#13;
Miss Bernice Mclntyre visited in&#13;
Hamburg the latter part of last week.&#13;
John Rolison of Hamburg was the&#13;
guest of the Swarthouts here Wednesday.&#13;
C. M. Wood was in Detroit the first&#13;
of the week attending the Republican&#13;
club bantfuet.&#13;
t j&#13;
Part of the school held appropriate&#13;
Washington's Birthday exercises Wednesday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Amos Winager and wife visited&#13;
their daughter, Mrs. Geo. Green at&#13;
this place the past week.&#13;
The firm of Reason &amp; Shehan have&#13;
disolved partnership, George Reason&#13;
Jr., buying out Mr. Shehan.&#13;
E. W. Bush of Grand Rapids' was&#13;
buried on Tuesday of this week. Mr.&#13;
Bush was a contractor and was well&#13;
known here.&#13;
The situation in Africa has changed&#13;
during the past week, the British&#13;
gaining ground and the Boers being&#13;
obliged to retreat.&#13;
Over 40 bids were received by the&#13;
Supts. of the poor farm for the management&#13;
ot the farm, jit will not be&#13;
awarded until aboutJtfarch 1.&#13;
St. Mary's society are arranging to&#13;
give a minstrel show at the opera&#13;
house in this plaqe, on Friday evening&#13;
March 16. We can promise our readers&#13;
a fine treat as this society never&#13;
does things by halves.&#13;
There will be a countv Teachers'&#13;
Association held at the central school&#13;
building, Howell, on Saturday, Feb.&#13;
24, commencing at 10:30. A good&#13;
program is arranged and every teacher&#13;
in the county is urged to attend.&#13;
•&#13;
I&#13;
Bo not let those&#13;
Ma$»fttes So to&#13;
waste.&#13;
Get 'era bound'af the Dispatch Bfndepy. •&#13;
Good Work.&#13;
Reasonable Rates. / Pinckney. •&#13;
• y y&#13;
Dissolution Of Partnership.&#13;
Notice is hereby giyen&#13;
Hardware firm, heretofore&#13;
that the&#13;
v&#13;
existing:&#13;
under the firm name of Reason &amp; Shehan,&#13;
is this day disolved, the business&#13;
to be continued by George Reason, Jr.&#13;
All accounts in favor of or against&#13;
said firm to be settled with George&#13;
Reason, Jr.&#13;
Dated, Feb. 21,1900.&#13;
RsisoK &amp; SHEHAN.&#13;
AUCTIONS.&#13;
Having decided to quit farming&#13;
John Kelly will sell bis personal property&#13;
at auction, on the farm occupied&#13;
by him 4 miles southwest of Pinckney&#13;
on Tuesday, March 6. Sale begins at&#13;
10, a. m. Lunch at noon.&#13;
Bills were printed at {his office this&#13;
week announcing an anction sale of&#13;
personal property belonging to L. M.&#13;
Teeple. The sale'will be held on bis&#13;
father's farm 3 miles east of this village&#13;
on Friday, March 2, at 1' o'clock&#13;
sharp.&#13;
» ^ i&#13;
Hamburg and Putnam Farmer's Club.&#13;
The next meeting of the abo?e&#13;
club will be held at the home of Peter&#13;
Conjway on Saturday of this week.&#13;
The following is the program:—&#13;
s at it.&#13;
A* What?&#13;
Selling Goods of course.&#13;
While the noliday trade is always a harvest for some&#13;
—and we get our share—our trade-always remains good*&#13;
the year around. The reason is that we sell the_l_best staple&#13;
goods for the least money. People today are not looking&#13;
for CHEAP goods but GOOD goods cheap.&#13;
The following are some of our lines:&#13;
Drugs and Medicines.&#13;
A full and complete line.&#13;
School Supplies*&#13;
B o o k s , T a b l e t s , P e n c i l s P e n s ,&#13;
Ink a n d&#13;
E x a m i n a t i o n B l a n k s .&#13;
XLrockepy.&#13;
A full l i n e o f&#13;
Plain a n d F a n c y w a r e .&#13;
A f i n e l i n e o f L a m p s .&#13;
Fancy Articles •&#13;
C e l l u l o i d G o o d s , Hdkf., C u f f&#13;
and C o l l o r B o x s .&#13;
T h e y make fine birthday gifts.&#13;
Groceries.&#13;
W e c a r r y a l i n e&#13;
of t h e b e s t in t o w n .&#13;
P r i c e s a r e right.&#13;
Wall Paper.&#13;
O u r s a l e s t h e p a s t y e a r w e r e f a r a h e a d o f&#13;
o u r e x p e c t a t i o n s , and t h i s s e a s o n , w e w i l l b e&#13;
b e t t e r p r e p a r e d t h a n e v e r t o g i v e v a l u e s .&#13;
; ^&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
General Hardware,&#13;
*Have as complete an assortment of heavy and shelf hardware&#13;
as can be found in the county, and 1900 finds us&#13;
more thorqughly equipped than evar before.&#13;
Singing&#13;
Inst* music&#13;
Recitation&#13;
Paper *»&#13;
Dntt H v&#13;
Beading&#13;
Song . :.*&#13;
Recitation&#13;
Song ,&#13;
Ifemer&#13;
Song '• J&#13;
Question t* be&#13;
by All&#13;
Grace Lake&#13;
Florence Kice&#13;
Ed. McClnakey&#13;
Ida Vanfleet, Adda Kice&#13;
Florence Lake&#13;
Grace Utah&#13;
v^JI re, Francis&#13;
I f Albert Mills&#13;
fio/d fcmndal&#13;
r* •;•;' - IdaYinfleet&#13;
:' •; Fk&gt;;&#13;
Builders Hardware a Specialty.&#13;
Doors and Common Sash always in stock.&#13;
Complete line of Buggies, Wagons and&#13;
Kice&#13;
*M*&#13;
^ Heating Stoves, 3f&#13;
&gt; V \ *&#13;
Ranges,&#13;
and Coal,&#13;
Woed&#13;
w,&#13;
•i&#13;
a&#13;
Ml&#13;
'vh&#13;
!H&#13;
-— i&#13;
i]&#13;
•VJ&#13;
*•';• :&gt;£*!&#13;
' . ; / ; ' : • . ; , ' • • • , ^ . - • • • . • / ; • ' " ; - ' t : : • . • • : - l ' " . V ; ; • v • - * . - . . ;• : . • • • • , • • • , , . • - . ' - • • • • v. . . - . V . . •-. \ • ; - . •• - . . - . - / • • ; • • • . . . • * - . • . . - , • . , ,&#13;
^ *P&#13;
^&#13;
4!&#13;
&gt;•• .'i'-&#13;
, ' - J : •••' •&#13;
-*- EVExNTS OF THE WEEK&#13;
i &gt; • • &gt; , • •&#13;
&amp; • * &gt; • • '&#13;
f.V. •&#13;
l - K -&#13;
P&#13;
/&#13;
IN OUR GREAT STATE RELATED&#13;
IN A BRIEF FORM.&#13;
T.&#13;
JDutglariTwere Foiled bjr • Burglar AUrm&#13;
at &amp;oath, Boekfeood j»nd Quae Got »&#13;
J Pallet Woaad serf, WM Captured —&#13;
Another efttag OaeaecoMfal at Delmjr.&#13;
Factor/ Bailee** op the laereaie.&#13;
. Labor Commissioner Cox has issued&#13;
advance sheets of his-annual factory&#13;
inspection report which give in a concise&#13;
form the results of the inspection&#13;
during1 the year. The total number of&#13;
factories inspected was 4,739 and the&#13;
number found running on the date of&#13;
tye inspection was 4,438, the number&#13;
idle being 301. . The employes canvassed&#13;
had worked on an average 10.4&#13;
hours per day and had been employed&#13;
On an average 10¾ months during the&#13;
year. If the factories had been running&#13;
at full capacity 1SS,330 workmen&#13;
would havo been employed, which&#13;
•vypuld be an average of 40 for each factory.&#13;
At the time of inspection there&#13;
were employed 131,332 males and 23,-&#13;
2¾ females, a total of 154,5:13 employes.&#13;
Of this number 4,014 were between the&#13;
ages of 14 and 16 years. Under the&#13;
law no child under* 14 years of age is&#13;
permitted to work in a factory and this&#13;
t provision is said to be rigidly enforced.&#13;
The pay rolls of the factories canvassed&#13;
aggregated §213,904 per day, an average&#13;
of $1.39 for each employe. The&#13;
averages vary iri"the different inspection&#13;
districts and are highest in the&#13;
northern part of the state. Nearly 75&#13;
per cent of the factories report increased&#13;
business averaging about 18&#13;
per cent over that of 1898, and 545 factories&#13;
report ah increased investment&#13;
of capital amounting to $6,531,884, or&#13;
an average of nearly $12,000 to each&#13;
factory. There were also 201 .new establishments&#13;
reported with an investment&#13;
of nearly $5,000,000. Accidents&#13;
were reported in 153 factories aggregating&#13;
1^9 persons ^killed or injured.&#13;
Of this number nine accidents resulted&#13;
from steam boiler explosions.&#13;
Burglar Shot at South Rock wood.&#13;
Shortly before 1 o'clock on the morning&#13;
of the 15th burglars were detected&#13;
at work in John Strong's store at South&#13;
Rock wood. Mr, Strong-has his house&#13;
and store connected by a burglar&#13;
alarm, and it worked to perfection on&#13;
this occasion. At the first souud of&#13;
the alarm Mr. Strong hustled out of&#13;
bed, donned his clothes as hasjtily as&#13;
possible, and, summoning several&#13;
neighbors repaired to the ..tore. As&#13;
the party neared the store building its&#13;
members spread out so as to surround&#13;
it. Theft as a warning to the burglars&#13;
Mr, {Strong shouted "Come on boys,&#13;
w e have them in a trap." In an instant&#13;
there was a crash of breaking&#13;
glass, the burglars jumping through a&#13;
rear window in an effort to make their&#13;
escape. Fire was opened on the, fleeing&#13;
men, about 10 shots in all being&#13;
fired. One of the men sank to the&#13;
ground, but his partner escaped. The&#13;
wounded man gave his name as Jas.&#13;
Murphy, of Wyandotte. He made a&#13;
full confession and also gave up the&#13;
name of his accomplice. Murphy is&#13;
about 18 years old.&#13;
' Burglars Cnsoeeoesfal at pel ray.&#13;
Safe crackers who evidently knew&#13;
their business but lacked nerve made&#13;
an unsuccessful attempt to empty the&#13;
big; safe in the Delray Savings bank at&#13;
Beiray on the night cjf the 13th. The&#13;
burglars gained entrance through the&#13;
reaj door of the building, which is a&#13;
one, story brick, erected as a temporary&#13;
home for the bank. They evidentally&#13;
used dynamite as the force of the explosion&#13;
shattered the six-inch outside&#13;
door on the safe, while the burglarproof&#13;
steel doors were badly bent, but&#13;
not enough to loosen the lock bolts of&#13;
the big lock. Aside from the theft of&#13;
two fine revolvers and the damage to&#13;
the safe the bank lost nothing.&#13;
The January Death Rate.&#13;
! There were 2,636 deaths returned to&#13;
the department oflstate for the month&#13;
of January. Ttiis corresponds to a&#13;
death rate of 13.0. This is slightly&#13;
higher thaa the rate for the preceding^&#13;
monthyWhich was 13.3, but much lower&#13;
t h a n i h e rate for January, 1899, which&#13;
was 10.2. The death rate for Indiana&#13;
ior the month of January was 12.7. As&#13;
/ compared with the proceeding month&#13;
there is very little change in the mortality&#13;
from any cause of death reported,&#13;
except from pneumonia, cerebro spinal&#13;
meningitis and influenza, each of which&#13;
showed a considerable increase. On&#13;
the whole, the month was a very favorable&#13;
one.&#13;
To Buy Sugar Beeta ta Indiana.&#13;
' A syndicate of Michigan capitalists&#13;
has offered to purchase at $4 per ton&#13;
the. sugar beet product of 7,000 acres of&#13;
land in the Kankakee (Ind.) region.&#13;
This immense acreage was secured for&#13;
the building of a $500,000 plant, but&#13;
the promised capital for the construction&#13;
of the factory is not forthcoming.&#13;
It* is said that two Michigan sugar beet&#13;
industries are negotiating for the purchase&#13;
of the Indiana product. -&#13;
The school at Danaville has been&#13;
closed on account of diphtheria.&#13;
An organized &gt;. gqng o'f thieve* are&#13;
operating In the idcinlty o*f Willow.&#13;
- - - r-„ ^ - ^ K . , - , ,. - ~ — • '•• •*-"• i r. - • . . ( . - .&#13;
M1CHIJQAN N E W S ITEMS.&#13;
iCrystal is to have a bank in the hear&#13;
future.&#13;
Lausing is to have a new Catholic&#13;
church.&#13;
There are a number of cases plf scarlet&#13;
fever at PlainwelL&#13;
The attempt to form an ice combine&#13;
at Port Huron has failed.&#13;
There is a good opening for a temperance&#13;
hotel at Northville.&#13;
The Allegan county fair will be held&#13;
Oct. 2-5, inclusive, this year.&#13;
The local hatchery at Alpena has&#13;
received 1,000,060 lake trout eggs. '&#13;
Eighty-nine couples received divorces&#13;
during the last year in Jackson county.&#13;
A Bryan league with a membership&#13;
of 50 has been organized at Coldwater.&#13;
Riga will purchase voting machines&#13;
in time to use them at the spring election.&#13;
The state fish commission has planted&#13;
130,000 trout in streams around Plainwell.&#13;
The schools at Laingsburg are closed&#13;
on account of scarlet fever in the village.&#13;
Flint parties are considering the advisability&#13;
of starting a new bank at&#13;
Flushing.&#13;
Stall saloons in Detroit must g o x&#13;
Supt. Martin of the police force having&#13;
so ordered.&#13;
Free delivery of mail was inaugurated&#13;
at Monroe on the 15th, and Monroeites&#13;
are now happy.&#13;
Navigation is now open between St.&#13;
Ignace and Mackinac Island—the earliest&#13;
in many years.&#13;
Negotiations are now pending lookingv&#13;
toward the establishment of a&#13;
woolen mill at Owosso.&#13;
The roads in many localities in southern&#13;
Michigan are so bad these days as&#13;
to be almost impassable.&#13;
The village of Dayton was almost&#13;
entirely wiped*out b|y lire on the 16th.&#13;
The loss is about $15,000.&#13;
The Fowlervillc Agricultural society&#13;
have selected Oct. 2-5 as the datesfor&#13;
holding their annual fair.&#13;
Fire, smoke and water&#13;
general store at Whitehall&#13;
tent of $4,000 on the 12th.&#13;
Important Lincoln banquets were&#13;
held at Grand Rapids, Pbntiac, Jackson&#13;
and Kalamazoo on the 12th.&#13;
The old Macon telegraph line is a&#13;
\ h i n g of the past. Its poles will be&#13;
.utilized for telephone wires.&#13;
Fourteen thousand trout fry were recently&#13;
planted in Beaver and River&#13;
Road creeks in Lenawee county.&#13;
Niles residents are feeling much&#13;
elated to think that they are going to&#13;
have free mail delivery after July 1.&#13;
Oil and coal have been discovered&#13;
near Battle Creek, and a company will&#13;
be organized with a capital of $200,000.&#13;
The erection of a Masonic temple the&#13;
comming summer is being talked of by&#13;
the members of that order at Manistee.&#13;
A stock company is being organized&#13;
at Northville for the establishment of&#13;
a wood working factory in the village.&#13;
The 17th annual convention of the&#13;
Ingham County Sunday School association&#13;
will be held at Mason, Feb. 21-22.&#13;
The West Bay City Sugar Co. on the&#13;
15th paid more than $30,000 to farmers&#13;
who have furnish beets for the&#13;
According to a letter recently received&#13;
at Lansing, about one-third of&#13;
the men of the 30th regiment, com-4&#13;
manded by Col. Gardener, are ill.&#13;
The city of Lansing on the 12th sold&#13;
$30,000 of three and five-year paving&#13;
bonds, bearing^}/ per cent interest, at&#13;
a premium of $400 and accrued interest.&#13;
Calumet's new theater is about finished&#13;
and will be ready for the initial&#13;
performance on Mar. 10. It is said the&#13;
place will be a revelation to its patrons.&#13;
A reward of $1,000. &gt;has been offered&#13;
by the board of state auditors for the&#13;
apprehension of Gen. Will White, who&#13;
damaged a&#13;
to the ex-&#13;
The hens belonging to Ex-State Senator&#13;
E.-Er Bostwiebr, of Coldwater, ^produced&#13;
4,326 eggs in January, *or* wnicH&#13;
he received nearly $80.&#13;
Michigan agricultural college, according&#13;
to report of Secretary of Agriculture&#13;
Hitchcock, gets $25,000 this&#13;
year from the federal government as a&#13;
portion of the proceeds of f he sale of&#13;
public lands.&#13;
The board of state anftiior at its next&#13;
meeting will probably consider the advisability&#13;
of offering a substantial reward&#13;
for the apprehension of Gen. Will&#13;
Whitd. There is no incentive for anyone&#13;
to chase after him.&#13;
The promoters of the proposed Flint-&#13;
Fentoo electric road now-aay that they&#13;
will build it next summer. It is also&#13;
their intention to extend the line&#13;
through Holly, Davisburg, Clarkston&#13;
and Waterford to Pontiac.&#13;
Chicken thieves are getting in their&#13;
work in the vicinity of Oxford, a t d&#13;
poultry raisers—the legitimate kir d—&#13;
have to sit up nights to see that tl e r&#13;
biddies do not mysteriously disappear&#13;
during the wee sma' hours.&#13;
Some unknown men who want to&#13;
raise all the money they can while the&#13;
price of iron and steel remains high&#13;
are stealiug farm machines from farmers&#13;
around St. Louis, breaking t h t m&#13;
up and carrying off the iron parts.&#13;
Situated near - U r i g h t o n a n d --only-amile&#13;
from the railroad, are marl beds&#13;
of about 100 acres in extent which&#13;
averages about 12 feet in depth, and&#13;
the the villagers are hoping for some&#13;
one to come along and establish a cement&#13;
factory in the place.&#13;
Agents of the Benton Harbor sugar&#13;
factory who are canvassing Van Buren&#13;
county for contracts are offering 75 cts.&#13;
per ton extra for beets if the state pays&#13;
the bounty of one cent per pound, and&#13;
will alsb allow farmers to ship in the&#13;
beets any time after they are ripe.&#13;
Geo. Nye, recently convicted in Detroit&#13;
on the charge of perjury, has,&#13;
through his attorneys, applied to the&#13;
supreme court for an order admitting&#13;
him to bail, pending the disposition of&#13;
his case which is about to be tak~ehT~to&#13;
the higher court on a writ of error.&#13;
When.Sam Smith and his wife, who&#13;
live near Osseo, returned home on the&#13;
10th after spending the evening with a&#13;
neighbor, they were attacked by two&#13;
men secreted in their house, who used&#13;
sandbags with good effect. Robbery&#13;
is supposed to have been their motive.&#13;
Sparta citizens have petitioned the&#13;
council to give them a chance to vote&#13;
on the proposition to purchase land for&#13;
a public park and playground somewhere&#13;
in or near the village, and it is&#13;
likely that the request _J¥ilLhe_gra&#13;
in time to settle the matter at the regular.&#13;
spring election.&#13;
The total amount of beets received&#13;
a t ^ e Michigan factories up to Feb. 1&#13;
was 210,971 tons, from which an aggregate&#13;
of 30,106,113 pounds of sugar&#13;
was manufactured. If the beet sugar&#13;
bounty law of 1897 is constitutional&#13;
the state will have to pay a total of&#13;
$301,061.13 for sugar manufactured up&#13;
to that date.&#13;
The big cooperage plant which was&#13;
destroyed by fire_at Escanaba recently&#13;
will be rebuilt immediately in that&#13;
city, notwithstanding the rumors that&#13;
the industry was to be removed to Menominee.&#13;
Its capacity will be increased&#13;
50 per cent and it is expected the entire&#13;
plant will be in nperntinn agnin&#13;
.THOME AND ABROAD&#13;
S U M M A R Y O P T H ^ E W S P O R&#13;
T H E WEEK BY WIRE.&#13;
Ex-Consul Macrae* Gives His Betsons&#13;
tof Oolttin/r Pretoria — The&#13;
Cataecle Troupe to he Aired 1* the I by dispatch,&#13;
i~&#13;
Courts—Other Items*&#13;
TRANSVAAL WAR ITEM3.&#13;
A Tripos has beeh Reached In Kentucky.&#13;
T h « . agreement entered into at&#13;
Georgetown, Ky., on the 16th by which&#13;
the Taylor' and Beckham injunction&#13;
suits were postponed till Feb. 23 is to&#13;
operate a s . a truce in the legal battle&#13;
over the state offices and it is not probable&#13;
that there will be any decisive&#13;
changes in the situation till then, unl&#13;
e s s the return of the Democratic legislature&#13;
at Frankfort adds some unexpected&#13;
feature. A part of the attorneys&#13;
on both sides held a meeting on the&#13;
16th and discussed several plans for&#13;
consolidating the various injunction&#13;
cases in order to avoid a clash between&#13;
the different state courts, in which&#13;
they are pending, but a final understanding&#13;
was not reached. A proposition,&#13;
which is said to meet with favor,&#13;
i s that a-U-f»f the cases be cobsolidatScF&#13;
and be submitted to a judge of one of the&#13;
neighboring circuit court 4i«trt4ettTrexcluding&#13;
both the Jefferson cqunty and&#13;
Franklin county court*.&#13;
Miicrnm Speaks at L»*t.&#13;
Chas. U. Macrum, former U. S. consul&#13;
to Pretoria, at last givei3 his reasons&#13;
for leaving South Africa. It&#13;
seems that since the war broke out he&#13;
bad been obliged to serve in the position&#13;
of a British consxil and not an&#13;
American consul; that orders issued by&#13;
him to Americans in the Transvaal, instructing&#13;
them that they must remain&#13;
neutral, were disobeyed, many of the&#13;
U. S. citizens taking the oath of allegiance&#13;
to the republic that they might&#13;
assist tlie Boers, and. finally his. viceconsul,&#13;
Mr. Van Amerigen, closed up&#13;
l a r g e s t Salt Ever Started In America.&#13;
The announcement in the papers on&#13;
the 14th that the long threatened clash&#13;
of the steel kings had been finally precipitated&#13;
by H. CT Frick filing the&#13;
&lt;^[ widely heralded suit against Andrew&#13;
Carnegie and the Carnegie Steel Co.,&#13;
praying for an equitable accounting of&#13;
thejex-chairjaan's Kt,n^khniHings ••? t^f&#13;
giant steel company, created a sensation&#13;
in financial and manufacturing&#13;
circles at Pittsburg, Pa. ' The suit is&#13;
regarded as the most important' ever&#13;
filed in connection with the steel business,&#13;
and it is said more money is at&#13;
stake than in any legal^ proceedings&#13;
ever brought in this country in which&#13;
all the parties were simply citizens.&#13;
Steel manufacturers view the trouble&#13;
as a bitter personal struggle for supremacy&#13;
and are_jwatching each move&#13;
with intense interest.&#13;
has been a fugitive from justice for two&#13;
months.&#13;
Arrangements are being perfected at&#13;
Houghton by which a new city hall&#13;
and opera house will be built this season&#13;
at an estimated cost of upwards of&#13;
$100,000.&#13;
—The Presbyterian society at Brighton&#13;
has puchased a large residence in the&#13;
village for a parsonage, and expects to j&#13;
build a 810,000 church on the. adjoining&#13;
property.&#13;
The superintendent of the poor of&#13;
Branch county has started- a crusade&#13;
against the selling of liquor to men&#13;
whose families are being supported by&#13;
the county. — — - :&#13;
Philip J. Mogk, of Detroit, charged&#13;
with an attempt to influence the Nye&#13;
jury was convicted and sentenced to&#13;
pay $f&gt;0 fine and serve six months in&#13;
.prison on the 10th.&#13;
Farmers around • Brighton are being&#13;
victimized lately by a man who claims&#13;
to have lost his farm buildings, cattle&#13;
and crops by fire, and is soliciting contributions&#13;
to give him a start again.&#13;
There are 2,072 farmain Cass county,&#13;
averaging 120 acres each. This average&#13;
is higher than that of any other county&#13;
in the four southern counties except&#13;
Livingston, in which the figure is 121.&#13;
Numerous horses around Grand&#13;
Blanc, Genesee county, have been&#13;
Btrickened-with some disease the exact [bonusof,$4&#13;
nature of which is not yet.knpwn, and&#13;
a good many deaths have been reported.&#13;
within four months.&#13;
;'] It has been discovered that the records&#13;
in one book of deeds in the Washtenaw&#13;
county register's office are rapidly&#13;
fading out, and they are to be&#13;
copied into a new book before they are&#13;
gone altogether. The book in question&#13;
was made back in 1838,^ and the ink,&#13;
unlike most of that which was used&#13;
years ago, was apparently of a poor&#13;
quality.&#13;
Although blanks were sent out in December&#13;
to 2,215 manufacturing and&#13;
mercantile corporations calling for&#13;
their annual reports as""required by&#13;
law, so far only 394 concerns have filed&#13;
their reports. The time limit expires&#13;
on March 1. There is a fine of $25 and&#13;
$5 per day for failure to comply with&#13;
the.law, and the secretary of state will&#13;
enforce the penalty this year.&#13;
The undertaker at Sutton's Bav is&#13;
apparently just as much of a believer&#13;
in advertising as men in other lines of&#13;
business, and has adopted some of their&#13;
methods in setting his wares before&#13;
the public. In a recent issue of the&#13;
local paper he says: "We have just receivexLa&#13;
large invoice of new fancy&#13;
shrouds, fancy casket trimmings, etc.&#13;
Call and see them before you die."&#13;
Register of Deeds Royce, of Shiawassee&#13;
county, has almost completed his&#13;
report to the "ftate tax commission on&#13;
the number of mortgages on file in his&#13;
office. He has already listed 3,600, and&#13;
believes the number will reach 4,000.&#13;
The information complied for the commission&#13;
is very valuable, and will&#13;
doubtless yesult in the taxing of considerable&#13;
property that has heretofore&#13;
been covered up.&#13;
The villages of Morrice and Perry&#13;
have long been rivals, but.in the last&#13;
two years Perry has had a little the&#13;
best of it in the way of a boom. Lately,&#13;
however, Morrice has made a. rapid&#13;
stride forward, the principal thing being&#13;
the electric lighting plant recently&#13;
secured. ...Now the village is offering a&#13;
a oar ta-^any drover who&#13;
h i s business and went t o the front as~ar&#13;
burger. All this together with the&#13;
fact that his mail was opened and read&#13;
by the censor at Durban, after being&#13;
held for weeks, prompted him in pursuing&#13;
the course he did, believing that&#13;
his report of the existing state of affairs&#13;
at Pretoria should be made by&#13;
him in person to his home government.&#13;
A British dispatch from Deikel's drif*&#13;
dated F&amp;s, H says;, t l e n ^ FreWc* l e f t&#13;
this poiot at A&amp;A yesterday morning]&#13;
with three brigades and cavalry, horae&#13;
artillery and mounted infantry, including&#13;
several dbfcnial,, ^contingents, i n&#13;
orfler to seia^.afetoguftj^of the Kodder,&#13;
t w e k - ^ d ^ t a n t about 20 miles. He reported&#13;
by dispatch, dated 5:35 p. m., that h e&#13;
forced a passage at CjJJp djirt and occupied&#13;
the hill* north of ^the river, capturing&#13;
three of the enemy's laagera,&#13;
with their aupplie* white (Sen. Gordeai,&#13;
o £ l h e 15th Hussana, w i t h his brigade,&#13;
who fcaQ made a fetal at RorMeval drift&#13;
four miles west,-' h a s seised 'it and a&#13;
seaond drift between - that- &lt;and&gt; £lift&#13;
drift,, together with two more laagers.&#13;
On the 12th the Boers forced a retirment&#13;
of the western outposts including&#13;
the withdrawal from Cole's kop&#13;
and all surrounding posts. They placed&#13;
a 40-pounder on Bastard's nek, commanding&#13;
the surrounding country and&#13;
successfully shelled the British positions.&#13;
The Boers numbered some&#13;
thousands and were five to one w h e r -&#13;
ever fighting occurred. The British'&#13;
are chafing under the necessity of a retreat&#13;
from their posts, some of which&#13;
they had held since the new year. The&#13;
British now have no camp west of&#13;
Rensburg. They safely brought off&#13;
Jbh e_ g u n s irom Cole's kop. -Severe&#13;
fighting occurred during the British&#13;
retreat, the outposts on both sides suffering&#13;
heavy losses.&#13;
A British dispatch from Rensburg&#13;
dated Feb. 13, says there has been&#13;
hard fighting for two days near ColeSf&#13;
burg, the Boers making strenuous efforts&#13;
toputflank the British left. The&#13;
liogrs occupies strong positions froin&#13;
Achtertang, through Potfontein to a&#13;
point five miles south of Jasfontein.&#13;
The fighting at the outpost camps has&#13;
been very severe during the last few&#13;
days. On the 13th the Boers attacked&#13;
the position of the Wbrcesters, to the&#13;
southeast of Colesburg. Fighting 'continued&#13;
all day, and after dark it was;&#13;
considered necessary to withdraw tp&#13;
itensburg. Our losses are not ye t&#13;
Soudan Chletatn Suffer* a Crushing Defeat&#13;
M.L Decrais, -minister of the colonies,&#13;
on the 15th received a telegram from&#13;
the governor of the French Congo, M.&#13;
N. De Lamothe, announcing the defeat&#13;
in battle of Rabah, the principal&#13;
chieftain of the central Soudan, by a&#13;
French expedition under M. Gertil.&#13;
Rabah has long been the strongest opponent&#13;
of the extention of French influence&#13;
in the Soudan. He was formerly&#13;
a slave of Zebehr Pasha, himself&#13;
a great Sudan ruler, but revolted&#13;
-and formed a kingdom of his own in&#13;
central Africa, subjugating potentate&#13;
after potentate until he became head&#13;
of a vast empire. His career of victory&#13;
gained for him the name of the "African&#13;
Napoleon." The French have been&#13;
fighting his power for years, and his&#13;
overthrow was a surprise to many.&#13;
His lose is estimated at between $,000&#13;
and 3,000 killed.&#13;
will go there and buy stock and ship it&#13;
from'that station.&#13;
Fonnd Dead in the Street.&#13;
Congressman Charles A. Chiekering,&#13;
of Copenhagen, N. Y., was found dead^&#13;
outside the Grand Union hotel, in New^&#13;
York on the 13th. He had either fallen&#13;
or jumped from a fourth-story window&#13;
of the hotel. The speculation&#13;
about the manner of death led to the&#13;
conjecture that the man may have&#13;
been seized by a fit of temporary insanity&#13;
from rheumatic pains and jumped&#13;
out of the window in the night, or that&#13;
he was a somnambulist and had walked&#13;
out of the vMndow and clambeved over&#13;
the fire escape. The body was tak,on&#13;
to Copenhagen for burial.&#13;
— • I . — I l l . — I ) | , , . M l . Mil ,&#13;
Will Sell Direct to Farmers.&#13;
The board of directors of the state&#13;
penitentiary of Kansas, on the 12th deeded&#13;
to hereafter sell the entire out*&#13;
put of binding twin of the Kansas penitentiary&#13;
direct to the farmers. Implement&#13;
dealers in various parts of the&#13;
state had offered to purchase the entire&#13;
output, but, it is said, the prison officials&#13;
learned there was reason to believe&#13;
that the binding twine trust was&#13;
back of some of the dealers. The plan&#13;
will become effective after March 20.&#13;
There is now more than 75,000 pounds&#13;
of'twin* iff stodk at the prison warehouse,&#13;
—&#13;
known.&#13;
The British armv, for the first time&#13;
sinqe the war began, is inside the Boer&#13;
frontier^ Lord Roberts, with at least&#13;
40,0fiti infantry, 7,000 cavalry and 150&#13;
guiJL has turned the Magersfontein&#13;
linea; before which the British forces&#13;
have been encamped for 10 weeks, and,&#13;
w i t h half of his corps, he is already&#13;
operating on Free State territory. JV&#13;
battle has not yet been fought, but&#13;
Targe tactical advantages have been&#13;
gained. The relief of Kiraberiey is&#13;
within measurable reach, and the way&#13;
to Bloemfontein is appreciably easier.&#13;
The besieged diamond city, Kimberley,&#13;
which has been shut up for the&#13;
past 122 days, was relieved . by (Sen.,&#13;
French's forces on the evening of the&#13;
15th. One of the principal reasons for&#13;
the siege of Kimberley by the Boers&#13;
was to effect^ a capture of Cecil Rhodes,&#13;
who was held to be responsible for the&#13;
Jameson raid into the Boer territory,&#13;
and also for bringing on the present&#13;
war. If Mr. Rhodes was still at Kimberley&#13;
when Gen. French reached&#13;
there he was doubtless overjoyed at his&#13;
presence.&#13;
During the fight at Rensburg the&#13;
British had one entire company killed&#13;
and two companies cut off. Col. Conynham&#13;
was shot through the heart at the&#13;
outset of the engagement. Nine&#13;
wounded officers and 35 men were received.&#13;
at the Naauwpoort field hospital,&#13;
but the number of dead is not given.&#13;
On the 12th Gen. Botha, a- Boer commander,&#13;
with a small force, crossed the&#13;
Tugela river to a deserted British camp&#13;
where he encountered 50 Lancers, of&#13;
whom 13 were killed, five wounded and&#13;
nine taken prisoners. One of the prisoners&#13;
waj^sent to tell the British to&#13;
fetch their wounded.&#13;
. Fifty-seven young and stalwart&#13;
men sailed from N e w York on the&#13;
French line steamship La Gascogne on&#13;
their way to Boers lines in South Africa&#13;
on the 15th. The corps w a s recruited&#13;
in Chicago by the United Irish societies&#13;
there and will aid the Boer sick and&#13;
wouded. ~&#13;
A London dispatch says the total •&#13;
British casualty returns up_to Feb. 15&#13;
arer Officers killed, 152; wounded, 380; ,&#13;
missing, 112; men killed, 1,477;'&#13;
wounded, 5,050; missing, 2,781; other&#13;
fatalities reported, 503. Grand total,&#13;
10,515.&#13;
The British forces on the 12th attacked&#13;
Fort Eloff, south of Gaberones, &lt;&#13;
but the Johannesburg men under Vahdelweig&#13;
forced the British to retire&#13;
leaving six dead and fo\ir wounded OJJ^&#13;
the field. There was ho "Boer loss.&#13;
The British army agents have let another&#13;
contract for 2,500 mules, to be&#13;
delivered at New Orleans, La., as last&#13;
as the animals can be^pnrchased.&#13;
X revised l i s t of the British casualties&#13;
at Potgieter'a drift from February,&#13;
5 to Febr^atfc tf£jta$j*: ^ a d , 2%y ,&#13;
wounded, 31$; mining,! S. ." /&#13;
During an engagement at Colesburg &gt; •,&#13;
on the 13th the British had 60 killed &lt;&gt;&#13;
and wounded and 80 captured,&#13;
Lord Roberts has authorized the formation&#13;
of a squadron of 100 picked&#13;
Irishmen for special duties. ,,-&#13;
Newfoundland is expected to vote&#13;
$20,000 toward _ the imperial patriotic&#13;
;fund.&#13;
*&#13;
A&#13;
1&#13;
SGermany is said to be displeased with&#13;
the treaty between the United States&#13;
and Italy, deelartttg i t t o be uniavqri&#13;
able to German interests.&#13;
rrtikt&#13;
•;&#13;
• . • • • v . , ^ -,&gt;f. '•&#13;
. » * • W «-,.'.W ..M v t * i %&gt;•"&#13;
•» V •••• » • » • . • - • • • • . . • « • .-.•• ' ••• •- -.••,-•.: •' -.- .-.•• . - - .-• - , - . A&#13;
V.&#13;
&gt;u&#13;
.1; a. «• mm&#13;
/ ^&#13;
" • ' " i i*i,i ai&lt;SSBMSSSlI&#13;
I Could&#13;
Han&#13;
Breathe&#13;
• «,\ Ujt .a t*rrityc cold wd&#13;
could fetidly breathe* I then&#13;
trici AyeT^ Cherry Pe^tbrtt&#13;
ind it gave, me immediate fdJeT&#13;
{don't believe there is t cough&#13;
remedy in the ..world anywhere&#13;
near as good."—W. C. Layton.&#13;
Sidell, ill., May 29,1899.&#13;
Cures&#13;
Night Colds&#13;
How- wilt your cough be&#13;
tonight ? Worse, probably.&#13;
For it's first a cold, then.a cough,&#13;
then bronchitis or pneumonia,&#13;
and at last consumption. Coughs&#13;
always tend downward. It's&#13;
first the throat and then the&#13;
lungs. They don't naturally&#13;
tend to get well. You have&#13;
to help Nature a little.&#13;
You can, stop this downward&#13;
tendency any time by taking&#13;
Aver's Cherry PectoraL Then&#13;
take it tonight. You will cough&#13;
less and sleep better, and by&#13;
tomorrow at this time you will&#13;
be greatly improved.&#13;
» — *&#13;
L&#13;
You can get a small bottle of Aver's&#13;
Cherry Pectoral, now, for 2/5 cents/ For&#13;
hard coughs, bronchitis, asthiaa, and the&#13;
croop, the CO cent steo is better. Fbr&#13;
chronic cases, as consumption, and to&#13;
keep on hand, the $1.00 8i?e is most&#13;
economical.&#13;
I s there a n t h i n g t h e devil can't m a k e&#13;
o u t of a n e n v i o u s man?&#13;
IIUOP.S&#13;
T H E Fleasantest, most powerful, effective 1 and never fail ng REMEDY for Rheumatism S;;aa&#13;
1LA GRIPPE and CATARRH!&#13;
If a l l k n e w w h a t t h o u s a n d s&#13;
k n o w of t h e efficacy of **5&#13;
m i l i u m D i t o p s " a s a Curative a s&#13;
w e l l a s a P r e v e n t i v e of a n y Ache or&#13;
Pain k n o w n t o t h e h u m a n body, there&#13;
w o u l d n o t b e a f a m i l y i n a l l America&#13;
w i t h o u t a b o t t l e of "5 DROPS!" Send&#13;
for trial b o t t l e , 25c, or large b o t t l e , cont&#13;
a i n i n g 300 doses. $1.00, 6 b o t t l e s for 36.&#13;
SVVANSON R H E U M A T I C CURE CO*&#13;
• 160.16 t E. Lake St., Chicago, Hi.&#13;
To give less than we should is not to&#13;
give as God would.&#13;
_ T h e liberal offer made by the T. M.&#13;
Roberts Supply House of Minneapolis,&#13;
Minn., should be of interest to all our&#13;
readers, in addition to the best bargain&#13;
ever offered in seeds they give a&#13;
nigh grade knife free of charge wi+h&#13;
«ach purchase. The firm is thoroughly&#13;
reliable.&#13;
T c b e a lion is to have a lion's enemies.&#13;
Go to your grocer to-day&#13;
and get a 15c. package of&#13;
It takes the place o f coffee&#13;
at { the cost.&#13;
Made from pure grains it&#13;
is nourishing and healthful.&#13;
AIncsciespt tt hnaot Iymouitra triroono.e r gites yon GRAET-O.&#13;
DO vou ]COUCH&#13;
DON'T D E L A Y&#13;
KEMPS&#13;
BALSAM&#13;
THE&#13;
. ]t Curat Golds, COM hs, tort Threat. Croup. In-&#13;
.iMarartrolitliiftdvtneoittMot. UMttaao*.&#13;
/Vot«4llttttkt«xetil«it otoefsftsrttUsttlie&#13;
THE THOUSAND-DOLLAR BILL&#13;
A MYSTERY OP THE UNITED STATES TKEASURY—A SHORT STORY&#13;
BY IXOftABU OCTBAJf&#13;
CHAPTER I.&#13;
They were out on the verandah in&#13;
the cool of the evening, old Caleb Lor*&#13;
tng, in a rocking chair, smoking his&#13;
corn-cob pipe; Bertha, his daughter,&#13;
swinging in a low hammock, and her&#13;
husband, Edmund Hackett, who was&#13;
perched upon th« wooden balustrade.&#13;
Wilton Loring was there, too, lounging&#13;
in a canvas chair and smoking a "domestic"&#13;
ciga|. The verandah ran&#13;
round three sides of a modest frame&#13;
house, all painted white, with the exception&#13;
of its bright green shutters.&#13;
Edmond andJBertha, recently married,&#13;
lived here itf the outskirts of Wasningtoh&#13;
with the head of the family.&#13;
Wilton had run down from Philadelphia,&#13;
where he was cashier of t h e&#13;
Rancher's National Banlc. They we:e&#13;
all grumbling over their meagre incomes.&#13;
"Uncle Sam," remarked Edmond&#13;
Hackett, a quiet, steady going sort or&#13;
fellow, v^ell advanced toward middle&#13;
life, "Uncle Sam is not generous, to us&#13;
boys and girls of-the Civil service. We&#13;
handle between "igh upon a, million&#13;
dollars -every working day, and give&#13;
our lives to the mill horse business for&#13;
a bare subsistence."&#13;
"Since I've been cashier of the&#13;
Ranchers' National," said Wilton Loring,&#13;
"I've had enough money pass&#13;
through my hands to make rae crazy&#13;
with thirst for it. It's like being—&#13;
"Don't like to hear you talk like&#13;
that, Wilt; my son," remarked Old Caleb,&#13;
with a quick shake of his head, as&#13;
if a mttsquito had settled on him.&#13;
"Thoughts of that kind sometimes materialize&#13;
into deeds you'd be sorry for."&#13;
''Humph! I'm not^so s u r f I shan't&#13;
one d a y l r y to pinch "something," pursued&#13;
Wilton, with a wink at his sister.&#13;
"But big steals are the sort to succeed&#13;
nowadays. To make a corner in something&#13;
or other; to float a salted mine,&#13;
or a bogus building society. That's&#13;
the game."&#13;
"Tut, tut!" protested the elder Lbring,&#13;
with fierce expectoration; but&#13;
Bertha mischievously took up her&#13;
brother's humor.&#13;
"There's a fine chance now I've got&#13;
into the counting division at the Treasury,"&#13;
said she. "Say now, why not&#13;
make up a family combination? You,&#13;
Wilton, are cashier at the 'Ranchers,*&#13;
.and you're constantly having old bills&#13;
to send int6 the Treasury for redemption.&#13;
You 'pinch,' as you call it, a&#13;
thousand-dollar greenback, and forward&#13;
the packet to the Treasury endorsed&#13;
as containing one more bill&#13;
than it actually does. That packet&#13;
comes to me to be counted and examined.&#13;
I just pass it as containing&#13;
the number of greenbacks specified.&#13;
On it goes to Edmond, my husband,&#13;
whose duty It chances to be to checic&#13;
my count. Smart Edmond finds one&#13;
bill short; but seeing his Bertha's initials&#13;
on the wrapper, he just winks a&#13;
little, and the packet, with, say ninetynine&#13;
bills instead^of one hundred billy&#13;
against the new ones to that value&#13;
which he sends back in exchange to&#13;
the Rancher's Bank through the Division&#13;
of Issue; See?"&#13;
"Ha, ha, ha!" laughed Edmond&#13;
Hackett, disposed to enter into any&#13;
joke conceived by his adored little&#13;
wife.-"How. we could bleed Uncle Sam&#13;
and help ourselves to the salaries ne&#13;
ought to pay us."&#13;
"Have done! Have done!" burst out&#13;
the old man. "If* I believed my son&#13;
and my daughter and my daughter's&#13;
busband were capable of such roguery&#13;
I'd fetch out my gun and fill you full&#13;
of holes, every one!"&#13;
He meant it. His usually placid features&#13;
were distorted and purple with&#13;
indignation, and the stem of the pipe&#13;
he held snapped in the angry grip of&#13;
his fingers. Wilton flung himself back&#13;
in a fit of hearty laughter, but Bertha,&#13;
perceived that the joke had gone too&#13;
far.&#13;
"Father! dear father!" She exclaimed&#13;
soothingly. "You know us all better'n&#13;
that, sure. We were just poking&#13;
fun; weren't we, Edmond? Besides,&#13;
such a combination as I figured out&#13;
couldn't be anyway."&#13;
"Quite impossible!" averred Wilton,&#13;
getting over his mirth.&#13;
"Well, I reckon it's improbable in&#13;
the last degree," said Edmond Hackett.&#13;
"So, as opportunity makes the thief,&#13;
and we shall have no opportunity,"&#13;
added young Loring. "the whole three&#13;
of us'n have to be honest, will we, or&#13;
won't we."&#13;
"You, know, father," urged Bertha*&#13;
to calm the old man, who muttered and&#13;
protested still, and seemed to have&#13;
taken fright at the very thought of a&#13;
breach of trust, "there are nine indies&#13;
in1 the Counting Division besides my-&#13;
Belf, and Wilton's imaginary short&#13;
packet might go to any one of them&#13;
instead, of to me."&#13;
"And if Bertha did get it and past&#13;
It," remarked Hackett, to clinch the&#13;
argument, "there are plenty of fellows&#13;
in the Secretary's office who check the&#13;
counts beside me, and one of them&#13;
would spot her'oversight' Even if the&#13;
short packet came to me, it would he&#13;
useless for me to wink, for I should&#13;
have one-half the bills. They are cut&#13;
longitudinally," ho added for Wilton'*&#13;
information, turning to his brotherin-&#13;
law; "one half—the lower sectionreomes&#13;
to the Secretary, and the upper&#13;
goes to the office of the Register, to&#13;
be checked there."&#13;
"J^e should need another confederate&#13;
in the Register's," put in Bertha.&#13;
"The steal would be caught to a certainty&#13;
In the Register's office."&#13;
"Unless—by Caesar! we've the whole&#13;
bag of tricks. The combination you&#13;
figured out is not only possible, it is&#13;
here in our hands. Dad Is the Senior&#13;
Counter in the Register Division. The&#13;
big bills go to him. This is marvelous.&#13;
If fortune is disposed to do us a good&#13;
turn, here's the method all ready, cut&#13;
and dried. I nobble a thousand-dollar&#13;
bill at the bank, and send a packet of&#13;
ninety-nine into the Treasury endorsed&#13;
as 100, Bertha passes it through the&#13;
Counting Division, Edmond gets the&#13;
lower half in the Secretary's office,&#13;
notes his wife's initials and swallows&#13;
the shortage with connubial submission;&#13;
and Mr. Lorlng, Who spots the&#13;
j a m e in the Reglster'sjTmt of respect&#13;
for—"&#13;
"His trust, "his country's confldenc3.&#13;
the honor of his name," burst out the&#13;
old man, "reports the matter instantly.&#13;
Yes, gives the lot of you away, to&#13;
ruin, to disgrace, to the hulks. No&#13;
words about it! That's what I would&#13;
do, mind that!"&#13;
Wilton laughed lightly.&#13;
"The bundles of rubbish; ninety-nine&#13;
or a hundred bills; what would it matter&#13;
to Uncle Sam? And I should send&#13;
each of you $250. Think it over, dad."&#13;
"Think it over? I shall never forget&#13;
this talk of yours, Wilton. A crime&#13;
conceived is half executed. May I&#13;
never hear more of this combination&#13;
of yours, in joke or in fact, will be my&#13;
prayer from this day to God in Heaven."&#13;
, And shaking his head angrily, the&#13;
father strode into the house.&#13;
CHAPTER II.&#13;
A few days after this conversation&#13;
Bertha Hackett sat to the office of the&#13;
Redemption Division assisting Mrs.&#13;
Lawson, the senior lady of the department,&#13;
to count a packet of "big bills."&#13;
Greenbacks of large denomination&#13;
were allotted to the senior lady in the&#13;
ordinary course, and the juniors would&#13;
take it in turn to work with her for&#13;
the sake of becoming accustomed to&#13;
every kind of note, and by such familiarity&#13;
detecting any forgery that might&#13;
fall into their hands. Bertha was&#13;
serving her apprenticeship in this department,&#13;
and that day she sat at Mrs.&#13;
Lawson's desk to learn -all that this&#13;
good lady could teach her.&#13;
Now among the packets of old bills&#13;
sent in from all parts of America to&#13;
b^ canceled and exchanged for new&#13;
currency, it was not unusual for the&#13;
Ranchers' National Bank of Philadelphia,&#13;
to contribute to its quota. Bertha's&#13;
bright grey eyes took a sidelong&#13;
glance at the heap of parcels before&#13;
her companion, wondering -whether&#13;
chance would so far realize their fancied&#13;
combination as to bring into her&#13;
hands a consignment from her/brother,&#13;
Wilton. Like a pestilent tune that&#13;
keeps echoing in the brain, that family&#13;
talk of a conspiracy to defraud Uncle&#13;
Sam could not »be dismissed from her&#13;
thoughts. These slips of dirty paper&#13;
authorizing the payment to bearer of&#13;
large sums of money, what a pity&#13;
they should all go to the macerating&#13;
machine to be ground into pulp! One&#13;
more or less woulcf make no difference&#13;
to the wealthy nation, but would work&#13;
wonders for an underpaid official who&#13;
found it hard to make both ends meet.&#13;
She told herself it was horribly wicked&#13;
to think of misappropriation, but she&#13;
could not control her thoughts and&#13;
they pictured for her persistently the&#13;
staff of the threo departments reduced&#13;
to herself, her father, and her husbandf&#13;
and figured out the fortwhe they might&#13;
accumulate by the aid of slick fingers.&#13;
Wh'le thus musing she was startled by&#13;
a remark from Mrs, Lawson, as that&#13;
lady placed before her a heap of thousand-&#13;
dollar bills which she had been&#13;
critically examining with a magnifying&#13;
glass. "That's a big charge from the&#13;
Ranchers' National—a hundred bills of&#13;
a thousand each. I make them right;&#13;
but you go over them again one by one,&#13;
count* them in two packets of fifty&#13;
each, and bind them with a paper band&#13;
In the usual way for me to initial and&#13;
pass forward."&#13;
Mrs. Lawson proceeded with another&#13;
packet, so absorbed in her work that&#13;
she did not notice how strangely young&#13;
Mrs. Hackett stared for a moment at&#13;
the task before her. With the heap&#13;
of bills lay the paper band that had enclosed&#13;
them when they came from the&#13;
Bank at Philadelphia. It was endorsed&#13;
with the number and the denomination&#13;
of the notes, and bore the signature.&#13;
"Wilton Loring, Cashier." Mrs.&#13;
Lawson vouched for them as correct,&#13;
and yet Bertha's fingers trembled as&#13;
she turned them over. She counted&#13;
half of them backward, from 100 to&#13;
fifty, and made a packet of them, as&#13;
instructed, and th,e other half she&#13;
counted la the usual way, beginning&#13;
one, two, three, four, and so on. When A M I N N E S O T A F A J i M E j f c&#13;
she came to the end of the count she . _ « « _ _ « -&#13;
paused, and counted this second half&#13;
again backward. Then she slowly fast- WRITES O P WESTERN CANADA&#13;
ened a band around the packet&#13;
"You're not very smart at present,&#13;
my girl," remarked the elder lady, observing&#13;
her sluggish action. "I have to&#13;
hunt for counterfeits; but should never&#13;
get through if I took so long as you&#13;
have done with that simple cheque.&#13;
But maybe you reckon to find I've&#13;
passed a wrong count?" she added,&#13;
with a r little touch of irony&#13;
WHERE HE IS NOW LOCATED.&#13;
The r a r a t t l a B i s MrffffeborffcooA Axe&#13;
B e l a g Bepldly T»fc*n t7» by Wormmr&#13;
BMkUut* of t h e Vmktmd&#13;
The following extracts from a letter&#13;
written to Mr. Benj. Davles, Canadian&#13;
After government agent at S t Paul, Minn.,&#13;
thirty-four " y e a r s ' a t " this "work, my S i v e an excellent idea of what is said&#13;
dear, the bills that have passed ot Western Canada by those who have&#13;
through Rosina Lawson's hands can zone there during the past two or three&#13;
be taken as right if she says so." years.&#13;
Mrs. Lawson was rather tetchy, and "When we first arrived here and took&#13;
had a good conceit of herself, born of UP o u r bomes on the prairie near&#13;
long infallibility. Bertha in silence Dalesboro, Assa., for a short time Tfs&#13;
wrote her own initials on the wrappers n a d a flt °* t n e 'blues,' but now'all&#13;
of tire-two packets, and this action bands are settled t o business, halfi,&#13;
molified the senKr lady, for by thus' bearty and contented, enjoying tile&#13;
taking responsibility for the correct- finest w*ater we hsve ever seen. We&#13;
ness of the packets, Mrs. Hackett h a v e £ o t yery. comfortably situated,&#13;
seemed to convey an impression of w i t h considerable preparations for a&#13;
confidence in her. But something else c r o P ' a n d a 1 1 hopeful. I think this is&#13;
was in Bertha's mind, for she muttered a v e r y flne country, and if the past seato&#13;
herself as the packets were taken '. son's crop is not an exception, which&#13;
away to the cutting machine to be further&#13;
checked in the offices of the Secretary&#13;
of the Register, "There is just a&#13;
"chancRt**"— z / ' •&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
C H E A P V I O L I N '&#13;
Csed by Two Smooth Men t o Beat a&#13;
Pawnbroker.&#13;
, The impression that pawnbrokers&#13;
cannot be "worked" has been exploded&#13;
by some cunning swindlers. Some&#13;
months ago there came to Philadelphia&#13;
two musicians who had been stranded&#13;
with a theatrical company in a neighboring&#13;
New Jersey town. They needed&#13;
money bauiy, so iney put their wits to&#13;
work and succeeded in raising a nice&#13;
little stake. This is the way they&#13;
worked it: One of them, who may be&#13;
called John Bow, took his violin—&#13;
which was a cheap instrument, worth&#13;
at the utmost $25—to a Market street&#13;
pawn shop and gave the proprietor a&#13;
long essay on the rarity of the instrument.&#13;
To prove that it was an old&#13;
Cremona, he played for the pawnbroker,&#13;
and finally succeeded in getting a&#13;
$15 loan on it for two weeks. Before&#13;
he left he urged the money lender to&#13;
oe very. careful of the violin, as he&#13;
would not lose it for hundreds o( dollars.&#13;
The pawnbroker placed the fiddle&#13;
in his safe and Instructed his 'assistants&#13;
to be very careful of it. A&#13;
week later a man entered the place&#13;
who said he was a collector of rare&#13;
violins, and wanted to know if there&#13;
were any in the shop that he might&#13;
fancy. The boss showed him a number,&#13;
but the fancier did not see any&#13;
to his liking. Finaly Bow's violin was&#13;
brought out,, and when the fancier&#13;
drew the bow over it he became enthusiastic&#13;
and said he would give $400 for&#13;
it. The broker replied that he was j&#13;
sorry, but the violin could not be sold.&#13;
The stranger then became anxious and&#13;
left a $5 deposit, and asked that they&#13;
try to get the fiddle. A few days afterward&#13;
the owner, Bow, came in, and&#13;
when the proprietor learned that he&#13;
wanted an additional $10 on the fiddle&#13;
he-offered him $100 cash more for the&#13;
instrument. At first Bow would not&#13;
listen to it, but finally he took the&#13;
additional $100 and left with a sorrowful&#13;
faceL The pawnbroker chuckled&#13;
over such an easy way of making over&#13;
$200. He wa^ed anxiously for the&#13;
fancier, but vas it i s ^ o w over three&#13;
months since he said he would come&#13;
back, the broker thinks it was a put up&#13;
job. He had the violin Valued last&#13;
week, and it was pronounced worth,&#13;
the highest, $25.—Philadelphia Record&#13;
they claim not, I believe this is going&#13;
to be the wheat fiekl'of the West. It&#13;
is filling Up fast. In this township last&#13;
spring there were 25 quarTer^ections"~~~&#13;
of land vacant and today there is not&#13;
one. I can stand at my house and&#13;
count ten houses where there was not&#13;
one last spring, with six more to go up&#13;
this spring. This is only a sample of&#13;
What is going on all round. We intend&#13;
to build a church next summer, right&#13;
close to my place, so we will be strictly'~&#13;
in line. It would have amused you to&#13;
have been here last spring. Thero&#13;
were crowds of land-seekers, and sometimes&#13;
in the spring the prairie is not&#13;
very Inviting, and of course lots were&#13;
discontented. There was one in the&#13;
crowd who jumped on me for putting&#13;
a letter in the paper, only for which&#13;
he never would have come here, an*&#13;
he was very hostile, but eventually he&#13;
got a place and today claims he would&#13;
not take a thousand dollars and move&#13;
out, so I am glad he is satisfied.&#13;
"Well, my dear sir, as Arthur Finney&#13;
is about to move out in March,&#13;
with his family, and also one of my&#13;
sons, anything you can do for them to&gt;&#13;
assist them along and to make things:::&#13;
smooth as possible, will be greatly&#13;
appreciated by me. I will close for&#13;
this time, and will write from time t o&#13;
time to let you know we are living.&#13;
Drop us a few lines to let us know&#13;
how things are moving in St. Paul.&#13;
"Yours Respectfully,&#13;
"ALEX CAMERON."&#13;
Vxeftilneftii of Great Lake^&#13;
The great lakes -have_bpc'ome a._\gre.&amp;£&#13;
artery of-our richest commercial blood.&#13;
One-third of t h e population of tbe&#13;
United States is dependent on these&#13;
lakes for their export and import&#13;
trade. This waterway taps the richest&#13;
and most prosperous agricultural&#13;
territory on this continent of ours, together&#13;
with our most productive&#13;
mines, and it is worth while noting&#13;
that within a radius of 400 miles of&#13;
Cleveland lies one-half the population&#13;
of the United States. It is a wellestablishsVi&#13;
fact that deep-water transportation&#13;
is. and necessarily must be,&#13;
far below the cost of transportation by&#13;
rail; indeed, It is computed that the&#13;
cost of water transportation by steam,&#13;
when the voyage is of any considerable&#13;
length, is about one-quarter of the&#13;
average cost of transportation by rail,&#13;
while by sailboat it is only one-eighth&#13;
of the latter. As this question of&#13;
transportation determines to a great&#13;
extent the existence or non-existence&#13;
of a possible industry, and enhances&#13;
or diminishes the value of every article&#13;
of export in proportion to its efficiency&#13;
and economy, the battle cry of&#13;
the watt for "twenty feet of water between&#13;
Duluth and the sea" is no great&#13;
problem to account for.—Ainslee's&#13;
Magazine.&#13;
IN 3 OR 4 YEARS&#13;
AN INDEPENDENCE&#13;
If you take up r&lt;tar&#13;
bomes In Wesern Canada,&#13;
tte land cf plenty.&#13;
11 tL»trate&gt; pampaleta.&#13;
giving experiences of&#13;
fanners wt o have become&#13;
wealthy In grow- 1 ing wheat, reports of&#13;
, delegates, etc.. and full&#13;
informa.ioa &amp;s to reduced railway rates can be&#13;
had on application to the Superintendent of&#13;
Immigration, Department of Interior, Ottawa*&#13;
Canada, or to J. Qrieve. Sa/jrtnaw. Mich., or »T&#13;
V. Mclnncs, X c S Merrill Block. Detroit, Mlqh,&#13;
* L &lt; &lt; * « « &lt; * W W * W W W W « W W W W W « W W i&#13;
W&#13;
«&#13;
m 8 t t r | « t 8 M 4 POTATOQnmii la&#13;
* 8 M * . 8e*4 ttt* M U M aatf M» ft „ Saak.""- C L O V E R V JOBS A. iULZXB 9 U B CO., JLA O W N S , WIS. WM I&#13;
POTATOES.*^&#13;
u&#13;
A» KpltoaM mt m Cen tarr*s Profrat*.&#13;
Professor—"Miss Flaxilla, mention s,&#13;
few of the most wonderful scientific&#13;
inventions of the nineteenth century.**&#13;
Miss P t e r i n * - " t « s , sir; the telephone,&#13;
photograph button, golf' capes,&#13;
and- ice cream soda,"&#13;
PENSIONS Write CAPT. CTPAftRBLL. I&#13;
M2S New York Ai&#13;
DOUBLE M C I&#13;
MOODY;" Mthortxofl «ofttaa; «Ujr O M wfffwd W tits»sra^&#13;
.HUUUnBB 'S9 Tf«tmr "T*or acMnadMr.. o|&gt;M«M )«e&#13;
U)ct«L4mbair*.co.,&#13;
/,&#13;
&lt;VV' -r £&#13;
m tm mM ^M - L i f - V , . .&#13;
w*&#13;
i;W-'-&#13;
: &lt; - 7 ^&#13;
•lift..*'-&#13;
'•'* v i i A ' ^ w • • ' • ' ? • ' . ' • ^ ' • • ' . ' ' • ' • &lt; ' ' v L ^ ' ; l ' ' &lt; 7 . ' ; , 7 : ; •^.••&gt;,i'*.'.'"'. ' 7 ' . . , , r f , . v ' " '" ' ' " •• ' • ' v ' , ; . .'•'' •'••"•'.'':'.,:' • • • ' ' ^ - ^ • « . ; * * . • 7 " *:. • •••'... . ' . ' • ; • . . ' - " " " • ' • • ? ' . ' • &gt; ' •' * * ' ' • " '•:{-: •'- - ^ ,'t •&gt;•••?. ; ' ' . 7 . ; Y . ' 7 ,&#13;
/ ;v. .v.1:&#13;
w*» ' . • * * *':&#13;
. &gt; • (&#13;
'.«•-•';; ; r * &lt;&#13;
r«M.-*'&#13;
v : r&#13;
&gt; S !&#13;
*S«. : &amp; «?'•&#13;
'•''.':f"^'•''''&#13;
:V&gt; 0V&#13;
K '•a&#13;
\*v#*-&#13;
,.' • . ' . • • ' ^ V . ' ^&#13;
..&lt;«,*&lt;.&#13;
' - • 4 .•'.•'•&gt;&#13;
, ..'.i'X '&#13;
IJ.V&#13;
»7&#13;
S?:&#13;
if «&#13;
m&#13;
tv*&#13;
Siv.-&#13;
*;&#13;
*.&#13;
Sf'&#13;
8&amp;e fhtrttnnj flfopfafc.&#13;
&gt;—— » n i » •• i i - ^ - i n m » ' i « ^ i " t i • «&gt;• y — 'i • • • • • • . y ii • i&#13;
F . L . A N D R E W S .-. €DiTO*.&#13;
— i — • • • • &gt; • • • - • • ' »y%p» II- i i » &gt; i - i - r—' • » — — — - . . t.&#13;
THIJJRSDAY, FEB. 22,1900.&#13;
This Paper&#13;
One Year.&#13;
Farm Journal&#13;
6 Years.&#13;
PAY UP AND GET BOTH PAPERS AT.PRICE&#13;
OF ONE.&#13;
We want to get 100 new subecribers&#13;
to our paper, and are going&#13;
to do it if we can; we therefore&#13;
continue our arrangement&#13;
with the Farm Journal by which&#13;
we can send the PINCKNEY D I S -&#13;
PATCH one year and the Farm&#13;
Journel 5 years, both for #1.00.&#13;
And we make the same offer to all&#13;
old biibecribers who will pay all&#13;
arrearages and one year in advance.&#13;
You know what our paper is,&#13;
and the Farm Journal is a gem—&#13;
practical, progressive—a clean,&#13;
honest, useful ' paper—full of&#13;
gumption, full of sunshine, with&#13;
immense circulation among the&#13;
best people everywhere: You&#13;
ought to take it.&#13;
It has been demonstrated repeatedly&#13;
in every state in the Union and in&#13;
many foreign countries that Chamberlain's&#13;
Cough Remedy is a certain pre-&#13;
Tenttveand cor© for iironp-^H Ma&#13;
become the universal remedy for that&#13;
disease. M. V. Fisher, of Liberty, W.&#13;
Va., only repeats what has been said&#13;
around the globe when he writes: "1&#13;
have used (DumberIain's Cough Remedy,&#13;
in my family for several years&#13;
and always with perfect success. We&#13;
believe that it is not only the test&#13;
cough remedy, but that it is a sure&#13;
cure for jcroup. It has saved the lives&#13;
of onr children a number of times/'&#13;
This remedy is for sale by F. A. Sigler,&#13;
Druggist.&#13;
HOUSEKEEPING.&#13;
Charcoal.—A dish of charcoal standing&#13;
in the larder wiir keep the dishes&#13;
almost as eweet and fresh ae Ice. The&#13;
charcoal must be changed every day.&#13;
Statuary.—You can clean marble&#13;
statuary with a solution of saleratus&#13;
and boiling water.' Mix a quarter of a&#13;
pound of saleratus to two quarts of&#13;
water and boil for almost two hou.s.&#13;
Wax Paper.—Do not take the paper&#13;
off the bottom of your cake when baking&#13;
until it is quite cold.&#13;
Bread Crumbs.—Old bread baked to&#13;
a golden brown and crushed to fine^&#13;
crumbs with a rolling pin is much better&#13;
for frying than cracker dust-&#13;
Ink Stains.—Ammonia will remove&#13;
ink stains from carpets. Use a little&#13;
clear water with it.&#13;
To Clean Jars.—To clean glass jars&#13;
or bottles that are stained on the inside&#13;
drop a few very smalr pebbles in&#13;
them with, water and shake wjelL&#13;
F. A. Sigler guarantees every bottle&#13;
of Chamberlins Cough Remedy and&#13;
will refund the money tc any one who&#13;
is not satsified after using two thirds&#13;
of the contents. This is the best remedy&#13;
in the world for la jprippe, coughs,&#13;
colds, eroop and whooping cough and&#13;
is pleasant and safe to take. It prevents&#13;
any tendency of a cold to result&#13;
in pneumonia. t mar.-l&#13;
The common opportunity comes. a«&#13;
the divineet opportunity in the whole&#13;
history of the word came, cradled in&#13;
obscurity.&#13;
A fricassee is made from newly cooked&#13;
meat: a rechauffee consists of cold&#13;
meat re-warmed.&#13;
A propensity to hope and Joy ie real&#13;
riches: one to fear and sorrow in real&#13;
poverty.&#13;
God never -wrought miracles to convince&#13;
Atheism, because his ordinary&#13;
works convince it.&#13;
The1 lucky man is the man who seea&#13;
and grasps hi* opportunity;&#13;
It is a miserable sight to see a poor&#13;
man proud and a rich man avaricious.&#13;
Dr. Cady's Condition Powders are&#13;
jost what a horse needs when in bad&#13;
condition. Tonic, blood purifier and&#13;
vermifuge. They are not food but&#13;
medicine and the best in use to pnt a&#13;
horae in prime condition. Price 25c&#13;
per package. For tale by P. A. 8igler*&#13;
. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • B S M a B H H K&#13;
Subscribe for the Dispatch.&#13;
j g T TliIIIII months for 15 oents.&#13;
Free Rural Mall Delivery.&#13;
How to Obtain it and Other&#13;
Iuteresthif Facts.&#13;
The folowing is clipped from a&#13;
circular letter from the Supt. of&#13;
Free Delivery, and as the subject&#13;
is being agitated in this vicinity&#13;
we-thought it would be interesting.&#13;
We also add a letter received&#13;
from Congressman Smith.&#13;
Present a petition, addressed to&#13;
the First Assistant. Postmaster&#13;
General, signed by those who&#13;
tlesire the service. This petition&#13;
should be signed only by heads of&#13;
families, and should mention the&#13;
number in each family. It should&#13;
set forth the natuie of the country&#13;
where the delivery is desired,&#13;
whether densely or sparsely populated,&#13;
the principal avocations of&#13;
the people, the character of the&#13;
roads, and the distances, which&#13;
under—existing conditions, oack&#13;
patron has to travel .to receive&#13;
his mail, and should be accompanied&#13;
wherever possible, by a&#13;
rough map indicating the route or&#13;
routes proposed.&#13;
This petition, when properly&#13;
signed, should be sent to your&#13;
Representative in Congress, or to&#13;
one of your Senators, with the request&#13;
that he endorse thereon his&#13;
recommendation of the service&#13;
asked, and forward the; petition&#13;
to4he^Pepartment^^' _ ___&#13;
CONDITIONS OF - T H E SERVCE.&#13;
It must be born in mind that&#13;
the intention of Congress in authorizing&#13;
the free delivery of&#13;
mails in the rural districts was&#13;
not to grant a suburban delivery&#13;
to cities included in the Free Delivery&#13;
Service, nor to establish&#13;
a village free delivery. The purpose&#13;
of the Rural Free Delivery&#13;
System is to give postal facilities&#13;
to those who have none, to carry&#13;
the mails daily to remote rural&#13;
comunitie£ the residents of which&#13;
would * otherwise have to travel&#13;
from two to twelve miles to&#13;
receive their letters and newspapers.&#13;
The roads must be good. This&#13;
is an essential pre-requisite to any&#13;
investigation.&#13;
No route can be established&#13;
that is less than from 20 to 25&#13;
miles in length, or which serves&#13;
less than 100 families.&#13;
The route should be so arranged&#13;
that the carrier will not be required,&#13;
to travel over the same&#13;
ground twice on the same day.&#13;
Those desiring the delivery&#13;
must be prepared to pat up, at&#13;
their own expen se, at some convenient&#13;
locaton which can be&#13;
reached by the carrier without dismounting&#13;
from his buggy, appropriate&#13;
and secure boxes for the reception&#13;
of the U. S. mails.&#13;
Rural carriers are not required&#13;
to delher mail to houses standing&#13;
back from the main road. The&#13;
service is one of mutual accommodation&#13;
and the patrons are expected&#13;
to meet the Department half&#13;
way in affording facilities for its&#13;
establishment.&#13;
Rural carriers will taka^ with&#13;
them upon their rounds a supply&#13;
of stamps, postal cards, etc.; will&#13;
be authorised to give receipts for&#13;
money orders, and, if the patrons&#13;
of the delivery so desire it, to enclose&#13;
the orders, when granted, in&#13;
addressed envelopes confined to&#13;
their charge.&#13;
Instructions are on preparation&#13;
and will shortly be issued, authorizing&#13;
them to register letters, givreceipts&#13;
for the same.&#13;
Wash. D. C , Feb. 1¾ 1900.&#13;
To the Editor&#13;
of the DISPATCH:—&#13;
I am working to secure the&#13;
blessings of free rural delivery a&#13;
far as possiblyin every part of the&#13;
6th GoB^ressional District I&#13;
shall ask Congress to appropriate&#13;
not less than one millton, and I&#13;
hope for one million five hundred&#13;
dollars. To secure the benefit of&#13;
this appropriation ail petitions&#13;
should be forwarded as soon as&#13;
possible. Any information will&#13;
be cheerfully giveu.&#13;
Samuel W. Smith.&#13;
- • • • • « -&#13;
QUESTION ANSWERED. •&#13;
Yes, August Flower still has the largest&#13;
sale of any medicine in the civilized world.&#13;
Your mothers and grandmothers, never&#13;
thought of using anything else for Indigestion&#13;
or Biliousness. Doctors were scarce,&#13;
and they seldom herd of Appedicitia, Nervous&#13;
Prostration or Heart failure, «tc.&#13;
They used August Flower to clean out the&#13;
system and stop fermentation of undigested&#13;
food, regulate the action of the liver, stimulate&#13;
the nervous and organic action of the&#13;
system, and that is all they took when feel*&#13;
ing dull and bad with headaches and other&#13;
aches. You only need a few doses of&#13;
Green's August Flower, in liquid form, to&#13;
make you satisfied there is nothing serious&#13;
the matter with you. Stfmple bottle at&#13;
F._ A,Sigler'iL _ 1—&#13;
GEMS'OF THOUGHT&#13;
On March 13 next the author&#13;
of "In His Steps; or, What&#13;
Would Jesus Do." will take&#13;
charge, pro tern., of the Topeka&#13;
Daily Capital. For one week he&#13;
will try to make it a model daily&#13;
newspaper. It is quiet significant&#13;
that the novial experiment should&#13;
be undertaken by so eminent a reformer.—&#13;
However it is absurd to&#13;
suppose that a man who is not an&#13;
editor, and was not trained to be&#13;
one, is necessarily the man to re^&#13;
alize his own dream-and make a&#13;
success of the venture. It is.&#13;
absurd to make the result of one&#13;
week or month, or even a year, a&#13;
test of what might or could be&#13;
done. It will not be a decisive&#13;
taial of either paper or popular&#13;
demand, but a passing sensational&#13;
move. What might prove an&#13;
abortive scheme in Topeka might&#13;
be a success in New York or Chicago.&#13;
There will be abnormal&#13;
factors in the trial—artiflcal stimulation&#13;
of curiosity and schemes&#13;
for advertising. Undoubtedly&#13;
there will be an immence sale of&#13;
the issues, and the demand will&#13;
be quickened and worked as high&#13;
as possible. The owners who&#13;
have generously placed their plant&#13;
at Mr. Sheldons disposal will no&#13;
doubt make a good thing out of it,&#13;
novelty seekers will be gratified,&#13;
nobody harmed, and a noble reform&#13;
will be profitably agitated—&#13;
AdvocaleT&#13;
Great opportunity offered to good, reliable&#13;
men. Salary of $15 per week and expenses&#13;
for man with rig to introduce our&#13;
Poultry Mixture and Insect Destroyer in&#13;
the country. Send stamp. American Mfg.&#13;
Co., Terre Haute, Ind.&#13;
The price of the Topeka paper&#13;
that Mr. Sheldon is, to edit one&#13;
week has been raised from ten to&#13;
twenty-five cents for that week.&#13;
Isn't the whole move on the part&#13;
of the journal a money-making&#13;
scheme? The emmense editions&#13;
and the greatly augmented revenue&#13;
from advertising ought to&#13;
lower the price. One subscriber&#13;
writes: "If Jesus were to assume&#13;
the management of the "Capital,"&#13;
do you think he would put up the&#13;
price on us like that the very first&#13;
dash out of the box?"&#13;
There is no^better medicine tor the&#13;
babies than ChamberlainV-. Cough&#13;
Remedy. Its pleasant taste and&#13;
prompt and effectual cures make it a&#13;
favorite with mothers and small children.&#13;
It quickly cure3 their coughs&#13;
aad colds, preventing pneumonia or&#13;
other serious consequences. It also&#13;
cures croup and has been used in tens&#13;
of thousands of cases without a single&#13;
failure so far as we have been able to&#13;
learn. It not only cures croup, but&#13;
when given as soon as the croupy&#13;
cough appears, will prevent the attack.&#13;
In cases of whooping cough it&#13;
liquefies the tough mucus, making it&#13;
easier to expectorate, aad lessens the&#13;
severity aad frequncy of the paroxysms&#13;
of ooagaing, thus depriving that&#13;
dieses! of all dangeroas consequences.&#13;
For sale sy F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
Lau«lh, \l you nre wise*—Martial&#13;
The absurd M ui Is -he w4u&gt; nevor&#13;
changes.—Bartl .'eray,&#13;
God &lt;has delegated hsmsetf 'to a- million&#13;
d.eputiori,—Emer*ou.&#13;
Power is the most persuasive ijheto#&#13;
ic—Schiller.&#13;
Prayer is a cry of 'hope.—A d« Musset.&#13;
The mind i s playful when unburdened.&#13;
To he tdl© le the ultimate purple&#13;
of the busy.—Johnson.&#13;
He who is wiibhout friends is tjke a&#13;
body without a &amp;oul.—Italian Pioverb.&#13;
Lying is th« strongent acknowledgment&#13;
of the force of tr(ith^Hazlit.&#13;
He who has good 'health is ridh, and&#13;
does not know lit.—Italian.&#13;
A willing burden is no biirden.—Italian&#13;
Proverb. \&#13;
Man may coateat himself with the&#13;
applause of the world, and the hexmag&#13;
« paikTto his intellect; but wouiam s&#13;
beart 'has holler idols.—Geocge Ellct.&#13;
The Turks have a proverb whidh&#13;
sfys thiat the devil tempts all a&amp;her&#13;
men, but Idle men tempt Kbe devil.-*-&#13;
XJoltan. -&#13;
The nearer I approach: the end, tibe&#13;
plainer I hear around me tihe immortal&#13;
eymphoatee which Invite me.—Victor&#13;
Hugo.&#13;
Men are made by nature unequal; it&#13;
is vain, therefore, to 'treat them as if&#13;
tbey were equal.—Frond*.&#13;
ahmistianity teac/he* us to love onii&#13;
nedg.hbor. Modern society acknowledges&#13;
no neighbor.—Disraeli.&#13;
Properly, tJhere is no othar knowljndaie&#13;
but that wihlch 1«' got by wonting;&#13;
the rest is yet all a hypothesis&#13;
of knowledge; a CM rig to be argued&#13;
of in schools; a thing floating ^n the»&#13;
clouds, in eucMess logic-vbrtlces, tali&#13;
w&gt;e try and fix it.—Carlyle.&#13;
Leisure is gone—gone where .ihf&#13;
spinning wheels are gone, and one&#13;
oackhor^es, and the slow wagons, and&#13;
the peddllers who brought bargains&#13;
to the door on sunny afternoons.—&#13;
George Eliot.&#13;
People are so ridiculous witib. their&#13;
-illusions, carry og their fool's caps unawares,&#13;
thinking their own lie*&#13;
opaaue. while evervbadv*s el«e are&#13;
toanepareM; making themselves exception&#13;
to everything, as if, when all&#13;
the world looked yellow under a lamp,&#13;
they alone were rcey.—George Eliot.&#13;
A vile imagination, once indulged,&#13;
gets the key of our min&lt;is, amd can grt&#13;
in again very easily, whether we will&#13;
or nio, and can so return as to bring&#13;
eeven otiher spirits with it more&#13;
wicked than itself; and what may follow&#13;
no one knows.—grp-urgeon.&#13;
Eaoh one IULS it in his power to&#13;
make many rejoice in his birtib. or to&#13;
make the em rue the day on which he&#13;
was bom.&#13;
If you would find a good many&#13;
faults, be on &lt;tlhe look-out: hut if yort&#13;
want to find them m unlimited Quantities,&#13;
be on the look-in.&#13;
Nobody, in however obscure a station,&#13;
can be uniformiy sincere, patient,&#13;
genftle and conscientious without oxert:&#13;
ng a positive influence on friends&#13;
and neighbors. *&#13;
When you come down from tne j&amp;uramitts.&#13;
you do not come away fromjGod,&#13;
There is no task In life in which you&#13;
do hot need him. The work bench&#13;
needs his light as truly as the&#13;
cloister.—Phillips Brooks.&#13;
The glory of a life is in the quantity&#13;
of aevotednesB to God, in Hhe fidelity&#13;
with wihich tb* simplest thing&#13;
(s done, in the quantity of the big er&#13;
life tlbar can be thrown in/to the lowliest&#13;
duty or the humblest position,—&#13;
J. F. W. Ware.&#13;
The ideal life—what is it but the&#13;
realization of our own cnetaeer-'Wiith&#13;
the Infinite, and i.he helping others to&#13;
realize ttoa'rs, stoowmg what can be&#13;
done »tthrough our own idving and loving,&#13;
and by our words bearing witness&#13;
to the Eternal Verities?—Selected.&#13;
Thank God every morning that you&#13;
have something to do tfcat day w.hic'.i&#13;
must be dene whether you like it or&#13;
not Being forced to work and to do&#13;
your beat will breed in you a hundred&#13;
virtues whicih the idle never&#13;
know.—Charles Kings.ey.&#13;
Make sore that however good you&#13;
may be, you nave faults; thixt however&#13;
dull yon may be you can find cut&#13;
what they are, and tibat however&#13;
slight they may be, you would bewemake&#13;
some patient effort to get quit&#13;
of them.—Raskin.&#13;
We are like soldiers In a vast, w.tfe&#13;
ly extended battlefield, wrapped in cb&#13;
ecurtty, of Which we know not the&#13;
phases, of wihich we seem utterly powerless&#13;
to control the issues; but we are&#13;
responsible for oar own part,—whatever&#13;
goes on elsewhere, let us not fail&#13;
in that. The changes of the wond.&#13;
which men think they are bring ng&#13;
about, are in th*- bands of God. With&#13;
Him. when we'tave done our fluty,&#13;
let us leave them.—Dean Oborcb.&#13;
i, the nnd*rsi|tDedY' do hereby&#13;
agree to refund the money oa s fiO*&#13;
cent bottle of Green's Warren ted&#13;
8yrup of Tar] if it fails to care your&#13;
cough or cqld:: 1 also guarantee a&#13;
25-c^nt bottle to' trove satisfactory or&#13;
money refunded. &gt; t-80&#13;
Will B. Darrow.&#13;
W A N T E D - T h e Subscription&#13;
dne oa the PtfPATje*;. :&#13;
. . i . ^ . J. G. SAYLES&#13;
Platnfield, Mich.&#13;
Funeral&#13;
Director&#13;
and&#13;
Embalmer*&#13;
Residence I milenorthof village.&#13;
State Telephone Connection.&#13;
Alt calls promptly answered.&#13;
I think 1 will go crazy with pain&#13;
were it not for Chamberlain's Pain&#13;
Balm/' writes Mr. W. H, Staple ton,&#13;
Herminie, Pa, "I have been afflicted&#13;
with rheumatism for several years and&#13;
have tried remedies without number,&#13;
but Pain Balm is the best medicine I&#13;
have got hold of/* One application&#13;
relieves the pain. For sale by P. 4 .&#13;
Sigler, prufftfist.&#13;
Snbecribe lor Dispatch*&#13;
SOME FACTS! READ THEM!&#13;
EUREKA SURE STOP TOOTHACHE POWDERS&#13;
Gives quick and sure relief.&#13;
EUREKA COMPLEXION OINTMENT&#13;
Removes Black-heads and Pimples.&#13;
EUREKA CORN CURE&#13;
Cures all Corns, Bunions, and Callous .&#13;
places.&#13;
EUREKA O.K. WART REMOVER&#13;
Is certain in its results.&#13;
Bach 10c, Coin OP Stamps&#13;
By R e t u r n Mall.&#13;
Agents wanted—write today.&#13;
Address, EUREKA SUPPLY HOUSE.&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
tfrand Trunk Railway System^.&#13;
Leave Pinckney.&#13;
WESTBOUND.&#13;
No. 27 PMsenrer, Pontile to Jackson&#13;
.connection from Detroit 0 44»M&#13;
Ho. 29 P«Men*er, Pontlac to Jackeon, S:45 p. m.&#13;
No. 29 has through coach trom Detroit to J axon.&#13;
No. 43 Mixed, Lenox to Jackson&#13;
connection from Detroit 4 46 p a&#13;
EA8TIOUND&#13;
No. 30 Passenger to Pontlac and Detroit 5 13pm&#13;
No. 28 Passnnger, Jaxonlo Detroit, 9:1« a. ta.&#13;
No. 28 has throngh coach from Jaxon f&gt; Detroit&#13;
No. 44 Mixes! »o Pontlac and Lenox 7 6 5 a m&#13;
All trains daily except Sunday. •&#13;
No 44 connection at Pontiac for Detroit and&#13;
for the west on DA M B R&#13;
W. J. Blaak, Agent, Pinckney&#13;
&gt;A O 8THAM8HJP U*B9*&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor, Teledo&#13;
and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owosso, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City *nd&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan.&#13;
W. H. BXsTJURT,&#13;
G. P.A.Toledo&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
3 R » M T O &gt; A , Tawrwaevry 3 1 , 1 9 0 0 .&#13;
LT&#13;
Ar&#13;
LT&#13;
Ar&#13;
GOINO BAST&#13;
Urand Sapid**,• • • » • » • • • • • •&#13;
Lansing ...&gt;.&#13;
Howell&#13;
Sooth Lyon,&#13;
Salem ,&#13;
Plymouth..,&#13;
Detroit ,&#13;
a m&#13;
OOISG WEST&#13;
Detroit&#13;
Ply m o n t h . . . . ,&#13;
9al«m&#13;
!*o«»{li Lyon..,.&#13;
Howe)! .,&#13;
Laneing.....&#13;
Ionia....&#13;
Orand Bapida.&#13;
f 10&#13;
7 40&#13;
9 04&#13;
10 09&#13;
10 Sfl&#13;
10 46&#13;
11 00&#13;
11 Ml&#13;
a m&#13;
T5&amp;&#13;
92»&#13;
9 «&#13;
9 ' latsi&#13;
11 ] leiaw&gt;&#13;
p u t&#13;
p m&#13;
1&#13;
1&#13;
p m&#13;
5 SO&#13;
609&#13;
7.«T&#13;
92»&#13;
8 88&#13;
908&#13;
980&#13;
10 05&#13;
p m&#13;
SolToo&#13;
1*05&#13;
UM&#13;
1 45&#13;
28ft&#13;
804&#13;
S2fi&#13;
4 09&#13;
«081&#13;
S8S rr&#13;
4 48&#13;
«10&#13;
.8 708&#13;
740&#13;
841&#13;
10 08&#13;
10 41&#13;
F&amp;txKBiY, OKO. D B H A Y K N ,&#13;
Agent, Sooth Lyon. 0 . P. A., Oraad Rapidt.&#13;
a&#13;
•X60P tfYtlEtNACItCr&#13;
TRADC MARKS Dcaioits&#13;
COPVRtOHT* Ao&gt;&#13;
jy aswerwn&#13;
iflon Jsproo&#13;
lOtOl&amp;eop8&#13;
Motataken tfwie^Tfi^ j k ^ u S S s V&#13;
A bandeosBi&#13;
•aJattonof 1¾&#13;
4&#13;
T&#13;
"WWr.&#13;
, , • • • . , ' ••«. . / . • • • , * ' • • • ' ' , - ' - . •«' ••• . ; ' -, , , . ; . r - • :. " , - • ( ' • • » . : . . • ' , •• . . , : ± J / V - V . . • • • • • , • • ; . * - , • .,,, • « ' « , . - « y &lt; • . . - • ' • ' •- - . v ' • A - . ; : ' • » ' • • ' •;•••&lt;. \ . • , : •&#13;
wmw^m^u^u.^ mmmwmaifiwm anfswiXwKif*** .»'."»^*--&#13;
? » :&#13;
; • * • •&#13;
T&#13;
I&#13;
\??&gt;'*w.H*:&#13;
.'W'i&#13;
• # * .&#13;
.-.' 'J'' -A', :1¾ W f (to* ///J&#13;
"';*.'1. '"•;&gt;'r,li,',-^':,:'?.'"'U-&#13;
"'^•/?. ' r ' ) r * « r - - -T-1*&#13;
* • " * - T -&#13;
1,000,000 DEATHS&#13;
nOV CHOLERA DUBIUCI THE&#13;
PA8TYEAB.&#13;
ThaCKnu ot tkii Fatal Mm** are&#13;
Larking? Ererewher^u TbopMBis&#13;
of DoIHru Sated by&#13;
Thin Wonderful&#13;
DiaooTeif.&#13;
Hundreds of thousands of dollars has&#13;
been lost in the poultry biasness on account&#13;
of the devastation among thef flocks&#13;
caused by cholera, roup, gape and other&#13;
fajaj diseases... There hay* been many&#13;
remedies advanced, but none seem to be&#13;
so suocsasful ,as the American Poultry&#13;
Mixture. This will cure chickeens in the&#13;
last stage of cholera and roup, aud is excellent&#13;
for gapes. Do your fowls suffer&#13;
from violent diarrhea, dropping of the&#13;
wings, stupor or excessive thirst? These&#13;
are the first symptions of cholera. Cholera&#13;
is a germ desease and being infectious&#13;
spreads rapidly through the entire flock.&#13;
Take time by the fore lock; don't stop to&#13;
experiment with unreliable or untried&#13;
r e m e d y Use ^&#13;
the sanitary measures they recommend in&#13;
connection. Don'4 g4ve-4he fowls up.&#13;
TEMPERANCE.&#13;
The late Gen. Lawton said -a&#13;
short time before his death to an&#13;
interviewer at Manila: "I never&#13;
drank a drop of liquor."&#13;
The Decker (India) Hoop Co.&#13;
has increased the wages of its employes&#13;
25 cents per day, conditioned&#13;
on their refraining from drinking&#13;
liquor or visiting saloons.&#13;
On one day recently sixteen&#13;
Cortland (N. Y.)liquor sellers&#13;
were sentenced to heavy fines and&#13;
imprisonment in the county court.&#13;
This is one of the results of the&#13;
UHAWLIiA PARKER* CLUB.&#13;
Cholera is a terrible disease but this remmedy&#13;
cures it every time. . It is also guarenteed&#13;
for roup, which can be told by&#13;
hoarse breathing, swelled eyes, discharge&#13;
at the nostrels, resembling catarrah. Fifty&#13;
dollars is offered for any case the Mixture&#13;
will not cure. If some of your fowls&#13;
are diseased it will prevent the rest from&#13;
catching it. Try it. It is cheap, reliable,&#13;
and effective, a scientific preparation,&#13;
goes more than three times as far an any&#13;
other remedy; does more good than all&#13;
of them combined. It is used and endorsed&#13;
by the, most experienced and i various Woman's Crusades and&#13;
largest breeders of plain and fancy poui-[the State Civic league, which last&#13;
try in all parts of the world. The mana-j organization i s composed chiefly&#13;
£ ^ £ 2 2 2 / ^ 1 ¾ ¾ ^ ot clergyman, are all committed&#13;
to t h e movement.&#13;
A widow whose only s o n was&#13;
The rnadillalarmen' club met&#13;
at the youngs mens' hall Unadilla,&#13;
as the guests of Frank Binrie, on&#13;
Saturday last Although a very&#13;
cold day nearly one hundred were&#13;
present. There were several good&#13;
papers read by Mrs. 0. Woodworth,&#13;
Mrs. Gates and Otto Arnold.&#13;
The discussion following&#13;
each was very interesting and instructive,&#13;
especially the remarks&#13;
by F. M. Chapman and 0. M.&#13;
Wood, who were our guests.&#13;
The next meeting will be held&#13;
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C.&#13;
Woodworth.&#13;
COB. SEC.&#13;
•&#13;
EIGHTH GRADE EXAMINATION.&#13;
town, in which Dr. O. A. Houghton,&#13;
pastor cf the First Methodist&#13;
Episcopal church, has been a prominent&#13;
leader. Other convictions&#13;
are sure to follow.&#13;
The various temperance and&#13;
prohibition organizations in Maine&#13;
are preparing for the greatest war&#13;
on liquor selling that the state&#13;
has known since 1878. The Woman's&#13;
Christian Temperance&#13;
Union, the Good Templers, the&#13;
fund purchase money. If'your druggest&#13;
don't sell American Poultry Mixnare he's&#13;
behind the age. in that case send $l.t)0&#13;
fOr sample box to American Mfg. Cp.,&#13;
Terre Hsfote, Ind. 2&#13;
1/- '*;/, ^Mm7&#13;
M iF1&#13;
t,'.i&lt;a.'&#13;
MT1VE.&#13;
Ijur-beii is the erfcutefit known TKADSSLUJK.&#13;
lierve tonic and Mood purifier..&#13;
It creates solid flesh, muscle find STRENGTH,&#13;
.clears thu brain, makes the blood pure and rich,&#13;
and causes a general feeling of health, power&#13;
and renewed vitality, while the Kenerative organs&#13;
ere helped to regain their normal po'vere, and&#13;
the sufferer is quickly made oonscloufc of direct&#13;
benefit. One box will work wonders, six should&#13;
perfect a cure. * 60 cts. A BOX: 6 boxes. JS.fiO. f"ox&#13;
sale by drugeists everywhf-re, or mniled. sealed,&#13;
on receipt of price. Address PUS. HAKTON&#13;
AND BENSON Bar-lien Block, Cleveland, O&#13;
For sale by&#13;
• .' F. A. SIOLEB, Druggist&#13;
"Pmckney, - - HIcE&#13;
murdered by the canteen—and at&#13;
whose burial the editor officiated&#13;
—in sending her mite to help on&#13;
the fight against the army saloon,&#13;
asks: "Sow long must the sons; of&#13;
Christian mothers have the drink&#13;
craving fostered and perhaps&#13;
lowered down to a drunkards&#13;
grave by a canteen, sanctioned and&#13;
protected by the Christian president&#13;
of a Christian nation?''—&#13;
Werner's Dictionary of Synonyms &amp; Autonyms,&#13;
KTtriolosy and Familiar PHrases.&#13;
i ;»ftKiiiarV j ,&#13;
e\gn&#13;
•A-boektbatshonldbeinthevest&#13;
pocket of every person, because It&#13;
tells you the right word to use.&#13;
No Two Words i n the English&#13;
Languace Have Exactly the&#13;
Same Significance. To express&#13;
the precise meaning that one intends&#13;
to convey a dictionary of&#13;
Synonyms is needed to avoid repetition.&#13;
The strongest figure of&#13;
speech is antithesis, in this dictionary&#13;
the appended Antonvrrs&#13;
will, therefore, be found extremely&#13;
valuable. Contains many other&#13;
features such as Mythology,&#13;
Familiar Allusions and For-&#13;
Pfcrsses, Prof,&#13;
National Temperance Advocate.&#13;
A special from N e w York Bays:&#13;
I n t h e board of alderman to-day&#13;
an ordiance was passed making it a&#13;
misdemeanor to sell cigarettes to&#13;
persons under 18 years of age,&#13;
and was passed by a vote of 38 to&#13;
3. Alderman Wafer, of Brooklyn&#13;
spoke in favor of the_ordiance.&#13;
"Our children are driven almost&#13;
'dopey,' "-said the alderman, "and&#13;
instead of u s fathers bringing u p&#13;
boys to sturdy manhood, we are&#13;
bringing them u p fit subjects for&#13;
sanitariums and asylums.&#13;
The pupils1 Eighth Grade examination&#13;
wrH be-feeM-oft Saturday, March&#13;
3rd,, -1900, -at the following placga:&#13;
Gregory, Pinckney, Hamburg, Brighton,&#13;
Hartland, Howell, Oak Grove and&#13;
Fowlerville. It is hoped that every&#13;
teacher in the county will encourage&#13;
his or her eighth grade pupils to write&#13;
this examination. Even if a pupil&#13;
should fail, he will find where a weakness&#13;
is and will be led to remedy that&#13;
defect. JAMES H. WALLACE,&#13;
Co. Com. of Schools.&#13;
' Prof. 8mitb, of the Agricultural&#13;
col]^gf^,ba* iust (Completed the program&#13;
for tht fifth annual round-up&#13;
farmers' institute, which will be held&#13;
in Ann Arbor Feb. 27-28 and March&#13;
l-$r The array of prominent speaken,&#13;
the subjects to be discussed and&#13;
the prospects for a large attendance,&#13;
owing to the half-fare rate granted by&#13;
all railroads of the state, give promise&#13;
of waking this the best institute ever&#13;
held in the state.&#13;
Facts to Beaseaber.&#13;
The original and genuine Bed Pills&#13;
are Knill's Red Pills for wan people&#13;
at 25c box, the womon s remedy.&#13;
Don't pay 50 cents.&#13;
lou can work when they work,&#13;
never gripe or make yon sick, Knill's&#13;
White Liver Pills. Bowel Regulator.&#13;
Twenty-five doses, 25 cents.&#13;
Pleasant, safe and sure are KniU's&#13;
Black Diarrhoea Pills. Cures summer&#13;
complaints, dysentery and all pains of&#13;
the storanch and bowels. Only 25&#13;
cents box.&#13;
T * -&#13;
Do not forget the DISPATCH Book&#13;
Bindery when you want work in that&#13;
lin«. We bind everythingHrom a receipt&#13;
to a dictionary. Call and see&#13;
our work.&#13;
An Editor's Life Smv«d hj Cbamfcer-&#13;
Iain's Cough Remedy•&#13;
During the early part of October,&#13;
1896,1 contracted a bad cold which&#13;
settled on my lungs and was neglected&#13;
until I feared that consumption&#13;
had appeared in an incipient state. I&#13;
was constantly coughing and trying&#13;
to expel something which I 'tonld not.&#13;
I became alarmed and after giving&#13;
the local doctors a trial bought a hottie&#13;
of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy&#13;
and the result was immediate improvement,&#13;
and after I Lad used three&#13;
bottles my lungs were restored to&#13;
their healthy state.—B. 8. Edwards,&#13;
Publisher of The Review. Wyat, III.&#13;
For sale by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL. DETROIT&#13;
AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLAN,&#13;
• 2 T 0 S 9 . 6 0 ff.OO TO Sf'OO f&#13;
Sl*QLM MEAL*, OOO. UP TO DAT* OAMMB&#13;
TXT AtfTKD—SK V hiKAl,&#13;
eStyc s. teTmh,i s'T whoan Aderrtfpufl Klit«tTlee rb oFokor bgoeutntidn ign." a «nteca.t, cLleoathth ebri,n dln onceA. ddSreenwdu all orders to&#13;
THE WERNER COMPANY,&#13;
Viblitbm tad M*Bu!a«tur«rt, AXXOIT, OHIO&#13;
OKKiHX&#13;
AND HON*EST nevanqg ti repi*seuj&#13;
«s as Managers in this and elotc by couifc&#13;
.__ ties. Salery 1000 a y«a/ and I'xpencea,&#13;
S 8 B 2 ! &amp; - 1 M 5 ^ B ^ so leas. PbsJ.&#13;
lion permanent. 0 » references, at*&#13;
Wnk ha anj tovn. It it avial? offi,«&#13;
-work conducted at ton*. Reference. Etu&#13;
Sloee ealf^dressed *ua»#«d «m*op«. turn&#13;
Dnwnrm* ' *»*^Ajrv rhr*r H. OKTPAO&lt;».&#13;
lading and sent postpaid for $0.25. Full&#13;
r.gilt edfce, fO.40, postpaid. Order at&#13;
Send for oar large book catalogue, free.&#13;
Uncle Sani'i Wonderful Fighting Ship.&#13;
The most formidable fighting ship in&#13;
the world is Uncle Sam's now wttnite&#13;
wonder, the Kearsargc&#13;
The 'Kearsarge is not only the most&#13;
powerful battleship in the world; in&#13;
many respects she is unique. She is&#13;
368 feet long, which eclipses the height&#13;
ofaill but a few office building's. Her&#13;
eztreme beam is 72 feet 2 inches; freeboard&#13;
forward, 14 feet 3 inches; freeboard&#13;
aft, 12 feet 4 inches, and mean&#13;
draught, 23 feet 6 inches.&#13;
To a naval engineer these and other&#13;
measurements mean that the new ooat&#13;
has a disp aeenif nt of 11 &lt;&gt;t)0 tone, v hicih&#13;
is seven times as great as that of the&#13;
original Kearsarge, in memory of&#13;
wiicee brave victory the present ship&#13;
has been named. The oid ship s horsepower,&#13;
moreover, was less than a&#13;
twelfth of that of the new Kearsar^o.&#13;
But with all her beauty, stability an.!&#13;
force, the most interesting featuie of&#13;
the new battle-ship consists in her two&#13;
heavy gun turrets, one placad above&#13;
J the other and both operated by the&#13;
same machinery. . In the lower iurre:&#13;
are two 13-inch guns, while in the&#13;
cmaller turrets are two 8-inoh rifles.&#13;
Experts say that no shfp that ever&#13;
floated could withstand an aseult directed&#13;
from these two turrets working '&#13;
together. The idea is due to Admiral !&#13;
T&gt;ampson. but its practicability has&#13;
been hotly disputed by otihen officers&#13;
Its exact value can be determined oniy&#13;
by experiment.&#13;
Su«';i trials of the Kearearge as hav?&#13;
already been made have shown mat&#13;
\ j ; she can probably make more than the&#13;
:^-11^1 ^i:;te?n knots atn hoiir guaranteed by&#13;
her builders.&#13;
JHTTIOB.&#13;
We the undersigned, do bertbj&#13;
agree to refund the money on ft SO&#13;
cent bottle of Down's EHxir if it does&#13;
not core any cough, cold, wboopusf&#13;
cough, or threat trouble. We also&#13;
guarantee Down's Elixir to care con*&#13;
sumption, when used according to directions,&#13;
or money back. A fall dose&#13;
on going to bed and small 'doses daring&#13;
the day will care the matt severe,&#13;
cold, and stop the most distressing&#13;
cough.&#13;
P. \ . Sigler,&#13;
W. B. Darrow,&#13;
Knill's Blue Kidney Pill core backache,&#13;
etc. Only 25 cents box.&#13;
Pare, sweet stomachs and breaths&#13;
are made by taking Knill's Dyspepsia&#13;
Tablets. They will care indigestion,&#13;
correct all stomach troubles, destroys&#13;
all foul gases for 25c box. Be3t and&#13;
cheapest. Guarrantaed by your druggest.&#13;
Will Curlett, Dexter.&#13;
W. B. Darrow, Pinckney.&#13;
Business Locals.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
New Milch Cow. Inquire at this&#13;
office.&#13;
L O S T .&#13;
A Black Shawl, between O. B. Jackson's&#13;
and Pinckney. Finder please&#13;
leave at this office, or G. W. Clark's,&#13;
and receive reward.&#13;
WANTED!&#13;
'Reliable man tor Manager of Branch&#13;
Office I wish to open in this vicinity.&#13;
Good opening for an energetic, sober&#13;
man. , Kindly mention this paper&#13;
when writing.&#13;
14 A. T. MOB-BIS,'CINCINNATI, O.&#13;
Illustrated catologue 4 cts. postage.&#13;
LOST—A small locket, ^brilliant set&#13;
on front, inital C. on Dack, contains a&#13;
childs picture.- Finder return to this&#13;
office and receive reward.&#13;
Money to Loan.&#13;
Having accepted an agency for&#13;
loaning money, I am prepared to&#13;
make loans on Real Estate, at a low&#13;
rate of interest. Inquire at the Pinckney&#13;
Exchange Bank. tf&#13;
Ike finfktte.M Dispatch.&#13;
FDBUaaSO S V U T THQUDAY «00X19« ST&#13;
FRANK. L. ANDREWS&#13;
Editor and Proprietor.&#13;
Subscription Price $1 l a Advance.&#13;
Saterea at the Postoince at Piackaey, Mlcnlf an,&#13;
aa aecouU-ciaas matter.&#13;
Adrertlaing ratei made known on application.&#13;
Bnalneea Cards, $4.00 per / e a r .&#13;
Death and marriage uoticea pabiiahed free.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may tie paid&#13;
for,li deilred, by presenting the om:.e with tiea&gt;&#13;
ets of admission. In case tickets are not drought&#13;
to the office, regniar rates will be charged.&#13;
Ail matter in localnoticecoiamn irilibeoftnrt-&#13;
I at 5 cents per Line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
insertion, where no time i s specified, all notices&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. « ^ A i l c h a a g M&#13;
of advertisements MOST reach this otflce aa early&#13;
as TuasniT morning t o ins ore an insertion t h e&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOS PBIJVlIJVGf&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We hareallkiiiAl&#13;
and the latest dtylee of rype, etc., which enables&#13;
aa to execute all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, statements, Car i s , Auction Bills, e t c , l a&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices aa&#13;
o*v as good work can be aone.&#13;
«LL BILL* HAVABLS VIAit OF BVSRIf JCOSTTH.&#13;
^HEH^LAGE-^DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PasstDSNT . MM* ...M^. ilex. Hclntyre&#13;
THOBTEBS U. Li. Taoinpsdu, Alfred Plonks.&#13;
Daniel Klchards, »eo. Bowmin, Samuel&#13;
tiykes, P. l&gt;. Johnson.&#13;
.B. ILTeeple C L I BK; . . . ir*« - »**«*ee&gt; &lt;&#13;
TasA.8UB*R MM — «...'• W. E. Mnrphy&#13;
A H S S S S O B . . . . MMM.. . . « . W, A. Carr&#13;
S T B I S T COMMISSIOKCU J. Monks.&#13;
MXBHAHL MM A. S, Brown.&#13;
HsALTHOrricBB.. or. U. P.Sigle*&#13;
ATfb&amp;NaY MM MM ...MM. ....MM W. A. Carr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
VTErHODlST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
I l l Kev. Chas. Sim,&gt;aoa, pastor. Ser?lcei e?ery&#13;
Sunday morning nt 10:30, and every Sunday&#13;
eveoing at 7:0u ©''clock. PrayerTneetinijThurad&#13;
»y eveolntfS. Suaday dcaool nt close of morning&#13;
service. LSAU SXOLBB, Supt.&#13;
ONUttEQAriONAL CHLTUCH&#13;
tor.&#13;
Sunday raorninj at 10:30 and every Sunday&#13;
\J ttev. C. \V. Kice pastor. Service every&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'cljci. Prayer meeting Thore&#13;
day evenings, b u n l i / sc^ioulat close of morn-&#13;
Init service. B. Li. i'acple , Snot. Boss rtead, Seo&#13;
ST. MAKY:'S'JA'mOL.lC CHURCH.&#13;
Kevv M. J. Commariard, ysator. Services&#13;
every Sunday. - Low mass at 7:30o'clock&#13;
higli mass with sermou at 9:-io *. m. Catechism&#13;
at 3:00 p. m., vespers ana benediction at 7:du p. m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. 0. H. Society of this place, meets every&#13;
third S.irvUv tutoe b'r. Vlitia^* Hill.&#13;
Johd rauui&gt;/aal ili'ij lidlly, 0&gt;J it/ Djlegites&#13;
EPWORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Snndajr&#13;
eveoini; at 6:00 oclock la the \L. E. Church. A&#13;
cordial invitatlua ta extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. Mrs. Stella Oraham Pre?.&#13;
E ! O S \ . V m SOJISrVi-M^et.&#13;
evdaiu&lt; at fr.\&gt;. freiiiiat,&#13;
Miss £tU Carpenter; •secretary, ilrs. C. &gt;V. Kice. GHRHTI\S&#13;
ias?-i every Suudiy evdain&lt; fr.U.&#13;
THE W. Q. T. U. raeet3 tha flrat Prlday of each&#13;
month at i'.'ij p. in. at tne ho ne of Dr. H. F.&#13;
STssA. TEof JIIOHIOAS_,_ C_o unty of Livingston&#13;
Probate Court for Bald .county, estate of&#13;
GKOKGK \V. BROWN deceased.&#13;
The undersigned having been appointed, by the&#13;
Judge of Probate of said county, coruml!&gt;8lonera&#13;
on claims In the matt r of said estate, aDd s i x T . , , . ,&#13;
.. - ., a.w J * n v . ^ Sieler. Everyone interested in te nperanee i s&#13;
monthe from the 6th day of Feb. A. D. 1900, hav j e q u a l l y Invited. Mrs. Leal Sigler, eras; Aire,&#13;
ing been allowed by said Judge of Probate""fo all 'Ktta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
persons holding claims against said estate in , ;&#13;
which to present their clainrs to us for exami- &lt; T a e c - T - A - ^ ^ B l ^0 ^8 4 ^ of this pUce, meet&#13;
nation and adinstmanf j X evety third Saturaay evening In the Fr. Matnauon&#13;
ana adjustment, l h e w H 4 l l J o a Q D o n 9 a u e ? p resident.&#13;
Notice is hereby given that we will meet on . .&#13;
Monday, the seventh day of May, A. D., 1900, I f NIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
1a9n0d0 ,o na tTeunees doa'yc,l othcke sepv.e nmth. doaf ye oafc hA udgauyst,, aAt .t Dhe., \ ^?l!SrJx^ff t l m ^ l i ^ ^ ? ^&#13;
late residence in the township of Putnam in said&#13;
county, to-meeive and examine such claims.&#13;
Dated: Howell, iiich., Feb. 6, A. 1). 1900.&#13;
CHABLKS W. BROWS, ) Couimisaionera&#13;
10 Gusr HALL, J , on Ciaima.&#13;
LAST&#13;
PERFECT FOAtVK* .&#13;
SCALES&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CUAS. CiuPBBtL, Sir Knight Commander&#13;
Livingston Lod-ie, Xo.7«, ? 4 A. M. Kegalar&#13;
Comoiunicaiion Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. Alexander Aiuiutyre, W. tf.&#13;
Coi i Plated ! All Steel Levers,&#13;
Combination Beam.&#13;
Catalogue Free.&#13;
Address, JONES or BINGHAMTON, *&#13;
BINQHAMTON, N. V&gt;&#13;
— „ — , - • 9&#13;
A $4.00 BOOK FOR 75cts.&#13;
The Fltrmers' Encyclopedia.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTEKX STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following tue regular F .&#13;
AA.M. meetiug, Mas. MABY it BAD, W. !€.&#13;
f AD1ES OF THE MACCABEKS. Meet every 1st&#13;
Jjj and 3rd Saturday of eachiuonth at J:;io p m. a t&#13;
K7o. T. M. hall. VUlUa^ sister* jordialty&#13;
vued. LILA CoxiWAr Lady Com. in-&#13;
*&#13;
Tit imp* t o ll«»men&gt;ber.&#13;
N e v e forger that women ai"^ ni:d'&#13;
out o.' n'rls and th:K men a:e via -c • u&#13;
of b : ; s f'at f ycu are .-&gt; wo.ih'e••?•&#13;
gi;l jv.u will b« a wurtnie*3 woinafi,&#13;
anl if yr \ a « a wOiriit^- hoy you wil&#13;
he a wcri;!less man; and ;ht b-v. &lt;ili:-&#13;
catC'cV r* ;. -lid '«')•;: —i ^nee did ' u&#13;
know "A. n C;" 'hat \l\ the ll.i.'gs&#13;
whic' &gt;-:)•• ar- Ka»- n1; frad t b?&#13;
etrrcd by thei:n that the \ciTa. s&#13;
spent in ..j!K!i,:. &lt; i- hap-".- &gt;•»..! .-.?&#13;
fO:nr w.y ii-l »o ycj • own h.ipp.'•: !«s.&#13;
tibat ;iU4i'e ot .1.6^^211.03^..011-^:..0.11).^1-.-&#13;
ncc&lt; U wrri.h virMiy times more il&gt;an n.&#13;
life o"' plea^me.&#13;
HowltWas.&#13;
o . . 1 h«*r yt&gt;u k » t m i«t of money&#13;
on Wall street while sou vera druuK&#13;
•NiCiHTS OF- TUB LOYAL GUABD&#13;
j. rae*t every second Wednesday&#13;
eveninti of every month in the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7::10 o'clock. AU visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
F. G. JACKSON, Capt. (Jen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
t a f T ^ y f y t f ! ; M. F. SIGLER M. D- C. I, SIQIER M, O.&#13;
f R S A i f S . ' „t , PKS- S I G L £ R &amp; SIGLER, stockrattiar. to- phT8lcl*l,}aa(l!'^r&lt;»l&gt;n9' AH calls promptl&#13;
braces articles on attended today or night. Odloe on Malnstr&#13;
the bone, the colt, riuokoey, Micb.&#13;
horse habits, dis- -&#13;
eates of the noree, • ^ - ^ - ^ - ^ » - » - » .&#13;
the fcnn, gnwsea, i DR A B G R F F N&#13;
fraitcuHureldaJr^ UIK' A " D * wlMLCW.&#13;
££&amp;$*&#13;
Tom I w^ft drtra*. b«f ^'M^J^lSSipfli^SLmSSSEi&#13;
I bought took a drop too m&#13;
ire. dairying.&#13;
oookery.hoalih,&#13;
cattle, sheep.swlhe,&#13;
poultry, bo^s, the&#13;
dog, toilet, social&#13;
life, etOM etc Ono&#13;
of the most com*&#13;
plete Encyclopedias&#13;
in existence.&#13;
A huje book, 8x5^&#13;
x 1¾ Inches. «86&#13;
pages, folly niusirated,&#13;
bound in&#13;
green oloth bind-&#13;
. Ing. and equal to&#13;
^ . . ctfie?1&gt;ooEsec«tJrtr&#13;
tbis book send ns oat special&#13;
and S0.20 extra iter postage and&#13;
Uinsnoti&#13;
DENTIST-Eyery Friday; and on Thursday&#13;
when having appointments. Office over&#13;
SUer's Drue Store.&#13;
PATENTS GUARANTEED Our fee returned if we fail. Any one eeadin*&#13;
sketch and description of any invention will&#13;
promptly receive oar opinion free concerns**&#13;
the patentability of same, •' Bow to OMatei&#13;
Patent^'- sent upon request. Patents seoatwl&#13;
through us advertised for sale at our expense!&#13;
Patents taken out through oa-neeive&#13;
r^.tnTunPATsarr&#13;
Sh. yoyr nwnayjflftnd tor our special illustrated catafcawe,&#13;
qt&gt;c«afthefewestpfleeson b o o k s , I U B&#13;
^ &lt; » » » T a i o a n x &gt; n e y . Address all ordeis to&#13;
SapMribo for t h o D » i * f c - - t h T t * t ^ T t e S r t ^ f t R COMPANY, •&#13;
DQOntbt for 160, UatU MaT0«yl. • trtlstiss aaawsaeSimmi. AAkkrroonn,. OOhbJit v&#13;
insWstawCea^aaytetaeeseaMysslhMil-Bdaea ''&#13;
**&#13;
cJoLns^uSlteUd^^ Wws1tt^uf ayeMturlteor s aonldrc uInlavteesit eit,&#13;
neMee* wtthoot charge.&#13;
- *.- * leturen&#13;
Send for samgiteopy %^%. #&amp;**&#13;
VICTO* 4 . KVAMt 4 OOb -&#13;
«*«Hin«TOa%s).0a&#13;
:. ...i*&gt;'&#13;
•'A1. •••.;. ur '•*j&#13;
, r&#13;
V&#13;
fv&#13;
;• '.','&#13;
, . V&#13;
' )k&#13;
•*MS&#13;
^&#13;
•i'"4r&#13;
l&#13;
• » . • &lt; «&#13;
:+-1&#13;
« u&#13;
4*&#13;
'- \&#13;
4.&#13;
3E&amp;£z&amp;&amp;nmm&#13;
T^^^W^^^^^^^^^^WPJff* m&#13;
' , . ! • • * )&#13;
j'ii; .MM ; * 9 , « "&#13;
-*T-V&#13;
^ • — ' ^ ^ ^ ^ - i j i i r ' i " -" • . , ' ""I""" , , ""&#13;
•iVJ®*1:*,&#13;
.1^:1-V:'•••'•'&#13;
kV*' - ' /&#13;
J : ^ ;&#13;
? • ; « &gt; . " ' • • • : • . .&#13;
5'JV.&#13;
* &gt; / : • •&#13;
••«?&#13;
Lai '•.•&#13;
ik&#13;
t&#13;
/&#13;
••-&gt;•&gt;- .;.*-i,-*l*-f-&#13;
- T M M&#13;
- V * - * — - " *&#13;
m m, i ••&#13;
FOANK L. ANDKSWS, Publisher*&#13;
PINCKNEY, • * •~ • MJCBIGA»,&#13;
a s&#13;
Unrequited love must be a species of&#13;
fce^rt iailu/e. ,, ., ..&#13;
i i 1 1 '» • "&#13;
Suppression of honest Investigation&#13;
means retrogression.&#13;
The skeleton In a woman's closet is&#13;
usually some other female.&#13;
The wife of a policeman should not&#13;
expect him to give up his club.&#13;
Nations, like individuals, derive their&#13;
vigor from noble sentiments only.&#13;
By wearing gloves you can avoid&#13;
•bowing your hand in a poker game.&#13;
,. Women who are confirmed man-haters,&#13;
had to begin on some particular&#13;
man.&#13;
Many an heiress has lost her fortune&#13;
In an unfortunate matrimonial speculation.&#13;
A ladies* tailor has a hard row to&#13;
fcoe. He has to re-form so many of his&#13;
customers.&#13;
Great as heaven and earth are, men&#13;
etill find things in them with which to&#13;
be satisfied.&#13;
The woman who doesn't care for&#13;
dress—well, it's either a mistake or a&#13;
misstatement.&#13;
The privilege of being at home everywhere&#13;
belongs only to kings, to girls&#13;
end to thieves, ._&#13;
Flying-machine inventors may be&#13;
strictly temperate, but they often take&#13;
a drop too much.&#13;
Says an Irishman: "It's a great comfort&#13;
to be alone—especially when your&#13;
sweetheart is with you."&#13;
The best servants of his satanical&#13;
majesty are those who attend church&#13;
for the purpose of making a show.&#13;
It is the mind that makes the body&#13;
rich; and as the sun breaks through&#13;
the darkest clouds, so honor peereth In&#13;
the meanest habit.&#13;
Y o u n e .TfiSRft J f l m p g h a g t a l r o n i i p f n&#13;
•himself a wffe. Now he may be able&#13;
to get some practical points on the art&#13;
cf holding up trains without bumping&#13;
into the law.&#13;
Luxurious repose is neyer true physical&#13;
rest To enjoy that blessing to its&#13;
fullest extent, freedom, from restraint&#13;
must be allowed every part of the&#13;
body. A firm Burface is required—one&#13;
that will tend to keep the body&#13;
stretched out at full length, that the&#13;
lungs and heart may. feel no sense of&#13;
restriction by compression of the chest&#13;
•walls, and that the blood may have&#13;
uninterrupted course ,in every direction.&#13;
;&gt;-&lt;&#13;
Lord Kimberley, it appears, grants&#13;
pensions of six and seven shillings a&#13;
week to his aged servants. One of°&#13;
these ancients conceived the bright&#13;
Idea thatf in addition to the pension&#13;
from his lordshop, he was entitled to&#13;
out-relief from the guardians. Accordingly,&#13;
he made an application, which&#13;
was refused on the ground that he was&#13;
already in receipt of a sufficient pension.&#13;
The old man went straight to&#13;
Lord Kimberley and asked if that was&#13;
fair. On being assured that it was,&#13;
he at once offered to resign his pension&#13;
and go into the workhouse, "For," he&#13;
declared, "I won't see your lordship&#13;
done over this."&#13;
A short life need not be at all one&#13;
of but small influence. A short story&#13;
or sermon has frequently more effect&#13;
than the more lengthy. It is only,&#13;
speaking from a human standpoint to&#13;
say tLat a life is prematurely dosed&#13;
•which covers but a portion of theTtime&#13;
alloted by the Psalmist. Christ's, public&#13;
mlnjstry occupied but three short&#13;
years, yet at their close he declared&#13;
finished that stupendous work, the redemption&#13;
of the world. Great achievements&#13;
are permitted a few, but opportunities&#13;
of influence are imposed upon&#13;
all, for we are living epistles known&#13;
end read of all men, and our living&#13;
preaches more eloquently than our&#13;
words.&#13;
Cushman of Wisconsin 13 put down&#13;
in the Congressional Directory as a&#13;
congressman-at-Iarge, his state being&#13;
without definite congressional districts.&#13;
This reminds him of a story&#13;
which is quoted in the Washington&#13;
Post. He was, one©- approaching a&#13;
town, where ho was billed to make a&#13;
speech, and stopped at a,house on the&#13;
outskirts to get a drink of .water. He&#13;
met the farmer's wife at the well.&#13;
^"What is the- political sentiment&#13;
around here?" asked Cashman. "I&#13;
du*no," said toe woman; "I, don't go&#13;
t o political meetings. They say there&#13;
fa a congressman at large, and I think&#13;
t h e safest thing i o r me to do is to stay at home." *"*&#13;
TALMAGE'S SERMON.&#13;
T H E SUBJECT,&#13;
"And They Brln* C n * Him Oae Tliat&#13;
Was Deaf* — Mark TII: 3 8 — C h r U f .&#13;
Work aa a Heater—A l « M a 4 for All&#13;
Men.&#13;
when, the crepe bangs unoa. the fcnob&#13;
and the hearse comes to carry away&#13;
the ftiled; casK^t .Out In/olden timee\&#13;
•MAKING THE' DCAfr 'WEAR" 15 [**' *a smaller country villages today,&#13;
everyone knew everybody else. Here&#13;
was a lad- born deaf. BveVyone -knew&#13;
his relatives and knew him, and k£ew&#13;
he had never heard a sound. He had&#13;
the sullen, vicious, self-willed, sinful&#13;
look of the deaf mutes of old. Perhaps&#13;
in one of his fits of $vil temper&#13;
he picked up a club, and as a maniac&#13;
struck his mother over the head and&#13;
left her bleeding upon the floor, caring&#13;
not even though she was a corpse.&#13;
Wonderful Medlolne Man.&#13;
i" 'By the way,' some one says, 'have&#13;
you heard of Jesus, the wonderful medicine&#13;
man, whom some call a phophet?&#13;
They say he dan cure sickness by just&#13;
looking at an invalid. He is a young&#13;
Natarene, only 30 years of age. You&#13;
know my wife's cousin. Somo few&#13;
months ago he was invited to a wedding&#13;
in the little village of Cana, near&#13;
GaJlilee. And this Jesus came to the&#13;
marriage, and the wine gave out, and&#13;
he bedded over some waterpots and the&#13;
water turned into wine. My cousin said&#13;
it was so; you need not laugh. I believe&#13;
him.'&#13;
" 'Yes,' answered another, XJbeard.&#13;
+h*t-hre^restnrgcTeT~7aT^^&#13;
and that an old woman.'who''had a&#13;
chronic sickness of twelve years, just&#13;
touched his garment and was healed.'&#13;
" 'Yes,' answered another, 'I not only&#13;
heard that he opened the eyes of one&#13;
born blind, but I even heard he cured&#13;
a dumb man possessed with a devil,'&#13;
and the people marveled, saying: 4lt&#13;
was never so seen in Israel.' -•&#13;
"Just then another neighbor comes&#13;
in and says that Jesus, this same Jesus,&#13;
this miraculous Jesus, is only a short&#13;
distance away over the hills of Decapolis.&#13;
'Come,' they say, with one accord,&#13;
'let us take him to Christ. He&#13;
can cure if any one can.' And they&#13;
bring unto him one that was deaf because&#13;
the affliction was incurable.&#13;
"Lesson the second: They brought&#13;
unto Jesus one who was not only deaf,&#13;
but dumb. The Bible says he 'had an&#13;
impediment in his speech.' No one part&#13;
of the physical body can be entirely divorced&#13;
from the other parts. As Paul&#13;
said: 'The body is one that hath many&#13;
members, and all of the members of&#13;
that one body being many, are one&#13;
body.'&#13;
"We find that these different members&#13;
act and react upon each other.&#13;
The hand protects the eye. The eye&#13;
warns the foot. The foat is the messenger&#13;
boy for&lt; the brain. The veins&#13;
are the canals carrying to the farthest&#13;
extremet'ies the daily supplies of food,&#13;
tibrim for the muscles, albumen for the&#13;
blood, lime for the bones/ phorfphates&#13;
"Six thousand years ago Adam and&#13;
Eve were driven out of the ^garden,. 0$&#13;
Eden. But in the latter part of this&#13;
sixth millennium the kindergartens,&#13;
academies, colleges, universities, seminaries,&#13;
lyceums, legislatures, political&#13;
colleges, lawyers, doctors, ministers,&#13;
daily newspapers, weeklies, and&#13;
monthly magazines have been working&#13;
side by side to change the sands of&#13;
ignorance into the flora of knowledge,&#13;
to lift the depressed valleys to "the&#13;
heights of the hills, and to deluge&#13;
earth's dry places with the water of&#13;
life.r Once the pulpit was the great&#13;
center, the Intellectual as well as the&#13;
spiritual educator of the community.&#13;
The clergyman, like the pope of Rome,&#13;
could'speak ex-cathedra. The orator&#13;
always knew as much as, if not a great&#13;
deal more than, the auditor. .NflgjEF&#13;
intellectual audiences think for themselves.&#13;
The churches and the public&#13;
halls are filled with juries ready to&#13;
weigh evidences. The people have not&#13;
only ojie, but many, Rosetta stones.&#13;
The dead languages are no longer dead.&#13;
Hearers °as well as speakers can soon&#13;
separate the brass from the gold, the&#13;
tares from the wheat, the false from&#13;
the true, man's thoughts from God's&#13;
thoughts. Once the king was not only&#13;
the ruler, but the judge and the executioner.&#13;
Two women claimed a certain&#13;
baby. Solomon, in his wisdom;&#13;
said, 'Bring me a sword. Divide the&#13;
living child in two, and give half to&#13;
the one and half to the other.* When&#13;
the true mother fell down and begged&#13;
that her child'•be given to the enemy&#13;
rather than be destroyed. Solomon&#13;
said, to the weeping suppliant, 'Give&#13;
her the living child, and in no wise&#13;
slay it; s^he is the mother.'&#13;
One or ChrWt's Cares.&#13;
"Today we are going to study one of&#13;
Christ's most wonderful cures: The&#13;
unstopping of a deaf mute's ears. It is&#13;
the more remarkable because St. Mark&#13;
is the only divine biographer who&#13;
resords the miracle. In the first place,&#13;
'they bring unto him one that is deaf,'&#13;
because the affliction was considered&#13;
incurable. Even unto this day we&#13;
know but very.-little about the human&#13;
ear. The eye, the foot, the hand, the&#13;
stomach, the liver, the heart have been&#13;
explored and are, understood by the f fo&gt;* t h e nerves, moisture for the glands&#13;
dissector's-knife. But the ear, with&#13;
its tympanum, its bones, its two vestibules,&#13;
or storm doors, for the anatomist&#13;
must pass through the outer and middle&#13;
ear before he can enter the holy&#13;
of holfes of Bound; the ear, able to&#13;
catch a loved one's whisperings, and&#13;
yet not be stunned at the thunderclap&#13;
of a tornado, has never been fully mastered.&#13;
The drum has side holes to let&#13;
the air in and out, that the drumhead&#13;
may vibrate and'cause sound. We find&#13;
in the ear there is a long tube connecting&#13;
with the throat, and on the top of&#13;
this tube there is a thin membrane or&#13;
skin which moves up and down as. the&#13;
waves o^sound strike it. And catarrhal&#13;
troubles are dangerous because they&#13;
threaten the stoppage of this tube.&#13;
Sometimes deafness Is caused by cerebm-&#13;
spinal .meningitis.- The nerve&#13;
which runs from the base of the brain&#13;
to the ear becomes paralized. Somct:&#13;
mes_deafness is caused b y the outer&#13;
nerves of tlie ear being destroyed by&#13;
that most dreaded of all infantile diseases&#13;
called scarlet fever, a more destructive'&#13;
.enemy to the nursery than&#13;
1'eath, because when it is driven away&#13;
from the cradle, in mad rage this disease&#13;
generally strikes a paralyzing&#13;
blow which leaves its victim helpless&#13;
and worse than dead. Sometimes the&#13;
?ause is.inexplicable. A man's ear may&#13;
'je perfectly formed, yet the mind is no&#13;
more able to differentiate sound that&#13;
one afflicted with color blindness is&#13;
lble to distinguish between red, white,&#13;
yellow, blue, purple, or-gfeen. What-&#13;
3ver may be the cause of deafness,&#13;
when a child Is once born deaf, he is&#13;
deaf to the grave. No power of surgery&#13;
or medicament has ever been&#13;
able to cure the affliction.&#13;
Figures That Prore Factg.&#13;
"To prove this is true, of the 35,000&#13;
leaf mutes ,in the United States, and&#13;
29,512 deaf mutes in Prance, -end the&#13;
24,485 deaf in Germany, and the 2,000&#13;
-leaf in Denmark, and the 4,778 in Sardinia,&#13;
and 4,000 deaf mutes In Canada,&#13;
and the 10,000,000 deaf mutes in this&#13;
world at the present time—for Joseph&#13;
A. Selss, in his book called 'The Children&#13;
of Silence,' declares there is one&#13;
deaf mute-to ever 1,400 of the human&#13;
race—not one of the deaf mutes has&#13;
ever heard one sound if born without&#13;
the power of hearing. Now, you must&#13;
realize the condition i s which Jesus&#13;
ChriaHived was entirely different from&#13;
that of the present day. In this age&#13;
of factories and smoke and beehives&#13;
of swarming populations a city it a&#13;
place where no one knows his neigh-,&#13;
bor. The only interest most of us take&#13;
In the man who lives next door is&#13;
And all over the surface of the body&#13;
the pores of the skin as scavengers are&#13;
at work tossing off the refuse night&#13;
and day, as well as day and night.&#13;
While the nerves are the harpstrings&#13;
upon which nature thumbs the harmonies&#13;
of life.&#13;
No Organ Independent.&#13;
"But in Christ's time no one part of&#13;
the body was more dependent on another&#13;
part than the organ of, speech&#13;
was upon the organs of the ear. That&#13;
is the reason we quoted only the first&#13;
nine words of the verse for a text.&#13;
There have been cases on record where&#13;
persons have been dumb and not deaf.&#13;
-But these are very rare. Ninety-nine&#13;
times out of a hundred, when a man is&#13;
a deaf mute, his vocal organs are all&#13;
rlsht, but undeveloped. The deaf and&#13;
dumb are unable to speak merely be-'&#13;
cause the ear cannot teach the voice&#13;
how to act. There are today 375 different&#13;
deaf mute schools, with 2,197&#13;
teachers and 25,797 pupils.&#13;
"By the power of touch, by placing&#13;
the finger under the throat of the&#13;
teacher and practicing the vowels and&#13;
consonants, even those who were born&#13;
deaf mutes are now taught to speak.&#13;
And through the same wonderful system,&#13;
not only the deaf mutes, but in&#13;
some instances those who have had&#13;
two of their five senses gone are not&#13;
only deaf and dumb, but also bMnd,&#13;
have had the spark of Intelligence&#13;
kindled in their darkened brain.&#13;
t&#13;
" 'Walled in by deafness, dumbness,&#13;
—blindness all&#13;
Can life exist beneath that dreadful&#13;
pall?&#13;
It does, life, love,are there; the living&#13;
soul&#13;
Beats hot against the bar3 that hold&#13;
it in&#13;
Striving among the best to reach the&#13;
goal,&#13;
And through Christ's death immortal&#13;
life to win/&#13;
"So when Jesus placedi'the two fingers&#13;
as two syringes against the two&#13;
broken ear drums and said, 'Ephphatha'—&#13;
that is—'Be opened,' he loosed&#13;
the tongue that had an impediment at&#13;
the same time. The best way to develop&#13;
the tongue is to develop the ear.&#13;
No man can speak right unless he first&#13;
learns to hear right. Jphn James&#13;
Audubon, with .gun and pencil, disappeared&#13;
Into the American forest's. He&#13;
lived among the birds until the birds&#13;
adopted him Into 1,000 different families.&#13;
They talked to him; he listened.&#13;
After awhile the naturalist's ear became&#13;
to keen he knew their songs of&#13;
joy, their cries of sorrow and their&#13;
love-makings. He stood at their eradies&#13;
and dug their graves. For y e a n&#13;
and rears thua ho practiced eelta&amp;e-'&#13;
rifice and worked and studied. Do you&#13;
wonder that John James Audubon's&#13;
tongue was able to talk about his&#13;
feathered friends so interestingly that&#13;
grown people stopped to listen and the&#13;
little children begged to look at bts&#13;
pfetty pictures?&#13;
"This feeling- was exhibited, in the&#13;
ninth chapter of John, when the dist&#13;
elplet asked him in reference to one&#13;
born blind, saying, 'Master, who did&#13;
sin, this man or his parents, t h a t he&#13;
was born blind?' .Jesus answered:&#13;
'Neither hath this man sinned or ftls&#13;
parents, but that the work of God&#13;
might be made manifest in him.'&#13;
Effect* of Heredity*&#13;
"In fifty-nine cases of ihaafnes3 reported&#13;
by the Illinois institution, in&#13;
1873, the parents of forty-two were&#13;
first-cousins; qf nine, second cousins,&#13;
of five, third cousins, and of two fourth&#13;
cousins, and of one an uncle and a&#13;
niece. And Dr. David Buxton writes:&#13;
'I knew the mother of three mute children&#13;
who was the daughter of a deaf&#13;
mute, and the grandfather, though his&#13;
own children heard perfectly, was one&#13;
of the eight deaf mute3 in a family of&#13;
sixteen. If a deaf person marries one&#13;
who hears, the changes, of their&#13;
TiavTng a deaf-mute child are throofourths&#13;
of 1 per eent.'&#13;
"In the next place, for these unfortunates&#13;
we should build the be3t&#13;
schools and send them the best teachers.&#13;
Tbat is the great trouble with&#13;
work, the bright Christian teachers&#13;
will not devote their time to these educational&#13;
opportunities. The class is&#13;
naturally small, the classroom v «ry&#13;
depressing, and the remuneration not&#13;
enticing.&#13;
"Most Important of all, we should&#13;
surround them with Christian love.&#13;
The matron of a deaf and dumb school&#13;
told me the deaf mutes were happy as&#13;
long as they were inside the four walls&#13;
of the school, but the children in the&#13;
street would tease and tantalize them.&#13;
As we help the helpless, God will care&#13;
for us.&#13;
"There is la beautiful story told that&#13;
one day a clergyman was visiting a&#13;
deaf and dumb school, and the teacher,&#13;
having sent the pupils to the blackboard,&#13;
the visiting clergyman asked a&#13;
young bpy there three questions. First,&#13;
"Deeds Are Better&#13;
Than Words, 1 1 What does Hoofs Sar$a~&#13;
partita d*} The answer&#13;
comes fall-throatedffrom *•&#13;
gigantic chorus of healthy&#13;
men snd fuppy &lt;oxmten. "Ii doe,* just&#13;
v&gt;h*t U cUims to do/'' U purifies th§.&#13;
blood AS nothing else cut. Thev numb»&#13;
of those &lt;&amp;ho Jtnu&amp;tt thus isjtjpon Andtheir&#13;
sentiment is umnimous.&#13;
fcidn«y Trouble -"wWp Uft me&#13;
With severe ptins in my b&amp;ck And kid"&#13;
neys. Could not KusdM vudhout support.&#13;
J beffAn ttktng Hood's Sarsap&amp;rillA And&#13;
WAS soon relieved* Am also cured of&#13;
c&amp;txrrh And indigestion." W. A. I&amp;edf,&#13;
17 Mowry Avenue, Exst Providence, R. L&#13;
S&amp;ccfoSt&#13;
Hood'a Fills care liver Ills; the nop-trriteHng and&#13;
ouly CHthaftlc to tak* with Hwxl'a SHI euparlUi^&#13;
T O M E E T STEAMSHIPS.&#13;
'Who made the world?' Immediately&#13;
the deaf-mute child wrote, 'In the beginning&#13;
God created the heaven3 and&#13;
the earth.' Question the second: 'Why&#13;
did Jesus Christ come into the world?'&#13;
With a smile the lad again wrote,&#13;
'This is a faithful saying, and worthy&#13;
of all acceptation, that Jesus Christ"&#13;
came into the world to save sinners.'&#13;
The clergyman hesitated for a moment,&#13;
and then asked: 'Why were you borri&#13;
deaf and dumb, while I can hear and&#13;
speak?'&#13;
"A tear started, yet the lad hesitated&#13;
not, but wrote, 'Even so, Father, for&#13;
so it seemed good in thy sight.'&#13;
"In that last great day may our sinful&#13;
ears hear the words 'Well d.one.'&#13;
For then the dumb shall speak and the&#13;
silent lips' sing for joy."&#13;
Legend of the Topaz.&#13;
The topaz is called the stone of&#13;
gratitude, and the old Roman books&#13;
record a suggestive legend. The blind&#13;
Emperor-Theodosjus used to hang aL&#13;
brazen gong before his palace gates&#13;
and ait beside it on certain days hearing&#13;
and putting to rights the grievances&#13;
of any of his subjects. Those&#13;
who wished for his advice and help&#13;
had but to sound the gong, and im--&#13;
mediately admission into the presence&#13;
of Caesar was obtained. One day a&#13;
great snake crept up to the gate and&#13;
struck the brazen gong with Its coils,&#13;
and Theodosius gave orders that no&#13;
one should molest the creature and&#13;
bade hereto tell him her wish. The&#13;
snake bent her crest lowly in homage&#13;
and straightway told the following&#13;
tale: Her nest was at the base of&#13;
the gateway tower, and while she Jiad.&#13;
gone to find food for her young brood&#13;
a strange beast covered with sharp'&#13;
needles had invaded her home, killed&#13;
.the nestlings and now held possession&#13;
of the little dwelling. Would Caesar&#13;
grant her justice? The Emperor gave^&#13;
orders Tor the porcupine to be slain&#13;
and the mother to bo restored to her&#13;
desolate nest. Night fell and the&#13;
sleeping world had forgotten the Emperor's&#13;
kindly deed, but with the early&#13;
dawn a great serpent glided into the&#13;
palace, up the step3 into the royalchamber&#13;
and laid upon each of the&#13;
Emperor's closed eyes a gleaming&#13;
topaz. When Emporor Theodosius&#13;
awoke he found he was no longer&#13;
blind, for the mother snake had paid&#13;
her debt of gratitude.&#13;
A New Service by the New York Central&#13;
Railroad.&#13;
George H. Daniel3, general passenger&#13;
agent of the New York Central and&#13;
Hudson River Railroad, has added a&#13;
steamship bureau to the equipment of&#13;
the passenger service of the road. He&#13;
has engaged Captain Louis Ingwersen&#13;
and F. A. G. Schultze to superintend&#13;
the bureau, and one of their duties will&#13;
be to meet all incoming trans-Atlantie&#13;
and the principal coastwise steamships&#13;
to assist passengers who wish to leave&#13;
the city via the Vanderbllt system.&#13;
Capt. Ingwersen will have charge of&#13;
the American, Cunard, White Star, Atlantic&#13;
Transport, Wilson, Anchor and&#13;
Allan-State lines, and Capt. Schultze&#13;
has been ass gned to the North-German&#13;
Lloyd, Hamburg-American, French,&#13;
Rotterdam, Red Star and Thingvalla&#13;
lines.&#13;
They will meet all incoming steamships,&#13;
and will be prepared to furnish&#13;
railway tickets, parlor and sleeping car&#13;
accommodations and to assist passengers&#13;
with their baggage and check i t&#13;
to points on the line of the railroad,&#13;
after it has been passed by the.customs&#13;
inspectors. They will also_furnish passengers&#13;
with cabs operated by the railroad&#13;
company, and furnish time^ tables.,&#13;
and general Information to passengers.'&#13;
The two men have also been directed&#13;
to assi9t passengers who come to this&#13;
city with a view of going abroad, and&#13;
-such passengers will be met at tht*&#13;
Grand Central Station on incoming&#13;
trains and conducted to the steamship.&#13;
Their baggage will be attended to, and_&#13;
steamship tickets can be procured in&#13;
advance by communicating with Mr.&#13;
Daniels.—From the New York Commercial&#13;
Advertiser.&#13;
Something is sure to be accomplished&#13;
by the man who stick to one thing.&#13;
SUCCESS FOR THE DAIRY.&#13;
To secure the best res-dts in the care of&#13;
miHr»Dd butter, attention must be given&#13;
deteils. The milking must be properly&#13;
done, and all rtaiia used must be kept&#13;
scrupulous,y clean by washing morning&#13;
and night in hot water with Ivory Soap,&#13;
then rinsing we 1 in cold water and setting&#13;
out to air and sun.&#13;
ELIZA R. PARKER.&#13;
TEe strongest of all men is the one&#13;
who takes God to be his strength.&#13;
A&#13;
Million&#13;
men&#13;
Silencing; Greeley.&#13;
After all, the "new woman" is not&#13;
such a very new institution. Few ad-&#13;
T0cate3 of women's suffrage today have&#13;
better arguments in reserve than that&#13;
which, on one occasion, silenced Horace&#13;
Greeley. The famous, editor had&#13;
thrashed over* the question of women's&#13;
rights with an able representative of&#13;
their sex, and -wound up with the canten&#13;
tl on t h a t In times or war women&#13;
were quite useless. "What would you&#13;
do," he demanded, "in the event .of&#13;
civil war?" "Just what you would do,&#13;
Mr. Gresley,' 'replied his opponent&#13;
promptly. "1 should sit In my office&#13;
and-write articles urging other people&#13;
to f0 and fight*—Youth's Compaaioa.&#13;
f&#13;
Jtave been relieved of&#13;
female troubles by Mrs.&#13;
Pinkham's advice and&#13;
ntedlelnem&#13;
'- the fetters of a few are&#13;
printed regularly In this&#13;
paper*&#13;
If any one doubts the&#13;
efficiency and sacredly&#13;
confidential character of&#13;
Mrs0 Pinkham's methods?&#13;
write tor a bock she has&#13;
recently published which&#13;
contains letters from the&#13;
mayor of Lynn, the post*&#13;
master, and others of her&#13;
city who have made careful&#13;
Investigation, anil who&#13;
verify all of Mrs, Pinkham's&#13;
statements and&#13;
plalmsm&#13;
The Plnkham claims are&#13;
sweeping* Investigate&#13;
them,&#13;
THIRTY YEARS OFOURES&#13;
f I S O C U R F FOR&#13;
C" ' r \ i 1 K . ^ L&#13;
k.i.'~&#13;
. . . V ..W£. &gt; y - » , : . , J | j .&#13;
.,- It&#13;
-^, '&gt;. f i :&#13;
1&#13;
C O N G R E S S I O N A L N O T E S .&#13;
' A n o t h e r r e c i p r o c i t y t r e a t y w a s s i g n e d&#13;
: a t t h e s t a t e ( f c p f t r t m e n t t t t i t h e 1 3 t h b y&#13;
L o r d P a u n c e f o t e a n d Mr\ JKasson, c o n -&#13;
f e r r i n g : u p o n t h e I s l a n d o f T r i n i d a d ,&#13;
W. L , p r i v i l e g e s &amp; ttw:4iattar\ o f r e -&#13;
d u c e d i m p o r t d u t i e s o n g o o d s s e n t i n t o&#13;
t h e U n i t e d : B t a &amp; s s i t &amp; l a r t&amp; t i f e &amp;&#13;
. g r a n t s i n ' t b e , W ^ w d r d a q £ , o t f j e r&#13;
i s l a n d s o f t h e B r i t i s h W e s t I n d i e s . T h e&#13;
- c o n c e s s i o n m a d e t o ^ f h e * t l n i t e d ' S t a t e s&#13;
OB o u r g o o d s g o i n g i n t o T r i n i d a d a r e&#13;
a l s o g e n e r a l l y s i m i l a r t o t h o s e c o n -&#13;
t a i n e d i n . t b e o t h e r t r e a t i e s . . ,. i n&#13;
R e p . B a i l , o ( T e x a s , o n t h e 1 3 t h i n -&#13;
t r o d u c e d i n t h e h o u s e a r e s o l u t i o n p r o -&#13;
v i d i n g f o r a p p o i n t m e n t o f p s p e c i a l&#13;
•committedi 6 f n i n e m e m B e r s , riol m o r e&#13;
t h a n five t o b e l o n g t o a n y p o l i t i e a l&#13;
p a r t y t o w b o t a * h a U b e s u b m i t t e d a i l&#13;
r e s o l u t i o n s , b i l l s o r a m e n d m e n t s r e l a t -&#13;
i n g t o t r u s t s o r m o n o p o l i e s a n d t h e r e g -&#13;
u l a t i o n o r s u p p r e s s i o n t h e r e o f , w i t h i n -&#13;
s t r u c t i o n s t o b r i n g i n a g e n e r a l b i l l f o r&#13;
t h a t p u r p o s e .&#13;
T h e s e n a t e s u b s t i t u t e f o r t h e h o u s e&#13;
c u r r e n c y b i l l w a s p a s s e d b y t h e s e n a t e&#13;
o n t h e 1 5 t h b y t h e d e c i s i v e m a j o r i t y of&#13;
46 t o 29.&#13;
T h e h o u s e h a s a d o p t e d a r e s o l u t i o n&#13;
t o p r i n t 15,000 c o p i e s o f t h e r e p o r t et&#13;
t h e P h i l i p p i n e c o m m i s s i o n .&#13;
T h e a p p r o p r i a t i o n c o m m i t t e e o f t h e&#13;
h o u s e o n t h e 1 2 t h c o m p l e t e d a n d r e -&#13;
p o r t e d t h e e x e c u t i v e , l e g i s l a t i v e a n d&#13;
j u d i c i a l a p p r o p r i a t i o n b i l l , o n e o f t h e&#13;
m o s t i m p o r t a n t o f t h e s u p p l y b i l l s a n d&#13;
c a r r y i n g t h e s a l a r i e s o f t h e o f f i c i a l s i u&#13;
a l l b r a n c h e s o f t h e p u b l i c s e r v i c e . T h e '&#13;
e s t i m a t e s s u b m i t t e d a g g r e g a t e d 8 2 5 ,&#13;
019,209, a n d t h e b i l l a p p r o p r i a t e s $ 2 3 ,&#13;
874,871.&#13;
W A R N O T E S .&#13;
A n I l o i l o d i s p a t c h s a y s t h a t t h r e e&#13;
M a s s a c h u s e t t s s o l d i e r s w e r e r e c e n t l y&#13;
t o r t u r e d t o d e a t h b y i n s u r g e n t s . T h e y&#13;
r e m a i n e d b e h i n d t h e c o l u m n a t B e l i -&#13;
nagJLast N o v e m b e r t o g e t a t u b a , a n d&#13;
r e f u s e d t o a c c o m p a n y t h e c o r p o r a l s e n t&#13;
b y C a p t . T u t h e r l y t o b r i n g t h e m a l o n g .&#13;
T h e y w e r e c a p t u r e d b y t h e i n s u r g e n t s&#13;
h a n g i n g o n t h e r e a r o f t h e c o l u m n a n d&#13;
w e r e c r u e l l y t o r t u r e d a n d m u r d e r e d b y&#13;
t h e r e b e l s i n t h e p u b l i c p l a z u a t B a l i -&#13;
n a g , t h e a c t i o n b e i n g c o u n t e n a n c e d b y&#13;
t h e S p a n i s h p r i e s t . T h e p a d r e h a s&#13;
Stincc l e f t h i s p a r i s h f o r the" m o u n t a i n s .&#13;
W h a t i s v i r t u a l l y a n e w r e g i m e n t i s&#13;
b e i n g o r g a n i z e d a t F o r t S l o c u m , N . V . ,&#13;
h a r b o r , f o r s e r v i c e i n t h e P h i l i p p i n e s .&#13;
T h e m e n a r e a l l n e w r e c r u i t s a n d a r e&#13;
i n t e n d e d t o s u p p l y d e f i c i e n c i e s i n t h e&#13;
r e g u l a r r e g i m e n t s i n t h e P h i l i p p i n e s&#13;
c a u s e d b y . d e a t h , d i s c h a r g e o r o t h e r&#13;
c a u s e s . T h e n u m b e r , w h i c h i s a b o u t&#13;
1,100, i n c l u d e s i n f a n t r y m e n , c a v a l r y -&#13;
m e n a n d m e m b e r s of t h e h o s p i t a l c o r p s .&#13;
C o m m a n d e d b y a b o u t 3G officers t h e y&#13;
w i l l g o t o M a n i l a b y t h e S u e z r o u t e o n&#13;
t h e t r a n s p o r t S u m n e r .&#13;
I n s u r g e n t f o r c e s e s t i m a t e d t o n u m -&#13;
b e r 5,000 s o l d i e r s , m o s t l y b o l o m e n , a t -&#13;
t a c k e d t h e A m e r i c a n g a r r i s o n i n t h e&#13;
c o n v e n t a t D a r o g a , i n t h e p r o v i n c e c\f&#13;
A l b a y , d u r i n g t h e n i g h t o f F e b . 5.&#13;
T h e y w e r e r e p u l s e d , h o w e v e r , a f t e r&#13;
t h e y h a d b u r n e d m u c h of t h e t o w n .&#13;
O n e l i e u t e n a n t w o u n d e d w a s t h e o n l y&#13;
l o s s s u s t a i n e d b y A m e r i c a n s .&#13;
T h e U n i t e d S t a t e s t r a n s p o r t L e e l a -&#13;
n a w , l a d e n •with.,.150 h o r s e s a n d 1Q0&#13;
m u l e s , s a i l e d f o r M a n i l a f r o m S a n&#13;
F r a n c i s c o o n t h e 1 3 t h .&#13;
T h e d a t e o f t h e fight b e t w e e n J a s . J .&#13;
J e f f r i e s a n d J a s . J . C o r b e t t h a s b e e n&#13;
f i x e d a s M a y 14 n e x t , a t t h e C o n e y I s l -&#13;
a n d c l u b .&#13;
T h e g r i p i s s t i l l g a i n i n g g r o u n d i n&#13;
G e r m a n y . T h e p h y s i c i a n s a s s e r t t h a t&#13;
a t p r e s e n t t h e r e a r e m o r e t h a n 8 0 , 0 0 0&#13;
p e r s o n s , i n B e r l i n s u f f e r i n g f r o m t h e&#13;
m a l a d y , a l t h o u g h r e l a t i v e l y f e w c a s e s&#13;
p r o v e f a t a l o r v e r y s e r i o u s .&#13;
I c e j a m s c a u s e d a b o u t 8150,000 d a m -&#13;
a g e a t M o n t p e l i e r , V t . , o n t h e 1 4 t h . B y&#13;
t h e f o r m i n g o f a n i c e j a m i n t h e r i v e r&#13;
t h e s t r e e t s o f t h e c i t y w e r e u n d e r w a t e r&#13;
f o u r f e e t , a n d e v e r y m e r c h a n t i l e h o u s e&#13;
a n d h o t e l s o n t h e p r i n c i p l e s t r e e t s w e r e&#13;
f l o o d e d . rf&#13;
F e b . 15 w a s t h e 2d a n n i v e r s a r y o f&#13;
t h e d e s t r u c t i o n o f t h e M a i n e , a n d M r s .&#13;
S h i l l i n g l o n , o f C h i c a g o , s e n t a l a r g e&#13;
b o x filled w i t h r o s e s t o t h e n a v y d e -&#13;
p a r t m e n t a t W a s h i n g t o n , w i t h t h e r e -&#13;
q u e s t t h a t t h e flowers b e p l a c e d o n t h e&#13;
g r a v e s o f t h e v i c t i m s i n A r l i n g t o n c e m -&#13;
e t e r y .&#13;
T H E M A R K E T b .&#13;
L I V E STOCK.&#13;
X e w Y o r k — Cattle Sheep Lamb* Hops&#13;
Bestgrades *4 70 ft&gt; 40 | 6 75 f7 60 %b 40&#13;
Lo wer * rades.. /3 50¾ J 15 44 00JJ 7 00 5 23&#13;
t&gt; 63&#13;
4 7i&#13;
4 73&#13;
3 73&#13;
C h i c a g o —&#13;
Best Rradet 6 0 )(¾} 00&#13;
LowertfraUas..'.* OJ&amp;I 8J&#13;
D e t r o i t —&#13;
Bent (Trades v . . . 3 7 ^ 4 63&#13;
Lower fra-lei.. .2 5:)&amp;1 7J&#13;
Best g r a d e ? . . . . . 8 83® I 85 6 73&#13;
Lower grade*... a 24&amp;1 0J 4 00&#13;
Cincinnati-*- •" * %'&#13;
B e s t g r a d e s , . . . . 5 23©5*&gt; 5 4»&#13;
Lower grades... 4 3-Kji t 70 4 83&#13;
F l t t « b t t r * ~ * ; n ».-.. &lt;&#13;
Beat grades 5 2Mh&amp;8S ft 75&#13;
LowerKrude*...4 ?o©5 00 „ 5 00&#13;
700&#13;
5 OJ&#13;
« 73&#13;
003&#13;
7 85&#13;
7 15&#13;
5 00&#13;
4 70&#13;
ft 0 5&#13;
4 8J&#13;
5 15&#13;
4 80&#13;
6 79 I •.&#13;
6 2i * J&#13;
7 15&#13;
7 0J&#13;
&amp;2-&gt;&#13;
5 OJ&#13;
O R AIX, ETC.&#13;
Wheat. Cora, Oats,&#13;
No. 2 r&amp;J No. 2 mix No. 2 white&#13;
M e w York 7&lt;&amp;787» 4 &amp; 4 J * S 9 Q &amp; *&#13;
C h i c a g o 6 9 0 3 3 * I4&amp;81* t3&amp;«3*£&#13;
• D e t r o i t 73^73¼ - 8 035H ?7Q3?X&#13;
T o l e d o 7.^73 85335¼ 24Q34&#13;
C i n c i n n a t i 72&amp;74 85®J5 y 2 «a?fj&#13;
P i t t s b u r g 75®7JV STt^StH S*a5»J*.&#13;
B u f f a l o 74(^71 ?4 26330 tt 28¾¾¾&#13;
'Detroit—Hay, No. I Timothy, 112 00 per ton.&#13;
Potatoes, WW p e r 50. , L i t e PoMlttWrspring&#13;
ohickeus. u a j M r ' t t : fo&gt;I* W; t u « e &gt; s , 110;&#13;
&lt;ktoks, lie. E/l(.4, ittricjtly fresa, 14o per dozoo.&#13;
flutter. be**, stotryyttagptr l e A g q n a n M r j p ^&#13;
• l o o K e w a r d 9 1 0 0 .&#13;
T h e readers of this paper will be pleased t o&#13;
learn t h a t there la at least one dreaded disease&#13;
that science haa been.ftble t o eare i n a l l t t e&#13;
stages, and that Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh&#13;
Cure i s t h e only positive oure now known to t h e&#13;
medical fraternity Catarrh. being a oomtitu*&#13;
nonol disease, reqolres a constitutional treatm&#13;
e n t Kail's Caton-h Cure i s taken Internally,&#13;
acting directly upon t h e blood and mueoua Surfaces&#13;
o i the system, thereby destroying t h e&#13;
foundation of thedlseaae, and giving t h e patient&#13;
strength /by building u p t h e ooastltuUon and&#13;
assisting nature In aolng its work, . The proprietors&#13;
h a v e s o moch faith In Its curative&#13;
powers that they offer One Huadred Dollars f Of&#13;
any case that It falls to cure. Send for list of&#13;
Testimonials. . _ .&#13;
Address F. X C H E N E Y A CO., Toledo, a&#13;
Sold by druggists 75c.&#13;
Hall's Famfly P i l l s are the b e s t&#13;
The m a n who would have a large life, must&#13;
work and pray that n e m a y have a large heart.&#13;
I t Is doubtful if there i s any man who has not&#13;
at some time in his life been a hypocrite.&#13;
W A N T E D 0 0 0&#13;
Men, Women and Children in the city t o try the&#13;
best and cheapest preparations ever offered the&#13;
public. You don't take any chances in trying&#13;
them, as your druggist guarantees KnlU's B e d&#13;
Pills for Wan People. "Pale and Weak," the&#13;
women's remedy or the day (the only genuine).&#13;
Knill's White Liver Pills, the great Li ver Invigorator,&#13;
System Renovator and Bowel Regulator,&#13;
25 doses, SSc. You can work^while thev work.&#13;
Never gripe or make you sick. Knill's Blue Kidney&#13;
Pills oure all Kidney Ills, Backache, etc.&#13;
KnlU's Djspepsia Tablets oure Indigestion, correct&#13;
all Stomach Troubles, destroy all foul gases,&#13;
make pure sweet stomachs and breaths. To do&#13;
as advertised or money refunded. The only&#13;
guaranteed preparations on the m a r k e t Knill's&#13;
Pills or Tablets cost 25c. Half price ^ f others.&#13;
The man who says no to himself In nothing&#13;
has the devil for a traveling companion.&#13;
W a n t e d .&#13;
B u t t e r n u t m e a t s , w e l l s e l e c t e d . M u s t&#13;
h e i n h a l v e s a s m u c h a s p o s s i b l e . I n&#13;
a n y q u a n t i t y f r o m o n e t o 50 q u a r t s .&#13;
A d d r e s s , s t a t i n g p r i c e p e r q u a r t . A . L .&#13;
N P B T H , 22 C l i n t o n S t . , D e t r o i t , M i c h .&#13;
' • • &lt; ; . . . : . # ! NICE OLD QUAKER LADY&#13;
Cured of Catarrh&#13;
By Peruna&#13;
After 20 Years'&#13;
Suffering.&#13;
It is better to be able to suffer long and be&#13;
kind than to be able to talk like an angel.&#13;
TO C U R E A C O L D I N O N E D A Y ,&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All&#13;
druggists refund the money if it falls to cure.&#13;
26c. E. W. Grove's signature on each box.&#13;
As much bitterness and hate can be expressed&#13;
in a word as can be tired out of a gun.&#13;
FITS PermanentlyCuXtfu. AofltsornerroiuiieBiaf*et&#13;
first day's Que of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer,&#13;
bend for F R E E 83.0O trial bottle and treatise.&#13;
Da. E. H. Kuax, Ltd.. 331 Arch St.. Philadelphia. Pa.&#13;
Before we can know much of God we have to&#13;
find out a good deal about ourselves.&#13;
Mrs. W l n * l o w ' s Soothing? S y r u p .&#13;
For children teething, softens the gums, reduces in*&#13;
flsmmstion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle.&#13;
Only God can tell how much wrong doing is&#13;
prevented by one man doing right.&#13;
T h e L a r g e s t in t h e W o r l d .&#13;
Walter Baker A Co. Ltd., Dorchester, Haw., are the&#13;
largest Mfjyrs. or Cocoa and Chocolate In the world.&#13;
If wo see nothing pood in others, they will not&#13;
'oc likely to sec much good in us.&#13;
Piso's Cure for Consumption is the only couph&#13;
medicine used in my house.—D. C. Albright,&#13;
Miffllngburg, Pa., Dec. 11, 1815.&#13;
Do away with a personal devil, and there is no&#13;
need of a personul Christ.&#13;
Brown's Teething Cordial heals irritated&#13;
gums, and gives babies rest day and night.&#13;
The_man,who would be considered wise often&#13;
turns out to be otherwise.&#13;
for OLD SOLDIERS Union soldiers and widows of soldiers who made&#13;
homestead entries befoce June 33.1874 °? less than&#13;
160 acres (no mailer if abandoned or relinquished).&#13;
iftSeyhsv*net'sold their additional homestead&#13;
rights, should address; with fail pertAMari; gMtatng&#13;
district, * c . mtX.Wl, VssabfUfr &amp; f&#13;
CHEAP FARMS&#13;
BO YOU WANT A HOME?&#13;
100,000 ACRES Jffirf^^OT,&#13;
- • 1 ,•'•'''..¾&#13;
roved&#13;
{(Tided&#13;
and sold on long time and e a s y p a y m e n t * , a little&#13;
each year. Come sad see us or write. THE TttTJMAH&#13;
MOSS tiTATE BAXK, Sanilac Center, MleL, or&#13;
The Truman MOM fcstste.CroswsH. SsniUc Ce.Mick.&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS&#13;
$ 3 f t 3.ff0 SHQES IflflC&#13;
wrtn other maket*&#13;
.Indorsed b y o v e r&#13;
&gt; 1,000,000 wearer,&#13;
The nenvinm have W. L. I&#13;
Douglas' nam* and price I&#13;
stamped on bottom. Take*&#13;
no substitute claimed to be&#13;
as good. Your dealer&#13;
should keep them —if&#13;
not, we will send a pair* .&#13;
on receipt of price and 35c.&#13;
extra for carriage. State kind ot leather,&#13;
„ „ '•'" and width, plain or cap toe. Cat. free.&#13;
auaevam *• L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mats.&#13;
Salzer's Caps&#13;
rlrea K k h ,&#13;
frees&#13;
food,&#13;
at FARM SEEDS&#13;
Spelts—&#13;
What is I t !&#13;
Catalog&#13;
tella7&#13;
^&#13;
MRS. POLLY EVANS, A LIFE-LONG FRIEND OF PERUNA.&#13;
"My wife (Polly J. Evans) says she feels entirely cured of systemic&#13;
catarrh of twenty years standing. She took nearly six bottles&#13;
of thy excellent medicine, Peruna, as directed, and we feel very thank*&#13;
full to thee for thy kindness and advice. She did not expect to be so&#13;
welt as she is now. Twelve years ago it cured her of la grippe, i&#13;
want to tell thee there has been a great deal of Peruna used here last&#13;
winter. Peruna does not need praising. It tells, for itself. We can&#13;
and do recommend it to anyone that is afflicted with catarrh."&#13;
As ever, thy friend, John Evans, South Wabash, Ind.&#13;
W h e n c a t a r r h h a s r e a c h e d t h e c h r o n i c&#13;
Gtag'e, o f c o u r s e i t &gt; h a s g o n e b e y o n d t h e&#13;
r e a c h o f a l l l o c a l r e m e d i e s . N o t h i n g b u t&#13;
a s y s t e m i c r e m e d y c a n r e a c h i t . P e r u n a&#13;
i s t h e o n l y r e m e d y y e t d e v i s e d t o m e e t&#13;
s u c h c a s e s . P e r u n a e r a d i c a t e s c a t a r r h&#13;
f r o m t h e s y s t e m . I t d o e s i t s w o r k&#13;
q u i e t l y , b u t s u r e l y . I t c l e a n s e s t h e&#13;
m u c o u s m e m b r a n e s jof t h e w h o l e b o d y .&#13;
I t p r o d u c e s r e g n l a r f u n c t i o n s . P e r u n a&#13;
r e s t o r e s p e r f e c t h e a l t h i n a n a t u r a l&#13;
w a y .&#13;
N o o n e s h o u l d n e g l e c t t o p r o c u r e o n e&#13;
o f D r . H a r t m a n ' g f f r e e b o o k s o n c a t a r r h ,&#13;
s e n t t o a n y a d d r e s s b y T h e P e r u n a&#13;
M e d i c i n e C o m p a n y , C o l u m b u s , O h i o .&#13;
ARTERSINK Has the largest sale of any ink&#13;
in t h e world.&#13;
When answering ads. Kindly Mention I his paper&#13;
Meat smoked in a few boon with&#13;
KRMISERS' LIQUID EXTRACT OF SM0KC&#13;
Made from biekory wood. Cheaper, cleaner,&#13;
•weeteT. and sorrr tbsn the old way. S*nd for&#13;
circular. £ . J&gt;.l£AL'h*J£ A BJiO., JaiUwa, **••&#13;
'•ot&gt;JBEfMha't Seeds are Warranted to rradses.&#13;
riftUon Lather. StTroy.Pa..artotii^hedUM world1&#13;
bt aruwiuc iiO buibelg big t'eurGau; J. Breuler,&#13;
Miibtoett, *»*., 173 bu«. baric;; andU.Lovi'jay,&#13;
BadTior. Ulnn.. by growlo* 320biuji. Salter'*wri&#13;
I per acre. If yno cloubt. write them. Wc wit* to gala&#13;
1300.000 new cimoiner*. hence wiUiend on trial&#13;
IO DOLLARS WORTH FOR 1 0 c&#13;
10 pkgi of r%tt Una feeds, Sail Saab, the 3-eare4&#13;
Corn—Sprlti, producing'(Oljujh. (oo&lt;i aad 4 toai hay&#13;
per acre—aboteoauau&lt;l barley. Broaua InermiJ&#13;
—•be greatuae fra** on tarUi; Salttr tat* •*•&#13;
Rape, Spring Whi-at, ice., iacludlug ear mammuibr'laDi.&#13;
J-'ruitanilSeeri Catalog, idling all&#13;
about Salzer'* Great MUJlon Dollar&#13;
Potato, all mailed fur 10c. postage;&#13;
itivelr worth 110 to getaitart.&#13;
" rolalaaa $1.20 a bbl. and o p . _ _ ,&#13;
send this&#13;
a d r . n l t h&#13;
10«. to Salzer.&#13;
PMiti1&#13;
.SeeSl&#13;
K pkga ear I tent Tegetable&#13;
aeeds, 11.00. CsUrOT&#13;
alose, Ac,&#13;
»nuj —&#13;
F O R E V E R Y H O U S E K E E P E R .&#13;
T h e G e m S e l f b e a t i n g F l a t I r o n a n d S t o v e&#13;
c o m b i n e d i s a n e w i n v e n t i o n of gTeat v a l u e&#13;
t o housekeepers. I t g i v e s a n y h e a t d e s i r e d ;&#13;
i s odorless, s a f e , s i m p l e , c o m p l e t e ; s a v e s&#13;
t i m e , l a b o r , health, fuel. 2 c e n t s r u n s o n e&#13;
all d a y I t a p p e a l s t o e v e r y o n e . O n c e&#13;
used i t i s incttspensible. AGEITTS- W A N T E D&#13;
E V E B Y W H E R E . A n y o n e c a n sett i t A n&#13;
i n v e s t i g a t i o n w i l l p a y y o u . O E M F L A T&#13;
I R O N CO., K a i , a M i z o o , M i e n .&#13;
n D n D Q Y N E w D O T E i ! Y ' ^res&#13;
Star I I \&gt;W \\ &lt; 9 I quick relief and cures wont&#13;
cases. Book of testlmogUala and 10 DaTS* treattnent&#13;
rniK. SS. U. H. eaSUPS BOSS. Bex t . A U U U . Ga.&#13;
\V. N. U . — D E T R O I T — N O . 8 — 190O&#13;
Bad Blood Pimples, eruptions, blotches, scales, ulcers, sores, eczema and chronic swellings are caused by bad blood.&#13;
CASCARETS are wonder-workers in the cure of any disease caused by bad or impure blood. They eliminate&#13;
all poisons, build up and enrich the blood, enabling it to make tiewrhealthy tissue. Pure blood means perfect&#13;
health, and if you will use Cascarets they will give you good health and a pure, clean skin, free from pimples&#13;
and blotches. To try Cascarets is to like them, for never before has there been produced as perfect ana so&#13;
harmless a blood purifier, liver and stomach regulator as CASCARETS Candy Cathartic !&#13;
Don't be imposed upon with "something just as good" as CASCARETS—you can't find itl&#13;
THIS IS&#13;
THE TABLET&#13;
10c&#13;
25a 50c&#13;
DRUGGISTS&#13;
CASCARBT8 are absolutely harmless, a purely vecetaMs compound. Ho mercurial or other mineral pffl-poisoa in Cascarets. Cascarets promptly, effectively and permanently&#13;
euro tvery disorder of thtStemaeh, Liver and Intestines. They not only cure constipation, hut correct any and every fenn o ( irregularity of the bowels, ladndinf diarrheas aaddystntary.&#13;
Pleasant, palatable, potent. Taste food, do coed. Hover sicken, weaken or fripe. Be sure you f e t the fsauine! Beware of imitations aad substitutes! Buy a box of C1SCABXT8&#13;
to-day, aad if not pleased la every reteect, f e t your money back I Write a s for bookltt and free sample! Address STERLING KSXBDY COMPAHY, CHICAGO or HBW TORT.&#13;
:&#13;
ID PUCE OUR GARDE* SEEK II EVERY&#13;
T H I S K i n PK&#13;
W i t h L o t N o . t l 8. B&#13;
W TUP CAtlMTRV g ojr&gt;r f&gt;&lt;ahjtardsn sasda. fall slaad aaeltsesa, at Is— than k walna, b—t i w r grown. thM win grow la any TT. S. climate and OIVsl&#13;
^ ^ ^ ^ *?&amp;?.GSmV^TS^l^nrt%»x|Las. 1 p k s . ^ j s ^ N s i a ^ T p i V l e W j A s s i -*BBSaasssm»m»SBUBB«BmB»B*g«s.iB^a-a-.«—assssss^&#13;
W s f K ^ l o a , 1 pas. l l a r t T e M a « « ^ B t « a b ^ i * C a a * g # a ^ Citron Moaki&#13;
« on. 1 pkf. Rntabae*,* ^e;%BaeBosseaLsttaoa, 2pUsvPorpU Top Tarajp, l pa*. • mmam _ ^ S ?&#13;
•d olobeOnlmiv \J**~ H o l W (AowalVnapa, pkaTSarly LOBS Searlst KadUh/1 IBIS 1X171&#13;
- - Prwaeh Mwaktass Bad*&#13;
gd OiobeOaien. lpa*B5H«w Crown PsdMnpa, 1 pa» Early Lon« dearlst KadUhTl S B&#13;
W l t l t L o t K o . 1 S B&#13;
e T H ^ s s W ^ ^&#13;
hosrf bladi*. $*&gt;iS£&#13;
IsuBstAPOU&#13;
/&#13;
. ^&#13;
¥4'&#13;
«fc m^fim^&#13;
it&#13;
sr&#13;
:-(1.&#13;
1|V&#13;
ft&#13;
•'V.&#13;
ffl?&#13;
*&#13;
£ x -&#13;
V \&#13;
£'.#•'' It&#13;
as.&#13;
it v, I&#13;
a.&#13;
*&#13;
J*.&#13;
—PHOTOS. — -&#13;
We will continue to make our&#13;
Best, $3.00 Photos For $2.00p«D°«"&#13;
• *&gt; :;"!&#13;
This will be p o s i t i v e l y the l a s t w e e k of th $2.00 work.&#13;
Open every day excepting Sunday.&#13;
One week longer, OP Until lyiarjcg^,&#13;
V e r y Respectfully, P. H. NIX &amp; SON.&#13;
, ANDERSON.&#13;
F. L. Merrill and wife were in&#13;
Hawell Monday. %&#13;
Miss Nora Durkee is on the&#13;
sick list this week.&#13;
Rumor says that the store here&#13;
has changed hands.&#13;
Mrs. Will Keusch is in Jackson&#13;
visiting her daughter.&#13;
Chas/^Hoff Jr., will work for&#13;
Harry Singleton the coming season.&#13;
A. H. Randall has rented the&#13;
Chapman farm for the coming&#13;
year.&#13;
A number of pupils from the&#13;
Lakin school visited the school&#13;
here Monday.&#13;
James^ Roche and family of&#13;
Finckney, visited Edward Bullis&#13;
and family Saturday.&#13;
Misses Blanche Miller and Lottie&#13;
Walker of Plainfield, called on&#13;
Anderson friends Sunday.&#13;
Elva Hon* left here last week&#13;
for Lansing, where bhe expects to&#13;
work in a knitting factory.&#13;
The exhibition that is being&#13;
prepared by the school here, will&#13;
be given on Friday, March 2.&#13;
Miss Emma Clarke, of Mt.&#13;
Pleasant U under the doctor's care&#13;
at the home of her sister, Mrs. DB.&#13;
Smith.&#13;
The next Anderson farmers'&#13;
club will meet at V. G. Dinkle's j&#13;
instead of with E. J. Briggs as&#13;
announced last week.&#13;
The infant son of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
E. Henry is very ill.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Silas Jones, of N.&#13;
Y., have ccme to spend the remainder&#13;
of the winter with his&#13;
brother James.&#13;
The masquerade ball given by&#13;
the Loyal Guards Feb. 14, was a&#13;
complete success in every respect&#13;
Seventy fine couple were present&#13;
besides a large number of on-lookers.&#13;
A great deal of taste was&#13;
displayed in the various costumes&#13;
of the dancers.&#13;
Agents on salary of $15.00 per week and&#13;
expenses; the greatest agent seller ever&#13;
produced ; every stock and poultry raiser&#13;
buys it on sight. Hustlers wanted. Reference.&#13;
Address, with stamp, American&#13;
Mfg. Co., Terre Haute, Ind.&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
Roy Crossman is slowly but&#13;
surely recovering.&#13;
Miss Nellie Powers visited in&#13;
Dexter Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Miss Bernice Greer taught the&#13;
school Monday until Miss Powers&#13;
returned.&#13;
Miss Lena Boss of Brighton, is&#13;
spending the week with Mrs. Jas.&#13;
Crossman.&#13;
The Ladies Aid will meet on&#13;
Thursday afternoon at the home&#13;
of Mrs. Wm. Featherly. '&#13;
The Ladies' Guild served a&#13;
^Colonial Dinner at Royces Hall&#13;
on Wednesday of this week.&#13;
The lecture by Rev. E. E. Caster,&#13;
of Howell, is announced for&#13;
March 8; subject, "Matrimony."&#13;
The IOOF gave their usual anniversary&#13;
party Monday evening&#13;
of this week, the Dexter lodge being&#13;
entertained on this occasion.&#13;
The early part of the evening was&#13;
spent in social talk, then followed&#13;
supper of which oysters were the&#13;
leading feature and about' 200 did&#13;
justice by the repast This was&#13;
followed by the initiation of Dorr&#13;
Quail who "rode the goat" etc&#13;
speeches and music filled up the&#13;
remainder of the evening and all&#13;
returned to their hnmee feeling&#13;
. they had spent the evening well,&#13;
EAST MARION.&#13;
Miss'Rose Hoisel returned to&#13;
home in E. Saginaw, last week.&#13;
Mr. Pond, and wife of Iosco,&#13;
called on friends here last weekr-&#13;
Thos. Gordon, Jr. of Howell,&#13;
called on Tim. McCarty, Tuesday.&#13;
Mark Allison has bought the&#13;
Dunn farm and will occupy it this&#13;
spring.&#13;
J. Ricketts has sold out his interest&#13;
in the Dunn farm and will&#13;
move from the neighborhood.&#13;
Pastor Blood's wife is canvassing&#13;
for the Life of Moody and appropriates&#13;
the profits to pay an&#13;
old debt on the parsonage.&#13;
The East Putnam and North&#13;
Hamburg C. E. socities attended&#13;
meeting here last Sunday evening&#13;
-and a very interesting and radical&#13;
temperance meeting was held.&#13;
Subscribe for the DISPATCH&#13;
nave YOU&#13;
Heard&#13;
Of II? You may have heard&#13;
about SCOTT'S EMULSION&#13;
and have a vague notion&#13;
that it is cod-liver oil with&#13;
its bad taste and smell and&#13;
all its other repulsive features.&#13;
It is cod-liver oil, the&#13;
purest and the best in the&#13;
world, but made so palatable&#13;
that almost everybody&#13;
can take it Nearly all&#13;
children like it and ask for&#13;
more. ^&#13;
SCOTT'S&#13;
EMULSION&#13;
looks like cream; it nourishes&#13;
the wasted body of&#13;
the baby, child or adult&#13;
better than cream or any&#13;
other food in existence, ft&#13;
bears about the same relation&#13;
to other emulsions that&#13;
cream does to milk. If you&#13;
have had any experience*&#13;
with other so-called "just as&#13;
good" preparations, you&#13;
will find that thb is a feet&#13;
ins iiypmimipnBCi ins* ire&#13;
combined wKh the cod-flvW oil SaddWoml vatoe to H became&#13;
tone up vis nervous system&#13;
imptit sotnjm to the whole&#13;
body. • /&#13;
SCOTT^BOW%Vc2£5f%Sr York.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE&#13;
Ward Cornell was home from&#13;
Rochester over Sunday.&#13;
The WOTU will meet with Mrs.&#13;
Henry Slover Friday afternoon.&#13;
Mrs. Clarissy Kirk of Howell,&#13;
visited Mrs. F. Eirk last' Sunday&#13;
and Monday.&#13;
Mrs. C. M. Smith had the misfortune&#13;
to fall last Sunday morning&#13;
and break her wrist.&#13;
The Epworth League held a&#13;
literary meeting at the home of&#13;
Margaret Walker Tuesday evening.&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Miss Nellie Fish is visiting relatives&#13;
in Williamston.&#13;
Sherman Bennett of Kalamazoo&#13;
is the guest of relatives here.&#13;
Miss Grace Lake spent the last&#13;
of the week with her sister at&#13;
Chilson.&#13;
Mrs. John Oliver of Lansing, is&#13;
visiting relatives and old neighbors&#13;
here.&#13;
Miss Nellie Cady of Chilson,&#13;
was a guest of Miss Nettie Hall&#13;
on Wednesday last-&#13;
Mrs. Fred Grieve, Miss Clella&#13;
Fish and Bruce Kennedy were on&#13;
the sick list last week.&#13;
Arthur Schoenhals and wife of&#13;
Hamburg, called on relatives and&#13;
friends here last week.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Brown attended the&#13;
wedding of her niece at North&#13;
Lake on Thursday, today.&#13;
The YPSCE of this place, Hamburg&#13;
and, Chubbs Corners, are&#13;
holding a series of very helpful&#13;
union services.&#13;
A large company of young people&#13;
spent Friday evening at the&#13;
home of Mrs. J. R. Hall and report&#13;
a very pleasant evening.&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Mrs. Maude Bullis is on the&#13;
sick list.&#13;
Emmet Hadley spent last Sunday&#13;
at Samuel Boises in Waterloo.&#13;
A. C. Watson made a business&#13;
The ladies' aid of the Presbyterian&#13;
-eiurch, will hold a hard&#13;
times social at their ball Wednesday&#13;
evening, Feb. 28.&#13;
District No. 10, Lyndon, will&#13;
give an exhibition in the Presbyterian&#13;
Hall of this place, Tuesday&#13;
evening, Feb. 27. Admission 10&#13;
cents.&#13;
Frank Barton and wife started&#13;
last week for a visit to their son&#13;
Elmer, who resides near Luther,&#13;
Lake county. They will drive&#13;
through.&#13;
HOUSEHOLD **&#13;
Livingston County Association of&#13;
Farmers' Clubs.&#13;
The Livingston County Association&#13;
of Farmers' Clubs will bold its next&#13;
meeting at the court house, Howell,&#13;
Saturday, March 3. The following&#13;
interesting program has been pre*&#13;
pared:&#13;
FORENOON SESSION, 10 TO 12.&#13;
Singing, "Star Spangled Banner,&#13;
Audience&#13;
Inrocation&#13;
Secretary's Report, ' A. M. Wells&#13;
Report from State Association,&#13;
Hon. J. W. Edgar&#13;
Discussion led by Frank Hacker&#13;
AFTERNOON SESSION, 1 TO 4.&#13;
Singing, Boy Quartet&#13;
The Farmer of Today, J. O. Taft.&#13;
Discussion led by Hon. C. M. Wood&#13;
Trusts and the Remedy, A. £. Cole&#13;
Discussion led by H. E. Reed&#13;
Question Box&#13;
Singing, Boy Quartet&#13;
Caring for Veils.—Th* beauty and&#13;
freshness of a well can be -preserved&#13;
for a long time If It is properly cared&#13;
for. After wearing It rfhouM be&#13;
smoothed out carefully and rolled between&#13;
paper or over a rod. A piece&#13;
ot broomstick" makes, an excellent,&#13;
roller. A veil will ion nas become&#13;
lirc.p can be freshened by dipping it in&#13;
weak gum water aad pulling It&#13;
straight before it dries.&#13;
Good Coffee.—Plug tihe apout of Aha&#13;
coffee pot while the coffee is bolllngr&#13;
Thlo will preserve the aroma amd improve&#13;
the flavor afcd strength of Jffafe~i&#13;
coffee. ? 4 . ' •'&#13;
To Preserve Silk.—When putitlng&#13;
away si'lk or ribbons, roll them in&#13;
blue paper. White paper ie bleaahed&#13;
with chloride of lime, which fades the&#13;
silk.&#13;
Doughnuts.—Take three cups or&#13;
flour, one tablespoonful of sugar, a&#13;
salt-spoonful of salt, one ounce of&#13;
bubteY, one, egg, a teaspoonful of baking&#13;
eoda, two teaspoonfuls of creaml o?..&#13;
tartar. Mix Into a lig&lt;ht dougth with™&#13;
milk, drop into boiling fat and fry a&#13;
light brown; scatter sugar over anxj&#13;
•serve cold. »&#13;
SUNBEAMS.&#13;
Every day there hangs over ^uuaou&#13;
a vast amcke cloud that is estimated&#13;
to weigh about 300 tons.&#13;
,Thtere are supposed to be nearly&#13;
fifty thousand dentists practising upon&#13;
people's teeth in the world. A dentist's&#13;
case of instruments now-a-oays&#13;
ootnitainis between three hundred ami&#13;
four hundred instruments.&#13;
The growth of the mistletoe on oak&#13;
is now of very rare occurrence, but it&#13;
flourishes lulxOrTanitly 4n many parts o&#13;
England on tine apple trees.&#13;
If yoa want ail the news subscribe&#13;
for the DISPATCH.&#13;
a few days last week with Dick&#13;
Barton/&#13;
A. E. Palmer is in Chicago,&#13;
where he is holding down a good&#13;
position.&#13;
Rev. Williams from Ann Arbor,&#13;
visited friends in this place the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
The Ollopodrida club and the&#13;
school will unite and give an exhibition&#13;
the last day.&#13;
The young people of this place&#13;
spent an enjoyable evening at&#13;
Fred Marshall's last Friday.&#13;
The next meeting of the Ollopodrida&#13;
club will be at Mrs. Flora&#13;
Watson's, Saturday evening.&#13;
Louis and Anna Stevenson of&#13;
North Lake, spent laat Saturday&#13;
and Sunday at John Webb's.&#13;
Wm. Livermore and wife visited&#13;
at the home of their daughter,&#13;
Kittie, in Stockbridge, laat Sun*&#13;
day.&#13;
Richard Mackinder is home&#13;
from the Agricultural College. He&#13;
was tick with the measles the last&#13;
two weeks of the course. '&#13;
The&#13;
Carpet&#13;
Question&#13;
Have you got to have a new one&#13;
this spring?&#13;
trip to Detroit one day last week. *&lt;&gt;*-** ^ ^ l f t h a t ' 8 t h e «** t 0 T t h l S * S&#13;
wm Clark of stockbridge, spen^ probably the best time to buy Carpets that&#13;
will come again for years.&#13;
We can sell you Carpets on last year's&#13;
prices because our Carpets were bought before&#13;
the advance.&#13;
If we had to go to the manufacturers today&#13;
to buy a stock of Carpets we would pay&#13;
25 per cent advance over the prices of last&#13;
year.&#13;
It's to your benefit that we had cash&#13;
enough to put a fortune into Carpets last&#13;
year when prices were low.&#13;
Tours respectfully,&#13;
L. H. F I E L D .&#13;
Jaokaoo, Miok •&#13;
/&#13;
1.&#13;
it&#13;
\ » .&#13;
rtViTMiiM i f &gt;MJr -A. J ? L&#13;
?V*i'&lt;*2! t r r t n t a s : ,:»•• .r^^-ag'-asma W»i*Miiri"itr,ii i ill u u'; V|f ,m* m&gt;*mm*iiiKli&amp;tM •rfiniiirnl&#13;
SSBBSSpp&#13;
^8»^ ^•Ji^Pr-WY^BF'^aswe^ee^eJ^W ^^P^»'^S1» ' W ^ ^ B T W&#13;
.¾ "*&#13;
^O^P'JW'^O^Ow . . • ^ ^ " • J f ^ '&#13;
^my Iff jgt a* .County&#13;
Sato-deMflS) M t M N&#13;
ae1e0d lwo eCrier eonrJ* Ceert&#13;
_ #VO»M»,&#13;
reoerd*d^;srt^c*se»opoBut&#13;
semmlstraaosts&#13;
i Mpti'if II Uj submitted.&#13;
iL. Lvov*, County Oterit.&#13;
v#H&#13;
MM&#13;
eaoa. a*e•r-v*J-o-ea In the&#13;
,• Chairman,&#13;
«# U M f w » x * OsofcgvNtito.&#13;
-. A*-r ^-.- - -r?W*v*^* • '•'' ' '' 17'&#13;
a w * , * . . • ' • . . V . '&#13;
P.71" I &amp;**'. w* Tuesday, January oth.&#13;
_ met, roll called, quorum i present&#13;
,t*s oLMotHUf'. ***** $ « » * ? $&#13;
ittteeB on lestrattteMit warltc?h the.&#13;
as follow*, to wft:-To the H41&#13;
fiateaoejniiaod Dee$L io~.&#13;
By ?lUa»» treasurers' receipt&#13;
count&#13;
*^i J',*,,t* * A ^ * * . j j W ^ W B ^ i y .Ow^S^saswOjavsPOj e T V J r « ^ W W OJVV^x^sjsjmwj ,OsJSjBSf&lt;,ssjssjOjSji^sv _&#13;
^ : X ^ : i . V Z 5 M w * o « o r a W e Board of&#13;
^ j ? ^vUVhMjaton^moty. Your oo&#13;
'loATetomafcetae&#13;
s.*;&gt;J, ;•: •. • STAXXTAX&#13;
^balance on band pec&#13;
9 f f .&#13;
May S, 1899 ~*&#13;
• / ^ . • • ; ; ;&#13;
to tax 0QiT«4?nnf «5 _,&#13;
-•&#13;
/ ^Isoursementa,&#13;
uent state tax.retaroed'^..^l'-.' 1 8 1 »&#13;
^ ? r ^ 3 ^ r e o t ^ t o •J8^) W^ 18» 30,009 oo&#13;
•• . " $t'48&#13;
" »,000 00&#13;
« , , H •• l u f 30. **:• tW85&#13;
• \ ;« •:.•«• NotW. M 98&#13;
Bai&amp;nee on band Deo 8 1 , 1 1 « - ^ . . . , — , v 5&#13;
/;- »».647 i8&#13;
OOUKTT oojrriMoairr ycran) BBCJKFTS. Jobalanee on band Deoember 31,18B&amp;. «0 28&#13;
uryaod entry fee from J. L-PetttboBe 18 f9&#13;
'•*• Soney refunded by C ^ . VanWHUge, 17 «&#13;
Bl tax ool in Deo after annoalsettteS&#13;
ApproDrtatton tax ef was. ,&gt;;;..,...' . ^&#13;
Money refunded.from Oonway-^^--,&#13;
Honey refunded from HoweUL 1—&gt;~&#13;
Rejected tax ofiaoa and 1896... _ .— 9 76&#13;
;Bee«iyed from OeorSeK ewcaan.—:^ a &amp;&#13;
tJeTdralQ taxool f eoaHJiff Mar ai. 1880 11 n&#13;
Del county tax eof f en I ftar(«, t&amp;».„. as 13&#13;
LDfeclm toorw tanx' co"ll ect*eTd _*-—*• •^•••-•—'•*•» ._M— 8,«4081 1»4&#13;
Ti« aateToodntf t a x . _ . ^ . — , ^ . 18 so&#13;
Tax awettirntax,^-.-*-^.,^ --,— 74 40&#13;
peTdrain tax eoli ending June 30,1S80 * ss&#13;
r»* county **r fi **• " *'• 20 30&#13;
»*town * ^ " ' •••• " ot as&#13;
From E. A 8towe J. P. eoeta .&gt;.— l 7S&#13;
De17l oounty tax ool iendlwc Sep 30, law to «4 town. •• y* - M " .lSI'JS&#13;
Frettt B J Jievrns guard, of tf Sohnltz t i 10&#13;
*eoTiendTng.8ept 80j *a&#13;
i MePnerson's. Bank—~.&#13;
state tax i&#13;
is from' 10.718 63,&#13;
Jury and entry fees from County Glerk 180 00&#13;
Fees tor ool delinquent taxes for 1809. - ,83 3»&#13;
23 0 1&#13;
Del Bounty tax oof} ending Dee 81,189» 46-8*&#13;
" dralu——" "H Beptand •" " 11 96&#13;
#30^84 09&#13;
drain •' Sounty orders pftUL^^.—_, SL_ IT*87t IS&#13;
urorscertlftoateapald-^-...^™.^ SJMB «9&#13;
Bdndaand coupons paM — MBooa&#13;
Bparrow&#13;
%%&lt;&#13;
is paM.&#13;
aldV—&#13;
_ tcroeuasnutyr eo'fsf lroeecrse.i pts—&#13;
Itnesa feMes In Justice court. elrcutt court... w , «,&#13;
s to state for hon^a Jeeble minded 26 67&#13;
oo&#13;
624 97&#13;
...-_ 5,100 00&#13;
...Z~ 526 48&#13;
m 06&#13;
907 60&#13;
to county poor fund..i 2,000 00&#13;
to soldiers re.li.e.f .f u^n —&#13;
udHort oG setnaetrea flo r tax to Utnatng hand Dec 81,1690.&#13;
3861 0040&#13;
76&#13;
.^--•_ 814 37&#13;
• * - POOB AHD tKg&#13;
-Balanoeonhand&#13;
From O, J, Parker&#13;
,130,284 09&#13;
FUWD BJBCUMS.&#13;
oenai, 18«—^ - or&#13;
_ ^^ _ T i M &gt; &lt; n ^ » LJ minfiUT. 1 1 3 1 4 ijnountcol/forlnmatwof Gofarm__ a,ro2 40&#13;
•'•..•••"'•'. M easternMlcb asylunu. 98244&#13;
j Proceed* of county faro ^^—:.^^,^. 426 63&#13;
«&#13;
Saaa«Mwa^Mdl^n7iis*&#13;
• s i *&#13;
8V.74,&#13;
MO. 11.&#13;
, , r&#13;
3*0.1A •_*• -&#13;
OonwaavDtstte He.lfl.&#13;
Balaam p^ b ^ K ai.iais t&#13;
JIJB&#13;
101»&#13;
1 «&#13;
17 60&#13;
•S2SS&#13;
V ^-Vi^ijr&#13;
Tax of las*&#13;
• 4 . M&#13;
»y«r ^proTea»«iW fiV&#13;
v&#13;
,1 /;&#13;
Comsat: Uraba Xo. is . ""&#13;
i * S * * * i ^ ^ S « M t &lt; i , 4 1 1 1 1 ^ 28)6 631&#13;
2»S »S •8 «S * • 2 J t 0 f&#13;
wis 04 .&#13;
Tax nf IflMt **^SP--vP^P*&gt;r-?&#13;
a f * it-iTTT'fi* " K K " " " «»•• • " i G l ^ ^ ™ - * ? ! ? * ' " * • • "i&#13;
• « » • • • •&#13;
WS Of&#13;
^SBSTS^&amp;iM•£&amp;M W^^%&#13;
to &lt;..;•&#13;
V'.-&#13;
TV SO vrtkiBJi ••r. .&#13;
••*sssesKas;n'f:dlI''r' &gt; -i»&#13;
, B a n d 3 r D f | 4 » ; I | « . ^ , ^ • • - . • - '&#13;
' ' • : • • • ' " ; f l / j r f * : ^ . * . ' '&#13;
i *^&#13;
' &lt; ^ ' ;&#13;
tar&#13;
i1&#13;
ttroen OaltDrato No, 4.&#13;
47 42&#13;
Ha«dy Drain Jfo.l.&#13;
mdl)«e3l,i886 l&#13;
47 68&#13;
12 60&#13;
4762&#13;
B a t e n e a d s l u k S K i e e s % m ^ 12 35&#13;
By ore&gt;re paid _ . . . -&#13;
Balaaeeonb*BaDee8i,i80O 318&#13;
»17&#13;
Balance onlumd&#13;
HandyDr&#13;
nCDeoSl,&#13;
Drain No 6.&#13;
12 85&#13;
Handy Drain No. 6.&#13;
1698 1 90&#13;
9 .&#13;
Balance on hanADw) 31,1^6 so&#13;
•'-** v • •/ '* •'•*•• 1899&#13;
Handy Drain No. 7;&#13;
Balance on htod Dec 81,1898 to 08&#13;
M89 . ,.&#13;
Handy Drain No. 9,&#13;
Tax Of 1898.,.....-....;. . 74 00&#13;
By orders paid..&gt;»........... #&#13;
Balance on band Dee 81,1699&#13;
74 00&#13;
Handy Drain No. n .&#13;
Balance on hand Dec 31* 1898 86&#13;
^Delinquent tax of 1895. 80&#13;
•Balanc&amp;on band Dec 31,1899 .-&#13;
12 35&#13;
160&#13;
SO&#13;
10 08&#13;
62 00&#13;
12 00&#13;
.Handy and Howell Drain.&#13;
.Balance on hand, D«81*1888 io zi&#13;
Tax of isst, Handy « , ; ; . , . „ . . 104 46_&#13;
Tax prisJg, Howell...; : . 95 54&#13;
From HowellA Handy Drain 4 79&#13;
By orders laid....&#13;
74 00&#13;
66&#13;
215 50&#13;
c«^fi^con3&amp;^oirk.. 46 60&#13;
lLSfSt£S?3^&amp;: (&#13;
Balanoeon handDec. 81.1,8-9°8 •2*0'*0*0 FaW A. J. Keary by order of&#13;
Judge of Probate:&#13;
Estate of Louisa Sbermao.&#13;
Balance on band Dee 8L 1898 44 66&#13;
Balance on hand Dee&#13;
_. Estate of Satah L. Ethtrldge.&#13;
Bat on band Dec 81,1898, cash s o w&#13;
•• «« " is99, note 500 00&#13;
Paid heirs Mar 28d, t * order&#13;
Judge of Probate&#13;
Bal on hand Dec 81, 1899, note&#13;
550 16&#13;
_ Estate of Peter O. Faze.&#13;
Balance on hand Dec 31,1898. 44 12&#13;
••?f SI-&#13;
4«t&#13;
: 4^-&#13;
. * 8 *&#13;
U 26&#13;
29 99&#13;
28 26&#13;
67 00&#13;
20 00&#13;
44 68&#13;
60 M&#13;
500 00&#13;
'500*16&#13;
44 B&#13;
87 70&#13;
19 81&#13;
'wf'A&#13;
9 9 p&#13;
$29,642 07&#13;
215 50 215 50&#13;
Howell&#13;
T : Handy and Iosco Drain.&#13;
Balance on nand Deo 81,1899 6*46&#13;
" 1899 6 46&#13;
Oceola Oounty.Draln.&#13;
„ „ 6081,1398-^--8 91&#13;
Tax Of 1898. Howell«... r.... 549 2 0 -&#13;
Oceola 408 75&#13;
Del tax and interest eoHect'd 11 29&#13;
From tax sale May 2d, 1899.. 10 60&#13;
By orders paid . 984 06&#13;
Balanc'e• ,o.'n hand Dec 31,1899 97S72 . 14 63&#13;
" Howell and Handy County Drain.&#13;
Balance on hand_pec'8l, 1898 ' 4 89&#13;
Transferred to Howell and&#13;
Handy D r a i n . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Hartland County Drain.&#13;
Delinquent tax collected.... 49 00&#13;
Int on delinquentJ»x col.... 6 46&#13;
By orders paid..':.....&#13;
Balance on band Dec 81,1899&#13;
' 06 46&#13;
Iosco No. 1.&#13;
Balance on hand Dee 81,1898 298 98&#13;
By orders paid.....»..&#13;
Balance on band Dec 81,1899&#13;
'*',-' ' LIQUGBTAX.&#13;
Balanoe on band Dee 81,1898.—&#13;
$5,636 6»&#13;
M&#13;
M . . U&#13;
247 5»&#13;
3,000 60&#13;
1.45$ 34 , _ f m&#13;
ton — _ a$??i Tax ofiiass..........;,......-. fc-r,,c^ 968 34&#13;
HjUBbttTIl™ 603 09&#13;
By orders p a i d . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Baianaa'i - - —&#13;
^ ^ • DtoburatuMDte.&#13;
' vaaanMfs reeelpta^«_.&#13;
&amp;: JI&#13;
Dfapuraemante. , * m&#13;
41 S&#13;
116&#13;
29896 v Kanouse Drain'.&#13;
Balance on hand Deo 81,1898 28 47&#13;
Lime Lake Drain.&#13;
Balance on band Dec si, 1898 • 86 82&#13;
By orders p a i d , . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
Balance on hand Dec 31,1899&#13;
L S3 82&#13;
^ - . LangYord Drain.&#13;
Balance on hand Dec 31,1398 1775&#13;
an hand Deo 81,1899&#13;
• •' • •* "' 81 SB&#13;
• ^ Marlon Drain No. 2.&#13;
Balance on baihiDeo»;v896 ; i t s ?&#13;
,*»••' •* &lt;•• ---1889, .-&#13;
Marlon Diain No, 3,&#13;
;-» «1&#13;
^«^ssy?3^j . . . . . . . • $0$&#13;
}.&gt;$•*,&#13;
V " t l l l _ ' «157 421&#13;
onhaMndarDloen^ Xtl)iiasianj No, Sv&#13;
;. ..**.*+•&#13;
&lt;$*&#13;
18,44884&#13;
^ 2 " "'• ^ "^Otebuwaaanti»'":&#13;
19 Bet&#13;
189&#13;
978 7¾&#13;
4 79&#13;
35 99&#13;
19 48&#13;
66 45&#13;
264 09&#13;
29 98&#13;
298 86&#13;
28 47&#13;
889&#13;
27.73&#13;
36 82.&#13;
767&#13;
23 8$&#13;
• « • • « *&#13;
81 SB&#13;
28 87&#13;
289&#13;
10$&#13;
• » • • • •&#13;
8 06&#13;
19 80&#13;
Welmeisjter Estate.&#13;
Bal on hand Dec 31,1898, cash 87 70&#13;
«• . " •'" check 19 81&#13;
.. 1899, cash&#13;
" " ,", cheek&#13;
. * w ' 51&#13;
Estate of Maria Lasher.&#13;
Beoelre^NQv28,l899.....i... 90 16&#13;
Balance on hand Dec al,J399..&#13;
'" BECAPrrULATIOW. Amount of state tax recelved$2P,647 48&#13;
" orders paid&#13;
•4 Contingent reo'd.. 30,284 09&#13;
*' orders paid 29,989 72&#13;
". poorJnsaaefundrc'd 5,63368&#13;
" orders paid ;. 5^6700&#13;
"' Uquor tax received.. 7,122 52&#13;
." orders paid. 6,875 02&#13;
" soldlersrel'ffu'drc'd 157 42&#13;
" orders paid. ^.,. 4100&#13;
•-" lTOtttute fund^ro'd.. 35984&#13;
-" orderspakt......;... 206 95&#13;
" primary money rc'd 8,446 00&#13;
" orders paid... 7,42000&#13;
library mone^rece'd 59100&#13;
orders paid * 27100&#13;
drain tour r«wftty«d, aar7fl9 «1&#13;
&lt; " orders paid 31,449 94&#13;
" deer license received 67 60&#13;
• t&#13;
orders paid&#13;
.'• paid&#13;
'«* re'd&#13;
•' paid " r&lt;*r&#13;
* paid&#13;
rc'd for village Brighton&#13;
1 . Brighton&#13;
Howell.&#13;
, r FowIervtUe&#13;
121&#13;
82 91&#13;
439&#13;
Balance on hand Deo 31,1899..&#13;
4426&#13;
121&#13;
40 9 L&#13;
448&#13;
3,77144&#13;
$115,091 94 $115491 94&#13;
WABTXK W. KITAPP, ) Com. on settlement&#13;
B. W. HARFORD, V with the County&#13;
H. E. BSxn, ) Treasurer. -&#13;
Moved by Mr. Cimmer.seconded by Mr.8mlth,&#13;
that the report be accepted and adopted. Carried.&#13;
Board took a recess until 1:80 o'clook.&#13;
AJTBBNOOX 8KS8l6lf.&#13;
Mr.Rtchter, from committee on civil ctalfiM,&#13;
presented several bills which were allowed as&#13;
recommended and numbered from 868 to 368&#13;
inclusive. The hour having arrived for the&#13;
order of business to be the consideration of the&#13;
bill of Dr. J. E. Brown, medical services. Mr.&#13;
Smith moved that action on the bill be deferred&#13;
until tomorrow morning at M&gt;:00 o'clock.&#13;
Motion carried. Mr. VanWmkle from committee&#13;
on crbntna! claims reported sundry bills&#13;
which were allowed as recommended and&#13;
numbered from 867 to 869. The bfil of W. J.&#13;
Mills for medical serrtees being reported by the&#13;
committee without • reooaunendatlen. On&#13;
motion the same was e^saUowed. The bfll of&#13;
Dr. Culver for medical servloes being reported&#13;
without reoommendatlon; on motion ox Mr.&#13;
Knapp the same was disallowed. Board adjourned&#13;
untU tomorrow morning at 9:09 o'clock.&#13;
Approved. E. j . S m a i P A y , Chairman.&#13;
Wednesday, January loth.&#13;
Board met, roll called, qourum present. Minutes&#13;
of Tuesday's session read and approved.&#13;
The hour bay^ajrrrredfdr the nnal oonslderation&#13;
of the bill of Dr. J. 1 . Browne. On meOoo&#13;
of Mr. Knapn the bul was aUowed aa charged&#13;
^ndnumbered 8 » . Ox mdtlou p j ^ . u s s i n e f&#13;
^ board proceedad to » Urn: lepon oc&#13;
Dram CommVsaloner Wm. M, Horton, vts&#13;
To the Board of Superrlaors o t Livingston&#13;
- County: - ,&#13;
QenOemen—I have the honor tojrabmlt herewith&#13;
my report aa County Dram cexaasMonat&#13;
lor the-pertod fromOcf 7th, A. D. tt$9. The&#13;
100&#13;
80-&#13;
Baiaaee on haNnedw tlo^ni aO/oiusnstyi .D. mln&#13;
\ * :m&#13;
A^ f-li^ojLtat*a*M O*'fct »* ^osfsaose 81,&#13;
Sewn treaauMra reeeinis.&#13;
e j t i w ^ x i i n g ^ )sjf *Mf*&#13;
nnAiirs.&#13;
c\y&#13;
MtSBSWlPS&#13;
TSSSKM . . •&#13;
; / ' &lt; ; ,&#13;
^ • - . • ; •&#13;
" , • • t ^ - * « , - , » , -•?,,&#13;
:";;, ' .-L ' • i y&#13;
' ^ ' • ' • . • . • "&#13;
$220 4* ; $300 40&#13;
-^By'OOjMrO F$ld«»,»., • «&lt;*-«»•.«• .*&#13;
^ ' Oceola Drain No. L&#13;
BxJanoe on hand Decil, n o t or&#13;
^^^S^BSBBBBW^W ^pBgp exsssosasjB) «B)^^8^s*^Br4l^ V^SSSSF •&#13;
' • • ^ • • " V - •:*•'"•:•' : tioa&#13;
Sh^wastee River Drain;&#13;
on band Dec 81,&#13;
on hand Dee si,, 1893&#13;
001«$&#13;
. * V * :&#13;
681 OS&#13;
soon oounty Ne. s drain.&#13;
The foUownig drains remain incompleted at&#13;
this date, rix^Conway NTTTdrtdnTlceooNo.7&#13;
* drain, Iosco No. 3 dram, lowxTNo. 1 dnahk.&#13;
CotoV County drain, Uvlnftoan County NoTl&#13;
'"" —— pottnty"»0k * ^ ¾ ¾ ^ ^&#13;
D r a ^ CoSoeteh Oounty&#13;
Otoaf9dss)Wit,,;, , - * • * « -01436&#13;
- 870&#13;
I i* *1»-&#13;
TOSS8«&#13;
'31, Sol&#13;
B a ^ g ^ a f t l j a n S ^ ^ ^&#13;
iL, " ^ Weal Cedar Dttisu '-&#13;
Balance on band Deo 81,1000; 1 U&#13;
3 3 \ o f 1008,...,....*.'......,,,; 42060 v.&#13;
K ™ ^ " ^ ^ a w w .^^sfEiVs^^sansi&#13;
flSB&#13;
. » • •&#13;
0*UU)d9Wtt,»09 - i ~ . .&#13;
1 9 »&#13;
00&#13;
00 48&#13;
_i'« 1.?&#13;
w Marion Dram No, 5,&#13;
' Carter Oounty&#13;
D a n o u e n t m ooOected;,^&#13;
^ orders paw .^,. ..,/..^,^ . ;. %K&#13;
r-':V'-'T ' ••' SB'&#13;
• '(•'* *W iiiii imiil&#13;
U M O t&#13;
• ' ' • ' S i ' *&#13;
^ • n &gt; *&#13;
BtOaneeni fund DOS «.1890,&#13;
WJ&#13;
•• i i&#13;
• * • • " ! • 080&#13;
mms**'- »'• » ! • » ' •&#13;
»» l l i i i i&#13;
9££2*tato8W«7» 1399 In, \IV,\&#13;
u f a a t i ptjio m ~.~.~..m,» .,h.,.,;;&#13;
Dec 31,&#13;
-1001&#13;
.-10«t&#13;
:^8&#13;
as&#13;
ii;&#13;
— 01«&#13;
- ^ «t$&#13;
"*!«&#13;
8010'&#13;
*9tmtm(tim^am&#13;
'.-&lt;&#13;
.V.-..&#13;
V i*«V &gt; . ^ f » '&#13;
1 *'••&#13;
to borrow funds* should&#13;
y funds become exhaueted before Jam&#13;
7 SrTBtoetor from.Oc«am.lttee on&#13;
L . - ' » i»&#13;
BaJaAoatatuftdDeesuuse&#13;
-.-.-•P'Sgfc'&#13;
csasra drawn »m»t»'&#13;
Balance in fund Dee n , tew&#13;
Baisaos la fund Dec 31, itw&#13;
J * m o t i o n q t J ^ o w&#13;
t»n we*ae«ep*edr"Mr Bloater fromeommtttee&#13;
on otvU claim* reported sundry Mile. i&#13;
were allowed ae recommended and anni A m 871 to 879 inclusive. The bTU of Or •&#13;
m Mr medical servioea In the Oamp east,&#13;
"^ services as a ooi&gt;sultto«pJr~&#13;
No.lsDrelo,&#13;
gg-^^seeintt4tfi»e on&#13;
C^esjVAevSMe^aaflAcwa&#13;
Balance m fund Dee M,M8»&#13;
Balan—ce I n jhBnaSn^dyT H, to.t 7» Drain.&#13;
fteeiit Balaam lujunqde i0id*ot7a,a1K»o * Praia.&#13;
BCaillaiantcieo ilia Qfoonmdn uiteeetl nTn.o 1r8 *&#13;
Dee ft, * .&#13;
»»-w*w»wp» »•*»»« — e&gt;w&#13;
8 »&#13;
leo?&#13;
lOOt&#13;
18 TT&#13;
MTT&#13;
Bslaenn *Ktee&#13;
Orders&#13;
•(.•in » &gt; • • ! » ' • '&#13;
U O M Lake Drain.&#13;
IntttnTpclT, 1 8 M _ . _ :£S&#13;
Balance la tend Dec n . us*..&#13;
Balaaoe la fundin Oeocto 7N,1o8.8 l» .D. rain. &gt;&#13;
Orders drawn&#13;
Balance in funCdo. n&#13;
rteheeo abuilnl ebaet atalltoiowoe.d Maserh juuurngmedo. rM mocotvoeos Mi •tvoTnX sBvjrreoeoteve aunnstisli ol :x8.8 o'clock. thMe br uBYuorldBern Am Oov'Nedel it bhea tr etehoeo velodtee rdSlaTaMUoowtilonSt leoawrretded a. t Mchra rdgiemdm: emr omtioovne dW thMa ts etheoeo bdielld baen adl -&#13;
toe pro „&#13;
S e AntWtaioon League oXr;Fowl&#13;
_ _ e a W n k % ? ? M ^ ^ e e ^ By request&#13;
^ l w o e j » a ^ a ^ o W y _ &lt; 5 a a w ^ o w ^ ^&#13;
'atatlns! thai&#13;
oJ^FwflsrvWe ffi&#13;
agreed to pay for his (Person's) services aau\ae&#13;
ttaihevote _&#13;
_ B Perton .837.50 lorlocal services in a . _&#13;
VttWnBe; .trom^eoeamlttee cm criminal&#13;
rttdjhe 'bSW&#13;
l ^ t ^ r a l n ,&#13;
Qonway No, t Drain,&#13;
Balaaoe in fund Oct 7,189»&#13;
" « Deen. y ...&#13;
Conway Kb. 5 Drain.&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1890 „_&#13;
" Dec 81, ••&#13;
Balaaoe in fuCndon Owcaty 7 N,1o8.9 »u Drain. ? Dec 31, ».&#13;
18»&#13;
18»&#13;
«8»&#13;
4 80&#13;
,815&#13;
815&#13;
»23&#13;
Balance in fuCndon Owcaty 7N.1o8.9 194 Drain.&#13;
*• ••. sDec3ii •".&#13;
Conway No. 15 Drain.&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1899 . - 2 08&#13;
•• . " Dee 81, " ~ ~&#13;
Handy No. 2 Drain.&#13;
Balance In fund Oct 7,189» —&#13;
" Dec s i , " .. Marlon No. 3 Drain.&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1889 .&#13;
Sarlon No. 4Drain.&#13;
. Oct 7,1899 „...„.&#13;
•• " Dec 31, •'&#13;
15 89&#13;
1589&#13;
- 2 0»&#13;
985&#13;
935&#13;
'105&#13;
106&#13;
Marion Drain No. 2&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1899&#13;
~ , '* Deo 31, " —&#13;
West Ced*r Drain.&#13;
Balance In fund Oct 7,1899&#13;
Orders drawn ... —.. _.&#13;
Conway and Cohoctah Union Drain&#13;
Balance In fund Oct 7; 1899&#13;
Orders drawn - —&#13;
I9 60&#13;
1950&#13;
23^37&#13;
28 87&#13;
42 12&#13;
4212&#13;
44153&#13;
43410&#13;
Balance in fund Dec 31,1899 - . — . — 6 63&#13;
Green Oak No. 3 Drain,&#13;
Balance In fnnd Oct 7,1899 119 Jtt.&#13;
Ordera drawn — . 106 2»&#13;
Balance In fund Dec 81,1899 14 37&#13;
Cedar River State Swamp Land Imp. Drain.&#13;
Balance In fund Oct 7,1899 -. 320 42&#13;
Orders drawn and Interest on orders 42 24&#13;
Balance In fund Dec s i , 1899..... 27818&#13;
Handy No. 4 Drain.&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1899 260 40&#13;
Orders drawn — -- _. 20040&#13;
liall Couuty Drain/&#13;
Balance in fund O c t ; , 1889 123 81&#13;
Orders drawn — 123 81&#13;
Smith and Smith Drain.&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1899 ,... 7192&#13;
Orders drawn 71 80&#13;
Btlaace in fund Dee 31,1899* 012&#13;
Conway No. 19 Drain.&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1899&#13;
Orders drawn -&#13;
Cohoctah and Deerfleld County Drain.&#13;
Balance lq teafl n^t ?, IM» „.„. 6802 171 wereallowea&#13;
orders drawn&#13;
A , allowed at 82JL0O and numbered 875.&#13;
Board adjourned until tpHaortow morning at&#13;
aeWefcT Approved, K.jTtoaamAKTcl'n.&#13;
Thursday! January 1L&#13;
Beard met; roll called; quorum present Mia*&#13;
utee ef Wednesday's session read and approved.&#13;
On motion of Mr Knapp the oaalr appolnted.a&#13;
committee to lnre*ttgatev the neeawwyel purwrlter-&#13;
foe the County Clerk's and&#13;
•s offiees; said oommlttee oonwell.&#13;
aiasple, rJaSSVid Knapp. iffBjhteri&#13;
from oommlttee on civil claims, reported sever*&#13;
al bills of Dr J 1 Brown and A O'Neli, medical&#13;
services in ooataglous disease eases, and other&#13;
bills la connection with the same, which were&#13;
allowed as reoommended and numbered 87?t 878&#13;
879,881-2-3-4. On motion ol Mr. Qlaaple Board&#13;
took a reoess until l .80 o'clock.&#13;
ATTBBKOOK SaaSXOK.&#13;
Mr Blchter, from oommlttee on civil claims,&#13;
reported the bill of Mrs Anson Briggs tor rent&#13;
In oontaglous disease case, with recommendation&#13;
that it be disallowed. On motion of Mr&#13;
Bidwell the recommendation was concurred ln&gt;&#13;
Mr Van Winkle, from oommlttee on criminal&#13;
claims, reported the bill of W O Hendryx, str^&#13;
vices as game warden. On motion of Mr Blchter&#13;
action on the bill was deterred until 9 o'clock&#13;
to-morrow morning, Mr Bidwell submitted the&#13;
following report:&#13;
To the Honorable Board of Supervisors ot Livingston&#13;
County:—&#13;
Your special committee beg leave-to make the&#13;
following report, viz: That we have examined&#13;
the typewriters now In the clerk's and probate&#13;
offices for trial, and that we fall to s*e the necessity&#13;
of such typewriters, and that we recommend&#13;
that all offers tor such machines be rejected&#13;
and the machines ordered removed from&#13;
the building.&#13;
Frank £ Bidwell, Douglas Giaspie, George&#13;
Dodds. Walter W Knapn, Committee.&#13;
On motion of Mr. Ktuhter the report was accepted&#13;
and adopted.&#13;
Mr Bichter presented the following resolution&#13;
which was accepted and adopted, as follows:&#13;
Resolved. That the_Clerk be instructed to purchase&#13;
a lock and keys to the water closet in the&#13;
na&amp;ement of the court house; that he place one&#13;
key in tbe hand* of each person entitled, to one&#13;
either as a public official, assistai t or one whose&#13;
business. Is connected with this building, and&#13;
'that safd closet be kept dosed to the public except&#13;
during sessions of circuit court, board of&#13;
supervisors and such ether days when public&#13;
meetingsiare held. Further, that this resolution&#13;
be strictly adhered to and that a notice be&#13;
placed above the door of tbe closet to that&#13;
effect. Board adjourned until to-morrow morning&#13;
at 9 o'clock.&#13;
Approved. E. J. SH'KBIDAN, Chairman. .&#13;
Friday, January 12.&#13;
Board met; roll called; quorum present. Minutes&#13;
of Tnursday's session read and approved.&#13;
The chairman announced that the hour nad arrived&#13;
for the order ot business to be the consideration&#13;
of thel)lll of W O Hondryx. Ou uwtluu&#13;
or Mr Dodds the bill was allowed at 820.00 and&#13;
ins reported several bills which were ti reoommended and numberedJromi9l&#13;
Delusive. Mr. BlohlejraJeotweeeatad&#13;
uaw 1-8» o'clock.&#13;
&lt; Asraanoosi saastov.&#13;
On motion of Mr. Beedthe wie/h wasinsti&#13;
ad to let the pubUc pHnUnitothe lowest bidd&#13;
Mr.Backer presortedthefoUowin* reeolutlo&#13;
Whereas it has been recently found out that&#13;
epfipenaatloa canJwJegaUy aUowedjietnh&#13;
otoommitieee of the Boards of Buper^sors I&#13;
nommittee work perfottned while suob Boen&#13;
JrTnol^n sSselouV Ba fti?eeWed tlia#a/rbU!&#13;
presented to the Boartof •upewisorsof Livta&#13;
well, QoTdoat ^%01aap»raj4w, ff^&#13;
S ? ^ r / ? n a p B % o V S H n 5 t K lanitor baM&#13;
iulreJtteo gf iSveS Ta Bi ^m4d., - ¾ ¾ a|p^vedj5r,t5&#13;
rTreaeurerandj&#13;
Omnied*^Mr&#13;
oUowlnt iSaoEttop w:&#13;
In the si t&amp;Mt9&amp;BB&amp;Sl ^tKtbtSfS&#13;
4 to our ehabawn&#13;
further reeolv&#13;
L to our Oovnty&#13;
t ante aaaaner l a&#13;
570 87&#13;
570 87&#13;
Balance in fund M ...&#13;
Howell No. 1 Drain.&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1899&#13;
Orders drawn. .&#13;
..2067 08&#13;
- 4735 09&#13;
.... 99 15&#13;
..- 95 94&#13;
Balance in fund Dec 31,1899.. .— 3 21&#13;
Balance in fund&#13;
Orders drawn&#13;
Bogue Creek Drain,&#13;
ad Oct 7,1889 1577 10&#13;
- „. 1505 00&#13;
Balanoe in fund Dec 31,1899 7210&#13;
Iosco No. 2 Drain.&#13;
Balance i n fund Oct 7.1899 1682 53&#13;
Tax to assess 1900 1044 25&#13;
Orders drawn „ ^. - -&#13;
Balance ln^urrdDec 31,1899&#13;
' Hewell No. 2 Drain.&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1899&#13;
Orders drawn .&#13;
2726 78&#13;
1118 80&#13;
_ 239 30&#13;
.. 233 30&#13;
Balance in fund&#13;
Howell Village County Drain.&#13;
Balance In fund Oct 7, —&#13;
Orders drawn&#13;
600&#13;
219 58&#13;
216 28&#13;
Balance in fund Deo 31,1899 .._..&#13;
Handy No. u Drain.&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1899 j&#13;
Orders drawn -&#13;
- v 3*8&#13;
„123 52&#13;
.. 116 30&#13;
Balance in fund Dec 31,1899 ..&#13;
Conway No. 16 Drain.&#13;
Balance In fund Oct 7,1899 .&#13;
Orders drawn ..&#13;
• . O c e o l a N o . l Drain.&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1899&#13;
Orders drawn u.~.&#13;
722&#13;
12195&#13;
117 74&#13;
Balance In fund Dec 31,1899 ;.&#13;
_ ^Conway No. 17 Drain.'&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1889&#13;
« Dec 31, ••&#13;
^ . , • Marion No. 5 Drain.&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1899&#13;
•• »• Dec 31, ,%&#13;
UnadlUa and Stockbrldge Drain&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1899 ~SL^^&#13;
** . D e c 31, "&#13;
Balance .I n f*u.n dW O ct C7r,1ee8k9 9D_r *l°'&#13;
" " . Dee si, •• ,._&#13;
. ^f8 6 0 O** No«»' Drain.&#13;
Balance in fund Oct 7,1890 -&#13;
" Den 81, •* .,&#13;
m Green Oak No. 4 Drain.&#13;
Balaaoe In fund Oct 7, 1899&#13;
Interest oTno dtealrin, quent tax .&#13;
Orders drawn....&#13;
4 21&#13;
49 49&#13;
22 50&#13;
"2699&#13;
082&#13;
082&#13;
. 097&#13;
097&#13;
2280&#13;
22 30&#13;
080&#13;
030&#13;
910&#13;
910&#13;
4864,&#13;
260&#13;
46 84&#13;
458»&#13;
Balance in fund Dee 81,1899-&#13;
_ losoo No 3 Drain,&#13;
Tax assessed isoo .&#13;
Orders drawn.. ^.&#13;
044&#13;
— _ » . 80000&#13;
187 85&#13;
Balance in land- •&lt;•!•• —yya,r-&#13;
_ M Coles County Drain.&#13;
Tax assessed for 1900...&#13;
Orders drawn*.. '236 00&#13;
2610&#13;
Balance in funa\Dec 81*1*99 I^'ibpso&#13;
_ Livingston County No l Drain.&#13;
Tax assessedlor 1900--. . 2520 00&#13;
Orders drawn . » _ 291 so&#13;
Balanoe in fund Dec 31,189» _^_*"2228 20&#13;
_ Livi^ugston County No. 2 Drain.&#13;
Tax assessed for 1900 ^.. 40725&#13;
Orders drawn •. 885 61&#13;
_ Jewett County Drain.&#13;
Tax assessed for 1000 , _&#13;
Orders drawn&#13;
2161&#13;
868 31&#13;
21905&#13;
B i n * ALU&gt;waa JAruAJsr taatxow 1900,&#13;
855 M HPuUen, burial indigent soldier...44» sol&#13;
tawmnan. Mvery^. ,. ^..^.-^^. 11 oal&#13;
»». ••.••• 8 85 J&#13;
r^.«,T.-,r,,"itl1&#13;
857 lumber&#13;
iBne aCchha, wrfoi%/ eon»table . taehdaTnw*yCpoO,&#13;
numbered 885. Mr Van Winkle from committee&#13;
ou criminal claims reported several bills, which&#13;
were allowed as recommended and numbered&#13;
886 to 890 inclusive, Mr Richter from committee&#13;
on civil claims, reported sundry Wlm, whhh&#13;
as recommended an&#13;
from 891 to 896. On motion of&#13;
row morning at 10&#13;
and numbered&#13;
Mr Aeed to-mor-&#13;
. o'clock was set as the hour&#13;
for tbe election of a janitor ot the court house.&#13;
Board took a recess until l :30 o'clock.&#13;
APTBENOON HV8SIOX.&#13;
The bill of Ihllng Bros &amp; Bvard tor bookcase&#13;
for probate office being reported by toe committee&#13;
on civil claims without recommendation, on&#13;
motion of Mr Knapp the same was disallowed.&#13;
Mr Ricbter, from committee on civil claims,&#13;
reported several bills which were allowed as&#13;
recommended and numbered from 897 to 9to Inclusive.&#13;
Tbe bill of O L Davis was submitted&#13;
to the Board by tbe committee on civil claims.&#13;
Mr Knapp moved that the bill be disallowed.&#13;
Motion lost Mr Bidwell moved that the -bill&#13;
be allowed at U.00. Motion lost. Mr Burden&#13;
moved that tbe bill be allowed at 86.00. Motion&#13;
carried and bill numbered 911. Mr Ci mmer presented&#13;
the following resolution, which was ac-&#13;
1607 98 I cePtc&lt;1 and^Mlopteaa* follows -.&#13;
Resolved, That the Clerk be and is hereby instructed&#13;
to draw an order on the county Treasurer&#13;
In tavor of the Sheriff at the end of each&#13;
quarter for 8200.00. and that the Sheriff shall&#13;
give credit to the county for the monies so&#13;
arawn, upon his bills-presented to the Board of&#13;
Supervisors: and that the Clerk is further Instructed&#13;
to draw an order in favor of the various&#13;
salaried officers at the end ot each month for&#13;
the amounts due on the precedlug month's salary,&#13;
and also amount due the New State Telephone&#13;
Company.&#13;
Mr. Blchter, chairman of the committee on&#13;
civil claims reported the bin of S. S. Abbott for&#13;
legal services in Cohoctah and Deerfleld Drain.&#13;
Mr. Gray moved that the bill be allowed at 820.&#13;
Mr. Hacker moved to amend the motion by&#13;
allowing the bill at $10. Amendment carried.&#13;
The vote recurring on the original motion as&#13;
amended was carried and bill numbered 912.&#13;
Mr. Cimmer presented the following resolution&#13;
which was accepted and adopted as follows:&#13;
Resolved. That the Janitor be Instructed to&#13;
receive bids and contract for coal and wood for&#13;
the coming season and that he certify the&#13;
{trice and amount paid to the county clerk, who&#13;
s authorized to draw his order on the County&#13;
Treasurer tot the same. Mr. Hacker presented&#13;
the following resolution which was accepted&#13;
and adopted as follows -.—Whereas it has become&#13;
a common practice tor persons to walk over the&#13;
grounds of the court house/regardless of their&#13;
condition: BeltreeotvedbytheBoard of supervisors&#13;
that the Janitor be empowered to stop&#13;
such trespass and that he be instructed to en&#13;
force thu resolution. Mr. Burden presented&#13;
the report of the committee on abstracts as&#13;
follows:—Your committee on abstracts beg&#13;
to report that they have examined the abstract&#13;
books kept by the Register of Deeds, and that&#13;
they find them correouy kept and io good Shane,&#13;
SignedWaaies Burden, Henry Bonn. George&#13;
Dodds, Committee On motion ot Mr. Hacker&#13;
the report WM accepted and adopted.. Mr. Bidwell&#13;
presented the following resol0tlon:-Resolved&#13;
that the County Clerk be and Is hereby&#13;
Instructed to purchase a book ease to be used&#13;
intfae Probate Office. Said book case to cost&#13;
net to exceed-$10.00. Mr. Bidwell moved Its&#13;
adoption,' Motion carried. Approved.&#13;
B. J. SHBBIDAX, Chairman.&#13;
Board met: rol&#13;
''8&#13;
Saturday, January is.&#13;
called: qqurum present,&#13;
Balance in fund Deo si, 18»&#13;
_ Bast Cedar Drain.&#13;
Deficit lastTepcrt Oct 7.1&#13;
Delinquent tax ooUeoted,&#13;
149 86&#13;
086&#13;
— 5 »8&#13;
Balance la fund Dec »1.1899 51»&#13;
« . y , Handy and losoo Drain,&#13;
Balanse ^ftmd Oct 7,1808 . 54«&#13;
~^ D00 81, 188» 1 «...». 5'46&#13;
Janitor for the Court House had arrived, Mr.&#13;
Knapp moved that the Board proceed to an informal&#13;
ballot for the election ot- a janitor for&#13;
athne Court House, Carried. Messrs. Hacker f t J D o d ^ ^ t w appointed teller*. Result of&#13;
ballot:-Whale numoec voting 16, of which&#13;
Frank Mealio received 16. Ou motion of Mr.&#13;
Riehter the vote was declared formal and Mr.&#13;
Mealio unanimously elected. On motion of Mr.&#13;
Reed the janitor salary was fixed at 8500.00 for&#13;
the coming year. Mr. Cimmer moved that the&#13;
janitor be allowed to- haw the woodwork next&#13;
to the floor on the first floor of the Court House&#13;
varnished and that the clerk be allowed to draw&#13;
D. Thompson and F. P. Dean for services under&#13;
direction of the state tax commission was&#13;
submitted to the board by the committee on&#13;
civil olalms. Mr. Rced-presented the following&#13;
reeolutloni-Wberea* there now exists an un*&#13;
cStointty regarding the legality of the state&#13;
Tax gommisfftmr therefore oe it resolved that&#13;
this Board of Supervisors defer action on the&#13;
bills presented bv the County Treasuier and&#13;
Register of Deeds for services rendered by&#13;
order of the State Tax Commission until the&#13;
^ I t y o t ^ C o m m l M l o n is established. Mr.&#13;
Reed moyedite adoption. Motion earned. On&#13;
motion of Mr. Cimmer the County Treasurer&#13;
s&#13;
s e a V a i t e / T m O o , supplies&#13;
861 Callahan ft Co, law hook,&#13;
a s e l l Howlett, expenses&#13;
857 W W Knapp. supplies&#13;
868 D Smith, justice aceoun&#13;
88» W L LyoM. servleef .&#13;
870 J B Browne, medical&#13;
871 Ida M Kent, n u r s e - ~ — . „-^w&#13;
872 O J Parker, supplies Cont disease ease 45 55&#13;
878 X W Brewer, Printing . - ^ - . . ^ . - ^ - . , 4 26&#13;
874 Joseph Fraok.'deputy sheriff — — 2475&#13;
875 W MPbwer, justice aooouns.—, 2100&#13;
876 O IBuroes, coal — ~ — - . _ — — — 80 is&#13;
877 A CPNlel, Md services Oamp eont case 15 00&#13;
878 A O'Neli, services Brooks coat ease 74 00&#13;
879 A O'Neli, services consulting physician 5 00&#13;
880 J E Browne. Md ser Wolcott eont case so 00&#13;
88t J B Browne, consult'g phy Brooks case 6 00,&#13;
882 C W Barber, board bill nurses 16 76&#13;
883 H F Stork, nursing Camp oases^S wks 80 00&#13;
884 W W Knapp, supplies Camp eont case 10 90&#13;
885 Wm O Henaryx, game warden : 20 00&#13;
886 Geo B Wesalnger. deputy sheriff i960&#13;
887 Rich D Roche, under sheriff 96 45&#13;
888 Malaehv Roche, criminal account 406 98&#13;
889 Caleb KColtett, deputy sheriff 76 64&#13;
«90 B Ajatowe, justice account —, 2215&#13;
891 WnMfcPherson &amp; Sons, sup eont cases 3 78&#13;
892 C G Jewett, supplies, and repairs...... 79 39&#13;
893 A O'Neli, medical services 5 00&#13;
891McHenchA Nortbrup, disinfecting. 700&#13;
896 J B Browne, medical services ~^~... 5 00&#13;
896 Richmond ft Backus Co, supplies 23 30&#13;
897 Nellie Gessler, nursing Wolcott ease 2100&#13;
898 Wm Huntington, postmortem e x a m 10 eo&#13;
89* George Barnes, prlnttbg„_. .' 16 00&#13;
900 O J Parker, supplies.-— ) 4 87&#13;
9M Jos A Franks, labor — „ 3 00&#13;
802 Ward ft Btllson, supplies 2 70&#13;
.903 E K Johnson, supplies 1 05&#13;
-904-W J Larkin, election returns - 2 46&#13;
905 w M Horton, expenses „ 1522&#13;
906 John Ryan, printing. 68 00&#13;
907 Ihllng Bros ft Bvered, supplies „....^ir-4»4T&#13;
908 J H Wallace, supplies ....._ _.:i 14 35&#13;
909 Malachy Roche, ofvll account 88 26&#13;
910 Plcckney Dispatch, printing.. 2 60&#13;
911 O L Davis, annotating statutes 6 00&#13;
912 H s Abbott legal services ..._ . 10 00&#13;
913 Doubleday Bros tt Go, supplies ..: 17 58&#13;
914 O J Parker, supt of poor—«^.-...... 26 50&#13;
915 E A Xubh, supt of poor 62 60&#13;
916 Henry Damann, supt of poor _~.. 61 50&#13;
917 Amos Wlnegar, supt of poor„ 18 12&#13;
918 H P Petolmeny, medical services 10 00&#13;
919 F P Dean, services 33 30&#13;
920 K D Sargent, services 1100&#13;
921 Paul Itsel, wood — ' 3 00&#13;
flftjBiipenrlgnrH, all 310 ftg&#13;
Ckrk's Certificate.&#13;
S T A T S O F M I C H I Q A H , i . .&#13;
flfflintV Of T.lylngat^n, f»*. _ —&#13;
I, Willis L. Lyons, Clerk of said County of&#13;
Livingston, and Clerk o t the Circuit Court for&#13;
said County, do hereby certify that I h a v e compared&#13;
the foregoing copy of the original record&#13;
ot Proceedings ot Supervisors with the original&#13;
record thereof, now remaining in ray office, and&#13;
that it is a true and correef transcript therefrom,&#13;
and of the whole ot such original record.&#13;
In testimony whereof, 1 have hereunto set my&#13;
hand, and affixed the seal ot said Court and&#13;
County, tbls 20th day ot January, A. D. 1900.&#13;
' [SBAIi.]&#13;
WXLXJB L. L Y O K S , Clerk.&#13;
She—You would make the thirteenth.&#13;
—Harlem Life.&#13;
CSlNESfi ALMANAC.&#13;
Infallible Jonrmal That Bajoyw&#13;
the L**areet Circulation tn.&#13;
the- WorlA.&#13;
The Chineae Almanac i s the moat&#13;
largely circulated publication in the&#13;
world, the number of copies printed&#13;
and sold yearly reaching several millions.&#13;
I t is printed at Peking, and la a&#13;
monopoly of the emperor, no other almanac&#13;
being permitted t o be sold in&#13;
that country.. Although containing reliable&#13;
astronomical Ittfrwmatlttn, ^tta_&#13;
chief mission is to give full and accurate&#13;
information for selecting lucky&#13;
places for performing all the acta,&#13;
great and small, of everyday life, And&#13;
aa every act of life in China, howavwi&#13;
trivial, depends for Its success On the&#13;
time in which, and the direction (point&#13;
of, compass) toward which it is done, tt&#13;
is of the utmost importance that every*&#13;
one shoul^ have correct information at&#13;
all times available to enable him so tft&#13;
order bis life aa to avoid bad luck and&#13;
calamity, and secure good/ luck and&#13;
proeperity. Ser great is the native fslth&#13;
in i t s infallibility, that not long since&#13;
the Chinese minister to Germany re&gt;&#13;
fused to sail on a day which had beta&#13;
appointed because it was declared**&#13;
the) almanac to be unlucky.&#13;
Monthly Pains oared by DrTMnee* Pain P1U*&#13;
/</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Note</name>
          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36688">
              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6453">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch February 22, 1900</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6454">
                <text>February 22, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6455">
                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6456">
                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6457">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6458">
                <text>1900-02-22</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6459">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="15">
        <name>newspaper</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="16">
        <name>pinckney dispatch</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="933" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="861">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/aece9f7ec01125bc93b7ab44af1bdf77.pdf</src>
        <authentication>2246131b878718eab6248e0b13953e2d</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="9">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1621">
                  <text>Newspaper</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="1630">
                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="57">
          <name>Hidden Search Text</name>
          <description>Enter Search Text that is always hidden except to edit.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32200">
              <text>VOL. XVIII. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MAR. 1, 1900. No. 9.&#13;
The--&#13;
Surprise&#13;
Store,&#13;
BARGAINS,&#13;
We give you big value for your money&#13;
HANDKERCHIEFS&#13;
Children-shdkfs lc&#13;
Ladies' fancy embroidered bdkfs&#13;
5,10,15,25c&#13;
Men's plain hemstitched hdkfs 5,10c&#13;
Men'* red and blue bdkTs 5c&#13;
HAIR PINS AND ORNAMENTS&#13;
1 Bunch hair pins lc&#13;
Box assorted hair pins 3c&#13;
Bone hair pins doz 5, 10c&#13;
Pouipadore combs 10, 15c&#13;
Ladies' puff combs with sets 10,15, 25&#13;
Side combs 5, 10, 15c&#13;
Back combs 10, 15c, with sets ' 25c&#13;
HOSIERY&#13;
Infants'*hose in wools and cottons 10c&#13;
r&#13;
Boys' 25c quality fleeced lined 15c&#13;
Ladies' fleeced lined hose 10c&#13;
Men's heavy cotton socks 5c&#13;
Men's Wool socks 15c&#13;
STATIONERY ' ~~&#13;
Bottle jbe.st ink 3c&#13;
25 good Envelopes 3c&#13;
Ink tablets 5, 10c&#13;
Composition book 5c&#13;
Drawing book 5c&#13;
Box of paper and envelopes 10,25c&#13;
DRESS LINING OEPT. ~ Yard Brush edge- binding 5c&#13;
Set dress stays 5c&#13;
Velveteen binding per bunch tfftr&#13;
Card of hooks and eyes 1, 2, 3c&#13;
Pair dress shields 5. 7c&#13;
Collar canvass per yard 16c&#13;
Cambric per yard 5&lt;;&#13;
Shirt canvass per yard 9&lt;\&#13;
Drilling per yard t 9c&#13;
Skirt lining per yard 10c&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
SOAPS&#13;
Cocoanut cream soap&#13;
Castile soap&#13;
Tar soap&#13;
Ivory soap&#13;
5c&#13;
5i;&#13;
2c&#13;
4c&#13;
TINWARE 2 Quart tin pail ,5n&#13;
Kettle Covers, all sizes #,3,4,50&#13;
6 Quart milk pans 7c&#13;
Tea and coffwe pots 10, 15, 25c&#13;
Copper-bottom tea kettle 65c&#13;
Come and see our S a n d 10 c e n t&#13;
tables, they contain bargains. O n e&#13;
d o l l a r spent in our store goes as far as&#13;
t w o d o l l a r s spent elsewhere.&#13;
MATCH US IF YOU CAN.&#13;
Yours for trade,&#13;
E. A. BOWMAN, Prop.&#13;
Bowman Block, Pinckney.&#13;
B E R T WELLMAN&#13;
Manager of Pinckney Stnre.&#13;
Howell Store, next to P. 0.&#13;
March 1,1900.&#13;
This is a spr.ng month.&#13;
Two months of 1900 gone.&#13;
It is about time for the village&#13;
election.&#13;
The next holiday will be St. Patrick's&#13;
Day.&#13;
Do not ^forget that the minstrels&#13;
will be here the 16th.&#13;
Bert Wellman was in Howell on&#13;
bnsiness the last of last week.&#13;
Wirt Barton visited at Lime fladley's&#13;
in Lvndon one day last week.&#13;
F. A. Barton and son Wirt was in&#13;
Iosco on business one day last week.&#13;
Miss Fannie Teeple of Albion College&#13;
was home the last of last week.&#13;
Earnest Carr is learning the barber&#13;
trade in Geo. Green's tonsorial parlors.&#13;
Those who were on the streets&#13;
Thursday had to "take heed" or they&#13;
fell.&#13;
The boys enjoyecl skating on the&#13;
walks Thursday—easier to skate than&#13;
to walk.&#13;
Miss Lottie Braley of Plainfield was&#13;
the guest of Mrs, H. F. Sigler, Thursday&#13;
last.&#13;
Sylvester Bullis of Unadilla spent&#13;
the later part of last week in Jackson&#13;
and Horton.&#13;
The Church Workers took in over&#13;
4 $11 at the tea at Fraak Siglers on&#13;
Wednesday last.&#13;
F. H. Nix &amp; Son, photographers,&#13;
have a change of adv. wbich will interest&#13;
our readers. It is on page 1.&#13;
Matt Brady who has been ill for so&#13;
long has to far re covered as to be up&#13;
town Saturday last, and shake hands&#13;
with his many friends.&#13;
The tonsorial parlors occupied by&#13;
Geo. Green have been re-papered and&#13;
the air-iierht put in making it one of&#13;
the. finest shops in the county.&#13;
J. J. Teeple w s in Jackson last&#13;
week attended the tenth anniversary&#13;
of the Elks. John now wears one of&#13;
those pins which means so much to&#13;
those who have been through the&#13;
mysteriesNjf Eibdora.&#13;
St._Mary*s society are arranging to&#13;
give a minstrel show at the opera&#13;
house in this place, on Friday evening&#13;
March 16. We can promise our readers&#13;
a fine treat as this society never&#13;
does things by ha! :es.&#13;
The filth annivil round-up of the&#13;
State Farmer's. Institute will be in&#13;
session at Ann Arbor the last four&#13;
ot this&#13;
men and&#13;
pains to make this one the best&#13;
round-up ever held. .&#13;
The Farmer's Co operative Beet&#13;
Sugar Co. of Dundee, will not furnish&#13;
MUM* tatory tin- season but will have&#13;
it re.idy for the season 1901. In the&#13;
meantime they will instruct the farmers&#13;
as to the best variety of beets&#13;
to crow and bow to do it.&#13;
TRIED TO KILL HIS WIFE&#13;
GEOEGE BCflL, OK ANN ARBOR,&#13;
SHOT AT HEK FOUB. TIMES.&#13;
WOll AN STUCK ONCE BUT WOUND&#13;
NOT DANGEBOUS.&#13;
Several ftlen, A'ter Severe Struggle,&#13;
Disarmed Him. PHOTOS.&#13;
Prices Cut in Two.&#13;
We will be here tmtil&#13;
MARCH 15,&#13;
And until that time we will make&#13;
B e s t 3.00 Cabinets&#13;
Ann Arbor, Mich., February 23.—&#13;
(Special.)—Geo. Buhl, a laborer, attempted&#13;
to kill his wife, Lydia, this&#13;
afterju/on by shooting. Out of lour&#13;
pistol snots only one found its mark&#13;
tearing its way through the womans&#13;
flesh at the base of the skull. The&#13;
wonnd, while pain fulis not considered&#13;
dangerous. It seems thai Buhl&#13;
and his wife seperated some months&#13;
since. She then applied tor a divorce.&#13;
Buhl had some property left htm by&#13;
the death of a cousin. Mrs. Buhl&#13;
withdrew her suit, but later began&#13;
it again and enjoined her husband&#13;
from disposing ol any of bis new&#13;
property. A week ago Buhl threatened&#13;
to kill her, but bystanders interfered&#13;
and he was not arrested. This&#13;
afternoon he went to her room in the&#13;
Newman I 6*N. He was very much&#13;
under the influence of liquor and the&#13;
quarrel became furious. Finally he&#13;
drew a revolver and fired at ber four&#13;
times, with the above result. Men&#13;
from the hotel office siezed him and&#13;
after quite a struggle disarmed him-&#13;
In dotn? so his head was badly hurt,&#13;
giving the inpression that be bad tried&#13;
to kill himself. He is now in jail.&#13;
The affair causes great excitement.—&#13;
Free Press.&#13;
February 26.—Mrs. Buhi, who was__days m a k e n o d i f f e r e n c e w i t h US,&#13;
shot Friday by her drunken husband,&#13;
is reported to be in danger fronypossible&#13;
blood poisonin?. Justice Duffy&#13;
took her statement of the affair Saturday&#13;
in order to provide against her&#13;
For $1.50 Per Dozeru&#13;
If you wish FIRST-CLASS WORK at&#13;
a LOW PRICE, it will pay you to avail&#13;
yourself of this opportunity. We&#13;
ANTEE every picture we make.&#13;
GUARCloudy&#13;
death. Huhl, her husoand, will have&#13;
bis hearing Friday.&#13;
For several years Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Buhl ran a restaurant in Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs Buhl is a sister of Floyd Reason&#13;
and very highly respected ' by everyone.&#13;
week&#13;
, ! UllfW'. * ~ '&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
Mrs. Will Stickle died at her home&#13;
in Ann Arbor on Friday, Mar. 23,&#13;
1900, and was brought here for burial&#13;
on Monday, the 26th, the funeral being&#13;
held at the Cong'l church. She&#13;
was a former resident of this place,&#13;
and the esteem in which she was held&#13;
was shown by the array of beautiful&#13;
flowers which almost buried the casket.&#13;
Minnie May Chapman was born in&#13;
Ann Arbor business•! Jamesville, N. Y., in Nov. 1872. She&#13;
citizens are sparing no married Win. Stickle, then of tLar&#13;
place Nov., 1891. They remained&#13;
there for four years, then came to&#13;
Michigan where-they have since resided,&#13;
the past twoyears in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Mr. Stickle has the sympathy of&#13;
all.&#13;
and do&#13;
not wait until the last day. That will be a&#13;
busy day.&#13;
-^VHrOTX &amp; SON,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
Gallery open every clay except Sunday.&#13;
Always af if.&#13;
A i W h a t ?&#13;
Selling Goods of course.&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
General Hardware,&#13;
Have as complete an assortment of heavy and shelf hardware&#13;
as can be found in the county, and 1900 finds us&#13;
mo~fe~thoroug lily equip ped 14¾¾¾ ev^r before. -&#13;
While the noliday trade is always a harvest for some&#13;
—and we , ^ t our share—our trade always remains good&#13;
the year around. T h e reason is that we sell the best staple&#13;
goods for the least money. People today are not looking&#13;
for CHEAP goods hut GOOD goods cheap.&#13;
T h e following are some of our lines:&#13;
Builders Hardware a Specialty. ,&#13;
Doors and Common Sash .always in stock.&#13;
*&#13;
Complete line ot Buggies, Wagons and&#13;
Heating Stoves, Ranges, Wood Stoves&#13;
Wood and Coal. ^.&#13;
Card of Thanks.&#13;
We desire to thank the many&#13;
friends, who so kindly assisted us in&#13;
burial of our wife and daughter.&#13;
Will C. Stickle&#13;
{ X Chas. Stiokle and Family.&#13;
Good sleighing—while it, lasts.&#13;
J. Swarthout is in Bay City on a&#13;
visit.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Hendee and Mrs. J.&#13;
Swarthout are visiting in Flint.&#13;
The VVCTU meet tomorrow (Friday)&#13;
at the home of Mrs. H. F. Siller.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. L. Coast visited their&#13;
brotber Andy Bates and family the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Thomas Turner and-family, who&#13;
have been spending *he winter with&#13;
their son and daughter in the we&gt;t,&#13;
retura«4 home Wednesday.&#13;
AlwTgd to press, Wednesday, the&#13;
worst snow storm of the season is&#13;
visiting this section., Already several&#13;
inches have la Item. If the air remains&#13;
still it will be all,right tut if it&#13;
"gets a gate on it" as it did Sunday,&#13;
j traffic will haw to be suspended&#13;
rugs and Medicines.&#13;
A full and complete line.&#13;
School Supplies. Fancy Articles*&#13;
Books, T a b l e t s . Pencils P e n s , celluloid Goods, Hdkf., Cuff&#13;
Ink and - andColhH^BoxaSr&#13;
Examination Blanks. They make flirts birthday 41«».&#13;
Crockery. ...... Groceries.&#13;
A full line of We c a r r y a line&#13;
^laifl^md-FanGy-w*****-- — — °* * n c b^** In t o w n .&#13;
A fine line of Lamps. P r i c e s a r e right.&#13;
.. Wall Paper.&#13;
Our s a l e s t h e p a s t y e a r w e r e far ahead of&#13;
oxir e x p e c t a t i o n s , and this s e a s o n w e will be&#13;
b e t t e r prepared than e v e r to give values.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
.cy^&#13;
W:V*i/# •&lt;!&#13;
EVENTS OF THE WEEK&#13;
%*r~-&#13;
IN OUR GREAT STATE RELATED&#13;
IN A BRIEF FORM.&#13;
Tho Dotitli Kite for the State la 1890&#13;
was 14.1 Per Gent Per 1,000 EHUmated&#13;
Population—Sutton and Marsh&#13;
Failed to gaasb. Indictment Charge*.&#13;
33,150 Death* la Michigan In 1890.&#13;
' Secretary of State Stearns has comp&#13;
l e t e d a compilation of vital statistics&#13;
of Michigan for the year 1899. This&#13;
;shows t h a t there was a total of 33,150&#13;
deaths in the state last year, t h u s making&#13;
t h e death rate per 1,000 of estimated&#13;
population 14.1 per cent. There&#13;
were 0,140 deaths of children under 1&#13;
year old, 2,432 from 1 t o 4 years old,&#13;
and 9,175 of persons &lt;&gt;5 years old and&#13;
over. The per cent in these classes&#13;
was 19.4, 7.7 and 28.9 respectively. The&#13;
number of. d e a t h s and annual death&#13;
r a t e per 100,000 of population from important&#13;
diseases were as follows: Pulmonary&#13;
consumption, 1.985, or 81.S;&#13;
other forms of tuberculosis,. 051,or 27.7;&#13;
typhoid fever, 571, or 24.3; diphtheria,&#13;
2^7, or 1 .llT; croup,ni¥T'or~Tnrr= s?rrrlct&#13;
ffever, 144, or 6.1; measles, 104, of 7;&#13;
W^hooping cough, 217, or 9.2; pneumonia,&#13;
2,934, or 124.7; diarrheal disease&#13;
of, children under 5 years old, 1,987, or&#13;
83.4; ccrebro spinal meningitis. 830, or&#13;
35.3; influenza, 1^69, or 75.2; puerperal&#13;
septicemia, 176, or 7.5; cancer, 1,282, or&#13;
54.5: violence, 1,694, or 72. The total&#13;
death rate per 1,000 of estimated population&#13;
was 1.6 g r e a t e r than in 1898,&#13;
and tfie total number of deaths 4.101&#13;
greater.&#13;
Sutton and Marsh Must Staml Trial.&#13;
J u d g e Wiest, of the Ingh:un county&#13;
circuit court, on t h e 19th ban tied down&#13;
his opinion in tho motions argued a&#13;
short time ago to quash the indictments&#13;
against Eli 11. &gt;Sutton and Art&#13;
h u r F. Marsh. Both motions are denied.&#13;
After reciting a t some length&#13;
the form and contents of the indictments,&#13;
the opinion says: " T h e respondent&#13;
has moved to quash the indictment&#13;
alleging several reasons, the&#13;
principal one being t h a t the indictment&#13;
against Sutton does net charge t h a t&#13;
any criminal offense had been committed&#13;
by White, but merely recites t h a t&#13;
an indictment had been found by the&#13;
grand jury against White, and does not&#13;
charge or allege t h a t any offense had&#13;
Been committed by White. In this&#13;
state an accessory before the fact may&#13;
be charged together w i t h the principal&#13;
indicted as a principal. The s t a t u t e&#13;
provides t h a t&#13;
"All persons concerned in the commission&#13;
of a felony, w h e t h e r they di?&#13;
xectly_ commit the act constituting the&#13;
Whisky at the Doftom of It. ,&#13;
Tired of t a k i n g in w a s h i n g to support&#13;
herself and an indigent husband,&#13;
who seemed to love liquor more t h a n&#13;
he did his wife, Lydia Buhl, of Handy&#13;
township, Livingston county, separated&#13;
her home ties from Geo. W. Buhl&#13;
last October. Three m o u t h s later she&#13;
commenced divorce proceedings in the&#13;
l^ivingston circuit court, securing an&#13;
injunction at t h e same time, which&#13;
tied up h e r husband's interest in the&#13;
estate of his sister, w h o had recently&#13;
died leaving him about 81,000. As a&#13;
sequel to the injunction, Mrs. Buhl is&#13;
now suffering from a bullet wound in&#13;
t h e back of t h e head which was inflicted&#13;
by t h e infuriated and whisky-soaked&#13;
husband at Ann Arbor on the night&#13;
of t h e 23d. He then t u r n e d the revolver&#13;
upon himself, b u t his aini was not&#13;
accurate. Both were alive at last account.&#13;
—&#13;
A Peculiar Accident at Galosburg.&#13;
An accident of a singular character,&#13;
although fortunately unattended by&#13;
serious results, occurred a t the People's&#13;
church in Galesburg on the 25th. The&#13;
reglar sexton being ill, a colored man&#13;
was engaged as substitute. While&#13;
ringing the bell for t h e morning ser-&#13;
-yk*e-hit»«^ek"4»v-tsome mt»ans hecinue en-„&#13;
circled by a bight of the rope and he was&#13;
d r a w n upwards, w i t h such terrific&#13;
force t h a t his head penetrated the&#13;
ceiling, breaking an, oak joist 3x12&#13;
inches in size. .Singular to relate the&#13;
man suii'ered no inconvenience save a&#13;
slight abrasion of the S'.-alp and was on&#13;
duty again the same evening.&#13;
jpists offense, or aid tfnd abet in its commission,&#13;
though not present, may hereafter&#13;
be indicted and punished as principals,&#13;
as in a case of a misdemeanor.-''&#13;
Row Over a&#13;
As Elmer J o n e s and&#13;
w i f e&#13;
a woman, supposedly&#13;
his wife, were about to board a&#13;
train at Holly on the 23d, a stranger&#13;
stepped up and asked him w h a t he&#13;
was doing with his wife. Jones den&#13;
i e d t h a t she was any one's wife but&#13;
his own, whereupon the second man&#13;
whipped out a revolver and it is said&#13;
fired a t Jones, w h o sustained a slight&#13;
-wpund. The shooter was captured&#13;
und gave h i s n a m e as J. Parks,&#13;
of Chicago. He stated t h a t he married&#13;
the young woman a t Chicago over&#13;
a year ago. The brother of the girl&#13;
was w i t h Parks and she has agreed to j&#13;
leave both men and r e t u r n to her par&#13;
e n t a l home in Chicago. She is but 20j&#13;
years of age and is a handsome girl. J&#13;
At t h e depot P a r k s tried to tear t h e&#13;
clothes oft% the young woman, declar-&#13;
, ing t h a t it was his money t h a t bought&#13;
them. The affair caused great excitement.&#13;
SI00.000 Fire iu Detroit.&#13;
The rolling mill department of the&#13;
Detroit Steel &amp; Spring Co.'s plant in&#13;
Detroit was gutted by fire on the evening&#13;
of the 25th. entailing a loss of&#13;
Sioo.oo;). One of the firemen was instantly&#13;
killed by the falling of a large&#13;
smokestack. Several other persons had&#13;
narrow escapes. While going to the&#13;
scene of the big fire a Harper hospital&#13;
ambulance was struck by a street car&#13;
and nearly broken in two. The driver&#13;
and surgeon of the ambulance were&#13;
quite baTrlj- bruised, the former suffering&#13;
a slight concussion of the brain,&#13;
but their injuries are not serious.&#13;
» • '&#13;
Spanish-American War Clalnn.&#13;
T h e work of sorting out the claims&#13;
of soldiers of the Spanish-American war&#13;
for relief provided by the recent special&#13;
session of the legislature, making an&#13;
appropriation of'.§10.000 for this purpose,&#13;
is now being performed by Auriitor-&#13;
Ceneral Dix. The claims tiled will&#13;
aggregate nearly twice the amount of&#13;
the appropriation, b u t it is t h o u g h t&#13;
t h a t after the u n w o r t h y ones are rejected&#13;
and others cut down t h a t about&#13;
75 per cent of the face value of the remaining&#13;
claims can be paid. It will&#13;
be March 10 before t h e p a y i h e h t s can"&#13;
be made.&#13;
MICHIGAN N E W S I T E M S .&#13;
Davisburg was visited by a §5,000 on&#13;
t h e 20th.&#13;
15,103 G, A. R.'s in Michigan.&#13;
T h e report of Michigan department,&#13;
iO. A. R., just made public, makes a&#13;
gratifying showing. The report, w h i c h&#13;
is for the last half of 1899, shows t h a t&#13;
at t h e close of t h a t period there were&#13;
in Michigan 382 posts w i t h an aggregate&#13;
membership of 15,102. The net&#13;
loss for the period named was only 34,&#13;
while t h e death loss alone was 171.&#13;
When it is considered t h a t there is no&#13;
^voung blood to be infused into the organization,&#13;
the work of Commander&#13;
Pcalcr and Adjt. Pond in t h e direction&#13;
of h a v i n g all t h e veterans enrolled in&#13;
the order is quite manifest. They predict&#13;
further substantial increase during&#13;
t h e present six months. Four&#13;
years ago there were 373 posts and 16,-»&#13;
766 members. Since then there has&#13;
been a gain of nine posts, b u t a loss of&#13;
1,662 members. Of the latter 1,423&#13;
-dtedrleftving-a-loss of only 239 from&#13;
honorable discharges, transfers, etc.&#13;
A Tiny Bit of Humanity.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Dukes, of Ithaca,&#13;
arc the happy parents of the tiniest bit&#13;
of h u m a n i t y ever seen in t h a t section.&#13;
I t w a baby boy born t o them about 10&#13;
-days ago, which weighed at birth a&#13;
l i t t l e less than 1)4 pounds. The child&#13;
in perfect in form and feature. Its&#13;
•head is surmounted w i t h a heavy&#13;
g r o w t h of black hair, a n d would just&#13;
1111 a teacup. Its little fingers are the^&#13;
si«e of small straws, and an ordinary&#13;
finger ring could have been slipped&#13;
over the hatrd aird worn as a bracelet.&#13;
T h e child is healthy and thriving.&#13;
Clarion, suffered a fire loss of 61,:100&#13;
on the 21st.&#13;
Large numbers of hogs are dying in&#13;
N o r t h Camden from hog cholera. ?&#13;
Ypsilanti is to have a new concern&#13;
which will manufacture smokeless furnaces.&#13;
After three weeks of revival meetings&#13;
at Coldwater US conversions are reported.&#13;
If Royal Oak will donate a site and&#13;
81.000 in cash she can have a canning&#13;
factory.&#13;
Six weeks of revival services in the&#13;
M. E. church at Allegan resulted in 50&#13;
conversions. .&#13;
Fifteen thousand tons of ice have&#13;
been taken from Grass lake during the&#13;
last month.&#13;
A S50,000 recitation building is among&#13;
t h e possibilities for Kalamazoo college&#13;
this spring.&#13;
Saginaw pastors have revolved not&#13;
to unite people in m a r r i a g e who have&#13;
been divorced.&#13;
The Holland house at East Tawas&#13;
was partly destroyed by fire on the&#13;
19th. Los's, 810,000.&#13;
The M. E. congregation at Albion&#13;
have purchased a paTsohage, after several&#13;
weeks of jangling.&#13;
The two-story general store, owned&#13;
by David H. Pierce, of Ubly, was destroyed&#13;
by fire on the 20th.&#13;
The s t a t e printing contract for two&#13;
3'ears has been awarded to Oscar L.&#13;
McKinley, t h e lowest btdderr&#13;
1 The recent cold wave was universal&#13;
all over Michigan, but was t h e most&#13;
severe in t h e upper peninsula.&#13;
The anti-saloon element at Plymouth&#13;
are about to commence a crusade&#13;
against the saloons.in t h a t place.&#13;
Red J a c k e t has a municipal theater&#13;
bnilt by the taxpayers at a cost of 870,-&#13;
000, which will be opened to the public&#13;
in a few weeks.&#13;
The Central high school trnilding a t&#13;
West Bay City was destroyed by fire&#13;
o n i h e 19th, entailing a loss of $25,000,&gt;&#13;
with $8,000 insurance.&#13;
The Detroit, Ypsilanti &amp; Ann Arhor&#13;
electric railway is securing options on&#13;
the necessary land required for t h e&#13;
building of a second track.&#13;
The secretary of t h e treasury at&#13;
Washington recently received an e n -&#13;
velope postmarked Benton Harbor,&#13;
containing a conscience contribution&#13;
i of §100.&#13;
Philanthropists of&#13;
MarquetUteffer to&#13;
equip a manual t r a i n i n g d e p a r t m e n t&#13;
w h e n t h e new high school is rebuilt.&#13;
T h e Michigan State League of Republican&#13;
clubs will hold a meeting and&#13;
a b a n q u e t in Nashville, March 15, at&#13;
w h i c h time a Barry county Republican&#13;
club will be organized.&#13;
Rev. Mr. Lowery, pastor of t h e M.&#13;
E. church a t Oxford, who was recently&#13;
a principal in a Sunday school row, h a s&#13;
tendered his resignation to the presiding&#13;
elder, the same to t a k e immediate&#13;
effect.&#13;
The 1899 compilation of t h e laws relative&#13;
to the incorporation of cities of&#13;
t h e fourth class has just been delivered&#13;
by the state printer to Secretary of&#13;
State Stearns, -and is now ready for&#13;
distribution.&#13;
A county Prohibition mass convention&#13;
has been called at Coldwater on&#13;
Mar. 3. The Prohibitionists in Branch&#13;
county number about 350, of whom&#13;
t w o were present at t h e convention&#13;
called in 1S98.&#13;
Anyone who desires to peddle tea&#13;
from house to house in Mt. Clemens&#13;
can do so without paying a license fee.&#13;
The city's ironclad ordinance in reference&#13;
thereto has been found defective&#13;
by thersupreiue court&#13;
After several days deliberation as to&#13;
t h e sanity of Harry E. Hamberger, t h e&#13;
self-confessed murderer of Detroit, Recorder;&#13;
Murphy found t h e defendant&#13;
sane, and t h e trail for m u r d e r was&#13;
commenced on the 23d.&#13;
Recorder Murphy, of Detroit, on the&#13;
21st sentenced George A. Nye, convicted&#13;
of perjury in connection with&#13;
t h e Cunningham holdup Case, to five&#13;
3'ears in Jackson prison at hard labor.&#13;
Nye took the sentence as if it was an&#13;
invitation to lunch.&#13;
F a r m e r s around P a w P a w have petitioned&#13;
for the establishment of a r u r a l&#13;
free delivery route, and are confident&#13;
t h e y will get it, as by establishing t h e&#13;
service there the government will save&#13;
money by doing away w i t h several star&#13;
routes now in operation.&#13;
The effect of the.consolidation of the&#13;
New State Telephone w i t h the Michigan&#13;
Telephone Co. is already being felt&#13;
in many towns in the state. The rates&#13;
for service of house "phones is being&#13;
raised from §12 to §18 per year, and for&#13;
business'phones §18 to §24.'&#13;
A letter from D. J. Ilainey, whose&#13;
home i s a t Birmingham, but who is&#13;
now in Alaska, says t h a t h e ~ a n d a&#13;
p a r t y of Owosso miners who went to&#13;
t h e gold country a few months ago&#13;
have struck it rich. They have formed&#13;
a company, and will begin • shipping&#13;
ore in March. ,&#13;
The first car on the new electric line&#13;
from Mt. Clemens to Marine City passed&#13;
_iivex the line on the 25th,_thus giving&#13;
chance for electric transit from Detroit&#13;
to Marine City. Through cars between&#13;
the two places will not be run for t h e&#13;
present, but connections will be made&#13;
at Mt. Clemens.&#13;
T h e executive committee of the state&#13;
fair association met on the 20th and&#13;
struck a balance .sheet on the last fair.&#13;
It showed a delicit of §41.89, which is&#13;
considered very good with three rainy&#13;
days during fair week.. The next fair&#13;
wjji probably be held the week of Sept.&#13;
10 in Grand Rapids.&#13;
Three one-story buildings, size lOOx-&#13;
275, 100x235 and 35x75 feet, respectively,&#13;
will be erected a t Dowagiac&#13;
shortly, which will be used for a furnace&#13;
plant by the stove works. This&#13;
it-is claimed will mean an additional&#13;
population of 1,500 for Dowagiac in&#13;
less t h a n three years.&#13;
J. P. Bonine, of Constantine, has&#13;
started—on a small scale for the present—&#13;
what is a new industry in Michigan,&#13;
t h a t is, the breeding of Belgian&#13;
hares. The little animals command a&#13;
ready sale not only as pets, but also as&#13;
a food, being much esteemed by epicures,&#13;
and the profits from raising them&#13;
are said to be very large.&#13;
At a meeting of the Republican state&#13;
central committee, held in Detroit on&#13;
t h e 21st, Judge Daboll. of St. J o h n s ,&#13;
was chosen chairman pro tern, to act in&#13;
the interim until the election of a new&#13;
committee by the state' conventk&gt;n«&#13;
which will be held in Philadelphia in&#13;
J u n e . This was made necessary by&#13;
the resignation of Arthur" F. Marsh.&#13;
A couple of brutes at Tompkins tried&#13;
to make a balky horse go by tying a&#13;
cord around the animal's tongue, hitching&#13;
the other end of the line to another&#13;
h o r s e a n d then_iitarting_thalattex.The_&#13;
AT HOME AND ABROAD&#13;
A 8 U M M A R Y O F T H E N E W S F O R&#13;
T H E WEEK BY WIRE.&#13;
The Military Ofliotal* of Canada&#13;
Preparing for a Potulbl* Bald&#13;
That Country In the Soring by&#13;
Feulant—Other Item*.&#13;
are&#13;
on&#13;
the&#13;
Canadians Preparing for Fenian Invasion.&#13;
Ominous rumors are in circulation in&#13;
Toronto, Ont., regarding the likelihood&#13;
of a Fenian invasion of Canada in t h e&#13;
spring. A meeting of commanding officers&#13;
of t h e Toronto garr.ison was held&#13;
on t h e 17th to make a r r a n g e m e n t s for&#13;
carrying out t h e " w a r game" settled&#13;
upon by Gen. Hutton some weeks ago.&#13;
I t is said the possibility of a Fenian&#13;
raid was brought up and the statement&#13;
t h a t positive evidence existed in high&#13;
quarters t h a t a Fenian coup is contemplated&#13;
as soon as t h e weather will&#13;
permit of operations in the field. Curiously&#13;
enough, the troops of the Toronto&#13;
military district and other sections&#13;
of Canada will assemble on t h e&#13;
frontier for ostensible tactical opera:&#13;
tions just about t h e time when the&#13;
, , . A, . ,, . ^ . "States^—would&#13;
tbhee mpaukripnogs etsh eoif r tahtet e"mwpatr tgoa ..m.creo,s7s7 , ev^e£ry. . . . 4¾¾¾¾-¾^ ^&#13;
available branch of the service in t h e&#13;
various military districts will be mobilized,&#13;
including cavalry, artilery and&#13;
infantry. The troops are to be equipped&#13;
just as they would be if they were&#13;
entering the field for a long campaign.&#13;
It is said in influential q u a r t e r s t h a t if&#13;
the Fenian raid is intended it will not&#13;
find the government of Canada unprepared.&#13;
1 T ^ A N ^ V A A L I V Y A R *ltT£M3.&#13;
Details w i t h re&gt;pe.ct * to tho c a p t u r e&#13;
of t h e British convoy a t Riet river w a s&#13;
received a t Cape Colony on the SOth.&#13;
It appears t h a t the wagons were laagered&#13;
near the drift, and t h a t the convoy&#13;
was attacked by 1,800 Boers w i t h&#13;
four guns. The shelling continued all&#13;
day. One hundred and eighty w a g o n s&#13;
were captured, containing provisions&#13;
and forage. Half t h e drivers and leaders&#13;
were killed or missing.&#13;
Dispatches from Maseru say t h a t&#13;
large forces are being sent from t h e&#13;
Transvaal to t h e Free State, u n d e r&#13;
prominent generals. I t is also said&#13;
t h e Free State is m a k i n g desperate&#13;
efforts to collect an a r m y to face t h e&#13;
British at Koffyfontein. An official&#13;
proclamation orders out all males between&#13;
the ages of 1G and 60, and enthusiasts&#13;
declare t h a t everyone up to&#13;
the age of 100 must go.&#13;
The British embassy, upon inquiry&#13;
being made authorized t h e s t a t e m e n t&#13;
t h a t there was no t r u t h whatever in&#13;
t h e story contained in the Paris dispatches&#13;
t h a t President McKinley h a d&#13;
sounded Lord Pauneefote, the British&#13;
ambassador at Washington, to ascertain&#13;
how an offer of mediation in tho&#13;
Transvaal difficulty on the part of t h e&#13;
*i&#13;
first horse's tongue was torn out, and&#13;
the animal had to be killed. A softhearted&#13;
or soft-minded justice let off&#13;
the offenders with a tine of $2 a piece.&#13;
Four divorce cases were commenced&#13;
in Van Buren county in one week recently,&#13;
while in the same week there&#13;
was not a single marriage license issued.&#13;
The Dowagiac Republican is of&#13;
the opinion t h a t this state of affairs is&#13;
the result of the large c o n s u m p t i o n s ^&#13;
applejack, which is the favorite tipple&#13;
in Van Buren owing to t h e local option&#13;
law in force there.&#13;
The Burrell Chemical Co.'s r e t o r t&#13;
plant at Manistique for the manufact&#13;
u r e of wood alcohol, an improvement&#13;
over the kiln methods, has jn.st been&#13;
completed and was started on a trial&#13;
run on the &lt; 19th. The plant contains&#13;
10 retorts and will convert 50 cords of&#13;
wood to charcoal daily. The plant is&#13;
t h e largest of the kind in the world&#13;
And the only one in the state;&#13;
M M . I.awton'» Gratitude.&#13;
Mrs. Lawton has made the following&#13;
acknowledgement of t h e receipt of t h e&#13;
home fund:&#13;
"Pewee Valley, Ky., Feb. 18, 1900.&#13;
"Dear Gen. Corbin:&#13;
"Such kindness as yours can never&#13;
be repaid, and my heart is very full&#13;
when I trv to t h a n k you. Words seem&#13;
very poor at such a time. Will you&#13;
please believe t h a t I do appreciate it,&#13;
and all my life will find comfort in t h e&#13;
remembrance.&#13;
'."The universal feeling, which&#13;
prompted such wonderful generosity&#13;
from the nation, is so beautiful to me,&#13;
and so dear, my g r a t i t u d e - is unexpressibly&#13;
profound.&#13;
" I t has relieved the one anxious&#13;
thought Henry would have had, and I&#13;
tlo not know how to t h a n k you or the&#13;
nation.&#13;
"Believe me, with kind regards.&#13;
"Very sincerely,—&#13;
" M A B Y C / LAWTON*."'&#13;
An Agreement Reached lu Kentucky.&#13;
The contests over the state offices are&#13;
very much simplified by an agreement&#13;
entered into on the 21st between t h e&#13;
attorneys for t h e Republicans and&#13;
the Democrats, representing both sides,&#13;
and s t r a i g h t e n i n g out the legal tangle&#13;
over the mxiltiplicity of injunction&#13;
suits for the title to the governorship.&#13;
The agreement is t h a t there shall be a&#13;
speedy trial in the court of an agreed&#13;
case involving all of the issues, the first&#13;
hearing to be before J u d g e E m m e t t&#13;
Field at Louisville.&#13;
Will Investigate Complaint*.&#13;
- A special from Washington saj-s t h a t&#13;
it is understood an investigation will j&#13;
be made by a court of inquiry into com- j&#13;
plaints made by Maj. William II. Arthur,&#13;
surgeon in charge of the hospital&#13;
ship Missouri, against other officers on&#13;
duty on the transport. This investigation&#13;
may settle t h e responsibility for&#13;
the deaths of 19 soldiers during t h e&#13;
voyage of t h e vessel from Manila t o&#13;
San Francisco a short t i m e ago.&#13;
C O N G R E S S I O N A L N O T E S .&#13;
The Republican members of the conference&#13;
committee on t h e financial bill&#13;
reached an agreement on the 23d. The&#13;
Democratic conferees were called in&#13;
and stated their opposition t o t h e&#13;
bill a n d w i t h o u t further formality t h e&#13;
bill w a s ordered reported. The t e x t of&#13;
t h e bill as agreed upon and as it probably&#13;
will become a law, is as follows:&#13;
T h a t the dollar, consisting of 25 8-10 • „ •• 4. t ,, „ ,, . . , , . .&#13;
* • i i~n *n i- ± t-,• 1 -. and t h a t uen. t r o n i e held his own.&#13;
grains of gold,*!-10 line, as established i rp , . , . . . , .,«"&gt;•"• ^&#13;
A Boer account of Gens. Cronje a n d&#13;
Dewet's actions d u r i n g the engagement&#13;
which lasted from Feb. 15 to Feb. 20&#13;
has been received. P a r t of t h a t time&#13;
Cronjb was almost surrounded by t h e&#13;
British a t Modder river, hnt at n i g h t&#13;
they cut t h e i r way t h r o u g h the British&#13;
lines with the loss of seven dead a n d&#13;
10 wounded. T h e British loss is n o t&#13;
estimated in this account, but is said&#13;
to be heavy.&#13;
A dispatch from Chieveley dated t h e&#13;
19th says the Boers' l i n e of fortresses&#13;
is broken. The British have achieved&#13;
a decided success in capturing t h e&#13;
enemy's position on Monte Cristo. T h e&#13;
Boers, however, effectively executed a&#13;
retreat, removing their g u n s and convoy&#13;
wagons. The British had comparatively&#13;
few casualties.&#13;
I t appears from advices received a t&#13;
Ldurenzo Marques t h a t the loot captured&#13;
by the b u r g h e r s on the 18th n e a r&#13;
Koffyfontein included over 3.000 head&#13;
of cuttle and a number of wagons, 18&#13;
of which were loaded with provisions&#13;
intended for the relief of Kimberley.&#13;
A number of prisoners were also taken.&#13;
A London dispatch d a t e d . t h e 20th&#13;
says t h a t (Jen. Cronjeof the Boer forces&#13;
is hopelessly surrounded, and t h a t t h e&#13;
sole purpose of the British government&#13;
withholding good news is t h a t confirmation&#13;
.and more details are awaited.&#13;
Lord Roberts has issued a proclamation&#13;
to the b u r g h e r s of the Orange&#13;
Free State in which he w a r n s t h e m t o&#13;
desist from further acts of hostility toward&#13;
her majesty's government a n d&#13;
troops, or suffer the consequences.&#13;
According to a Boer account (Jen.&#13;
DtiWeltiayimtUl IftO wagons of provisions&#13;
and ammunition, 2,800 oxen and&#13;
58 men by an attack upon the r e a r&#13;
guard of Uen. French's column at Modder&#13;
river on t h e 19th.&#13;
The British w a r ollice, for the first&#13;
j time, gave out a n : official compilation&#13;
of their, losses on the 22d. The t o t a l&#13;
i up to Feb. 17 is 11.208. This does not&#13;
J include Lord 'Roberts' recent losses.&#13;
j Three hundred mounted volunteers&#13;
for service in south Africa, t h e t h i r d&#13;
section of the second Canadian conting&#13;
e n t will sail from Halifax for Cape&#13;
Town on the 21st.&#13;
The total British casualties at t h e&#13;
recent engagement at Colenso was 800.&#13;
Of this nnniber 19 officers were killed&#13;
and wounded, including two generals.&#13;
According to a dispatch from Rennes,&#13;
Prance, a factory there received .an order&#13;
from the Transvaal government&#13;
for J50,000 artillery shells.&#13;
At Kimberley a r e p o r t ' is c u r r e n t&#13;
t h a t Mafeking h a s been relieved, b u t "&#13;
t h a t the Boers are t r y i n g to conceal&#13;
t h e information.&#13;
During the recent engagement a t&#13;
Modder river the Canadian contingent,&#13;
sustained a loss of 22 killed and over GO&#13;
wonnded.&#13;
Heavy fighting is said to have t a k e n&#13;
place around Kimberley on the 19th,&#13;
Typhoid fever is said to be playing&#13;
havoc among t h e Boers at Colesberg.&#13;
All business at Mafeking is b e i n g&#13;
conducted underground.&#13;
by section 3511, of the revised s t a t u t e s&#13;
of t h e United States, shall be the&#13;
standard u n i t of value, and all forms&#13;
of money issued or coined by the United&#13;
States shall be maintained at a parity&#13;
of value withJJusjiiajQiiard a n d i t - s h a l l&#13;
be the duty of the secretary of t h e&#13;
treasury to maintain such parity: t h a t&#13;
all U. S. notes and treasury notes issued&#13;
under the act of July 14, 1890,&#13;
when presented to the treasury for redemption,&#13;
shall be redeemed in gold&#13;
coin, and t h a t it shall be t h e duty oj^&#13;
the secretary of the treasury to set&#13;
apart in the treasury a reserve fund of&#13;
8150,000,000 in gold W i n and bullion,&#13;
which fund shall be used for such redemption&#13;
purposes only.&#13;
C. H. Duell, commissioner of patents,&#13;
transmitted to congress a report on the&#13;
number of patents issued in the various&#13;
states for the last fiscal year. The&#13;
number of patents issued during t h e&#13;
year was 25,527, of which 805 were&#13;
from Michigan. Three deaths from t h e snow storm&#13;
The Republican members of the ways are reported from eastern New Jersey,&#13;
and means committee of the house are J ^ s a result of a freight wreck on tho&#13;
now frantic in their fear t h a t the house B i g F o n r a t Terre Haute, Ind., on t h e&#13;
200 Mexicans Killed in Uattle.&#13;
liV"speciaTfroffi Potam, tion~ora,~ Me jr.,&#13;
says: The Mexican federal troops \inder&#13;
(Jen. Torres have saved Guayamas&#13;
from the Yaquis, but by dint of t h e&#13;
fiercest fighting of the w a r and a t a&#13;
sacrifice of 200 soldiers. The town i s&#13;
filled with wounded and all the public&#13;
^wildings are utilized. Torres anticipated&#13;
the surprise t h e Yaquis intended.&#13;
The Indians were accompanied by 10&#13;
adventurers, miners and cowboys, w h o&#13;
acted as commanders of separate companies&#13;
of 40 men each. The Yaquis&#13;
had also a Maxim gun, which had been&#13;
smuggled t h r o u g h at Bisbee, Ariz., in&#13;
a load ol machinery. The g i n w a s&#13;
manipulated, the Mexicans claim, by&#13;
two ex-rough riders.&#13;
will defeat the bill making Puerto Rico&#13;
a dependency of the United States.&#13;
23d&#13;
w a&#13;
t w o&#13;
badly&#13;
persons&#13;
hurtr*&#13;
will die and a third&#13;
iff&#13;
•;n i*-rf" «SU*»iC&#13;
':?•'•' .&gt;.&gt;&#13;
»'•&lt;&#13;
B»* '&#13;
THE THOUSAND-DOLLAR BILL&#13;
A MTSTEftY Or TUB UNITED STATES TREASURY—A SHORT STOBT&#13;
BT LKQtAJU) QVT*AM&#13;
(Conclusion:)&#13;
An hour later Edmond Hacfibtt sat&#13;
a this desk in. the department of the&#13;
Secretary of. the Treasury, counting&#13;
and recounting a packet ot 1,000-dollar&#13;
bills. Thoy were old and frayed, ragged&#13;
Hind discolored, and belonged ^to&#13;
the issues of long ago. They were only&#13;
half notes, moreover—the lower&#13;
halves; and each fragment of paper&#13;
had two big holes punched in it by a&#13;
blunt instrument, totally destroying&#13;
the signatures which had made it&#13;
money, and at the same time reducing&#13;
the half-note to the merest remnant.&#13;
One by one Edmond turned over&#13;
these morsels of dirty paper, counting&#13;
them most carefully.&#13;
"Forty-one. forty-two, forty-three,&#13;
forty-four, forty-five, forty-six, fortyseven,&#13;
forty-eight,, forty-nine! There&#13;
are not fifty here! And yet they've&#13;
been passed as fifty in the Redemption&#13;
Office. Humph! Awkward fo» one of&#13;
those clever ladies. A thousand-dollar&#13;
bill missing. Poor Mrs. Lawson. .Infallible.&#13;
Mrs. Lawson! It must be she&#13;
who's in for this."&#13;
Taking_..up_.his..j)en ttTmalvO ouT'Th?&#13;
report, he glanced at the wrapper upon&#13;
which appeared the number of bills it&#13;
was supposed to contain and the initials&#13;
of the lady-examiner who in the&#13;
Redemption Office had counted and&#13;
made herself responsible for the packet's&#13;
accuracy. "What!" The pen&#13;
dropped from his fingers. "B. H. Great&#13;
Heaven!" That was the signature of&#13;
his own wife.&#13;
CHAPTER III.&#13;
Now this error would mean more&#13;
than discredit and a consequent check&#13;
In Bertha's future promotion. It was a&#13;
rule that the examiner who overlooked&#13;
a counterfeit or missing bill should&#13;
make good the value of it. To make&#13;
good oa thousand dollars would pretty&#13;
well ruin the Hacketts and old father&#13;
Caleb into the bargain. But it was his&#13;
duty to make his report instantly to&#13;
the Secretary, and with painful reluctance&#13;
he filled up the prescribed but&#13;
seldom requisitioned tot^m. With slow,&#13;
dragging steps, he proceeded with it to&#13;
the Secretary's private room, but halted&#13;
with his hand on the door. Suddenly&#13;
that frivolous gossip on the veranda&#13;
rushed into his memory. Had&#13;
Wilton Loring—had Bertha herself&#13;
stole the missing bill? What then?&#13;
Should he turn conspirator and cover&#13;
the fraud? No, no, his duty was clear.&#13;
He Would not allow himself to hesitate,&#13;
but knocked at the door and entered.&#13;
But there was no respite for him and&#13;
for his wife. The Treasurer himself&#13;
was closeted with the Secretary.&#13;
"One moment. Mr. Hackett! I'm engaged,"&#13;
was the sharp peremptory dismissal,&#13;
and he perforce withdrew postponing&#13;
the declaration. As he returned&#13;
stupefied to his desk a clock struck&#13;
the hour of his luncheon interval. It&#13;
was the custom of the family to meet&#13;
at home for their midday meal. He&#13;
locked up the report and rushed out&#13;
of the Treasury. Flying home on a&#13;
cable car, he found his wife there before&#13;
him. Bertha sat at the table Hke&#13;
ene in a dream. She did not raise her&#13;
eyes from-the fowl that stood untouched&#13;
before her. Edmond himself could&#13;
not swallow a morsel, but furtively&#13;
watched his wife while the . negness&#13;
who waited on them tarried in the&#13;
room. The moment they were alone he&#13;
leant across the table and whispered&#13;
hoarsely:&#13;
"You passed a packet today—r-a packet&#13;
of Thousands."&#13;
The young- wife looked up with a&#13;
start of surprise. The fear that was&#13;
written in her troubled face gave way&#13;
to a flash of desperate hope.&#13;
"It came to you ***""&gt;•&#13;
"One'bill is missing."&#13;
"Thank God you can pass it!"&#13;
.,..,No word of denial. She caught his&#13;
recoiling hand across the table.&#13;
"For my sake—for your Bertha's&#13;
sake—you will, you will!"&#13;
Edmond Hackett raised his other&#13;
hand to his damp forehead.&#13;
"Impossible, child—impossible! You&#13;
must be saved another way—if it be&#13;
not too late. Pind the missing bill&#13;
among some papers, as if an accident&#13;
had placed it there. But, whatever you&#13;
do, put it forward instantly, instantly!"&#13;
"I cannot, Edmond. I haven't the&#13;
bill."&#13;
"You did not steal it? Oh, forgive&#13;
me! Heaven be thanked'for that! It's j pious fancy away&#13;
an oversight, then? Bad enough, but&#13;
not beyond repair. Make out your report&#13;
at once, and send it in. You nre a&#13;
novice, the delay may be overlooked."&#13;
"I cannot do that. Edmond. It would&#13;
be to cast suspicion upon the cashier&#13;
who forwarded the bills to'the Treasury."&#13;
"That is his affair. If the packet was&#13;
short When yon counted it—"&#13;
"Edmond, why' will you not Ignore&#13;
the shortage? By a miracle it ty in&#13;
your power to prevent the discovery."&#13;
"It is not in my power." /&#13;
"How not in yonf power? The packet&#13;
will go frora^our hands to the_cominlttee,&#13;
who do not count it again; and&#13;
by 'them \%—will be deposited In the&#13;
maceratoK to be ground into pulp. It&#13;
wouidyriever be known that forty-nine&#13;
/&#13;
Instead of fifty Mils had been destroyed."&#13;
"Bertha, you forget the other half. I&#13;
have only a portion of the bills. The&#13;
upper section of your packet went to&#13;
the Register's office to be counted&#13;
there."&#13;
Bertha Hackett grew white as death,&#13;
and hot tears sprang in her eyes.&#13;
"•yre are ruined!" she cried, "unless,&#13;
unless-?-" Her glance from the window1&#13;
perceived Caleb Loring entering&#13;
the hpuse. "Here is father! He will&#13;
find out who had the count at the Registers,"&#13;
But the old man knew already. They&#13;
read it in his face as he confronted&#13;
them, elosing the door. Whatever&#13;
hope he had cherished on his homeward&#13;
way that he might find Bertha&#13;
unconscious of the storm that threatened&#13;
was dashed to the ground the&#13;
moment he perceived her and her hus'&#13;
band's agitation. The memory of that&#13;
evening* on the veranda burned in his&#13;
mind, and in a fury of rage he demanded,&#13;
fiercely:&#13;
"Daughter, what infernal thing is&#13;
•this you'vo boon doing*..... Axe.. you mad?&#13;
Have you turned thief? Is Edmond in&#13;
it? Or has Wilton—No, no. For God's&#13;
sake don't tell me it is my son!"&#13;
Then Bertha, to her husband's&#13;
amazement and dismay, fell down at&#13;
her father's feet and confessed that&#13;
she, she had yielded to temptation and&#13;
stolen the missing bill. She hurriedly&#13;
stated the miraculous chance that had&#13;
put Edmond in a position to save her,&#13;
and inferring from her father's knowledge&#13;
of the affair, that the man who&#13;
had detected the shortage had confided&#13;
to him his daughter's responsibility&#13;
.with a view of screening her, bespught&#13;
him to accept the friendly overture.&#13;
"I would permit no man's dishonor&#13;
for the sake of me or mine," he declared.&#13;
. "For what you have done, you&#13;
must pay the penalty. Your impossible&#13;
combination has actually come to pass.&#13;
As the counter-check came to your&#13;
husband in his department, so it has&#13;
come to me in the Register's. It was&#13;
I myself who caught the short packet&#13;
which you had signed for.&#13;
Bertha clasped her hands in thankc*&#13;
giving.&#13;
"Then, father, you alone know?"&#13;
"I—and one other."&#13;
"Ono other?" repeated Bertha,&#13;
aghast. "Who in your department&#13;
should know besides yourself?"&#13;
"My chief," replied the old man, with&#13;
a f^ce cf adamant.&#13;
"You have reported it, knowing that&#13;
your own child—"&#13;
"Certainly. Fraud&#13;
yours or your brother's&#13;
me to consider. I am&#13;
servant of the State."&#13;
They went back to&#13;
or oversight;&#13;
it was not for&#13;
first of all, a&#13;
-the Treasury,&#13;
where Edmond at once delivered his&#13;
report.&#13;
Bertha found Mrs. Lawson impatiently&#13;
awaiting her. The Treasurer&#13;
had-sent for the Head of the Redemption&#13;
Division to investigate an error in&#13;
one of the packets which Bertha had&#13;
made up. Mrs. Lawson was highly indignant.&#13;
"I counted the Ranchers' packet myself,'&#13;
'said she. "I am positive there&#13;
were exactly a hundred bills."&#13;
"If one is missing," began Eertha,&#13;
but the senior lady interrupted her.&#13;
"Missing? No, nothing is missing&#13;
at all. There is sa,id to have been&#13;
one too many."&#13;
So many miracles had happened that&#13;
clay that poor Bertha could only gape&#13;
at her in astonishment. It was an&#13;
anomaly in arithmetic that one taken&#13;
from one hundred should leave one&#13;
hundred and one. There came another&#13;
summons to the Treasurer. Another&#13;
report had come in of an error from&#13;
Mrs. Lawson's desk. The old lady was&#13;
almost in tears but she carried it off&#13;
with a show of jocosity.&#13;
"Either there must be some conscience&#13;
money knocking about, or Mrs.&#13;
Bertha Hackett brings a mascot to the&#13;
treasury," said she. "Is thte another&#13;
surplus thousand-dollar biTlT^ir?"&#13;
But this was the shortage which Edmond&#13;
and Mr. Loring had reported,&#13;
and it was happily met by the excess&#13;
in the other packet. So, beyond an&#13;
admonition tempered in mercy for the&#13;
manifest distress of the'girl. Bertha&#13;
got into no trouble. She held stoutly&#13;
to a theory of the intervention of&#13;
providence when discussing the matter&#13;
at home, and her husband swept the&#13;
"I reckon Providence don't supply&#13;
cheating clerks with thousand-dollar&#13;
bilbi." said he. "You divided the packet&#13;
of100 in two of 50, as you thought.&#13;
But you counted the first D^ckward.&#13;
from 100 to 5fr inclusive, and that left&#13;
only forty-nine for the second packet.&#13;
But why didn't you tell Mrs. Lawson&#13;
you made one short?"&#13;
"Fact is, Edmond, that combination&#13;
chatter of ours had got into my brain.&#13;
I thought Wilton had pinched a bill,&#13;
and I reckoned to do more for my&#13;
brother than Daddy would do7 for his&#13;
little girl."&#13;
'iBa!".observed old Caleb, filling his&#13;
pipe. 'Duty first, family afterwards,&#13;
and roguery niever at any time, Under&#13;
any circumstances/&#13;
(The end.)&#13;
Sarin** a»4 Sayings.&#13;
The boy having freely admitted that&#13;
tie cut down the cherry tree, is amazed&#13;
to observe his father coming at him&#13;
with the trunk strap.&#13;
"What!" exclaims the boy. "Do you&#13;
not propose to exemplify the saying&#13;
that honesty is the best policy?"&#13;
"No; rather the saying that children&#13;
and fools speak the truth!" retorted&#13;
the old man, with a readiness of wit&#13;
scarcely to be expected in one of his&#13;
mature years,—New York World.&#13;
H o p e f o r H i m .&#13;
Negroes are unconsciously humorous.&#13;
The other day two roustabouts&#13;
were overheard talking. They met on&#13;
the levee, after one had been absent&#13;
from the city for several weeks.&#13;
• "Hello, Bill. How is yer?" asked&#13;
the first.&#13;
"Well," was the reply, "de doctors&#13;
is give me up. but de police ain't!"—&#13;
Memphis Scimitar.&#13;
W h e r e Opinions Differ.&#13;
'I want to tell you something, dear!&#13;
Your former governess, Fraulein Grete,&#13;
is going to be married soon."&#13;
"Well, I'm thankful, pa, that that&#13;
stupid thing is going to leave the&#13;
house. But what numbskull is goins&#13;
to marry her?"&#13;
"I am, my dear!"—Der Floh.&#13;
A l m o s t a s Gooil.&#13;
"Now that I have promised to be&#13;
yours forever and ever," she said, as&#13;
she looked up into his eyes, "tell mc,&#13;
Harold, if I am the only girl you ever&#13;
loved."&#13;
"Ah, my, darling," he replied, "can&#13;
you not content yourself with the assurance&#13;
that you are the only girl who&#13;
ever loved me?"—Chicago Evening&#13;
Post.&#13;
Con»taneyi •&#13;
"I have been married for fifteen&#13;
years, and my wife never fails to meet&#13;
me at the door."&#13;
"Wonderful !&gt;p&#13;
"Yes, she's afraid I might go in without&#13;
wiping my-feet."—Chicago Times-&#13;
Herald.&#13;
A Different Method.&#13;
• "Our new girl is so different from&#13;
the old ones. She hasn't cracked a dish&#13;
since she has been with us."&#13;
"Indeed!"&#13;
"No. When she br?alis anything she&#13;
smashes it to eternal flinders."—New&#13;
York World.&#13;
Didn't I n t e r e s t H i m .&#13;
First Suburbanite—Would you like&#13;
to see a scientific definition of malaria?&#13;
Second Suburbanite—No, I wouldn't.&#13;
I don't think malaria can be edequately&#13;
defined without profanity.—Puck.&#13;
An Exemption Cited.&#13;
Miles—A physician told me recently&#13;
that a good, hearty laugh prolongs a&#13;
man's life.&#13;
Giles—Perhaps it does—unless he&#13;
laughs at another man who slips on an&#13;
icy sidewalk.—Chicago News.&#13;
WANTED BOO&#13;
Wen, TToxnen and Children to try the bsst&#13;
and cheapest preparation* ever offered the&#13;
public. You don't take any chances in trying&#13;
them, as your druggist guarantee* KniU's Bed&#13;
Pill* for Wan People. r'Pale and Weak," the&#13;
women's remedy of the day (the only genuine).&#13;
Knill's White Liver Pills, the great Liver Invigorator,&#13;
System Kenovator and Bowel Regulator,&#13;
26 doses, 26c. You can work while they work.&#13;
Never gripe or make you sick, Knill's Blue Kidney&#13;
Pills cure all Kidney Ills, Backache, etc.&#13;
Knill's Dyspepsia Tablets cure Indigestion, correct&#13;
all Stomach Troubles, destroy all foul gases,&#13;
make pure sweet stomachs and breaths. To do&#13;
as advertised or money refunded. The only&#13;
guaranteed preparations on the market. Knill'a&#13;
Pills or Tablets cost 25c. Half price of others.&#13;
1&#13;
Some can ride a hobby with as much cruelty&#13;
of spirit as others mount % war horse.&#13;
STATE OF OHIO, CITT O* TOLEDO, »__&#13;
LUCAS CocMTr, j 8 *&#13;
Frank J. Cheney senior partner of th mef aikrems oofa Fth. Jt.h Caht enheey i&amp;s Cthoe., danodin gS tabtues ainfoesress aiind ,t haen dC tihtyat o sfa Tido flierdmo ,w Ciollu pnatyy ethaech s aunmd eovfe rOyN cEas eH UofN CDaRtaErDrh DthOaLt LcAanRnSo t fboer cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure.&#13;
Sworn to before meF RanAdN sKu bJs.c rCibHeEdN iEnY m. y presence, this 6th day of December, A D. 1884&#13;
rexwr 1 A. V7. GLEASON,&#13;
lSEAI*i Notary Public.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and&#13;
acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces&#13;
of the system. fcend for testimonials, free.&#13;
F. J. CHENEY &amp; CO., Toledo, Ol&#13;
Sfil&amp;by nr^ft'ists, 7.¾.&#13;
Hall K Family Pills are the best.&#13;
Ifa^'irl has a pretty face her mirror frc&#13;
qu-iuly casts reflections'about it. I&#13;
A B o o k o f Choice R e r l p l e s&#13;
RfTif traohy \Y;i;tr:r Raker &amp; Co. Ltd., Dorchester,&#13;
Masis. Meir. ion thia papi;r.&#13;
Every man makes the world richer or poorer&#13;
by what he gives to it of himself.&#13;
I believe my prompt use of Piso's Cure prevented&#13;
quick consumption.—Mrs. Lucy Wallace,&#13;
Marquette, Kansas, Dec. 12, l&amp;y5.&#13;
Sin pot n foothold in this world by making&#13;
Itself look harmless and little.&#13;
Brown's Teething Cordial cures all diseases&#13;
peculiar to babies when teething.&#13;
Great victories aio not always won on fields,&#13;
where great armies tight.&#13;
FOR MIDDLE-AGED WOMEN.&#13;
• — — «&#13;
•Two Letters from Women Helped Tfuwogto&#13;
the "CJuuiff* of Life- by 1*41» M, Finkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound •&#13;
" DEAR Mas. PimtHAJf:—When I first&#13;
wrote to you I wps in a very bad condition.&#13;
I was passing through the.&#13;
change of life, and the doctors said I '&#13;
had bladder and liver trouble. I had&#13;
suffered for nine years. Doctors failed&#13;
to do me any good. Since I have taken&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,&#13;
my health has improved very&#13;
much. I will gladly recommend your&#13;
medicine to others and am sure t h a t i t&#13;
will prove a s g r e a t a blessing to them&#13;
as it has to me."—Mas. GEO. H. J U X E ,&#13;
001 DeEalb Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.&#13;
Relief Came Promptly&#13;
" DEAR MKS. PINKBJLM :—I had been&#13;
under treatment with the doctors for&#13;
four years, and seemed to get no better,&#13;
I thought I would try your medicin$.&#13;
My trouble was change of life, and I&#13;
must say t h a t I never had anything&#13;
help me so much as Lydia E. Fulfill&#13;
am "s Vegetable Compound. Religf&#13;
came almost immediately. I hav&gt;e&#13;
better health now than I ever had. I&#13;
feel like a new woman, perfectly&#13;
strong. I give Lydia E. Pinkhamts&#13;
Compound all t h e credit, and woulQ&#13;
not do without her medicine for anything.&#13;
I have recommended i t t o&#13;
several of my friends. There is n o&#13;
need of women suffering so much for&#13;
Mrs. Pinkham's remedies are a sure&#13;
cure." — M AH ALA BUTLBB, Bridgewater,&#13;
111.&#13;
Another Woman Helped&#13;
" DEAB MBS. POTKHAJI :—I took Lydia&#13;
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
during change of life and derived great&#13;
benefit from its use."—MABY E. JAJCES,&#13;
136 Coy don St., Bradford, Pa.&#13;
i&#13;
.i.. •, tJ. n r- i.v;.: n • t*,'i i': • • rt r,v;i vaj inT.i I r^^TTy^q r. rt-^ •; ;uTT!T^rrTT~T77r^-T7&#13;
4ttO©ROPS&#13;
hi! Hi., i 4i i,r .i.i I.; j , , , l.,ii nil . ., i!..M:vHi,i,ii'.„,,,I'l.Miiiin&#13;
I M V I I M Miife im.HnM^'i.u &gt;MiTtil.&gt;•. ,...•. •!• i•,.uiu•.IiTTTr&#13;
^Vegetable Preparalionfor Assimilating&#13;
the Food andBcgula&#13;
ling the Stomachs andBowels of&#13;
CASTORIA For Infants and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
1N FA N T S / ( HIL1) K h N&#13;
Promotes Digpstion,CheerPurness&#13;
and Rest.Con tains neither SMum,Morphine nor Mineral,&#13;
O T ^ A R C O T I C .&#13;
/by* afOUUk-SAMUELPBtCBKi&#13;
Jtx.Smn* *&#13;
Aperfect Remedy for Constipa-&#13;
Tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea&#13;
Worms .Convulsions Jeverishness&#13;
and L o s s OF SLEEP.&#13;
Facsimile Signature of&#13;
XEW YORK.&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORIA TNB CKNTAUN COMNRT, H n t T O M CTTV.&#13;
PATENT GUARANTIES&#13;
with no fee Tfiilnl-.&#13;
A l w a y s L.lqnM.&#13;
"Your wife." remarked the visitor,&#13;
preparing a compliment, "has a liquid&#13;
voice."&#13;
"Liquid!" replied Henpeck. musingly.&#13;
"Oh, yes! It—er—never dries up."&#13;
—Philadelphia Record.&#13;
A IlHuty Kctrrat.&#13;
"Why did the young minister Irave&#13;
so suddenly?"&#13;
"The Maiden Ladiss' Ilom? Missionary&#13;
society took up th£ r.i.&gt;k of tin dins&#13;
him a suitable wife."—Philadelphia&#13;
North American.&#13;
P r e s e n e p o f Mind.&#13;
Professor—Suppose you were engaged&#13;
in the "autopsy of a subject, and it&#13;
gave signs of life, what would you do'.'&#13;
—Student—I think T should * • •&#13;
change the subject, sir.—Brooklyn&#13;
Life.&#13;
At t h e Concert. ^.&#13;
"Johnson is a great arUst£»lfow inevitable&#13;
is his touch." &gt;""'&#13;
"Just what-l've-becnlhinking my-_&#13;
self. He 'touched' me for $10, and I&#13;
found it extremely ineritu^e."—Atlanta&#13;
Constitution.&#13;
i O * ** *«•«•», eirilwt. OOTB will rvrote-&#13;
IzS &gt;rmA AKIMt"D! * UMBMonoiMitolonrnoM gortAow.MinOg,b ayit.o ]l&gt;dt«a•f« i•n. ^ j e u w t . B I e r o C B OATS&#13;
CORN S W A *"-^ "• *"&#13;
80 boi. p«r tere. Grettett mte&#13;
•ad h»r fuod thitahleofth« tunl&#13;
BARLEY, BEARDLKftS,&#13;
;b!&lt;i* lilbm. la N.Y. Woo&lt;l«rfai!&#13;
KAPE »&amp;?. A TON&#13;
Otres rich, jre«n food for etttl*,&#13;
•h««p, iwtn«, poaltrT, etc., at33«.&#13;
awn. ft* tell ciot'tmthi of tb«&#13;
B*pe *eed Dted la the U. 3.&#13;
BROXl'8 IXEBJtUS&#13;
Qmueit ens* on earth. Grows to&#13;
••rtectk&gt;'u in America artrywtMr*.&#13;
Salter warrants It I&#13;
THE MILLION DOLLAB&#13;
potato U Utt most talked or potato&#13;
oa earth, and Salter Mz&#13;
X eeka | hots will nak* ye* rich.&#13;
Larffrst grower of PoUlowa aad&#13;
Farm Seeda in tl-e world.&#13;
VEGETABLE 9EEB0&#13;
, Largest, choicest list In V. S. ,&#13;
[ Onion Sred, 80s. lb. E»erjthlng&#13;
warranted to grow. » pip ««*. |&#13;
lieat twgetables. poatpeid. &amp;.0&amp;&#13;
, sa^w . t^kFk OMt?le al,© woo. nSaTiAl gMrePatS S eed ^ V CCataatlaotgo ga ntdt m10, pikeg. sp Foastramge S. e*emd M ore***&#13;
JOHNASALZERSEEDCO.&#13;
LACRQSSEWI^&#13;
CHEAP FARMS&#13;
( 0 YOU WUT &gt; HOSE J I1W0U0 i.U0U0U0 TMCUHllECSa fIamrmprionvge dU nadnod tuon bime dpirvoivdeedd eaancdh s voelda r&lt;.m C loomnge taimnde a geaed u «e* o»rj rw priatey. mTHeKn tTsR, UaM itiAuNe Mfl»O STSr uSaTuAn TMEOM B AENtUKt,e .SCarnoitlwace Cli.e Snatenri,l aMc iCcho..,, Mori eb.&#13;
/&#13;
less s u c c e s s !&#13;
Patents aUvert(?ld&#13;
f r e e for client*.&#13;
F r e e a d v i c e a s t o p a t e n t a b i l i t y . S«rjd for&#13;
Inventor's Primer. MILO 8 . STEVENS &amp; C O . ,&#13;
Established ;sbi. » n uth s t , W a s h i n g t o n , D.C*&#13;
Branch Offices: Chicago, Cleveland aud Detroit.&#13;
B A D E f t CENTS we'win sencrjrr*,&#13;
r W I X D U oar TWO-OUART F o r * .&#13;
TA1M SYBIXGE, fitted with a full length&#13;
STEEL NICKXX-PLATXD VALVE a THREB hygienic, bard rubber pipes—for INFANTS,&#13;
ADULTS, RECTAL and VAGINAL. These pipes have the slip expansion&#13;
aiMight joints, guaranteed&#13;
not to leak or wear. All&#13;
carefully packed in a strawt&gt;&#13;
oard, paper-co7t&gt;rvd box.The&gt;&#13;
postage will oel2ct.^&#13;
Oar 8pri*eT CateJagwe of&#13;
" — — 1.06U illustrated pages wil!.be&gt;&#13;
sent prepaid on receipt of 15 cents, which pays part of&#13;
the express charm*, and will be refunded on receipt of&#13;
your first order This catalocoe quotes wholesale price*&#13;
on EVERYTHING you RAT. WEAR and USE.&#13;
Established JOHN M. SMYTH COMPANY.&#13;
Order Style No. A 1 1 CHICAGO,&#13;
FOR EVERY HOUSEKEEPER.&#13;
The Gem Selfheattag Flat Iron And Stove&#13;
combined is a new Invention of great value&#13;
to housekeepers. It gives any heat desired;&#13;
is odorless, safe, simple, complete; save*&#13;
time, labor, health, fuel. 2 cents runs one&#13;
all day. I t appeals to everyone. Once&#13;
used it is indispensible. AOBKTS WANT*D_&#13;
EvsRTwmcRX. Anyone can sell it. An&#13;
investigation will pay yon. GEM FLAT&#13;
IRON CO., KAUMAZOO, MIOB.&#13;
W . f i . U . - - D E T R O I T — N O . e—19CO&#13;
• • • » ' . i |&#13;
-,-.&#13;
*1&#13;
yi&#13;
A&#13;
I,&#13;
m&#13;
ft*!&#13;
IS!&#13;
•VV V\ ^^W^TW^^^^W^W-—•'•"" W*&lt;&#13;
&amp; •&#13;
•!i&#13;
&lt;1\&#13;
V&#13;
v&#13;
7"3 ' i • &gt;&#13;
B ®lw §hufenrg Jlfepaich.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS EDITOR.&#13;
THUBSDAY, MAR. 1,1900.&#13;
This Paper&#13;
One Year.&#13;
Farm Journal&#13;
5 Years.&#13;
PAY UP AND GET BOTH PAPERS AT PRICE&#13;
OF ONE.&#13;
We want to ^et 100 new subscriber*&#13;
to our pnper, and are going&#13;
to do it if we can; we therefore&#13;
continue our arrnngexneut&#13;
Bureau of Labor.&#13;
The Bureau of Labor for this&#13;
state will soon issue its seventh&#13;
annual report in book form and&#13;
will be a very complete report of&#13;
the work done by the bureau. We&#13;
clip the following from an advance&#13;
sheet sent us by the labor commissioner:&#13;
The State is divided into five&#13;
inspection districts, each having a&#13;
deputy inspector. The entire&#13;
work is under the supervision of&#13;
the Commissioner o* Labor, and&#13;
is made uniform throughout the&#13;
whole state. Through the medwith&#13;
the Farm Journal by which ium of weekly, narrative reports&#13;
we can send t i e FINCKNEY DIH-! from each deputy the bureau is&#13;
PATCH one year and the Farm&#13;
Jouruel 5 years, both for fcl.CO.&#13;
And we make the same offer to all&#13;
old mbecrib'ers who will pay all&#13;
arrearages and cue year in ad-&#13;
»&#13;
vance.&#13;
kept in close touch with the work&#13;
iu all its various pharsefl.&#13;
Nearly 75 per cent of the factories,&#13;
inspected report an increase&#13;
in buisness, averaging about 18&#13;
percent over that of 189¾. It&#13;
MONTHLY REPORT&#13;
Of the Pinckney Public Schools for the&#13;
month ending F e b . 2 3 , 1900.&#13;
HIGH SCHOOL DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whole uumber of pupils 4 3 .&#13;
Total days attendance 726.&#13;
Average attendance 40.&#13;
Aggregate tardiness ()8.&#13;
Number of days taught Itt.&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY,&#13;
Gasper CuUnme Dosde Daley&#13;
Iva PI ace way May Jeff ITS&#13;
Mae Reason Hert Roche&#13;
STEPHEN D U R F E E , Supt.&#13;
GRAMMAR DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Number of pupils 24&#13;
Total attend a uce 398&#13;
Total tardiness CO&#13;
Daily attendance 21.86&#13;
Number days taught 18&#13;
PUPILsS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
Ellery Durfee Ethel Durfee&#13;
Eva Grinjes » Fred Rend&#13;
JSthel Graham Rex Read&#13;
C. L GRIMES, Teacher.&#13;
Y o u k n e w w h a ^ O o u r p a p e r is, l i s m o s t p l e a s a n t t o n o t e t h a t laa&#13;
n d t h e F a r m J o u r n a l i s a g e m — J ^ o r « n o t n o w b e g g i n g f o r e m -&#13;
p r a c t i c a l , progieer-ive— a c l e a n , I p l o y m e n t .&#13;
h o n e s t , m c f u l p a p e r - f u l l of! A b o v e t h r e e f o u r t h s ( 7 4 p e r&#13;
g u m p t i o n , full of t u u s h i n e , w i t h ; C e n t ) o f t h e s e f a c t o r i e s p a y t h e i r&#13;
i m m e n s e c i r c u l a t i o n a m o n g t h e j e r a r ^ y e e s w e e k l y , t h e o t h e r s b e -&#13;
b e s t p e o p l e e v e r y w h e r e . y o u | i « t o a b o u t e q u a l l y d i v i d e d b e t w e e n&#13;
o u g h t t o t a k e it. ' 1 m o n t h l y a n d s e m i - m o n t h l y . T h o s e&#13;
! p a y i n g - m o n t h l y a r e m o s t l y i n t h e&#13;
F . A. Siyler ^ump.ntees every -hot- [ u p p e r p e n i n s u l a . T u e a v e r a g e&#13;
t l e o t CusmtierlinsCoufth Remedy and j w a g e 8 V B r y j n t j , e different, d i s -&#13;
will refund tbe money to any one who I t r i c t g ftnd flre i^heat i n fa&#13;
is not satsifieiLaiter usinp 1 wo t h i r d s ! ,-r ,&gt; t xi en i&#13;
, , , ^ T ~ : , , . i n o r t h e r n p o r t i o n of t h e o t a t e .&#13;
o M h e contents. This i s t h e best rem-1 „,, , . , . , , .&#13;
, . ., , . . , • . I h e w a g e s s h o w d e c i d e d i n c r e a s e&#13;
edy in the world tor la prippe coughs, ! • &amp;&#13;
colds, c-roop and w h o c p m g c o n i r h a r d j o v e r t h a t of 3898, a n d a n a v e r a g e&#13;
is p l i a n t and safe to take. It • pre- of m o r e t h a n 10 p e r c e n t i n c r e a s e&#13;
vents any tendency of a c n l d j o result o v e r 3897.&#13;
in pneumonia. t raar.-l g oTv ehren i negn f cohr ci ledm elnatb o ro f ist h es o l vl aiwn gs&#13;
S o l o n C u t l e r , of P o t t a w a t o m i e | t h e w o r s t p r o b l e m . T h e a v a r i c e&#13;
P a r k , in TYest Cole m a , e v o l v e d a j 0 f o p e r a t o r s i n s e c u r i n g c h e a p&#13;
p l a n for h i s s u p p l y of i c e f o r n e x t j l a b o r a n d t h e c u p i d i t y of s o m e&#13;
s u m m e r t h a t will p r o b a b l y b e | p a r e n t s i n w i s h i n g t h e i r c h i l d r e n&#13;
a d o p t e d by m a n y o t h e r s w h e n i t s ! e v e n of i n f a n t a g e , t o w o r k i n facs&#13;
u p e r i o r i t y is b r o u g h t t o t h e i r j t o r i e s , a r e o b s t i c l e s h a r d t o r e -&#13;
a t t e n t i o n . T o s o l v e t h e ice h a r v e s t j u o v e . T h e i n s p e c t o r s h a v e&#13;
p r o b l e m , h e o r d e r e d a n u m b e r of p r o m p t l y O r d e r e d t h e d i s c h a r g e&#13;
h e a v y m m p a n s , t w e n t y i n c h e s of all c h i l d r e n u n d e r t h e a g e o f 1*4.&#13;
l o n g , f o u r t e e n i n c h e s w i d e a n d j T h e r e h a s b e e n a c o n s t a n t d e -&#13;
e i g h t i n c h e s d e e p , w h i c h h e p l a c e d : c r e a s e i n c a s u a l t i e s s i n c e f a c t o r y&#13;
o n s l i g h t e l e v a t i o n s a n d rilled w i t h j i n s p e c t i o n w a s e s t a b l i s h e d in t h e&#13;
w a t e r d u r i n g t h e c o l d w e a t h e r . S t a t e , a n d t h e d e c r e a s e h a s b e e n&#13;
w h e n f r o z e n t h e ice- i s e a s i l y l a r g e l y i n a c c i d e n t s of a f a t a l&#13;
d u m p e d from t h e p a n s b y i n v e r t i n g a n d s e r i o u s n a t u r e .&#13;
INTERMEDIATE DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whole number of days taucht 19J&#13;
Total number days attendance 373.5&#13;
Average daily attendance 18.78&#13;
"Whole number belonging 20&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 35&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY&#13;
Lucy Jeffreys Leon G r a h a m&#13;
.Orpha H e n d e e&#13;
E D I T H C A R R , Teacher.&#13;
PRIMARY DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whole number of days taught 18&#13;
Total number of days attendance 434.&#13;
Average daily attendance 21.7&#13;
Whole nunrber belonging- 25&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 24&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
Lloyd Grimes Steve Jeffreys&#13;
Thomas Moran&#13;
J E S S I E G R E E N , Teacher.&#13;
them and pouring over the bottom The results of each year's work&#13;
and sides a 6mall quantity of hot f prove more conclusive the practl&#13;
water. The ice thus procured is j cal working and benefits arising&#13;
as clear as a piece of crystal and from the Factory Inspection laws.&#13;
Great opportunity offered to good, relia&#13;
ble men. Salary of $15 per week and ex&#13;
peases for man with rig to introtluce our t a b | e cloths and napkins&#13;
Poultry Mixture and Insect Destroyer in dingy after washing them a few times.&#13;
Wicker cr.n!'^ soon become soiled,&#13;
and they can I." c.e.uied a tew times&#13;
with strong *u : water, using, a brush&#13;
to scrub them. When they cannot, bo&#13;
clennou an longer in this way. they&#13;
can be tniv.iud to look nicely, or painted&#13;
any co.or with enamel paint.&#13;
The girl who U clover with her&#13;
noodle is f o r t u m t e in these days vvlien*&#13;
..o la.inv stylish fripperies in neckwear&#13;
are worn. Trifles that cost dollar.-&#13;
l^ny be fashioned at home in this way.&#13;
Sir art scarfs for the neck are made of&#13;
silk ana finished at the botiom with&#13;
many rows of stitching.&#13;
To cloud a glass for the sake of p r &gt;&#13;
t e t i o u purjm-aa, as In a bathroom, and&#13;
yet to preserve the light a man who&#13;
works in glass s i y s that it it done with&#13;
a solu ion of epsiun salts and vinegar&#13;
applied with a brush. This should&#13;
give a frw.tcd look that becomes very&#13;
duni'blo if it is done over at once with&#13;
de/var or white varnish.&#13;
T h e F ench manner of cooking youns:&#13;
cirrous is deacoiis. lioil them until&#13;
•temler, then cut them into halves&#13;
lengthwise. Melt some butter in a hot&#13;
sp'hior. When the butter bubbles lay&#13;
In the carrots and sprinkle them with&#13;
some sugar, salt and pepper and finely&#13;
chopped parsely. • Fry them until the&#13;
cdgKS becomVtritrpsind browned.&#13;
When frying fish the test to know&#13;
when the lard or drippings is hot enontrh&#13;
is to dip in the tail of one fish.&#13;
It it h.pcomes crisp very quickly thei&#13;
lard is m the proper state for frying.&#13;
Or it may be determined with a piece&#13;
af stale bread which will become&#13;
brown directly, if the lard is in order.&#13;
Put in plenty of lard so that the fishi&#13;
will not uurn. Cook them well oh one&#13;
side, t u r n them and fry on the othciv&#13;
side. v —&#13;
Plain Layer Cake: Ore-half cup of&#13;
butter, two cups of ftigar, four eggs.&#13;
one c u p of milk, three cups of flour&#13;
and one teaspoonful baking powder.&#13;
Flavor to taste. Cream half the butter&#13;
with the sugar, the other half with the&#13;
yolks of the eggs, then mix togothe:-,&#13;
then add milk and Hour, sifted four&#13;
times. Put the bnking powder in \ h e&#13;
last sifting; lastly the whites of t h e&#13;
eggs, beaten light. This can be used&#13;
for chocolate, cocoanut, jelly, creain,&#13;
or layer cakes.&#13;
There is no use in having colored&#13;
faded and&#13;
A C « r d .&#13;
I, the u n d e r s i g n e d , do hereby&#13;
agree to refund t h e money on a J50-&#13;
cent bottle of Green's W a r r e n ted&#13;
S y r u p of T a r if i^, fails to c o r e y o u r&#13;
cough or cold. * 1 also g u a r a n t e e a&#13;
25 cent bottle to p r o v e satisfactory or&#13;
money refunded. t-80&#13;
Will B. Darrow.&#13;
W A N T E D - T h e Subscription&#13;
due on the DISPATCH.&#13;
J. G. SAYLES&#13;
F l a l n f l e l d , MIcKT&#13;
Funeral&#13;
Director&#13;
and&#13;
t m b a l m e r .&#13;
R e s i d e n c e I m i l e n o r t h of v i l l a g e .&#13;
S t a t e T e l e p h o n e C o n n e c t i o n .&#13;
All c a l l s p r o m p t l y a n s w e r e d .&#13;
SOME FACTS! READ THEM!&#13;
EUREKA SURE STOP TOOTHACHE POWDERS&#13;
Gives quick and sure relief.&#13;
EUREKA COMPLEXION OINTMENT&#13;
Removes Black-heads and Pimples.&#13;
EUREKA CORN CURE&#13;
Cures all Corns, Bunious, and Callous&#13;
places.&#13;
EUREKA 0. K. WART REMOVER&#13;
Is certain in its results.&#13;
E a c h 1 0 c , C o i n o r S t a m p s&#13;
By R e t u r n Mail.&#13;
Agents wanted—write today.&#13;
Address, EUREKA SUPPLY HOUSE,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
the country. Send stamp. American M f g .&#13;
Co., Terre Haute, Iud.&#13;
WORTH REPEATING.&#13;
Oriental-physicians have p n i c t s e i&#13;
raccina/ti'on^for over l.OuO }-e*v*.&#13;
The largest locomotive works ,n tlu:&#13;
worla are in Phi';ide;'..bia.&#13;
Over 60 different 1&lt; j^u;ige&gt; nro spoken&#13;
Ln the Philippine ;.u;nipelag:j.&#13;
Queen Victoria has not w&gt;crn her&#13;
crown more than 20 times during her&#13;
whole reign.&#13;
Vienna policemen are require,I to&#13;
uiKlfersiand telegraphy and to be able&#13;
to swim and row a boat.&#13;
Rain ihas never been known to fall&#13;
In t h a t part of Egypt between the-two&#13;
lower falls of the Nile.&#13;
and they will not be if the washing is&#13;
done properly. Use tepid water, dissolve&#13;
a-little borax in it, and enough&#13;
pure soap to get them clean. Very&#13;
Ittle rubbing is needed when borax Is&#13;
used, for it softens the water and&#13;
m^kee the washing easy. Borax should&#13;
always be used in the water ln which&#13;
colored clothes are washed, for It does&#13;
not Injure the most delicate colors.&#13;
Rinse well and hang them in the shade&#13;
to dry.&#13;
Wood tar Is still made as It was 400&#13;
! years B. C. A bark is chosen and a&#13;
i hole dug, in/to wfliich the wood is D .U-"!&#13;
; covered wiuh. turf. A fire is lighted&#13;
1 uTi'd'erneath, and the tar slowly, iir.ps&#13;
i into the barrels to receive n.&#13;
j A firm of fi&amp;h dealers in Mobile? A l a *&#13;
! is erperimentirig with a. railroad t a n k&#13;
i car, in wnhwh il sucefssful,. they w.ll&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
tfrabd T r u a k R a i l w a y System. ~&#13;
Leave Hnckney.&#13;
WESTBOUND.&#13;
No. 27 Paitttnrar. Pontine tn JarUann&#13;
i s n e a r l y a b s o l u t e l y p u r e .&#13;
D r . C a d y s Condition Powders are&#13;
j u s t what a bQr&amp;e needs when in bad&#13;
condition. Tonic, blood purifier and&#13;
vermifuge. They a r e - n o t food but&#13;
medicine and the best in use to p u t a&#13;
horse i.n prime condition. Price 25c&#13;
per package. For sale by F. A. S i l -&#13;
l e r .&#13;
DR. BABCOCK'3 EP!G&#13;
We are not responsible for the &lt;u ,:.^&#13;
of sin in us, but we are reipoa.-&gt;ible&#13;
tor the ihoots-.&#13;
Character is the confirmation of&#13;
ohoice. the petrifaction of tendency.&#13;
To die doing right is bettor tluut-i^-&#13;
live doing wrong.&#13;
The seed.* ol truth sprou: in the -Oil&#13;
of obedience.&#13;
Many a good Intention dies from inatten.&#13;
icn.&#13;
Be gc.cd. and be gcod for somet.iin^.&#13;
A grimy 'hand may do a graded.*&#13;
dt-ed, but a nad neart cannot&#13;
If a man s to be a pillar in the: ' e n&#13;
pie of his God by ami by, h? mus. i;e&#13;
tome kind of a prop \n God's house today.&#13;
A cold prayer, like cold air sinks:&#13;
Slot air ri&gt;es, and fervent prayers are&#13;
world escaping, heaven moving&#13;
agencies.&#13;
While the beneficent provisions of&#13;
the law throw safeguards around&#13;
the operatives in factories and&#13;
workshops, it also extends to owners&#13;
and operators, who comply&#13;
with its provisions, a protection&#13;
against damage suits which they&#13;
more freely realize as its workings&#13;
are made manifest. Their&#13;
best interests lie in the care and&#13;
safety of their employer. Michigan&#13;
stands second to no other j for the purposes of war&#13;
state in the efficiency of her in-&#13;
| spectionlaws and their enforce-&#13;
' ment.&#13;
* — ~ — 7 ' , ; „ r r o .J iAn , , ^ , 1 , ^ , 1 ^ . —transport Spanis-h mackerel, psrapatrj&#13;
^ A P a u ' ° * h e r r ? s s : f ler^jindMiurb?-. £ » so«aiiei-i &amp;dLi&#13;
ed 20 yearn would yield an\amouut of *»&#13;
fi&amp;Ath saigs .nl aorgf e paosl .ttehne etgsl oibne . TVh.i b.e. t on&#13;
meeting a "per«on is to hold up iho&#13;
cla-ped hands and at ck out the tongu«.&#13;
TIhe wool on the back_of a sheep is&#13;
the e h e p h e r d s barom teT\ The cu i;e.&#13;
the wool the finer will be t h j w^ath r.&#13;
A schoolgirl in Wnl.asn, Ind., i&lt; .-uf&#13;
fering from paralysis of the muscles&#13;
of '.the mouth, caused by too persistently&#13;
chewing ^uni.&#13;
Russia ie a country extremely rich&#13;
in horses, t h e number of which has&#13;
been estimated ait 20.000,000, of wh ch&#13;
at least 1,000,000 .are -addle-horses fit&#13;
, A. R. Da Flvent, editor of the&#13;
J o u r n a l , Doylestown, Obio, suffered&#13;
^for a n u m b e r of years from rheumatism&#13;
in bis r i g h t shoulder and side.&#13;
H e »ay»; "My r i g h t a r m at times was&#13;
entirely useless. I tried Chamberlain's&#13;
P a i n Bairn, and/was surprised to receive&#13;
relief almost immediately. The&#13;
P a i n B a l m has been a constant companion&#13;
or mine ever since and it&#13;
never fail*." For sale by F . A. Siffler&#13;
D r u g g i s t .&#13;
/' Subecribe for the Dispatch.&#13;
Throe month* for 15 cent*.&#13;
It is very hard to stand idly by and&#13;
yeexrur dear-enes suffer while awaiti&#13;
n g the arrival of the cfoctoi. An Alb&#13;
a n y N Y. dairyman called at a d r u g&#13;
store there for a doctor to come and&#13;
see his child, then very sick with&#13;
croup. N o t finding the doctor in, he&#13;
lei't word for him to come at on-.e on&#13;
his r e t u r n . He also bought a bottle&#13;
of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy,&#13;
which hejioped would give some relief&#13;
until the doctor should a r r i v e . In&#13;
a few hours be returned, saying the&#13;
doctor need not come, as the child was&#13;
much better. The druggist Mr. Otto&#13;
b'cbolz, says the family has since recommended&#13;
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy&#13;
to their neighbors and friends&#13;
until he has a constant demand for it&#13;
from t h a t p a r t of the country. F o r&#13;
saie by F . A. Sigler Druggist. -&#13;
-• * "fie •smallest ooin now current ia&#13;
E u r o p \ and the one havihg the Je.ist&#13;
value, is the Gre*k leptcn. The l e ^ o n&#13;
is, according to the decim-n mone a r /&#13;
system, current4n-all_cQuntnes belonging&#13;
ttrthe Latin union. Some idea of&#13;
t*N valueless little disc of copper m a&#13;
be gathered from the fac' "that the&#13;
lepton ie the one-fcundred-rfc part of&#13;
a drachma. Th« Greek drachma usually&#13;
pusses for t h e valuo of 20 c e n t e r&#13;
es alive to Northern cities.&#13;
|- When a burglar wants to break into&#13;
a Peruvian house he takesji sponge&#13;
.and bt&lt;cket of water and mofstens thewalls,&#13;
which a r e covered with only a&#13;
thin coating' of mud, and easily dissolved&#13;
upon the application of moi.it-&#13;
I In-^he ambulance and patrol department&#13;
of a Ohica'A'o park police s U t l j n .&#13;
t w o banrarn,s with on? chick have * established&#13;
them-selves as the comp^niomis&#13;
of the officrrs, Their favorite&#13;
perches are on thp wheels of the ambulance&#13;
or patrol wagon.&#13;
| One of the oldret cannon in existence&#13;
hr.e just been fifhed out of the bottom&#13;
of the river Thames near Twickenham.&#13;
This archaic cannon is 28 inches in&#13;
length and abouit 4½ inches in diameter,&#13;
being made of bars of iron&#13;
strengthened with hoops of the same&#13;
metal welded together.&#13;
j Among the numerous things considered&#13;
sacred m ln\dia is the banyan-ire;1&#13;
one of th# fig genus, remarkable for&#13;
its vast rooting branches. The huriaontal&#13;
branches s«nd down j&gt;h;_pts"&#13;
which take root When they rea:h the&#13;
ground and enlarge into trunks, whieii&#13;
in their t u r n send out branches.&#13;
| Five hundred' Litlh.ua.n.ian girls havepetitioned&#13;
to be alto wed »o form the&#13;
boie guard ol honor of th.? German&#13;
emperor durlfiig tJhe hunting reason tdi.s&#13;
year. Thes« girls are all skilled&#13;
fcaroewoinen, a n d a r e , o f a race t h a t&#13;
became famous under the Jagellcns.&#13;
Their offer was provisionally accepted.&#13;
nDoOkE-sSj ITTT PPAA Yv TPOA nBrUTYv rCfHTPEAAPPo? .L oTnhd*o nl t obryf n t,u he ofo pCeorav ensty ndGicaartdee n tmtiMn&#13;
A chesp remedy for coughs and colds is 1948 includes everything except one&#13;
all right but you want something that will box and two stall's. These the Duke&#13;
relieve and cure the more severe results of , ^J^H*?**!*?™** ° f t h e Pr °Pe n &gt;'- r e "&#13;
i»« ». n MM * . ,, i o n . . served for this owm uso at any performiung&#13;
iruDies. v\ fiat shau you dor iio to a n &lt; J G l n t h e n e x t forty.nine years wiinwarmer&#13;
and more regular climate? Yes, j out the paymen.t of an entrance fee.&#13;
if possible; if not possible for you, then in&#13;
eather case take the ONLY remi&gt;dy that has&#13;
been introduced in all civilued countri&#13;
with success in severe throat and lung&#13;
trubles, ''Bt^chee's German Syrup." It&#13;
not only heals and stimulates the tissues to&#13;
destroy the germ disease, but allays inflam*&#13;
mation, canies easy expectoration, gives a&#13;
good nights rest, and cures the patient.&#13;
Try one bottle. Recomended many yean&#13;
by all druggist* In the world. Sample botl&#13;
e s a t F . A ^ S i g l e r ' i .&#13;
.conuectloti from Detroit 0 44 ft m.&#13;
No. «9 Pssaeuijer, Potrttac to fuckson. H: j"&gt; p. tn.&#13;
No. 89 has through coach troru Ut'troit to J axon.&#13;
No. 43 Mixed, Lenox to Jackson&#13;
• •......connectlou'from Detroit 4 4 5 p m&#13;
EASTiOUND&#13;
No, 30Passeng;er to Pontiac and Detroit 8 15 p w&#13;
No. 28 PflBsnnser, Jaxon to Detroit, 9:tfi a. ra.&#13;
No. 28 has through coach from Jaxon to Detrokt&#13;
No. 44 Mixed to Pontiac and Lenox 7 5¾ a m&#13;
All trainB daily except Sunday.&#13;
No 44 connection at Pontiac for Detroit and&#13;
. . . . . . . . for tha west on I) &amp; .M R R&#13;
W. J. Blaax, Agent, Pinckney&#13;
A Lynn, Mass., man. in answer to&#13;
the question of thn r&gt;gi^trars of vot»rs&#13;
as to what his busin ,s wns. said lie&#13;
was a "wealth producer," but would&#13;
not explain how he produced it.&#13;
The Duke ot Devonshire possesses&#13;
a book for which his father refused an&#13;
offer of $100,000. It is Claude Lorra n'i&#13;
"B&gt;€k of Truths." .the larest book m&#13;
Europe, and ah heirloom in the family.&#13;
In BaVc.ria each family on Easter&#13;
Sunday brings to the cburch ward-tiro&#13;
a walnut branch, which, rt'fer be ng&#13;
partially burned, "is carried home to&#13;
be laid on the hearth dur ng tempests,&#13;
as a protection agair.«r liS'i'.tntng. *&#13;
The rtcihffft milk is that which comes&#13;
near the clo.^e of 'milking. A test disclosed&#13;
that the first half pint of m Ik&#13;
at a m i k i n g contained only 3 07 per&#13;
cent, of cream,, while the last, naif p.at&#13;
contained 10.36 per cpnt.&#13;
A.Tr&gt; STEAMSHIP L/K'SS,&#13;
P o p u l a r r o u t e for A n n Arbor, T o -&#13;
ledo and points E a s t , S o u t h , a n d -for&#13;
Bowell, Owosso, A l m a , M*t P l e a s a n t&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, T r a v e r s e City a n d&#13;
points in N o r t h w e s t e r n M i c h i g a n .&#13;
W v H . B E S T j f e ,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
PURE MARQUETTE&#13;
R a i l r o a d , Taxi.'&amp;axy 2 1 , l O O O .&#13;
Lv&#13;
QOINO R A S T&#13;
Ar&#13;
LT&#13;
Ar&#13;
Urand Rapids,&#13;
Ionia..&#13;
Lansing&#13;
Howell&#13;
South Lyon...&#13;
Salem&#13;
Plymouth&#13;
Detroit&#13;
ooiyo'wKaT&#13;
Detroit ~7.V. 77. .7.&#13;
Plymouth&#13;
Salem !&#13;
Month Lyon&#13;
Howel+ ., . . .&#13;
L'instn£,&#13;
Ionia..&#13;
Urand RapidB&#13;
a m&#13;
f in&#13;
7 4ft&#13;
y in&#13;
10 o?&#13;
10 3fi&#13;
10 4fi&#13;
11 00&#13;
11 M)&#13;
P m&#13;
1-* t)^&#13;
U 2d&#13;
I if,&#13;
3 04&#13;
3 25&#13;
4 OV&#13;
P m&#13;
~ * so&#13;
6 06&#13;
1*1&#13;
9 2W&#13;
8 M o m&#13;
9 *&gt;&#13;
10 05&#13;
FaAWKBiY,&#13;
, Agent, South Lyon. O. P,&#13;
a m&#13;
8 4C&#13;
9 25&#13;
9 M&#13;
9 49&#13;
10 S3&#13;
11 «&#13;
13 50&#13;
1 80&#13;
P ra&#13;
1 1ft&#13;
1 4S&#13;
? 08&#13;
2 :«&#13;
A 3.)&#13;
4 45&#13;
!S 10&#13;
p :n&#13;
tt uO&#13;
6 43&#13;
0 W&#13;
7 0»&#13;
7 40&#13;
841&#13;
10 05&#13;
10 45&#13;
DlHAVEN,&#13;
, A., Gran i RtpMi.&#13;
eo YEARS&#13;
EXPERIENC1&#13;
I thinfc I will go craay with pain J&#13;
were it not for Chamberlain's Pain&#13;
aim," writenarT^vvT H&gt; atapleton,&#13;
Herminie, Pa. "1 hare been afflicted&#13;
with rheumatism for several years and&#13;
have tried remedies without number,&#13;
but Pain Balm is the best medicine I&#13;
have ffot hold of." One application&#13;
relieves the pain. For sale by P. A.&#13;
Sigler, Drnggist.&#13;
If you want all the newt subscribe&#13;
for theDapATOH.&#13;
TRAOC M A R K S&#13;
D E S I G N *&#13;
C O P Y R I G H T * A C&#13;
Anyone tending- % sketch and d«wertpeton maa Slickly appertain our opinion fr«« wfceth«ral&#13;
Tentlon laprobnMr patentable. Corati&#13;
.^ i&gt;etb«r&#13;
„.. - , Atantable. Coniman|fla&gt;&#13;
tlonsstrictlf nonHdentlAl. Fhmdbook on Patastt&#13;
lent free. Oldest agency for Mourtng patents.&#13;
Patenu taken throoih Mann a Co, reoatva&#13;
tpeetal notice, without c W r e , tn the Scknrinc Htnerfcaa.&#13;
y&#13;
:'" A V % •"'. /.'"••• * ' 5 M " ;&#13;
&gt;?t&#13;
i':-'w^'!'&#13;
• • . ' . . • • " . ' • ' : * 3&#13;
\&#13;
WAR TO THE DEATH&#13;
PESTS OF THE POULTRY YARD&#13;
MUST GO!&#13;
i*wwa&#13;
A m e r i c a n L i c e D c v t i w y e r K i l l s lUcure&#13;
ffll(e«i l i l c e a n d O f t i c r V e r m i n&#13;
I n a D a y T b a n A l l O i l i e r&#13;
K e r n e d i e s C o m b i n e d .&#13;
T h e war i s OD! T b e d a y s of lice a n d&#13;
v e r m i n that h a v e d o n e so much to m a k e '&#13;
tiie l i f e of t h e poultry m a n miserable, a n d&#13;
wniTiintmtwi&#13;
wM*m*m*ltrm*W9&gt;&#13;
® W. C- 7. UEdited&#13;
by the W 0 T n nt P^lPckney&#13;
W h a t prohibition will do for a&#13;
town has a fine example in Shackelford&#13;
county, Texas. F o r many&#13;
h i s business unprofitable are over. A m e r - y e A r s t h i s c o u n t y h a s h a d n o s a&#13;
lean L i c e destroyer i s the proper a m m u -&#13;
n i t i o n t o usel T h i s perpuration i s won*&#13;
derful i n its p o w e r a n d v e r m i n cannot&#13;
e x i s t twenty-four hours after it i s applied ,&#13;
t o t h e&#13;
n e e d s i t . loons, a n d Albany, t h e county&#13;
seat and terminus of t h e Central&#13;
Texas railroad, is t h e trading&#13;
^\7Z^"im nZ^u^lP°int ^r ^ ^^ areB* and j s ful1&#13;
it. I t i s c h e a p&#13;
'reliable a n d ef- j o f b u s i n e s s h o u s e s , , I t i s i n t h e&#13;
f e c t i v e o n e package b e i n g sufficient t o ; s t o c k r e g i o n o f t h i s , o n e o f t h e&#13;
protect 2 5 0 fowls from mites a n d lice for j g r e a t e s t s t o c k r a i s i n g s t a t e s i n&#13;
o n e y e a r . W h e n this Destroyer .is « • • ? . j t h e U n i o n , a n d s p e a k * l o u d l y f o r&#13;
profits at o n c e i n c r e a s e . L i c e and vermin I . . / . V &gt;&#13;
do more to kill profits &amp;** all other; the character of the men who are&#13;
causes combined. You know it. Dun't, known to the world as "cow boys.11&#13;
g o o n l o s i n g m o n e y e v e r y week, but try : T h e r e 18 n o t a QOUS6 i n t h e t o w n&#13;
A m e r i c a n L i c e D e s t r o y e r , Y o u may h a v e £ o r r e n ^ a n ( j t u e d e m a n d | 8 s o&#13;
; tried other things withbut success, ^ 1 «i groat that a family have rented&#13;
t i n s fail y o u c a n h a v e your m o n e y b a c k . i ~ , *&#13;
W e a r e i n this fight t o stay, a n d will back | t h e J a i 1 f o r a d w e l l i n g . T h i s&#13;
D e s t r o y e r against a n y n u m b e r of mites or , t o w n i s f a s t b e c o m i n g a n e d u c a -&#13;
Jice you may have. Pont fool away tional center, as the situation, al- Recitation Florence Kice&#13;
m o n e y with " r e c e i p t s " or h o m e m a d e T j £ U ( ] e &amp; n £ 8 U r r o u n d i n g s ~ m a l ^ iti&#13;
m a k e s h i f t s . U s e scientific m e a n s . T h e : a n j d e a l l f t c e for y Q u n g p e Q p l e&#13;
A m e r i c a n L i c e D e s t r o y e r h a s been used , . , . . -, , , , e&#13;
, it . . ./ .k . . t o receive t h e ideas t h a t corm&#13;
by t h o u s a n d s of p o u l t r y m e n ; it h a s been&#13;
on t h e market several years a n d h a s b e e n C h a r a c t e r .&#13;
tested thousands of times. We know it A. Feature of the Paris Ex.posiis&#13;
all right, and if it dosent do the work; t i o n w i n . b e a m international Con.&#13;
r e m e m b e r y o u g e t your money back, ! . . . , . , , m&#13;
„,. t&#13;
J e I* -.*• J . gress Against t h e Abuse of l o -&#13;
W h a t more c a n y o u ask? I f your d r u g - &amp; "&#13;
Hamburg and Putnam Farmer's Club*&#13;
On t h e last Saturday in F e b .&#13;
about 70 of t h e members of t h e&#13;
H a m b u r g a n d Putnam Farmer's&#13;
club met at t h e Jiome of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. P e t e r Coniway a n d a veiy&#13;
plesant time was had.&#13;
The Meeting was opened by&#13;
singing followed by t h e sec. report.&#13;
! T h e question "How much population&#13;
does a territory require to&#13;
become a state" being left over at&#13;
the. last meeting was answered by&#13;
Ed. McCluskey.&#13;
As the hour was late and as&#13;
considerable time had been spent&#13;
in t h e t h e discussion of this question&#13;
all were pleased when dinner&#13;
was announced.&#13;
T h e afternoon meeting was called&#13;
to order by t h e pres. and was&#13;
followed by singing.&#13;
^Next listened to the report of&#13;
the various committees, then came&#13;
an excellent literary program.&#13;
Do not forget the DISPATCH Book&#13;
Bindery when you want work in that&#13;
linn. We bind everything from a receipt&#13;
to a dictionary. Call and see&#13;
our work.&#13;
EIGHTH GRADE EXAMINATION.&#13;
The pupils' Eighth %ade examination&#13;
will be held on Saturday, March&#13;
3rd., 1900, at the following places:&#13;
Gregory, Pinckney, Hamburg, Brighton,&#13;
Hartland, Howell, Oak Grove and&#13;
Fowlerville. It is hoped that every&#13;
teacher in the county will encourag&#13;
his or her eighth grade pupils to write1&#13;
this examination. Even if a pupil&#13;
should fail, he will find where a weakness&#13;
is and will be led to remedy that&#13;
defect. JAMES H. WALLACE,&#13;
Co. Com. of Schools.&#13;
gist d o n ' t sell A m e r i c a n L i c e D e s r o y e n b a c c o . i t i s t h e s e c o n d o f i t s&#13;
he's behind the age. In that case send kind. T h e general secretary is&#13;
for a ¢1.00 box at once. Made only bjr I JJr . George Petit, professor a t the&#13;
A m e r i c a n M f g . C o . , T e r r e H a u t e , I n d . 3&#13;
ATIV£.&#13;
Faculty of • Medicine, Paris.&#13;
Works, manuscripts .or printed&#13;
! matter handed in before May 1,&#13;
1900, will be admitted in competi&#13;
ition. This congress says the&#13;
p r o g r a m , interests hygieuists,&#13;
doctors, philanthropists, agriculturists,&#13;
manufactures a n d dealers&#13;
Bar-Ben Is the greatest known TUADEJLiBK.&#13;
nerve tonic and blood purifier.&#13;
It creates solid flesh, muscle and STRENGTH,&#13;
clearo the brain, makes the blood pure and rich,&#13;
and causes a Reneral feeling of health, power&#13;
and renewed vitality, while the generative organs&#13;
are helped to regain their normal powers, and&#13;
the sufferer is quickly made conscious of direct&#13;
benefit. One box will work wonders, six f hould&#13;
-perfect a cure. 60 cts. A BOX; 6 boxes. $2.50. For&#13;
sale by druggists everywhere,,or mailed, sealed,&#13;
on receipt of price. Address DKS. BARTON&#13;
AUD BENSON, Bar-Ben Block, Cleveland, O.&#13;
y&#13;
1 F o r sale by&#13;
F.-A. S I G L E R , Druggist&#13;
Pinckney, - - Mich.&#13;
Werner's Dictionary of Synonyms &amp; Antonyms,&#13;
Mythology and Familiar Pluses.&#13;
A book that shoi: Id be in the vest&#13;
pocket of every person, because it&#13;
tells you the right word to use.&#13;
No T w o WordB i n t h e E n g i i s n&#13;
L a n g u a g e H a v e E x a c t l y t h e&#13;
S a m e S i g n i f i c a n c e . To express&#13;
the precise meaning that one in-&#13;
I tends to convey a dictionary of&#13;
I Synonyms is needed to avoid repetition.&#13;
The strongest figure of&#13;
speech is antithesis. In this dictionary&#13;
the appended Antonyms&#13;
| will, therefore, be found extremely&#13;
I valuable. Contains many other&#13;
features such as M y t h o l o g y ,&#13;
F a m i l i a r A l l u s i o n s a n d Fore&#13;
i g n P h r a s e s , Prof. Loisette's Memory&#13;
S y s t e m , ' T h e Art of N e v e r F o r g e t t i n g , " e t c . ,&#13;
etc. This wonderful little book Dound in a neat&#13;
cloth binding and sent postpaid for $0.26. Full&#13;
Leather, gilt edpe, $ 0 . 4 0 , postpaid. Order at&#13;
once. Send for our large book catalogue, free.&#13;
Address aU orders to&#13;
THE WERNER COMPANY,&#13;
FaMUluw u 4 Mftaoftotoren, AXXON, OHIO.&#13;
the rich and poor, smokers and&#13;
non-smokers workman and soldiers,&#13;
man, and children, scintitic&#13;
and charitable iustituions, and&#13;
even animals. I t is to be hoped&#13;
t h a t before t h e Congress adjourns&#13;
it will do as did t h e International&#13;
Congress Against the Abuse- of&#13;
Alcoholics last year, change its&#13;
name to read "Against the Use of"&#13;
instead of "Against the Abuse of."&#13;
We have saved many doctor bill?&#13;
since we began using Chamberlain's&#13;
C^ugb Remedy in our home. We&#13;
keeps bottle open all the time and&#13;
when any of my family or myself hegin&#13;
to catch cold wo b^gin to u-se the&#13;
Ooutfh Remedy, and as a result we&#13;
never have to send-away for a doctoi&#13;
and Tncur a large doctor bill, for&#13;
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy never&#13;
fails to cure. It is certainly a. medicine&#13;
of tfreat merit and worth.— D. S.&#13;
MEARKLE, General Merchant and Farmer,&#13;
Mattie, Bed lord Co. Pa. For&#13;
-ale by F. A. SigJer, Druggist.&#13;
"People d o the voting a n d we&#13;
go to school."&#13;
A very interesting paper " F a r m -&#13;
ing or the Michigan F a r m e r as we&#13;
see him today" by Mr. E d . Mc-&#13;
Cluskey was very well handled,&#13;
and showed Mr. McCluskey's&#13;
ability to treat a subject of that&#13;
sort.&#13;
H e sa: d our ordinary expenses&#13;
are made; and must be paid from&#13;
farm products* Also a farmer, as&#13;
the farmer that makes his income&#13;
cover his expences—must couple&#13;
"brains and brawn. H e also said a&#13;
farmer should take an active part&#13;
in politics; n o t by setting o n t h e&#13;
street corner and talk with every&#13;
body that comes along; but should&#13;
keep posted, and understand who&#13;
and for" what he is voting.&#13;
Next on the program was a very&#13;
pretty duet b y Mrs. I d a VanFleet&#13;
and Miss Addie Kice; select reading,&#13;
Mrs. Francis;recitation, Alma&#13;
McCluskey and reading, Mrs. I d a&#13;
VanFleet. These were followed&#13;
REWABD.&#13;
We the undersigned druggists, oft.&#13;
er a i ewa/d of 50 cents to any person&#13;
wbo purchases of us, two 25c boxes&#13;
of Baxter's Mandrake Bittew Tablets,&#13;
if it fails to care constipation, biliousness,&#13;
6ick-headache, jaundice, loss of&#13;
appetite, sour stomiohe, dyspepsia&#13;
liver complaint, or any of the disease*&#13;
for which it is recommended. Price&#13;
25centafor either tablets or liquid.&#13;
We will also refund the ra^ney on one&#13;
ipackage of either if it fails to give&#13;
satisfaction,&#13;
F. \. Sigler,&#13;
W. B. Darrow,&#13;
(She finctmey gftepatcit.&#13;
PUBLISHED KVSBT TBUMDAY XO&amp;tflNQ BY&#13;
FRANK. L. ANO^ELWS&#13;
Editor and Proprietor.&#13;
Facts to Bememberv Subscription Price $1 la Advance.&#13;
The original and.genuine Red Pills&#13;
are KnilTs Red Pills for Wan people&#13;
at 25c box, the wornon's remedy.&#13;
Don't pay 50 cents.&#13;
IOU C&amp;n Work Wben t h e y w o r k / f0r, it desired, by presenting the oiflci wit a tick;&#13;
never gripe or make you sick, Knill's&#13;
White Liver Pills. Bowel Keg alitor.&#13;
Twenty-iive doses, 25i-cenlsJ___&#13;
Watered at the PoatoiUce at Piacicaey, Michigan,&#13;
as second-class matter.&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
Business Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
peain and marriage uoticaa pablteaed tree.&#13;
Announcements oi entertainments may oe paid&#13;
ets of admission. In o^etioiietsare i H u r o u g a t&#13;
to tne omce, regular rates will be cnar^ad.&#13;
All matter in local notice column will be cnari&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for eaci&#13;
insertion. Where no tluie is spucined, all notices&#13;
will be inserteamnttl ordered-^taeomittaed, and--&#13;
vUl be coarg-id for accordingly. daT".vllchanges&#13;
Rlar&gt;k D i a r r h e a P i l l c P.nre* A n m m » * I °* advertisements MUST rea:h thisomce as e a i i j&#13;
u i a c K u i a r r o c e a m i s . o a r e s s u m m e r i M T a K S D A T m 0 r n i n g to insure an insertion the&#13;
Pleasant, safe and sure are Kni'l's&#13;
lack Diarrhoea Piljs. Cares summer&#13;
complaints, dysentery and all pains of j 8 a m * v v e t J k&#13;
the storanch and bowels. Only 25&#13;
cents box.&#13;
Knill's Blue Kidney'Pill cure backache,&#13;
etc. Only 25 cents box.&#13;
Pure, sweet stomachs and breaths&#13;
are made by taking Knill's Dyspepsia&#13;
Tablets. They will cure indigestion,&#13;
correct all stomach troujbles, destroys&#13;
all foal gases for 25c box. Best and&#13;
cheapest. Guarrantaed bv your draggest.&#13;
WiirCurlett, Dexter.&#13;
W. B. Darrow, Pinckney.&#13;
Subscribe for the D I S P A T C H&#13;
Business Locals.&#13;
i'or Salts&#13;
New Milch Cow, Inquire at this&#13;
office.&#13;
WANTED!&#13;
Reliable man ior Manager of Branch&#13;
Office I wish to (©pen in this vicinity.&#13;
Good opening for an energetic, sober&#13;
man. Kindly mention this paper&#13;
when writing.&#13;
by t h e opening of question box i n A. T. MORRIS, CINCINNATI, O.&#13;
which contained som© good—ejnestious&#13;
aird-served to draw out some&#13;
interesting discussion.&#13;
Should we give our sons and&#13;
daughters a musical education?&#13;
Mrs. 'Nash—we should give our&#13;
children all possible advantages;&#13;
in some families the sous, and in&#13;
T l l n s t r a t p d r a t n l n f m n 4- nt&lt; p o s t a g e .&#13;
M o u e y t o L o a n .&#13;
r i a v i u g a c c e p t e d a n . a g e n c y f o r&#13;
l o a n i n g m o n e y , I a m p r e p a r e d t o&#13;
m a k e loan&lt; o n R^al E s t a t e , a t a l o w&#13;
r a t e ot i n t e r ^ t . I n q u i r e a t t h e P i n c k -&#13;
n e y Ex-'h tf,vr.H B m i v . t(&#13;
, JOS PfirjVTIJYGf&#13;
In all ite branches, a specialty. We hare all kinds&#13;
and the Uteat styles of Type, etc., wuich enablei&#13;
ua to execute all Itinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill deads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statemema, Cards, Auction Bills, etc, In&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prlcesaa&#13;
O'v aa good wort can be aone.&#13;
+ LL BILLS P A f . l « L 3 tlftiS Og KVSalf XjSlH.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBBSIDRHT . ..M. ~« Uex. Mclntyre&#13;
TiiuaTiJisiJ, . £• L». I'tio.npdoa, Alcrel Aloaua,&#13;
Daniel ttlcharda, iao. Bow in m, Samuel&#13;
Sykea, K. U. Jounson.&#13;
ULBBK.... - ~« K- K- Teeple&#13;
TBBASUKEft W. E. .Vlnrphy&#13;
Assasaott ~ »* W, A. CAtr&#13;
STKEET ( J O i L S l I S S l O S B l t . . . . J . M\&gt;ofca.&#13;
MABSAUI. .A. E. riM*a .&#13;
UaALTUOmciiK Dr. li r*. Siller&#13;
ATTURSBY.....M ^ . . . ^ ^ , ^. \V. A. Uarr&#13;
'""" ~~ "GHURCHEST&#13;
V f E r H O U i S T KPiSUOFAL CUUKUU.&#13;
*WL ituv. Ciia-i. Sim.jioa, pist^r. S-irvi-jji rn^ery&#13;
Suuday morning at 10:3&gt;i, aad every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0*» o'clock, i'rayor meeting Ttturslf&#13;
»y eveninija. Sunday acuooi &lt;it close ot tnorning&#13;
servico. LEAI. SIOLEU, Supt.&#13;
COXUrtKtfArlONAL UIJUKCH.&#13;
Uev. C. W. Kice padtor. Service every&#13;
Sunday tnofninj at 10:..10 a n i evjry S j a i i j&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'cl JCi, Prayer meetlni? Thoxs&#13;
diiy evenings. S o n i f y s-jaool at cloae ot mornin-&#13;
service, li- U. i'eeplo , -iaot. H&gt;ss Head, Sec&#13;
ST. MAitvs 'jArnouiu oauitou.&#13;
Kev. -M. #. CoJi.mriord, l'«t&gt;r. Services&#13;
every Sutiday. Lnw mass at 7:30 o'clock&#13;
bigli mass with sermon at 9:¾ a. m. Catechism&#13;
at .J:iXi p. UJ., vespers ana beaediction at 7:^0 p. m.&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
D T A H i j f -'*Ii -lit i.VN', .'jiiiiynf Livingston&#13;
rphe A. O. H. Sociecv of ttiia pU^.e, m-^ets evary&#13;
i. tliir i H i'i U / j.i tn-j Kr. M it;u-&lt;.v ilill.&#13;
/oho raomay an 1 &gt;Ii &lt;j lv»ii/, ') j i t / !)'! ,'gites&#13;
!iev&#13;
W A.XTl.-:i&gt;—iSliVbihAJ- B K I G U I&#13;
A V D I f O N E S T p*r**ru t, represens&#13;
ns r.s MMH.1^era i a this and tlo*e b r coun*&#13;
nc. .^lerv mo . r o r and .xpences. i t i m e e a c l l w e e k i n r e a d i u g or His&#13;
fcl'raii, ttoiK-ficfe, M MOT*. OO 1«68. Po»i&#13;
others t h e daughters have all the&#13;
chances, b u t I believe in giving | r™^u* comt f.»r nv:ic»uat.v, estate of&#13;
t h e m e q u a l a d v a n t a g e s . j The underaUned lnv.; ! , b^on appointed, by the&#13;
W o u l d VOU C o n s i d e r i t A r o f i t a - J l l d K ' ? n 3 f r n " M l e o f 8 H i d county, OHuniisslonera&#13;
, . ^ . I on claims in the matt.r of said estate, aod s i s&#13;
ble to read t h e newspapers • in the [months from ti^ 6th day of Fob. A. D, IOOO, hlv&#13;
p u b l i c 'SCllOOls? N e t t i e H a l l — I ' i"gl&gt;«*»n allowed by *zb\ Jad^ot Probate to all&#13;
, , • • , . , . . . . • I persons holdins claims against said e?late in i £Ua t&gt;urtee, Secretary.&#13;
think there are many things in .which to present their dams to us for esaiiii.'&#13;
the newspapers that ought to be IDlttion and tt,1i»st'«e«:&#13;
t , , . ' ,\ , ,X_ — T , ! Notice is hereby Kivt?n that we wil! meet on&#13;
D r o u g h t l U t O t h e p u b l i c S C h O O l s . j Monuay, the seventh day of May, A. i \ , lilod,&#13;
^PWOIlTH LKACrUE. M -ets every Sunday&#13;
enm,? at'tl;iiJ octock in tue \l. II. 'J iitrci. X&#13;
cordial tuvitaii.jQ is extead*d to everyone,' espfleiuliy&#13;
yoiiUjj people. Mrs. StdUa Gruti^m I'res.&#13;
WAYNE HOTEL, DETROIT&#13;
AMERICAN AMD EUROPEAN PLAN,&#13;
%a T O I 3 . B O 91.00 TO ma.oo .&#13;
StMOLM MuAum, « O o . UP T O OATM QAPM* D o v t w w w &gt; ^vrxxy rhrrr. 9 , O i r r c A a o . ,&#13;
Others thought that the teacher&#13;
should spend a certain amount of&#13;
cussing the newspapers with the&#13;
It k mudnlj of&amp;um s c a ° I a r s - Another said if the&#13;
E11. teacher should do . that, there&#13;
t!o»e s*lr-*Jdr«*»W tt«apW «mJopet T H » would be some in the district who&#13;
tiou p e : u a t i e n t . 0 « r r t l t r e n o e a , nzf&#13;
bftjak in any t o w n .&#13;
work corwluot«d %%&#13;
would think they might better be&#13;
studying their books.&#13;
Who are the "fence viewers?"&#13;
the three nearest pathmasters.&#13;
and 011 Tuesday, the sevemii dny ul .\ u..-.; ••, A , !&gt;.,&#13;
I'M), at out o'clock p. in. 'of each il\\ at ttie&#13;
late residence iu the townsni p of i'utn uo iu said&#13;
county, to receive aud examiue suca ci.uaid.&#13;
Dated: Howell, Mich., t'eh. 0, A. D. 1'JJO.&#13;
CH\KI.ES \V. BROWN, I ComuasMoners&#13;
10 U i v H I L L , / ouCuuuia.&#13;
LAST&#13;
FORE VCR.&#13;
Ci l f t l s r i Y N KMOIOVV)^ SO J l U r f i - t f i e t .&#13;
i I,M ev-rv SiLi l.ky ev^ nax nt 0: i 1. Pr&lt;J*t I int,&#13;
Mits i-Ht.t Jarp^ut^r; Seornary,. .Mrs. C. vV. Kice.&#13;
UE1E »V. C. T. U. ma^ts th; tim Friday of each&#13;
1 '.uonth at 2;:L p. 111. at t le' ho-ne of Or. tl. b\&#13;
siller. Everyone interest &lt;d ia te^ip^raiit?* is&#13;
(-ia lia'.lv iuvited Mrs. 'jeal Staler, Pres; Mr&lt;*.&#13;
The C. T. A. and ti. Socieiy nt this place, meat&#13;
evecyihird Saturday eveniasj in the Kr. Matthew&#13;
Hall. John Donohuc, President.&#13;
• — — . . — - - • • in - — — i. .i , - • 1 -in • t KN'KUITSOK MACCABEES..&#13;
Meeteverv Friday eveuia„- OQ or before full&#13;
of the tuoon at their ball in tha Sw&amp;rthout bldg.&#13;
S'ieitina brothers are e.ordially invited.&#13;
CHA-. L'iMi'B^Li., Sir iinifht Commandej&#13;
Livingston Lod^e, N'o, 7,:., V &amp; A. M. Ke^a'ar&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the tall oUhe m J.III. Alexander Mclntyre, W. M.&#13;
PERFECT&#13;
SCALES&#13;
0 IU)EK OK EASTEliN S TAB, meets each month&#13;
tiie Friday evening following the re-^alar K.&#13;
vVA.M. meeting, Mtts. MAWY UBAD, W. M.&#13;
Conpoi Plated&#13;
All Steel Levers,&#13;
Combination Beam.&#13;
Catalogue Free.&#13;
Address, JONES or BINQHAMTON, *&#13;
SINQHAMTON, N. V*&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Aloat every 1st&#13;
audird Satardiiy of eachmooth at -i'-'iO p m. at'&#13;
K. &lt;), T. M. ball. Visiting •iisuri cordially iu-&#13;
.UKJ. LILA CONIWA/ Lady Com.&#13;
The meeting adjourned to meet&#13;
•; j ! the last Saturday in March with &amp; $ 4 , Q 0 BOOK F O R TSCtS.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur ScluSenhals.-j&#13;
Con. SEC. The Farmers'Encjcl^fuja! v-KN'ItfUTS OK TICK LOYAL tiU \RO&#13;
ine"t every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every montliiuthe K. 0.&#13;
T. M. Hall at r-.-iJo'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome,&#13;
K: G-. JACKSON, Capt. Gen.&#13;
S p e c i a l iHeetiujr.&#13;
A S p e c i a l M^etintr ot t h e L i v i n g -&#13;
s t o n C o u n t y A l u t U i i l ' F i r e I n s u r a n c e&#13;
C o m p a n y , t o r t h e P u r p o s e of A t y i e n d -&#13;
iik' 11^ C h a r t e r o\ S a i d O o n T p a n y . a n d&#13;
tor t h e h \ i n &gt; a c t i o n ot S n c l i o t l ; e r I'nsi&#13;
n v s s a s m a y l e g a l l y t-oiUH ' h e f o r e it.&#13;
w i l l be h e l d a t t h e C o u r t l i o u &gt; e in t h e&#13;
V i l l a g e o f H o w e l l , m S a i d C o u n t y ,&#13;
on T u e s d a y , t u e 6 t h d a y o f . . , a r c h ,&#13;
1 9 0 0 a t 1 0 : 3 0 O ' c l o c k i n t h e F o r e -&#13;
n o o n , hy.% o r d e r o f t h e B o a r d o f&#13;
Directors.&#13;
Dated Howell Mich. Jan. 20th 1900 H00- If5'ou deslre th1s **** wnTus^our'RpociaT&#13;
.., T T , • """^ offer price, $0.75, and *j.U J extra for vo^&amp;ge and&#13;
W . J . L a r k i n , S e c r d t a r v . we will forwarvt the book to you. Ifit is not satis-&#13;
' factory return it and wt- will exchanKc it or reftmd&#13;
T&gt;an R i c e t h e vehAr&amp;n o\ri*n» &lt;*l.iccn your money. 8en*l for our special illustrated ratau&#13;
a n n i c e i a e v e r e r a n c i r c u s c l o w n lofue. quoting the lowest prices on bookn, FREE&#13;
d e i d i n N . Y . l w t J s M f i k f i f f e i 7 7 y e a r s . We can save you money. Address all orders to&#13;
^ - ^ ^ J T H E W E R N E R C O M P A N Y , •&#13;
faMtshtrs aa4 UaasiMturtri. A k r o n , ObiOx&#13;
(The W«rn«r Conpunv ii UiorougUy rttiabl*.^—Edito*.&#13;
^ ti'Ir.it-s to ti;e a i -&#13;
..*."-Jl,ii -.•ii'ic.t the 2&amp;r;v.t ^ ^ " ? ^ l l i &gt; ; i r . ^ n l d ;\r.d&#13;
- b u ' - j . I t . . : &lt; • r . . 1-&#13;
bruc'v^ k"i: .. s cii&#13;
I b o ' ; : . - - r . lii-j ;v- t,&#13;
;:&lt;v;&gt;: ' / . . , : :'*, •la-..&#13;
cn?cs r;' Ci:o ho;vo,&#13;
11"0 .¾ ,:i. ^-.rs.^iv.,&#13;
t:v.}t - • :v.rc, u. irvit:&#13;
c • - -;.o.y.l:v;;;th,&#13;
O U i J o , y:;o&lt;.-?T.&gt;\vii:t?t poultry. U'.-&lt;, t&gt;iO&#13;
dog, t'-.ilL", sunal&#13;
life, etc., etc. c : a&#13;
of the most comp&#13;
l t M O 1] !!('}•(' lw&#13;
p&lt;?C:a^in ixisMicr,&#13;
A larvo lvsi k, jSi*,""1;;&#13;
X l'j;i inches, tod&#13;
pagts, fully illu^&#13;
trnted, bound irrt^&#13;
en cloih Mnd-&#13;
BUS1NSSS CARDS.&#13;
, H. F. SIGLER M. D- C. L, StGLER M, O&#13;
DRS. S L J L E R &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Phy^ictii .sand ^ur.^ ins. All culls prompt!&#13;
attei: i«.-I t •&gt; &lt;l:iy or i :-"n. Ortice on Main str&#13;
Pinrku'.y, Mich.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DKNTIS r—Eyi-ry Fridaj; and on Thursday&#13;
when having appointmcufs. Olttce over&#13;
SL'ler's Mruu.Store. • ' • *&#13;
PATEHTmUARANTEED&#13;
Subscribe for Dispatch.&#13;
Our fee returned if we fail. Any one sending&#13;
sketch aud description of any invention will&#13;
jrten ciuin rnnu- promptly receive our opinion free concerning&#13;
ng and equal to -ft,-e pato'tmrWttty of satne. " H o w to O D U i a S&#13;
&gt;therbookseustins Patent" sent upon request. Patents securtd&#13;
through us advertised for sale at our expense.&#13;
Patent, taken out through us receive tpeeiot&#13;
notice, without charge, in THR P A T E N T R S C O U H .&#13;
an illustrated aud widely circulated joantsJ,&#13;
consulted by Manufacturers aud Investors.&#13;
Send for sample copy FREE. Addrsaa,&#13;
VICTOR J . EVANS A CO.&#13;
(Patent Attorneys,)&#13;
CV»M Btilldiag, WASHINGTON, S \ 9&gt;&#13;
^&#13;
:w&#13;
•m&#13;
. • ', - \ \&#13;
* v:&#13;
M &lt; J I&#13;
JTSAJTC L. AXDRJBW8, Pttbltffce*&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN,&#13;
—»=•**&#13;
It is worth noting, also, that the&#13;
first English general who has earned&#13;
promotion in South Africa is French.&#13;
V&#13;
Old man Joubert is adhering tenaciously&#13;
to his promise to flight "to the&#13;
last ditch, the last gun and the last&#13;
man."&#13;
Nearly 200,000 valentines passed&#13;
through the Chicago postofflce this&#13;
year, and yet Chicago has been called&#13;
a city with no sentiment above corned&#13;
beef.&#13;
A Delaware woman who went away&#13;
•with another man while h'er husband&#13;
•was out doing the milking left a note&#13;
saying: "Dear John—I have gone away&#13;
with the man I love, and we will live&#13;
happy. Don't hunt for us." But John&#13;
is hunting for them with a gun. probably&#13;
tc prove that she was wrong -for&#13;
once. Some men take such a mean&#13;
delight in robbing women of innocent&#13;
peace.&#13;
drrrster vrtiodltt norserTiple&#13;
to fish for compliments was once&#13;
invited t o take dinner with an old&#13;
elder, as reticent as they make them.&#13;
Manipulate tlje conversation as . he&#13;
\?ould, the young man could not get&#13;
his host to say "sermon," and at last&#13;
he boldly introduced the important&#13;
subject by remarking directly, "That&#13;
-was a fine text I had to-day." But the&#13;
elder knew his man. "Ou, ay, there's&#13;
naething wrang wi' the test!"&#13;
England has more battleships and&#13;
cruisers than France and Russia combined&#13;
and more than -Germany, Italy,&#13;
United States and Japan combined. In&#13;
torpedo boats she is inferior to France&#13;
and but little superior to Russia. The&#13;
Australians want to have a littlfc navy,&#13;
but objection is raised to this in England&#13;
on the ground that the colonists&#13;
would next insist upon having a voice&#13;
in the disposition of the British fleet&#13;
and might not be disposed to take a&#13;
hand in all of the imperial wars.&#13;
TALHAGE'S SERMON.&#13;
"PRODIQAL SONS," THE LATEST&#13;
SUBJECT DISCUSSED.&#13;
Fr om La k e XV:13 as Follows: «"•„T h e&#13;
Yonnirer Son G a t h e r e d All T o g e t h e r&#13;
a n d Took HU J o a r u e y I n t o a Far&#13;
Com* try."&#13;
The czar of Russia is not much in&#13;
love with the grandeur in which he is&#13;
compelled to live. He has no liking&#13;
for a soldier's or sportsman'sJife, and_&#13;
is never more uncomfortable than&#13;
when obliged to don the gorgeous uniform&#13;
of some crack regiment of which&#13;
he is colonel. He is fond of rowing,&#13;
cycling, tennis and other quiet sports.&#13;
His happiest moments are spent in his&#13;
unpretentious library.—The czar and&#13;
his young wife have for their favorite&#13;
domestic resort the small Alexander&#13;
palace, at Czarskoie Selo. In the&#13;
grounds of this palace is a queerly&#13;
built pavilion, or summer house, which&#13;
was designed by the great Catherine of&#13;
Russia, and here the royal pair enjoy&#13;
their meals unattended by servants. A&#13;
sort of "trick table" sinks through the&#13;
floor when each course is finished and&#13;
reappears laid for the following c-ourse.&#13;
Curious as it may appear to many&#13;
people, it is, nevertheless, extremely&#13;
probable that the war in South Africa&#13;
may have the effect of giving an immense&#13;
stimulus to mule breeding in&#13;
Great Britain. The truth is that the&#13;
military authorities ' have discovered&#13;
that the demand for really eligible&#13;
mules far exceeds the supply, and as it&#13;
is evident to the public that the prices&#13;
paid for such animals are, remunerative,&#13;
it is pretty certain that the lesson,&#13;
will receive the attention it deserves.&#13;
In this country the mule is&#13;
highly valued for heavy draught work.&#13;
When it^ifi also borne in mind that the&#13;
mule can exist well where a horse&#13;
•would vell-nigh starve, that he is the&#13;
most healthy of animals and a .willing&#13;
•worker* in spite of all the jokes which&#13;
are made on the score of the obstinacy&#13;
displayed by some mules, there can be&#13;
no,gainsaying the fact that he is a&#13;
useful beast.&#13;
"Today the old homestead Is turned&#13;
upside down. One of the boys, the&#13;
younger, is about to leave the parental&#13;
roof. The eaglet is tired of being&#13;
warmed by the wings of the old birds&#13;
and with ruffled feathers stands upon&#13;
the edge of the eyrie ready to fly off.&#13;
It is a sad sight to see a home being&#13;
broken up. Whon the children are&#13;
about to say goodby the families laugh,&#13;
t£lk and joke up to the last moment,&#13;
but they are only' trying to keep the&#13;
courage up. Even the wedding bells&#13;
weep as well as chime. The guests&#13;
may congratulate you upon having&#13;
gained a son or a daughter, but you&#13;
know that it is a mockery, though you&#13;
do smile through your tears. From&#13;
now on the daughter will never be tha&#13;
same again. She has gone to make he;&#13;
own home, to build her own nest, rear&#13;
her own young and live her own life.&#13;
Ins.tejadOLf -belonging- to you she is another's.&#13;
Instead of you being first, now&#13;
you are last.&#13;
"After the wedding of a very dear&#13;
friend and the worn slipper and the&#13;
rice had been thrown, and the bride&#13;
and bridegroom started, I followed the&#13;
old gray-haired father down to the&#13;
garden gate, and there we stood alone&#13;
in the moonlight. 'Yes, Frank,' he&#13;
said, 'I know she has married a good&#13;
man, but she was my youngest, and&#13;
it breaks the heart, It breaks the&#13;
heart.' Children are born, grow up&#13;
into young manhood and womanhood,&#13;
and just when it seems the parents&#13;
cannot get along without them, off&#13;
they go. Death kno&amp;ks at the door and&#13;
carries away some. Love hovers about&#13;
the spring flowers and breathes&#13;
through the orange.blossoms and woes&#13;
others. Business calls and duty beckons&#13;
until the old nursery is silent and&#13;
there are rooms to let in the homestead&#13;
which once resounded with the&#13;
young" people's voices.&#13;
Mother Who Grieves.&#13;
"Such is the sense of- my text. The&#13;
mother did not sleep much last'night.&#13;
Though she tries to look cheerful her&#13;
eyes are very red. Every little while&#13;
she disappears into the pantry or goes&#13;
upstairs. She makes an excuse as&#13;
though looking for something, but we&#13;
know it is—only to have a good cry.&#13;
The father is giving his last instructions&#13;
and handing the young traveler&#13;
back to the '-itehen; tho domestic machinery&#13;
Is started and the neighbors&#13;
say it Is merely the natural prder of&#13;
things for t h e younger con to gather&#13;
all together and take his journey into&#13;
a far country.'&#13;
"Lesson the first: This journey of&#13;
the prodigal son into a far country is&#13;
a divine protest against making sin attractive.&#13;
The far country was evidently&#13;
the land of sin. By this Jesus&#13;
does not mean every young man who&#13;
starts away from home is bad. But if&#13;
we carefully study the parable we can&#13;
read between the lines how the younger&#13;
son was restless. Lik$ a hi'rd he felt&#13;
his wings clipped by the control of the&#13;
old folks. He could not be out with&#13;
his friends as late as he thought he&#13;
ought to be. Some of the entertainments&#13;
he attended were questionable.&#13;
He feared a meddlesome neighbor&#13;
might report him. He was too old to&#13;
be punished and yet not old enough to&#13;
take care of himself. He decided to&#13;
leave his old-fashioned father and&#13;
mother and the strict rules of the&#13;
homestead. These are the reasons of&#13;
the departure.&#13;
"Christ does nof enter into a disgusting&#13;
description of what the young&#13;
man did. He docs not picture him&#13;
among the gay aristocrats of the new&#13;
town, opening the best bottles of wine,&#13;
-driving the fastest horses, and living&#13;
with evil companions whom he dare&#13;
not introduce to his sisters. He does&#13;
not describe him In some lewd dance&#13;
hall, intoxicated with flattery as much&#13;
as with wine. Ho does not have a&#13;
palace of Circe filled with princes and&#13;
princesses, the walls pictured, the&#13;
floors of mosaic, the banquet table&#13;
groaning under the weight of gold and&#13;
silver as well as fruits and viands.&#13;
Parable Omits Details.&#13;
"He does not trace him on and on,&#13;
running into debt, having his friends&#13;
leaving him one by one, as .humming&#13;
birds with their pretty wings will flutter&#13;
away fram~~a flower as soon as the&#13;
honey is gone. He does not describe&#13;
him at last so poor that he is begging&#13;
alongside of the beggars whom he once&#13;
cursed in the street. No, _Jesus covers&#13;
up the months of wassail, libertinism,&#13;
and conviviality with the simple sentence&#13;
of my text 'The younger son&#13;
gathered all together and - took his&#13;
journey into a far country.' In&#13;
Christ's parable it is only one step&#13;
from the father's house to a swine's&#13;
trough.&#13;
"The trouble with many so-calW&#13;
Christian teachers is that we put a&#13;
halr/over sin and talk too much about&#13;
water nymphs, fairies, seamaids,-denizens&#13;
of the air, sylphs, spirits and&#13;
flaxen-haired goddesses. We picture&#13;
Temptation as a dream of beauty seated&#13;
upon the rim of a cloud. She-holds&#13;
A recent commercial report shows&#13;
the fntimate relation between weather&#13;
and business. The unusually mild temperature&#13;
has bad its effect in many&#13;
ways. The smaller sale of shoes is&#13;
attributed to the mildness of the&#13;
weather, and the absence of rain and&#13;
the slight fall of snow have resulted&#13;
in the shut-down Of some rubber factories.&#13;
The sale of overshoes, rubber&#13;
hoots, and mackintoshes is much less&#13;
than ever before. • The ice business is&#13;
affected, the cut in most .localities being&#13;
small'and giving promise of a&#13;
small crop, with dearer prices in the&#13;
..summer. The scarcity of snow in the&#13;
northwest is decreasing the log cut.&#13;
Drought in New England resulted in a&#13;
ehortage of water in the little streams.&#13;
that furnish power to the cotton and&#13;
other mills, causing many of. them to&#13;
shut down. This was followed by&#13;
floods that brought too high a level- and&#13;
kept the mills still closed. Warm&#13;
•weather being responsible for scarcity&#13;
of ice and lumber, one would think it&#13;
would result in a decreased price of&#13;
coal, but, strangely QiiDugh, this has&#13;
not followed.&#13;
a last farewell. I always did believe&#13;
a bright dog was smarter than-a stupid&#13;
man. But the farewell words are&#13;
now being said. The father has given&#13;
his benediction. We must turn aside a&#13;
little, while the mother has her last&#13;
convulsive clasp. These are the snapping&#13;
of heart strings. A mother can&#13;
never realize the baby she once rocked&#13;
in a cradle can grow to be a man.&#13;
"People who have stood upon the&#13;
wharf at Queenstown and heard the&#13;
Irish peasant's moan when the young&#13;
emigrant steps into the boat to take&#13;
steamer for America know what 1&#13;
mean. There is only one cry similar to&#13;
it. That is, when a family draped in&#13;
heavy black push back the veils to take&#13;
a last lingering look at the silent form,&#13;
sleeping in the casket, when the undertaker&#13;
stands impatiently behind.&#13;
Youth Rides Away.&#13;
"But suddenly the young man breaks&#13;
away. He leaps into the saddle. The&#13;
spurs cut deep. The parents shout&#13;
their affectionate adieux to the horseman&#13;
dashing off. Then they wave and&#13;
throw kisses. The old father 'now&#13;
wipes his face vigorously with a handkerchief&#13;
and scolds the servants and&#13;
sends them off, because he does not&#13;
want, them to see him cry. As the&#13;
, horse disappears over the last hill the&#13;
old mother buries her head on her husband's&#13;
neck and sobs as if her heart&#13;
would break. He tenderly puts his&#13;
arm about her and draws her toward&#13;
the house/'Slowly they walk up the&#13;
tree-arched path. They stop a moment&#13;
on the first step to glance for the last&#13;
time down the road. Slowly, with a&#13;
sigh, the father opens the door. The&#13;
men go back to the work,-the women&#13;
chttd to' com* home. Cut there a n&#13;
many minor truths as well £s the&#13;
major one. All the gold taken from&#13;
the mizjes is not poured into the same&#13;
mold. The chisel of Michaer Angelo&#13;
can cut a curly-headed shepherd boy as&#13;
well as the long, flowing beard and&#13;
swarthy muscles of the Jewish lawgiver.&#13;
The wheels in a factory should&#13;
not be despised because they do not revolve&#13;
the one way.&#13;
"Mr. Moody said: 'This father ought&#13;
to bo censured. He could not have&#13;
done a greater unkindneas to the boy&#13;
than to give the younger son his goods&#13;
and money and let him go. A true&#13;
father would have said to such a contemptible&#13;
filial spirit, "Go and earn&#13;
your own portion by the sweat of your&#13;
brow," ' Yet hundreds of parents are&#13;
making the same mistake every day.&#13;
Try as hard as the loving heart may,&#13;
we are very apt to be partial to the&#13;
babies. When the young couple stand&#13;
at the marriage altar, hope and poverty&#13;
generally clasp hands. The first children&#13;
who sleep in the cradel have to&#13;
take their share of struggle for daily&#13;
bread. But when the youngest babies&#13;
are born the parents often have a foothold.&#13;
Servants now clean the house&#13;
and run the errands and care for the&#13;
shoes. To use a worn-out figure, the&#13;
younger son lies on a bed of rose3.&#13;
— " L a s t l r , learn "whentheyoung prodigal&#13;
gathered all together and took his&#13;
journey into the far country he left his&#13;
mother as well as his father. Some&#13;
preachers go so far as to suppose this&#13;
boy did not have a mother. The parable&#13;
mentions her not. Perhaps on account&#13;
of the dissipations of the younger&#13;
son the mother's hairs prematurely&#13;
silvered. Then, like the blossoming of&#13;
the almond tree, became as white as&#13;
snow. The long, deep wrinkles grew&#13;
deeper; the eye.eaddet; the lip more&#13;
ready to quiver. The doctors said she&#13;
was worrying about something. One&#13;
day the old trouble came. There was&#13;
an awful cry, as the spasm of the heart&#13;
clutched at her life, and she was dead.&#13;
[This interpretation may be true, but&#13;
we do not thinTTsoT and you and I have&#13;
just as much right to our opinion as&#13;
others have to theirs.&#13;
"In the first place, the man is at the&#13;
head of the house. By the eastern&#13;
custom he alone is mentioned. The Bible&#13;
tells us that Christ was to be born&#13;
of Mary the Virgin. Yet in the two&#13;
distinct genealogical tables of the New&#13;
Testament, the one in Matthew and&#13;
the other in Luke, only the genealogical&#13;
table of Joseph is given; the one&#13;
tracing the family history from God&#13;
down to the manger, the other from&#13;
the manger back to God.&#13;
Old H o m e Recalled.&#13;
"Shall I describe a scene which happened&#13;
last night? No, it was not in&#13;
some letters of Introduction to a prominent&#13;
merchant with whom the son&#13;
will lodge in the next town. There is&#13;
a noise at the gate. The servants are&#13;
bringing out the horses and strapping&#13;
the baggage upon the pack mules.&#13;
They talk in subdued whispers. Even&#13;
they "feel sorry. The young 'raassa'&#13;
was a happy, jolly, go-lucky boy, and&#13;
always had a cheerful and kind word&#13;
for the hostlers. The only creature&#13;
who seems to be merry-making this&#13;
morning is the yellow dog. He frisk3&#13;
about, barking and yelping, thinking&#13;
he is to follow the sportsman on a&#13;
week's hunt. But his hilarity is&#13;
stopped when some one shie3 a stone&#13;
at the brute and shouts: 'Go back to&#13;
the barn!' Slowly he crawls back with&#13;
fail and head lowered in abject woe.&#13;
He stops now and then as if expecting&#13;
to hear—the familiar call. Perhaps he publishers and buy that very book,&#13;
realizes for the. first time he is_laking__m.er£fy because the preacher told you&#13;
in; one hand a pack of cards and in the&#13;
other a chalice of wine. The colors of&#13;
her cheek, the flowers caught in the&#13;
folds of the garment clinging, about her&#13;
lithe form make her look so innocent&#13;
one can't help loving her, even though&#13;
she may be bad.&#13;
"The-great criticism, against John&#13;
Milton is that he introduces his Satan&#13;
as a very respectable sort of a gentleman.&#13;
Supposing tonight I should attack&#13;
a certain infidel book or a vile&#13;
French novel and mention the book by&#13;
name and the author, and tell you under&#13;
no condition to read it; that if you&#13;
did you would blast your soul for time&#13;
and eternity. What, would be the result?&#13;
Tomorrow morning fifty or one&#13;
hundred of the young people sitting before&#13;
me would arise early and take the&#13;
first car down town arrd hurry to the&#13;
not to read it. That is human nature.&#13;
"What is the greatest damage a&#13;
newspaper can do a man? Attack&#13;
him? No! That always does an innocent&#13;
public man good. The harder&#13;
the newspaper denounces, the more&#13;
prominent the- man becomes; The&#13;
worst insult the newspapers can give&#13;
is to simply ignore a man. Never mention&#13;
his name. Treat him as if he was&#13;
not worth noticing. The mo3t awful&#13;
contempt you can hurl at an enemy is*&#13;
silence, complete silence, never-ending&#13;
silence.&#13;
Not SntanM Ralletln Board,&#13;
"Refuse to allow your' back to be&#13;
Satan's bulletin board. Pose not before&#13;
a community as a reformed drunkard,&#13;
or an evangelized thief. If you&#13;
once had a diseased tongue, please do&#13;
not tell It If you were once bedaubed&#13;
with'social filth, we do not want to&#13;
know it. Talk not about the gilded&#13;
saloon and bacchanalian feasts and the&#13;
good times you used to have'before you&#13;
joined the church and married and&#13;
gave up all fun.. Throw not the coat of&#13;
many colors over licentiousness and&#13;
somber black over virtue. Leave evil&#13;
advertisements alone. With one&#13;
plunge jump from the highest mountain&#13;
of inspiration into the lowest&#13;
depths of, despair with the simple sentence,&#13;
'And he went.into a tar country.'&#13;
"In the next place, learn that the&#13;
prodigal of my text went into the far&#13;
country because the father "v/aa too&#13;
lenient, and divided unto him his living.&#13;
Of course, we all know the great&#13;
teaching of this parable was to show&#13;
God's mercy; how, as a broken-hearted&#13;
parent; he is longjng for tho wayward&#13;
Chicago.—Not in that low saloon or&#13;
cheap theater where you were playing&#13;
billiards and gambling away your&#13;
life. The scene was way back in-the&#13;
country. You remember the old farm,&#13;
the white house^the pillared porch, the&#13;
big barn in the rear, the wood pile to&#13;
the left of the kitchen door. The hens&#13;
are now running around begging for&#13;
food because the earth is a frozen ttfmb&#13;
in which the worms have gone to sleep&#13;
for the winter. It is about evening,&#13;
and an old woman, an old gray-haired&#13;
woman, is— cook-ing over the kitchen&#13;
stove. She looks thinner than when&#13;
you saw her last. The neighbors say&#13;
she is aging; very rapidly and will not&#13;
live long. An old man comes in and&#13;
stamps the snow off his great boots.&#13;
The woman, this gray-haired woman,&#13;
looks up and says, 'Pa, have you a letter?&#13;
Have you been to the postofflce?&#13;
Is it not strange he has not written?&#13;
He has been gone five long years.&#13;
Do you think God will let me live long&#13;
enough to see him just once before &gt; I&#13;
go?'&#13;
, "The old man says nothing, but goe&#13;
to the door and looks down the ro.&#13;
He shades his eyes as if he could see a&#13;
great way off. Then he turns and&#13;
says, 'Mother, that is a fine calf we&#13;
have there in the barnyarth—She is&#13;
getting fatter each day. We must kill&#13;
her soon. Perhaps we can have a big&#13;
feast if our boy ever comes home.'&#13;
"They sit by the fire a little while&#13;
after the dishes are wiped. Their evening&#13;
talk is soon ended. They are so&#13;
tired they cannot stay up late. They&#13;
are too tired to sleep. Then they take&#13;
the old Bible and the mother says, 'Pa,&#13;
won't you read that story of the prodigal&#13;
son? Somehow I never can hear it&#13;
enough. You read it last night. It is&#13;
In the fifteenth chapter of Luke. About&#13;
tho younger son that went away and&#13;
starved and was too proud to come&#13;
home.' When homo to a parental&#13;
heart without the boy was even a&#13;
more desolate place than the pig pen&#13;
was where her boy was starving.&#13;
"Then they knelt. As they prayed&#13;
the little candle-light began to flicker&#13;
in sympathy. The tears trickled down&#13;
through the four withered hands. Thus&#13;
the two tottering old folks staid upon&#13;
their knees pleading with God until an&#13;
angel in heaven could hear their grief&#13;
no longer, and he fluttered away and&#13;
wnispered to me the secret that I' am&#13;
now telling you. Boy, will you not gohome?&#13;
Before they are dead go home&#13;
and leave this far country-of sin, even&#13;
this wicked/selfish city, where we now&#13;
live."&#13;
"A Friend in Need&#13;
Is a FntndIndeed."&#13;
Your blood is poor and&#13;
therefore you suffer from&#13;
eruptions,- pains and general&#13;
debility and " that tired feeltng/'&#13;
The blood is the red source of alt&#13;
health. Hood's SarsaparUU is' ihe shepherd&#13;
of health. Why? Because it&#13;
purifies the blood AS nothing the can.&#13;
Tired Feeling—''/ had that tired&#13;
feeling And headaches. WAS more tired&#13;
in the morning than 'when 1 *went to bed,&#13;
And my back pained me* Hood's SarsApartlla&#13;
And Hood's Pills cured me and&#13;
1 feel ten years younger.'0 Bi Schcbtein,&#13;
274 Busfcwtck Place, Brooklyn, # . Y.&#13;
Be sure to get Hood's because&#13;
dWQtfcS SoJUa,&#13;
Hood's 11 lis cure fiver Ilia; tlie non^t-rltatlng arid&#13;
ouly'ciiYhar'tic to take with liood'a SaWtpartfia.&#13;
Mew Y*ar'(* lakt'K.&#13;
It used to be the custom to eat what&#13;
w_e^eJ!callejLGojl,5,cjikeja_mLJiejy -Year-'Aday.&#13;
They were of triangular shape,&#13;
about half an inch thick, and fiilfti&#13;
with a kind of mincemeat.&#13;
Coughing; Leads to Consumption.&#13;
K e m p s B a l s a m w i l l s t o p t h e c o u g h&#13;
a t once. Go t o y o u r d r u g g i s t t o d a y&#13;
a n d get a s a m p l e b o t t l e free. S o l d i n&#13;
25 a n d 50 c e n t b o t t l e s . Go a t o n c e ; d e -&#13;
l a y s a r e d a n g e r o u s .&#13;
Co»t of CavrrUr P l e e o n 8 « » I e e .&#13;
Each pigeon used in the carrier serv*&#13;
Ice of the British navy costa the government&#13;
$4 a year.&#13;
I i A B A S T I N E Is tho original&#13;
and only durable wall coating;&#13;
entirely different fyom all *t.alsomines.&#13;
Ready for use in&#13;
white or fourteen beautiful&#13;
tints by adding cold water.&#13;
•ADIES n a t u r a l l y prefer ALA«&#13;
BASTING for walls and coiling*,&#13;
because It is pure, clean,&#13;
durable. P u t up in dry powdered&#13;
form, in five-pound pack*&#13;
ages, with full directions.&#13;
L L kalsomines R V cheap, tern*&#13;
porary preparations m a d e front&#13;
whltingr, chalk*, .plays, etc..&#13;
and stuck on walls with de«&#13;
eavln* animal glue. ALABAS*&#13;
TIN&amp; is not a Ralabratne.&#13;
E W A R B of t h a dealer w h o&#13;
says he can sell you the " s a m e&#13;
t h i n g " a s ALABASTINE or&#13;
"something Just as good." H*e&#13;
is either not posted or 1» try*&#13;
lng to deceive you.&#13;
N D I N O F F E R I N G something&#13;
h?&gt; has .bought cheap and tries&#13;
t o sefl on ALrABASTINE'S demands,&#13;
he m a y not realize the&#13;
damage you will suffer by a&#13;
kalsomlne on your walls.&#13;
BNBIBL.B dealers will n e t buy&#13;
a lawsuit. Dealers risk one by&#13;
selling and consumers by using&#13;
Infringement. Alabastlne Co.&#13;
own right to m a k e wall coating&#13;
to mix With cold water.&#13;
H E I N T E R I O R W A L L S of&#13;
every church and school should&#13;
be coated only with pure, durable&#13;
ALABASTINK. It safeg&#13;
u a r d s H e a l t h . Hundreds of&#13;
tons used yearly for this work.&#13;
N BUYING ALABASTINK.&#13;
customers should avoid potting&#13;
cheap kalsomines under&#13;
different names. Inisist on&#13;
having our goods In packages&#13;
and properly labeled.&#13;
UTSANCE of wall paper is obviated&#13;
bv ALABASTINE. I t&#13;
c a n be used on plastered walls.&#13;
wood ceilings, brick o r canvas.&#13;
A child can brush it on.&#13;
I t does not r u b or scale off.&#13;
STABLTSTTTO in favor. Shun&#13;
all imitations. Ask paint dealer&#13;
or druggist for tint card.&#13;
W r i t e us fdr Interesting.booklet,&#13;
free. ALABASTINE CO..&#13;
Grand Rapids, Mich.&#13;
TGhUiIsT AHRlg fho-rC rOandley &lt;_^#%* £ f " B U 9&#13;
The top edge ia boand with white celluloid.&#13;
HUM fanoy inlay around Bound-hole. Tlie best&#13;
Atnerioan-mad* patent head. KAISER Ltermau&#13;
silver frets, with inlaid pearl position dots.&#13;
The scale is ae near perfect as it IH possible&#13;
to make. Is strong with a full sot of BliSX&#13;
Suality steal Htrrnga, A coxnpluteInstruction&#13;
ook is seal FBEE with each Guitar. On r&lt;*&#13;
coipt of 91.00 we will send it C. 0.1)., t»nbjoot&#13;
to examination. OUU SPRING CATALUGUE&#13;
of 1,000 illustrated pnsoa wi 11 be Bent&#13;
prepatti on receipt of 15 cent*, which puja&#13;
reooiptof first order. ciUnfrtifUG BOOTHS wlu'ieiwil*&#13;
m-icx*on EVEKYTHrNO you EAT. WEAK ami USE,&#13;
EstftblUhed 1867. JOHN M. 8MYTJ1 t o -160-1 (Id&#13;
W- MaUlaan 8U, Chicago. Order by thU No, A 1 1&#13;
IN 3 OR 4 YEARS&#13;
AN INDEPENDENCE ASSURED&#13;
If you talto m&gt; your&#13;
t homos in W'csicrn ( a;ii;&#13;
da, thc-'.and c'f plonty. _&#13;
HustratoJ pump.,lots.&#13;
Riv.injr -ejcprricwcs of&#13;
farmer^ w! o have become&#13;
wealthy in «row-&#13;
* nip wheat, reports ( f&#13;
delnpates, etc.. .mri fin I&#13;
informal.:osi ns -to reduced raihvnv rates oan bv&#13;
hnrt on application to trio Kupt'rintt'Ti lonr, of&#13;
Immigration, Dep;irtmf?nt of Interior, Or.n.w.i,&#13;
Canndii, or to J. Griove. Saginaw. Mien., or M.&#13;
V. MCIUDCS, Nc. :'Merril! Bioolc, Detroit, Moh%.&#13;
Reader, why not be -oletoute tha most&#13;
mjsteriom and powerful force of naturef&#13;
By my method you can learn lib Hypnotiza&#13;
in a few hours time, without leaving' your&#13;
home. You can perform all of the many&#13;
snarveToirs {eS'.i that are possible to the&#13;
HypneHst. Through Hypnotism you can&#13;
cure disease, conquer P.iin,jriivr^|uctai\t&#13;
affection, gratify Mtit'igitriUfanfi/tnd pro.&#13;
duceanmwmentbytjiehbur. ltco*t*y"U&#13;
nothing- to find out-all about ft. 1 have&#13;
Juit tatted in book form a mammoth lllm-&#13;
&lt;rj&gt;&lt;«l LESSON or k'«y to liyp-ottan,&#13;
which fully explains the mysterie* and it&gt;&#13;
crew of the Art. It contain* hundreds cl&#13;
beautiful and artistic en|fra»inps, and U&#13;
the moat elaborate and expense tlitnir&#13;
of the kind ever published. For a&#13;
sfiort lime 1 will send thia magnificent work Abao*&#13;
lately FREE to all who apply. 1 will alsolncluTie&#13;
a lave amount of other valuable, interesting and elegantly&#13;
illustrated literature without _ ^ ,&#13;
charge. Xemomber, all this coats you&#13;
nothing. A postal card will bring K.&#13;
Order today and learn ro Hymtotrre.&#13;
Jt is a chance of a lifetime. Address.&#13;
PCOF. 1,. _&gt; BABRADEN,&#13;
Station 213.Jack.on, Mich.&#13;
\'S&#13;
)&#13;
;:'^-X^'v:^o&#13;
W2!'1VW&#13;
Not ci&#13;
Bald Head&#13;
" I fud a very severe sickness&#13;
that took of all toy hair. 1 purchased&#13;
a bottle of Aycr's Hair&#13;
Vigor and am glad to say that I&#13;
it brought my hair back again and&#13;
I am not today obliged to be&#13;
classed among the bald-heads."&#13;
— W. D. Quinn, Marseilles,&#13;
111., Aug. 25,1899.&#13;
row&#13;
One thing is certain,—Ayer's&#13;
Hair Vigor makes the hair grow.&#13;
This is because it is a hair food.&#13;
If it were a hair stimulant simply,&#13;
it could not do this. You must&#13;
have food to live; stimulants cannot&#13;
take its place, Ayer's Hair&#13;
Vigor feeds the hair and it grows.&#13;
It could not do differently, for&#13;
it's Nature's plan. It stops falling&#13;
of the hair, too, takes out all&#13;
dandruff, and always restores&#13;
color to gray hair.&#13;
$1.0« a bottle. All dragftfts.&#13;
Write the Doctor&#13;
If yon do not obtain all the benefits you&#13;
desire from the use of the Vigor, write&#13;
the Doctor about it. JIo will t e a you just&#13;
the right thing to do, and will send you&#13;
his book on' the Hair and Scalp if you&#13;
request it. Address,&#13;
Dr. J . C. A Y E R , Lowell, Mass.&#13;
" • • • ' i " p &gt; f W W W &gt; I W f l&#13;
Highest Grade Moderate Prices&#13;
Schaef f er I&#13;
Pianos&#13;
Secured only Diploma of Honof&#13;
Paris ExpotiiioD, 1878.&#13;
BEST VALUE BECAUSE OP&#13;
Beauty of design,&#13;
P o w e r f u l s i n g i n g q u a l i t y o f t o n e ,&#13;
E x t r e m e d u r a b i l i t y .&#13;
•Write for catalogue and prices.&#13;
Schaeffer Piano Mfg. Co.&#13;
215 Wabash Ave.,&#13;
WAB N O T E S .&#13;
A c c o r d i n g t o i n f o r m a t i o n r e c e i v e d a t&#13;
t h e w a r d e p a r t m e n t f r o m M a n i l a w i t h&#13;
t h e e n d of t h e p r e s e n t e x p e d i t i o n o f&#13;
G e n . B a t e s i n t o t h e t w o p r o v i n c e s a t&#13;
t h e e x t r e m e s o u t h e r n p a r t of t h e i s l -&#13;
a n d of L u z o n , m i l i t a r y o p e r a t i o n s i n&#13;
t h e P h i l i p p i n e s w i l l c l o s e . A f t e r w a r d ,&#13;
i t i s s a i d , t h e r e i s n o t h i n g t o d o b u t t o&#13;
u n d e r t a k e t o m a i n t a i n o r d e r t h r o u g h a&#13;
p o l i c e s y s t e m . A t t e n t i o n i s n o w b e i n g&#13;
g i v e n t o t h a t s u b j e c t a n d s t e p s a r e b e -&#13;
i n g t a k e n t o f o r m a t h o r o u g h l y m o b i l e ,&#13;
l i g h t l y a r m e d g e n d a r m e r i e , s o m e t h i n g&#13;
o n t h e o r d e r of t h e C a n a d i a n m o u n t e d&#13;
p o l i c e , t o c o v e r t h e i s l a n d s a t a l l p o i n t s&#13;
a n d c o n s e r v e t h e e n e r g i e s of t h e r e g u -&#13;
l a r t r o o p s .&#13;
G o v . - G e n . W o o d ' s g e n e r a l o r d e r s ,&#13;
s p e c i f y i n g t h e p r e r o g a t i v e s o f m i l i t a r y&#13;
c o m m a n d e r s a n d c i v i l g o v e r n o r s , a r e&#13;
c r e a t i n g a s e n s a t i o n a t S a n t i a g o . T h e&#13;
p r e s s , w i t h t h e e x c e p t i o n of t h e v i o -&#13;
l e n t l y p a r t i s a n l o c a l C u b a n o r g a n , c o m -&#13;
m e n t s f a v o r a b l y u p o n t h e m , s a y i n g&#13;
t h a t t h e y i n d i c a t e a n h o n e s t i n t e n t i o n&#13;
o n t h e p a r t of t h e i n t e r v e n i n g g o v e r n -&#13;
m e n t t o fulfill t h e p l e d g e t o e s t a b l i s h&#13;
t h e i n d e p e n d e n c e of C u b a .&#13;
F o r s o m e t i m e t o b a c c o s e e d of a n i n -&#13;
f e r i o r q u a l i t y h a s b e e n s h i p p e d t o C u b a ,&#13;
a n d t h e C u b a n s n a t u r a l l y f e e l t h a t t h i s&#13;
w i l l m i - i t i t e a g a i n s t t h e f u t u r e r e p u -&#13;
t a t i o n u u c l v a l u e of t h e , l o c a l product*..&#13;
E a r n e s t p r o t e s t s h a v e f r e q u e n t l y b e e n&#13;
m a d e , a n d o n t h e 21st G o v . - t J e n . W o o d&#13;
i s s u e d a n o r d e r w h i c h p r o h i b i t s t h e&#13;
f u r t h e r i m p o r t a t i o n of s e e d . R e p u t a b l e&#13;
t o b a c c o d e a l e r s a n d t h e p u b l i c g e n e r -&#13;
a l l y a r e m u c h g r a t i f i e d .&#13;
T h e r e m a i n s of 80 s o l d i e r s w e r e b u r -&#13;
i e d a t t h e n a t i o n a l c e m e t e r y a t A r l i n g -&#13;
t o n o n t h e 2'2d w i t h t h e u s u a l m i l i t a r y&#13;
h o n e r ^ . M o s t of t h e s e m e n l o s t t h e i r&#13;
l i v e s i n C u b a d u r i n g a n d s i n c e t h e&#13;
S p a n i s h w a r . T h e r e r r a i n d e r d i e d i n&#13;
t h e m i l i t a r y s e r v i c e i n P o r t o R i c o .&#13;
T h e i r b o d i e s w e r e b r o u g h t h o m e o n&#13;
t h e t r a n s p o r t l i u f o r d a n d o t h e r v e s s e l s .&#13;
«&#13;
T h e d i r e c t o r - g e n e r a l of p o s t s f o r&#13;
C u b a h a s s e n t a s t a t e m e n t t o t h e p o s t -&#13;
otfice d e p a r t m e n t r e g a r d i n g t h e p o s t a l&#13;
e s t a b l i s m e n t i n Cuba. T h e r e a r e 27G&#13;
p o s t o t l i c o s o n t h e i s l a n d , l'J of w h i c h&#13;
a r e i n c h a r g e of A m e r i c a n s a s a c t i n g&#13;
p o s t m a s t e r s w i t h C u b a n a s s i s t a n t s i n&#13;
m a n y c a s e s . T h e o t h e r 267 offices a r e&#13;
i n c h a r g e of r e s i d e n t s o r n a t i v e s .&#13;
F o u r of t h e five m e m b e r s o f t h e n e w&#13;
P h i l i p p i n e , c o m m i s s i o n h a v e b e e n -sel&#13;
e c t e d . . T h e y a r e : J u d g e T a f t of O h i o ;&#13;
L u k e E. W r i g h t , of T e n n e s s e e : II. C.&#13;
Ide. of V e r m o n t , anil D e a n W o r c h e s t e r ,&#13;
of . M i c h i g a n .&#13;
F A S H I O N IN GAMBLING.&#13;
K i t o n Co. F a r m e r a n d Ills T^xes.&#13;
F o r live "yearn, .Ios. C h i l d s , w h o is :i&#13;
s u c c e s s f u l f a r m e r l i v i n g a m i l e w e s t of&#13;
S u n i i e i d , h a s r e g u l a r l y , e a c h y e a r , ref&#13;
u s e d t o p a y h i s t a x e s . A l w a y s , w h e n&#13;
c u l l e d u p o n b y t h e c o l l e c t o r , h e r e t u r n s&#13;
S o i t t e t t a Ik N o w jth« Vashlaraabi* G»&#13;
or Sportive N o w Yorkers.&#13;
" T h e r e Is a f a s h i o n i n g a m b l i n g a s&#13;
i n e v e r y t h i n g e l s e , " s a i d C. K. B u n d y&#13;
of N e w Y o r k , " a n d j u s t n o w t h e s p o r t -&#13;
i n g r a g e i n G o t h a m i s all i n t h e d i r e c -&#13;
t i o n of r o u l e t t e . . O n e h e a r s a l o t o f&#13;
p o k e r y a r n s , b u t t h e y a r e m o s t l y h o a -&#13;
r y w i t h a n t i q u i t y , f o r t h e b i g g a m e s&#13;
o f s q u e e z e p l a y e d n o w a d a y s a r e l i k e&#13;
v i s i t s of a n g e l s . I w a s t a l k i n g t o t h e&#13;
p r o p r i e t o r of a s w e l l g a m b l i n g h o u s e&#13;
i n t h e h e a r t of N e w Y o r k c i t y t h e o t h -&#13;
e r d a y , a n d h e c o n f i r m e d w h a t I h a v e&#13;
s a i d a s t o t h e p o p u l a r i t y of r o u l e t t e .&#13;
H e h a s i n h i s p l a c e f a r o , b a c c a r a t ,&#13;
a n d t h e w h e e l , a c o n c l u s i v e s h o w i n g&#13;
t h a t b a n k a n d b a c c a r a t h a d b o t h b e e n&#13;
s u p e r s e d e d b y t h e s e d u c t i v e g a m e of&#13;
r o u l e t t e . A s t o p o k e r , h e d o e s n ' t c o u n -&#13;
t e n a n c e it i n h i s e s t a b l i s h m e n t , f o r t h e&#13;
r e a s o n t h a t i t i s a t e d i o u s w a y f o r t h e&#13;
h o u s e t o m a k e m o n e y , h o w e v e r l a r g e&#13;
t h e rake-off, a s c o m p a r e d w i t h a n y o l&#13;
t h e o t h e r g a m e s . H e t o l d m e t h a t it&#13;
w a s a c o m m o n t h i n g f o r m e n t o c o m e&#13;
i n t o h i s p l a c e a n d b e t h i m 9500 t o&#13;
$1,500 o n a s i n g l e t u r n o j t h e w h e e l ,&#13;
a n d I k n o w h e w a s t e l l i n g t h e t r u t h ,&#13;
f o r m a n y of h i s p a t r o n s a r e k n o w n t o&#13;
m e a n d t h e y a r e a m o n g t h e h i g h r o l l -&#13;
e r s of t h e c i t y w h o l o o k o n b e t t i n g $500&#13;
a b o u t a s t h e a v e r a g e p i k e r r e g a r d s t h e&#13;
r i s k i n g o f a $2 n o t e . T h e s e " p l u n g e r s&#13;
l i k e r o u l e t t e f o r t w o r e a s o n s — t h e y g e t&#13;
q u i c k a c t i o n f o r t h e i r m o n e y a n d t h e y&#13;
a r e s a t i s f i e d t h a t t h e g a m e i s a b s o l u t e -&#13;
l y s q u a r e . I n t h e first p l a c e , t h o u g h&#13;
t h e p e r c e n t a g e i n f a v o r of t h e p r o -&#13;
p r i e t o r i s n o t l a r g e , b e i n g o n l y 5 5-19&#13;
i n 180, i t w i l l b e a t t h e p l a y e r i n t h e&#13;
l o n g r u n , a n d t h e r e f o r e t h e r e i s n o r e a -&#13;
s o n t o o p e r a t e a d i s h o n e s t m a c h i n e .&#13;
S e c o n d l y , t h e w h e e l i s c o n s t r u c t e d s o&#13;
t h a t t h e l i f t i n g of i t s t o p d i s p l a y s t h e&#13;
i n t e r i o r a n d t h e p r e s e n c e of w i r e s&#13;
w o u l d b e r e a d i l y d e t e c t e d . W i t h o u t&#13;
w i r e s t h e r e is n o c h a n c e for f r a u d . T h e&#13;
b i g g e r t h e b e t s t h e b e t t e r f o r t h e h o u s e ,&#13;
a l t h o u g h t h e r e a r e t i m e s w h e n t h e&#13;
p l u n g e r w i l l m a k e t h e p r o f e s s i o n a l&#13;
s i c k . T h e r e h a s b e e n s o m u c h c r o o k e d&#13;
w o r k d o n e i n b a c c a r a t a n d f a r o t h a t&#13;
b o t h h a v e s t e a d i l y l o s t in p o p u l a r i t y .&#13;
Of c o u r s e t h e r e a r e fiends a t b o t h w h o&#13;
w i l l t a k e c h a n c e s o n b e i n g r o b b e d ,&#13;
t h o u g h I d o n o t m e a n t o i m p l y t h a t all&#13;
b a n k g a m e s a r e of t h e s k i n v a r i e t y .&#13;
T o d a y i n N e w Y o r k a c i t i z e n w i t h&#13;
s p o r t i n g b l o o d i n h i s v e i n s c a n g e t all&#13;
t h e a m u s e m e n t s h e w a n t s a t s w e l l e s -&#13;
t a b l i s h m e n t s , w h e r e e n t e r t a i n m e n t a s&#13;
l u x u r i o u s a s a n y D e l m o n i c o c a n furn&#13;
i s h is p r o v i d e d g r a t i s for t h o s e w h o&#13;
f e c i d i s p o s e d t o try t h e fickle g o d d e s s&#13;
of f o r t u n e . " — W a s h i n g t o n P o s t&#13;
OUR POST. MOT the CHEAPEST «8 BEST&#13;
BUGGY our factory&#13;
Trimmed&#13;
Including&#13;
*» TEWS*&#13;
flhuJtraitArtttUy t quipped,&#13;
cjutpmer's ehoioe of cither HZ&#13;
fcaJaber or leather QawtoMop. ,&#13;
_ ^ , or Brewster aide-baripriaie.&#13;
.IIAIJ. rrf trrlftr In irainftin* (&#13;
or leather trimmed. TneB&#13;
HICKORY f era wed Bim WWaJf,&#13;
X or 1 inch&#13;
tread. Tall &gt; « u &amp;&#13;
BOOT. aroBM 4WOK, Wall. Soa&amp;t,&#13;
» d q. o&#13;
oalpt of •*••&lt;&#13;
prefer&#13;
wad&#13;
U . to.r —t* l_U. ad WatMUkfrom •mrmju PI&#13;
irlac W I H H and It mtim4m Bl|&#13;
Mat of the Book? M on i&#13;
ft&#13;
f M.OO. rabtot toexaminetic&#13;
to send the full.amoont;with&#13;
a •cood whip. OUTl SPBrNQ&#13;
ognteine oi&#13;
Forthoae&#13;
Costs but a trfle more than cedar.&#13;
Can be used for any fence. A&#13;
foundation for a fence Is just as&#13;
necessary as a foundation for a house. Write us for&#13;
flescrtptive circulars, or see our avrunt la your territory.&#13;
D U R A B L E CSUSJUST P O S I CO.,&#13;
B a t t l e Creek, Mich.&#13;
Fnoludaatoodwhip. O^niSFBrNQalfA&#13;
1,000 puna, illoatrauas aojna of tha Una in _ . .—&#13;
COLORS, willbe aent prepaid upon reoaipt of U oeaSs,&#13;
which pave part ox&#13;
funded on reoaipt&#13;
ojoptee wholesale&#13;
WEAK and TJ8£&#13;
Established JOHN M. SMYTH CO.,&#13;
«67. 1&amp;O.160W. MadUeaftfc,&#13;
Order b7 this No. A 1 1 CHICAGO, ILL.&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS&#13;
S3 &amp; 3.B0 SHOES ffyfip&#13;
W o r t h S 4 t o $ 6 c o m p a r e d t wrtn o t h e r m a k e s .&#13;
I&amp;doraed b y over&#13;
• 1,000,000 wearers.&#13;
The genuine have W. L. I&#13;
Douglas* name and price J&#13;
•tamped on bottom. Take!&#13;
no substitute claimed to be&#13;
as good. Your dealer&#13;
should keep them —if&#13;
not, we will send a pair'&#13;
on receipt of price and 35c&#13;
extra for carriage. State kind of leather,&#13;
size, and width, plain or cap toe. Cat. free,&#13;
W. L DOUGLAS SHOE WLBrockton, Man.&#13;
CHICAGO.&#13;
FOR 14 CENTS&#13;
We wish to *a.in this year 200,000&#13;
, .- new oustomerd, and hence offer&#13;
\ . «,1 PJNf\.0it?: G"den'Beet, lCc&#13;
11 Pkff.Earl'et Emerald Cucumbert&amp;o&#13;
La Orosse Market Lettuce, 16c&#13;
Strawberry Melon, 16o&#13;
* - 13 Day Radish, loo&#13;
} if—S*r}y5)i&gt;*c&lt;i?b***a» *&lt;*&gt;&#13;
1 " K&amp;rly Dinner Onion. , A -&#13;
8 M Brilliant Flower Seeds,&#13;
Werth U.OO^for 14 oeate.&#13;
Above 10 Plcffg. worth «1.00, we will&#13;
mail yon free, tosether with oar&#13;
great Cotalo*. telling all about&#13;
npen receipt of this n o t i c e A f i e ,&#13;
•tamps. W e invite yonrtrade, and&#13;
\ know when yon once try S a u c e r ' s&#13;
- . - i5s£o2i£) *P«rllsoeurwoi ln1 S•?a•i,le*r«'•sd 1oW wOiOth—oruart-. est earliest Tomsto Giant on earth. ws«—&#13;
iOHM 4. SALZEB SKKD CO^ LA CBO88I, WIS.&#13;
V , ^4or OLD SOLDIERS Union soldiers and widows of soldiers who made&#13;
homestead entries before June 21,1874 o f l e * a than&#13;
160 acres (no matter if abandoned or relinquished),&#13;
if they have not sold their additional homestead&#13;
rights, should address, with full particulars, gfiv&#13;
ing district, &amp;c. 2EH2? N. CO??, WMfcbgtm, 9. a&#13;
D A D A I V O I O Locomotor Ataxia conr&#13;
A l l A L L l u l l ] quered at last. Doctors&#13;
• n e B s r m a w • « * • « * p u z z l G ( ) &gt; spcclallets&#13;
amazed at recovery of patients thoutrbt lncurahle. by&#13;
D R . C H A S E ' S B L O O D AMD NKRVK F O O D .&#13;
WrlteTtie abwut your case. Advice and prtwf ot cures&#13;
VRKB. DB.tUi8K,224 N.IOth 8t.^PHlLADKLPUU,PA CARTERS INK&#13;
I » T H B B E S T I n k .&#13;
t h e s a m e uus'-vur, t h a t i t i s n o t r i g h t t o&#13;
l e v y t a x e s , a n d n o t for w e e k s o r m o n t h s&#13;
a f t e r \ v a r d shrare t h e officers b e e n a b l e&#13;
t o i n d u c e h i m t o m a k e t h e p a } ' m e n t .&#13;
T h i h y e a r n o p e r s o n a l i u l l u u i i u e would&#13;
m o v e h i m a n d a c l i m a x w a s r e a c h e d .&#13;
T o w n s h i p T r e a s u r e r H a g a r . w i t h Chas,&#13;
A. B r o w n , w h o m lie d e p u t i z e d a s a s s i s t -&#13;
a n t t r e a s u r e r , a n d C o n s t a b l e V a n&#13;
U u r e n . w e n t t o t h e C h i l d s ' f a r m t o t a k e&#13;
off p e r s o n a l p r o p e r t y t o t h e a m o u n t of&#13;
t h e t a x , t h i s being" a c c o r d i n g t o l a w .&#13;
C h i l d s w a s o b s t i n a t e a n d o r d e r e d t h e&#13;
ofticers off t h e p l a c e , a n d w h e n t h e y&#13;
Try Gruln-o! Try Graln-o !&#13;
A s k y o u r g r o c e r t o d a y tcf s h o w y o n a&#13;
p a c k a g e of G R A I N - O , t h e n e w f o o d&#13;
d r i n k t h a t t a k e s t h e p l a c e of c o f f e e .&#13;
d i d n ' t g o , h e h i t U r o w n w i t h a c l u b . A&#13;
w a r r a n t w a s s w o r n o u t for C h i l d s a n d&#13;
w h i l e h e w a s b e f o r e t h e c o u r t a t Charl&#13;
o t t e , t h e treasxirer d r e w a w a y w h e a t&#13;
f r o m h i s p l a c e t o lipid f o r t h e t a x . -&#13;
• j a ^ y a M V ^ A s W W M M A A M ^ ^ M I&#13;
l l D A D Q V N E t t DISCOVERY} gives&#13;
a v f f m W 1 ^ W ¥ QMick relief and cures worst&#13;
cases.. Hook of testimonials and 10 DATs* treatment&#13;
rnKK. OR. H. H. 0BIKC8 8038. Bos K, AUaata, «a&gt; .&#13;
1 AUR'Q Thront Candy, one of the best confections&#13;
LHMIf O for vocalists, public speakers, Ac. Send&#13;
10c to Lamb Mf«. Co., Ottawa, Canada, for earn pie. bob&#13;
IfnfnlP'erHrithl&#13;
BOTH nvts. uav ) Thompson's E y i W o U r&#13;
^ P l S O T . C U R E F O R e limp. Tastes Good.&#13;
Sold by arnggiata.&#13;
BestObngh t&#13;
in time.&#13;
C O N S U M P T I O N . ^&#13;
Mortgajfe Creditors Suffers D e f e a t .&#13;
T h e t h i r d m o r t g a g e c r e d i t o r s of t h e&#13;
j y t e O. M. l i a r n e s , ' w h o a r e s c a t t e r e d&#13;
a l l o v e r M i c h i g a n , s u f f e r e d d e f e a t i n&#13;
a n o p i n i o n h a n d e d d o w n b y t h e s u -&#13;
p r e m e c o u r t o n t h e 2 0 t h . T h e s e c r e d i -&#13;
t o r s r e c e n t l y f o r e c l o s e d t h e i r m o r t g a g e&#13;
a n d b i d i n t h e p r o p e r t y s u b j e c t t o t h e&#13;
first a n d s e c o n d m o r t g a g e s . T h e d e -&#13;
p o s i t o r s of t h e d e f u n c t C e n t r a l M i c h i -&#13;
g a n a n d I n g h a m C o x m t y S a v i n g s b a n k s&#13;
w e r e t h e p r i n c i p a l b e n e f i c i a r i e s u n d e r&#13;
t h e s e c o n d m o r t g a g e a n d t h e c i r c u i t&#13;
c o u r t r e c e n t l y g a v e t h e f o r m e r a d e c r e e&#13;
for $;VJ,804 a n d t h e l a t t e r f o r 812,500.-&#13;
T h i s w a s o b j e c t e d t o a s e x c e s s i v e b y&#13;
t h e t h i r d m o r t g a g e c r e d i t o r s w h o a p -&#13;
p e a l e d t o t h e s u p r e m e c o u r t .&#13;
THE M A R K E T S&#13;
\ L I V E STOCK.&#13;
N«w York— Cattlo Sheap Lamb*&#13;
lJest.s'rados..&#13;
Lovvcrtrriidea&#13;
rhlomro—&#13;
npstirrsr.le*..&#13;
Lo\vertrr&gt;iL^^&#13;
D e t r o i t —&#13;
Host. srr;wlo*..&#13;
-Lower^rJ lc»&#13;
Itufftilo —&#13;
Uost Annies..&#13;
Lower »r&gt;'ikdoi&#13;
...H 7l).i&amp;5 40 $5 7.i&#13;
. . . 3 50^.i to 4 UJ&#13;
. . . 5 0&gt;®o &amp;*&gt; ft 8.)&#13;
.. .4 UJ^-4 7j 5 OJ&#13;
.. .5 75^4 25 4 75&#13;
...;! 5Ui3 ?J 3 75&#13;
,,&#13;
. . . 4 i a a i 60 5 65&#13;
.. .3 iotft UJ ^ 5 2J •&#13;
C i n c i n n a t i —&#13;
Hcst iirrvtle.'*..&#13;
Lower jjruvios&#13;
l'ttt*burg&#13;
Lower wraJes&#13;
Nrvr York&#13;
Cltlc&gt;ic;»&#13;
*I&gt;»troU&#13;
T o l e d o&#13;
Clnoiuimtl&#13;
rttt*barit&#13;
llurT.ilo&#13;
...M5@»5 5) 5 25&#13;
...4 ^Xii4 #) 4 8J&#13;
—&#13;
...R 10©* 40 5 80&#13;
...4 2 &lt;&amp;4 7o 5 40&#13;
GRAIN, My^ a&#13;
Wheat. Oorn,&#13;
No. 2 ral No. 2 mix&#13;
7K&amp;7I1* *:@u&#13;
oniJi^ «4aai^&#13;
: - A S » \ ; 3t*&amp;3j&#13;
7 &lt;»r &gt;u 3ti®;n&#13;
?J#73 33(338&#13;
71(^74 *i 8^(¾¾&#13;
7.5(.^:3^ . 37(^37&#13;
S&gt;7 60&#13;
7 00&#13;
7 15&#13;
ft 0J&#13;
6 91&#13;
5 5J&#13;
*&#13;
7 35&#13;
6 25&#13;
7 ej&#13;
8 3 )&#13;
6 85&#13;
&amp; k&gt;J&#13;
Hogra&#13;
85 40&#13;
5 25&#13;
4 05&#13;
4 70&#13;
5 00&#13;
4 75&#13;
5 15&#13;
4 8J&#13;
ft 10&#13;
4 UJ&#13;
5 15&#13;
ft UO&#13;
Oat«.&#13;
N a 2 whits&#13;
'»@2J&#13;
23@23i»&#13;
27®27^&#13;
O&#13;
*1&#13;
i&amp;H&#13;
(8i2J&#13;
S0O20U'&#13;
28®28«*&#13;
T h e c h i l d r e n m a y d r i n k i t w i t h o u t inj&#13;
u r y a s w e l l a s t h e a d u l t . A l l w h o t r y&#13;
i t , l i k e it. G R A I N - O h a s t h a t r i c h s e a l&#13;
b r o w n of M o c h a o r J a v a , b u t i t i s m a d e&#13;
f r o m p u r e g r a i n s , a n d t h e m o s t delicate^&#13;
s t o m a c h r e c e i v e s i t w i t h o u t d i s t r e ^&#13;
O n e - f o u r t h t h e p r i c e of c o f f e e ,&#13;
a n d 25c. p e r p a c k a g e . S o l d &gt; # a l l&#13;
g r o c e r s .&#13;
^ l e n h a v e e v e n h a d j r r a i r b r c a d t h cs-&#13;
Ottpes f r o m b e c o m i n o r ' b a l d h e a d e d .&#13;
GREAT BARGAINS FOR ALL.&#13;
T h e a d s of t h e J o h n M. S m y t h Co.&#13;
in a n o t h e t c o l u m n of t h i s p a p e r s h o u l d&#13;
be of rrnerest t o e v e r y r e a d e r . T h e&#13;
firm i s o n e of t h e l a r g e s t in t h e U n i t e d&#13;
S t a t e s a n d i s t h o r o u g h l y r e l i a b l e .&#13;
T h e i r c a t a l o g u e of e v e r y t h i n g t o eat,&#13;
w e a r a n d u s e is a m a m m o t h o n e and&#13;
c o m p l e t e in e v e r y p a r t i c u l a r . W r i t e&#13;
f o r it t o d a y .&#13;
A m a n t h a t w i l l h o l d y o u u p c a n b e&#13;
e x p e c t e d t o k n o c k yoxi d o w n .&#13;
Music C a t a l o g u e s Free.&#13;
S e n d f o r o u r m a m m o t h c a t a l o g u e s of&#13;
s h e e t m u s i c , m a i l e d f r e e , c o m p r i s i n g&#13;
a l l t h e l a t e p o p u l a r m u s i c . ' O u r p r i c e s&#13;
a r e l o w e r t h a n a n y o t h e r m u s i c h o u s e&#13;
i n A m e r i c a . C. W. M a r v i n P i a n o Co.,&#13;
M a r v i n B u i l d i n g , D e t r o i t , M i c h .&#13;
O n l y o n e - t h i r d of t h e p o p u l a t i o n of&#13;
C a l c u t t a a r e f e m a l e s .&#13;
W a n t e d .&#13;
B u t t e r n u t m e a t s , w e l l s e l e c t e d . M u s t&#13;
b e i n h a l v e s ^ a s m u c h a s p o s s i b l e . I n&#13;
a n y q u a n t i t y f r o m o n e t o 50 q u a r t s .&#13;
A d d r e v s , s t a t i n g p r i c e p e r q u a r t . A. L.&#13;
N O R T U , 22 C l i n t o n S t . , D e t r o i t , M i c h .&#13;
A s l o n g a s w e l e t C h r i s t l e a d w e&#13;
s h a l l h a v e v i c t o r y . *&#13;
•TJeiroit—Hay. Mo. 1 Timoth£. $12 01 per ton.&#13;
PraaUxM, Mo p!r bu. Llvo Poultry, spring&#13;
ctiicKens; IJC pm* lb: fowls, flo: turkeys, lie;&#13;
ducks, l i e Ktf••.'&gt;!. st'.-icUv fresu, I3J rjjc dpjtou.&#13;
Hatter, best ualry, 21J pu*' lb; creamery, 25a&#13;
l i n e ' s F»m1ry Merttctne.&#13;
M o v e s t h e b o w e l s e a c h d a y . I n o r d e r&#13;
t o l&gt;e h e a l t h y t h i s i s n e c e s s a r y . A c t s&#13;
gently=-on t h e l i v e r a n d k i d n e y s . C u r e s&#13;
s i c k h e a d a c h e . P r i c e 25 a n d oOe. '-&#13;
T h e d e v i l i s a l w a y s p o l i t e u p o n first,&#13;
a c q u a i n t a n c e .&#13;
T H E G R I P C U R E T H A T D O E S CtTRE.&#13;
Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets removes&#13;
the cause that produces La Urippo; E. W.&#13;
Grove's siffc*ture is on each box. 25c&#13;
O n l y t h e g o d l y c a Q - 9 k ) g o o d w i t h&#13;
m o n e y . /&#13;
M m . W l n s l o w ' s Soothlna; S y r n p .&#13;
For children tetthtnR, aott^na the guma, reduces IBCainmatlon.&#13;
allayapaia.oiireavlnticollo. SSoabottla.&#13;
T o b e a f r a i d ,&#13;
h i m .&#13;
/ o f y o\vc f r i e n d , i s t o l o s e&#13;
Hands / /&#13;
Red, Rough Hands, Itching, Burning&#13;
Palms, an^ Painful Finger Ends*&#13;
One Night Treatment&#13;
/SoaETRe hands on retiring in a^strong, hot,&#13;
creamy lather of CUTICURA SOAP. Dry,&#13;
and anoint freely with CUTICURA, the great&#13;
skin cure and purest of emollients* Wear, during&#13;
the night, old, loose kid gloves, with the finger&#13;
ends cut off and air holes cut in the palms. For&#13;
red, Tough, chapped hands, dry, fissured, itching,&#13;
feverish palms, with shapeless nails and painful&#13;
finger ends, this treatment is simply wonderful,&#13;
and point3 to a speedy cure of the most distress*&#13;
ing cases when physicians and all else fail.&#13;
Sore Hands 8 Years Cured. P a i n S o I n t e n s e W o u l d N e a r l y T w i s t F i n g e r s F r o m S o c k e t s . H a n d s&#13;
P u f f e d U p L i k e a T o a d T S v a t e r R a n T h r o u g h B a n d a g e s t o&#13;
fftriy i&#13;
i V i&#13;
F l o o r . H a d t o W a l k t h e F l o o r U n t i l W o u l d F a l l&#13;
A s l e e p . F i n g e r s W o u l d P e e l L i k e a n O n i o n .&#13;
D o c t o r s C o u l d N o t C u r e .&#13;
pAKKtR'A/HArn BALSAM Ve«ps the hair soft aad \&#13;
plentiful and restores the colo? whon gray. ' . i,&#13;
UiitDMcoRxs, tha best cure for corn*. lScta. " :&#13;
N o t h i n g b u t s i n e v e r m a d e a n u g l y .&#13;
E i g h t yer.rs a g o I p o t sore h a n d s , c o m m e n c i n g w i t h a b u r n i n g s e n s a t i o n&#13;
o n m y fingers a u d o n t o p o f t h e h u u d . "When I r u b b e d t h e m , Y O U c o u k i&#13;
s e e little w h i t e p i m p l e s . I f e l t like t w i s t i n g m y l i n g e r s o u t of t h e i r s o c k e t s .&#13;
I h a d h i g h f e v e r , a n d c o l d c h i l l s r a n o v e r m e , a n d so I k e p t it g o i n g u n t i l&#13;
I w a s tired o u t . N i g h t s , I h a d t o w a l k t h e tloor u n t i l I f e l l a a l e e p . M y&#13;
h a n d s p e e l e d l i k e a n o n i o n , t h e finger n a i l s g o t l o o s e , a n d t h e w a t e r&#13;
r a n o u t , a u d w h e r e v e r , . t h e r e w a s a l i t t l e p i m p l e t h e r e t h e b u r n i u g fire w a s —&#13;
t h a t h a p p e n e d a t l e a s t t e n t i m e s . I a m r u n n i n g a b l a c k s m i t h s h o p , h o r s e -&#13;
s h o e i n g , a u d I w o u l d n o t s h u t u p the"strop for a n y b o d y , but it w a s h a r d .&#13;
M y h a n d s pufFed u p w o r s e t h a n a t o a d . W h e n i " d r o v e horsD n a i l s , t h e&#13;
w a t e r f r o m m y h a n d s r a n t h r o u g h t h e b a n d a g e , o n t o t h e floor. M y c u s -&#13;
t o m e r s r e f u s e d t o l o o k a t m y h a n d . I h a d a f r i e n d take' m e t o t h e d o c t o r ;&#13;
h e g a v e a s o l u t i o n of s o m e t h i n g t o b a t h e m y h a n d s . I w e n t t o a n o t h e r&#13;
d o c t o r , I t h i n k , f o r a y e a r . I f o u n d y o u r a d v e r t i s e m e n t i n a U t i c a n e w s -&#13;
p a p e r , a u d I g o t t h e C U T I C L ' R A r e m e d i e s . A s s o o n as I u s e d t h e m I b e g a n&#13;
t o g a i n , a n d a f t e r u s i n g a s m a l l q u a n t i t y o f t h a m I w a s e n t i r e l v c u r e d . I&#13;
w o u l d i n o t t a k e . A f t y - d o l l a r s f o r a c a k e o f OrTiCCKA S O A P if I c o u l d n o t g e t&#13;
a n v m o r e . . I w o u l d n o t suffer aitv m o r e 0¾ I &lt;iid, f o r t h e w h o l e c o u n t r v .&#13;
F e b . 2 2 , 1 S 9 8 . C A S T E R D 1 E T S C H L E R , P e m b r o k e , G e n e s e e C o . , X . Y .&#13;
Cooplefe^itoal and Internal Treatment for Eterf Humor,&#13;
eonalatinffof Cimci'RA POAP &lt;2&amp;«), to clwmae the akin of ermate and&#13;
aoalea and soften the thickened cuticle, CirncvnA OINTMENT (M&gt;C),&#13;
_ . a . A . ^ _ to iaatantly allay Itching, Inflummntion, and Irritation, and eootheaad&#13;
T n O S O t » $ l - Z O n*»J. and CUTICURA ltBitOLVKXT (60c.), to cool and cleant* UM blood.&#13;
A 8INOLI SET ia often aufflclent to cure the moat torturing, dtaflgurin*,&#13;
and humiliating akin, ecalp, and blood hurnnra, with loaa of hair, when all elae fmlta. £o!d&#13;
throughout the world. POTTER Dnuo AXD CUEJC. Cu»r., Ool* 1'ropa., Boaton, U. 8. A. •* Ail&#13;
ateotal the Bkln. Scalp, tad Hair,*' free.&#13;
Millions of Women Use Cuticura Soap&#13;
Exclusively for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the akin, for cleansing the scalp of&#13;
crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and&#13;
soothing red, rough, and soro hands, In the form of baths for annoying irritations, lnflammatloos,&#13;
and chaflngs, or too froo or offcnslTO perspiration, in the form of wnshes for&#13;
ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative antiseptic purposes which readily suggest^&#13;
them«*&gt;lw?! to »vomen, and especially mothers, and for all the purposes o f t h e toilet, bath,&#13;
and nursery. No amount of persuasion can induce those who have once used It to use&#13;
any other, especially for p i s s e w l n g and purifying the skin, scalp, and hair of Infants aud&#13;
o.Mldren. CUTlcu^ASOAPoomblnes delicate emolllont properties derived from CtfTIcuaA,&#13;
the great skin euro, with tho purest of cleansing ingredients and the mort refreshing of&#13;
flower, odors. No other medicaid soap ever compounded is to be compared with It for&#13;
preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skin, ecalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign&#13;
or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the purposes&#13;
of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus It combines in O N E SOAP at O N B PatCE, viz..&#13;
TWENTY-FIVK CKNTS, tho BUST I U U and complexion soap,'tho xuux toilet aad B u z&#13;
U*b/ «oaj&gt; in the world.&#13;
1&#13;
*&#13;
m •&gt;&lt;&#13;
&lt;$h&#13;
»^'&#13;
m:&#13;
,- ? •• - •&#13;
Ti;L"'&#13;
•'C&#13;
i'.'/a&#13;
?&lt;*!:•&#13;
S&#13;
v ^&#13;
L*--&#13;
T &gt;&#13;
•h&gt;&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Garduer visited her j&#13;
parents in Dexter the first of the j&#13;
week. |&#13;
Dale Darrow of P i n c k n e y spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday as the guest!&#13;
of L e e Barton. j&#13;
Miss Lucy Harris spent t h e |&#13;
first part of last week with Miss&#13;
Fannie Monks.&#13;
Master Luke D o y l e who was&#13;
dangerously fick a short time a g o&#13;
is slowly recovering.&#13;
Andrew Murphy who was severly&#13;
injured sometime ago by a fal-&#13;
Hug tree has nearly recovered.&#13;
The Misses Nella Gardner and&#13;
Fannie Monks were in A n n Arbor&#13;
last \*eek to hear Sousa'e Orchestra,&#13;
Ernnk r h i m m e r a n d Family&#13;
have inovc-d in John Dunn's tenant&#13;
house on the former Kennedy&#13;
place. Mr. Plummer expects to&#13;
remain here some time.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
F. W. Merrills was i n Howell&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
James Hon* and s o n Charley&#13;
were in Stockbrklge Saturday.&#13;
Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Fred&#13;
Mackinder, Friday last, a daughter.&#13;
Mrs. Nancy May of Unadilla,&#13;
spent part of last week with relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Quite a nv.mbeT from tin's place&#13;
n.trende-1 the cxebition at Unadilla&#13;
Tuesday night."&#13;
fcYliool Commissioner, J a m e s H.&#13;
WuJlnce, visited the E a m a n school&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
The Eaman school will close&#13;
Friday night, March % with an&#13;
exhibition. Admission, 10 cents.&#13;
James Marble and wife visited&#13;
their daughter, Mrs, CT~IT.' B e n -&#13;
nett, in Howell, a couple of days&#13;
last week.&#13;
HAMBURG.&#13;
A baby arrived last Friday eve-&#13;
-at- the home of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Wheelock.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dunlavy&#13;
were at the county seat o n business&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
T h e Ladies Aid,will meet next&#13;
week, on Thursday at the home of&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Silsby.&#13;
Mips Aroia Steiner returned&#13;
last Wednesday from a visit with&#13;
relatives in Howell.&#13;
T h e Misses Nelra P o w e r s and&#13;
Bernice Greer attended t h e&#13;
Teachers Association at Howell&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
Alex. Pearson of Pinckney. and&#13;
M i s s N e l l i e K n a p p of this place,&#13;
were united in marriage at B r i g h -&#13;
oon en Tuesday, Feb. 20.&#13;
T h e ladies of the M. E . church&#13;
will serve a chicken pie dinner at&#13;
the home of J. E. Eliott, March 1,&#13;
today. Bill 15. cents. F u n d s for&#13;
benefit of pastor.&#13;
Miss Nellie Powers, assisted by&#13;
her pupils, will g h e a n entertainment&#13;
and* social at Shaffer's hall,&#13;
onThursday evening of this week.&#13;
Proceeds for library fund.&#13;
A O.UOU3 lncid-sun of the bee world&#13;
is reported from Hamp.^ir*. E»g. A,&#13;
oo't ger tQO* two large bars of h.-.ney&#13;
and a square.section ir^m one of uhe&#13;
hivee. This honey he put into a large&#13;
jxin and ovt^rl it with a cloth, placing&#13;
it in pn up etairs room of his cottage.&#13;
During the day the be.* got&#13;
scent of the honey through the opfta&#13;
windew, crept -uudeiMhe cloth cover,&#13;
•art &lt;ook away all the honey in an in&#13;
credibly tfhor-t time, and stored it in&#13;
tfceir hive again. The quantity r u&#13;
*bout 10 pounds In weight.&#13;
M- &lt;•&#13;
OF GENERAL INTEREST.&#13;
LA. pure blue is Che natural color of&#13;
water&#13;
Virginia holds ftrtt place In the production&#13;
of peanuts.&#13;
The caiute of Freedom is the cause of&#13;
God.—Bowles.&#13;
To trore soft corn*, apply ma*, cotton&#13;
«&lt;aked in oastor oil.&#13;
There are over forty American Lawyers&#13;
located in MaxiUt.&#13;
The annual value of the Porto Rico&#13;
coffee crop is $8,739,788.&#13;
The old Lake Front Park In Chicago&#13;
Is now called U. S. Gran* Park.&#13;
Seame of coal have been found in&#13;
New "Zealand which are 45 feet thick.&#13;
It is computed that v'hera are 455 000-&#13;
000 believers in the Buidist religion.&#13;
About 2.000,000 tons of sugar is consumed&#13;
in tJhe United States each year.&#13;
The price of grain is about 12 cents&#13;
higher at present than at this date last&#13;
year.&#13;
It costs 75 cents per 100 pounds to&#13;
ship wool from Sydney. Australia, to&#13;
London.&#13;
Th^.re were about 16.000,000 bunches&#13;
of bananas sold .n the United States&#13;
Ta&amp;ryear7™~&#13;
The Shah" of r*eretn smokes a irioe&#13;
the tiowl of wni?,bi uolus half :* vouad&#13;
of tobacco.&#13;
There are some sheep ranches in&#13;
Aus.ral'a whicii almost equal in area&#13;
to che whole ct* England.&#13;
There avo l,45').S80 acres or tend in&#13;
Oklahoma oet nnart for the support of&#13;
the public srlicjiis.&#13;
Seven "hundred Kansas quail are being&#13;
d^sLribu'ted by spor.amen in the viciniiy&#13;
of York, Pa.&#13;
There is a book made of marble at&#13;
the Strozzi Palace, in Rome, th &gt; le. vas&#13;
bang of almost transparent thmneos.&#13;
The making of baskets, boxes, panniers,&#13;
hats, bonnets etc.. is the source&#13;
of livelihood of thousands of people in&#13;
Germany.&#13;
The man who wrote the book explaining&#13;
how i.t was possible for a ruun&#13;
to Jive one hundred years died at the&#13;
age of thirty-eitrhit.&#13;
• • * • • -&#13;
MORE LOCAL.&#13;
"' Agents on salary of $lu&gt;00 per week and&#13;
expenses; the greatest agent seller ever&#13;
produced ; every stock and poultry raiser&#13;
buys it on sight. Hustlers wanted. Jtefereuce.&#13;
Address, with stamp, American&#13;
Mfg. Co., Terre Haute, Ind.&#13;
Drs. Sigler &amp; Sftfler, and Dr. Darling&#13;
of Ann Arbor, performed an operation&#13;
on Mrs. H. H. Swarthout Saturday&#13;
last, and although it was of a very&#13;
serious character, she is doing nicely-.&#13;
It has snowed steadily ever since&#13;
about midnight, and at this time,&#13;
Wednesday afternoon, it shows no&#13;
signs of abating. There is more snow&#13;
on the ground than there has been at&#13;
any one time in years. Should it go&#13;
off with a rain as it is quite likely to&#13;
do at this time of the year, there will&#13;
be some damage clone.&#13;
H*m *m* *H* •H" &gt;m* »*H •m*&#13;
ASK YOUR&#13;
DOCTOR!&#13;
Ask-yettr phystt&#13;
I tion, M What is the one great&#13;
! remedy for consumption?"&#13;
He will answer, "Cod-liver&#13;
oil." ^Nine out of ten will&#13;
answer the same way.&#13;
Yet when persons have&#13;
consumption they loathe all&#13;
fatty foods, yet fat is neces-&#13;
. sary for. their recovery and&#13;
they cannot take plain cod-&#13;
: liver oil. The plain oil disturbs&#13;
the stomach and takes&#13;
• away the appetite. The disagreeable&#13;
fishy odor and I&#13;
taste-make it almost uncn-&#13;
.: durable. What is to be done ? :&#13;
This question was ans*&#13;
: wered when we first made !&#13;
SCOTT'S&#13;
EMULSION&#13;
'of Cod-Liver Oil with Hypot_&#13;
phosphites. Although that&#13;
: was nearly twenty-five years&#13;
ago, yet it stands alone today&#13;
the one great remedy&#13;
for all affections of the throat&#13;
and lungs.&#13;
The baa taste and odor have been&#13;
taken away, the oil itself has been&#13;
partly digested, and the most sensitive&#13;
stomach objects to H rarely.&#13;
_Not ont in ten can take and digest&#13;
the plain oil Nine out of ten can&#13;
take SCOTTS EMULSION and digest&#13;
ft Thaf s why it cures so&#13;
many cases of early consumption.&#13;
Even in advanced cases it brings&#13;
comfort and greatly prolongs Use.&#13;
^__Joc and tt.00, all druggfcte.&#13;
SCdTT&amp;BOWNB,Chemists, N«w York.&#13;
The past week has h?en a cold one&#13;
and it has been bard for all our correspondents&#13;
to Work.™&#13;
Thomas Holan of Hot Springs Colo,&#13;
was brought to Dexter for burial tb«&#13;
first of the week. He was a brother&#13;
of Mike Dolan of this place, and wan&#13;
well known by many of our readers.&#13;
Doctors DaHinp, of Ann Arbor,&#13;
ttigler, of Pinckney, and Ludlum, of&#13;
Howell, performed an operation for&#13;
appendicitis on tbe little daughter of&#13;
Mr. and Mr*. W. P. Van Winkle, on&#13;
Wednesday of this week. Tbe little&#13;
one recovered from the operation&#13;
and it is hoped that she will rapidly&#13;
recover.—L:vin«rston Herald. Later:&#13;
The little one passed away Saturday&#13;
morning, and tbe funeral was held on&#13;
Monday. Mr. and Mr.-.'.- Van Winkle&#13;
have tbe sympathy ot a host of friends.&#13;
• • m m •—•—&#13;
Frozen To Death.&#13;
On Friday last, Martin Armstrong&#13;
of Unadilla township, came to Pinckuey,&#13;
remaining twrr"diy§;"drTnRTng&#13;
heavily ail the time. Horaetime Sat&#13;
urday evening be got into his rig and&#13;
started for home. The next morning&#13;
the horse and rig wer« found in front&#13;
of the Dunning barn in the village of&#13;
(JiTnadilla, where the horse-had evidently&#13;
gone tor protection from tbe&#13;
terrible blizzard 'wliich raged ail night,&#13;
and Mr. Armstrong was found in the&#13;
buggy frozen to death. HH 1ms been&#13;
a h«avy drinker for several y^ara.&#13;
We understand there is talk of an&#13;
Investigation with a view to prosecution.&#13;
AUCTIONS.&#13;
Having decided to quit farming&#13;
John Kelly will sell bi« personal property&#13;
at auction, on the farm occupied&#13;
by him 4 miles southwest of Pinckney&#13;
on Tuesday, March 6. Sale.begins at&#13;
10, a, m. Lunch at noon.&#13;
Bills were printed at this office this&#13;
week announcing an auction sale, of&#13;
personal property belonging to L. M.&#13;
Teeple. The sale will he held on his&#13;
father's farm 8 miles east of "tbis_village&#13;
on Friday, March 2, at 1 o'clock&#13;
sharp.&#13;
Citizens' Caucus.&#13;
Notice is ner by given t^at a viDage&#13;
caucus will be held at the Town Hall,&#13;
Pinckney, Micb., 00 tbe 5th day of&#13;
March, 1900, at 3 o'clock p. m., for the&#13;
purpose of placing in nomination candidates&#13;
for village officers of the village&#13;
of Pinckney, state of Michigan,&#13;
and for the transaction of such other&#13;
business as may properly come before&#13;
it.&#13;
By order of Citizens' Caucus Comi&#13;
— - — — — — • • # • • . —&#13;
Village Election.&#13;
0 tm? electors of tbe Village of&#13;
Pinckney, Mic igan:&#13;
Notice is hereby given that the next&#13;
ensuing general election of said Vil&#13;
lage will be held at the Town Hall&#13;
within said Village, on- Monday,&#13;
March 12th, A. D. 1900, at which elec&#13;
tion the following officers are to be&#13;
chosen, vis.: One Village Presidentthree&#13;
Trustees for two years, One Village&#13;
Clerk, one Village Treasurer and&#13;
one Assessor.&#13;
The Polls of said election will be&#13;
opened at 7 o'clock in the forenoon&#13;
and will remain open until 5 o'clock&#13;
in the afternoon of said day of election.&#13;
13y order of the Board of Election&#13;
Commissioners of said Village.&#13;
Dated, this 1st day of March, A. D.7&#13;
1000. R. H. TEEPLE, Clerk.&#13;
* * *m* *#&lt; *•&lt; * * 4 * 1 *m&#13;
Registration Notice.&#13;
To the electors of the Village of&#13;
Pinckney, State of Michiuan :&#13;
Notice is hereby given,that a meet&#13;
ing of the Boardof Registration of&#13;
the Village above named, will he held&#13;
at the Town Hall within said Village,&#13;
on Saturday, March 10th, A. D. 1900,&#13;
for the purpose of registering the&#13;
names of all such persons who shall&#13;
be posessed of the necessary qualifications&#13;
of electors, and who may apply&#13;
for that purpose; and thac said&#13;
Board of Registration will be in session&#13;
on that day and at the place&#13;
aforesaid from 9 o clock in the forenoon&#13;
until 8 o'clock in the afternoon,&#13;
for tbe purpose aforesaid.&#13;
Dated, this lst'day of March, A. D.&#13;
1900.&#13;
By order of the Village Board of&#13;
I Registration. R. H^TCTPLI, Clerk.&#13;
Livingston County Association of&#13;
Farmers' Clnbs.&#13;
The Livingston County Association&#13;
of Farmers'Club- will hold its next&#13;
meeting at the M urt house, Howell&#13;
Saturday,'Mnt'cb 3 The following&#13;
nterpsting program has been pre*&#13;
pared:&#13;
FORENOON 3ESSION, 10 TO 12.&#13;
Singing, "Star Spangled Banner,&#13;
Audience&#13;
Invocation&#13;
Secretary's Report, A. M. Wells&#13;
Report from State Association,&#13;
Hon. J. W. Edgar&#13;
Discussion led by Frank Hacker&#13;
AFTERNOON 8EBRION, 1 TO 4 .&#13;
Singing, Boy Quartet&#13;
The Farmer of Today, J. (), Taft.&#13;
Discussion led by Hon&#13;
Trusts and the Remedy,&#13;
Discussion led by&#13;
Question Box&#13;
Singing,&#13;
C. M. Wood&#13;
A. £. Cole&#13;
H. E. Reed&#13;
Boy Quartet&#13;
h ANDOM COMMENT&#13;
Fifty«*even M V cotton mtrUs fcavi&#13;
bean built In tflie South tbe part.year.&#13;
The Sault de Sainte Marie canal&#13;
pawes two and a half tfjmw a* w w *&#13;
tanmafre in eig-blt mon&lt;t*« as the Suea&#13;
canal passes in a full year.&#13;
A Rock Port, Mo., school teacher&#13;
offered a prize to the pupil who would&#13;
come to school with the cleanest face.&#13;
The next day he was unable &lt;to recognise&#13;
a single etudent.&#13;
A sera* of expeiltnenite made at&#13;
Kiel '-during the last two years UKive&#13;
shown tihait of all rnetads uaed In shipbuilding&#13;
an axna'gam of iron and zinc&#13;
le least subject to deterioration t'rum&#13;
the influence of sea water.&#13;
The Briltieh Museum comtalne the&#13;
oltdie&amp;H specimen of pure glass wthlch&#13;
bears amy date. This is a l.ttle Horn's&#13;
head, hiavtoig on it tfie" najme of an&#13;
Egyptian king of the 11th dynasty.&#13;
Production of pig Iron in trii&lt; country&#13;
is now at the rate of 15 000,000 ton*&#13;
a year; yet tibis encirmous amount is&#13;
all absorbed In the manufacture &lt;&gt;r&#13;
iron and sJteel, and t)he denwnidl sihow:;&#13;
no signs of abating. h&#13;
e&#13;
e&#13;
Do not let those&#13;
Magazines go to&#13;
w a s t e 9&#13;
e&#13;
•&#13;
j Get'em bound at the Dispatch Bindery. •&#13;
ee&#13;
m&#13;
Good W o r k .&#13;
Reasonable Rates. Pinckney&#13;
T h e Crockery jjupinegg&#13;
of Jackson, is being done in the&#13;
Busy Bee Hive basement.&#13;
Mr. Timberlake, the oldest established crockery merchant&#13;
in Southern Michigan, and Mr. Frank B. Taylor, for&#13;
many years a leading chinaware dealer, have both retired&#13;
from'busines.&#13;
W e W ^ n l d n n n ^ n n r » t ^ T r ^ former p a t r n n a r&gt;f theaft&#13;
merchants that the largest and best lines of reliable Chinawares&#13;
now found ill Jackson are in our large, light, Basement&#13;
Salesroom. Mr. Bert Russell who has charge of this&#13;
room, has just returned from New York, where he has&#13;
been for the past ten days buying the best the market&#13;
affords in Chinaware bargains.&#13;
In Dinnerware, Toiletware, Glassware we have remarkable&#13;
bargains.&#13;
Kitchen Furnishing?.&#13;
This department, also in the Basement, mak^s the&#13;
room one of the most interesting places of the store to&#13;
visit. The best place to buy Granite Ironware because&#13;
nothing but first qualities are handled. The prices may&#13;
seem higher than prices asked by firms who handle&#13;
"seconds** and imperfect goods, but Granite Ironware is&#13;
high at any small price if it has holes or chips. Nothing&#13;
worth having of this kind but the best.&#13;
Tinware in everything that can be wanted.&#13;
All the Kitchen Knick/iacks -necessary to the housekeeper.&#13;
Laundry Utenpilp;&#13;
Washtubs, Ironing Boards, Scrubbing Boards, Irons,&#13;
Clothes Bars, Clothes Lines and 'all other appliances for&#13;
the laundry to be found in this Basement.&#13;
Yojirs respectfully,&#13;
L. H. FIELD.&#13;
JMkm,Mkb&#13;
1</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
        <element elementId="52">
          <name>Note</name>
          <description>Extra information that can be shown with the item.  Such as how to get a physical copy of the item.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36689">
              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6460">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch March 01, 1900</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6461">
                <text>March 01, 1900 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6462">
                <text>Newspaper archives</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6463">
                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6464">
                <text>application/pdf</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6465">
                <text>1900-03-01</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6466">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="15">
        <name>newspaper</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="16">
        <name>pinckney dispatch</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
