<?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=113&amp;sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CCreator" accessDate="2026-04-25T05:10:19+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>113</pageNumber>
      <perPage>10</perPage>
      <totalResults>10202</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="994" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="922">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/518672433e2f788c072b6405aabae96c.pdf</src>
        <authentication>fdd93653947c88d8fcf18c61a1cfcf3c</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="32308">
              <text>VOL. XIX. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO„MICH., THURSDAY, MAY. 9. 1901. No "5? J&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE&#13;
HOWELL. - MICHIGAN&#13;
A Bush of Business from a&#13;
Whirlwind of Bargains. We Sell&#13;
the Very Best at the Lowest Possible&#13;
Price. Come and look.&#13;
Dry Goods&#13;
Groceries&#13;
Hardware&#13;
China&#13;
AT&#13;
BARGAIN&#13;
I&#13;
MILLINERY.&#13;
Have you seen our Hats?&#13;
When in Howell drop in and&#13;
see us.&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
Next to Post Office.&#13;
Mail orders&#13;
Carefully filled.&#13;
• i&#13;
We are showing a&#13;
line of very neat and&#13;
practical hats.&#13;
ur prices will please&#13;
you*&#13;
Remember the place at&#13;
Boyle &amp; Halstead.&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
Having rented the Brown store, second door west of M. Dolan's grocery&#13;
in Pinckney, I will on Monday, May 6, open with a good'line of&#13;
Clocks, Watches, Chains, Cuff and Collar Buttons. All fancy jewelry&#13;
sold from catalogue at reduced prices.&#13;
Sewing Machines.&#13;
I am also agent for the New Home and&#13;
Crown Sewing Machines and will make&#13;
an object to buy of me.&#13;
Repairing.&#13;
I will also repair watches, clocks aud&#13;
sewing machines and guarantee all&#13;
work satisfactory. Shoes at Cost.&#13;
I have on hand about 225 pairs of Ladies', Gents', and Misses'&#13;
Shoes, ALL NEW STOCK, which I will sell at just cost in order to&#13;
close them out during the next 30 days.&#13;
MICHAEL Y4KE.&#13;
Michigan state fair will be held in&#13;
Pontiac this year.&#13;
Roger Carr and Fred Campbell were&#13;
in Howell Sunday.&#13;
Fred Hemingway and wife were in&#13;
Ho well last Saturday.&#13;
Edd Cook and family have moved&#13;
into the Potterton house.&#13;
Alex Mclntyrei has moved to bU&#13;
farm a mile east of town.&#13;
Dr. C. L. Sigler and wife visited in&#13;
Detroit the last of last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Gilchrist were in&#13;
Howell on business last Thursday.&#13;
The Misses Mocco and Hand Teeple&#13;
called on Howell friends Saturday.&#13;
John Maier of Farmington visited&#13;
bis parents near here the past week.&#13;
Mrs: G. W. Reason and daughter,&#13;
Daisy, were in Howell on Saturday&#13;
last.&#13;
Rev. Pierce brought in his first&#13;
spring vegatables on Saturday of last&#13;
week.&#13;
.Mrs,.-. Samuel atfe_and Claud&#13;
one day last&#13;
WANTED&#13;
T h e Ladies of Pinckney and vicinity *&#13;
to know that we have a line of Millinery&#13;
Goods to suit everyone both&#13;
in Style and Price.&#13;
Those who bay&#13;
of us can't help saving money. You&#13;
may match the price but you can't&#13;
match the&#13;
Goods&#13;
at the price.&#13;
Georgia Martin,&#13;
Opera House Block.&#13;
Black Cat Stockings.&#13;
Do you u s e t h e m ?&#13;
T h e best S t o c k i n g&#13;
tor the money, In the&#13;
County.&#13;
Can show you all Styles in Ladies'&#13;
Can show you all Styles in Misses'&#13;
Can show you all Styles in Children's&#13;
Can show you all Styles in Men's&#13;
P r i c e s K&gt;, 15, 3 0 , 2 5 , 4 0&#13;
and 5 0 c t * .&#13;
You will get your money's&#13;
worth if you buy them.&#13;
W. W. BARNARD.&#13;
)&#13;
Reason were in Howell&#13;
week.&#13;
Near Chelsea there is a roost of&#13;
heron which covers about an acre of&#13;
ground.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Webb and two&#13;
daughters visited the county seat last&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mrs, C. L. Grimes was called to her&#13;
home in Indiana, last week by the illness&#13;
of her sister.&#13;
Vera McGilvery of Jackson&#13;
spent a short time with hereousin,&#13;
Carrie Erwin ot this place.&#13;
Other villages use the street sprinkler.&#13;
Why not Pinckney? It would&#13;
be a saving ot goods and patience.&#13;
Rev. F. H. Nix, father of Harry Nix&#13;
who formerly run a photograph gallery&#13;
here, died at bis home in Ovid,&#13;
April 15.&#13;
The Juniors and school cleared over&#13;
$5 by serving ice cream on Friday&#13;
evening last. This was the first of&#13;
the season.&#13;
The angler has been putting in the&#13;
fine days the past week after the finny&#13;
tribe. Several quite nice ones have&#13;
been caught.&#13;
Tbe annual commencement of the&#13;
Dexter high school will be held May&#13;
29. Prof Laird orthe Normal will deliver&#13;
the address.&#13;
E. W. Kennedy received a telegram&#13;
on Thursday last announcing the&#13;
death of bis brother Hiram, of West&#13;
Branch. Mr. K attended tbe funeral&#13;
there on Friday.&#13;
There will be a civil service examination&#13;
at Ann Arbor, June 4 and 5&#13;
to fill positions in the Philippine3.&#13;
Why do not more of our young teachers&#13;
fit themselves for tbe civil service.&#13;
This is about the season when the&#13;
annual "road work" is done by the&#13;
farmers. Those who desire free rural&#13;
mail delivery should remember that&#13;
much depends upon how well the road&#13;
work Is done. Many routes are being&#13;
held up for no other cause only the&#13;
condition of the road3.&#13;
This question came up in a family&#13;
circle a short time since: "How many&#13;
young men can you name who do not&#13;
use tobacco in some form?" Just&#13;
think of the personal and real estate&#13;
that will be worse than wasted by the&#13;
young men in the next 50 years. Just&#13;
pause and count the cost.&#13;
Mr. Joseph Collins died at bis borne&#13;
in north west Putnam. Nfsy 1 1901 of&#13;
heart failure, aged 79 years and 2&#13;
months. He leaves a widow, three&#13;
sons and three daughters, one son and&#13;
daughter living m Denver Colorado.&#13;
His funeral was held Friday after*&#13;
noon at the home of bis so -ic-law Wir.&#13;
DaWey conducted by Rev. Mr. H cks&#13;
of Pinckney and tbe burial was in tbe&#13;
Gilks oemetery. .^.&#13;
••:• 'VV&#13;
Specials In Carpets h-&#13;
FOR rJ?JHIS WEEK&#13;
Best Body Brussels&#13;
Wilton Velvet&#13;
Best Tapestry Brussels&#13;
Double Extra Super&#13;
Kidder-minster (an all wool)&#13;
Extra Super Union&#13;
$1.00&#13;
88c&#13;
7 2 ^ c&#13;
• 55c&#13;
50c&#13;
- 40c&#13;
Specials in Ladies' fine 8hoes.&#13;
Ladies' $3.50 Tan $2.50&#13;
Ladies' 83.00 Tan $2.00&#13;
LadieBl$2.50 Tan $1.75&#13;
Ladies' Button Shoes in $2.25 and $2.50 values, at $1.50&#13;
F. G. JACKSON&#13;
N o t i c e ! T o&#13;
Farmers&#13;
of the&#13;
Empire Drill agency for 1901 has been secured by us&#13;
and we wish to call your attention }*T"a few' of the new&#13;
features of this Drill, as well as sowing all kinds of grain it&#13;
will plant Sugar Beets four rows 21 inches apart, will plant&#13;
corn two rows 3J^" feet apart, Beans three rows 28 inches&#13;
apart, or if desired the rows may be made closer together&#13;
or farther apart by simply closing a shut-off slide on inside&#13;
of box. Come and examine the Drill and you will be&#13;
convinced that it is the best Drill on earth.&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
_£Q2-&#13;
"Sometlmes her narrow kitchen wall*&#13;
Stretched away Into stately ha[l»."&#13;
&lt;xx&gt;&#13;
This happened t o Maud Muller, but our&#13;
prices on&#13;
Wall Paper&#13;
Make it possible for it to happen&#13;
to everybody. Wall paper which&#13;
used to cost so much that it could&#13;
only be hung in the parlor, or in&#13;
stately hails, is now so cheap that&#13;
the kitchen walls can be made&#13;
really attractive.&#13;
Come in and see out* new&#13;
for 10O1. Prices from 7 to 25 cents&#13;
per doiible roll.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
Drngrgfiet.&#13;
datate ^ ^ ^ L i ^ M M M ^ mm ^^^tM&#13;
DOUGLAS FACTORY&#13;
t o Be Enlarged Before the First of July.&#13;
Will Make 6 . 0 0 0 r a l r s Daily.&#13;
A d v e r t i s i n g p a y s .&#13;
W . L . D o u g l a s Is g o i n g t o i n c r e a s e&#13;
t h e c a p a c i t y of h i s f a c t o r y t o 6,000&#13;
p a i r s of s h o e s p e r d a y . T h e a d d i t i o n&#13;
w i l l a d d 16,000 s q u a r e f e e t of s p a c e f o r&#13;
m a n u f a c t u r i n g p u r p o s e s . A t t h e s a m e&#13;
t i m e a n e w 400 h o r s e - p o w e r e n g i n e a n d&#13;
a n a d d i t i o n a l 150 h o r s e - p o w e r b o i l e r&#13;
w i l l b e I n s t a l l e d , w h i c h w i l l afford a d e -&#13;
q u a t e p o w e r f o r t h e p r e s e n t a n d a n -&#13;
o t h e r a d d i t i o n t o t h e f a c t o r y , w h i c h&#13;
w i l l n o d o u b t b e n e c e s s a r y l a t e r o n .&#13;
W h e n t h e f a c t o r y s t a r t s u p t h e first&#13;
o f J u l y i t w i l l b e o n a n o u t p u t of 600&#13;
d o z e n or 6,000 p a i r s of s h o e s per d a y ,&#13;
a n d t h e w e e k l y p a y r o l l , e x c l u s i v e of&#13;
o f f i c e h e l p , s u p e r i n t e n d e n t , f o r e m e n ,&#13;
•etc.. w i l l b e $22,000 p e r w e e k . T h e&#13;
D o u g l a s s a l e s m e n o n t h e r o a d a r e s e l l -&#13;
i n g 2 5 p e r c e n t m o r e g o o d s t h a n l a s t&#13;
s e a s o n . T h e i n c r e a s e d s a l e s i s t h e dir&#13;
e c t r e s u l t o f g o o d s h o e m a k i n g a n d e x -&#13;
t e n s i v e a d v e r t i s i n g . T h e a d v e r t i s i n g&#13;
e x p e n d i t u r e of Mr. D o u g l a s i s n o w&#13;
l a r g e r t h a n a t a n y p e r i o d of h i s b u s i -&#13;
n e s s , a n d t i n s i s t o b e s t i l l f u r t h e r i n -&#13;
c r e a s e d . B e g i n n i n g t h i s w e e k h a l f -&#13;
p a g e a d v e r t i s e m e n t s of t h e D o u g l a s&#13;
s h o e w i l l a p p e a r i n a l l t h e p r i n c i p a l&#13;
n e w s p a p e r s of t h e l a r g e c i t i e s , a s w e l l&#13;
a s s u c h p a p e r s a s t h e Y o u t h ' s C o m p a n -&#13;
i o n . — B r o c k t o n , M a s s . , T i m e s ,&#13;
rylons and timers art; too week in lung power&#13;
to run mure than half u mile.&#13;
If Y o u H a v e D y s p e p s i a&#13;
Bead no money, but write Dr. Shoop, Kaotne, Wig.,&#13;
Box 143, for six bottles of Dr. Shoots Kestoratire;&#13;
.express paid. If cured, pay $5.J0— If not, it la free.&#13;
Some or the wealthiest plunters in the West&#13;
todies lire on coffee grounds.&#13;
X&#13;
V&#13;
•2» i&#13;
COME AND GO&#13;
l a many forms&#13;
Rheumatism&#13;
Neuralgia&#13;
Lumbago&#13;
Sciatica&#13;
m a k e u p a large part of human&#13;
Buffering. They come suddenly,&#13;
but they go promptly by the&#13;
cue of&#13;
St Jacobs Oil ?&#13;
?&#13;
Y&#13;
!&#13;
X&#13;
which is a certain sure cure,&#13;
!&#13;
For 8 0 Years&#13;
mothers have been giving their&#13;
&gt; children for croup, coughs and&#13;
colds Shiloh's&#13;
Consumption&#13;
Cure&#13;
^Mothers—have you SIIILOH in&#13;
the house at all times? Do&#13;
you know just where you can&#13;
find it if you need it quickly—&#13;
if your little one is gasping&#13;
and choking with croup? If&#13;
you haven't it get a bottle.&#13;
.It will save your child's life.&#13;
"ShiToh atway* cured my baby of crofcp,&#13;
•Coughs and colds. I wtWd not be without it.'&#13;
MRS. J. B. MARTIN, HuntsviUe, Ala.&#13;
BtiTloh'e Connnmption Cure Is Mold by »11&#13;
d r u g g i s t s Mt 85«, 5 0 c , Sl.Ofl a bottle. A&#13;
ttrlut«d g u a r a n t e e g o e s w i t h every bottle.&#13;
i r y o u a r e n o t s a t i H f l m l g o t o your druggist&#13;
a m i g e t your m o n e y b a c k .&#13;
f Write for illnitrated book on consumption. Sen|&#13;
without cou to you. S. C Weill &amp; Co., 1-eKoy, N. V,&#13;
Turn the Rascals Out&#13;
W e a r e s p e a k i n g " o f t h a g r i p m i c r o b e s&#13;
T h e w e l l a n d s t r o n g ' c a n r e s i s t t h e i r p o i -&#13;
s o n , t h e s i c k l y a n d w e a k a r e t h e i r p r e y .&#13;
B a x t e r ' s M a n d r a k e B i t t e r s a r c nat&#13;
u r e ' s r e m e d y f o r e x p e l l i n g a l l p o i s o n&#13;
• f r o m t h e s y s t e m . A t d r u g g i s t s , i n l i q u i d&#13;
• o r t a b l e t s a t 25 c e n t s p e r b o t t l e o r b o x .&#13;
B e U f JL a n will be paid&#13;
I f C W A R U f o r i u u e o f&#13;
backache, nervousness, sleeplessness,&#13;
weskQesM. lossof vitality, In-&#13;
: clplentlciduey.blaUder and urinary 1 disorders that csn not be cured by KID-NE-OIDS . the great kidney, liver and blood medicine. 0Oc&#13;
AianDrUsststs. Write for free wunple. Address&#13;
K I D - N E - O I D S , 6 t . L o u i s , M o .&#13;
SEND US YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS&#13;
and upon receipt of same I will send you a&#13;
proposition whereby you will be literally&#13;
paid for a few joinui.es of your time; no can*&#13;
vasslnK, as I hnve nothioglo sell. It costs&#13;
you absolutely notbiag. Write to-day.&#13;
W. C. KL8INB,&#13;
8100 Pine Street, Bt. Louis, Mo.&#13;
CUBA A N D P H I L I P P I N E NEWS.&#13;
T h e t r i a l of Capt, J a s . C, R e e d , form&#13;
e r c o m m i s s a r y a t M a n i l a , a n d w h o&#13;
w a s a r r e s t e d a b o u t a f o r t n i g h t a g o for&#13;
a l l e g e d p a r t i c i p a t i o n i n t h e c o m m i s -&#13;
s a r y f r a u d s , w a s b e g u n a t M a n i l a o n&#13;
t h e 2 0 t h a n d b i d s f a i r t o d e v e l o p i n t o&#13;
a c e l e b r a t e d c a s e . Capt. H e e d is c h a r g e d&#13;
w i t h s o l i c i t i n g a n d r e c e i v i n g b r i b e s&#13;
a n d w i t h o t h e r official m i s c o n d u c t . A t&#13;
t h e b e g i n n i n g of t h e t r i a l c o u n s e l *for&#13;
d e f e n d a n t o b j e c t e d t o t h e j u r i s d i c t i o n&#13;
of t h e c o u r t . T h e d e f e n s e f u r t h e r d e -&#13;
n i e d t h a t a s t a t e o f w a r e x i s t e d i n M a -&#13;
n i l a t o d a y , u u d a l l e g e d t h a t t h e p r o -&#13;
v o s t m a r s h a l , Gen. Geo. W. D a v i s , i s&#13;
u n a u t h o r i z e d t o c o n v e n e a g e n e r a l&#13;
c o u r t m a r t i a l . T h e d e f e n s e f u r t h e r o b -&#13;
j e c t e d t o t h e f a c t t h a t s e v e r a l m e m b e r s&#13;
of t h e c o u r t w e r e of i n f e r i o r r a n k t o&#13;
C a p t . R e e d . A l l t h e s e o b j e c t i o n s w e r e&#13;
o v e r r u l e d a n d t h e h e a r i n g of t e s t i m o n y&#13;
w a s b e g u n .&#13;
A f t e r a c a r e f u l c o n s i d e r a t i o n o f t h e&#13;
s i t u a t i o n i n t h e P h i l i p p i n e s a s it n o w&#13;
e x i s t s , t h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n IIHS d e c i d e d&#13;
t o r e d u c e t h e a r m y i n t h e i s i a n d s tc&#13;
i 40,000 m e n . T h e o p i n i o n p r e v a i l s t h a t&#13;
t h i s n u m b e r w i l l b e a m p l e f o r t h e&#13;
p r e s e n t n e e d s i n t h e i s l a n d s , a n d ii&#13;
c o n d i t i o n s c o n t i n u e t o i m p r o v e i n t h e&#13;
s a t i s f a c t o r y m a n n e r t h a t h a s b e e n&#13;
s h o w n i n t h e p a s t f e w m o n t h s thp&#13;
f o r c e m a y b e r e d u c e d s t i l l f u r t h e r .&#13;
A t t h e w a r d e p a r t m e n t it i s s a i d t h a t&#13;
e f f o r t s a r e b e i n g m a d e t o h a v e t h e reo&#13;
r g a n i z e d s t a n d i n g a r m y f u l l y officered&#13;
a n d e q u i p p e d a n d e n l i s t e d t o t h e&#13;
s t r e n g t h of 75,000 b y A u g . 1. M o r e&#13;
a p p r e h e n s i o n i s f e l t o v e r g e t t i n g t h e&#13;
f u l l q u o t a of c o m p e t e n t l i n e officers b y&#13;
t h e d a t e m e n t i o n t h a n o v e r t h e rec&#13;
r u i t i n g o f t h e 15 n e w r e g i m e n t s .&#13;
I t i s s a i d a t t h e w a r d e p a r t m e n t , b y&#13;
officers r e c e n t l y b a c k f r o m t h e P h i l i p -&#13;
p i n e s , t h a t t h e r e n o w r e m a i n s i n t h e&#13;
field i n L u z o n o n l y o n e c h i e f w h o m&#13;
t h e y a r e p a r t i c u l a r d e s i r o u s o f c a t c h -&#13;
i n g , n a m e l y C a i l l e s , t h e h e a d h u n t e r .&#13;
T h i s m a n h a s v i o l a t e d e v e r y r u l e , of&#13;
w a r f a r e a n d i t i s e x p e c t e d t h a t h e w i l l&#13;
b e t a k e n a i i v e .&#13;
A c c o r d i n g t o a r e p o r t r e c e i v e d f r o m&#13;
G e n . M a c A r t h u r o n t h e 1st t h e r e a r e&#13;
2,586 s i c k i n h o s p i t a l i n t h e P h i l i p p i n e s ,&#13;
a n d 013 s i c k i n q u a r t e r s . T h i s is 5.80&#13;
p e r c e n t , a l e s s p e r c e n t a g e oi s i c k t h a n&#13;
h a s b e e n s h o w n a t a n y t i m e s i n c e t h e&#13;
U . S. t r o o p s w e r e s e n t t o t h e a r c h i p e l -&#13;
a g o .&#13;
Gen. T i n i o s u r r e n d e r e d w i t h h i s&#13;
c o m m a n d a t S i n a l t o n t h e 3 0 t h . l i e&#13;
w i l l d e l i v e r a l l m e n a n d g u n s i n h i s&#13;
c o m m a n d a s s o o n a s t h e y c a n be g a t h -&#13;
e r e d t o g e t h e r . T h i s c o m p l e t e l y pacifies&#13;
t h e first d e p a r t m e n t , n o r t h e r n&#13;
L u z o n , f o r m a u y m o n t h s t h e w o r s t i n&#13;
t h a t s e c t i o n .&#13;
T h e r e p o r t t h a t G e n . A l e j a n d r i n o&#13;
h a s s u r r e n d e r e d i s c o n f i r m e d , l i e w a s&#13;
l o o k e d u p o n a s t h e p o s s i b l e s u c c e s s o r&#13;
of A g u i n a l d o . P a d r e A g l i p a y , t h e e x -&#13;
c o m m u n i c a t e d F i l i p i n o p r i e s t , w h o&#13;
p r e a c h e d t h e d o c t r i n e of a h o l y w a r&#13;
a g a i n s t t h e U. S., h a s a l s o s u r r e n d e r e d .&#13;
Q u e n t i n S a l e s s u r r e n d e r e d a t I l o i l o ,&#13;
A p r i l 21, a n d a l l o p p o s i t i o n i n t h a t&#13;
i s l a n d i s n o w e n d e d .&#13;
T R A N S V A A L WAR ITEMS.&#13;
A d i s p a t c h f r o m L o r d K i t c h e n e r ,&#13;
d a t e d f r o m P r e t o r i a , M a y 1, s a y s t h a t&#13;
G r e n f e l l a t t a c k e d t h e B o e r s a t l i e r g -&#13;
p l a n t z , n e a r H a l v e r s t s b e r g , w h e r e t h e&#13;
l a s t l o n g - t o r n o p e n e d tire a t 10,000 y a r d s .&#13;
K i t c h e n e r ' s s c o u t s a d v a n c e d t o w i t h i n&#13;
3.000 y a r d s , w h e n t h e g u n w a s b l o w n&#13;
u p a n d t h e D o e r s fled. T e n o f t h e m&#13;
w e r e m a d e p r i s o n e r s . O t h e r c o l u m n s&#13;
r e p o r t e d 10 B o e r s k i l l e d , s i x w o u n d e d ,&#13;
s i x m a d e p r i s o n e r s a n d 00 s u r r e n d e r e d ,&#13;
a n d 30,000 r o u n d s of a m m u n i t i o n c a p -&#13;
t u r e d . T h e B r i t i s h h a d f o u r k i l l e d a n d&#13;
s e v e n w o u n d e d .&#13;
Gen. D e l a r e y , t h e B o e r c o m m a n d e r ,&#13;
h a s n o w 4,&lt;&gt;00 o r 5,000 m e n i n t h e h i l l s&#13;
a r o u n d H a r t b e e s t e f o n t e i n . G e n . Jiabi&#13;
n g t o n i s w i t h o u t a s u f f i c i e n t f o r c e t o&#13;
a t t a c k , b u t . M c t h u e n a n d R a v v l i D s o n&#13;
a r e c o n v e r g i n g h i t h e r . A b a t t l e a p -&#13;
p e a r s i m m i n e n t .&#13;
N E W S Y B R E V I T I E S .&#13;
F i v e f i r e m e n w e r e i n j u r e d , o n e fat&#13;
a l l y , w h i l e fighting a fire a t C h i c a g o&#13;
o n t h e 3 0 t h .&#13;
T h e U n i t e d S t a t e s q u a r a n t i n e a g a i n s t&#13;
t h e C i t y of M e x i c o i s i n e f f e c t o n acc&#13;
o u n t o f t h e t y p h u s f e v e r t h e r e .&#13;
T h e o d o s i u s S e c o r , o n e of t h e e a r l i e s t&#13;
A m e r i c a n b u i l d e r s o f m a r i n e e n g i n e s ,&#13;
d i e d a t h i s h o m e i n B r o o k l y n , o n t h e&#13;
3 0 t h , a g e d 93.&#13;
A l l s a l o o n s i n K a n s a s C i t y , M o . , w e r e&#13;
c l o s e d t i g h t o n t h e 5 t h , t h e first t i m e&#13;
i n s i x y e a r s .&#13;
B e t w e e n 500 a n d 800 m a c h i n i s t s in&#13;
B u f f a l o , a n d p r o b a b l y 300 m o r e i n E r i e&#13;
c o u n t y , o u t s i d e of B u f f a l o , s t r u c k o n&#13;
t h e 1 s t t o s e c u r e a 9 - h o u r d a y w i t h o u t&#13;
a d e c r e a s e o f p a y . ..&#13;
A d o z e n p e o p l e w e r e s e v e r e l y&#13;
s h o c k e d a n d t w o s e r i o u s l y i n j u r e d by&#13;
a b o l t o f l i g h t n i n g w h i c h s t r u c k t h e&#13;
t o w e r o f t h e O z a r k a p a r t m e n t b u i l d i n g&#13;
i n C h i c a g o o n t h e 2d.&#13;
8 e v e n p e r s o n s w e r e b u r n e d t o d e a t h ,&#13;
t h r e e f a t a l l y i n j u r e d a n d s e v e r a l o t h e r s&#13;
s l i g h t l y b u r n e d a n d o t h e r w i s e i n j u r e d&#13;
i n a fire t h a t d e s t r o y e d a t h r o e - s t o r y&#13;
a p a r t m e n t b u i l d i n g ad C h i c a g o o n t h e&#13;
m o r n i n g o f t h e 5 t h .&#13;
T h e c e n s u s b u r e a u o n A p r i l 30 i s s u e d&#13;
a b u l l e t i n a n n o u n c i n g t h a t t h e c e n t e r&#13;
o f p o p u l a t i o n i n t h e 17. S. e x c l u d i n g&#13;
A l a s k a a n d r e c e n t t e r r i t o r i a l a c c e s -&#13;
s i o n s o n ^ u n e l a s t , w a a a i x m i l e * s o u t h -&#13;
e a s t o f C o l u m b u s , B a r t h o l o m e w c o u n t y ,&#13;
i n s o u t h e r n I n d i a n a .&#13;
Career and Character of Abraham Lincoln.&#13;
A n a d d r e s s b y J o s e p h C h o a t e , A m -&#13;
b a s s a d o r t o G r e a t B r i t a i n , o n t h e c a r e e r&#13;
a n d c h a r a c t e r o f A b r a h a m L i n c o l n —&#13;
h i s e a r l y l i f e — h i s e a r l y s t r u g g l e s w i t h&#13;
t h e w o r l d — h i s c h a r a c t e r a s d e v e l o p e d&#13;
i n t h e l a t e r y e a r s o f h i s l i f e a n d h i s&#13;
a d m i n i s t r a t i o n , w h i c h p l a c e d h i s n a m e&#13;
s o h i g h o n t h e w o r l d ' s r o l l of h o n o r&#13;
a n d f a m e , h a s b e e n p u b l i s h e d b y t h e&#13;
C h i c a g o , M i l w a u k e e &amp; S t . P a u l R a i l -&#13;
w a y a n d m a y be h a d b y s e n d i n g s i x ( 6 )&#13;
c e n t s i n p o s t a g e t o F . A . M i l l e r , G e n -&#13;
e r a l P a s s e n g e r A g e n t , C h i c a g o , 111.&#13;
T o o m a n y a n c e s t o r s h a v e s p o i l e d&#13;
m a n y a g o o d m a n .&#13;
F a i l u r e i s o n e o f t h e t h i n g s t h a t a r e&#13;
s p o i l e d b y s u c c e s s .&#13;
A n a s t r o n o m e r r e p o r t s t h a t h i s b u s i -&#13;
n e s s i s l o o k i n g u p .&#13;
Are You I n t e r e s t e d In t h e N o r t h w e s t ?&#13;
C u t o u t t h i s a d v e r t i s e m e n t , m e n t i o n&#13;
p a p e r in w h i c h i t a p p e a r e d . e n c l o s e w i t h&#13;
10c in s i l v e r t o a d d r e s s g i v e n a n d&#13;
H o m e a n d G a r d e n , l l l u s t r a t e j a J _ j n o n t h -&#13;
ly, w i l l be s e n t y o u f r e e f o r o n e y e a r .&#13;
R e g u l a r p r i c e , 50c. A d d r e s s H o m e a n d&#13;
G a r d e n , N e w s p a p e r R o w , S t . Paul-,&#13;
M i u n .&#13;
T h e e a r l y b i r d s a p p e a r w h e t h e r t h e&#13;
w o r m s d o o r d o n o t .&#13;
O r i g i n a l i d e a s r e s e m b l e c l o c k s w h e n&#13;
t h e y s t r i k e o n e .&#13;
Are You I'slug Allen's F o o t K a s e ?&#13;
I t i s t h e o n l y c u r e f o r S w o l l e n ,&#13;
S m a r t i n g , B u r n i n g , S w e a t i n g F e e t ,&#13;
C o r n s a n d B u n i o n s . A s k f o r A l l e n ' s&#13;
F o o t - E a s e , a p o w d e r t o b e s h a k e n ) i n t o&#13;
t h e s h o e s . A t a l l D r u g g i s t s a n d S h o , -&#13;
S t o r e s , 25c. S a m p l e s e n t F R E E . Add&#13;
r e s s , A l l e n S. O l m s t e d , L e R o y , N . Y .&#13;
T h e n e w w o m a n w a n t s t o b r a c e u p&#13;
a n d b e a m a n .&#13;
W h a t D o t h e Children D r i n k ?&#13;
Don't give them tea or coffee. Hnve you tried&#13;
the new food drink called GRAIN-0» It is delicious&#13;
and nourishing, and takes the place of&#13;
coffee. The more.G ratn-0 you give the children&#13;
the more health you distribute throusrh their&#13;
systems. Grain-O is made of pure grains, and&#13;
when p.*operly prepared tastes like the choice&#13;
grades of coffee, but costs about l\ as much. All&#13;
grocers sell it. 15c and 'Zhc.&#13;
You can't eat the kernel and raise another&#13;
crop of nuts from the shell.&#13;
T r y G r a l n - O t Try Grain-O!&#13;
Ask your Grocer today to show you a packr*&#13;
ge of GKAIN-O, the new food drink that lukes&#13;
ti.^ place of coffee. The children may drink It&#13;
without injury as well as the adult. All who&#13;
try h like it. GKAIN-O has that rich seal&#13;
brown of Mocha or Juva. but it is made from&#13;
pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives&#13;
it without distress. )i the price of coffee.&#13;
l.V und£5 cts. per package. Sold by all&#13;
grocers.&#13;
The child is wiser in his inuocence than the&#13;
philosopher in his wisdom.&#13;
Garfield T e a i s t h e m o s t u s e d , t h e&#13;
b e s t l i k e d , a n d i s t h e o r i g i n a l h e r b&#13;
t e a f o r t h e c u r e of c o n s t i p a t i o n a n d&#13;
s i c k h e a d a c h e . I t s t r e n g t h e n s t h e dig&#13;
e s t i v e o r g a n s . '&#13;
In times of war the number of individual&#13;
homicides always increases.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure&#13;
Is t a k e n i n t e r n a l l y . P r i c e , 75c.&#13;
Words are vehicles for thought; but vehicles,&#13;
of course, are often empty.&#13;
Mrs. Wlnslow's S o o t h i n g Nyrup.&#13;
Vr\v chililppn torthln;;, soften* tin; tfiims. vediu'Ps inflamaiatlon,&#13;
allay* j&gt;ain. cures wiml colic. iiio a txntli.'.&#13;
Parents first teach a child lo talk, then try to&#13;
teach it to hold its tongue.&#13;
Piso's Cure cannot he. too highly spoken of as&#13;
:i cough cure.-J. \V. O'BKIKN :1JJ Third Ave.,&#13;
X., Minneapolis, Mion., Jan. C, li'lX).&#13;
If thou are a master be sometimes blind, ifa&#13;
a aervunt, sometimes denf,&#13;
Some articles must be described. White's&#13;
Yucatan needs no description; it's the" real&#13;
tiling.&#13;
The friends of the opposition candidate are&#13;
always "heelers."&#13;
PERK OF PAIN. How Three Women Pound Relief.&#13;
,6^^3^2¾&#13;
W h i l e n o w o m a n i s e n t i r e l y f r e e f r o m p e r i o d i c a l s u f f e r i n g , i t d o e s n o t s e e m&#13;
t o h a v e b e e n t h e p l a n o f n a t u r e t h a t w o m a n s h o u l d s u f f e r s o s e v e r e l y . L y d i a&#13;
K . P i n k h a m ' s V e g e t a b l e C o m p o u n d i s t h e m o s t t h o r o u g h f e m a l e r e g u -&#13;
l a t o r k n o w n t o m e d i c a l s c i e n c e . I t r e l i e v e s t h e c o n d i t i o n w h i c h p r o d u c e s s o&#13;
m u c h d i s c o m f o r t a n d r o b s m e n s t r u a t i o n o f i t s t e r r o r s .&#13;
T h e t h r e e l e t t e r s h e r e p u b l i s h e d s h o u l d e n c o u r a g e e v e r y w o m a n w h o s u f f e r s :&#13;
A u g . 6, 1898.&#13;
" D E A B M B S . P I N K S A M : — I h a v e&#13;
s u f f e r e d s i n c e t h e a g e o f s i x t e e n w i t h&#13;
p a i n f u l m e n s t r u a t i o n . I h a v e b e e n&#13;
t r e a t e d f o r m o n t h s , a n d w a s t o l d t h a t&#13;
t h e w o m b h a d f a l l e n a l i t t l e . T h e&#13;
d o c t o r s a y s t h a t i s n o w i n p l a c e a g a i n ,&#13;
b u t I s t i l l h a v e t h e s a m e p a i n . P l e a s e&#13;
t e l l m e w h a t t o d o . " — M R S . E M M A&#13;
K U K H L , 113 T r a u t m a n S t . , B r o o k l y n ,&#13;
E . D . . N . Y .&#13;
J a n . 19, 1899.&#13;
" D E A B M R S . P I N S H A M : — A f t e r r e -&#13;
c e i v i n g y o u r r e p l y t o m y l e t t e r o f&#13;
A u g . 6 1 f o l l o w e d y o u r k i n d a d v i c e ,&#13;
a n d a m g l a d t o t e l l y o u t h a t I h a v e&#13;
b e e n c u r e d o f t h e s e v e r e p a i n a t t i m e&#13;
o f m e n s t r u a t i o n t h r o u g h t h e use" o f&#13;
L y d i a E . P i n k h a m ' s V e g e t a b l e C o m -&#13;
p o u n d . I h a v e t a k e n s i x b o t t l e s o f&#13;
. i t , f e l t b e t t e r a f t e r t h e first b o t t l e ,&#13;
a n d a f t e r a w h i l e h a d n o m o r e p a i n&#13;
o r w o m b t r o u b l e .&#13;
" I h a d d o c t o r e d f r o m t h e a g e o f s i x -&#13;
t e e n t o t w e n t y - s i x , a n d h a d l o s t a l l&#13;
n o p e , b u t y o u r m e d i c i n e h a s m a d e&#13;
m e w e l l .&#13;
" I w o u l d l i k e t o h a v e y o u u s e m y&#13;
t e s t i m o n i a l , s o t h a t o t h e r s m a y s e e ,&#13;
a n d b e i n s p i r e d w i t h h o p e , a n d t a k e&#13;
y o u r m e d i c i n e . " — M R S . E M M A K I T K H L ,&#13;
112 T r a u t m a n S t . , B r o o k l y n , E . D . , N . Y .&#13;
F e b . 20, 1900.&#13;
" I s a w y o u r m e d i c i n e s o h i g h l y&#13;
r e c o m m e n d e d I t h o u g h t 1 w o u l d w r i t e&#13;
t o y o u for a d v i c e .&#13;
" M y m e n s t r u a t i o n o c c u r s e v e r y t w o&#13;
w e e k s , l a s t s a w e e k , a n d i s p a i n f u l . I&#13;
h a v e b e e n t r o u b l e d i n t h i s w a y f o r&#13;
s o m e t i m e . I s u f f e r f r o m s i c k h e a d -&#13;
a c h e a n d b a c k a c h e a l l t h e t i m e , a p p e -&#13;
t i t e p o o r , s i c k a t&#13;
s t o m a c h e v e r y&#13;
m o r n i n g , e v e r y - • *&#13;
t h i n g I e a t h u r t s&#13;
m e , a m v e r y w e a k ,&#13;
t h i n , a n d s a l l o w .&#13;
" 1 h a v e t r i e d a&#13;
d o c t o r , b u t h e d i d&#13;
n o t s e e m t o d o m e&#13;
a n y g o o d . " — M i s s&#13;
M A G G I E P O L L A R D ,&#13;
319 S o . 4 t h S t . ,&#13;
R i c h m o n d , V a .&#13;
A p r i l 23, 1900.&#13;
" S i n c e r e c e i v i n g y o u r a n s w e r t o&#13;
m y l e t t e r I h a v e b e e n t a k i n g y o u r&#13;
V e g e t a b l e C o m p o u n d , a n d i t h a s d o n e&#13;
m e m o r e g o o d t h a n a n y m e d i c i n e I&#13;
h a v e e v e r t a k e n . M y m e n s e s a r e a l l&#13;
r i g h t n o w , a n d a p p e a r o n c e a m o n t h ,&#13;
a n d I f e e l s o m u c h s t r o n g e r . 1 e h a l l&#13;
a l w a y s p r a i s e y o u r m e d i c i n e . " — M i s s&#13;
M A G G I E P O L L A R D , 3 1 9 S o . 4 t h S t . ,&#13;
R i c h m o n d , V a .&#13;
4 4 1 w a s t r o u b l e d w i t h f e m a l e w e a k *&#13;
n e s s , i r r e g u l a r a n d&#13;
p a i n f u l m e n s t r u a -&#13;
a t i o n , a n d l e u -&#13;
e o r r h o e a . T h e&#13;
d o c t o r ' s m e d i c i n e&#13;
d i d m e n o g o o d .&#13;
I h a v e t a k e n o n e&#13;
b o t t l e a n d a h a l f&#13;
o f y o u r V e g e t a b l e&#13;
C o m p o u n d , a n d&#13;
t h a n k s t o y o u r&#13;
m e d i c i n e , m y p a i n s&#13;
a r e g o n e . I a d v i s e&#13;
a l l w o m e n s u f f e r i n g a s I h a v e t o u s e&#13;
y o u r V e g e t a b l e C o m p o u n d . " — E M M A&#13;
J . P R I U B L E , I n d i a n o l a , 111.&#13;
I f t h e r v i s a n y t h i n g a b o u t y o u r c a s e a b o u t w h i c h y o u w o u l d l i k e s p e c i a l&#13;
a d v i c e , w r i t e f r e e l y t o Mrs. P i n k h a m . N o m a n w i l l s e e y o u r l e t t e r . S h e c a n&#13;
s u r e l y h e l p y o u , f o r n o p e r s o n i n A m e r i c a h a s s u c h a w i d e e x p e r i e n c e i n t r e a t -&#13;
i n g f e m a l e l l l s - ^ a a - s h e - b a s - h a d . S h e h a s h e l p e d l V T m r r r e d s - o f - t h o u s a n d s o f&#13;
w o m e n b a c k t o h e a l t n . H e r a d d r e s s i s L y n n , M a s s . , a n d h e r a d v i c e i s f r e e .&#13;
Y o u a r e v e r y f o o l i s h if y o u d o n o t a c c e p t h e r k i n d i n v i t a t i o n .&#13;
S5000 ' K £ X T £ m &amp; ~ W f , h a 7 e d e P 0 9 i t e d with the National City Bank of Lynn, S5000,&#13;
which will be paid to any person who can find that the Above testimonial letter*&#13;
are not genuine, or were published before obtaining the writ**"* ° M C al per- m i s a i o a - LYDIA E. P i x g H A M MEDICINE C&amp;.&#13;
k hit-Sim «t Trtttmtmt of Dr. O.&#13;
r Phelps BFOWJJ'S Great Remedy for&#13;
Fits. Epllepsv aiui Mil Ner»otis Diseases. Address&#13;
O. PHELPS BROWN. 8» Broadway, Newburgh, B.I.&#13;
f t E n U C I / ^ s U J O H N W . 1 H O R R T &amp;&#13;
[ I C i m i U n l W e l l i n g t o n , D . c T&#13;
• f Successfully Prosecutes Claims.&#13;
• Lat« Principal Bx&amp;mlncr U.S. Pension Buresa,&#13;
V 3 vrsln civil war. 15 adjuillcatiiicrlaimn, atty aiaofc&#13;
^'eiel^iThomoson^ Eyt Water&#13;
&gt;&#13;
" 1 • H A&#13;
V&#13;
&lt;*r «•»»*&gt;ymp&gt; •&#13;
^ ' f.X i-f *.*,V&#13;
130 Clocks in the Capital City&#13;
Burned Over.&#13;
-tfllANY PEOPLE MADE HOMELESS&#13;
L a t e s t R e t u r n s P l a c e s t h e N u m b e r o f&#13;
H o m e l e s s a t 1 0 , 0 0 0 — T h e (State b a i&#13;
F a r n l s h e d t h e U n f o r t u n a t e s W i t n T e n t *&#13;
f o r T e m p o r a r y Shelter.&#13;
F l o r i d a T o w n G u t t e d by Fire.&#13;
The UK)it disastrous tire in the&#13;
history of Jacksonville!, Fla., started&#13;
there shortly after noon on the 3d, in&#13;
a small factory from a defective . wire,&#13;
according to the best belief, and burned&#13;
nearly 10 hours. In that time a property&#13;
damage, estimated from $10,000,-&#13;
000 to 815,000,000, was caused. According?&#13;
to the city map, 130 blocks were&#13;
burned, many of them in the heart of&#13;
the business and residence section.&#13;
jf,Thc estimate of houses to the block, is&#13;
10; hence 1,3)0 of them went up in&#13;
smoke. Many of the finest public and&#13;
private buildings were destroyed, including&#13;
hotels, theaters, churches and&#13;
residences. The casualties cannot be&#13;
accurately estimated. That there were&#13;
several seems to be well authenticated.&#13;
Among- thera was that of the fire chief,&#13;
who sustained a bad fall. The mayor&#13;
ordered all of the saloons closed and&#13;
has impressed help to clear the wreckage.&#13;
The, mayor, at a late hour,&#13;
stated that he estimated the loss at&#13;
$15,000,000, and that 10,000 to 15,000&#13;
people were homeless.&#13;
Caring for the Homeless.&#13;
The hunger of 10,000 homeless people&#13;
was satisfied at Jacksonville, Fla.,&#13;
on the f&gt;th upon the arrival of relief&#13;
trains and boats bringing provisions&#13;
from neighboring towns. In the early&#13;
morning a commissary was established&#13;
in the center of the city and thousands&#13;
were fed during the day. The distress&#13;
is growing hourly and every mail&#13;
brings offers of assistance. An order&#13;
has been promulgated under martial&#13;
law requiring all merchants, whose&#13;
stores were spared by the conflagration,&#13;
to open their doors and sell to all&#13;
who asked. I t is estimated that 3,000&#13;
persons have left the city and every&#13;
outgoing train is crowded with refugees.&#13;
Five carloads of tents, the property&#13;
of the state, which are to be used&#13;
by the homeless temporarily, has been&#13;
received. It is now estimated that the&#13;
total property losses will reach $11,-&#13;
000,000.&#13;
S m a l l p o x A m o n g Indians.&#13;
The bureau of Indian affairs has received&#13;
an official report from the Tulalip&#13;
Indian agency, Washington, announcing&#13;
that smallpox exists not only in the&#13;
state of Washington, but also in communities&#13;
adjacent to the Tulalip reservation&#13;
and in other reservations&#13;
within the jurisdiction of the Tulalip&#13;
agency. Vaccination has been&#13;
going on at the Fort Madison, Swinomish,&#13;
Lummi and Tulalip reservations&#13;
and a liberal additional supply of vaccine&#13;
points will be sent to the agent at&#13;
Tulalip.&#13;
.Juimn'rt Cabinet lU'ftlffniMl.&#13;
In -consequence of continued postponement&#13;
by the Japanese minister of&#13;
* finance, Viscount Watanabe, of the&#13;
carrying out of the expected public&#13;
works, the'cabinet crisis reached a climax&#13;
and Marquis lto, the premier, »ifr^&#13;
thecarbtnet meeting proceeded to the&#13;
palace and tendered his resignation to&#13;
the mikado. All the other members&#13;
of the cabinet did likewise with the&#13;
exception of the minister of war, Baron&#13;
Kodamo.&#13;
M o r g a n W a n t s 10 Control Ocean Traffic&#13;
A special cable from Loudon says&#13;
t h a t J. Pierpont Morgan's purchase of&#13;
a controlling interest in the Leyland&#13;
line of steamers is the opening move&#13;
for the extending of the power of t h e&#13;
American railway combine over the&#13;
ocean. The present plans contemplate&#13;
the controlling of ocean traffic like&#13;
that between New York and Chicago.&#13;
Struck b y L i g h t n i n g .&#13;
Howard City was visited by a severe&#13;
electrical storm on the 1st, lightning&#13;
striking the residence of J. X. Clark,&#13;
injuring his wife. It tore her shoes&#13;
off, blackened her face and body. I t&#13;
is doubtful if she survives the shock.&#13;
The house caught lire and burned to&#13;
the ground.&#13;
f Kxposition a Frost.&#13;
The gates of toe l'an-Araerican exposition&#13;
were thrown open on the&#13;
morning of the 1st. No ceremonies&#13;
marked the opening of the gates, it&#13;
having been decided by the management&#13;
to combine the opening day cere*&#13;
monies with those of dedication day,&#13;
May 20. „&#13;
BRIEF NEWS P A R A G R A P H S .&#13;
The population of the district of Victoria,&#13;
accorning to tho last census report&#13;
is 1,195,874. This is an iucrease&#13;
of 5,460 in tlie last 10 year.&#13;
David U Hill, ex-governor, of New&#13;
York, and cx-U. S. senator, declares&#13;
again that he is not a candidate for&#13;
the Democratic nomination for the&#13;
presidency in 1904, and t h a t he will&#13;
make no political trips.&#13;
TWENTY PER CENT LOSS.&#13;
That Is tns Average In Transmission of&#13;
Tower from Niagara to Buffalo.&#13;
Naturally all who Inspect the great&#13;
central power station of the Niagara&#13;
Falls Power company at Niagara Falls&#13;
become greatly interested in the wonderful&#13;
feat of transmitting thousands&#13;
of horsepower over solid copper and&#13;
aluminum conductors from the falls to&#13;
Buffalo. It Is hard to understand how&#13;
such a vast amount of force as Buffalo&#13;
receives from the power station is&#13;
transmitted over or through a solid&#13;
body such as these conductors, and&#13;
people wonder what percentage of the&#13;
power designed to be* transmitted&#13;
reaches Buffalo. In other words, they&#13;
wonder what the percentage of loss&#13;
is in the transmission.&#13;
For the benefit of those who seek&#13;
this information, it may be stated that&#13;
the loss of current in the transmission&#13;
Is less than twenty per cent, which is&#13;
equivalent to saying that of the Niagara&#13;
energy started out on the Niagara&#13;
end of the transmission lines,&#13;
over eighty per cent of it reaches Buffalo&#13;
and is available there for light,&#13;
heat and power purposes.&#13;
A UNITED STATES MARSHAL&#13;
Thanks Parana Far Hit Rapid Rssotary&#13;
Fram Catarrh.&#13;
The dog in the manger isn't always&#13;
the one with the mange.&#13;
Do Your Feet Ache or Burn?&#13;
Shake into your shoes, Allen's Foot-&#13;
Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes&#13;
tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures&#13;
Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot and&#13;
Sweating Feet. At all Druggists and&#13;
Shoe Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE.&#13;
Address Alien S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.&#13;
Many people seemingly try to show&#13;
what chumps they are.&#13;
Lane's Family Medicine&#13;
Moves the bowels each day. In order&#13;
to be healthy this is necessary. Acts&#13;
gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures&#13;
sick headache. Prices 25 and 50c.&#13;
When a man gets angry his reason&#13;
takes a short vacation.&#13;
"Good Health comes to those who&#13;
take the great herb blood purifier, Garfield&#13;
Tea; it cleanses t h e system and&#13;
cures digestive disorders. All the druggists&#13;
sell it.&#13;
In Portugal married women retain&#13;
their maiden names.&#13;
Hamlin's Blood and Liver Pills cure&#13;
constipation and all the ills due to it;&#13;
35c at your druggists.&#13;
A thief's talk is always about the&#13;
dishonesty of others.&#13;
EX-UN1TED STATES MARSHAL MATTHEWS, OF MISSISSIPPI.&#13;
Hon. S. 5. Matthews, ex-United States Marshal of Mississippi, In a recent&#13;
letter to The Peruna Medicine Company of Columbus, Ohio, written from&#13;
Hazelaurst, Miss., says:&#13;
&lt;&lt;/ am happy to say that I am cured of catarrh and need no more&#13;
attention from you. It is a great satisfaction that I am able to write&#13;
you that Peruna has in my case done i&amp;l that you claim, and that&#13;
I will need no more medicine."&#13;
The great multitude take this&#13;
edy without any other advice than t h e&#13;
directions to be found upon the bottleand&#13;
in the pamphlets. There a r e t h e e *&#13;
who prefer, however, to correspond,&#13;
with Dr. Hartman during their sickness.&#13;
To all such he will make prompt.&#13;
and careful answer without charge.&#13;
Hon. J. F. Crooker of Buffalo, N. Y ^&#13;
who was for years Superintendent ©T&#13;
Schools at Buffalo, in a letter dated October&#13;
16« writes:&#13;
" / have been a sufferer from c » -&#13;
tarrh six or » m i m u i i n i t n u i H n i y&#13;
seven years, \&#13;
and after&#13;
trying many&#13;
remedies was&#13;
induced* by a&#13;
friend to take&#13;
Peruna, The&#13;
results have&#13;
been highly&#13;
satisfactory. I&#13;
take pleasure $ Hon. J. F. crooiwr,&#13;
, r . 5 Supt. Buffalo, N. Y. r&#13;
in recommend' 3 f»ubiic sc&amp;oois. |&#13;
ing Peruna tO grmTTMMminiiMTrmao&#13;
any one suffering with catarrh*&#13;
as my case is complete,"&#13;
Hon. B. B. Doviner, Oongresamax*&#13;
from West Virginia, in a letter from&#13;
Washington, D. C„ to The Peruna Medicine&#13;
Co., says the following of their&#13;
catarrh remedy, Peruna:&#13;
"I Join with my colleagues in t h e&#13;
House of Representatives in recommending&#13;
your excellent remedy, P e -&#13;
runa, as a good tonic and also an effective&#13;
cure for catarrh."&#13;
Mrs. Mary C. Fentress WTitea Iron*&#13;
Paradise, Tex., the following: " I&#13;
think I can say that your good adviceand&#13;
medicine has cured me of chronic&#13;
catarrh. I have had no pains in my&#13;
head since I have taken Peruna. 1&#13;
have been in bad health ever sinpfr&#13;
'59, and have taken a good many medicines&#13;
which were only of temporary&#13;
relief. Peruna is the catarrh cure. The*&#13;
Peruna stopped my catarrh of the head&#13;
so that it did not become chronic, and&#13;
I am very thankful for Dr. Hartman's&#13;
advice and medicine."&#13;
Peruna is a specific for all catarrhal&#13;
diseases. It acts quickly and beneficially&#13;
upon the inflamed mucousmembrane,&#13;
thus removing the cause of&#13;
catarrh.&#13;
Catarrh is catarrh wherever located.&#13;
Catarrh is essentially t h e same everywhere.&#13;
The remedy that will cure catarrh&#13;
in one situation will cure it 1 B&#13;
all situations.&#13;
If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory&#13;
results from the use of Peruna,&#13;
write at once to Dr. HaTtman,&#13;
giving a full statement of your case&#13;
and he will be pleased to give you His&#13;
valuable advice gratis.&#13;
Address Dr.-Hartman, President of&#13;
The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, 0..&#13;
A Poor Woman&#13;
has just as much right to good health as a rich&#13;
woman. Dn Greene offers free of charge to&#13;
every woman, the advice that leads to health&#13;
and strength. Write to him at 35 W. 14th St.,&#13;
New York City, and tell him all about your&#13;
weakness, the special advice of the discoverer&#13;
of Dr. Greene's Nervura cannot be bought&#13;
for money, but it will be given to you free if&#13;
you will write.&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS&#13;
$3 &amp; $3.50 SHOES K The real worth of mv 83.00 and #3.M&gt; shoes compared with&#13;
other makes 1» $4.wi to fcVou. My $4.00 Gilt Edpe Irine cannot be&#13;
equalled at any price. Best hi the world for men.&#13;
1 n u k e sunt tell mora m c a ' i One shoe*. G o o d y e a r&#13;
W e l t ( H a n d ~ S e w e d r V o e e M V t h a a o a y o t h e r m a n u f u c .&#13;
turer la t h e w o r l d . I wilt p a y »1,©©© t o a n y o n e w h o c a n&#13;
prove t o u t may stuieaneat Is n o t true. _&#13;
(Signed) W . 1«. Donfflna.&#13;
T a k e n o «nb«tlfnt** 1 Insist on having W. L. Douglas shoes&#13;
•with name and price BtamtKid on liottom. Your dealer should&#13;
keep them ; I give one dealer exclusive sale In each town. If&#13;
he does not keep them and will not get them for yon, order&#13;
direct from factory, enclosing price and 25c. extra for carrlaue.&#13;
Over 1,000,000 satisfied wearers. New Spring Catalu? free.&#13;
P u t Color Er*i«ta a»*d «x«iaaiT«iy. W. L DOUGLAS. Brockton, Mass.&#13;
Sozodont'" *• Teeth •* Mouth 25'&#13;
PATENTS • MTT.ft B . STEVRVN A&#13;
W I T H O U T F E E&#13;
n n lea* successful&#13;
Send deicrTplloor&#13;
and »ret freeopmion.&#13;
M I L O B . S T E V E N S A CO.. EattA. Its*.&#13;
Div. 2, «17-14th Street, W A S H I N G T O N , D . C.&#13;
Branch offices: Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit.&#13;
W . N . U . - - DETROIT— NO. 19 — 1901&#13;
Vhen Answering Advertisements Kitdlj&#13;
Mention This Taper.&#13;
i___Liver Do n't Act?&#13;
You know very well how you feet when your liver don't act. Bile collects in the blood, bowels become&#13;
constipated and your whole system is poisoned. A lazy liver fs an invitation for a thousand pains and aches to&#13;
come and dwell with you. Your life becomes one long measure of irritability and despondency and bad feeling.&#13;
CASCARETS act directly, and in a peculiarly happy manner on the liver and bowels, cleansing, purifying,&#13;
revitalizing every portion of the liver, driving all the bile from the blood, as is soon shown by increased appetite&#13;
for food, power to digest it, and strength to throw off the waste. B e w a r e o f I m i t a t i o n s i&#13;
THIS IS joc:&#13;
25c. 50c&#13;
NEVER SOLDO/BULK.&#13;
E THE TABLET&#13;
e U A K A N T C B B T O C T I I all b o w e l troable*. aaaeadfeltts. b l l l s a s a n e .&#13;
bad a r e a t a , bad blood, w. .l.a-d_ a, .a- . • - . kted bowels,, fbal smooth,&#13;
h e a d a c h e , l a d l a e s t i e a , almalea, a a l a s a f t e r e a t t a * . l i v e r t r e s t l e , s a l l o w e e a v&#13;
a l e x l o a a a « d&amp;slaees; ^ i r h e a y e a r b o w e l s d o a ' t • * • • r e a a l a r l y » o n a r e&#13;
Settla*. ateh. C e a s t l a a t l e a k i l l s atere a e o e l e . t h a a all ««her d i e s o j m t e M t h e r .&#13;
I t Is a s t a r t e r for t h e e h r o a l e allateats » » « J o e a y e a r r e j r &gt; a t &gt; r j a f * * * * « * g «&#13;
a f t e r w a r d * . K o M a t t e r w h a t &lt;alia y o « , a t a r t t a h l a v CAmCAMtrnut^mjJbr&#13;
y e a w u T a a V e r « e t arall a a l ho w e l ^ a l l t h e . t h a « . » » « l » • • */»* * • * * &gt; • • • } •&#13;
rtffht. TTake o a r advteet atart w i t h —-=«— . _ . _ _ __. ..__.&#13;
i t o ear* or aaoaey&#13;
t o d a y , a a d a r a a&#13;
Karaatood to earo or aaoaey reloaded.&#13;
j a » a f M r » h e a o a t t r l a l , a *&#13;
are&#13;
a a a e e d&#13;
a d * e - y " *&#13;
a f t e r aalae; o a o M e b o x , rotaa&#13;
aa b y Jiaajl* o r t h e drajnrtat free&#13;
baelt f a r b o t h b o x e s . T a h e o a r&#13;
H e a l t h w i l l&#13;
O o b a y t o d a y , t w o — e 1&#13;
•lataie dlreettoas* a a d l f y e a&#13;
«V&#13;
aaiiuiuiuiiiiti»itmttmttiiiitiiiiiiiti»mm»»iiiii immmmimiiuuimimmuiiim&#13;
DRUGGISTS&#13;
re**» _&#13;
m&#13;
£&#13;
•&gt;-?&#13;
*. -^¾ .vW . A . i&#13;
i,&gt;*&#13;
^^rw^ m^isrw^^^^^f'&#13;
, ) • • ' *&#13;
- . v .•&gt;••'•••&gt;.&#13;
; ' • , - ' . ' ; ct • . , •• . '• • . . u V ' ' ' • i • ii... :»• ! • • ' , • • . ' . . • - » . • . • ! ! v " .&#13;
• . ! . • • • . • • ' j - V ' " • ' • • ' i ; , • • •'•&gt;•.•.• f • * ' ; . • - " J •"•'&lt;-( &lt;&#13;
^ i N S f&#13;
'•;«V.^.i*&#13;
&gt; ' #&#13;
\ «, ?* , &gt; .&#13;
m-&#13;
1 \ a&#13;
R/:?SST&#13;
11¾ •'&#13;
•jr.&#13;
1&#13;
h •&#13;
'tfi&#13;
I&#13;
•'. - /&#13;
/&#13;
i|:;&#13;
&amp;S.&#13;
•w*&#13;
M T&#13;
— ^ r ffowiu&#13;
uJ^JUUllflfem^&#13;
THURSDAY, MAY. 9, 1901.&#13;
A short time ago a lady in&#13;
Brighton went to primp some&#13;
water from the cistern and found&#13;
that the pump would not work.&#13;
Investigation proved that someone&#13;
had stokn the led pipe.&#13;
The Michigan supreme court *)•**-••**-••&#13;
has rendered that no juror has a ( * \ i / ^ /T^&#13;
right to collect pay for two days' j } *¥ • ' V "&#13;
service when jury of which he i s j }&#13;
a member remains out after twelve ^&#13;
o'clock at night. This has been&#13;
the custom heretofore, but under&#13;
this decision sitting on jury will&#13;
not l.e popular.&#13;
J -&#13;
Edited by the W. C. T I'.of J'li&gt;cku«y. f&#13;
T O C a r e u Cold' i n O n e D a y&#13;
T a k e L a x a t i v e Brotrio Q u i n i n e l a b&#13;
lets. All d r u g g u t e *&gt;*&lt;»&lt;* t b e mo**l&#13;
it it fails t o c o r e . E . W. Grove's sign&#13;
a t u r e is on each box. 2 5 c .&#13;
An exchange expresses a lot of&#13;
horse sense, when it says: "Why&#13;
is a woman like a newspaper?'&#13;
"Because every man should have&#13;
one of his own and not -be running&#13;
after his neighbor's."&#13;
Old Soldiers Experience.&#13;
M. M. A u s t i n , a civil w a r v e t e r a n ,&#13;
of Winchester, Ind., w r i t e : " M y " i t *&#13;
^ a s sick a l o n g t i m e i n spite of good&#13;
doctors t r e a t m e n t , h a t was wholly&#13;
c u r e d by D r . King's N e w Lite Pills,&#13;
which worked wonders for her health&#13;
They a l w a y s do. T r y t h e m . Only&#13;
25c a t F . A. Sigler's dru^r store.&#13;
All Eyes on T e x a s .&#13;
( i i v a t is Texas. H e r vast cotton&#13;
crops a n d marvellous oil d i s c o v e r t .&#13;
amaze, t h e w o r l d . N o w follows t h e&#13;
s t a r t l i n g s t a t e m e n t of t h e wondrfrfrill&#13;
VV.YI k ut Cieco, Tex. of D r . K i n g ' s N e w&#13;
Discovery toy c o n s u m p t i o n . " M y&#13;
wife contracted a severe lun^r t r o u b l e&#13;
writes editor J . J . Eager, which &lt;*aus&#13;
«d a most obstinate exugb and finally&#13;
resulted in proeuse h e m o r r h a g e s , b u t&#13;
she tins been completely cured by D r .&#13;
K i n g ' s N e w Discovery." I t ' s postivelely&#13;
g u a r a n t e d tor Coughs, Colds a n d&#13;
all t h r o a t and l u n g troubles. 50c and&#13;
$1.00. T r i a l bottles free a t F . A. Sigler\&#13;
s di a g 'store.&#13;
Pan-American Exposition.&#13;
T h e G r a n d T r u n k B y . S y s t e m&#13;
h a s a n n o u n c e d f a r e s t o t h e P a n -&#13;
A m e r i c a n E x p o s i t i o n f o r t h e&#13;
m o n t h o f M a y . I t a l l o w s , s t o p&#13;
o v e r of t e n d a y s a t N i a g a r a F a l l s&#13;
w i t h o u t c o s t , a n d a t B u f f a l o o n&#13;
p a y m e n t o f o n e d o l l a r o n t i c k e t s&#13;
t o e a s t e r n d e s t i n a t i o n s t o e n a b l e&#13;
p a t r o n s t o v i s i t t h e E x p o s i t i o n .&#13;
O n M a y 1 5 t h a n d 2 9 t h i t w i l l&#13;
r u n a s p e c i a l c h e a p c o a c h e x c u r -&#13;
s i o n t o B u f f a l C f r o i n a l l p o i n t s i n&#13;
M i c h i g a n . F o r r a t e s , t r a i n s e r -&#13;
v i c e , a n d g e n e r a l i n f o r m a t i o n i n -&#13;
q u i r e o f a n y a g e n t 6 r w r i t e t o&#13;
B e n . F l e t c h e r , T r a v . P a s s A ^ e n t ,&#13;
D e t r o i t M i c h . t 1 9&#13;
S h u d d e r s a t his past.&#13;
" I recali n o w with h o r r o r . " sa\ s&#13;
frail ( j a n i e r Ru-meW-M^«n, of-l&amp;v*uina,&#13;
0 . , " m y three years years ot suffer&#13;
i n g from K i d n e y trouble. .1 was&#13;
h a r d l y e v e r free from dull aches or&#13;
a c u t e paiiis.in my back. T o stoop o r&#13;
lift mail sacks made me g r o a n . I felt&#13;
t i r e d worn o u t about ready to give n p&#13;
w h e n I be'gan to u?e Electric Bittors,&#13;
b u t six bottles completely cured me&#13;
a n d made me feer like a n ew m a n . "&#13;
T h e y ' r e u n r i v a l e d t o regn.'ate ' Stomach.&#13;
Liver, Kidneys, a n d I - W e U&#13;
Perf.jcr. satistaction u a a r ^ n t e e d »&gt;y VA.&#13;
Sitfler. Only ,r»0 cents.&#13;
W i t h " D e t r o i t i n N i n e t e e n&#13;
H u n d r e d " j u s t i s s u e d , a n d t h e f e w&#13;
a d d i t i o n a l c l i p p i n g s o f a p e r s o n a l&#13;
n a t u r e o r o f p e r s o n a l i n t e r e s t t h a t&#13;
f r o m t i m e t o t i m e a p p e a r i n t h e&#13;
d a i l y p a p e r s , i t i s n o l o n g e r n e e -&#13;
c e s s a r y t o p r e s e r v e b u l k y files of&#13;
n e w s p a p e r s i n o r d e r t o k e e p t r a c k&#13;
of l a s t y e a r s i m p o r t a n t e v e n t s . I t&#13;
i s a b o o k o f 152 p a g e s , i n c l u d i n g&#13;
a c a r e f u l l y p r e p a r e d i n d e x w h i c h&#13;
e n a b l e s a n y o n e t o a t o n c e t u r n t o&#13;
t h e i t e m d e s i r e d , a n d o n e o f t h e&#13;
w o r k i s t h a t i t : e c o r d s b o t h t h e&#13;
b e g i n n i n g a n d e n d i n g of w h a t -&#13;
e v e r e v e n t i s m e n t i o n e d i n i t s&#13;
p a g p s . I t i s a c h r o n o l o g i c a l r e -&#13;
c o r d o f b o t h l o c a l a n d s t a t e h a p -&#13;
p e n i n g s d u r i n g t h e c l o s i n g y e a r&#13;
of t h e c e n t u r y a n d t h e r e a d e r i s&#13;
a b l e t o g e t a g o o d p e r s p e c t i v e of&#13;
t h e v a l u e o f t h e n e w s o f t h e y e a r .&#13;
" D e t r o i t i n N i n e t e e n H u n d r e d "&#13;
i s t h e w o r k o f S . B. V c U r a c k e n ,&#13;
a n o l d j o u r n a l i s t , w h o w a s a i d e d&#13;
b y c o n t r i b u t i o n s f r o m t h e start' of&#13;
T h e N e w s a n d T r i b u n e . T h e&#13;
b o o k s e l l s f o r a * 1 , a n d c a n b e o b -&#13;
t a i n e d of T h e E v e n i n g N e w s A s -&#13;
s o c i a t i o n , D e t r o i t , M i c h .&#13;
s t o p t h e Coiiffh ^ " d w o r k * "f* ' l * 6&#13;
L a x a t i v e BromO'Quiuino Tablet-, c u r e&#13;
a cold in one day. N o ' o r e , no p a y .&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
T u e Liquor Men Anarchist*. ;&#13;
I t i s t h o r o u g h l y k u o w n t o i n -&#13;
t e l l i g e n t p e o p l e t h a t l i q u o r m e n&#13;
d e s p i s e l a w if i t i n t e r f e r e s w i t h&#13;
t h e m . T h e l i q u o r p a p e r o f C l e v e -&#13;
l a n d , t h e R o y a l A r c h , i n s p e a k i n g '&#13;
of t h e S u n d a y l a w u s e s t h e f o l -&#13;
l o w i n g l a n g u a g e :&#13;
" Y e s , i t w a s a l a w , a n d a d a m n -&#13;
e d p o o r o n e a t t h a t , a n d w e a g r e e&#13;
w i t h t h e n a r r o w - m i n d e d p e o p l e o f&#13;
t h d S t a t e ' o f O h i o c h a t t h e S u n d a y&#13;
o r d i n a n c e i s a l a w , b u t , l i k e t h e&#13;
s l a v e l a w , i t s h o u l d n e v e r e x i s t ; i t&#13;
s h o u l d n e v e r h a v e b e e u m a d e , f o r&#13;
t h i s g l o r i o u s c o u n t r y i s s u p p o s e d&#13;
t o b e o n e o f f r e e d o m , a u d s o l o n g&#13;
a s w e d o w h a t i s r i g h t t o o u r f e l -&#13;
l o w - m e n , a n d k e e p u p t h e l a w s o f&#13;
G o d , t h e n w e a r e s u r e l y k e e p i n g&#13;
u p t h e l a w s o f m a n . I n o u r m e e t -&#13;
i n g s t h e s a l o o n m a n m e r e l y d e -&#13;
m a n d s r i g h t s t o d e f y a n y m a n w h o&#13;
s h a l l i m p o s e u p o n h i m a l a w t h a t&#13;
i s a g a i n s t h i m , r i g h t i u g a g a i n s t&#13;
h i s b r e a d a n d b u t t e r , a n d s u c h '&#13;
l a w s s h o u l d b e d e f i e d , t h e y s h o u l d&#13;
b e t r a m p l e d i n t h e d u s t , a n d if&#13;
t h e y c a n n o t b e ' r e v i s e d , t h e n w e&#13;
s a y i t i s t i m e t o b e c o m e a n a r -&#13;
c h i s t s . "&#13;
T h e r e y o u h a v e i t — a n a r c h i s t s&#13;
b y t h e i r o w n c o n f e s s i o n .&#13;
Additloal Local.&#13;
In c o m p l i a n t w i t b t h e kind wishes&#13;
of Mie. lata R u t h E . G r i m e s of P i u c k&#13;
ney, her g r a n d 4aui^hiJirL u n 4&#13;
sake, lititn E . May ot this village, became&#13;
thev pofiheswoe- of h e r fine solid&#13;
fjrold watch a n d c b a i n , ^ - S t 0 3 k b r i d g e&#13;
Brief.&#13;
T h e pust otlice d e p a r t m e n t h a s fss'u&#13;
tni an order pi\ hibifing t h e practice&#13;
uf funny people adrlre^ini,' mail t o&#13;
such persons 8« " t h e bust blacksmith"1&#13;
" t h e handsomest m a n " " a n y d r u g g i s t "&#13;
and the like, and l e a v i n g it to the dis&gt;-&#13;
crwatiou of the p o s t m a s t e r , as in vio&#13;
lation of t h e o t h e r d e p a r t m e n t , a n d&#13;
postmasters are cautioned a g a i n s t receiving&#13;
such m a t t e r for mailinur a n d&#13;
if i t passes t h r o u g h t h e mails t o t h e&#13;
office of destination' t o r e g a r d it as unde&#13;
live ruble.&#13;
We clip t h e f o i l o w n g from t h e&#13;
S t e r l i n g , Neb., K e e o r d : — H a v i n g r e -&#13;
cently r e t u r n e d from M i c h i g a n with&#13;
her p a r e n t s with ' t h e i n t e n t i o n ol&#13;
m a k i n g there home here, t h e friends&#13;
ot Miss Uoldie T u r n e r t h o u g h t t h a t&#13;
it would be proper t o give her a welcome&#13;
so they a c c o r d i n g l y assembled&#13;
t o g e t h e r last F r i d a y e v e n i n g and called&#13;
a t h e r home a n d v . r y agreeably&#13;
surprised h e r . * T h e , e v e n i n g ' was&#13;
pleasantly spent in waines a n d music&#13;
for a pastime, and a t a very a p p r o p r i -&#13;
ate t i m e ice-cream a n d cake and o t h e r&#13;
relres-hments were served after which&#13;
the guests d e p a r t e d lor their h o m e s .&#13;
A m e a s u r e c a l l e d t h e p r e c i n c t&#13;
o p t i o n b i l l i s n o w p e n d i n g b e f o r e&#13;
t h e C o l o r a d o l e g i s l a t u r e , w h i c h&#13;
p r o v i d e s t h a t t h e p e o p l e o f e a c h&#13;
e l e c t i o n p r e c i n c t s h a l l h a v e t h e&#13;
r i g h t t o d e t e r m i n e b y b a l l o t t h e&#13;
q u e s t i o n w h e t h e r s a l o o n s s h a l l b e&#13;
l i c e n s e d i n t h a t n e i g h b o r h o o d .&#13;
W h e n e v e r fifty p e o p l e i n a , p r e -&#13;
c i n c t w a n t t o h a v e i r d e t e r m i n e d&#13;
w L e t l t e r s a l o o o n s m a y o r m a y n o t&#13;
b e I f c e n s e d - i n t h a t p r e c i n c t , t h e y&#13;
c a n p r e s e n t t h e i r p e t i t i o n t h e r e f o r&#13;
t o t h e c i t y c l e r k a n d t h e q u e s t i o n&#13;
m u s t b e s u b m i t t e d t o t h e v o t e of&#13;
t h e p e o p l e i n t h a t p r e c i n c t .&#13;
Bound Over.&#13;
At the e x a m i n a t i o n of G. B . flinch&#13;
ey on F r i d a y last, for shooting i i .&#13;
Clinton sonin time a g o . M r . H i n d i e y&#13;
was- bound over *o circuit c o u r t , bonds&#13;
being fixed a t $1,000, with W. A.&#13;
S p r o u t a n d G. W\ Teeple a s surties&#13;
T h i s ease will a t t r a c t considerable a t -&#13;
tention from"this vicinity.&#13;
Card of T h a n k s .&#13;
We \vi&gt;li to extend o u r h e a r t felt&#13;
fIwinks to I'lir friends ;md neighbors&#13;
and t'sneciJIv the choir for their Kind&#13;
a&gt;si-tance. d u r i n g t h e &gt;iel;ness a n d&#13;
dentil of our wife a n d m o t h e r .&#13;
(J. Svvarthout and F a m i l v .&#13;
vrkmm Mrs. Gllh«*t l M t H»» §*•©-&#13;
t s o l e a . • x&#13;
T h e only time I resented newspaper&#13;
c h a t t e r w a s when I h a d my speetaoles&#13;
stolen. They were snatched from m y&#13;
b e l t t h e c a s e ^ wore t h e r e being torn&#13;
a w a y . I spoke of it to Mr. Doroey, a n d&#13;
t h e story went round t h e theater. Someb&#13;
o w t h e reporters got hold of i t a n d&#13;
they m a d e a great t o d o about i t I t&#13;
was really too bad of them. I felt i t&#13;
j b e more because I h a d managed t o&#13;
keep a fatten more serious theft a n a b -&#13;
solute secret. T h a t w a s a t t h e t i m e .&#13;
when so much fun w a s being m a d e of&#13;
the "robbery of j e w e l s " form of theatrical&#13;
advertisement. I h a d a very&#13;
valuable pair of earrings taken from&#13;
my pocket most cleverly, a n d I w a s o n&#13;
my w a y t o play for a charity t o o !&#13;
However, I kept m y loss quite t o myself.&#13;
And then t o be brought before,a&#13;
sympathetic public a s t h e loser of a&#13;
pair of spectacles!—From " T h e S t a g e&#13;
Reminiscences of M r s . Gilbert" i n&#13;
Scribner's.&#13;
An I n t e r e i t l n f f L i n k .&#13;
One curious incident in t h e siege of&#13;
Badajos m a y b e related. T h e d a y&#13;
after t h e assault t w o Spanish ladles,&#13;
t h e younger a beautiful girl of 14, appealed&#13;
for help t o t w o officers of t h e&#13;
rlties, w h o were passing through o n e&#13;
of the streets of t h e town. Their dresses *&#13;
were torn, their ears, from which rings&#13;
bad been roughly snatched, were bleeding,&#13;
a n d t o escape outrage o r death&#13;
they cast tbemselvea on t h e protection&#13;
of t h e first British officers they m e t&#13;
One of t h e officers was Captain H a r r y&#13;
Smith of t h e rifles. Two years later&#13;
he married t h e girl h e had saved in a&#13;
scene s o wild. Captain H a r r y Smith&#13;
In, after years served a t t h e Cape a s&#13;
Sir H a r r y , a n d this Spanish girl, a s&#13;
L a d y Smith, gave her n a m e t o t h e historic&#13;
t o w n which Sir George W h i t e defended&#13;
with such stubborn valor.—&#13;
"Wellington's Men."&#13;
B e W t i r e o f H C*»ld.&#13;
A cough is not a disease, b u t a symptou.&#13;
C o n s u m p t i o n a n d bronchitis,&#13;
which are the most d a n g e r o u s i«nd&#13;
fatal diseases, have for their first indication&#13;
a persistant couj/l', and if properly&#13;
treated JIS so&lt;in as this o u y h&#13;
appear:? are eHSi'y cured. C h a m b e r -&#13;
lain's Couglv Hemer.iv has proven wonderfully&#13;
successfnI, a n d trained i t s&#13;
wide reputation f*nd extensive -ale b y&#13;
its success i:: ee.riit:/ t h e &lt;i)&gt;ea.»es&#13;
which cause crn^hinir. Jf it is n o t&#13;
her.elioial i t will nut co.-f. y o u a c m t .&#13;
For sale by F. A. Su/ier, Pir.cknev.&#13;
W a s t e . Ilfnt a n d E x e r c i s e .&#13;
William M. tfvarts w a s a marvel of&#13;
intellectual-"Tvi):'.!:t.v t o an advanced&#13;
age, a n d he usod t o explain it by sayins&#13;
t h a t he slept late in t h e morning&#13;
and never took ai.\v exorcise. There&#13;
is no a d v a n t a g e In getting u p early in&#13;
t h e nmruinr;- if you need t h e sleep.&#13;
Manv a man is I ami in.tr t h e caudle a t&#13;
both ends L.v geLt'in.?' up a t an early j a n c e l e s s o n i n t h e S u n d a y s c h o o l ,&#13;
hour simply because his housekeeping j&#13;
is adjusted t o t h a t programme. As t o&#13;
physical e.\orcise. Mr. Kvarts had discovered&#13;
for himself w h a t our physiologists&#13;
a r e now beginning t o teach —&#13;
D r . W a t t s Honored.&#13;
Dr. W. B. W a t t s , of J r c k s o n , Mich.&#13;
WAS this .day very p l e a s n t l j introduced&#13;
to. Peoria. T h o d o ' d o r . n t h e n e w&#13;
medi'.;-il e x a m i n e r of the Brotherhood&#13;
nf Locomotive F i r e m e n , a n d li3 comes:&#13;
to this city Lo reside, A t high 12 t o&#13;
dtiy he was taken in . hand by Ohie(f&#13;
S a r g e n t and G r a n d S e c r e t a r y Arnold,&#13;
and w.i.s greeted by a p a r t y of well&#13;
of t h e l a r g e S u n d a y s c h o o l p u b - known residents of t u e city as gue.stni&#13;
l i s h i m ? h o u s e . U6 E l g i n , I 1 ! . , h a s ! honor a t a c o m p l i m e n t a r y l u n c h e o n&#13;
a l s o d e c i d e d t o i s s u e n s p e c i a l t e r n - ; served in elegant siyle a t Hotel F e y .&#13;
p e r a n c v n u m b e r e a c h q u a i t e r . ; h«r. W a t N is a m e m b e r oM.lm order&#13;
T h e i i r * t n u m b e r a p p e a r e d J n M» w l . k h F r a n * S a r g e n t ,&#13;
c o n n e c t i o n w i t h t h e l a s t t e m p e r -&#13;
— T h e e-hHeial S u n d a y s c h o o l p a -&#13;
p e r s o f t h e M . E . c h u r c h w i l l&#13;
h e r e a f t e r p r o v i d e s p e c i a l t e m p e r -&#13;
a n c e l e s s o n , a s w e l l a s e x e r c i s e ad&#13;
a p t e d t o ' S u n d a y s c h o o l u s e a&#13;
f o r t n i g h t i n a d v a n c e o f t h e s e t e m -&#13;
p e r a n c e d a y s . D . C C o o k , o w n e r&#13;
S u b s c r i b e l o r l &gt; i s p a t c h .&#13;
WANTFIi--SalM.*uian and Collector&#13;
to re|ire&gt;'jnfr. U-;M| c^iiOiii-iie i oiisiuess&#13;
of 50 years s u n d i j i g Small -Honesty&#13;
bond required, a lih&lt;'i\il conti'Mct for&#13;
a gimd riian.&#13;
D.K v V | i i ! M i l e .&#13;
;]():) South M a i n S"t.&#13;
• • . A n n A r or, Mich.&#13;
WANTED—Cu}&gt;:i!:le, reliable p trstm in ever)'&#13;
county t&lt;&gt; f«pre» -ut l;u'^o cjmpiitiy of solid rtnaocial&#13;
fejxifntion. iW&gt; s.ilnry |^jr /o:ir, p iy&lt;»l&gt;l"&#13;
weokly: cf:J pt*r day al&gt;s-&gt;1 iH-*ly t&gt; ir.&gt; and all oxpensca:&#13;
slrjiiLrht, hurm-li I \ dolin it^ -«Hl:iry, rc&gt;&#13;
coiniiiiSMoii; salary p&gt;ii() i.'.u.,lj Saturday and oxliense&#13;
iui»my atlvrt.'jtHVl ca.-h week. S'l'ANT) A Hi)&#13;
JiOL'SK,::-,! Dearborn &gt;t Cliioj^ii. t-29&#13;
F r a n ! :&#13;
EXCURSIONS&#13;
VIA THE PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
* * - i f l ^ | namely, t h a t if a man consumes tissue At a s m a n country cnurcn in rjug-&#13;
Grand R a p i d s , Sunday May 5 . , n h a r \ , i n t e l h ^ t u a l work t h e w a y t o 'and a newly married couple w e r e j u s t&#13;
T r a i n s will leave Brighton „t. 8:57 | repair t h e l o . s is b y - t i n , and^ not &gt;»£ ^ ^ o w « S T ! o 2&#13;
A. M. R e t u r n i n g , leave G r a n d Rap- . b y ^ u ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ . J } ^&#13;
ids a t 6:30 P . M Kate $1.50.. M S&#13;
Couldn't FOIIOTV Him.&#13;
At a small country church in E n g -&#13;
I t Saved his Leg.&#13;
P . A. Dant'ortb, of L a G r a n g e , G a „&#13;
suffered for six m o n t h s with a I r i g h t - f r o o m window wide open in summer&#13;
exercise. T o t h e majority of brain&#13;
w o r k e r s osy.srenizatiou of t b e blood is&#13;
far more important than physical exercise,&#13;
and there are two very good ways&#13;
to secure t h a t : Sleep with your bedl&#13;
u l ' r u n n i n g sore on his l e g : ' b u t wri&#13;
es t h a t B u c k l e n ' s A r n i c a Salve vtiolly&#13;
r « d i t i n five davs. F o r Ulcers,&#13;
W o u n d s , Piles, it's the best, salve in&#13;
t b e world. C u r e g u a r a n t e e d . Only&#13;
25c. Sold by F . A . Sigler, Pi nek ney.&#13;
Look out for the man with tin&#13;
headache powders to sell. He&#13;
calls at the house and asks the'&#13;
lady of the house to sample a newheadache&#13;
cure that he is introducing,&#13;
warranted to dispose of the&#13;
most obstinate.pain in one sniff.&#13;
P! ,- If she is not posted she sniffs and&#13;
1 ¾ ^ goes to dreamland, waking to find&#13;
(bat all the readily portable articles&#13;
in reach have disappeared&#13;
with the affable agent.&#13;
T r v the n'«w r e m e d y 'for eo*-tiven *&lt;&gt;&lt;«,&#13;
: ' C h a m b e r l a i n ' s ftiomneh a n d L i v e r&#13;
T a b l e t s , ^ g v e r y box g u a r a n t e e d .&#13;
P r i c e 3 5 , e e n t s N . F o r sale b y F . A .&#13;
Sitfler, PinoknejA&#13;
a n d winter, and, if you can afford it,&#13;
keep a horse and drive In t h e open air.&#13;
—Boston W a t c h m a n .&#13;
" I t is with a pood d e a \ of pleasure&#13;
ftnd satisfactition t h a t I rfcmumenr]&#13;
U h u m h e n a i n ' s Colii', Choler.i a n d&#13;
Diarrhoea K e m e d y . " says f&gt;ruggi.-t A.&#13;
VV..Sawtelln, ol' Hartford, Conn 4 , . \&#13;
lady custonr.er, s e e i n g t h e remedy ex&#13;
po-ied for sale on my !,how ca»e, said&#13;
to me:*I really ^lelieve t h a t medicine&#13;
vicar a s to how they were t o conduct&#13;
themselves a n d so a l w a y s live happily.&#13;
"You must never both g e t cross a t&#13;
once; i t is t h e husband's duty t o protect&#13;
Ids wife whenever a n occasion&#13;
arises, and. a wife must love, honor&#13;
and obey h e r husband a n d follow him&#13;
wherever lie KOOS."&#13;
"But, sit"— pleaded t h e y o u n g bride.&#13;
"I h a v e n ' t y e t finished," r e m a r k ed&#13;
the clergyman, annoyed a t t h e interruption.&#13;
"She m e s t " -&#13;
"But, please, s i r (in desperation),&#13;
^an't you alter t h a t last p a r t ? My husband&#13;
is going t o be a postman."-&#13;
in which Franii* sjar^'jnt. 1'Tan!; A r -&#13;
nold a n d W. S. Ciirt-r are j r a n d l o d , e&#13;
olftcers., and he .oin-"^ fo t!ie &lt;ji".".y u i r h&#13;
the highe.-t pnde.s-i'ioal a m ! socia&#13;
recoiiimendHtionx. His irrecting was&#13;
a warm a n d h e a r t y o n e , a n d t h e&#13;
luncheon was as tine as was ever ser-&#13;
V d in the city. — Peoria, 111. J o u r n a l .&#13;
N d i e e .&#13;
You a r e hereby notified t h a t sealed&#13;
bids will he received by me on o r before&#13;
Monday J u n e 3 1901 for t h e&#13;
furnislnn&lt;/ of K.-d S t a r oil t o t h e vill&#13;
a g e of P i n r k n e y for o n e y e a r . T h e&#13;
c i u n c i l r e s e r v i n g the r i g h t t o accept&#13;
or ivjuut any o r all bids.&#13;
K. R. Bi«Auy, Clerk.&#13;
, Dalcd May 0 1901.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
tmm^m&#13;
1 r' .&#13;
• • * • . .&#13;
A Q u e s t i o n .&#13;
J a c k ' s father and mother w e r e hav-&#13;
&gt;ig a very heated discussion a t t h e&#13;
- - - ^ . table o n e day.. They entirely forgot&#13;
saved my lite the past s u m m e r while him. a n d a s t h e a r g u m e n t . w a x e d&#13;
at the s h o r e , ' a n d »he became so enthusiastic&#13;
over i t s m e r i t s t h a t I a r&#13;
onee m a d e u p my mind TO recommend&#13;
it in t h e f u t u r e , Recently a g e n t l e&#13;
man came i n t o my rtore so overcome&#13;
with colic pains t h a t h e sank t o t h e&#13;
floor. I g a v e him a do.&lt;e of this r e m&#13;
edy which helped h i m . 1 repeated&#13;
the dosf» a n d in fitf.een mmnfpf* he left&#13;
tnv &gt;f*.i'•• .-II.ii.1-» i\ n.U'i m-iri-'»:•« tti4t.&#13;
hwlelt as wn/J as evtji." iloid b y F .&#13;
A. tfigler, P i n c k n e y .&#13;
Pay your Subscription this month&#13;
fiercer h e looked from one to t h e other&#13;
with real concern on his chubby face.&#13;
Presently during a lull h e cleared t h e&#13;
air by asking, pointedly:&#13;
" P a p a , did you m a r r y m a m m a o r did&#13;
m a m m a m a r r y you ?"—Brooklyn Life.&#13;
I t la W r i t t e n .&#13;
"So!" said Mr. Upjohn In h i s most&#13;
witherlngly «arcastlc manner, " J o h n n y&#13;
gets a l l I)in good qualities from you,&#13;
tuul 3:11 his b a d ones from me, does&#13;
he?"&#13;
"Certainly." answered Mrs. Upjohn,&#13;
t r i u m p h a n t b u t calm. ^'Doesn't t h e&#13;
Bible expressly s a y t h a t t b e sins of t h e&#13;
f a t h e r s a r e visited upon t h e children?",&#13;
-Chicago Tribune. '&#13;
Notice,,&#13;
Voivare herebv notified t h a t sealed&#13;
bids will he received by me on or be&#13;
fore Monday J a n e 3 1901 for l i g h t i n g&#13;
street lamps and c a r i n g lor same f o r&#13;
one year. Council r e s e r v i n g r i g h t t o&#13;
accept o r reject a n y or all bids.&#13;
E . K. Br.AITjf, Clerk.&#13;
Dated May 9 1 9 0 1 .&#13;
1&#13;
^ * , , * ' STZAMSt-UP LIMES*&#13;
P o p u l a r rbute l o r A n n A r b o r , T o -&#13;
ledo a n d points E a s t , South, a n d l o r&#13;
Howell, Ovvosso, A l m a , Mt 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. H . BKXNKTT,&#13;
G. P . A. T o l e d o&#13;
T h e y W e r e A t t e n t i v e .&#13;
A clergyman preaching.In a-country&#13;
church for the first time was delighted&#13;
to find t h e congregarion very attentive&#13;
a n d told t h e verger so after t h e&#13;
service.&#13;
T h e verger replied. "Lor' bless you.&#13;
sir, we was all looking for you to jlisn&#13;
p p e a r P '&#13;
" W h y . what d o you menu*/" said t h e&#13;
clergyman.&#13;
"Well, sir, you see-, t h e pulpit Is rotten&#13;
a n d hasn't been preached ID this&#13;
ten y e a r o r more."—Pearson's Weekly.&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
K.all.rD3.3., " * a . 1 , 1 9 0 1 .&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon nn follows:&#13;
For Detroit and Kent,&#13;
10:3(5 a. m., 3:04 p. ru., 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and WeRt,&#13;
9:45 a. ra., 2:08 p. m. 6:20 p. m.&#13;
For .Saginaw and Bay City,&#13;
10:3(i a. m., 3:04 p. no., 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10 :3fi a. m.&#13;
FRANK B&gt;Y, H. K. MOELLEJt,&#13;
Agent, Honth Lyon, (f. P."A., Detrrtlt.&#13;
»Jrand T r u n k Rail w a r S y s t e m .&#13;
- fl.4^».m.&#13;
J 0:45p.m.&#13;
£ 4:45 p.m.&#13;
.tackaon, Ih-froit, and&#13;
In term*1 J': ;• - 'ntintm&#13;
««&lt;l« .n&gt;.&#13;
iDt«fSM*»»« M4ltluQ«&#13;
JBSBEL&#13;
Htlrt*. m, M&#13;
5:lAp. m. o&#13;
?:Ma,m. S&#13;
Th« fctfl «. m. and * &gt; • p. sw tftin* tiavs through&#13;
coach totv^MtokStei »nd Detroit.&#13;
Agant, Piackno&gt;&#13;
/ :.£*•&gt;':**&lt;&#13;
Hi&#13;
•4&#13;
1&#13;
Mi** Flor*aee N»w« who bat&#13;
bean a ^raal ttiffer^ from ;mawt&gt;l&gt;r&#13;
rht»umatingtp, say8 Chamberlain'* i'ain&#13;
Bain* i* the only remedy that affords&#13;
bar reliat. Mis* Newman is a much&#13;
respected resident of the village cf-| into tbe French army, which stood in&#13;
(Jrav N. Y., and make9 tim statement -•-— •&#13;
" '-tfra^mttttflVelothttra similarly nfflicted.&#13;
This liniment is for bale by&#13;
F..A.*Sifclfr, Pmck*y.&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
Salary S900 Y E A R L Y *&#13;
Mo »B&lt; wcmen of good address to re &gt;reseqt&#13;
B e, some to tiavel appointing agents, others Tor&#13;
] oca! work looking »ft*r our Interests. « 9 0 0&#13;
salary guaranteed "&gt;early; extra oo • missions and&#13;
expenses, rspd " advancement, old established&#13;
house. Grand chano* tor earnest man or woman&#13;
to secure peasant, permanent position, liberal&#13;
Income ana future. New. brilliant lines. Write&#13;
at once, fcl A e i o K U r » U i : s s , t-aa&#13;
US C h u r c h Hi,, N e w H a v e n , C o u n .&#13;
L « V M W W &lt; i i &lt; K H * " V S « V M ^ n &gt; I S « V A ' S A i V « | i The&#13;
Griswold&#13;
House&#13;
POSTAL A MONEY,&#13;
pRopfticToiia.&#13;
DETROIT.&#13;
A&#13;
atrictly&#13;
fl ratclaw,&#13;
modern,&#13;
up-to-date&#13;
Hotel, looated&#13;
in the heart of&#13;
the City&#13;
Rates, $2, $2.50, $3 per Day.&#13;
'.(•&gt;.&#13;
C O * . ONAND HlWIW 4 0NIBWOLO S T .&#13;
Tka P*a»efc Cavvalrr at Sedaa.&#13;
Both banku of the Givonpe were In&#13;
German hands; no was Balan, a small&#13;
Tillage nearer to Sedan than Btueillea,&#13;
and aoon after 1 o'clock no fewer than&#13;
426 German guns were hailing shells&#13;
close formations within a space measuring&#13;
leas than two miles in breadth or&#13;
f1i*ptti, Tit of thin twrrUdp ffflnlrtrnn nf&#13;
defeated troops about this time rode&#13;
the French cavalry In a heroic endeavor&#13;
to turn the fortunes of the day and&#13;
retrieve the honor of Prance.&#13;
General Margueritte, called by some&#13;
"the star of bis arm," was struck in&#13;
the face by a bullet while riding out to&#13;
reconnoiter the ground before he charged.&#13;
He now handed over the cavalry&#13;
command to De Gallifet. who for the&#13;
second time on that tremendous day&#13;
led the flower of French cavalry&#13;
against the enemy and for the space of&#13;
half an hour charged the German&#13;
ranks again and again on the hillsides&#13;
north of Sedan.&#13;
But the courage of tbe gallant horsemen&#13;
was all in vain. The anno blanche&#13;
was unequally matched against the&#13;
bre^chloading rifle held in steady&#13;
hands, and no effort of the French&#13;
cavalry could withstand the slowly&#13;
tightening grasp of that fiery circle.—&#13;
Chambers' Journal.&#13;
B i l i o u s n e s s i&gt; a condition I-II,Trnct**rizHcJ&#13;
by a &lt;lisT,ui'i&gt;arn'* of the djo^tiv*1&#13;
OIVHUS. TIIH ^,i'inia&lt;;'h is deUiiitat. d,&#13;
the liver tot'hid, tfn-* l&gt;o&gt;vels iMii.-Mpated.&#13;
T h e r e is a l o a t h i n g n( food, p.-iiii&gt;&#13;
in 'lie h o w l ' s , d.//.ine&gt;s, eonti»d inhjjUH&#13;
und v o m i t i n g ^'•-r °f !'"' nnilii.'H-.tH.i&#13;
or p.itllv diae^Vtl food H t i ! then id&#13;
Hie bi'e. C'iiam'iei Uiri"s 8toit)rh:li ami&#13;
Liver Tablets ally the d i s t u r b a n c e 01&#13;
the, stomach and trreaiB u heaiihv&#13;
petit,e. T h e. y_also t o n e Up ' I Iie&#13;
to a heal!by. action a n d r e g u l a t e&#13;
b o w e l s . Try t h e m a n d y o u are&#13;
SKINDIAN&#13;
MAPLE SUGAS&#13;
. . . I . . n . »&#13;
THE » € 0 MAN TAUGHT THB WHITE&#13;
MAN TO MAKE THE DAINTY.&#13;
U» Man o f n e t a r e W a n P r a c t i c e d b y&#13;
A l l N o r t h e r n I n d i a n a a n d W a »&#13;
K a o w n t o T h o a e L i v i n g a s F a r&#13;
l n n t h na Fl-ffrlda a n d ^+^^9.&#13;
a.|.-&#13;
n'er&#13;
tllH&#13;
Yain to b« much pleased with the ic&#13;
suit. For sain t»v F. A. Sialer, I*&#13;
ney.&#13;
i l l ! 1&#13;
F n l r S i z e d .&#13;
"No." said the retired showman, "I&#13;
won't say that we bad the biggest&#13;
giant that ever happened, but it is a&#13;
solemn fact what I am going to tell&#13;
you. This giant had a penehance, or&#13;
whatever you call it, for trying new&#13;
styles of whiskers."&#13;
"M-hra."&#13;
"Well, when lie wanted a new style&#13;
laid out he had to send for a landscape&#13;
gardener."—I mHanapolis Press.&#13;
Very few of the people to whom maple&#13;
sugar is an entirely familiar and&#13;
commonplace thing are aware of the&#13;
fact that the method of making sugar&#13;
was taught to the white people by the&#13;
Indians and that they made «ugar long&#13;
before the discovery of America, ^ i s&#13;
Is only one of the many tilings that the&#13;
•white people learned from the Indians.&#13;
Others were the weaving of cotton, the&#13;
cultivation of Indian corn and the use&#13;
of tobacco.&#13;
Some of the early writers tell ua that&#13;
the French were the first to make this&#13;
*ugar and that they learned how to&#13;
make it from the Indian women. The&#13;
sap was collected in a rude way, a gash&#13;
being cut in the tree, and into this a&#13;
stick was thrust, down which the freely&#13;
flowing sap dripped into h vessel of&#13;
birch bark or a gourd or into wooden&#13;
troughs hollowed out by tire or the ax.&#13;
Then into larger wooden troughs full&#13;
of the sap redhot stones were thrown,&#13;
,1ust as in old times they used to be&#13;
thrown into the water in which food&#13;
was boiled, and by constantly throwing&#13;
in hot stones and taking out those that&#13;
had become cool the sap was boik'd&#13;
and evaporated, and at length sirup&#13;
was nuule. which later became sugar.&#13;
0 « * * * ^ V *%+*** *.---***»t • * * • * » # • V t e ^ v l • J**&gt;^&gt;** ti'1&#13;
ra and. Pawnee. T b t Cueycnntw. on&#13;
tbe other baud, call It bos elder water.&#13;
A. F. Chamberlain, who- baa gone with&#13;
great care into tbe question of tbe&#13;
meaning of tbe words which designate&#13;
the maple tree and its product, is disposed&#13;
to believe that the name of the&#13;
maple means the tree—In other words,&#13;
the real or actual tree or tbe tree whien&#13;
stands above all others.~Forest and&#13;
Stream.&#13;
• . _ « _ . »&#13;
W h i t e W a x . .&#13;
The white wax exported from China&#13;
la made by the curious method of using&#13;
insects Jn its production. These insects&#13;
are found in brown pea shaped&#13;
excrescences or galls attached to an&#13;
evergreen tree called the "insect tree."&#13;
The galls are gathered in May and carried&#13;
in headlong flight tb the market&#13;
towns by bearers, who travel at night&#13;
so that the heat may not force the insects&#13;
to emerge during the journey.&#13;
They are then placed on the "wax&#13;
tree," which is a stump varying from&#13;
3 to 12 feet in height, with numerous&#13;
branches rising from the top, similar.&#13;
to the pollard willow.&#13;
The wax insects are made into small&#13;
packets of 120 or 30 galls, which are inclosed&#13;
in a loaf of the wood oil tree,&#13;
fastened together with rice straw.&#13;
These packets are suspended close to&#13;
the branches under which they hang.&#13;
On emerging frdrn the galls the insects&#13;
creep rapidly up the branches, to which&#13;
they attach themselves and begin forming&#13;
a coating of wax that in about&#13;
three months attains a thickness of almost&#13;
a quarter of an inch.&#13;
The branches are then cut off. and&#13;
•twywa^jfww^aw&#13;
*mm&#13;
""•'•^'"•Wlffrt'&#13;
after removing as much of the wax as&#13;
This manufacture of the sugar was p o 5 s i b l e b v n a m l t h e v a r e p u t i n &lt;a Uet-&#13;
no&gt;tt confined to any one tribe, but was t l e o f n o t w:Ut n .( y.^u t h e r e m a i a i n g&#13;
practiced by all northern Indians and&#13;
was known tc those living as far south&#13;
as Florida and Texas. Among the&#13;
sugar making tribes a special festival&#13;
was held, which was. called'the maple&#13;
dance, which was undoubtedly a religious&#13;
festival in the nature of a&#13;
prayer or propitiatory ceremony, asking&#13;
for an abundant flow of sap and&#13;
for good fortune in collecting it.&#13;
Among many if not all the Indians&#13;
inhabiting the northern United States&#13;
maple sugar was not merely a luxury,&#13;
something eaten because it was toothsome,&#13;
but was actually an important&#13;
part of their support. Mixed with&#13;
pounded, parched corn, it was put up&#13;
in small quantities and was a coucen-| hjqh up in the air?&#13;
wax floats on the surface and the insects&#13;
finish their term of usefulness by&#13;
going to the bottom.&#13;
F o r m a t i o n of D e w .&#13;
Ground a little below the surface is&#13;
always wanner than the air above it.&#13;
So long as-the surface of the ground is&#13;
above the dew point vapor must rise&#13;
and pass from the earth into the air.&#13;
The moist air so formed will mingle&#13;
with the air above it, and its moisture&#13;
will be condensed, forming dew wherever&#13;
it comes in contact with a surface&#13;
cooled below the dew point. In fact,&#13;
dew rises from the ground.&#13;
But how is the dew formed on bodies&#13;
abena te ionr mtb«d wboyrl dt hfoer nboojea . gJnaunt nmtaw .r aUTahbl»a tod adrlMble for men.&#13;
No. 1? -wltkvPlaiB Opti Sigfcta. .ftft.00&#13;
No, 18-witk Tar*** Sight* 8.00&#13;
Wwilhle areea tdh,e eaxep rreifalee• p arreep naoidt ,c oanrr ireedc eIinp t itoofc pkr ubya. dealen we Amd t$*m»/or cmtalogut. r* » „ I. STEVENS AJLhtS ATOOL OO . f o«x ^JH . Chleope* Falla, MIM.&#13;
5 0 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
T R A D E M A R K S&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C .&#13;
Anvone sending n sketch and description may&#13;
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an&#13;
invention is probably patentable. Communications&#13;
Btrletty confidential. Handbook on Patents&#13;
sent frep. Oldest nueuoy for se mnn/patents.&#13;
Patents taken throueb Munn 4 Co. receive&#13;
special notice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. T^aifrest circulation&#13;
of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a&#13;
year: four months, $L Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN &amp; Co.*6'8™"1-'- New York&#13;
Branch Office, 625 F SU Washington, D. C.&#13;
Didn't Cut H i s Corner*.&#13;
A writer in the Dostou Transcript&#13;
gives this reminiscence of the Rev. Dr.&#13;
Elijah Kellogg of Harpswell, Me.:&#13;
"One Sunday before his sormon the&#13;
doctor announced from his pulpit: 'The&#13;
widow Jones' grass is getting pretty&#13;
long. I stiall be there with my scythe,&#13;
rake and pitchfork at 4 o'clock tomorrow&#13;
morning, and I hope every male&#13;
member of the congregation will bo&#13;
there too.'&#13;
"The next morning they were all&#13;
there and among them Captain Griggs,&#13;
six feet two in his stockings, with a&#13;
weight of nearly 2."0 pounds. 'Parson,'&#13;
said he as they were working up&#13;
the field near each other. Tin goin to&#13;
cut your corners this mornin.'&#13;
"Now, Dr. Kellogg was a little man.&#13;
weighing scarcely more than 130&#13;
pounds, but he knew how to handle&#13;
a scythe, and, as he told me, with a little&#13;
shrng of his shoulders, 'he didn't&#13;
ent my corners that morning.' More&#13;
trated form of nutriment not much&#13;
less valuable in respect to its quality&#13;
of support than the pemmiean which.&#13;
was used almost down to our own&#13;
times.&#13;
Among Jill the older writers who had&#13;
much familiarity with the customs of&#13;
the Indians accounts are given of the&#13;
manufacture of.sugar, and this custom&#13;
was so general that among many&#13;
tribes the month in which the sap ran&#13;
best wns called the sugar month. By&#13;
the Iroquois the name Itatirontaks.&#13;
meaning'tree eaters, was applied to the&#13;
Algonquin tribes, and an eminent authority.&#13;
Dr. Brintou. has suggested&#13;
that they were probably, "so called&#13;
from their love of the product of the&#13;
sugar maple." On the other hand*&#13;
A. F. Chamberlain has very plausibly&#13;
said "that it is hardly likely that the&#13;
Iroquois distinguished other tribes by&#13;
this term, if its origin be as suggested,&#13;
since they themselves were sugar makers&#13;
and eaters."&#13;
A more probable origin of the word is&#13;
that given by Schoolcraft, in substance&#13;
as follows: "Ilatirontaks. whence Adirondncks.&#13;
was applied chietiy to the&#13;
Montagnais tribes, north of the St.&#13;
Lawrence, and was a derisive term indicating&#13;
a well known habit of these&#13;
tribes of easing the inner bark of trees&#13;
in winter when food was scarce or&#13;
when on war excursions."&#13;
This habit of eating the inner bark of&#13;
Dew does not rise in particles. a3 it&#13;
was once considered to fall in particles&#13;
like tine ruin. It rises in vapor. Some&#13;
is caught l y what is on the surface of&#13;
the earth..but the rest ascends in vapor&#13;
form until it comes in contact with a&#13;
much colder surface to condense it into&#13;
moisture.&#13;
The vapor does now flow upward In&#13;
a uniform stream, but is mixed in the&#13;
air by eddies and wind currents and&#13;
I carried to bodies far from where it&#13;
! rose. In fact, dew may be deposited,&#13;
I even though the country for many&#13;
I miles all around be dry and incapable&#13;
of yielding any vapor. In such cases&#13;
the supply of vapor to form that dew&#13;
would depend on the evaporation of&#13;
the-dew-and-Jiri what was wafted over&#13;
by the winds.&#13;
iWa^aF^TpW^r»^aw &lt;&#13;
We tbevBMerwawi*.•'4o • b*rebf&#13;
a*ree to rarand the inoaey on a 50&#13;
cent b&gt;&gt;ttle&lt;0f Down* EHM*it,i% A&lt;m&#13;
ttotcureanv eongh* cold, «fboopin»|&#13;
cootfh, or ihroat JtrontjAe. Wf *&gt;•»&#13;
KtiaranteH Dawn** Elixir to ...ear*; OQ»&#13;
sumption, when used accord&gt;»« to ty*&#13;
rections, or money back. AfaHdosf&#13;
on tfoinejto bed and small {doses d^f*&#13;
in* fcbe day will care tbe mo»t «&amp;W*&#13;
cohi, and stop the *moat distressing&#13;
coatru.&#13;
P. A. Sigler,,&#13;
W. B. Darrow&#13;
"5SH»&#13;
Jhr gittristuti fhspatdi.&#13;
ptTBuaasD icvsa* TBVMBDAX MORKIVO S T&#13;
FRANK t.. ANDREWS&#13;
Editor and 2*ropri*lor.&#13;
SabacripUoa Price $1 in Advanca.&#13;
Sntered at the Poatofice at PtaeKaey, Michigan&#13;
aa aecond-cJaae matter.&#13;
Adrertiaing ratee made known on application.&#13;
Baslneaa Carda, $4,00 per year.&#13;
Peaih and marriage notices published free.&#13;
Announcements ot entertainment* may be paid&#13;
tor, if desired, by pr -aentlng the office with tickets&#13;
of admission. In c*ae ticket* are not broaght&#13;
id tne office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter in local notice column will he c&amp;arued&#13;
at 5 centa per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
insertion. Where no time ie specified, all notice*&#13;
will be ioserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
vUi be charged for accordingly. 43^All change*&#13;
of advertisements MUST reach thi*office/ aa early&#13;
as TUESDAY morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
sbiue week.&#13;
JOS f&gt;nr# 7ijv G /&#13;
in all its branches, a specialty. We hare alt kinds&#13;
and tbe latest styles of Type, etc., which enables&#13;
UB to execute all kinds of work:, such as Books,&#13;
ttunple^, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Carda, Auction Bills, etc, in&#13;
superior atyles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
• &gt;v as tiooii wori can b^ uone.&#13;
_LL I t l L U PA.rA.BC.7 FlUiT OV iVS&amp;t XiSTkl.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
ParBIDKNT.....*• -, C. L. Sigler&#13;
iHUSTasa £. L. Thompson, Alfred &amp;vn*&amp;&#13;
Daniel Richards, i&gt;eo. Bowman, Samuel&#13;
Syked, K. D, Johnson.&#13;
CLsas.... » ....M. ~ ,..E. R. Braan&#13;
TBKASUBEH .J. A. Cadwell&#13;
AHSBSSOU Jaa. A.Greene&#13;
STUSBT COMMISSIONER J. Monk*&#13;
HEALTH urFiusB ~ Dr. H. F. Sl«ler&#13;
MAUBUALL, _.. £&gt;. Brogan&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
WANTE'J-Capable* reliable person, in every&#13;
connty to represent large company of solid fmaucial&#13;
reputation;' §:t36 salarv per yeir, payable&#13;
weekly; j.'i pt r da* absolutely sure and all expenses;&#13;
?t.iart.ht, bona tide, dednate salary, no&#13;
commission; salary paid each Saturday and expenst'&#13;
money advanced each week. S T A N U A U L )&#13;
HOUSE, S)i Uearbtm st. Chicago t-^i&#13;
tbNX tkat, the man who had thought&#13;
he coold heat tlie parson at mowing i trees was, as is well known, common&#13;
' dropped under a tree exhausted from&#13;
toMlrlng with such a pacemaker."&#13;
If1 ' A Knotty V&#13;
Qti0&gt;stion&#13;
You cannot know which may be the B e s t&#13;
F a i n t tmtU time has tried them—the test of&#13;
ex{K&gt;«u»U(lk the quality of Paint.&#13;
Tin Ptifcsiilar Lead &amp; Color Works, Ltd,&#13;
Detroit, Mixed Paint has solved the knotty questien&#13;
uoder the test of practical experience. It&#13;
has been tried by time and exposure—and never&#13;
disappoints.&#13;
It fe strong and true in color—always of&#13;
uniform excellence, and of * great durability.&#13;
Why cafferiment ? Buy the Paint sure to satisfy.&#13;
• O L D BY&#13;
Geo. W. BE.iSON &amp; SON,&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
to many tribes of Indians, both those&#13;
who inhabit the country where the sugar&#13;
'maple grows and aiso those in other&#13;
parts of the country where the maple&#13;
is unknown.&#13;
On tlie western prairies sugar was'&#13;
made also from the bos elder, which&#13;
trees were tapped by the Indians and*&#13;
I the sap boiled down for sugar, and toj&#13;
day the Cheyenne Indians tell us that&#13;
1 it was from this tree that they derived&#13;
J all the sugar that they had until the&#13;
arrival of the white man on the plains&#13;
something more than 50 years ago.&#13;
j It is interesting to observe that in&#13;
j many tribes .today the word for sugar&#13;
| is precisely the word which they applied&#13;
to the product of the maple tree&#13;
before they knew the white man's sug-&#13;
I ar. It is interesting also to see that&#13;
1 among many tribes the general term&#13;
j for sugar means wood or tree water—&#13;
| that is to say. tree sap. This is true of&#13;
I the Omahrss? and Poneas. according to&#13;
; J O. Horsey, and also of the Kansas.&#13;
ST.VTK of MICHIGAN" CiMintr of t.ivinpstnn.&#13;
._ s.;, N'otic is hereby t'iven that by au order&#13;
of the ProbMe Court for tho • county of l.ivinjj*&#13;
s&gt;i»n, made* on th« *"&gt;th day of April. A. D , 1SK&gt;:&#13;
six nn&gt;ntb-&gt; irom dnte were allowed f.tr rredUors&#13;
to piTs«v.t fin ir claims Hcniti.»t tlie esf&amp;te of&#13;
THX)\I.\S FITZSIMMONS, t&gt;oceafed. '&#13;
And «H rj-oditors of said &lt;ieceaw»l are required"&#13;
t » prescn1 their claims to said Probate cotirt, at&#13;
«'tlio rrob:ir&lt;&gt; office in tb* 'iliaire of Howell, for&#13;
I eTmniimtlon niut aHownnc&gt;, on or rH&gt;for»» the ^1 th&#13;
{ day of Oftobev next, and that such H«in)s' will&#13;
be heard bel'&gt;rt&gt; SRUI court on Saturday, the 30?h&#13;
d:iy of .Inly, and on Monday, the \Mth day of&#13;
&lt;&gt;&lt;"f.&lt;&gt;l er i&gt;H\t. «f one o'clock in the afiejNio&lt;\n,&#13;
of es\ch ol suid (luys, -^.&#13;
r&gt;«ted; Howell, &lt;\pr. '.inh.lOOl.&#13;
t Cl KeotNK^. Sfowx, Jiu»si» of Probate.&#13;
A Card.&#13;
I, llif undersigned, &lt;io h'»Ve!&gt;y asjree&#13;
to refund fhn money on a 50 o^nt l)ottle&#13;
'if Green's Warr;v&lt;itt'u iSvrup of&#13;
Tar if it fail^s vo cur&lt;' your cniiffh or&#13;
cold. I a'&gt;so tfuarantf1 a 25-eent. bottte&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money refunded.&#13;
" " \21&#13;
Will 11. Darrow.&#13;
V|£THODiST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
JL Kev. H. VV . Hicks, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:3a, and avucy Sunday&#13;
e\euing at 7 :iKi o'clock. Prayer meeting Tnnrsd&#13;
»y evenings. Sunday school at close of morniUJ,&#13;
service. L E A f . S l Q L E B . S u p t .&#13;
C^O.NlirtKttAi'IONAL CHLTKCH.&#13;
J Kev. O. W. Uice paator. Service every&#13;
suiduy morning at 10:30 and every Sunday&#13;
wv«uin"n at ?:0C 6'ci'^ck. Prayer meeting Thura&#13;
d »y ovenia^e. Suadiv school at close of tn&lt;»rninti&#13;
service. .Iliad Kiltie liofl, Supt,, Mauel&#13;
Swarthout Sec.&#13;
OT. MAltV'S'JArifOLlCCHUKCa.&#13;
O lt«v. M. J. Oominerford, P%itt»r. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low utaad at 7:30 o'clock&#13;
high maea with sermon at 9:31/0. m. Catechism.&#13;
*t b:0o p. ui., vespers and benediction at 7 :-10 p.m.&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
mhe A. O. H. Society of this place, meats every&#13;
1 third Sunrtav mine Fr. Vlittna.v dail.&#13;
John Tuomey and 51. T. Kelly,Ooauty Dil-gates&#13;
i^PVVORTH LEAGUE. -Meets every Sunday&#13;
Cicvening at ti:i)0 ocloclc in tlie 51. K. Church. A&#13;
cordial invitation i? extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. F. L. Andrews, Pre*.&#13;
nFIRISTIAN E^DEVVMP. oDJIECV-.-M^e&#13;
Vjin^ every .Sunday aveuin,f at '*:)) Pro^i l$:\t&#13;
.Miss L. M. v\&gt;3; Secretary, Mtsa Itittle C»rp-i;itec&#13;
f\\RE W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
I month at 2:30 p. m. at tbe home of Dr. fl. F.&#13;
sigler. Everyone interested in temperance ia&#13;
coartlally invited. Mrs. Leal Siller, Prea; -Mrs.&#13;
Etta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
The C T . A. and a. Sociexy of this nlace, n»e&lt;»t&#13;
every third Satnraay evening in the Fr. &gt;a»t«&#13;
thew Hall. John lionohue, President.&#13;
El&#13;
$ &lt; % • &amp;&#13;
This signature is on every box 1 the genuine&#13;
Laxative Bromo=Quiai^e Tablets&#13;
the remedy that c u r e s a c o l d i n one d a y&#13;
MGUTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarfhout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brother* are cordially invited.&#13;
CHA*. U4MPBBLL, Sir Knight Commands)&#13;
F v c r y W o u i t t n&#13;
who h:;s femtile troubles, cmnuni to her&#13;
sex, is weak, feels tired, worn out* or ha*&#13;
lost her ambition, should take Knill's l&gt;ed&#13;
Pills for Wan Teonie, "P.-tle or W&gt;:ik."&#13;
Tlu'V ;i:v the great liioo&lt;i nnd Xerve Medicine&#13;
and Developer. They restore h« ahti&#13;
Strength and lieauty. l.)nly i o e . Try&#13;
thera.&#13;
l'.vcry ^IJHI&#13;
worn out nientnllv or physically from overwork&#13;
or other CHUses should take Kntll'a&#13;
Ked Pills for Wan People, "P.ile or Weak."&#13;
They are th»* great Blood and Xervt- Tonic,&#13;
restore V i m , Vigor and Vitality. They&#13;
will mike a perfect man of vou. Try&#13;
ibem.&#13;
i'.xcry W o m a n or VInn&#13;
trtMjhled with bilousness or inactive Liver&#13;
or l?»&gt;we!s, should take Knill's While Liver&#13;
Pills. '2o doses 2jf&gt;c.&#13;
If troubled with any Kidney or Urinary&#13;
tromlhs, Hacknche, I^me or Sore, vou&#13;
take Kuiir* Hi we Kidney Pills. They&#13;
are.&#13;
Guaranteed by a!! Dr.t^ista; 2"&gt;o" a box&#13;
o boxes 551(X).&#13;
Write for- phamplet.s, te«itiuiv»niab&#13;
°sam}&gt;'es «ent free.&#13;
K n t H ' a R e d , W h i t e a n d B l u e P I l L C o&#13;
P o r t H u r o n , M I c h&#13;
Livingston Lod^e, No.76, F A A, M. Keg'i'.ir&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the lull ot the moon. H. F. Sigler, W. Si.&#13;
OHDfiK OF EASTEKN STAK meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the reguiar F.&#13;
AA.M. meeting, MRS. MAKY KBAD, W* AX.&#13;
KDEK OF MODERN WOODMEN' Meet the&#13;
firut Tnursday ,eveQiu$; of each Month in the&#13;
.wccubee nail. " C. L. Grimes V. C. '&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meat every Is&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachiuontb at -^:30 p ui. a&#13;
K. o. T. M. hall. Visiting sUters cordially invited.&#13;
Jt'LtA Sir,LEU. Lady Com.&#13;
5 ^ KEIGHTS or THE LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meft every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in the K.. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at :-.30 o'clock. All visitin*&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
C. L, Grimes, Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIQLER M. D- C, I , SIQLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and dur^^ns. All calls prompt!&#13;
attended to day or uigut. Office on Main str&#13;
Pinckuey, Mich.&#13;
&lt; M M M M a n M M a M a a ^ n n a a H a M B B M B i a a a a a M a&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DENTiST-Eyery Kridaj; and on Tanrsday&#13;
\fheu bavins appointments. Ot&amp;o* over&#13;
Siller's Drue; Store. '&#13;
I. F. MtL*m*&#13;
V E T E R I N A R Y S U R G E O N .&#13;
Graduate of Out irio Veterinary College, alio&#13;
4 the V eteri n ary Den tlatry College&#13;
Toronto Canada. .&#13;
Will promptly attend to alt disaasM • { th» d3&#13;
mesticated animal at a reasoaahk pricav.,&#13;
Horses teeth examine* Frea* -«v&#13;
ornceat inifeu PWCKNUX&#13;
w&#13;
• ; t V&#13;
•,.;:&lt;• ,*yi&#13;
• " &lt; ' '&#13;
mtiM m^Mhm^M^I^M&#13;
... Wi&#13;
v.'V. '*' r'l \ • ' •&#13;
I' V ' ^ : •••'•&lt;&#13;
r - - ; H . ; ' - ' • • • • '':,-••&#13;
v ^ - : J.' ., •&#13;
I.&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS, Publisher.&#13;
PINCKNEY, - * - MICHIGAN.&#13;
« 1 1 ii 11 1 1 » ii • ' ii ii -&#13;
Rev. Frank Gunsaulus of Chicago,&#13;
has interested his congregation in&#13;
mining and the church has invested in&#13;
ft mine in the Cripple Creek district,&#13;
which will be operated for the benefit&#13;
of the church.&#13;
fi. L I&#13;
Has Been Issued by Department&#13;
Commander Allen.&#13;
MEMORIAL DAY APPROACHING&#13;
India and Ceylon have competed so&#13;
successfully with China in the production&#13;
of tea that, whereas in 1880 2,100,-&#13;
000 hundredweight of the leaf were exported&#13;
from China, only 1,631,000 hundredweight&#13;
left the country in 1899.&#13;
AJMI the Commander Take* This Method&#13;
of Appealing to Hla Comrade*—He Asks&#13;
That AH Patriotic Persons Join In Pay-&#13;
Ins Tribute to the Departed Heroes&#13;
MINOR MtCHlQAN MATTERS.&#13;
A Minneapolis man bought from a&#13;
Russian in Halifax five years ago a&#13;
curious rough stone of reddish hue.&#13;
•Acting on a recent hint, he sent the&#13;
stone to Kansas City, and cutters developed&#13;
ten fine Siberian rubies worth&#13;
$75 a carat.&#13;
Public-spirited citizens at St. Loui3&#13;
have offered conditionally to free the&#13;
site of the exposition if it can be secured&#13;
for the use of the public.library,&#13;
Memorial Day Order.&#13;
Department Commander Allen of the&#13;
G. A. It. has issued general order No. 7&#13;
in which he calls attention to the fact&#13;
that "Memorial day,sacred to the Grand&#13;
Army of the Republic, and fragrant&#13;
with tender memories of unforgotten&#13;
valor, is approaching. Let the woman's&#13;
relief corps and all patriotic women,&#13;
the sons and daughters of veterans, all&#13;
veterans of the civil war and of the&#13;
more receot conflicts, together with the&#13;
school children and all civic organizations&#13;
be invited to participate with&#13;
you in the duties of Memorial day.&#13;
"Post commanders and all officers of&#13;
the posts are requested to use their best&#13;
efforts in directing the minds of their&#13;
drew Carnegie.&#13;
There is only one building at the&#13;
Pan-American exposition in Buffalo&#13;
designed in its entirety by a woman,&#13;
and that one is the structure which&#13;
will represent the states of New England.&#13;
The woman whose brilliancy as&#13;
an architect has gained for her this&#13;
honor is Miss Josephine Wright Chapman&#13;
of Boston.&#13;
in order that the city may avail itself&#13;
of the $1,000,000 gift offered by An- f °l l o&#13;
u&#13;
w c&#13;
a&#13;
l t , " n * l&#13;
%°, a P"*6 * &lt;**&gt;"™e&#13;
of the 30th of May as a day sacred to&#13;
the memory of men who were instrumental&#13;
in enabling the business man of&#13;
today to enjoy the benefits that he&#13;
calls his privileges. Let there be a&#13;
proper effort made to dispense with&#13;
any attempt to make the day one for&#13;
sport and amusement only.&#13;
ikPost commanders are requested to&#13;
arrange, as far as practicable, for an&#13;
observance by all churches ou Sunday,&#13;
May 26, of an appropriate service commemorating&#13;
the soldier and sailor dead&#13;
of our country, and it is earnestly desired&#13;
that with their colors at the&#13;
front every Grand Army post in this&#13;
department will attend some such&#13;
memorial service i'c a body on the Sabbath&#13;
next preceding Memorial day.&#13;
"In occordance with the action of&#13;
the thirtieth national encampment, it&#13;
is ordered by the department commander&#13;
that Lincoln's Gettysburg address&#13;
be read in connection with memorial&#13;
services."&#13;
The Atlantic pigeon post, which was&#13;
suspended for the winter, will be resumed&#13;
next month. Passengers on&#13;
board Atlantic steamers can avail&#13;
themselves of the birds to let their&#13;
friend3 hear of the progress of the&#13;
voyage or of their impending arrival.&#13;
Of the hundreds of pigeons sent off at&#13;
sea last year only two went astray.&#13;
In passing upon the constitutionality&#13;
of an act of the legislature limiting the&#13;
height of buildings to seventy feet on&#13;
lands'adjacent to the new courthouse,&#13;
the Supreme Court of Massachusetts&#13;
held that the state, in the exercise of&#13;
its police power, has not the right to&#13;
impose such restrictions without paying&#13;
damages to the property owners affected.&#13;
If Lieut. Elmsley, the young Canadian&#13;
officer who was reported dangerously&#13;
wounded in South Africa some&#13;
weeks ago, recovers, his restoration&#13;
will be one of the record recoveries,&#13;
since on his arrival at the hospital in&#13;
Pretoria it was found a bullet had&#13;
gone through his heart. Whether tho&#13;
diagnosis was wrong or his case is another&#13;
example of the humanness of&#13;
the modern bullet remains to be seen.&#13;
The fact that he lived at all is sufficiently&#13;
remarkable.&#13;
Canvassers Completed Their Work.&#13;
The state board of canvassers completed&#13;
the work of canvassing the vote&#13;
cast at iast month's election on the 1st.&#13;
The result shows that the Republican&#13;
candidates bad a very easy thing of i t&#13;
For justice of the supreme court, Robert&#13;
H. Montgomery, Republican, received&#13;
219,097 votes; Allen C. Adzit,&#13;
Democrat, 124,485. For regent of the&#13;
university, Frank W. Fletcher, Republican,&#13;
received 215,305 votes; Henry W.&#13;
Carey. Democrat, 215,011; constitutional&#13;
amendment relative to the circuit&#13;
court of Bay county—Yes, 110,885;&#13;
no, 130,108; majority against, H).?28.&#13;
Constitutional amendment relative to&#13;
salaries of members of the legislature&#13;
—Yes, 112,833; no, 187,015; majority&#13;
against, 74,732.&#13;
There Is an epidemic of scarlet fever&#13;
at East Taw as.&#13;
The central Michigan band, tournament&#13;
will be held at Lansing in Jnne.&#13;
There ha* been eight national banks&#13;
established in Michigan since March,&#13;
1900.&#13;
An attempt is being made to organize&#13;
an Episcopal church society at Duraad.&#13;
It is saia that Michigan has one of&#13;
the finest displays at the Pan-American&#13;
exposition.&#13;
Klatte's hotel in Wyandotte was destroyed&#13;
by f^re on the night of April&#13;
30. Loss. $13,000.&#13;
The streets in the business portion&#13;
of Luditigton will be macadamized.&#13;
The work has already been started.&#13;
Ex-Alderman Chris. Jacob, of Detroit,&#13;
after an illness of less than a&#13;
week, died on the 4th, aged 65. He&#13;
had been a resident of Detroit since&#13;
1875.&#13;
Hillsdale has secured one new industry,&#13;
a gasoline engine factory, and is&#13;
now hustling after another, the latter&#13;
a shoe factory now located in Springfield,&#13;
O.&#13;
Genesee county farmers are just discovering*&#13;
that duriug the past winter&#13;
mice have injured much nursery stock&#13;
so badly by gnawing the bark from it&#13;
that it is worthless.&#13;
The general store and postoffice kept&#13;
by Geo. D. Shearer at Francisco, Jackson&#13;
county, was broken into by burglars&#13;
on the night of the 2Sth and 801.48&#13;
money and 850 in stamps taken.&#13;
As there was no testimony strong&#13;
enough to hoid Drs. Bailey and&#13;
McLaren, charged with manslaughter&#13;
in the Mahan case at Detroit, Justice&#13;
Sellers on the 22d exonerated them.&#13;
Inspector-General Green suggests&#13;
that a good way to make the national&#13;
guard efficient would be to ra\se the&#13;
pay of the troops. He also suggests&#13;
that the state erect its own armories.&#13;
Burglars operated at Luther on the&#13;
night of the 4th. The safes in the two&#13;
depots were blown open. Only 81 was&#13;
secured in one, but the amount secured&#13;
at the other place is not made&#13;
public.&#13;
The cash balance in the state treasury&#13;
ut the close of business April 30&#13;
DOINO* Or T H E +1ST SESSION.&#13;
SSSS5S s A*rt*«tt»r»l Oppo*4nn!H*4 la ntaglL&#13;
Readeri of the Farmers' Review&#13;
ThefoUowlng bills were passed by who nave been infected with a deeire&#13;
the house on the 2d: To restore school to develop the resources of South&#13;
district No. 2 of Waterford township, America should read the following let*&#13;
Oakland county; providing for the organization&#13;
of a fractional school district&#13;
iu the township of Pick ford,&#13;
Chippewa county, and in*the township&#13;
of Marquette, Mackinaw county; to incorporate&#13;
the public schools of Stambaugh&#13;
township, Iron county; to authorize&#13;
the making of special assessments&#13;
for the construction ot drains&#13;
ter published in the Rio News of Rio&#13;
*e Janeiro, concerning the induceaents&#13;
offered by Brazil to agricultural&#13;
Immigrants. The letter is as follows:&#13;
"A letter has been laid upon our&#13;
table from the director of the agricultural&#13;
department in one of the most&#13;
prominent institutions of learning in&#13;
the United States, In which ho asks&#13;
and sewers in the village of Highland o u r i m p r e S f i l o n „' t o t h e l a b i l i t y&#13;
Park, Wayne county; providing for the&#13;
relief of Edward C. Cuminings; appropriation&#13;
Upper Peninsula hospital for&#13;
the insane. §92,051; increasing amount&#13;
of property that can be held by corporations&#13;
organized for owning, leasing&#13;
and selling real estate from two to&#13;
three acres; amending law relative to&#13;
Corporations organized for erecting&#13;
buildings, etc.; fixing telegraph tolls in*&#13;
the state and establishing a uniform&#13;
rate of 25c for 10 words and Ic for each&#13;
additional; Detroit public school teachers&#13;
retirement fund; authorizing electors&#13;
of Peutwater, Oceana Co to vote&#13;
on proposition for the relief ot H. A.&#13;
Grant, village treasurer, for loss of&#13;
funds due to failure of bank in which&#13;
funds were deposited; amending charter&#13;
of Kalamazoo relative to the collection&#13;
of taxes; appropriation state asylum&#13;
at Ioni«, 582,900; compelling hotel&#13;
keepers to post i*ates charged in each&#13;
room occupied by guests; authorizing&#13;
district school boards to establish rural&#13;
high schools; giving members of&#13;
the legislature the authority of notatarics&#13;
public; amending pure food law&#13;
relative to obtaining samples of milk&#13;
by state inspector; amending pharmancy&#13;
law.&#13;
The following bills were passed by&#13;
the house on the 30th: Preventing&#13;
spread of tree p;«sts; defining qualifications&#13;
of kindergarten teachers in the&#13;
public schools; amending charter of the&#13;
cit.y of Detroit so as to create a commissioner&#13;
of public works; amending&#13;
Detroit charter so as to create commissioner&#13;
of parks and boulevards; amending'Detroit&#13;
charter so as to create commissioner&#13;
of police; prohibiting the&#13;
Succi, Tanner, and all other fasting&#13;
men, would appear to be distanced by&#13;
a young widower who lives in the "Faubourg&#13;
St. Antoine, Paris. This person&#13;
lost his wife a few months since, and&#13;
his grief took the form of a desire to&#13;
starve himself to death. He had, it is&#13;
affirmed, been without food since December&#13;
29, 1900. When found he was&#13;
a mere heap of skin and bone. A&#13;
neighbor poured some warm bouillon&#13;
down his throat, and after awhile he&#13;
revived and wrote on a piece of paper,&#13;
"Being unable to survive my wife. I&#13;
resolved to commit suicide by starving&#13;
myself to death."&#13;
In his biography of Phillips Brooks,&#13;
Alexander V. G. Allen of Cambridge&#13;
tells of a clergyman who was going&#13;
abroad and talked in jest of bringing&#13;
back a new relation with him. "You&#13;
might have some trouble in getting it&#13;
through the custom house," some one&#13;
remarked. "No," observed Bishop&#13;
Brooks; "we may take it for granted&#13;
that a new religion would have no duties&#13;
attached." Another person, for&#13;
the sake, no doubt, of argument, once&#13;
drew attention to the fact that some&#13;
men, calling themselves atheists,&#13;
seemed to lead moral lives, and Brooks&#13;
promptly disposed of it. "They have&#13;
to," said he; "they Aave no God to&#13;
forgive them if they don't."&#13;
A horrible parricide was committed&#13;
recently at Marseilles. M. Martin Josime,&#13;
cashier at a large firm, resolved&#13;
to contract a second marriage. His&#13;
son* aged 20, who had given his father&#13;
a great deal of trouble, asked to be&#13;
present. M. Josime gladly consented,&#13;
and presented him with a new suit of&#13;
clothes for the occasion. Joseph Josime&#13;
angrily declared that they were&#13;
not of good quality. The wedding party&#13;
were Just starring to the church for&#13;
the ceremony when the son said to hi3&#13;
father that it would be more in keeping&#13;
to take some flowers to the tomb&#13;
of Itfs dead mother. He then pulled&#13;
out a revolver and exclaimed: "Take&#13;
that. One bullet for you, and two, for&#13;
me afterwards." M. Posime^fell dead,&#13;
and his son, who expressed gladness,&#13;
was arrested. ^w&#13;
Ice IHockade in St. Cluir JMvpr.&#13;
Instead of improving, the conditions&#13;
at St. Clair, Marine City and Algouae,&#13;
where the ywr, is the thickest are continually&#13;
getting worse, and on tho. 2d&#13;
much damage was done. Only for a&#13;
short time did the immense field of ice&#13;
move, but in that time its power was&#13;
supreme and no human effort could&#13;
save the valuable shipping property&#13;
from damage. Vesslemen state that it&#13;
now looks as though it will be May 1"»&#13;
before navigation will be optm and&#13;
'when finally the ice does begin to&#13;
move they anticipate that much more&#13;
serious results will follow. The greatest&#13;
aaraage thus far was done to the&#13;
docks of the Marine City Stave Co. and&#13;
the boats that were tiftd up there.&#13;
m •&#13;
Manistee May Get M. X. G. Encampment.&#13;
Unless the members of the state military&#13;
board change their minds wh;le&#13;
on their northern trip the next state&#13;
military encampment will be held at&#13;
Manistee, but in all probability this&#13;
site will not be permanent. The advantage&#13;
of the Manistee site lies principally&#13;
in the fact that the grounds&#13;
are well covered with sod, while the&#13;
grounds at Newaygo and Cadillac are&#13;
more or less sandy in character. It is&#13;
possible, however, that the' Cadillac&#13;
site will be approved as the permanent&#13;
camping ground of the troops.&#13;
890,000 Fire at Charlotte.&#13;
Fire was discovered in Brown Bros.'&#13;
clothing store at Charlotte on the afternoon&#13;
of the'-.r&gt;th and an hour later&#13;
the entire stock was sufficiently damaged&#13;
by fire, smoke and water to make&#13;
it a total loss. The origin of the blaze&#13;
is a mystery. The damage to the block&#13;
is not large. The front end of the&#13;
building was torn out by the department&#13;
in order to get the fire apparatus&#13;
working on the flames. C. S. Brown&#13;
estimates the loss at 820,000; insured&#13;
for 812,000.&#13;
200.000,000 Pickerel Egg*.&#13;
Representatives of the state fish commission&#13;
have been at West Bay City for&#13;
some days past securing pickerel eggs&#13;
for'We^aWTTaTcheries,'and later the&#13;
young fry will be placed in waters in&#13;
various parts of the state. The spawn-,&#13;
ing season for pickerel is nearly over&#13;
now and the men will leave in a few&#13;
days. So far they have secured about&#13;
200,000,000 pickerel eggs,&#13;
was 82,027,809.47. During the next&#13;
two weeks the state will pay out upwards&#13;
of 8300,000 in primary school&#13;
money.&#13;
Galcsburg's canning factory has been&#13;
completed and has been turned over to&#13;
the company by the contractors who&#13;
built it. More than 50 acres of tomatoes&#13;
alone are under contract to supply&#13;
the raw material for the cannery.&#13;
Mendon will be a dry town for a&#13;
couple of Weeks at least. The village&#13;
council refuses to act on saloon bonds&#13;
until its meeting May 1:5, and as the&#13;
old licenses expired on'the 1st, the saloonkeepers&#13;
will have to take a little&#13;
vac tion.&#13;
That Manistiquo will have,a pulp mill&#13;
is almost an assured fact. The country&#13;
tributary to the city is being thoroughly&#13;
investigated by a company&#13;
which will establisn the mill if the visible&#13;
supply of suitable timber warrants&#13;
the outlay.&#13;
Niles claimn the distinction of having&#13;
the only woman chewing gum&#13;
"magnate" in tr.e world. Her name is&#13;
Kate \\\ Noble, and she wages war&#13;
agaiust the great chewing gum trust&#13;
and employs nobody but women in her&#13;
factory at Niles.&#13;
For the 'steenth time the people of&#13;
Oceana county will, on June 7, vote on&#13;
a proposition to bond the county for&#13;
§10,000 for a new county jail. Hart,&#13;
the county seat, will give 83,000 toward&#13;
the new building in exse it is decided&#13;
to have one.&#13;
The large shingle mill of the Gray&#13;
Milling Co., at Standish, burned on the&#13;
1st together with several cars of bolts&#13;
and a large amount of shingles. The&#13;
fire is thought to bave been the work&#13;
of an incendiary. The loss is about&#13;
810,000, well insured.&#13;
Benton Harbor and St. Joseph are&#13;
both hustling to secure new industries&#13;
but there are hardly enough houses in&#13;
the cities to accommodate the present&#13;
population, to say nothing of the additional&#13;
families which would come in&#13;
with the new factories.&#13;
Congressman Rosscau O. Crump, representative&#13;
of the 10th district of&#13;
Michigan, died at his home at West&#13;
Bay City on the morning of the 1st, of&#13;
heart trouble. He returned from a&#13;
Baltimore hospital 10 days ago and had&#13;
been gradually failing since.&#13;
Although he lived within r&gt;0 miles of&#13;
Detroit for 05 years, Alfred B. Ilustead,&#13;
a prominent farmer of Groveland township,&#13;
Oakland county, who recently&#13;
died, had never visited the metropolis&#13;
but once. That was in 18.10, when he&#13;
walked into the city to file a deed to&#13;
the farm he had purchased from the&#13;
government.&#13;
The Pottawatomles of Michigan are&#13;
mad. The syndicate of Chicago capitalists&#13;
who agreed to pay the tribe&#13;
845,000 by May 30, in settlement of&#13;
their claims against valuable realty in&#13;
the Windy city, have gone back on&#13;
their agreement The Indians, who&#13;
number 300, say that if the claim isn't&#13;
settled by June 1 they will on that date&#13;
charter a steamer, sail to Chicago and&#13;
take nosaession of their property.&#13;
spearing of fish in the lakes of Jackson&#13;
county: to permit fishing through the&#13;
ice with bob lines in Livingstone&#13;
county; amending justice court act of&#13;
Grand Rapids to provide that in work&#13;
and labor claims the costs shall follow&#13;
the judgment; appropriation Jackson&#13;
prison, 812,000; appropriation State&#13;
public school, $80,500; appropriation&#13;
labor commissioner's department, 820,-&#13;
OOn; appropriation Soldiers' Ilome,&#13;
8271,000; appropriation Mt Pleasant&#13;
Normal school, 8118,000; amending act&#13;
incorporating the French Canadian Society;&#13;
regulating taxes to be paid by&#13;
mutual fire insurance companies; providing&#13;
for the open sale of certain&#13;
homestead lands.&#13;
The senate passed the following bills&#13;
on the 1st: Permitting the catching of&#13;
suckers in Wall lake, Barry county;&#13;
relative to black bass fishing in Bear&#13;
lake, Charlevoix county; to permit&#13;
fishing with bob lake fishing in Livingstone&#13;
couuty; to permit fishing with&#13;
&amp;x*Hi~J.ines in Kalamazoo county; to&#13;
protect trout in Au Sable river and&#13;
tributaries; to protect the fish in Pine&#13;
lake Charlevoix county; to authorize&#13;
Norway. Dickinson county, to extend&#13;
its svaf.sr and electric lighting system&#13;
beyond the city limits; appropriation&#13;
for Mt. PJeasant normal school; appropriation&#13;
for Ypsilanti normal school;&#13;
to amend the law for the protection of&#13;
owners and keepers of stallions; relative&#13;
to suits against joint defendants&#13;
in different comities; to prohibit net&#13;
fishing in waters connecting Lakes&#13;
Superior and Huron; to amend tax law;&#13;
to amend tax law; to j&gt;.raend tax law;&#13;
to amend game warden^*w; appropriation&#13;
for Northern Michigan asylum.&#13;
The following bills *yere passed by&#13;
the senate on the 30th: exempting from&#13;
taxation shares in foreign corporations&#13;
owned by citizens of Michigaa; providing&#13;
for the survey of certain islands&#13;
by the state land commissioner; providing&#13;
a salary of 81,500 a j^ear for the&#13;
secretary of the senate and the chief&#13;
clerk of the house; appropriating 017,-&#13;
500 for the purchase of land for the&#13;
Eastern Michigan asylum; providing&#13;
for the settlement of sum's received in&#13;
the extinguishment of drain taxes;&#13;
making an appropriation for the Home&#13;
for the Feeble-Minded; amending the&#13;
Detroit charter relative to parks and&#13;
boulevards; amending Detroit charter&#13;
relative to superintendent of public&#13;
worKs; amending Detroit charter relative&#13;
to superintendent of police.&#13;
The house passed the following bills&#13;
on the 1st: Empowering city of Norway,&#13;
Dickinson county, to extend its&#13;
system of water works and electric&#13;
lighting beyond the city limits; directing&#13;
commissioner of state land office to&#13;
survey islands in Leelanau and Missaukee&#13;
counties; providing for the protection&#13;
of fish in waters of south arm&#13;
of Pine lake, South Arm township,&#13;
Charlevoix county; providing for control&#13;
of chartable societies under the&#13;
hospital act under certain conditions.&#13;
The house on the 1st passed Rep. C.&#13;
J. Byrns's bill raaking\eight hours a&#13;
legal day's work for employes in all&#13;
"iron ore, copper, coal or other mines&#13;
in this state."&#13;
After a three-days vacation, the&#13;
Benate devoted but 30 minutes to the&#13;
state's business on the night of the&#13;
20th. Only 20 senators were present.&#13;
of Americans entering farm life in&#13;
Brazil. Although there are countless&#13;
openings here for labor and capital in&#13;
the development of agriculture, we&#13;
cannot say that tney would be suitable&#13;
or congenial for young Americana. In&#13;
the first place, language, race, and Institutions&#13;
are all radically different&#13;
and would at first be obstacles; but to&#13;
these, of course, an energetic, intelligent&#13;
young man could adapt himself&#13;
if he tried. But farm life as he understands&#13;
it does not exist in Brazil, nor&#13;
will he find in this country the Inducements&#13;
for agricultural enterprise&#13;
which exist in tne United States. Climate&#13;
and custom will stand in the&#13;
way of personal manual labor; consequently,&#13;
he must bring capital to&#13;
enable him to play the role of a gentleman&#13;
planter, directing bis laborers,&#13;
but not joining in their toil. Then,&#13;
too, the cultivation of tropical products&#13;
involves a new experience. He&#13;
will have a new type of labor to direct,&#13;
hew conditions of weather to study,&#13;
new markets with which to familiarize&#13;
himself. But the really serious&#13;
obstacles, in our opinion, are artificial&#13;
rather than natural—unsettled and frequently&#13;
disturbed political conditions,&#13;
latent jealousies springing from inherited&#13;
antagonism of race and religion,&#13;
crude idens of taxation by which &lt;,tbe&#13;
development of general agricultural&#13;
industries or small farming has been&#13;
rendered quite impossible, a depreciated&#13;
currency which unsettles values,&#13;
hampers trade, and nourishes speculation,&#13;
and, lastly, deficient protection&#13;
from the courts. There is no lack of&#13;
opportunity for enterprise, but the man&#13;
who devotes himself to the development&#13;
of an Industry is not appreciated&#13;
except as a source of revenue through&#13;
the imposition of taxes. And one of&#13;
the worst features of the system is the&#13;
imposition of Interstate import and&#13;
export taxes, which confine the producer&#13;
to purely local and restricted&#13;
markets. An example of this may be&#13;
seen every day at our ferry station,&#13;
where chickens, eggs, vegetables,&#13;
plants, fruits, etc., are compelled to&#13;
pay an export duty to the state of&#13;
Rio de Janeiro before they can reach&#13;
a market in this city. The result has&#13;
been that many vegetaole gardens on&#13;
the other side of the bay have been&#13;
abandoned, because they are no longer&#13;
profitable. A year or two ago, some&#13;
Minas Geraes planters began producing&#13;
potatoes and found a ready market&#13;
for them here; but an export duty&#13;
was immediately imposed upon them,&#13;
and the industry was checked. Conditions&#13;
like these will always operate&#13;
against the settlement of thls^ country&#13;
by energetic planters until wiser&#13;
and more liberal counsels prevail. In&#13;
southern Bra2il the climate is not unsuitable&#13;
to Americans and north Europeans,&#13;
and there are industries available&#13;
which would amply repay them&#13;
for their capital and labor; but as yet&#13;
we cannot advise them to come."&#13;
Ammonia Tent of r*ri&lt; Green.&#13;
Paris green dissolves freely and&#13;
wholly in ammonia, becoming a beautiful&#13;
blue liquid; while a majority of&#13;
the substances formerly used in adulterating&#13;
Paris green are insoluble.&#13;
This, therefore, is a very ready means&#13;
of recognizing most of the crude forms&#13;
of adulteration. If upon treatment&#13;
with ammonia any of the material fails&#13;
to dissolve, the same is adulterated.&#13;
This test, however, is not conclusive,&#13;
since white arsenic and a number of&#13;
other substances used in adulterating&#13;
Paris green, especially in these later&#13;
years, are soluble in ammonia and&#13;
would escape detection if this method&#13;
alone were depended on. Ammonia&#13;
then affords valid grounds for rejecting&#13;
a sample if any portion of it is&#13;
insoluble; but other means must be&#13;
used to be sure of its purity, even if&#13;
apparently purs by this test.&#13;
As a general thing farmers do not&#13;
make enough use of clover about the&#13;
hen yard and nests and in the feeding&#13;
of the fowls. How many go to the&#13;
trouble of cutting dry clover for any&#13;
such purposes? Yet in nearly all&#13;
cases it la far ahead of chaff, even for&#13;
packing purposes. If cut fine 11 makes&#13;
a good center for the nests of laying&#13;
hens and a ttill better center for the&#13;
nests of sitting hens. It is far preferable&#13;
to whole straw in which the&#13;
young chicks may become entangled.&#13;
Some egg sellers use cut clover for&#13;
packing efgs that are to go by express&#13;
using the out clover in the part of the&#13;
package containing the eggs and using&#13;
excelsior only on the outside to separate&#13;
the egge from the outside of the&#13;
package*. Some chicken raisers use&#13;
cut clover on, the floor of the brooder&#13;
and say it is superior to sand or dirt&#13;
In the London schools, last year 37,«&#13;
000 girla were taught to cook.&#13;
J:&#13;
x?-&gt;mm :mw. :-^t-::&#13;
, „ • : , ; :yy-*&gt;,••.,*.&lt;••.&gt; - . , ; * &gt; • • ^ • - y " y ^ • * - V ' V v • . . - . . &gt; , ' . " • • ' . • • :;•&#13;
yf-.-^'-^. //••: l \ &gt; -&#13;
* '&#13;
V'%•;&#13;
• *i&#13;
£ /•••&#13;
»Kr«&#13;
•(/".&#13;
• . &lt; * * • •&#13;
7* /"*•:&#13;
'',.•• ••'••^•vfv, , . - y *•.&#13;
,i*':.$l&#13;
V&#13;
* »&#13;
^4&#13;
I Hcllotv 'Ash... •»&#13;
J ^ H b / / J*» *s&#13;
B Y M A R G A R E T B L O U N T ^ k&#13;
CHAPTER XII.—(Continued.)&#13;
"I rose, pale and weak, and trembling,&#13;
and- gained the shore. Striking&#13;
Inland, the old Hall was just before&#13;
me. I walked slowly up the long avenue&#13;
and ascended the granite steps.&#13;
As I reached the last step, I stumbled&#13;
and .fell upon my knees. Looking&#13;
round to see the cause, I found an iron&#13;
gauntlet, rusted and eaten away, and&#13;
half buried in the moss that grew&#13;
around it. I tock it up with a strange&#13;
thrill of awe. How many years had it&#13;
awaited me, since the fiery lover hurled&#13;
it, like a curse, back in the face of&#13;
his pursuer? The door before me was&#13;
of carved oak, but worm eaten and decaying.&#13;
With a sudden impulse, for&#13;
which I could not account, I struck&#13;
upon it furiously with the iron g ove.&#13;
The frail fastenings, already half undone&#13;
by the hand of time, gave way at&#13;
my impetuous summons, and, amid a&#13;
thousand echoes, the door swung slowly&#13;
on its hinges and the castle was&#13;
won. When the cloud of dust raised&#13;
by my sudden entrance had subsided,&#13;
I passed through the portal and stood&#13;
upon the floor of the hall. There,&#13;
where the lovely lady's flying footsteps&#13;
had rested last; there, where the lover&#13;
had thrown down the iron glove, in&#13;
defiance of the wronged and deserter!&#13;
husband; there, where the feeble old&#13;
man had sunk down in agony, when,&#13;
hearing their horses' hoofs beyond tha&#13;
outer court, he learned the full extent&#13;
of his dishonor and despair; there,&#13;
where his menial3 had ra sed him,&#13;
shrieking and cursing In impetuous&#13;
madness; there, where they had borne&#13;
him slowly up the long stone staircase&#13;
that wound around and around and-far&#13;
above my head to the lonely room that&#13;
was to be his prison and his tomb.&#13;
The stone flags were no longer shoulder&#13;
to shoulder, like firm friends and&#13;
true. Time had come between them,&#13;
as between all other things, and tha&#13;
dark, deep crevices on every side were&#13;
only hidden by the long grass that&#13;
sought to bridge them over.&#13;
"While I stood in the hall I thought&#13;
I heard a faint, distant noise above&#13;
my head, and looking up the staircase,&#13;
I suv?—~"&#13;
"Yow!" yelped Mr. Cowley, flinging&#13;
the book to the other end of the room.&#13;
"I'll read no more of that. I've got&#13;
to where the ghost comes in. I looked&#13;
up and saw—Oh, yes, of course you&#13;
did. But if you imagine you are going&#13;
to induce me to read your rawheaded&#13;
and bloody-bone rubbish, you&#13;
are grandly mistaken. Strange that&#13;
everything one takes up in this wretched&#13;
place turns into a ghost story on&#13;
your hands. I should not be surprised&#13;
any morning to find the leading artlcls&#13;
in the Times turning into a tale of a&#13;
haunted house right under my eyes.&#13;
It's unbearable—positively unbearable!"&#13;
He finished his grog and looked at&#13;
his watch.&#13;
"Eleven o'clock and the house as stlU&#13;
as death! I wonder if they are all&#13;
asleep. High time for me to go—Oh,&#13;
Lord! what's that?"&#13;
The sound was in the room exactly&#13;
overhead—a steady, continuous knocking&#13;
that seemed to summon him to the&#13;
place without delay.&#13;
"What room is that? The turret&#13;
chamber! Rose said there was something&#13;
there and that was why she&#13;
moved her room!"&#13;
For a moment or two the worthy&#13;
banker sat like one paralyzed, a cold&#13;
moisture on his face and h s heart&#13;
beating a muffled march Within his&#13;
breast At last his "British pluck"&#13;
came to his aid.&#13;
"By S t George of England. I won't&#13;
turn coward in my old age!" he exclaimed.&#13;
"Man, woman or ghost—let&#13;
it be what it may, I'll go and meet it!"&#13;
He took the candle and left the room.&#13;
All was quiet on the stairs, in the hall,&#13;
in the gallery above. The knocking&#13;
ceased.&#13;
With trembling hand he opened the&#13;
door of the turret chamber.&#13;
A tall and slender woman stood&#13;
alone in the center of th* room. Her&#13;
face was hidden by a black mask. A&#13;
full mantle, or robe of crimson cloth&#13;
covered heT from head to foot. It was&#13;
girded at the waist by a cord of variegated&#13;
silk, and the full sleeves were&#13;
embroidered with threads of gold.&#13;
Upon her breast something shone and&#13;
sparkled in the shape of a star.&#13;
In one hand she held the casket and&#13;
the tress of hair; in the other, a paper&#13;
o n which the astonished banker saw&#13;
written in large lettf re:&#13;
"On that day, I, a child of three&#13;
years, had lain speechless and sense'.ess&#13;
for more than twelve hours. The&#13;
strange and sudden illness terrified&#13;
every one around me—they thought me&#13;
dead, and a veritable resurrection from&#13;
t h e tomb could hardly have created&#13;
more excitement than my recovery. I&#13;
remembered the recovery—perfectly,&#13;
tout all before It was a blank. Now,&#13;
however, as I stood gazing on that picj&#13;
ture, I seemed to remember dimly some&#13;
' other stage of existence, some lost life&#13;
in which I bad loved or suffered in&#13;
this. It was the old mystery that had&#13;
I puzzled so many minds far stronger&#13;
than mine—the mystery that we shall&#13;
all, perhaps, see one day was but the&#13;
dim working of a veiled and hidden&#13;
truth." .&#13;
Mr. Cowley read these words with&#13;
an air of the utmost perplexity. His&#13;
terror was gone, for he believed the&#13;
, mysterious old lady to be human and&#13;
, living like himself. But what she&#13;
I wanted of him—why she held that paper&#13;
out so persistently, and what on&#13;
earth its contents were all about, he&#13;
could not say.&#13;
"Bleis me! what a rigmarole it all is,&#13;
to be sure!" he muttered to himself.&#13;
"How on earth did she get here? and&#13;
what can she want? I wonder if she&#13;
can speak English? I'll try her, at a!l&#13;
events. Madam, can I be of any service&#13;
to you?"&#13;
The figure turned. The very movement&#13;
struck a sudden chill to the&#13;
worthy banker's heart. What if she&#13;
was net alive, after all! Gracious powers!&#13;
what if he had been calling a&#13;
ghost "Ma'am!"&#13;
The figure moved. It made no noise,&#13;
and yet it came nearer and nearer. He&#13;
put out his hand to arrest its progress&#13;
and an ice-cold touch met his own.&#13;
He turner faint and sick. He would&#13;
have fled, but his feet seemed rooted&#13;
to the floor.&#13;
"Go~-go from the house and bring&#13;
my husband back!" said a hollow&#13;
voice; then the veil fell aside, and a&#13;
white, hideous face glared upon him.&#13;
He uttered a loud shriek, and fainted.&#13;
The next instant, Mrs. Cowley, Rose&#13;
and Catharine were in the room, and&#13;
Cousin Charles stole out of the cupboard,&#13;
where he had witnessed the&#13;
scene.&#13;
"I hope he is not hurt," whispered&#13;
Mrs. Cowley. "I shall never forgive&#13;
myself for the trick if he comes to&#13;
harm."&#13;
"Make yourself easy, aunt, he 13 recovering,"&#13;
said Mr. Cowley; and,&#13;
snatching his uncle up in his strong&#13;
arms, he laid him upon his own bed,&#13;
and vanished before the banker had&#13;
seen him.&#13;
There was not much danger, after&#13;
that, of Mr. Cowley's remaining in the&#13;
haunted house a day longer than he&#13;
cor.ld help.&#13;
CHAPTER XIII.&#13;
It is strange how ultimateiy~sceneTy&#13;
becomes connected with some of thg&#13;
strongest emotions and passions of the&#13;
human mind. We gaze out upon a fair&#13;
and sunny landscape in midsummer,&#13;
as we lie beneath the trees, and a&#13;
vague sadness steals over us, because&#13;
the eyes whose beauty has sunk into&#13;
our hearts cannot look upon it too; we&#13;
look up at the moon as she floats serenely&#13;
through the deep blue sky an.l&#13;
sigh, thinking of the days that are no&#13;
more. Nay, even the storms that roar&#13;
loudly over land and sea, set us brooding&#13;
over the past, and our tears fall&#13;
wi'h the rain.&#13;
So thought Rose Cowley, as she sat&#13;
alone in her dressing room one gloomy&#13;
morning. Poor Rose! she had be?n&#13;
washed in many a shower of tears, in&#13;
spite of all her present gayety.&#13;
Her fnther would as soon have believed&#13;
that Gog and Magog would com?&#13;
down from their pedestals and fall in&#13;
love, as that his merry Rose had fallen&#13;
a victim to the little urchin with the&#13;
bow. Yet it was true. A year after&#13;
she left school, she had paid a visit* to&#13;
one of her mother's relatives—a genuine,&#13;
old-fashioned, hearty English&#13;
squire. It was at his house that the&#13;
mischief was done—under his protection&#13;
that she met the man who was&#13;
to be at once the blessing and the torment&#13;
of her future life. She had first&#13;
seen him at church, where, I am afraid,&#13;
h|s blue eyes and regular features and&#13;
golden hair had attracted more of her&#13;
attention than she gave to her prayer&#13;
book. And when, at the end of the&#13;
service, her host came up to her and&#13;
introduced the handsome stranger us&#13;
the son of his oldest and dearest friend&#13;
there were not wanting those who&#13;
marked the shy smile, the slight blush,&#13;
and the bashful drooping of her eyes&#13;
as she greeted him. Rose was a free,&#13;
wild Rose no longer. Love, even at&#13;
first sight, will be lord of all; and&#13;
there is no time on earth, I think,&#13;
where he plays so many vagariees as&#13;
during the visit of a pretty city girl&#13;
to an old-fashioned English countryho'-&#13;
rse.&#13;
Mr. Verc became a constant visitor&#13;
at the house of his friend, and Rose&#13;
entered upon a new phase of her life,&#13;
and that sweetest, happiest and meet&#13;
foolish of times, when a young girl's&#13;
heart first finds out that it has other&#13;
work to do besides besting. She would&#13;
sit for hours, when her lover was ab«&#13;
sent, recalling every trivial circumstance&#13;
of their last Interview; and then&#13;
with a blush at the thought of her&#13;
employment, welcome another idea,&#13;
touching in its tenderness, to her heart,&#13;
and'weep for joy that she had reserved&#13;
the first fond love of her ycung spirit&#13;
for t i t e r —&#13;
In such musing3—such happy companionship—&#13;
a month passed rapidly&#13;
away. No word of love had been&#13;
spoken between the two; yet enough&#13;
had been said (though something a l -&#13;
ways seemed to check the avowal upon&#13;
his lips) to leave her happy in the&#13;
belief that she was very dear to him.&#13;
True, he had never asked her to be&#13;
his—had never told her definitely that&#13;
he loved her. But he had ki3sed her&#13;
hand; and a lock of that beautiful&#13;
golden hair rose and fell with every&#13;
pulsation of her happy heart.&#13;
Alas for that first sweet, Innocent&#13;
joy! Ere long that sunny curl w a s&#13;
wet with bitterest tears, and hidden&#13;
carefully away—the first of the lost&#13;
treasures which she, like every other&#13;
woman, was to gather around her as&#13;
she went through life.&#13;
It was her own folly that first came&#13;
between them. She was young and&#13;
childish; perhaps vain and trifling at&#13;
times. She loved him dearly, and yet,&#13;
secure in her possession, she was at&#13;
times very cruel to him. For when a&#13;
man leves a woman truly, she has it&#13;
in her power to hurt and torment him&#13;
In a thousand different ways.&#13;
Rose took the heart that had been&#13;
given her; and, half carelessly, half&#13;
maliciously, wounded it very grievousl&#13;
y&#13;
Among the guests at Howlet House&#13;
was one who had been seriously inclined&#13;
to worship at her shrine before&#13;
Mr. Vere had made his appearancce.&#13;
That he loved her she could not help&#13;
believing; that he was unhappy about&#13;
her, she and every one else around her&#13;
knew. And yet she allowed him to&#13;
hang over her chair—to talk to her—&#13;
to bring h e l i c e s — t o hold her bouquet&#13;
when she danced,giving him encouragement&#13;
(in the countless ways a woman&#13;
knows so well), without seeming to do&#13;
so.&#13;
Mr. Vere looked on and said nothing.&#13;
She was not engaged to him, and he&#13;
had no right to interfere. It may be&#13;
that he might have asked for such a&#13;
right; but in his heart he disapproved&#13;
so strongly of her conduct, that he&#13;
preferred to watch the drama to its&#13;
close before h e committed himself in&#13;
any way.&#13;
The crisis came at last. They were&#13;
at a party one even—this man aivl&#13;
Rose. Mr. Vere was absent, but was&#13;
expected later in the evening—a proceeding&#13;
on his part which did not&#13;
please his wilful lady-love. But she&#13;
would not show her displeasure. She&#13;
listened to the passionate words that&#13;
were breathed in her ear, and said to&#13;
herself that she would not "wear the&#13;
willow." Come what might with that&#13;
thought, some chain that bound her&#13;
spirit seemed suddenly unloosened, and&#13;
she became the gayest of the gay. The&#13;
band struck up a waltz—couple after&#13;
couple glided easily away from the&#13;
ground around them, till she was the&#13;
only lady left.&#13;
"One waltz—only one!" breathed&#13;
that voice in her ear.&#13;
She sh rank back at first, well remembering&#13;
in what terms Mr. Vere&#13;
had expressed his opinion of the dance&#13;
a few days before.&#13;
"Oh, I c-.nnot'"&#13;
"Surely you are not afraid of Mr.&#13;
Vere? He is not here—he will not&#13;
know. Will you not grant this favor&#13;
—perhaps the last I shall ever ask of&#13;
yon?"&#13;
The pleading glance of the sad, dark&#13;
eyes prevailed. She rose from her&#13;
seat. His r.rm was around her waist;&#13;
his breath upon her cheek; his voice&#13;
breathing passionate words of admiration&#13;
in her not unwilling ear; and the&#13;
absent lover seemed almost forgotten.&#13;
People made a circle around the room&#13;
to watch them; for both were young,&#13;
and graceful, and beautiful, and they&#13;
moved as if they had but one soul between&#13;
them. Rose's vanity was roused&#13;
by the flattering exclamations she&#13;
heard on every side. Flushed and&#13;
smiling and happy, she floated around;&#13;
when, as she passed the door, she&#13;
looked up and «sw a gentleman standing&#13;
there with folded arms, and his&#13;
eyes fixed intently upon her face.&#13;
It was Mr. Vere.&#13;
She was proud—too proud to show&#13;
how frightened she was, though her&#13;
partner felt her trembling from head&#13;
to foot. She said that she was tired,&#13;
and they left the circle and sat down^&#13;
Mr. Vere did not come to her. She&#13;
saw him talking to a lady near the&#13;
door, as grave and calm as ever, only&#13;
that he never trusted himself to look&#13;
that way until the party was breaking&#13;
up. Then he crossed the room and&#13;
stood before her.&#13;
"The carriage waits," he said quietly.&#13;
"Will you allow me?"&#13;
He offered his arm. He did not seem&#13;
angry. No man could have been more&#13;
courteous than he. He never spoke&#13;
as they descended the stairs together;&#13;
but at the carriage door ha stopped&#13;
a moment and looked at her very&#13;
gravely.&#13;
(Te be continued^&#13;
''CHINA WAR N E W S .&#13;
The generals of the powers held a&#13;
conference at PeUin on the 29th, to&#13;
consider the withdrawal of troops, and&#13;
decided to address a note to tde miniater-&#13;
j informing them that when the&#13;
ministers are able to announce the&#13;
lump sum demanded as indemnity and&#13;
the Chinese have agreed to the prin'&#13;
ciple of the payment arrangements&#13;
will be possible for withdrawal. The&#13;
other matters discussed were handing&#13;
over the administration of Pekirr to&#13;
native officials, and the plan for the&#13;
command of the legation guards, as to&#13;
whether this command should be centered&#13;
in one officer or each detachment&#13;
should be independent.&#13;
The report of Gen Ketteler, received&#13;
at Pekin from Kuo Lu, differs from the&#13;
other reports concerning the German-&#13;
French expedition previously received.&#13;
Gen. Ketteler's report shows that the&#13;
Chinese troops did not leave the province&#13;
till they were forced to do so. The&#13;
entire brigade, commanded by Gen.&#13;
Ketteler, met t h e enemy on April 23&#13;
and inflicted immense loss. The report&#13;
does not give the loss. The Germans&#13;
had one officer and three soldiers&#13;
killed and 28 soldiers wounded.&#13;
It is reported that the Japanese government&#13;
has reserved a subsidized mail&#13;
steamer for its own use. This suggests&#13;
that she is preparing for emergencies.&#13;
The desperate state of the&#13;
private iioaDces of Japan is said to&#13;
be making the war propaganda peculiar.&#13;
According to opinion in Shanghai,&#13;
an outbreak of hostilities would&#13;
be the signal for a rising1 throughout&#13;
China.&#13;
" The legation guard at the American&#13;
legation at Pekin will not be subjected&#13;
to the order of any foreign&#13;
general. Official reports of the latest&#13;
phases of the negotiations at Pekin, as&#13;
told in press dispatches, have not&#13;
reached Washington. The American&#13;
legation guard will retain its independence,&#13;
even if necessary to remove&#13;
it from Pekin and from Chioa.&#13;
A dispatch from Pekin, dated May 1,&#13;
says that a bloody battle has occurred&#13;
between the Russians and Chinese&#13;
near Mukden. The Russians lost 00 in&#13;
killed and wounded. Four Russian&#13;
officers were killed, and among the&#13;
wounded was Gen. Zerpitzki.&#13;
The German expedition is returning&#13;
to Pekin, leaving the country greatly&#13;
disaffected, o w i u g to the hardships inflicted&#13;
upon the population. Altogether&#13;
the expedition appears to have&#13;
produced a very bad effect I&#13;
The famine Rtricken peop'e of China&#13;
are becoming desperate,.and are now&#13;
. eating each other. They have eaten&#13;
every blade of grass, every bit of bark ;&#13;
in fact everything that can be eaten I&#13;
in that province. I&#13;
The U. S. cavalry and artillery left&#13;
Pekin on the 5th to march to Ton-Ku.&#13;
Imposing farewell ceremonies attended&#13;
their departure. {&#13;
France has placed the amount of her&#13;
indemnity to be asked from China at&#13;
1,3(&gt;5,000,000 francs. I&#13;
Tt»Bn»«» Clab of tb« Dlvoroatf,&#13;
Vienna has a new socjety which&#13;
should rouse some American cities t o&#13;
noble emulation. . No woman not divorced&#13;
is eligible to membership, bat&#13;
there Is nothing frivolous about the organization.&#13;
It is to be called the Humanity&#13;
club, and its badge is a silver&#13;
ring, engraved with that word, and&#13;
worn on the wedding ring finger. m e&#13;
appropriateness of the name seems a&#13;
jtrlfle occult; but, presumably, a divorced&#13;
woman has more troubles of her&#13;
own, in Austria, than here and needs&#13;
moral support. The idea of a band of&#13;
divorced women meeting weekly "for&#13;
mutual entertainment and support"&#13;
will probably strike the average American&#13;
citizen as distinctly humorous;&#13;
but it is a serious matter in Vienna,&#13;
and the club proposes building for&#13;
itself a permanent home.—New York&#13;
Sun.&#13;
VFher* Indian Corn &lt;)rl«fInat-d.&#13;
The earliest specimen of Indian corn&#13;
grew, it is believed by botanists, on&#13;
the plateau of .Peru, where this plant&#13;
has been found growing in a condition&#13;
which indicates that it is indigenous&#13;
to the soil.&#13;
A dispatch from Berlin, Germany,&#13;
dated the -d, says that an epidemic of&#13;
typhoid has broken out in the forts&#13;
and villages in the neighborhood of&#13;
Metz. The Eighth Bavarian regiment&#13;
. has alone lost 10 men from the disease&#13;
and has 281 men sick.&#13;
B A S E B A L L .&#13;
Below we publish the standing of&#13;
the American and National league clubs&#13;
up to and including the gi.#jes played&#13;
on Sunday, May 5:&#13;
AMERICAN.LF.ACrr..&#13;
Won. Lost. Perc\&#13;
Detroit 8 • ;i .Ti7&#13;
Chu'-ago .' 7 4 .aw&#13;
Washington r&gt; .1 .&amp;2~i&#13;
Baltimore 4 4 .IVKi&#13;
Philadelphia 4 4 .5)0&#13;
Boston...' .- 3 5 .373&#13;
Cleveland 4 7 .&amp;&gt;4&#13;
Milwaukee 3 8 .2TJ&#13;
NATIONAL LEACrE.&#13;
, Won. Lost. Per ct.&#13;
Cincinnati 7 3 .700&#13;
Brooklyn 6 4 . * »&#13;
Pittsburg 6 5 .543&#13;
Philadelphia 6 &lt;5 .500&#13;
Boston 4. 4 .5tM&#13;
S L Louis.. h fi .455&#13;
New York 3 . 3 .373&#13;
Chicago 5 D .357&#13;
A D O C T O R T H I S T I M E .&#13;
Portland, May 6th.—Dr. E. A. Rose,&#13;
a practising physician, formerly of&#13;
Yates Center, Kans., was on what&#13;
everyone supposed • was his death&#13;
bed. He had Diabetes, and six of&#13;
his brother doctors were in attenda&#13;
n c e and consultation at his bedside&#13;
They had done everything that medical&#13;
skill could suggest to save his life,&#13;
but they were at last reluctantly forced&#13;
to tell him that he must prepare for&#13;
death.&#13;
His aunt had been summoned to his&#13;
dying bedside. After the doctors had&#13;
given her nephew up, she insisted that&#13;
as a last resort, he be given a treatment&#13;
of Dodd'8 Kidney Pills.&#13;
From the very first dose, the tide&#13;
turned in his favor. His life was&#13;
saved, and he is hale and hearty today.&#13;
This case and its cure has amazed&#13;
the physicians, and is the sensation of&#13;
the hour. It is interesting to note&#13;
that while many others are being&#13;
cured this great discovery in medicine,&#13;
the physicians themselves are&#13;
among the first to benefit, and that&#13;
while the simpler and more prevalent&#13;
forms, such as Rheumatism, Sciatica,&#13;
Bladder and Urinary Trouble and Female&#13;
Weakness disappear before it,&#13;
the more malignant forms, such as&#13;
Bright's Disease, Diabetes and Dropsy,&#13;
which have always been regarded as&#13;
incurable, are yielding just a s easily.&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills are fast superceding&#13;
all other treatment for Kidney&#13;
Disease, and as nearly all human sickness&#13;
and suffering has its origin in the&#13;
Kidneys, the use of this wonderful&#13;
medicine is becoming almost universal.&#13;
• -* -&#13;
The molasses output of thetwosujrar&#13;
companies at Bay City will be converted&#13;
into alcohol and chemicals.&#13;
DO VOVJ&#13;
0OUCH&#13;
D O N T DELAY&#13;
BALSAM&#13;
THE " *%&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
LIVK STOCK.&#13;
New York— Cattle Sheep Lambs H o n&#13;
Beat grades... .14 40&amp;5 60 « SO 15 30 16 45&#13;
Lower grades..S £&gt;4i 85 3 5J 4 b) 6 2i&#13;
Chicago—&#13;
Best grades.....5 00^5 9) 4 50 5 23 5 93&#13;
Lower grades. .3 »»$4 95 4 2i 4 50 5 60&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Best grades... 3 80 $4 60 4 03 4 75 5 73&#13;
Lower grades. .-2 T5&amp;4 J\&gt; 3 GJ 4 5J 5 00&#13;
Buffalo—&#13;
Best grade* 4 wa* ?"&gt; 4 3"V 5 10 « 0)&#13;
Lower (Trades .2 uu&amp;i i&gt; 2 7&gt; 4 30 5 6)&#13;
Cincinnati--&#13;
Best grades. ....4 75¾¾ 1» 4 2'&gt; 5 5) 5 8)&#13;
Lower grades. .4 3*£1 0&gt; 4 ©J 5 0J 5 5J&#13;
' Plttatrarg—&#13;
Best grades..... 5 037£V M&#13;
Lower grades .4 00&amp;4 6¾&#13;
4 80&#13;
4 40&#13;
Ml)&#13;
OSJ.&#13;
5 9%&#13;
555&#13;
GRAIN. E T C&#13;
Wheat Corn Oats&#13;
No. a red No. 2 mix No. 2 whits&#13;
New York S1S81* f S ^ K 34^34*&#13;
Chie««o 73*73* 4?£47Vt M&amp;»\&#13;
•Detroit ?G*7S* 40&amp;46 31@3l4&#13;
Toledo 75375½ 47947* S&amp;3£8*&#13;
Cincinnati 77^78 47«4?tt 303S9&#13;
PttUbors 79)73* 48*43 3 * 3 » *&#13;
BoffaJo 77^77* 47-tV? 3*3*»*&#13;
•Datrolt—Hfcj. No. 1 Timothy. »12 73 per ton.&#13;
Potatoes, tic per bu. Lire Poultry, spring&#13;
eatekeas, Ue per * : fowls, 10c; turkeys, lie;&#13;
duekm 10c. Vggs, strtotly fresh. 1 Jo per&#13;
putter, best dairy. l5o per h; ommery, 19o&gt;&#13;
It Cures folds. Cough*., Sere Threat, Croup. I n -&#13;
fuenza. WtoooiiigCougvrronchithandA tttma.&#13;
A certai i cure tor ons imptlon in first stages,&#13;
and a sure relief in advanced sages. Use at&#13;
•ace. You will see the excellent eflrct after&#13;
taking the first dose. Sold by dealers ev rywhere.&#13;
Large bottles 25 cents and 5 0 oaots.&#13;
IN 3 OR 4 YEARS&#13;
M INDEPENDENCE ASSURED If you take up your&#13;
borne in Western Canada,&#13;
the land of plenty.&#13;
Illustrated pamphlet*. STing experiences of&#13;
.rmers wbo have become&#13;
wealthy in growing&#13;
wheat, reports of&#13;
„ , delegates, etc..and full&#13;
information as to reduced railway rates can be&#13;
had on application to the Superintendent of&#13;
Immigration, Deportment of Interior. Ottawa,&#13;
Canada, or to J. Grieve. Saginaw, Mich., or M.&#13;
V. Mclnnes, No-1 Merrill Block, Detroit, Mich.&#13;
: ' " . ' • • • • &gt; • ;&#13;
.A&#13;
S&#13;
J 4*/*«**«i*&gt;-Jtl, '*ii '&#13;
• V^*'-*"!P v-*".\"&#13;
; &gt; ' / ' • ' ' " " i i " . * .'. &lt; • *&#13;
• &gt; - .&#13;
&gt; • • • • • * : , , « "&#13;
A ; f ::&amp;«: " ' I t '&#13;
•'-, •?«•&#13;
&gt; * • *&#13;
( ' : " * ' • ,'V^&lt;: .v&#13;
•.-• ' . j . &gt; • i r . . - • • • #&#13;
:"''U^'':;* "! J&#13;
':%&gt;'; v. J&#13;
^ ' ; . " • '&#13;
• • " # • &amp; • • '&#13;
4 ' * ^&#13;
/'&#13;
%&#13;
I *?•&#13;
y'•&#13;
WE8T PUTNAM.&#13;
S. E. Bartou was in Lyndon on&#13;
business last Friday.&#13;
Carrie Erwin visited Grace&#13;
Gardner last Wednesday.&#13;
Ed Spears visited his sister&#13;
Mrs. Doyle last Saturday.&#13;
Julia Mulraney of Fowlerville&#13;
is visiting at J. M. Harris.&#13;
- Mrs. L. Chalker of Fowlerville&#13;
visited her mother here last week.&#13;
Bobt. O'brien and sister of&#13;
Bunkerhill spent Sunday at Patrick&#13;
Kelley's.&#13;
Mrs. Kennedy of Stockbridge&#13;
visited at her old home here a few&#13;
days last week.&#13;
Mrs. F. G. Stone and Jean P y -&#13;
per of Unadilla visited at Henry&#13;
Gardner's Friday last.&#13;
PLAINFIEUX&#13;
Grandma Montague is able to&#13;
sit up a little.&#13;
E. L. Topping has put an addition&#13;
on his house lately.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Mapes were&#13;
in Stockbridge Saturday.&#13;
Preaching: at the Presbyterian&#13;
church last Sunday p. m.&#13;
E. T. Bush will move his saw&#13;
mill to Gregory this week.&#13;
Ingles and Meabon represent&#13;
the McCormic in this vicinity.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Mapes spent&#13;
Saturday and Sunday with their&#13;
children in Chelsea.&#13;
Messrs H. and C. D. Mapes, B.&#13;
J. Gardner, E. VanSyckel, H.&#13;
Huston, and wives, Mrs. J. B Foster,&#13;
Mrs. Albert Westfall, were&#13;
all entertained recently by Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Andrew Jackson. Turkey&#13;
dinner, and a fine time was&#13;
the report of all.&#13;
SOUTH MARION.&#13;
Mrs. Heman Smith is very low&#13;
at this writing.&#13;
Kate Boss sewed in this neighborhood&#13;
last week.&#13;
B o b t Wylie called on Wm.&#13;
White last Sunday.&#13;
A. A. Abbott is visiting his son,&#13;
I. J., for a few weeks.&#13;
Lettie Wylie was home from&#13;
her school over Sunday.&#13;
The farmers in this vicinity are&#13;
drawing their potatoes to Gregory.&#13;
Wm. Caskey and wife, of Iosco,&#13;
were guests at I. J. Abbott's last&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Mr. Keland and family of&#13;
Plain fie Id, are moving into Jas.&#13;
Wylie's bouse.&#13;
Britton Gilks and wife, and&#13;
Mrs. Mann, of Bives J e t , visited&#13;
at N. Pacy's the first of the week.&#13;
Miss Mabel Docking, of Pinckney,&#13;
visited her brother Will and&#13;
sister Mrs. N . Pacy, the past&#13;
week.&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Fred Brown, of Fowler, is the&#13;
guest of his mother and other relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Miss Belle Kennedy, of Ypsilanti,&#13;
spent Saturday and Sunday&#13;
with her mother.&#13;
Orville Tapper and wife, of&#13;
Hamburg, were guests of her&#13;
mother on Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. Sweeney, of&#13;
Chilson visited relatives in this&#13;
place on Saturday last&#13;
Clayton Placeway was quite&#13;
badly injured about the head, on&#13;
Monday, while assisting in build*&#13;
ing fance with a machine. Several&#13;
stitches were necessary to close&#13;
the wound.&#13;
Miss Vina Barton is wo iking&#13;
at Wirt Milner's.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Secor was on the&#13;
sick list last week.&#13;
—A. C. Watson was in Ann Arbor&#13;
oue day lest week,&#13;
Bert Hartsuff and family visited&#13;
at this place Sunday.&#13;
Bessie Lane is working at&#13;
Fitch Montague's at Gregory.&#13;
John T. Sadler, of Detroit, visited&#13;
at Wm. Pyper's last Friday.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Laverock and daughter&#13;
Ada, are visiting relatives in&#13;
Leslie.&#13;
Mesdames Wirt Barnum and&#13;
Alox Pyper were in Chelsea last&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Lyman Hadley and wife, and&#13;
Mrs. L. Clark visited Chelsea last&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Jas. Mackinder sold a valuable&#13;
horse to Michael Noyse . of Chelsea&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mrs. Gertrude Webb, of Stockbridge&#13;
spent Sunday under the&#13;
parental roof.&#13;
Wm. Livermore and daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Kittie Budd, were in Stockbridge&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Allie Holmes and wife, of West&#13;
Stockbridge, visited her parents at&#13;
this place last Sunday.&#13;
The Unadilla farmers' club will&#13;
meet at the home of David Westfall&#13;
and wife, Saturday, May 18.&#13;
The Misses Ina Smith and&#13;
Erma Pyper were gueets at Lyman&#13;
Hadley's Saturday evening&#13;
Lon Clark and wife, of Stockbridge,&#13;
visited at L. K7 Hadley's&#13;
the last of last week and the first&#13;
of this.&#13;
Sylvester Bullis and wife, Mrs.&#13;
Bullis and daughter Minnie attended&#13;
the fun«ral of J o h a Miller&#13;
of Iosco, last Sunday.&#13;
Don't forget that Be v. Powers&#13;
will preach in t h e Presbyterian&#13;
church next Sunday, May 12 at&#13;
2:30. Everyone come.&#13;
Foster Chapman and Mrs. Hattie&#13;
Stowe were in Pinckney last&#13;
week. Mrs. Stowe was having her&#13;
eyes treated by Dr. Sigler.&#13;
Mrs. Hattie Stowe and Miss&#13;
Jean Pyper visited at Henry&#13;
Gardners and Kirk Van Winkle's&#13;
in West Putnam, last Friday.&#13;
In tJnadilla, commencing at&#13;
what is known as Beny Sales corners&#13;
and go east two miles, you&#13;
will pass four empty houses, all&#13;
having become so this spring.&#13;
This line of road lies in road district&#13;
No. 18, which contains just&#13;
3 J miles of road to be looked after,&#13;
and only two residents to do the&#13;
work. What puzzles the pathmaster&#13;
is to know how to get the&#13;
parties who own the land together&#13;
to do the work. To warn them he&#13;
would have to travel a good part&#13;
of Unadilla, Putnam and Lyndon&#13;
townships, north edge of Montcalm&#13;
Co., and west into Washington&#13;
state.&#13;
W * * » • • » • • • Qrftoy lost Ufa Bat*&#13;
A very distinguished assemblage honored&#13;
Grant's bail, which was held&#13;
In the newly completed north wing of&#13;
the treasury building. Elaborate preparations&#13;
were made (or dancing, the&#13;
manager, by telegraphic communications,&#13;
keepiug the dance moving simultaneously&#13;
on three floors. But the&#13;
man who preferred eating to dancing&#13;
and could not get even within the sight&#13;
of food was not well pleased. Refreshments&#13;
were served in the basement,&#13;
in a room too small to accommodate&#13;
the 0,000 guests, but large&#13;
enough to contain the provisions,&#13;
which were scarce indeed. In the&#13;
cloakrooms the committee in charge&#13;
lost their heads, visitors lost their&#13;
hats, and it is stated on good authority&#13;
that the sulphurous vapors which&#13;
rose in the vicinity of the place where&#13;
Horace Greeley searched for his hat&#13;
during two hours were stifling.&#13;
It is recorded that one gentleman&#13;
walked to Capitol hill, two miles distant,&#13;
in dancing pumps and bareheaded&#13;
and that many frightened women&#13;
still cowered In the corners of the&#13;
dressing rooms at dawn the next morning.&#13;
So, In preparing Grant's second&#13;
ball, the committee made elaborate&#13;
arrangements in order that these unpleasantnesses&#13;
should not again occur.—&#13;
National Magazine.&#13;
Want Column.&#13;
Our merchants were kept busy last&#13;
Saturday. *&#13;
Mr. Pitts is the guest of his daughter,&#13;
Mrs. S. Dnrfee.&#13;
F, ft. Janksnn made a business trip&#13;
Por Sale.&#13;
Twenty yards of good ra» carpet&#13;
for 13.50. Also 25 lbs ot carpet rags&#13;
all sewed and colored. Inquire at&#13;
tbis office.&#13;
FOR SALE—Brown Leghorn eggs&#13;
from one ot the best laying flock of&#13;
hens in Lower Mich. 25c per setting&#13;
at residence or 50c by express,&#13;
F. W. MACKIVDER,&#13;
t 26 Anderson, Mich.&#13;
For Set vice..&#13;
Short Horn Bull, Duke of Plain*&#13;
field, f 1.00 for season with privilege&#13;
ot returning. P. H.KELLY. ' 19tf&#13;
r or Sale.&#13;
A Half-blood Jersey&#13;
milch, at P. H. KELLY'S.&#13;
Cow, new&#13;
t21&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
A cow for sale. Inquire of&#13;
I. J. ABBOTT.&#13;
FOR SALE—a balf cottage bed with&#13;
springs and mattress. Inquire at this&#13;
office,&#13;
FOR SALE.&#13;
Twenty-eight yards of pood rag&#13;
carpet for sale at 15 cents per yard.&#13;
Enquire at tbis office. t22&#13;
If troubled by a weak digestion, loss&#13;
of appetite, or constipation, try a few&#13;
doses of Chamberlain's Stomach and&#13;
' Liver Tablets. Every box warranted.&#13;
For sale by F. A. Siuler, Pinckney.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
Oats, Hay, and Corn. Inquire of&#13;
H. M. Williston, Administrator of the&#13;
estate of Janet Lore, deceased." t-18&#13;
Havinsr recently purchased a&#13;
thoroughbred Hereford Bull 1 will&#13;
offer his services at $1.00 the season,&#13;
payable at time of service with return&#13;
privilege. C. V. VANWINKLE. t-19&#13;
UNAOILLA.&#13;
lira. Mima Watpon was in phel-&#13;
Htoa Monday. ;&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
Miss Ethel Spront is in Muir&#13;
taking music lessons of her cousin&#13;
Beatrice Spront. Her mother accompanied&#13;
her as far as Lapsing.&#13;
The Anderson farmers' club&#13;
meets at the home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Eugene Smith May 11, for&#13;
supper—ice cream will be served.&#13;
The following program will be&#13;
rendered.&#13;
Minnie Monks&#13;
Susie Smith&#13;
Maude and Snsie Smith&#13;
Minnie Hoff Edith Wood,&#13;
Dillivan Dorkee&#13;
Will Roche, N. Wilson&#13;
Samuel Wilson&#13;
Frankie Placeway&#13;
Flossie Smith&#13;
Lucios Wilaott&#13;
Joseph Eialee&#13;
Nellie Gurdner&#13;
Instrumental solo&#13;
Recitation&#13;
Song&#13;
Inst, duett&#13;
Pap«r&#13;
Discussion&#13;
Solo&#13;
Recitation&#13;
Inst. Solo&#13;
Solo&#13;
Recitation&#13;
Solo&#13;
Bring yonr Job Work to tbis office.&#13;
RaiMCalrea Without Jlilk.&#13;
Thousands are doing it Cheaply and&#13;
successfully with "Blatch ford's Calf&#13;
Meal" the perfect milk substitute.&#13;
For sale by Teeple &amp; Cad well. t-26&#13;
STILL MORE LOCAL.&#13;
A fine soaking rain Tuesday evening.&#13;
D. W. Murta was in .Jackson Wednesday.&#13;
Gns Cole of Neb. is working for Dr.&#13;
H. F. Sigler.&#13;
Perry Blunt and wife were in Detroit&#13;
this week.&#13;
Lara Spear* was home from Grand&#13;
Rapids over Sunday.&#13;
Master Kennedy ot Stockbridge was&#13;
a caller at this office Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs. Richard Baker is caring for&#13;
her sister Kate's babe for the present.&#13;
Miss Daisy Reason of Jackson spent&#13;
the first of the week with her parents.&#13;
F. 0. Beech and wife of Marion&#13;
•toted at A. J. Wilbelm's last Sunday.&#13;
Born, to Mr. and Mrs, Kirk Van&#13;
Winkle on Tu sday, a nine-pound&#13;
tfirk -&lt;&#13;
F. R. Travis and daughter Marginrete&#13;
of St. Johns art spending the&#13;
week at his Mortage lake farm and&#13;
ratort&#13;
to Detroit last Thursday.&#13;
B. b\ Andrews, of Paraballville, was&#13;
a gnest of his son F. L. the last of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Bert Green and daughter, of&#13;
Stockbridge visited relatives here the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Sheriff Finley and Pros. Atty.&#13;
Shield* of Howell w0re in town the&#13;
last of last week.&#13;
The same teachers as was employed&#13;
last year have been retained in the&#13;
Pinckney schools.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. T. 0 . Nickels of Corunna,&#13;
visited Mrs. Nickel's parents of&#13;
Marion a few days last week.&#13;
Hartley Bland and wife of Hartland&#13;
have been visiting their people&#13;
in Lyndon and Putnam a few days.&#13;
Mark 8 war thou t it building a house&#13;
on his place southeast of town.&#13;
Robt. O'brien and Bister of Bunkerhill,&#13;
were guests of relatives here the&#13;
past weak. , —&#13;
Miss Ethel Graham bad the mis*&#13;
fortune to tall down stairs last Monday.&#13;
A few bruises was the result. '&#13;
Mrs. D. F. Ewen was called to Da*&#13;
kota, Monday by the serious illness of&#13;
her daughter, Mrs. Nellie Harrison.&#13;
C. W. Hills of Jackson erected a&#13;
monument last Tuesday for J. R.&#13;
Martin on his lot in the Pinckney&#13;
cemeterv.&#13;
Mrs. A. J. Wiibelm is in Marion&#13;
this week seeing to placing a monument&#13;
to her mothers grave in' the&#13;
Greene cemetery.&#13;
The society of church workers wilt&#13;
hold their monthly tea with Mrs.&#13;
Frank Sigler next Wednesday May 15.&#13;
Tea from 5'until all are served. All&#13;
cordially invitep. Sec.&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
All persons having&#13;
Flour or Feed at&#13;
the Pinckney mill&#13;
are requested to remove&#13;
the same before&#13;
May 15. All&#13;
parties having accounts&#13;
with me will&#13;
please settle by that&#13;
time as the mill has&#13;
been sold.&#13;
K. H. ERWIN.&#13;
*^\/j^»&#13;
O u r Mottot " T h e Better t h e&#13;
Grade the Bigger the T r a d e . "&#13;
o / \ y &gt;&#13;
Royal Tailoring&#13;
Stands at the Head,&#13;
is&#13;
The Very Best!!&#13;
Clothing is absolutely&#13;
m ade to your measure, and&#13;
in the latest styles. Satisfaction&#13;
is always guaranteed!&#13;
W e s o l i c i t y o u r p a t r o n a g e&#13;
K. H. Crane,&#13;
Local Agent.&#13;
CLOTHING!&#13;
We have a little song to sing on Clothing.&#13;
We want to Interest you and show you that&#13;
we have the right afnd proper lines.&#13;
Nobby styles of the leading&#13;
cloths, having all the features of&#13;
the Tailor-made.&#13;
Thats what you want!&#13;
Along with the clothing you&#13;
might see something in gents&#13;
furnishings.&#13;
Have the best assortment to be found&#13;
in any city; all bright new numbers that&#13;
carry beauty to the eye.&#13;
See us for your spring out-fit,&#13;
we can save you $$$.&#13;
Car fare&#13;
We deduct your car fare from&#13;
bills of $15.00 or over.&#13;
Tours For Business,&#13;
HOLMES &amp; DANCER,&#13;
j • . Stockbridge, Mich,&#13;
&gt; s&#13;
.• A~*Z a»^.*s^x*,.^ ^</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="36750">
              <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="6887">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch May 09, 1901</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6888">
                <text>May 09, 1901 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="6889">
                <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="6890">
                <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="6891">
                <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="6892">
                <text>1901-05-09</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6893">
                <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="995" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="923">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/87f83b35f36a55ecaf27e6df5d0b8789.pdf</src>
        <authentication>529898db10c129436c39e36ec7fc5085</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="32309">
              <text>VOL. XIX. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MAY. , 1901.16 No. 1^.1 0&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
Quite a heavy frost Sunday evening.&#13;
Claire Backus of Stockbridge was&#13;
in town Monday.&#13;
Brighton is sure of an electric road.&#13;
Well st) are we bat not just yet.&#13;
Rev. Mr. Hicks made a business trip&#13;
to Corunna Wednesday afternoon.&#13;
The L. M. Ooe bouse on Mill street&#13;
is being treated with a coat of paint.&#13;
Mrs. H. W. Hicks is spending a&#13;
couple of weeks with her friends in&#13;
Gorunna and Owosso.&#13;
Bro. Barnes of tha Livingston Republican&#13;
was a pleasant caller at this&#13;
office Friday Jast. He was well pleased&#13;
with our new location.&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
D E P A R T M E N T&#13;
HOWELL- MICHIGAN&#13;
A Bush of Business from a&#13;
"Whirlwind of Bargains. W e Sell&#13;
the Very Best at the Lowest Possible&#13;
Price. Come and look.&#13;
on the&#13;
Dry Roods&#13;
Groceries&#13;
Hardware&#13;
China&#13;
A T&#13;
BARG&#13;
A I N&#13;
When in Howell drop i n and&#13;
see us.&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
N e x t to Post O f f i c e .&#13;
Mail orders&#13;
Carefully filled.&#13;
AjUfcAdlfcAalfc.&#13;
O u r Motto« " T h e Better the&#13;
G r a d e the Bigger the T r a d e . "&#13;
Royal Tailoring&#13;
Stands at the Head,&#13;
— tfr&#13;
i&#13;
The Very Best!!&#13;
Clothing is absolutely&#13;
made to your measure, and&#13;
in the latest styles. Satisfaction&#13;
is always guaranteed!&#13;
W e s o l i c i t y o u r p a t r o n a g e&#13;
3 _ _&#13;
K. H. Crane,&#13;
Local Agent.&#13;
Miss Fannie Monks is&#13;
list. ,&#13;
Decoration day two weeks from today—&#13;
May 30.&#13;
Mrs. 0. W. Haze has had her residence&#13;
repainted.&#13;
R. D. Roche and Miller Beurman of&#13;
Howell were in town Tuesday.&#13;
R. H. Erwin has moved his family&#13;
into the LaRue bouse on Ma n St.&#13;
The fine rains of the past week have&#13;
done a world of good to farm crops.&#13;
J.L.Roche has rented the Mclntyre&#13;
house and moved there this week.&#13;
Miss Mabelle Daley ot Howell visited&#13;
her aunt Mrs. A. J. Wilbelm last&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
We bear no more about the Lakeland&#13;
cement factory. Wonder what&#13;
is the reason?&#13;
Mike Filzsimmons and Archie Durfee&#13;
were down from Stockbridge Sunday&#13;
visiting their people.&#13;
Mesdames G. W. Halstead of Leslie&#13;
and G. VV. Rogers of Albion were the&#13;
quests of Lillian Boyle last week.&#13;
Mrs. LaRue ot Howell and sister,&#13;
Mrs. Curtis of Lansing were guests ot&#13;
Mrs. Frank Moran ot this place the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Postma3ter Swartbout informed us&#13;
Monday that the supplies for the R.&#13;
F. D. had been received and the route&#13;
ordered to commence July 1.&#13;
There will be an ice cream social, at&#13;
the home of Mr. N. Basing Wednesday&#13;
evening May 22 for the benefit&#13;
of the Lakin appointment every one&#13;
cordiallv invited.&#13;
The citizen who wishes to know&#13;
what the council of the village do at&#13;
their regular meetings will have to&#13;
attend them. It costs $10 per year to&#13;
get them printed.&#13;
There is some talk that a state bass&#13;
hatchery will be locatod at Milford by&#13;
the state fish commission. That village&#13;
and surrounding country ha*&#13;
plenty of fresh running water which&#13;
is needed in fish breeding business.&#13;
In a letter paying $2 in advance for&#13;
his paper, Rev. Fr. J. k Stack'able of&#13;
McHenry III., says: "The DISPATCH&#13;
keeps me posted on the happenings in&#13;
and about Pin.kney the home of my&#13;
boyhood days. I should feel very&#13;
lonely without it."&#13;
Several people were seriously injured&#13;
in a disturbance on the Campus&#13;
Martin^fn Detroit last Friday night at&#13;
which time the police were suppressing&#13;
free speech. Commissioner Andrews&#13;
who was the real cause of the disturbance,&#13;
we are glad to say is no relative&#13;
of ours.&#13;
Some people do not know it, but the&#13;
law does not require supervisors to&#13;
make out or go after tax statements.&#13;
He may require the taxpayer to make&#13;
his own valuations on personal property.&#13;
Many did this last year, swore&#13;
to the statement, tbsn when thev came&#13;
to pay their taxes blamed the supervisors&#13;
for the raise.&#13;
sick i John Chambers and wife spent Sunday&#13;
with friends in Hamburg.&#13;
J. F. Milne and wife spent part ot&#13;
the past week with Jackson friends.&#13;
H. G. Briggs and wife spent part of&#13;
the past week with friends in Brighton&#13;
and Howell.&#13;
Do not forget that the Dispt-rcH office&#13;
has moved into new quarters at&#13;
the corner of mill and main streets.&#13;
If the DISPATCH Neks anything as to&#13;
news and make-up this week, please&#13;
remember that the editor and family&#13;
have been busy moving and settling&#13;
in their new home.&#13;
H. D. Grieve and family have moved&#13;
into Mrs. Grieve's residence on&#13;
Main street. Prof. Durfee and family&#13;
have mo.ed into Miss Maggie Grieyes&#13;
residence on Unadilla street,&#13;
Sometime between midnight and&#13;
morning last Thursday a couple of&#13;
wandering minstrels discoursed sweet&#13;
music on a violin and guitar, ^isny&#13;
citizens wert* awakened with sweet&#13;
strains that made tnera think of an&#13;
angel v s tation. Come again boys.&#13;
Secretary of state Warner will notify&#13;
all county commiisioners of schools&#13;
not to permit the sale of counly school&#13;
diplomas bearing a fac similie of the&#13;
great seal ot the state. It is learned&#13;
that several publishing houses have&#13;
been selling such diplomas in the state&#13;
and the use of the seal is contrary to&#13;
law.&#13;
For the summer at least the Ep*&#13;
worth League have decided to hold&#13;
their devotiooal meetings in connection&#13;
with the prayer meeting on&#13;
Thursday evening of each week. At&#13;
the meeting last week thi topic was&#13;
taken up and much interest manifested&#13;
by those present. All are invited&#13;
to attend these services.&#13;
An exchange has the following to&#13;
say of an Orion man's experience in&#13;
the use of salt ia raising potatoes last&#13;
season: A few rows of hiils in a field&#13;
he salted thoroughly and these rows&#13;
yielded more and better tubers than&#13;
the unsalted rows. Having used the&#13;
salt during a dry spell, he claims that&#13;
it keeps the hills moist. Another&#13;
thoroughly satisfactory result was&#13;
that the salted rows were untouched&#13;
by the pestiferous potatoe bug.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
The Ladies of Pinckney and vicinity&#13;
to know that we have a line of Millinery&#13;
Goods to suit everyone both&#13;
in Style and Price.&#13;
Those who buy&#13;
of us can't help saving money. You&#13;
may match the price but you can't&#13;
match the&#13;
Goods&#13;
at the price.&#13;
Georgia Martin3&#13;
Opera House Block.&#13;
.¾&#13;
Change of Ownership,&#13;
Mr. Frank M. Peters of Springport.&#13;
Mich, has purchased the Pinckney mill&#13;
property of Mr. Birkett. Mr. Peters&#13;
is a practical miller or life-long experience&#13;
and bad charge of the Howell&#13;
roller mills for A. 0 . Hutching3 for&#13;
almost 7 years up to two years ago&#13;
with great success as to quality' of&#13;
flour turned out and general results.&#13;
We welcome him to our town and&#13;
wish bim great success in his new fie.d&#13;
of labor.&#13;
ANDERSON FARMER'S CLUB.&#13;
Notice! To&#13;
Farmers&#13;
of the&#13;
20th Century.&#13;
Empire Drill agency for 1901 has been secured by us&#13;
and we wish to call your attention to a few of the new&#13;
features of this Drill, as wall as sowing all kinds of grain it&#13;
will plant Sugar Beets four rows 21 inches apart, will plant&#13;
corn two rows 3&gt;£ feat apart, Baans three rows 28 inches&#13;
apart, or if desired the rows may be made closer together&#13;
or farther apart by simply closing a shut-off slide on inside&#13;
of box. Come and examine the Drill and you will be&#13;
convinced that it is the best Drill on earth.&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
-&amp;*2£_&#13;
" S o m e t i m e s her n a r r o w k i t c k e n w a l l *&#13;
S t r e t c h e d a w a y t n t » s t a t e l y h a l l s . "&#13;
coo&#13;
This happened to Maud Muller, but our&#13;
prices on&#13;
1 A m&#13;
Still&#13;
Selling&#13;
CARPETS.&#13;
Can show you a large line of samples of&#13;
the best wearing Carpets made—you&#13;
will be pleased with the styles and the&#13;
prices will suit you.&#13;
A large line of Misses* and Children's School Shoes of one of&#13;
the beat makes known—Burley Stephens &amp; Co.—an old firm who&#13;
have been shoe makers for over forty years. Yon will get your moneys&#13;
worth when yon bay their shoes.&#13;
W. W. BARNARD.&#13;
The Anderson farmers club was&#13;
held la*t Saturday at the pleasant&#13;
home of Eugene Smith and was largely&#13;
attended despite the busy tine.*. A&#13;
very select and carefully prepared&#13;
program*was rendered consisting of a&#13;
solo by Minnie Monks; the secretary's&#13;
report was then read afrer which we&#13;
listened to a duet by Minnie Hoff and&#13;
Edith Wood which was well rendered.&#13;
Miss Frankie Place way then pleased&#13;
the company with a recitation. Next&#13;
came a vocal duet by little Maud and&#13;
Su»ie Smith which was encored.&#13;
Dillivan Durkee read a paper on&#13;
education which contained many&#13;
truths and was ably discussed by Norman&#13;
and Luoius Wilson and Z. Hart*&#13;
suffand Albert Prost. We then lis*&#13;
tened to an instrumental solo by&#13;
Flossie Smltif and a vocal solo by Samuel&#13;
Wilson which was encorei. Mrs.&#13;
Waggers also favered us with a solo.&#13;
The club after partaking of a tine&#13;
sapper adjourned until the second&#13;
Saturday in June to meet with Mitt&#13;
Lucy Hincbey. \*&#13;
Wall Paper&#13;
Make it possible for it to happen&#13;
to everybody. Wall paper which&#13;
used to cost so much that it could&#13;
only be hung in the parlor, or in&#13;
stately halls, is now so cheap that&#13;
the kitchen walls can be made&#13;
really attractive.&#13;
• ' V&#13;
Come in and. see our new&#13;
for lOOl. Pricen from 7 to 25 oent«&#13;
per double roll.&#13;
- - 1 , •,&#13;
• -¾..&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
- * &gt; i f ~»v. 4k&#13;
, Ufa*. .h~*^ .**•&gt; *w &gt;«-*•*»• '-*•-&#13;
HuU.'^".". JX"^"&#13;
W r \ J , \ w ? " i ' •••••:• ; •• , : , . •• &lt;. ' - . - J "!!•&#13;
: , . , " ' " : r ' • J . , v V ,:'.• - •': " ' \ ' - , .-' * • • / .-•••• / :---i.Ji',,^&gt;^. , ^ : •'-;•': 'v •':•" • &amp; . . • . J • • • : / • - • • &lt;*'&#13;
- - • • . . • • - ' ' ' • , • . : ' . , v : • • .. . ' . - . , . • • &gt; * • : ' ' &gt; • • . . ' , • • ' . • • • ' ; • » •:• • / ' . : ' • ' ' ' • • " ' • • &gt; ' \ . ^ : , 1 : - -&#13;
^ , ^ «...&#13;
I-&#13;
"•'1.&#13;
s..&#13;
T&#13;
; * * •&#13;
* •&#13;
HYJttUTIC TiflCKS.&#13;
A S R E V E A L E D BY A F A M O U S&#13;
S U B J E C T .&#13;
Vfefc* W&lt;tad«rral Trelnln* Whloh Made&#13;
t h o a i u Mlnnoofc * Matter in the Art&#13;
of D^eepUoti—Can Coutrol Respiration,&#13;
Heart and FaUe.&#13;
That many of the mysteries of hypnotism&#13;
are nothing more than cleverly&#13;
executed tricks is proven, if the&#13;
statements of Thomas Minnock are&#13;
tfue. Perhaps no one is better qualified&#13;
t o speak o n this subject. For&#13;
years he has acted as a hypnotic subject,&#13;
or "horse," as the character i s&#13;
termed in the language of the profession.&#13;
He is one of that class of men&#13;
wfao sleep for hours in a store window,&#13;
are buried alive, drink and eat poisohona&#13;
substances, and submit to havi&#13;
n g ©ins and needles stuck into their&#13;
dean without flinching. He claims to&#13;
have traveled with such noted hypnotists&#13;
and magnetic healers as Sant&amp;&#13;
nelii, Schlatter, Keen, the Lees, the&#13;
Sages, and to have received his training&#13;
from the famous Dr. Charcot of&#13;
Paris. He has not only deceived the&#13;
general public, but some of the world's&#13;
leading scientists and physicians. His&#13;
training has led him to gain a wonderful&#13;
control of his faculties and organs.&#13;
He can control his heart beats&#13;
and respiration, and produce an action&#13;
in the muscles In his wrists to ind&#13;
i c a t e that the pulse is not beating&#13;
vhe same in each.&#13;
H U E a r l r Training*.&#13;
Minnock was brought to the attention&#13;
of Dr. Charcot in Brussels, Belglum.&#13;
He went to Europe with Barnum's&#13;
circus and acted the part of the&#13;
"baby clown." This consisted in running&#13;
about the ring and imitating all&#13;
the acts of the real clown. Dan Rice&#13;
was the clown and the old funmaker&#13;
thought a creat deal of the boy. When&#13;
THOMAS MINNOCK,&#13;
the show was In England Minnock attracted&#13;
the attention of the manager of&#13;
a local circus. It was a small affair,&#13;
bat the manager offered him a larger&#13;
salary than he was getting and he&#13;
accepted i t The circoe went to the&#13;
Brussels exposition and became&#13;
stranded and wrecked in the Belgium&#13;
capital. Minnock had no money and&#13;
when almost on the verge of starvation&#13;
appealed to the American con-&#13;
:soL That official could not furnish&#13;
him with transportation to the United&#13;
Slates, bat gave him a little money&#13;
and a note of introduction to Dr.&#13;
Charcot, who was then in Brussels.&#13;
The doctor was Impressed with the appearance&#13;
of the boy and took him&#13;
In his service. Then his training as a&#13;
fharpnotic subject commenced. He&#13;
say8: *The doctor began to stickpins&#13;
into various parts of my body, but&#13;
only pricked me a little, and, though&#13;
I winced considerably, I at last learned&#13;
tit submit quietly, no matter how deeply&#13;
the pins were stuck into me. Then&#13;
he taught me to lower my respiration&#13;
and heart action at will—a process&#13;
that took several months of constant&#13;
practice. But these are essentials to&#13;
a. successful hypnotic subject, as I will&#13;
explain.&#13;
The Cataleptic Condition.&#13;
"'To begin with, in order to simul&#13;
a t e the cataleptic condition, it is necessary&#13;
that the respiration should be&#13;
very faint. It have learned to keep&#13;
/alive o n two breaths a minute, which&#13;
•yon will admit is rather a small allowance.&#13;
The control of the heart is&#13;
more complicated—being in reality a&#13;
control of the pulsations by which&#13;
they may be increased or diminished&#13;
a t will. But even this i s attended&#13;
with deception, particularly when I&#13;
rpretend to have two separate pulses,&#13;
one side running high and the other&#13;
low. I nave deceived the ablest doctors&#13;
in the world with this act."&#13;
ATteT Minnock had become proficient&#13;
the doctor used him to Illustrate&#13;
his lectures and scientific lectures, and&#13;
paid h i m well. When the physician&#13;
died be left him $600 in his will. Minnock&#13;
then returned to the United&#13;
States and soon spent his money.&#13;
W h e n be became stranded he went to&#13;
work in dime museums as the human&#13;
pin cushion, and in this capacity&#13;
Blade a reputation all over the coun-&#13;
. -try. _&#13;
There is often mote of Christ in the&#13;
/fefttebs* than In the cathedral&#13;
CHINA WAR N E W S .&#13;
The latest mail from" China has&#13;
brought- to the state ^department a t&#13;
Washington new proofs of the terrible&#13;
and perhaps irretrievable conditions&#13;
which exist under the foreign military&#13;
rule in north China, involving a situs*&#13;
tion not hitherto fully realized, even&#13;
in Washington, and utterly unappre*&#13;
eiated in the U. S. generally. The&#13;
character of the in'ormation which&#13;
has now come into the administration's&#13;
possession is, summarized i n the following&#13;
extracts from a communication&#13;
written by one of the most trusted&#13;
officials i n t h e service abroad and&#13;
mailed from Pekin a month ago: "The&#13;
question of raising the indemnity,&#13;
though one of the most serious for the&#13;
Chinese government, is not paramount&#13;
All the people w h o are likely t o know&#13;
declare that the Chinese peasant can&#13;
stand no greater burden of taxation&#13;
than in the past, as the question resolves&#13;
itself largely to reducing the expense&#13;
of collection, which in China involves&#13;
radical reforms. Another proposition&#13;
for meeting the indemnity is to&#13;
prant lucrative mining and industrial&#13;
conces4oas to foreigners, by that&#13;
means bartering their independence&#13;
and laying up endless trouble for the&#13;
Chinese, which are quick to recognize&#13;
the fact."&#13;
Inquiry at Washington confirms the&#13;
report that the U. S. is working, and&#13;
finds support in its effort, toward the&#13;
opening of all China, including the&#13;
provinces, to the trade of the world.&#13;
This does not mean the abolition of&#13;
customs duties, but would make every&#13;
Chinese city a market for the world's&#13;
goods instead of limiting' foreign commerce&#13;
to the few existing treaty posts.&#13;
The project is one that appeals temptingly&#13;
to the commercial interests of&#13;
others of the great powers than t i e&#13;
U. S., and, if it should command the&#13;
support of the necessary number, hope&#13;
is entertained that i t will indirectly&#13;
aid in the settlement of the troublesome&#13;
indemnity question.&#13;
The report of Gen Ketteler, received&#13;
at Pekin from Kuo Lu, differs from the&#13;
other reports concerning the German-&#13;
French expedition previously received.&#13;
Gen, Ketteler's report shows that the&#13;
Chinese troops did not leave the province&#13;
till they were forced to do so. The&#13;
entire brigade, commanded by Gen.&#13;
Ketteler, met the enemy on April 23&#13;
and inflicted immense losa The report&#13;
does not give the loss. The Germans&#13;
had one officer and three soldiers&#13;
killed and 28 soldiers wounded.&#13;
The foreign ministers on the 7th decided&#13;
to address a collective note to&#13;
the Chinese government informing it&#13;
that a joint indemnity of 450,000,000&#13;
taels would be demanded, and asking&#13;
what method of payment is proposed.&#13;
A reply is expected at the end of the&#13;
week, which will probably propose to&#13;
meet the indemnity by raising the customs&#13;
tariff.&#13;
A dispatch from Pekin, dated the&#13;
'7th, says China will request the powers&#13;
to obtain for her a loan sufficient to&#13;
pay the indemnity as soon as the&#13;
amount thereof is made known. She&#13;
will also ask for an extra 20,000,000&#13;
taels to be provided annually according&#13;
to the proposition of foreign ministers.&#13;
The transport Ejrbert, now in quarantine&#13;
at San Francisco, has on board&#13;
the remains of 50 men w h o died in&#13;
China.&#13;
A M O N G A N C I E N T P E R U V I A N S . A Month's Test Pros.&#13;
If you fcata Bb«OB^tl*m, wrlw Pr Bboop, lUctos,&#13;
Wlfc, Box US, io» elx bottles of b W ftb«u*jUlo Cyr*,&#13;
unreal paid. Stud no money. r«y|8.Mlfour«.&#13;
ss&#13;
BASE RALL^&#13;
Per&#13;
Below we publish the standing of&#13;
the American and National league clubs&#13;
up to and including the games played&#13;
on Sunday, May 12:&#13;
AMERICAN LEAGUE.&#13;
Won. Lost.&#13;
Detroit 13&#13;
Chicago 11&#13;
Itoston&#13;
Baltimore&#13;
Washington&#13;
P h i l a d e l p h i a . . .&#13;
Milwaukee...&#13;
Cleveland.. ..*..&#13;
7&#13;
6&#13;
6&#13;
6&#13;
6&#13;
4&#13;
4&#13;
0&#13;
6&#13;
6&#13;
8&#13;
7&#13;
11&#13;
13&#13;
ct.&#13;
765&#13;
617&#13;
533&#13;
500&#13;
600&#13;
48¾&#13;
853&#13;
235&#13;
Plttsburjr&#13;
New York...&#13;
Philadelphia&#13;
NATIONAL LEAGUE&#13;
Won.&#13;
10&#13;
n 7&#13;
7&#13;
8&#13;
w&#13;
Lost.&#13;
6&#13;
6&#13;
ft&#13;
S&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
12&#13;
11&#13;
Per ct.&#13;
.825&#13;
.825&#13;
.5^3&#13;
.539&#13;
.467&#13;
.438&#13;
.400&#13;
.330&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
N*wYork— Cattle Sheep Lambs&#13;
Best grades... .14 &lt;)0&amp;5 10 MM) 55 75&#13;
Lower grades. .3 Oft&amp;i 60 3 SO 4 75&#13;
Chlearo—&#13;
Best grades....&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
Ho«rs.&#13;
Detroit-&#13;
Best grades....&#13;
Lower grades-&#13;
Buffalo—&#13;
Beat grades.'....&#13;
Lower grades..&#13;
Cincinnati—&#13;
Beat grades.&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
Pittsburg—&#13;
Best grades.....&#13;
Lower grades..&#13;
5 00^5 91&#13;
.3 80&amp;4 90&#13;
.3 8054 8»&#13;
.2 7533 7J&#13;
4 03&amp;4 73&#13;
.2U0d&gt;25&#13;
5 10^S »0&#13;
.4 15&amp;4 75&#13;
5 25¾¾ 7*&#13;
3 00&amp;4 50&#13;
4 15&#13;
3 50&#13;
403&#13;
300&#13;
4 40&#13;
403&#13;
460&#13;
4 25&#13;
4 5)&#13;
4 0J&#13;
5 21)&#13;
4 25&#13;
4 50&#13;
5 00&#13;
4 5 0&#13;
6 01&#13;
5 25&#13;
6 25&#13;
6 00&#13;
K&#13;
6&#13;
5&#13;
5&#13;
i&#13;
6&#13;
6B5&#13;
6 t)&#13;
6 5J&#13;
« H&#13;
5 9J&#13;
GRAIN, E T C .&#13;
New York&#13;
Chicago&#13;
•Detroit&#13;
Toledo&#13;
Cincinnati&#13;
Plttabar*&#13;
Buffalo&#13;
Wheat&#13;
No. 2 red&#13;
80S804&#13;
75&amp;75\&#13;
73 »74&#13;
75370&#13;
77/177¾&#13;
7J(S78«&#13;
Corn&#13;
No. 2 mix&#13;
51ft5lK&#13;
45®45&#13;
45 ¢45&#13;
46^46¼&#13;
47&amp;47&#13;
48 g 4«&#13;
Oat*&#13;
No. 2 white&#13;
34334&#13;
27&amp;27X&#13;
31@3I X&#13;
3033J&#13;
33333*4*&#13;
32@3&gt;*&#13;
•Detroit—Hay, No. I Timothy. 112 75 per ton.&#13;
Potatoes, 35e per bu&gt; Live Poultry, spring&#13;
chickens, llo per lb; fowls, 10c; turkeys, He;&#13;
duckx. 10c Eggs, strictly fresh, 12c par dozen.&#13;
Butter, beat dairy, 16c per * ; creamery, 18A&#13;
The Bart? Tribes Trephined IfcaUa with&#13;
fttowe lasttraoaenta. '&#13;
' Pror W. J. McGee of the bureau of&#13;
ethnology, in Washington, has received&#13;
official permission to exhibit at the&#13;
Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo&#13;
his studies of trephining among the&#13;
early Peruvians. He "will show ancient&#13;
skulls trephined by atone implements,&#13;
and in connection with thla, some animal&#13;
skulls, showing experimental work&#13;
done under Prof. McQee's directfon,&#13;
using th* M m e fllnt implements which&#13;
the aborigines were forced to employ.&#13;
It is doubtful whether the ancient operations&#13;
were performed for a distinctly&#13;
surgical purpose or whether the operation&#13;
was of some mystic significance.&#13;
In some cases'the freshness of&#13;
the wounds in the bone showed that&#13;
the patient did not long survive the&#13;
operation, and in one or two instances&#13;
it is plain that the ancient operator&#13;
must have cut down upon a large blood&#13;
vessel, causing almost instantaneous&#13;
death, but in other cases the operation&#13;
was more successful and the patient&#13;
must have survived for some years at&#13;
least. Prof. W. H. Holmes, of the National&#13;
Museum, will exhibit a dozen&#13;
groups of models representing the domestic&#13;
life of the aborigines of both&#13;
North and South America, and will&#13;
show also the houses in which they&#13;
lived and some of the garments and&#13;
implements of their daily life. This&#13;
exhibit, although under the auspices of&#13;
the National Museum.has been planned&#13;
to supplement the regular ethnologic&#13;
and archaeologic exhibit of the exposition,&#13;
A Miracle Explained.&#13;
Bryant, Mo., May 13th.—The sensational&#13;
cure of Mrs. M. A. Goss of this&#13;
place has sent a ripple of excitement&#13;
all over Douglas county, and Bodd's&#13;
Kidney Pi^ls, the remedy in question,&#13;
are receiving thereby the greatest advertisement&#13;
any medicine has ever had&#13;
in this state.&#13;
To satisfy the many inquiries which&#13;
she finds it impossible to answer by&#13;
letter, Mrs. Goes has sent the following&#13;
statement of her case to the St.&#13;
Louis Globe-Democrat:&#13;
"I did not think I could live a day&#13;
and suffer as I have lived and suffered&#13;
for months, with Sciatica and Rheumatism.&#13;
I used baths and liniments&#13;
of all kinds. Two physicians treated&#13;
me, one of them for two months. Nothing&#13;
helped me in the l e a s t I never&#13;
slept more than ten or fifteen minutes&#13;
at a time. I was bedfast and had to&#13;
lie on one side all the time, I used&#13;
to wish for death to deliver me from&#13;
such torture.&#13;
"A friend suggested Dodd's Kidney&#13;
Pills, and after I had used them a&#13;
week I began to improve, and in about&#13;
four weeks I could sit up in bed. A&#13;
few days later I walked a quarter of&#13;
a mile and back. I now do all my own&#13;
cooking and housework. The pain&#13;
has entirely left me and I am a well&#13;
woman. I have taken altogether sixteen&#13;
boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills.&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills saved my life.&#13;
"Mrs M. A. Goss."&#13;
People come for miles to see Mrs.&#13;
Goss and hear her wonderful story.&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills are working mar- j&#13;
velous cures in Missouri.&#13;
Xt comes as natural for a gtrl to like her&#13;
teacher as it is for a boy to dislike bin.&#13;
No woman really enjovs wealth unleas she&#13;
feels that she U inspiring eavy.&#13;
Ball's Catarrh Care&#13;
Is a constitutional euro. Price, 75a&#13;
ITyon don't refer to a young lawyer«*a legal&#13;
light he is apt to be quite put out.&#13;
Last year the number of boys and girls educated&#13;
free In Berlin was 807.5U.&#13;
fPlrITstS dJa*ye'r»a aun*een otlyf DCra.r Kedl.in Ke'*of iGtsr oeart a eNrreornveen leUMnt oarfteear, nRaea. dR f,o Hr .FBBB SS.OO trial bottle and treatise, KLUK. Ltd.. m area St. rhiiartohnaU. fa.&#13;
lOB.^inW&#13;
FRAGRANT&#13;
a perfeet liquid dtnllfrloi for the&#13;
Teeth and Mouth&#13;
25&#13;
The fellow with his first camera believes in /&#13;
taking things just as they come.&#13;
lira. Wlnalow'a Soothing1 Syrup.&#13;
Vor chlWren teething, soften* the runu, redutwt IntUuumuloB,&#13;
»lUy» pain, vurej wiiul cuUc. %&gt;c &amp; buttle.&#13;
A man's house may be his castle, but that&#13;
doesn't make him a nobleman.&#13;
I do not bolieve Pise's Cure for Consumption&#13;
has an equal for coughs and colds. -JOHNF.&#13;
BoVKtt, Trinity Springs, Ind.. Feb. 15,1*W).&#13;
Tell a dignified individual to pull down his&#13;
rest und you raise his cholcr.&#13;
When cycling, take a bar of White's Yucatan. v ou can ride further und easier.&#13;
Harrowing a man's feelings won't help toward&#13;
cultivating his acquaintance.&#13;
New Size S0Z000NT LIQUID, 25c&#13;
S0Z0D0NTT00TH POWOBR, 2fc&#13;
Large LIQUID aid P0WDBR, lit&#13;
At, all Stores, or by Mall fortbeptiot.&#13;
HALL A R U C K E U N e w York.&#13;
Turn the Rasoals Out&#13;
We are speaking of the grip microbes&#13;
The well and strong can resist their poison,&#13;
the sickly and weak are their prey.&#13;
Baxter's Mandrake Bitters are nature's&#13;
remedy for expelling all poison&#13;
from the system. At druggists, in liquid&#13;
or tablets at 35 cents per bottle or box.&#13;
Nature's PrietleM Retried)&#13;
DR.0. PHELPS BROWN'S&#13;
PREOIOUS&#13;
HERBAL&#13;
OINTMENT&#13;
flheumifew, Neural*&#13;
..Weak Baek.r&#13;
&lt;ur•n•s". *So"r eMs andt ig gj.&#13;
i r h e doe* not sell it, tend&#13;
as his name, and for your&#13;
* »&#13;
CVfIW M MWBK&gt;n M trouble, w e w i n . Craa&#13;
II CurasThrouoh the Peres Send You a Trial f i n&#13;
Address Dr. O.P.Bx 7W&amp;.98 B'way,Newbur«b,N. Y.&#13;
W . N . U . — D E T R O I T — N O . 2 0 — 1 9 0 1&#13;
When answering Ads. please men'.bn th's paper&#13;
Miwiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iMi-'.'iir^iiwiiniTOiroiiiiiiiiiwi.ii'nituw&#13;
fluiiiiii'ii'iuw'i).•iniiiiHiimiHi'ii'ii'mi•I'liimmmuiiiiHwinri nmuiimw&#13;
^Vegetable PreparatLonfor Assimilating&#13;
ttteFoodandReguia&#13;
ting theStoinachs and Bowels of&#13;
I N * A N L s •/{ H1L1) K i: N. !&#13;
Promotes DigeslionCheerFurness&#13;
and Rest.Contains neither&#13;
Opium.Morphine nor Mineral.&#13;
N O T }JARC O T I C .&#13;
J*ty*afOUl*SAMVELPtTaiER&#13;
Mx.Stnnm *&#13;
A perfect Remedy for Constipation&#13;
, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea&#13;
Worms .Convulsions ,Fevenshness&#13;
and Loss OF SLEEP.&#13;
^^^BB^BBaaameaw ee •BBBSMMHM*^^*-*-&#13;
Facsimile Signature of&#13;
NEW YORK.&#13;
For Infanta and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
)¾ 1)»S1 S - J ^ C l M S&#13;
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.&#13;
The U, S. Philippine commission has&#13;
decided to establish an insular government&#13;
printing plant.&#13;
R e* | A | A D n w i n ^ pam&#13;
B f f 4¾ t a V for scafie of&#13;
backache, nervousnenB, RlecplessnenR.&#13;
weakness. Ions of vitality, Incipient&#13;
ktdiiey.bladder and urinary&#13;
disorder* that con not he curea by KID-NE-OIDS&#13;
the great kidney, liver and blood medicine. 5 0 c&#13;
At all Druggist*. "Write for free sample. Addreaa KID-NE-OIDS, 8t. Louis, Mo.&#13;
C I Y Y Y flAI I ADC worth of staple Rood* frw to&#13;
VIA I I a l V h k J U l w onefntelUKentmanorwomai&#13;
in every county of the U. S. vv rite quick.&#13;
&gt;'KW .TV"? V,v M T , , CO. .T***** Cttv. V. J.&#13;
*M*m\&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORIA TMC CCMTAttfl e O M M N V . NCW T«4M OTTV.&#13;
W.L.DOUGLAS&#13;
$3. &amp; $3.50 SHOES = . fful w o r t h of W . Li. D o u g l a a S:&gt; emd&#13;
S u . S O stmeii U * 4 t o « &amp; . M y » 4&#13;
CAilt £ U g e l i l a e c a n n o t b e e q u a l l e d&#13;
u t a n y p r i c e .&#13;
H 1B not alone the nest&#13;
leather that makes a flrst&#13;
class shoe it Is the brains,&#13;
that hare planned the best&#13;
style, laxts a perfect model&#13;
of the foot, and the construction of the shoe. Ft is mechanical skill and&#13;
knowledge that hare made W. I.. Hooplas shoe« the best in the world for men.&#13;
T t t k o n o ftiitHitltute. Insist on havtmr W. I . Douglas shoe* with name&#13;
and price stamped on bottom. Your dealer should keep them, if he does not,&#13;
•end for catalog giving full instrnctlons how to order hy malL&#13;
W . L.. l&gt;OU&lt;*L.^H, B r o c k t o n , Maaa.&#13;
1 . : , . . !&#13;
a&#13;
mi tiM W.&amp;r? 3# ^&lt;fr&#13;
**£*&#13;
'$*-\ * * $ • "&#13;
•. ••• . • ' ' &lt; ' . ' ; . y ^ ' v * ' - . ' &gt; ' ' . - • • • ' • ..• . ' &gt; ' . * - - • • . • . . . ; ' &gt;';, - ' , . '"".• • * &gt; ; . • • • ' ' - ; , •;•&lt; ; r v - ;'. • : ••• "• • ; • • • " • ' • .&#13;
• ' ' ' ' • - &lt;&lt;:' • ' • ' • • ' v ' V - : " . • ' • . . • : ' ' • • , . • ' . ' . . . - . ' • • • • • - : • V \ " , ' • " ' • ; • ' • • ' ' •' ' • • • " '&#13;
&gt;•'; ^ - " . •••'; 'J '••». .. &gt; • ,.- '" " " ; ' ' * • ' . ' '&#13;
" • • . - - - .' • . : I . : • -&#13;
^ ¾ : , ^&#13;
»;-5\-i-?j«r:; "5?"&#13;
^ a v ^ i i M * * * -&#13;
•srw.ii .••;•:jf» - •*•;.* *• ;.!?&lt;'&#13;
!•&lt;•'&lt; • j j l " "«'••'&#13;
ONE qr THI new WEBTE»N&#13;
« A N A D A D i a T r t l C T S ,&#13;
The Great Advantages of latOMMBt&#13;
Where Mi« Soil It of Casx*&#13;
ampled fortuity*&#13;
CUBA AND PH1UPPINE NEWS.&#13;
The commission of the constitutional&#13;
conTention which returned to Havana&#13;
from Washington, May 5, presented to&#13;
the convention on the 7th, at the letter's&#13;
secret session, an extensive report&#13;
of the conferences with President&#13;
McKinley and Secretary Root. In reference&#13;
to the third clause of theamend-&#13;
During the past year or two a largo&#13;
number of American settlers (those&#13;
going from the United States to Canada),&#13;
have made homes in the Saskatoon&#13;
district in Western Canada. They&#13;
have found the climate all that could&#13;
be desired and their prospects are of&#13;
the brightest. In writing of it a correspondent&#13;
says:&#13;
The lands for sale are choice selections&#13;
from a large area, and every&#13;
farm is within easy distance of a railway&#13;
station. Experience has shown that&#13;
this district enjoys immunity from&#13;
summer frost, from cyclones and blizzards.&#13;
The South Saskatchewan,&#13;
flowing through the tract, is one of&#13;
the finest rivers in the country, being&#13;
navigable and having an average&#13;
width of stream of 1,000 feet&#13;
The agents of the Canadian government,&#13;
whose advertisement appears&#13;
elsewhere in your paper and who will&#13;
be pleased to furnish full information,&#13;
tell me that within the limits of the&#13;
tract there are two distinct varieties/&#13;
of soil. One Is -a rich black loam, and&#13;
the other Is a somewhat lighter loam,&#13;
containing a small admixture of sand.&#13;
There appears to be no appreciable&#13;
difference between the fertility of these&#13;
two kinds of soil. Both are alluvial&#13;
in their characteristics, both are marvelonsly&#13;
productive, and both rest&#13;
upon a subsoil of clay. The advantage&#13;
of this formation is that it&#13;
retains the heat of the day during the&#13;
night, t and is favorable to .the early&#13;
maturity of crops. Every kind of&#13;
crop will here attain the highest perfection&#13;
of quality. The land Is admirably&#13;
adapted for stock-raising and&#13;
dairy farming, as well as growing&#13;
grain. Some idea of the richness of&#13;
the natural grasses of the prairie may&#13;
be formed from the fact that—more—&#13;
than 200 tons of hay were gathered&#13;
within a short distance of Saskatoon&#13;
and stored up for use during the winter.&#13;
A growth so luxuriant demonstrates&#13;
beyond all possible question the&#13;
suitability of the land for pasturing&#13;
cattle, and no doubt this important industry&#13;
will be largely carried on.&#13;
Nature has been lavish in her gifts&#13;
to this territory. Not only is the soil&#13;
of unexampled fertility, but the climate&#13;
is deligbtful and healthy. Such is the&#13;
testimony of every settler, and this&#13;
testimony isconflrmed by enthusiastic&#13;
opinions from eVery traveler, explorer,&#13;
missionary or newspaper correspondent&#13;
who has ever visited this farfamed&#13;
Saskatchewan Valley. .In former&#13;
years vast herds of buffalo came&#13;
here to winter from the elevated&#13;
storm-swept .regions south of the&#13;
United States boundary line, proving&#13;
thereby the adaptation of these rolling&#13;
prairies to the purpose of raising&#13;
stock. The land is dry, with sufficient,&#13;
but not excessive rainfall, capable of&#13;
early cultivation in the spring, and&#13;
free from summer frosts. The configuration&#13;
of the country renders artificial&#13;
drainage unnecessary, and prevents&#13;
the accumulation of stagnant&#13;
pools; mists and fogs are seldom seen.&#13;
The days of summer are full of sunshine,&#13;
under the genial influence of&#13;
which crops rapidly ripen. Autumn&#13;
is characterized by an almost unbroken&#13;
succession of fine weather, during&#13;
which the crops are safely garnered.&#13;
In winter it is cold, but extremely ex:&#13;
hilarating and pleasant, owing to the&#13;
wonderful dryness and bracing qualities&#13;
of the air. The winter is a source&#13;
of profit as well as enjoyment to the&#13;
people, being far healthier than a&#13;
humid climate.&#13;
Water and fuel—these two prime&#13;
necessaries of life are plentiful&#13;
throughout the district.&#13;
meat the report stated that the u. ».&#13;
would not intervene unless Cuba were&#13;
attacked by a foreign power or unless&#13;
there existed in Cuba a condition of affairs&#13;
similar to that which existed un*&#13;
der. Spain at the time of American intervention.&#13;
Regarding coaling stations,&#13;
the report set forth that the&#13;
places so desired by the U. S. were&#13;
Capes Mais and San Antonio, and another&#13;
point commanding the entrance&#13;
to the Gulf of Mexico; these would be&#13;
definitely determined upon when drawing&#13;
up the treaty and that the object&#13;
of these stations would be the maintenance&#13;
of the independence of Cuba&#13;
as well as the protection of the U. S.&#13;
The report also said that the U. S.&#13;
would in no way interfere in the local&#13;
frovernrnent and that President Mc-&#13;
Kinley had promised to appoint a commission&#13;
to meet a Cuban commission&#13;
to discuss the economic question, and&#13;
draw up a commercial treaty as soon&#13;
as the republic is established. The&#13;
representatives announced that Secretary&#13;
Root had said there was nothing&#13;
in the Piatt amendment to prevent&#13;
Cuba having diplomatic representatives&#13;
in foreign countries.&#13;
The island of Samar, one of the Visayan&#13;
group, has been transferred from&#13;
the department commanded by Gen.&#13;
Wade to that commanded by Gen.&#13;
Hughes. Gen. Hughes has been ordered&#13;
personally to Samar and if he is&#13;
unsuccessful in negotiating the surrender&#13;
of the insurgent, Gen. Lukban,&#13;
the force of American troops in Samar&#13;
will be increased and a vigorous offenaive&#13;
campaign will be inaugurated.&#13;
Provost-General Davis is preparing&#13;
recommendations to submit to the commission&#13;
for a separate scheme of city&#13;
government in Manila. The commission&#13;
favors a plan of federal center&#13;
similar to that of Washington and the&#13;
City of Mexico. Ordinances are in&#13;
course of preparation.&#13;
The military authorities at Manila&#13;
have prepared a schedule and forwarded&#13;
the same to Washington covering&#13;
the sailing dates of the 10 regiments&#13;
of volunteers still in the archipelago.&#13;
Unless unforseen delays arise,&#13;
the last of these regiments will reach&#13;
home before June 30.&#13;
tCol. Astilla, the insurgent governor&#13;
or Infanta province,. has surrendered&#13;
with 10 officers, 180 men, 107 rifles and&#13;
10 cannon.&#13;
TRANSVAAL. WAR ITEMS.&#13;
Private Mailing Card.&#13;
Private Mailing Card with colored&#13;
views of scenery on the Chicago, Milwaukee&#13;
&amp; St. Paul Railway sent on&#13;
receipt of ten (10) cents in stamps.&#13;
Address F. A. Miller, General Passenger&#13;
Agent, Chicago, 111.&#13;
The more a wise man thinks the less&#13;
he is apt to talk.&#13;
»»&#13;
Lane's Family Medicine&#13;
Moves the bowels each day. In order&#13;
to be healthy this is necessary. Acts&#13;
gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures&#13;
sick headache. Prices 25 and 50c.&#13;
There is no profit in religion where&#13;
there is no loss.&#13;
j -&#13;
For Its unexampled electrical display&#13;
the Pan-American exposition will receive&#13;
five thousand horse power electric&#13;
power from the great plant of the&#13;
Niagara Falls Power company, twenty&#13;
miles distant.&#13;
There is no pride like that of a beggar&#13;
grown rich. .&#13;
The well posted druggist advises you&#13;
to use Wizard Oil for pain, for he&#13;
knows what it has done.&#13;
There is a potato field in Kansas 40&#13;
miles long.&#13;
In the German reichstag on the 7th&#13;
Baron von Hodenberg, the Guelph&#13;
leader, interpellated the government&#13;
on what steps had been taken to effect&#13;
the release of the German missionaries&#13;
now held prisoners by the British in&#13;
South Africa. He averred that 10 missionaries&#13;
were confined in Pretoria,&#13;
and that there was not the slightest&#13;
charge against them, and that their&#13;
property had been seized. A general&#13;
debate on the interpellation followed,&#13;
several members strongly condemning&#13;
Kritish methods in South Africa,&#13;
Sir Alfred Milner, the Hritish commissioner,&#13;
addressing a mass meeting&#13;
at Cape Town on the 7th, said there&#13;
was absolutely no reason for the anxiety&#13;
felt in some quarters lest any&#13;
change be introduced in South Africa&#13;
that would in any way weaken the imperial&#13;
policy. Such a change was impossible.&#13;
Great Britain had made up&#13;
her mind and would carry out the policy&#13;
she had laid down.&#13;
The report that a force of Boers is&#13;
concentrating under Delarey at Hartebeestefontein&#13;
is regarded with a feeling&#13;
of satisfaction. The British force&#13;
should far outnumber the Boers, and&#13;
as the latter must by this time have&#13;
lost practically all their guns, Delarey&#13;
cannot have any artillery with him.&#13;
This fact alone should place him at a&#13;
great uisadvantage.&#13;
A dispatch from London, dated the&#13;
7th. says that the health of Mrs.&#13;
Botha, wife of Commandant-General&#13;
Botha, has broken down owing to&#13;
worry, and her constant journeys between&#13;
her husband and Lord Kitchener,&#13;
and that she is about to sail from&#13;
Delagoa Bay to visit M H Kruger, and&#13;
to appeal to him to persuade the Boers&#13;
to surrender.&#13;
The London war office on the 6th&#13;
officially gave out the total number of&#13;
deaths in the South African war at&#13;
714 officers and 14,264 men. Four officers&#13;
and 314 men have been invalided&#13;
home and subsequently died. Two&#13;
thousand four hundred and ninetythree&#13;
non-commissioned officers and&#13;
men have left the service unfit for&#13;
duty. ^&#13;
By the explosion of a boiler near&#13;
Uniontown, Pa., on the 7th, two men&#13;
lost their life.&#13;
The River Raisin Paper Co/s plant,&#13;
at Monroe, was destroyed by tire on&#13;
the morning of the 29th, entailing a&#13;
loss of 330,000.&#13;
Information was received act Washceived&#13;
at Washington on the 8th confirming&#13;
a dispatch from Fekin regarding&#13;
the amount of indemnity to be demanded.&#13;
This total has now been reduced&#13;
from something like half a billion&#13;
dollars to 1337,000,000.&#13;
CHASED THE SUPER.&#13;
*»P»Wf,»«^fip»*J»»""*J" m*m0*-*mkm£B E **•*»&#13;
rfce Bsettlag Baae Be*&#13;
tbe Slave&#13;
Some strange tales have been told by&#13;
old-timers in the stags business about&#13;
the Keans, both the elder and the last&#13;
to be seen on the American stage.&#13;
Some have said that hard study made&#13;
them a little Wrong at times, and some&#13;
of the things they did certainly InoVfld&#13;
queer. It is told by an old New Orleans&#13;
horseman, who is here from the&#13;
Crescent City, that when Kean, the&#13;
younger, was playing there* he nearly&#13;
scared a super to death and came near&#13;
"pinking" him. It was in "Richard&#13;
III." in* the scene where he sees the&#13;
ghosts. The stage manager was a lit"&#13;
tie bit the worse for drink and determined&#13;
to have some fun. He did not&#13;
like Kean, as he was a hard man behind&#13;
the scenes. Among the supers&#13;
was a raw Irish lad who had never&#13;
seen a stage before. The manager told&#13;
this fellow that If he would run across&#13;
the stage when he gave him the tip&#13;
he would stand to earn $2. The poor&#13;
fellow was broke, and a two-spot&#13;
looked to him like a national bank.&#13;
He agreed and the stage manager gave&#13;
him a gaudy oilcloth banner bearing&#13;
these words: "Smoke General Jackson&#13;
Cigars." It was nearly a panic that&#13;
this Irish lad started. He ran across&#13;
the stage, and when Kean saw him he&#13;
was furious. He made a lunge at tho&#13;
unfortunate super with his sword, and&#13;
as the "rag" came whizzing down to a&#13;
hurry call he chased the poor standard&#13;
bearer off the stage, down the passage&#13;
and to the street. For two blocks he&#13;
followed him in his Richard costume,&#13;
and finally the super escaped down a&#13;
dark alley. What effect it had upon&#13;
the show the turfman does not say, but&#13;
certainly it was only the super's agility&#13;
of foot that saved him.—Cincinnati&#13;
Enquirer.&#13;
A Noted Knight Templar&#13;
Owea His Health to Penina 4 &gt;&#13;
Colonel T. P. Moody, a prominent&#13;
Knight Templar, is well known in&#13;
every city in the United States west of&#13;
Buffalo. N. Y.. as a Jeweler's Auc-&#13;
Great Lighting Features.&#13;
People who expect to attend the Pan-&#13;
American exposition should remember:&#13;
First, that the number of lights and&#13;
the quantity of light will exceed that&#13;
of any other equal area ever artificially&#13;
illuminated, and it will be evenly&#13;
distributed; second, that unusual spectacular&#13;
effects will be produced by the&#13;
many combinations of light and water,&#13;
and these combinations are to be so&#13;
graded as to climax in keeping with&#13;
the decorative lights at the electric&#13;
tower; third, that the electric tower&#13;
basin will be the stage of the display&#13;
of a combination of 1,500,000 gallons&#13;
of water per hour in fountains with the&#13;
light of 100 large-sized searchlights—&#13;
a scene which will certainly be impressive.&#13;
Happiness is never found by those&#13;
who seek it on the run.&#13;
There are more rich slaves in this&#13;
country than poor ones.&#13;
The first thing a shoemaker uses in&#13;
his business is his last.&#13;
tioneer. In the city of Chicago as a&#13;
prominent lodge man,' being a member&#13;
of the K. T.'s arid also of the&#13;
Masons. The cut shows Colonel&#13;
Moody in the costume of the Oriental&#13;
Consistory Masons, 324 degree.&#13;
In a recent letter from 5900 Michigan&#13;
avenue, Chicago, 111., Mr. Moody&#13;
says the following:&#13;
"Porover twenty five years I&#13;
suffered from catarrh, and for&#13;
over ten years I suffered from&#13;
catarrh of the stomach terribly,&#13;
&lt;« 1 have taken all kinds of medicines&#13;
and have been treated ty&#13;
all kinds of doctors, as thousands&#13;
of my acquaintances are aware&#13;
in different parts of the United&#13;
States, where I have traveled, but&#13;
the relief was only temporary,&#13;
until a little over a year ago I&#13;
started to take Peruna, and at the&#13;
present time I am better than I&#13;
have been for twenty years,&#13;
&lt;&lt; The soreness has left my stomach&#13;
entirely and I am free from&#13;
indigestion and dyspepsia and will&#13;
say to all who are troubled with&#13;
catarrh or stomach trouble of any&#13;
kind, don't put it oft and suffer,&#13;
but begin to take Peruna right&#13;
away, and keep it up until you&#13;
ore cured, as you surely will be if&#13;
you persevere."&#13;
"My wife, as many in the southwest&#13;
can say, was troubled with a bad cough&#13;
and bronchial trouble, and doctors all&#13;
over the country gave her up to die,&#13;
as they could do nothing more for her.&#13;
She began taking Peruna with the result&#13;
that she is better now than she&#13;
has been in years, and her cough has&#13;
almost left her entirely. The soreness&#13;
ha3 left her lungs and she is as well&#13;
as she ever was in her life, with&#13;
thanks, as she says, to Peruna. Yours&#13;
very truly, T. P. Moody.&#13;
Catarrh in Its various forms Is rapidly&#13;
becoming a general curse. An&#13;
undoubted remedy has been discovered&#13;
by Dr. Hartman. This remedy has&#13;
been thoroughly tested during the past&#13;
forty years. Prominent men have&#13;
come to know of its virtues, and are&#13;
making public utterances on the subject.&#13;
To save the country we must&#13;
save the people. To save the people&#13;
we must protect them from disease.&#13;
The disease that is at once the most&#13;
prevalent and stubborn of cure Is catarrh.&#13;
If one were to make a list of the&#13;
different names that have been applied&#13;
to catarrh in different locations&#13;
and organs, the result would be as-&#13;
Colonel T. P. Moody, of Chtcajro^badr&#13;
Catarrh Twenty-five Years and)&#13;
Was Cured by&#13;
tonishing. We have often published)&#13;
a partial list of these names, and fne&#13;
surprise caused by the first publication&#13;
of it to all people, both professional&#13;
and non -professional, was amusing.&#13;
And yet we have never enumerated *)l&#13;
of the diseases which are classed As&gt;&#13;
catarrh. It must be confessed, hoy».&#13;
ever, to see even this partial list drawn&#13;
up in battle array is rather appalling.&#13;
If the reader desires to see this list,&#13;
together with a short exposition of&#13;
each one, send for our free catarrh&#13;
book. Address The Peruna Medtetp*&#13;
Co.. Columbus. Ohio.&#13;
POOR LITTLE JOHNNY!&#13;
AND HIS "TUMMY"!&#13;
Small boys, and many times large ones,&#13;
and occasionally girls, too, big and little,&#13;
suffer terribly from convulsive pains or&#13;
"cramps" in the bowels and stomachpain&#13;
so violent that it "doubles up" the&#13;
ones attacked, and makes it impossiole far&#13;
them to stand up.&#13;
Some people call it colic, but most honest,&#13;
plain-spoken people call it "belly-ache" and very&#13;
properly, for the seat of the trouble is in the&#13;
bowels, and caused by the violent efforts of the&#13;
bowels to rid themselves of something which&#13;
doesn't belong there. The small boy usually&#13;
gets it from over-eating or from eating forbidden&#13;
Fruit, and suffers mostly in the summer time*&#13;
It's spring now, and "in times of peace, prepare&#13;
for war." Let the boys and girls and the big&#13;
folks, too, for that matter, clean out the dogged&#13;
channels filled with winter bile and putrid undigested&#13;
food, strengthen the 30-feet of bowel&#13;
canal, liven up the liver, and "summer bellyaches"&#13;
wiH have no terrors, because they won't&#13;
happen. The way to make the body ache-poof is to use CASCARETS, gentle, sweet, tra&amp;rant&#13;
CASCARETS, the perfect system cleaners and bowel strengtheners. For fear that anybody in the&#13;
family should ever be attacked by belly-ache, keep a box oi CASCARETS in the house always* and&#13;
rcmemher that all paint and troubles in your insides are&#13;
QUICKLY CURED BY&#13;
J0c&#13;
25c 50c&#13;
ALL DRUGGISTS.&#13;
NEVER&#13;
SOLD IN BULK.&#13;
CURE •11 bow*. tronblM* attpeadlclft* htU&#13;
iotunesa, bad breath, bad blood, wind&#13;
on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul&#13;
w w - &gt; •» month,headache, indigestion, pimples,&#13;
pains after eatlna.JlTer trouble, sallow complexion&#13;
and dizziness. When your bowels donf move rera*&#13;
larly you are gettlns sick. ConsUnaUon hills mora&#13;
people than all other diseases together. It is a&#13;
•tarter for the chronic aliments and Ions years of&#13;
tnftVte*; that come afterwards. No matter what&#13;
alb) you,, start takta* OASOARET9 to«4ay, for you&#13;
will never get well and bo well all the ASM until&#13;
Ton put jour bowels right, Take our advice; start&#13;
with CA&amp;CARBTS to-day. under an absolute guar*&#13;
antee to cure or money refunded. M&#13;
T O C T J R E J r t r e rears a c s&#13;
Now It Is&#13;
tke *r*t box of&#13;
GUARANTEED Era WM similar BMdletae ta the w e r l a .&#13;
great aierlt. a s * e a r best testis&#13;
w i l l sell CAftCAXsTTU absolutely n a n u t a w &lt;e care es&gt;&#13;
woaey refasasd. 4&gt;o bay today* t w o 50e boxes* stye taess a&#13;
f a i r , soaest t r t a j , as per •lassie alreeflbas, aad I f y e a a f e&#13;
••Id.&#13;
• v e r six mullea *•:&#13;
year, sreater taaa&#13;
Tkla 1« nbsolate .&#13;
taalal. W e hare m l t a&#13;
day. Health w i n aaleKlyfbllew&#13;
y e a arat started the oweefCAjSCAj&#13;
IeoNM! sTIBUNu IIKIDY Ctv*&#13;
I&#13;
a*&gt;&#13;
* . * * • "*;\ , &gt;&#13;
:%&#13;
•.'• V •&#13;
^ ^ • . . ' • • . . • / . • ' • • • ' • - ' ^ v . ' v V - ' ^ .•« " • • ' . . • • . ' • ' • : • • = «. , : ? ,&#13;
.T&#13;
• • • • • " ' ' " , &gt; • • . ' • ' • . .'f &gt;.• : v; ' - , ' . " • • • ' ' : * .&#13;
••••' o - &gt; : - . ^ - : . •• " •, . w • &lt;• •*••&#13;
ppan&#13;
v ' •••• . » ' , . &gt; • • * - : , , . . . «&#13;
• • * \&#13;
_ L&#13;
V'?;'&#13;
&lt;•?»&#13;
. *&#13;
X&#13;
fJ •' •' , '*"&#13;
•\ L ANOREWS d GO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THUBSDAY, MAY7T6\135T&#13;
Cp Im t h e Air.&#13;
"What aort of a fellow 1« 8w«Udupr&#13;
"Well, he's one of those* fellows that&#13;
you can never convince that there's&#13;
plenty of room at the top."&#13;
"Pessimistic, eh?'*&#13;
"Not at all, but he thinks he's there&#13;
already, and that be occupies ail the&#13;
apace."—Philadelphia Press.&#13;
TO Cure a Cold In One D a y&#13;
Take. Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.&#13;
All drnggiits refund the roonej&#13;
if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature&#13;
is on each box. 25c.&#13;
Common and beautiful In the tropics&#13;
U ? h ? m ^ t r e e . Of all fruits none&#13;
to reSshed more by the natives ttto&#13;
at the same time a magnificent shade&#13;
tree. •&#13;
Old Soldiers Experience.&#13;
M. M. Au9tin.a civil war veteran,&#13;
of Winchester, Ind., write: "My wife&#13;
was sick a long t'me in spite of good&#13;
doctors treatment, but was wholly&#13;
cured by Dr. King's New Life Pills,&#13;
which worked wonders for her health&#13;
They always do. Try them. Only&#13;
25c at F. A. Sigler's drug store.&#13;
"TUEFITZSlXMOXSCfSE,"&#13;
Thomas Pi4»simmons who was&#13;
supposed to have been murdered on&#13;
March 13, was a member of Iosco&#13;
•J-ArW, Ancient Order of Gleaners,&#13;
The notice of his death was received&#13;
at headquarters on March 19,&#13;
and as soon as it l.ec&amp;me known&#13;
that he had often murdered the Supreme&#13;
Officers of the Order expressed&#13;
their willingness to offer a reward&#13;
lor the arrest and conviction&#13;
of the murderers. The prosecuting&#13;
Attorney of this county thanked&#13;
til". Supreme Officers most heartily&#13;
for the good spirit they had shown&#13;
m endeavoring to assist in clearing&#13;
up the mystery. Mrs. Kitzsiramons&#13;
has received a draft tor $1,000 in&#13;
loll payment of the policy held&#13;
by her husband and it is needle**&#13;
to say that this assistance is a great&#13;
blessing to her. The prompt payment&#13;
of this certificate *ud the offer&#13;
of the Supreme Officers of the&#13;
order to assist if possible in ferriting&#13;
out the claim is certainly commendable.&#13;
Fan-American Exposition.&#13;
The Grand Trunk ByT~System&#13;
Las announced fares to the Pan-&#13;
American Exposition for the&#13;
month of May. It allows stop&#13;
over of ten days at Niagara Falls&#13;
without cost, and at Buffalo on&#13;
payment of one dollar on tickets&#13;
to eastern destinations to enable&#13;
patrons to visit the Exposition.&#13;
On May 15th and 29th it will&#13;
run a special cheap coach excursion&#13;
to Buffalo from all points in&#13;
Michigan. For rates, train service,&#13;
and general information inquire&#13;
of any agent .or write to&#13;
Ben. Fletcher, Trav. Pass Agent,&#13;
Detroit Mich. t ! 9&#13;
Shudders at his past.&#13;
"I recall now with horror,"" says&#13;
Mail Carrier Burnett Mann, of Levanna,&#13;
0., "my three years years of suffer&#13;
ing from Kidney trouble. I~was&#13;
hardly ever free from dull aches or&#13;
acute paios in my back. To stoop or&#13;
lift mail sacks made me groan. I felt&#13;
tired worn out about ready to give up&#13;
when I began to use Electric Bitter?,&#13;
but six bottles completely cured me&#13;
and made me feel like a new man."&#13;
They're unrivaled to regulate Stomach,&#13;
Liver, Kidneys, and Bowels.&#13;
Perfect satisfaction guaranteed by F.&#13;
A. Sigler. Only 50 cents.&#13;
All Eyes on Texas.&#13;
Great is Texas. Her vast cotton&#13;
crops and marvellous oil discoveries&#13;
amaze the world. Now follows the&#13;
startling statement of the wonderful!&#13;
work at Cisco, Tex. of Dr. King's New&#13;
Discovery tor consumption. "My&#13;
wife contracted a seveie lung trouble&#13;
writes editor J. J. Eager, which caused&#13;
a most obstinate cough and finally&#13;
resulted in prosuse hemorrhages, but&#13;
she has been completely cured by Dr.&#13;
Kings New Discovery." It's postivelely&#13;
guaranted for Coughs, Colds and&#13;
all throat and lung troubles. 50c and&#13;
$1.00. Trial bottles tree at P. A. Siller's&#13;
dtug store.&#13;
W.'.C. T. U- \&#13;
• Edited by tbeW. C. T r.nf Pineknoy 4&#13;
* The Man and the Rope.&#13;
A Chinaman whtf had been condemned&#13;
to wear the cangue, or wooden collar,&#13;
was seen by some of his friends.&#13;
"What have you been doing," they&#13;
asked, "to deserve this?"&#13;
"Oh, nothing," he replied. "I only&#13;
picked up an old piece of rope."&#13;
"And are you to be punished thus severely,"&#13;
they asked, "for merely picking&#13;
up an end of rope?"&#13;
"Well," answered the man, "the fact&#13;
Is there was a bullock tied to the other&#13;
end."-H. A. Giles' "History of Chinese&#13;
Literature."&#13;
. .It Saved his Leg.&#13;
P. A. Dan forth, of LaGrange, Oa.,&#13;
suffered for six months with a frightful&#13;
running sore on his leg: but writes&#13;
that Bucklen's Arnica Salve vholly&#13;
cured it in five davs. For Ulcers,&#13;
Wounds, Piles, it's the best salve in&#13;
the world. Cure guaranteed. Only&#13;
25c. Sold by P. A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
Some Odd Mistakes.&#13;
An urban chemist advertised In his&#13;
.shop window: "Artificial eyes. Open&#13;
all night." Away down south in front&#13;
of the pofitofSce in an inland town&#13;
may have been seen this legend. "Post&#13;
here letters too late for the next&#13;
mall." In a picture of the departure&#13;
of the pilgrims from Delftbaven the&#13;
artist placed a large steamer In the&#13;
distance leaving the harbor under full&#13;
steam.&#13;
Try the n*»w remedy fo,% co»r.ivHne»s,&#13;
Chamberlain'. Stomach and Liver&#13;
Tablets. Bfwj box guaranteed.&#13;
Price 25, ceiti,' For sale by F. A.&#13;
Sigler, Pinokney.&#13;
What They Made.&#13;
A certain father is possessed of a&#13;
pair of exceedingly bright girl children.&#13;
The other day his eldest daughter,&#13;
Alice, was putting her younger&#13;
Bister, surname Gretchen, through&#13;
Bome arithmetical paces, and the&#13;
father was an amused listener.&#13;
"Gretchen, how much do 12 and 10&#13;
make?" was the form of owe query,&#13;
and, being correctly answered, other&#13;
and similar questions followed each&#13;
other in quick succession.&#13;
The father believing the younger&#13;
daughter was doing too much of the&#13;
work thought he" would put his firstborn&#13;
up a tree, and so he broke in with&#13;
a problem of his own Invention.&#13;
ilAlLie^!_ he queried solemnly, "how&#13;
much do you and Gretchen make?"&#13;
Without an Instant's hesitation came&#13;
the reply:&#13;
"Gretchen and 1, pop, make you a&#13;
oroud and happy father."—Exchange.&#13;
Stop tbe CouffU and w o r k * off the&#13;
Cold.&#13;
Lpxative Brom'o-Quinine Tahlets cure&#13;
a cold in one.day. No «tire, no [ ay&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
From • • ficoHomlc Point of' Ylew.&#13;
Upon authority it is learned&#13;
that while 183,000,000 is annually&#13;
spout to educate our young people&#13;
and children, 11,200,000,000 goes&#13;
out for intoxicating liquors.&#13;
Nearly fifteen times as much&#13;
money spent to ruin people as to&#13;
build them up! The Chicago&#13;
Tribune is authority for the statement&#13;
that the sa oou was responsible&#13;
{or 531436 murders between&#13;
1886 and 1896. Taking seme figures&#13;
of Dr. N. D. Hillis, who is so&#13;
well known in Chicago; and New&#13;
York, we find there are over 2,000,&#13;
000 niodeaate drinkers, and 700,&#13;
000 drunkards in this country&#13;
alone. H e asserts that the economic&#13;
loss to the country through&#13;
these 700,000 drunkards is 17,000,&#13;
000,000, eight times tbe amount of&#13;
the total banking capital of the&#13;
country. To this he adds: "When&#13;
will voters and home-makers learn&#13;
that there is no question before&#13;
the American people transcending&#13;
in importance the one involving&#13;
the eradication of the monstrous&#13;
folly of intemperance—and&#13;
that, too, not merely from a mo:-&#13;
al, but from an economic point of&#13;
view.&#13;
God looks down with delight&#13;
upon men who are in van. All&#13;
history teaches this. * The men&#13;
whom God has highly honore4&#13;
were the leaders, men who would&#13;
obey him and dare something—&#13;
dare to go forward—dare to lead&#13;
his people—dare to reform customs&#13;
of society—dara to knock to&#13;
pieces any brazen derpeut that&#13;
may be leading the people astray&#13;
—dare to cut down the groves that&#13;
Abraham has planted.&#13;
Men who simply tell people the&#13;
things they like to hear, the things&#13;
they already think and believe,&#13;
who simply express the people's&#13;
thought in beautiful language for&#13;
thetnymea wke-etdy do this get&#13;
no honor of god or men, because&#13;
there is little virtue in it.&#13;
It is men who can strike sledgehammer&#13;
blows at public s i n s -&#13;
men who can deliver thoughts&#13;
that burn their way into stolid&#13;
conscience and lift men to higher&#13;
levels, who are worthy of all honor.&#13;
G e o r g e Washington's Lottery.&#13;
It is not generally known that the&#13;
great Father of His Country was on&#13;
at least one occasion the originator of&#13;
a lottery, the like of which at the present&#13;
day would be forbidden to send Its&#13;
tickets through the mails. That George&#13;
Washington was interested in such a&#13;
scheme is proved by a number of tickets&#13;
still in existence which bear his&#13;
august name. It was the Mountain&#13;
Road lottery of which George was the&#13;
promoter, and it is. of course, unnec- '&#13;
essary to state that Washington him*&#13;
self did not financially profit from it.&#13;
All the funds raised by the lottery&#13;
were spent in building the road&#13;
through Cumberland gap, near Fredericksburg,&#13;
Va. Originally the lottery&#13;
tickets which Washington signed were&#13;
worth $1 each. Now, because they bear&#13;
his signature, they are easily sold for&#13;
$50 apiece, though it is certain that&#13;
not one of them will ever draw a prize.&#13;
•'It is with a flood.deal of pleasure&#13;
and satisfactition that I recommend&#13;
t&#13;
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and&#13;
Diarrhoea Remedy,'' says Druggist A.&#13;
W. Sawtelle, of Hartford, Conn. "A&#13;
Udy oustorter, seeing the remedy exposed&#13;
for sale on my show case, said&#13;
to me:'I really believe that medicine&#13;
saved my life tbe past summer while&#13;
at tbe shore,' and she became so enthusiastic&#13;
over its merits that I ar&#13;
once made up ray mind to recommend&#13;
it in the future. Recently a gentle&#13;
man came into my store so overcome&#13;
with colic pains that be sank to the&#13;
floor. I gave him a do«e of this remedy&#13;
which helped him. \ repeated&#13;
the dn»M» nnd in H'tppn minutethe left&#13;
my store BmilinuJy intnrmimg me that&#13;
he felt as well as ever.'v ' Sott by F.&#13;
A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
Fay your Subscription this month&#13;
- • • • • • -&#13;
Gaudy Acovatlca.&#13;
"How are the acoustics of that theater?"&#13;
"Tbe what?"&#13;
"Acoustic properties."&#13;
"Oh, ah, yes: the acoustic properties.&#13;
Why. it struck me they were&#13;
rather gaudy."—Exchange.&#13;
Usually t b e Case.&#13;
Little Waldo—Papa, what Is a library?&#13;
Mr. Reeder—A library, my son, is a&#13;
large number of books which a man&#13;
loans to friends.—Harper's Bazar.&#13;
Qnlck Eater*.&#13;
"Have you any idea," remarked the&#13;
cashier of one of the largest lunch restaurants&#13;
in New Yortc, "how many&#13;
minutes the average down town business&#13;
man devotes to his midday meal?"&#13;
"At a venture," answered the reporter,&#13;
watching the hurried play of knives&#13;
and forks about him. "I should say 13&#13;
minutes."&#13;
"You set about the time usually estimated,"&#13;
returned the cashier, "but In&#13;
reality half that time would be nearer&#13;
right The average time consumed for&#13;
lunch by the patrons of this establish*&#13;
raent Is just eight minutes. The fact&#13;
is," continued the cashier after the reporter&#13;
had ventured a foreboding for&#13;
New York digestion, "people find it&#13;
snch a trifling and unobtrusive matter&#13;
Just to get 'a bite of lunch* that few&#13;
realize what a gigantic business it Is&#13;
merely to supply hungry people down&#13;
town at noon, because fevr bring their&#13;
lunches with thorn, and from the formation&#13;
of the city none can go bome.&#13;
••'This establishment feeds 3,000 people&#13;
ft .0«/..and the amount of food req&#13;
«te*| Mctoft for that patronage is&#13;
enonriMft, ra, example, when we put&#13;
hash Oft t|^apeclals' enough is made&#13;
up a«tn#jljr,fc flJl a wagon. We are&#13;
not thtMJratt.iinchroora, however."&#13;
Crop Report For April.&#13;
Tbe weather during April was,&#13;
on the whole, unfavorable for the&#13;
growth of wheat and grass. Tbe&#13;
temperature in tbe upper peninsula&#13;
was from 3 to A degrees above&#13;
the normal, while iu tbe lower&#13;
peninsula it was about normal.&#13;
The precipitation was below the&#13;
normal all over tbe state. In the&#13;
southern and central counties the&#13;
raiufall was less than oue iuch,&#13;
while the normal for April is considerably&#13;
over two, inches for this&#13;
portion of tbe State.&#13;
The natural result was that vegatation&#13;
started slowly. Wheat&#13;
suffered some on account of this&#13;
dry weather. On the other hand,&#13;
these conditions were favorable&#13;
for the sowing of oats and barley&#13;
and for prepariag the ground for&#13;
corn and sugar beets.&#13;
The condition of wheat in the&#13;
state is varied, but in most cases,&#13;
considerably better than one year&#13;
ago. In some counties a large&#13;
acreage is being plowed up, due&#13;
to the damage done by the fly last&#13;
fall. I t is to early to tell what&#13;
damage the fly will do to wheat&#13;
this spriug. Uunder favorable&#13;
conditions the evil results might&#13;
be great. Correspondents repott&#13;
the flies are hatching out, but time&#13;
alone can tell what the outcome&#13;
will be. The weather was cool&#13;
during April, so that the plant&#13;
made slow growth.&#13;
The oats were not all sowed by&#13;
the first of May, and were sowed&#13;
germination and growth weresluw&#13;
ou account of the cool, dty weather.&#13;
The acreage of oats sown iu&#13;
the State and central counties as&#13;
compared with 1900, is 90, iu the&#13;
southern counties 95, in the northcounties&#13;
101.&#13;
- » • • - »&#13;
Notice.&#13;
You are hereby notified that sealed&#13;
bids will be received by me on or before&#13;
Monday June 3 1901 for the&#13;
furnishing of Red Star oil to tbe village&#13;
of Pinckney for one year. The&#13;
council reserving the riffht to accept&#13;
or reject any or alt bids.&#13;
E. R. BRMJK, Clerk.&#13;
Daled May 9 1901.&#13;
Notice.&#13;
You are hereby notified that sealed&#13;
bids will be received by me on or be&#13;
fore Monday Jane 3 1901 lor litfhtioar&#13;
street lamps and caring for same for&#13;
one year. Council reserving right to&#13;
accept, or reject any or all bids. ^&#13;
E. K. URAUN, Clerk.&#13;
Dated May 9 19'U.&#13;
•mat a Little D i s a g r e e m e n t Between&#13;
t h e P e p p e r y L o v e r s .&#13;
"See here, Daniel." begau the old&#13;
farmer when he had cornered his son&#13;
out by the corncrib, "what's this here&#13;
clrcalatln round 'uiong the neighbors&#13;
'bout you and Patience breakin off yer&#13;
engagement?"&#13;
"Nnthln to it 'tall," with a sullen tone&#13;
and look.&#13;
"Blamed funny. I never see so much&#13;
smoke where there wasn't some fire.&#13;
Did you and her have some words?"&#13;
"I snkl there wasn't no breakin off,&#13;
didn't I'! What's the use of cross questions&#13;
a feller like he was on the witness&#13;
stan'?"&#13;
"Lots of use, my young man. Hain't&#13;
I tole you more times 'n you've got&#13;
Ingers and toes that my mind and ma's&#13;
mind is sot on this here marriage?&#13;
Don't our farms jlne, and isn't she a&#13;
only chile, and hain't you a only chile?&#13;
Hain't you got no gumtion nur common&#13;
sense?"&#13;
"She said not. She said' I didn't&#13;
know enough to peel b'iled pertaters&#13;
afore eatin 'em or to keep awake when&#13;
I was a-courtin of her."&#13;
"She hain't so fur wrong, either. And&#13;
what did you say?"&#13;
"I tole her she didn't have lnterleck&#13;
enough to talk so's to keep nobody&#13;
awake and that ef I was a-pickln and&#13;
a-choosin fur beauty she'd be at the&#13;
foot of the class. That's what I tole&#13;
her."&#13;
"Well?"&#13;
"She ordered me to git out and said&#13;
ef she ever see me on that farm from&#13;
hencefor'ard she'd set the dogs on me.&#13;
and I tole her the dogs would have a&#13;
confounded easy time of it so fur as 1&#13;
wns consumed. Rut there was no&#13;
breakin off."&#13;
Then the old man Informed the boy&#13;
that if the engagement wasn't renewed&#13;
within 24 hours he'd leave every&#13;
"durned dollar to a sannytorlum fur&#13;
fooli."-Detroit Free Press.&#13;
Waaa Mrs. GUfcart l a * Ha* S»a«-&#13;
taalaa,&#13;
Tbe only time I resented newspaper&#13;
chatter was when I had my spectacles&#13;
stolen. They were snatched from ray&#13;
belt, the case I wore there being torn&#13;
away. I spoke of It to Mr. Dorney, and&#13;
the story went round the theater. Somehow&#13;
the reporters got bold of it, aad&#13;
they made a great, to do about it It&#13;
was really too bad of them. I felt it&#13;
the more because I had managed to&#13;
keep A much more serious theft an absolute&#13;
secret That was at the time&#13;
when so mucbrfuir^wae being: made of&#13;
the "robbery of jewels" form of theatrical&#13;
advertisement I had a very&#13;
valuable pair of earrings taken from&#13;
my pocket most cleverly, and I was oa&#13;
my way to play for a charity tool&#13;
However, I kept my loss quite to myself.&#13;
And then to be brought before a&#13;
sympathetic public as the loser of a&#13;
pair of spectacles!—From "The Stage&#13;
Reminiscences of Mrs. Gilbert" in&#13;
Scribner's.&#13;
An Interesting LtnJc&#13;
One curious incident in the siege of&#13;
Badajos may be related. The day&#13;
after the assault two Spanish ladies,&#13;
the younger a beautiful girl of 14, appealed&#13;
for help to two ofQcers of the&#13;
rifles, who were passing through one&#13;
of the streets of the town. Their dresses&#13;
were torn, their ears, from which rings&#13;
had been roughly snatched, were bleeding,&#13;
and to escape outrage or death&#13;
they cast themselves on the protection&#13;
of the first British officers they met&#13;
One of the officers was Captain Harry&#13;
Smith of the rifles. Two years later&#13;
he married the girl he had saved in a&#13;
scene so wild. Captain Harry Smith&#13;
In after years served at the Cape as&#13;
Sir Harry, and this Spanish girl, as&#13;
Lady Smith, gave her name to the historic&#13;
town which Sir George White defended&#13;
with such stubborn valor.—&#13;
"Wellington's Men."&#13;
B e w * r e of a Cald.&#13;
A couph is not a disease but a sympton.&#13;
Consumption and bronchitis,&#13;
which are the most dangerous and&#13;
fatal diseases, have for their first indication&#13;
a persistant eouph, and if properly&#13;
treated as ?oon as this couffh J'&#13;
appears are easi'y cured. Chamberlain's&#13;
Couffb Remedy has proven wonderfully&#13;
successful, and (rained its&#13;
wide reputation ancj extensive Kale by&#13;
its success in curinj/ tbe diseases&#13;
which cause couflhinur. If it is not&#13;
beneficial it will not cost you a c«ut.&#13;
For sale by F. A. Sijrler, Pmekney.&#13;
Subscribe (or Dispatch,&#13;
WANTED- -Salesman and Collector&#13;
to represent well nsiablished business&#13;
of 50 years Ktandintf Small Honesty&#13;
Bond required, a liberal contract for&#13;
a good man.&#13;
D.E. Whippier&#13;
303 South Main St.&#13;
Ann Ar, or, Mich.&#13;
WANTf:D-Capa»Ie,r«liable porsoa In every&#13;
county to lepre.wtfnt large company of solid fluaacla)&#13;
reputation. $&gt;% salary per year, payable&#13;
weekly: &amp;3 per day absolutely sure aad all expenses;&#13;
straight, bona-fide, deflnate salary, oa&#13;
commission; salary Dairt each Saturday and expense&#13;
money advauceri each week. STANDARD&#13;
HOUSE, 334 Dearborn at. Chicago. t-29&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
"N AND STKAM9HIP UNE9* 'J&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and lor&#13;
Howell, Owosso, Alma, Mt Pleasaat&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern ilichi«?an.&#13;
W. H. BKNSKTT,&#13;
G . P . A. Toledo&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
R a U t o a i , Taa. 1, I S O i .&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit and Eest,&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p. nr., 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Grand Rapida, North and West,&#13;
9:45 a. m», 2:08 p. m. 6:20 p. m.&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay City,&#13;
10:3a a. m., 3:04 p. m., 8:58 p. a .&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10:8fl a. m.&#13;
FRANK BAT, H. F. ItfOBLLElt,&#13;
Agent, South LTOO. t&gt;. p. A., Detroit.&#13;
f&gt;r»Bd Trwfc Railway Syatem&#13;
JaoboD. Detroit, and&#13;
Intermediate ttntloai&#13;
mail as* exp.&#13;
g 9.44 a. m.&#13;
• 6:45 p.m.&#13;
£e 4:4ft p. -i.f-t . JiBactekramoae.d liaatat otlxa,t taonada T mixed&#13;
•:18 a. a.&#13;
5:15 p. n,&#13;
7*6 a.m.&#13;
?&#13;
I&#13;
Thefciea,*,and6:45p,m, train*hate throng*&#13;
coach between Jackaon and Detroit.&#13;
W. J. BUek, Afant, FtMkaej&#13;
" ' '.-1 ;&gt;».' - , &lt; • '/•'•&gt;' V * "&#13;
.«•&lt;.-&#13;
V i 1 Sfp^iis^^^p^^^^pSPP ,vtV«f a (ri"i».&#13;
. * •&#13;
1 - - ft,T' •••••. '••'•• • • . ' ' . ' ' . . &gt; • . - " - ^ ^&#13;
•c*-&#13;
v-. - : - ^ , - ,&#13;
•£&#13;
l&#13;
'iMjiiiwut.i ^jaiM1,1"&#13;
&lt;ft&#13;
•Y*&#13;
A s AlsJenaaate BalL&#13;
ions* tint* ago a follower of one of&#13;
tbo city aldermen c u t covetous glances&#13;
apon * dealmble oewanUuNj tinder the&#13;
elevated railroad ttalra. Straight he&#13;
went to hia friend, the alderman, and&#13;
made known hia wiabea, which were&#13;
that the news dealer should be evicted&#13;
from the locality.&#13;
"All right me boy; leave it to me,"&#13;
•aid the city father and began to pull&#13;
wires. Finally he got an order directing&#13;
the newsdealer to show cause why&#13;
he should not get o n t but that obstinate&#13;
indtvldual still remained. Then&#13;
he drew up a fo#ma! complaint which&#13;
was duly laid before one of the judges.&#13;
The complaint after telling bow the&#13;
newsdealer bad been ordered to leave&#13;
and had not done so. concludes:&#13;
"And now we have to complain,&#13;
your npDor, that not only is this same&#13;
stand still there, but the defendant has&#13;
replaced It by a bigger one."—New&#13;
York Commercial Advertiser.&#13;
THE NEW TENANT.&#13;
• W « « m « i i v n M « l i r " * W &gt; P * &gt; r i p i M * « &gt; TIM ' I. "W I"&#13;
F o a a s l t k e H o u e .&#13;
The late Sir Frederick Gore-Ouseley.&#13;
professor of music at Oxford, was once&#13;
going to call on a friend in London and&#13;
asked a fellow musician the number in&#13;
which be lived in a certain street&#13;
"1 don't know his number," answered&#13;
the other, "but the note of his door&#13;
scraper is O sharp."&#13;
Sir Frederick went off. contentedly&#13;
kicking the door scrapers all down the&#13;
street until be came to the right one,&#13;
when he rang the bell and went in.—&#13;
London Standard.&#13;
sMi«» Florence Newman, who ha?&#13;
been a srreat soff«r«r from musinlxr&#13;
raeurnatisam, says Lharalfftrlain's Pain&#13;
Balm is tho only rfliUHdy that affords&#13;
her relist. Mis* Newman is a much&#13;
respected resident of the village cf&#13;
ray N. Y., and makes this statement&#13;
for the bhnefi*. of others similarly afflicted.&#13;
This liniment \a for sale by&#13;
F. A. Siarler, Pmckey.&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
Salary $900&#13;
•Toar, when us left my Ute I drtw v&#13;
Close Unit the casements of my heart&#13;
Aad locked tbs door, aad In each ptft&#13;
Strange darkness reigned, forlorn and new.&#13;
Taer* pierced so happy sunshine throogk&#13;
The barrier of fattened dooif;&#13;
The duat lay thick upon the Soon&#13;
Where rosemary was strewn and rue.&#13;
But oa a certain day came one&#13;
Who knocked and would not be denied&#13;
And threw the rated easements wide&#13;
And entered with the wind aad ran.&#13;
The dingy webs that grief had spun,&#13;
The dust that sad neglect bad laid,&#13;
The faded hangings, vent and frayed,&#13;
Had vanished ere his work was done.&#13;
Ob, he hath swept my heart for roe&#13;
Clean of old sorrowing and doubt,&#13;
Aad he hath sef it ail sbout&#13;
With peace and happy certainty!&#13;
Ob, home be glad for sucb as be&#13;
And vtry sweet nor let him and&#13;
That ghost one tenant left behind,&#13;
That silent, sad eyed memory!&#13;
—Tfaeodosia Garrison in Harper's Basar.&#13;
A PERSEVERING MONKEY.&#13;
Pvtfaaaa* Qaun»t&gt;**» Storr of Kellle&#13;
sw« «**&gt; Matchbox.&#13;
Monkeys are always happy if they&#13;
have plenty to eat and something to&#13;
play with. Professor B. L, Garner, In&#13;
bis "Apes and Monkeys," says that he&#13;
recalls no investment which ever yielded&#13;
a greater return in pleasure than a&#13;
tertain little pocket match safe, which&#13;
tost 20 cents. H e gave it to a little&#13;
monkey, Nellie by name, after putting&#13;
Into it a small key to make it rattle&#13;
ind some bits of candy.&#13;
She rattled the bos and found much&#13;
pleasure in the noise.* I showed her*&#13;
how to press the spring in order to&#13;
open the box, but her little black finjers&#13;
were not strong enough to release&#13;
the spring.&#13;
However, she caught the idea aud&#13;
knew that the spring was the secret&#13;
which held the box closed. When she&#13;
found that she could not open it with&#13;
her fingers, she tried it with her teeth.&#13;
Falling in this, she turned to the wall,&#13;
and, standing upright on the top of&#13;
her cage, she took the box in both&#13;
bands and struck the spring against&#13;
the wall until the lid fle*v open.&#13;
She was perfectly delighted at the&#13;
result and for the hundredth time at&#13;
least 1 closed the box for her to open&#13;
it again.&#13;
The next time Nellie received the&#13;
match safe she was In ber cage, and&#13;
through Its meshes she could not reach&#13;
the wall. She had nothing against&#13;
which to strike the spring to force it&#13;
open.&#13;
After looking around and striking the&#13;
f box several times against the wires of&#13;
I the cage, she discovered a block of&#13;
; wood about six inches square. She&#13;
World's Longest Stairway.&#13;
The Philadelphia city hall contains&#13;
the highest continuous stairway In the&#13;
world, and tourists who have boasted&#13;
of their muscular ability in climbing&#13;
the stone steps of the Bunker HID&#13;
monument at Charlestown, the Washington&#13;
monument or the monument to&#13;
General Brock uear Queenstown, Ontario,&#13;
will tell their friends of their&#13;
feat of ascending the 598 steps which&#13;
lead from the seventh floor of the city&#13;
ball to the landing about the feet of&#13;
William Penn's statue. It extends&#13;
from the seventh to the sixteenth floor&#13;
and contains 598 steps of iron, arranged&#13;
about a square central shaft in&#13;
which runs an electric elevator. To&#13;
reach the tower stairway the climber , , ^ . , ., A J . ^ „ ,&#13;
may mount 245 granite stairs in the I t o o k t h l s a n d m o u D t e d h e r Per&lt;*- ™&#13;
stairways at the northern end of the! a n c l n S t h e b l o c k o n t h e perch, she held&#13;
building, thus making a total climb of&#13;
743 steps.&#13;
Tower climbing is one of the fads of&#13;
tourists. Hitherto the Bunker Hill&#13;
monument, with its four hundred odd&#13;
stone steps, and the Washington monument,&#13;
which has ^ few more, have represented&#13;
the acme of opportunity for&#13;
tests of physical endurance in this&#13;
country .—Philadelphia Press.&#13;
Y E A R L Y ,&#13;
Mn IDC wemsr of good nddressto re 'resent '&#13;
s a, some to tisvel appointing wxents. others for i&#13;
local work lookin* after our interests. # 9 0 0 I&#13;
salary putirunteed yearly; extra co rotatou* ami I&#13;
expenses, rapd auvsniemeot, old established&#13;
house. Urand chine* for earnest man or woman I&#13;
to secure pleasant, permanent position, literal&#13;
income ana future. New. brilliant lines. Write&#13;
at once, M A f r t O l t l * P H I S ! * , t-,33&#13;
2 3 Cburcta •*»., N e w H a v c a , C O D si.&#13;
» » A . « W i « l » V V V S &lt; V S / W V M S f t » / ' ^ l ^ A « ^ »&#13;
POSTAL * MORIV,&#13;
The enos-aicvoaa.&#13;
Griswold&#13;
House&#13;
. A&#13;
strictly&#13;
ars»&gt;&#13;
clans.&#13;
modem,&#13;
up-to-date&#13;
Hotel, located&#13;
in tbe heart of&#13;
DETROIT. «he City.&#13;
R e m a r k a b l e P o w e r .&#13;
A dear old lady was taken one day&#13;
to a musical service in a Boston church.&#13;
She had heard much about the fine&#13;
voice of the soprano and was prepared&#13;
for a treat.&#13;
She sat in rapt enjoyment until the&#13;
service was over and then turned a radiant&#13;
face toward her escort, who was&#13;
a young grandson.&#13;
''Dear boy," she said, "you've given&#13;
me a great treat. Her voice is perfectly&#13;
beautiful. It made cold chills run&#13;
all up and down my spine."&#13;
"It's too bad, grandmamma," said&#13;
the boy, "but she didn't sing today,&#13;
though she was there. The gentleman&#13;
next me says she's been suffering from&#13;
a bad cold, and one of the chorus had&#13;
to sing the solos for her."&#13;
"What, dear?" said the old lady, looking&#13;
momentarily distressed. Then her&#13;
face cleared, and she patted his arm&#13;
reassuringly.&#13;
"Never you mind," she said.- "We&#13;
can come again some time. But. after&#13;
all. if she can make me feel that way&#13;
without singing I don't know that it&#13;
would be wise for me to henr her. Now,&#13;
would it?"-Youth's Companion.&#13;
it with the left foot, while with the&#13;
right foot she clung to the perch. With&#13;
her tail Wound around the meshes of&#13;
the cage to steady herself, she carefully&#13;
adjusted the matchbox in sucb a&#13;
manner as to protect ber fingers from&#13;
the blow. Then she struck the spring&#13;
against the block of wood, and the lid&#13;
flew open.&#13;
She fairly screamed with delight as&#13;
she held up the box.&#13;
CAME IN.TO BE HANGED.&#13;
T o o P r o f u s e .&#13;
Managing Editor—Qulller writes more&#13;
than twice as much as any other mar&#13;
on the staff. He really deserves u.&#13;
have his salary raised.&#13;
Business Manager—On the contrary,&#13;
he ought to have it reduced. Just think&#13;
of the money he costs us iu a year in&#13;
the matter of pens, ink and paper PBoeton&#13;
Transcript.&#13;
60 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TrtADC MARKS'&#13;
DKSIONS&#13;
COPVArOMTa AC.&#13;
tions strictly confldentuof Handbook on Patents&#13;
sent free. Oldest agency forjse^rtngpatente.&#13;
Patent* taken through Mann JTCo. receive&#13;
s j e f i U e t t * wtthoat obsree, la t i e Sckiulficfliiierrcaa.&#13;
rawt fMtfpoataatfL let&#13;
Many men in China do not marry,&#13;
the priests who serve in the temples&#13;
and those who take up literary pursuits&#13;
abstaining by choice, while many&#13;
remain single by reason of their poverty.&#13;
Milwaukee &amp; Manitowoc via Rail and&#13;
Lake.&#13;
The Pere Marquette routes via Ottawa&#13;
Peach and Ludington to Mil*&#13;
waukee and Manitowac are now in&#13;
opfration, with improved .service and&#13;
equipment. Passenger* &gt;n-route to&#13;
the West and Northwest will find&#13;
these routes desirable in the wav of&#13;
k&gt;w raf*s and tfood 3«rvice. t. 21&#13;
Ask agents for fuU information.&#13;
Biliousness is a condition characterized&#13;
hy a disturoanca of the digej-tiv&#13;
organs. The stomach is debilitated,&#13;
ihe liver torbid, the howHs constipal-1&#13;
ed. There is a loathing of food, p.tin*&#13;
in tb* bowels, d.zziness, coAtnd inngUH&#13;
and vomiting, Hrst of the uudik's^ted&#13;
or partiv diues'ed food and then of&#13;
the biie. Chamberlain's Stomach and&#13;
Liver Tablet* ally the disturbances of&#13;
the stomach and create n hnaithv appetite.&#13;
They also tone up the liver&#13;
to a healthy action and regulate ihe&#13;
bowels. Try them and you are certain&#13;
to rw much pleased with the re&#13;
suit. For sal* by F. A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
A S t o r r T o l d o f A b e l E r a i m a i , t h e&#13;
B o e r , a n d L o r d W o l i e l e r .&#13;
A good story is told of the old Boer,&#13;
Abel Erasmus, aud Lord Wolseley.&#13;
then Sir Garnet Wolseley, in connection&#13;
with&#13;
Wolseley's campaign in 1879 against&#13;
Sekukuni, the chief of the Bapedis, on&#13;
the borders of Swaziland. After the&#13;
capture of Sekukuni he was immediately&#13;
brought before Sir Garnet Wolseley,&#13;
who asked bim how he, a miserable&#13;
Kaffir, living in a cave, dared to&#13;
defy the great queen of England. The&#13;
chief replied that he had been instigated&#13;
to do so by Abel Erasmus.&#13;
Sir Garnet in describing the scene at&#13;
a public dinner given to him at Pretoria&#13;
on his return from the campaign&#13;
said that he wished there and then to&#13;
let Abel Erasmus know that if ever be&#13;
found that Erasmus had been inciting&#13;
any chief to levy war against England&#13;
and be was able to lay hands on him&#13;
Abel Erasmus would hang as high as&#13;
Haman.&#13;
^ f e w days after the dinner Sir Henry&#13;
Brackenbury. Sir Garnet's military&#13;
secretary, was sitting in his office&#13;
when a tall, bearded Boer entered and&#13;
asked permission to speak with him.&#13;
"I am Abel Erasmus." he said, "and&#13;
I have very Important business to do&#13;
here."&#13;
He explained that he had come to&#13;
see Sir Garnet Wolseley. for he had&#13;
heard that Sir Garnet bad said that if&#13;
he could lay hold of him he would bang&#13;
him. and so he bad come to be banged.&#13;
Sir Garnet was in the next room, and&#13;
Sir Henry Brackenbury thought it&#13;
would be advisable to consult bim on&#13;
the subject Sir Garnet, however, happened&#13;
to be too busy at the moment to&#13;
see anybody, and Sir Henry after reflection&#13;
persuaded his angry visitor to&#13;
take his leave and* allow the hanging&#13;
to stand over for the time.&#13;
"John," ah* said, suddenly •baking&#13;
bim, ''there it a burglar in the house "&#13;
"Are you sore?' he asked.&#13;
"Positive," she replied. "Don't you&#13;
bear him?*4&#13;
He got up and began to dress hastily,&#13;
but quietly.&#13;
"What are you going to do, John?'&#13;
she inquired. #&#13;
"I am going to sneak out thfc back&#13;
way and get a policeman," be arriwered.&#13;
"But if you go right down Rtairs&#13;
now," she said, ."you'll find him in the&#13;
ilinlng room." -.&#13;
"Oh, I'll find bim. will I&gt;J he retortrd&#13;
sarcastically. "Well, now yon Just&#13;
look me over carefully."&#13;
"Yes, John; what of it?"&#13;
"Do I look like a man who has lost a&#13;
burglar anywhere?"&#13;
"No; of course not, but"—&#13;
"Do I have the reputation of being&#13;
an impertinent fellow who is always&#13;
Interfering with other people's business?&#13;
Do I in any way resemble the&#13;
lost and found department of a daily&#13;
newspaper?'&#13;
"No."&#13;
"Then why should I get tangled up&#13;
with other people's property?'&#13;
"You're afraid, John."&#13;
"Afraid nothing!" net retorted indignantly.&#13;
"I am looking at it from an&#13;
ethical point of view. This burglar undoubtedly&#13;
has been lost by the police,&#13;
and if I took charge of him they might&#13;
think I was trying to steal him and&#13;
make a lot of trouble for me. Besides.&#13;
I'm no searching party. You women&#13;
don't understand the ethics of business&#13;
at all."—Chicago Post.&#13;
', • I f " ' " a&#13;
T e s t i n g t h e S c h o o l m a s t e r .&#13;
In the town* records of the city of&#13;
Boston there is a curious passage&#13;
which records bow a schoolmaster was&#13;
examined and what happened. The&#13;
manner in which the visit of Inspection&#13;
Is recorded makes one incline to the&#13;
elew that the unlucky schoolmaster&#13;
may not have had fair play, although&#13;
If he was really inefficient be may be&#13;
said to have been judged by his peers.&#13;
In the record for the 22d of May,&#13;
1722, it is set forth that:&#13;
"Coll Pen Townsend, Jeremiah Allen&#13;
Esqr, &amp; John Edwards together&#13;
with the Select men, Vissitted the&#13;
wrighting School at the Southerly End&#13;
Df Boston on Thirsday the 24th apll&#13;
1722. and Examined the Scholars un-&#13;
Jer mr Ames Angers tuition as to their&#13;
proficiency . in Reading writing ScyhThTpart&#13;
^Erasmus t w V ta j #**l»S &amp; the masters ability of teacb-&#13;
•s '"**-A&#13;
lm}nc2** ?°?h " • " » &gt; * • &amp;&#13;
methods therefore And are of Opinion&#13;
That it will be no Service to the Town&#13;
to Continue, mr anger In that Employ."&#13;
Whereupon it was voted that the&#13;
said Mr. Ames Anger should not continue&#13;
master of the "Said South&#13;
school."&#13;
It is true that nothing is said of the&#13;
methods of spelling inculcated at the&#13;
"wrighting School." and it is also possible&#13;
that a clerk rather than the committee&#13;
was responsible for the errors&#13;
Df the record, but there is certainly&#13;
something absurd in the passage as it&#13;
stands.&#13;
D e l i c a c i e s Oat o i faeassoa.&#13;
Old Moneybags was tired of bearing&#13;
all this stuff and nonsense about the&#13;
poor. Some one had called his attention&#13;
to his own way of living, with deli*&#13;
cacies out of season on his groaning table&#13;
and—&#13;
"Delicacies out of season!" be thun&gt;&#13;
dered. "What if I do get to use ice in&#13;
the summer time? Don't the poor gel&#13;
to use it in the winter, when i f s fresh,&#13;
and-t-have to put up with the cold storage&#13;
stuff? B-r-r-r-r!" — Indianapolis&#13;
Press.&#13;
WANTJCD— Capable' reliable person iu every&#13;
county to represent large compaoy-etsolid financial&#13;
reputation; $¢35 salarv per ye*r, payable&#13;
weekly; S3 per day absolutely sure and all expenses;&#13;
stjsight, hona tide, definate salary, no&#13;
commission; salary paid each Saturday and expense&#13;
money advanced each week. STANDARD&#13;
HOUSE, 334 Dearbcrn st. Chicago t-'49&#13;
A Card.&#13;
I, the undersigned, do hereby agree&#13;
to refund the money on a 50 cent bottle&#13;
of Green's Warranted Syrup of&#13;
Tar if iUofafles 10 cure vour cough or&#13;
cold. I a'so guarantee a 25-cent. bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money refunded.&#13;
t23&#13;
Will B. Darrow.&#13;
4W&amp;&#13;
This signature is on every box . 1 tbe genuine&#13;
Laxative Bromo-Quiniiie Tablet.&#13;
tbe remedy thjat c w t e s * e o M i n OBM d a y&#13;
STATK of MICHIGAN, County ot Livingston,&#13;
SG. Notice is hereby ffiven that by an order&#13;
of the Probate Court for the conntyof Uvingston,&#13;
marie on ibe 20th day of April, A. D., IflO]&#13;
six me-nths irora dste were allowed for creditors&#13;
to pretest their claim* sgalnst the estate of&#13;
THOMAS K1TZSIMMONS, ueceased.&#13;
And ail creditors of said deceased sre required&#13;
to present their claims to said Probate cO;jrt, at&#13;
the Probate Office in the tlilacs ot Bowell, for&#13;
examination and allowance, on or before tbe ilth&#13;
day of October next, and that sneh claims will&#13;
he besrri before said court on Saturday, the 80th&#13;
day of July, and oa Monday, the 91th day of&#13;
October next, at one o'oloo* in tbe aftesaoea*&#13;
of escb of said days. ,&#13;
Dated: Howell, Apr. 90th, 1901.&#13;
t 91 EoaaxB A. htowa, J.«rigtet Probate&#13;
K v e r y W o m a n&#13;
who has female troubles, cinmon to her&#13;
sex, is weak, feels tired, worn out or lias&#13;
lost her ambition, should take Knill's Red&#13;
Pills for Wan People, "Pale or Weak."&#13;
They are the great BlooH and Nerve Medicine&#13;
nnd Developer. They restore healtlj&#13;
vStrength and Beauty. Only 25c. Try&#13;
them.&#13;
E v e r y ffnn&#13;
worn out mentally or physically from overwork&#13;
or other causes should take Knill's&#13;
Red Pills for Wau People, "Pale or W e a k / '&#13;
They are the great Blood and Nerve Tonic,&#13;
restore Vina, Vigor and Vitality. They&#13;
will make a perfect man of you. Try&#13;
them.&#13;
C v e r j r W s a i s n s r !*l*n&#13;
troubled with bilousness or inactive Liver&#13;
or Bowels, should take Knill's White Liver&#13;
Pills. 25 doses 25c.&#13;
If troubled with any Kidney Of, Priaary&#13;
troudles, Backache, Lame or Bore, yon&#13;
take Knill's Blue Kidney Pills. They&#13;
cure."&#13;
Guaranteed by all Druggists; 25e*"* box&#13;
5 boxes $1.00.&#13;
Write for phampkts, testimonials'^&#13;
samples sent free.&#13;
fttatlt'av R e d , W h i t a a n d B l u e F i l l C o&#13;
P o r t H u r o n , M i c h&#13;
mmmAum&#13;
er • . t w a / d of M e t s l t &amp;» ftay&#13;
wbo puicbMt*of us, two 2&amp;6&#13;
of Baxter's M w d r t k * i(itt«rt Tablet*,&#13;
if it fails to cure oonttipfttion, bUktn*&#13;
nets, sick-headache, jaundke, lota of&#13;
appetite, soar storaache, 47#|fJ*t»&#13;
liver complaint, or any of tfea JjpiMee&#13;
for which it is recommended, • r i o e&#13;
25 centH ror either tablets or liquid.&#13;
We will also refund the money on ona&#13;
package of either if it fails to gWe&#13;
satisfaction,&#13;
P. K, 8igler„&#13;
W. B. Darrow&#13;
She finrtttKji fffepattfa.&#13;
raauaaao a n a * varoas&amp;aT aoaatsa mr&#13;
F R A N K L. A N D R E W S&#13;
ttobacriptloB Price $1 la Advance.&#13;
Saterea at (be Poetoflce at fiaefcaej, Mlealgaa&#13;
as secoaa-daae matter.&#13;
Advertising rates aaade Kaowa oa application.&#13;
BoalaeM Cards, $440 per year.&#13;
Peath and marriage notices pablisaed tree.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may be paid&#13;
tor, U desired, by presenting tae ofice with tick*&#13;
ets of admission. In case tickets are not broogfat&#13;
to toe office, regale* rsteewlU be charged.&#13;
All matter la local notice eolama will be eaarsved&#13;
at o cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
Insertion, \toere no UmeUspeclned. all notices&#13;
will be Inserted until ordered dlscontlnaed, and&#13;
^ be charged for accordingly. ¢ ^ AH changes&#13;
of advertisements MCbT reach this office as early&#13;
ss Tcasjur morning to insare an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
, JOS PKIXTIXQ/&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We havsell kinds&#13;
and the latest styles of Type, ete., which enable*&#13;
as to execute all kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Pamnlets, Fosters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, ete., la&#13;
superior sty les, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
ov as good work can b* done.&#13;
• LL BILLS P4TA.BLV F U U t OS B V a a t atOVTS.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DlkECTGRY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBSSIDSKT ... ««•...,^«. C. L.8lgler&#13;
TanSTBas E. L. Thompson, Alfred Moruu&#13;
Daniel Richards, t&gt;eo. Bowman, Semnel&#13;
Sykes, f. 1&gt;, Johnson.&#13;
UiiisE..&gt;a&gt;i.MfH&gt;MM«.&gt;MimM ,••£• H. Braun&#13;
Ta*A8tJBB».....~~, _ » . _ . .J. A. Cadwell&#13;
ASSBBSOB ~~« MM..Jas. A.Greene&#13;
Sraarr COKMISSIONBB - J. Moats&#13;
HBAxTHOmusB Dr.fi. F. Siglsr&#13;
&amp; * X O B U I X X ».»MiMt«»Mt»»ii&lt;i»»teH».«nnM**- •** *V e «•* v a T i&#13;
MABSHALL,&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
nine A . O. H. Society of this place, meets every&#13;
1 third guartay in tae Ft. Mattae* Hall.&#13;
John Tuotney and Si. T. Kelly,Cauaty Delegates&#13;
X?PWORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
Utorening at &amp;00 oclock in the M. E. Cnurch. A&#13;
cordial Invitation U extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. F. L. Andrews, Pres.&#13;
CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR SO0lEr*:-\feet&#13;
lags every Sunday evening at 6:+). Pnwi teat&#13;
Mi&amp;s L. M. Ooe; Secretary, .Miss H Utle Carpaater&#13;
m H E W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
I month at 8:80 p. m, at tbe home of Dr. H. F.&#13;
sigler. Everyone interested in temperance is&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs. Leal Sigler, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
Ktta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
The C. T. A. and B. society of this place,&#13;
every third Saturday evening in the Pr.&#13;
thew Hall. John Donohue, P resident.&#13;
v e s t&#13;
Mat-&#13;
K KNIGHTS or xaa LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Weds&#13;
evening of every mootuinthe K.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:30 o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
C. L. Grimes. Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIOLER M. D- C, L, SIOLER M, 0&#13;
Bk DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
rbysieiaus and durK«"ae. Ail calls prompt!&#13;
attended to day or night. Office on Main str •&#13;
Pincaney, Mich.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEff.&#13;
DBNTI3T-Every Friday; and on Tharsdsy&#13;
when having appointments. Office over&#13;
Sixer's ifrug Store.&#13;
VETERINARY S U R Q E O N&#13;
Crtadaste ot Outjno Veterinary College, also&#13;
• the Veterinary Dentistry College&#13;
Toronto Canada.&#13;
Will promptly attend to aU dtsmis at tke do&#13;
. &lt; _ w ^ - , — i - ^ - Horses teeth ttamlaajt fro*.&#13;
ornccatniLU*?»NCiCNiA&#13;
\g£THOD18T EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
ivx Rev. R.W. Hicks, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at Ui:3o, aad every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close of morn«&#13;
lug service. ^ LBAJ. S i o u a , Supt.&#13;
CONGrtBQAflONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. C. W. Rice psstor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:80 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Thars&#13;
day, evenings. Hunday school at does of mornini:&#13;
service. Miss Kittle HoS, Supt,, Maoel&#13;
Swsrtbout Sec.&#13;
ST, MARY'S CATHOLIC CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Commerford, Pastor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:911 o'clock&#13;
high mass with sermon at 9:30 a. m. Catechism&#13;
st S ;0o p. m., vee per sand benediction at 7:40 p. m.&#13;
KNIGHTS OP MACCABBB8.&#13;
Meet every Priday evening on or before foil&#13;
or the moon st their hall In the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CHAS. UaapBBXJ., Sir Knight Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 7«,? A. A. M. Regular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. H. P. Sigler, W. M.&#13;
0RDSR OF EASTERN STAR meets each, month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
AA.M. meeting, Mas. MART READ, W. M.&#13;
RDEK OF MODERN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
aret Tnursday evening ot each Month in the&#13;
jJaccabee nail. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every Is&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of each month at t :30 p m. a&#13;
K. o. T. M. halL Visiting sisters cordially invited.&#13;
JuLU SlQLsa, Lady Com.&#13;
'&amp;&amp;&#13;
r:^3&#13;
V..'&lt;1,&#13;
• ' • • ; ' * '&#13;
i&#13;
; • *&#13;
-V.N&lt;&#13;
».'v» •i-v&#13;
•-4T.&#13;
^ ¾ ¾ ^&#13;
v»«„V)uV', ''"&lt;.'»"^Wt*'&#13;
§inck\qi gifyaldt.&#13;
FBASK I*. AXDBKWS, Publisher.&#13;
*ItfCSNEY, - ' - MICHIGAN,&#13;
Christian Klucker, a Swiss guide in&#13;
the Rocky mountains, ha* a record o£&#13;
2,000 mountain ascents without an. accident&#13;
to himself or his party/ ,-w&#13;
, " : ' " &gt;&#13;
This Buffalo is the same sanguine&#13;
little city that was bragging a few&#13;
months ago that its fair should be&#13;
ready when the opening day arrived.&#13;
•It is too soon to tell whether the&#13;
reduction in the size of the page which&#13;
several metropolitan daily newspapers&#13;
are making is merely an advertising&#13;
experiment, or the beginning of an&#13;
important permanent change. The&#13;
daily newspapers are much too large;&#13;
they absorb so much time as to leave&#13;
little for more serious reading.&#13;
Sweden and Norway both boast several&#13;
homes for unmarried women. One&#13;
of these was endowed more than 200&#13;
years ago by a man who left the bulk&#13;
of his fortune to his spinster descendants.&#13;
Tne home is managed by salaried&#13;
trustees, and the unmarried,&#13;
woman who can prove kinship to the&#13;
founder is entitled to a home there.'&#13;
In the new mint in Philadelphia the&#13;
United States will have the finest, costliest,&#13;
and most complete moneyrmaking&#13;
establishment of its kind in the&#13;
world. The granite structure was commenced&#13;
two years ago. and will cost&#13;
about $2,000,000, including the mechanical&#13;
equipment, costing $200,000.&#13;
There will be 24 coining presses in the&#13;
new mint.&#13;
A physician who has recently returned&#13;
from Persia says that the natives&#13;
still believe that human tears&#13;
are a .remedy for certain chronic diseases.&#13;
At every funeral the bottling&#13;
of mourners' tears is one of the chief&#13;
features of the ceremony. Each of the&#13;
mourners is presented with a sponga&#13;
with which to mop his face and eyes,&#13;
and after the burial these sponges are&#13;
presented to the priest, who squeezes&#13;
the tears into bottles, which he keeps.&#13;
The Forestry Department of the St.&#13;
Louis fair intends to have an exhibition&#13;
that will be an object lesson to&#13;
all who see it of the practical side of&#13;
wood working in all its phases and&#13;
branches. It will show the woods of&#13;
the country and the uses to which&#13;
they are adapted; it will endeavor to&#13;
show where they grow, at what pries&#13;
the standing timber can be bought,&#13;
the size of the tract, accessibility, and&#13;
everything that a prospective purchaser&#13;
would want to know.&#13;
Prince Alphonse, the nephew of the&#13;
Prince Regent of Bavaria, is the man&#13;
of the hour in Bavaria. He has received&#13;
the "Blue Letter," which means&#13;
he has 'been officially degraded. He&#13;
was not severe enough to ,please the&#13;
military, and the mistake he made was&#13;
to manifest too much consideration&#13;
for the horses in his care. During&#13;
the last maneuvers, on reaching a steep&#13;
and stony descent, Prince Alphonse ordered&#13;
the men to dismount, so that the&#13;
horses might 'be spared. It is claimed&#13;
the order completely upset the plan of&#13;
action. Popular feeling is intense&#13;
against the authorities who have&#13;
brought about the prince's dismissal.&#13;
It is believed to be the first time a&#13;
Bavarian prince has received the 'Blue&#13;
Letter."&#13;
The sumptuous chapel built to commemorate&#13;
the many victims of the ter-'&#13;
rible fire which took place a few years&#13;
ago at the Charity Bazaar in Paris is&#13;
now finished, and is generally considered&#13;
to be exceptionally artistic and&#13;
appropriate. It contains, however, a&#13;
very curious optical illusion. The dome&#13;
is painted by Maignan, and represents&#13;
the Virgin surrounded by angels carrying&#13;
the implements of the Passion,&#13;
with the victims of the awful catastrophe&#13;
rising from their graves at her&#13;
feet. Seen from the right-hand side,&#13;
the Virgin and angels alone appear,&#13;
but if the spectator goes .to the left he&#13;
sees only the unfortunate victims ascending&#13;
to glory, the Madonna and her&#13;
celestial host, by an ingenious arrangement&#13;
of the light, being no longer&#13;
visible.&#13;
While a crew of stone laborers ware&#13;
working an excavation through the&#13;
Fonnan clift, two mile3 east of Newport,&#13;
R. I., for the bed of the Tennessee&#13;
and North Carolina railroad.they found&#13;
a human female skeleton 19 inches in&#13;
height, In a perfect state of preservation.&#13;
The only anomaly was the teeth,&#13;
which were 200 in number and had no&#13;
sockers, but were developed from and&#13;
grew upon the jaw bone with no adjacent&#13;
valvular process. The bonoa&#13;
we~e hermetically sealed and sent to&#13;
the Smithsonian Institution. The skeleton&#13;
was found in solid rock ten feet&#13;
from the faco and eight feat from the&#13;
top of clift, in a cavity two feet by 15&#13;
inches. About the cavity was no&#13;
opening crevice or aperture for the&#13;
skeleton, to enter since the formation&#13;
^&gt;f the clift, more than 2,000 years ago.&#13;
« l . . " ' t&#13;
H P W MM. • i in i I,&#13;
Second Attempt to Suppress Single&#13;
Taxer Caused a Riot.&#13;
12,000 PEOPLE PARTICIPATED*'&#13;
Mounted Ffclloe Were Assaulted by Howling&#13;
Mob and It was Some Time Before&#13;
„ the Blneeoats Succeeded In Dispersing&#13;
the Disturbers—Several Persona Hurt*&#13;
Blot Raged on Detroit's Streets.&#13;
Riot reigned for a time in the streets&#13;
of Detroit on the* night of the 10th,&#13;
and a score of persons bore upon their&#13;
bodies the following morning painful&#13;
reminders of the mob's doings. Five&#13;
policemen more or less badly injured&#13;
by cobble stones and brickbats and&#13;
more than a dozen civilians crushed&#13;
beneath the hoofs of the mounted police&#13;
and otherwise injured are the result&#13;
of the madness that seized upon&#13;
13,000 people, exasperated by the attempts&#13;
of the police department to&#13;
clear the Campus Marti us of the orators&#13;
and crowd-catchers that have obstructed&#13;
this public square so many&#13;
years by night. Not since the celebrated&#13;
street car riots of the early '90's&#13;
has anything like the frenzied scene&#13;
been witnessed in any city in Michigan.&#13;
Thousands of men gathered front&#13;
nil sections of the city in anticipation&#13;
of trouble, and assembled upon the&#13;
Campus while it was yet daylight. It&#13;
was after 10 o'clock before the 20D policemen&#13;
called out succeeded i n dispersing&#13;
them and the streets were&#13;
once again free. The trouble was the&#13;
outcome of the persistence of Tom&#13;
Bawden, the single taxer, arguing his&#13;
theory and congregating a crowd on&#13;
one of Detroit's principal thoroughfares,&#13;
night after night.&#13;
Later—Peace reigned on the Campus j&#13;
on the night of the 11th. In place of&#13;
another and more serious riot, there&#13;
was held a jollification meeting on the&#13;
above night. Police Commissioner&#13;
Andrews surrendered to the mayor and&#13;
the trouble was all off.&#13;
Weekly Crop Bulletin.&#13;
The weekly weather crop bulletin&#13;
says: The week has been favorable&#13;
for the progress of field work, but too&#13;
dry for the best growth of wheat, rye,&#13;
meadows and pastures and the germinating&#13;
of spring seeding. Very beneficial&#13;
showers occurred in the upper&#13;
peninsula and portions of the northern&#13;
counties, but practically no rain fell&#13;
in the central and southern counties&#13;
and is now much needed. Wheat has&#13;
made some progress, butcontinuesvery&#13;
uneven and in some cases is being&#13;
plowed under. Rye and meadows, although&#13;
slow, are generally promising.&#13;
Pasturage is very slow. Oat seeding&#13;
is nearly completed and is germinating&#13;
nicely, though slowly. Plowing for&#13;
corn, beans and potatoes is well advanced&#13;
in most counties of the lower&#13;
peninsula. Corn planting has begun&#13;
in the extreme southern portion of the&#13;
state. Early potato planting is quite&#13;
sjeneral. In the *northern and central&#13;
counties barley and pea seeding are&#13;
well advanced and germinating nicely.&#13;
Sugar beet seeding has generally begun.&#13;
Cherries and strawberries are in&#13;
blossom and promise good yields; all&#13;
Dther fruit prospects are generally&#13;
jood.&#13;
FIRE A T RIVER ROUttE. "T&#13;
Nearly a Balf Ml men Dollars Worth oX&#13;
Property pestroyad.&#13;
Upwards of 60,000 telegraph poles,&#13;
t w o sawmills, a salt block, a dredge, a&#13;
tug and many thousand feet of lumber&#13;
were burned in a fire that started&#13;
shortly before 3 o'clock on the afternoon&#13;
of the 12th in Salliotte &amp; Furgason's&#13;
sawmill at River Rouge, causing&#13;
a lossof at least *323,or&gt;0, divided among&#13;
the several firms as follows: Western&#13;
Union, Telegraph Co., $300,000; SalUotte&#13;
&amp; Fursrason, $50,000; John Brown lee &amp;&#13;
Co., $45,000; Carkin, Slickney &lt;fe Cram,&#13;
$15,000; Maltby Lumber Co.. $13,000:&#13;
John Mason, salt well tools,.$1,000.&#13;
Fanned by the furious westerly gale&#13;
that blew fully 30 miles an hour at&#13;
times, the fire was soon out of the control&#13;
of the village firemen and was&#13;
licking up the mills and lumber piles&#13;
hUndreds of yards away. It swept&#13;
over huge piles of lumber almost as&#13;
fast as the eye could follow it, and in&#13;
less than an hour had eaten its way&#13;
from the place where it started to a&#13;
point fully a half mile distant, where&#13;
eight acres of land were piled high&#13;
with cedar poles belonging to the&#13;
Western Union Telegraph Co.&#13;
The fire is supposed to have been&#13;
caused by a spark from the smokestack&#13;
of Salliotte &amp; Furgason's salt&#13;
block, which is immediately west of&#13;
the sawmill Fortunately no fatalities&#13;
occurred.&#13;
Bis Salo of Stamp Lands.&#13;
The Michelson &amp; Hansou Lumber&#13;
Co., of Lewiston, has just closed a deal&#13;
with a company of Iowa farmers which&#13;
disposes of about 18,000 acre3 of its&#13;
siump-laods.—The 1 afidsr emtnracecT l i r&#13;
the deal lie in Oscoda, Montmorency&#13;
and Otsego counties. The Iowa people,&#13;
under the management of Cephas&#13;
Buttles, of Milwaukee, will open the&#13;
lands for settlement and are already&#13;
forming a colony for that purpose.&#13;
This movement means much for this&#13;
section of the state and especially for&#13;
the village of Lewiston, which is now&#13;
an enterprising village of about 800 inhabitants,&#13;
but maintained largely by&#13;
lumbering interests. *&#13;
MINOR MICHIGAN MATTERS.&#13;
Murderer Bramm Glveu Ills Liberty.&#13;
While Eaton county people knew&#13;
that James H. Hrumm, the Dimondale&#13;
murderer, would be given his liberty&#13;
is soon as the supreme court took up&#13;
the proceedings, the announcement&#13;
that he had been released on the 8th&#13;
was a complete shock. Brumtn murdered&#13;
Mollie Flagler on the morning of&#13;
May 10, 1899. His only defense at the&#13;
trial was epileptic insanity and the&#13;
prisoner's murderous attack on Sheriff&#13;
Shepherd in the jail corridor is still&#13;
fresh in the public memory. During&#13;
the trial relatives and acquaintances&#13;
testified that Brumm was subject to&#13;
violent attacks and they were always&#13;
fearful that he would commit some&#13;
rash act and in view of all these facts&#13;
the prisoner is again turned loose on&#13;
the public. DimoDdale people who&#13;
were bitter against Brumm all think&#13;
him to be a fit person for an insane&#13;
asylum. The responsibility for the&#13;
prisoner's release rests with Gov. 1'in-&#13;
?ree, who pardoned him on the last&#13;
day of his term of office.&#13;
MyaterlooH Drops of Fresh Blood.&#13;
Again on the 6th it was reported&#13;
that several drops of fresh blood were&#13;
to be found on the face of the famous&#13;
'•bleeding*' picture at Menominee. One&#13;
of the priests drew some blood from&#13;
his own veins and compared it with&#13;
j the substance on the glass. The two&#13;
were identical. It is said that when&#13;
•&gt;ome of the dried pubstanee c.ime in&#13;
contact with the fresh blood from the&#13;
iriest's wrist, it resolved itself into a&#13;
.shape that strongly resembled the face&#13;
j of the Savior. An examination of the&#13;
i red spots on the picture has resulted&#13;
in the discovery that they are coagulated&#13;
blood. Dr. Venema, one of the&#13;
leading physicians of Menominee, has&#13;
declared so emphatically. ^The origin&#13;
of the spots is shrouded in mysterj*.&#13;
Norway's new bank will commence j&#13;
business about June 1.&#13;
Rogers City will soon be lighted by&#13;
electricity.&#13;
Forest fires are doing considerable&#13;
damage in Wexford county.&#13;
A fine new grain elevator is in course&#13;
of construction at Verraontville.&#13;
The state convention of W. C. T. U.&#13;
will be held at Marshall, June 5-8.&#13;
Gladstone was scorched to the extent&#13;
of $35,000 on the morning of the 8th.&#13;
Centreville is now a "dry" burg, the&#13;
council having.suppressed the saloons.&#13;
The plant of the Bellmer Fames&#13;
Tool Co., of Cincinnati, will locate at&#13;
Kalamazoo.&#13;
Cadillac is already preparing plans&#13;
for a monster celebration this year on&#13;
July 4 and 5.&#13;
Grand jury has been called at Grand&#13;
Rapids to investigate the water scandal&#13;
and other matters.&#13;
The total membership of the L. O.&#13;
T. M. in Michigan is now 59,000, an&#13;
increase of 1,100 during April.&#13;
The ice blockade at Marine City&#13;
broke on the morning of the 8th, and&#13;
St. Clair river is now free of ice.&#13;
The Manchester Enterprise reports&#13;
that sn»kes are plentiful this spring.&#13;
Just a little early for snake stories.&#13;
Wheat is said to have come through&#13;
the winter finely in Mecosta county&#13;
and to be in splendid condition at&#13;
present.&#13;
A dispatch^ from Algonac, dated the&#13;
L'Oth, says that notwithstanding the&#13;
fact that the ice is slushy the jam is&#13;
still unbroken.&#13;
Muskegon and Ludington are to be&#13;
connected by an electric line, the council&#13;
of the former place having already&#13;
granted a franchise.&#13;
A Jackson company is trying to&#13;
lease about 1,000 acres of land at New&#13;
Baltimore. It is believed there is a good&#13;
vein of coal thereabouts.&#13;
A petition is being circulated by the&#13;
farmers between Milan and Stony&#13;
Creek and many are signing it. asking&#13;
for a free rural mail delivery route.&#13;
It is expected that the work of widening&#13;
the guagc of the Almont branch&#13;
of the Pere Marquette railroad from&#13;
narrow to standard will bo done this&#13;
month.&#13;
Alex: R. Avery, collector of customs&#13;
at Port Huron, died very suddenly at&#13;
Lakelapds, Fla., on the 0th. Notice of&#13;
his death came as a great surprise to&#13;
his family and friends at home.&#13;
A rear-end freight collision occurred&#13;
at llaisin, two miles north of Monroe,&#13;
on the Pere Marquette at an early&#13;
hour on the raoruing of the 7th, and&#13;
as a result 15 cars were ditched.&#13;
What resembled a sea serpent. Imt&#13;
which is believed to be a sea lion&#13;
which escaped from Lincoln Park,&#13;
Chicago, three years ago, was *een in&#13;
the lake off lien ton Harlwr on the 0th.&#13;
Miss Inez Maltby, aged 20, of Flint,&#13;
but who had of latn been employed as&#13;
a domestic in Detroit/committed suicide&#13;
by swallowing a huge dose of carbolic&#13;
acid oh'the 6th. lier aim was to&#13;
become an actress, and having failed&#13;
to make any progress along this line&#13;
sincp locating a t Detroit, is thought to&#13;
have caused her to commit the rash&#13;
act. • •&#13;
DOrtMGS O P T H E + l \ r B E » 8 1 ON.&#13;
The following hills were passed by&#13;
the house on the 8th: Appropriating&#13;
¢50,000 for a psychopathic ward at the&#13;
state university; detaching territory&#13;
from Millen and Uawes townships and&#13;
attaching same to Mitchell township.&#13;
Alcona county; amending Detroit&#13;
charter; to provide for a central bureau&#13;
for the receiving and compiling&#13;
records of the description, measure'&#13;
ments and histories of the eonvleta~in&#13;
the penal institutions of this and other&#13;
states, to make such descriptions,&#13;
measurements and histories available&#13;
to the several circuit courts of this&#13;
state, and to appropriate $500 a year&#13;
for these purposes; relative to authorizing&#13;
use of voting machines at elections;&#13;
amending act relative regulating&#13;
fraternal beneficiary societies, orders&#13;
and associations; relative {to laying&#13;
of telephone wires; amending&#13;
horseshoers' act so as to extend the&#13;
time for filing liens upon horses and&#13;
other animals from 00 days to six&#13;
months; fixing minimum capitalization&#13;
of trust deposit and security companies&#13;
at 8100,000; empowering state board of&#13;
education to provide all courses of&#13;
studj^i'n state normal schools and to&#13;
grant such certificates and diplomas as&#13;
it may c ee fit; to legalize special assessments&#13;
on which taxes have been&#13;
levied in Highland Park village, Wayne&#13;
county, for the building of sewers&#13;
costing about $00,000; authorizing city&#13;
assessor of Grand Haven to assess the&#13;
tax on the toll bridge across Grand&#13;
river for the year 1901; providing for&#13;
transfer to city of Lansing of&#13;
He M an Estrte of $1,000,000&#13;
to His 3? Children.&#13;
2½ acres&#13;
state&#13;
purposes; memorializing congress to&#13;
submit to popular vote an amendment&#13;
to the fe ieral constitution for the election&#13;
of l \ S. senators by direct vote of&#13;
the people; amending act for regulation&#13;
of plate glass, accident, live stock,&#13;
steam boiler and fidelity insurance;&#13;
providing for the incorporation of companies&#13;
to earry on any lawful business;&#13;
to prevent wearing of G. A. R. and&#13;
other badges by \inauthorized persons;&#13;
amending act to provide for the sale of&#13;
swamp lands; amending act providing&#13;
for the incorporation of cities of the&#13;
fourth class; amending act relative to&#13;
title to real property by descent; regulating&#13;
use of chemical preservatives&#13;
in articles of food and drink; amending&#13;
act relative to incorporation of villages.&#13;
The senate passed the following bills&#13;
on the 8th: Appropriating $20,000 for&#13;
publishing the records of Michigan&#13;
soldiers; appropriation for state horticultural&#13;
society; to reimburse Ingham&#13;
county; to amend the tax laws; to&#13;
amend Detroit's charter; to amend Detroit's&#13;
charter; to organize Sheridan&#13;
township, Mason county, into a single&#13;
school district; to detach territory from&#13;
the townships of Millen and Uawes,&#13;
Alcona county, and attaeh the same to&#13;
Mitchell township; relative to salaries&#13;
of certain officers of Springwells township,&#13;
Wayne county; to authorize Grand&#13;
Haven, Ottawa count}', to collect the&#13;
tax on its toll bridge for the year 1901;&#13;
to protect owners of bottles, e t c&#13;
The following bills were passed by&#13;
the house on the 0th: Appropriation&#13;
of $2,500 for completing records of soldiers&#13;
and sailors in Spanish-American&#13;
war: provide for organization of Sheridan&#13;
township. Mason county, into single&#13;
school district; organization of&#13;
Hamlin township, Mason county, into&#13;
single school district; provide for the&#13;
building of stone and brick sidewalks&#13;
in Saginaw aud authorizing common&#13;
council to issue $25,000 bonds to pay&#13;
for the s;.me in anticipation of the&#13;
collection of the assessments; amending&#13;
general tax law relative to township&#13;
treasurers making returns;&#13;
amending law relative to societies for&#13;
loaning and investing money; amending&#13;
garnishee law so that proceedings&#13;
may be commenced against the state&#13;
of Michigan, or any county, the same&#13;
as against municipal corporations, also&#13;
that summons may be served on any&#13;
officer of a corporation; relative to the&#13;
commencement of suits in which partition&#13;
of law is sought; limiting stay&#13;
of proceedings upon any verdict to 20&#13;
days unless party applying shall execute&#13;
a bond for the amount; amending&#13;
election law relative to ballots;&#13;
authorizing superintendents of police&#13;
and governor1 to license persons to&#13;
carry concealed weapons.&#13;
The following bills were passed by&#13;
the senate on the 7th: To amend Manistee's&#13;
charter; to reduce the number&#13;
of justices in Grand Rapids; to reincorporate&#13;
Menominee; to permit catching&#13;
carp, suckers and redsides with nets&#13;
and spears in the inland waters of&#13;
Wayne county which have not been&#13;
planted by the state hsh commission;&#13;
to amend K .lamazoo charter; to regulate&#13;
electric cars in Bay county; appropriating&#13;
$2,000 per year to the state&#13;
board of health: appropriation for Marquette&#13;
prison; appropriation for Marquette&#13;
Normal.&#13;
The following bills were passed by&#13;
the house on the ?th: Compelling the&#13;
equipment of electric cars in Bay&#13;
county with hir brakes. Applies to&#13;
cars running frorr Bay City to Winona&#13;
Beach; submitting to vthe electors of&#13;
Manistee proposition *o raise $125,000&#13;
for a gas and electric lighting system;&#13;
allowing the catching of carp, suckers&#13;
and redsides with nets or spears in the&#13;
inland waters of Wayne county not&#13;
•pUntpri by the fish ccmtui&amp;Mon,&#13;
25,868 INDIANS ATTENDSCH00L&#13;
According to a Statement Given Out by&#13;
the Indian Bureaa-Thto 1« the Largest&#13;
Number at Any Tim* in the Last 10&#13;
Yean—Other Events of the Weak.&#13;
Kilted Her Father and Herself.&#13;
Gustave Baare, aged 50 years, bailiff&#13;
of the S t Louis; Mo,, school board a n d&#13;
an ex-representative in the legislature,&#13;
was shot and k i l b d at his home on t h e&#13;
night of the 7th by his daughter, Ida&#13;
N. Baare, aged 20, who theD turned&#13;
the revolver upon herself inflicting a&#13;
wound from which she soon died.&#13;
Both were shot through the h e a d T h e&#13;
action of the young woman was preinediated&#13;
as was shown by the letter&#13;
which she left. In it she said the frequent&#13;
iusults offered her mother by&#13;
her father became unbearable and that&#13;
she had resol/ed to kill him and then&#13;
herself. Mr. Baare was taking a nap&#13;
when he was killed.&#13;
Assaulted and Left for Dead.&#13;
Miss Ethel Bonnie, daughter of G.&#13;
W. Bonnie, an employe of the Kansas&#13;
penitentiary, while gathering mushrooms&#13;
near Lansing, was struck on the&#13;
back of the head by an unknown w h i t e&#13;
of Industrial School for Boys state man on the 7th, presumably a tramp.&#13;
land for-$40Q-fo^-street and higfrway-faad rendered npconsctotiS; a f t e r w h i c h -&#13;
she was assaulted and her body thrown&#13;
into an old well, for the purpose of&#13;
hiding the crime. The young woman&#13;
regained consciousness and after repeated&#13;
attempts, reached t h e surface&#13;
where she was found, sitting on the&#13;
edge of the well. She Stated that she&#13;
had caught a glimpse of her assailant&#13;
and would be abie to identify him.&#13;
Left 33 Children and ¢1,000.000.&#13;
The will of Geo. Q. Cannon, of Salt&#13;
Lake City, Utah, filed for probate on&#13;
the 9th, disposes of an estate approximating&#13;
$1,000,000. The estate is divided&#13;
into t w o parts, the first part consisting&#13;
of gilt-edged securities worth&#13;
$200,000. This is to remain in trust&#13;
until his youngest child, now 0 years&#13;
of age, attains his majority. All of&#13;
the 33 children of President Cannon&#13;
are given an acre of land from the Cannon&#13;
farm, and $3,000 in cash on attaining&#13;
majority or at marriage, the&#13;
balance of the $200,000 to be divided&#13;
among the children when the youngest&#13;
child becomes of age.&#13;
25,868 Indian PnpUs.&#13;
A statement by the Indian bureau&#13;
shows that there are more Indians now&#13;
in the schools of the government than&#13;
at any other time in the last 10 years,&#13;
the total being 35,868. The statementembraces&#13;
figures for the three months&#13;
ending March 31, 1901. It shows that&#13;
in the non-reservation boarding schools&#13;
the enrollment for the quarter was&#13;
7,470. The enrollment in reservation&#13;
boarding schools ; n the three months&#13;
was 10,411. The day schools during&#13;
the quarter had 4,307 pupils. The total&#13;
enrollment of the three classes of&#13;
schools during the quarter was 22,188.&#13;
Craze for Speculation Cannes Many Deaths.&#13;
In a report issued on the 0th the&#13;
Chicago health department attributes&#13;
an increase in the death rate to the&#13;
craze for speculations in stocks. The&#13;
excitement occasioned, either by&#13;
losses or quickly gained riches, the report&#13;
snys, has proven dangerous,&#13;
chiefly to persons over 60 years of age.&#13;
Of 500 deaths which occurred there&#13;
during the past week 124 were persons&#13;
00 years old or older. There is an Increase&#13;
of 26 per cent over the previous&#13;
week and of 24 per cent over the corresponding&#13;
week of 1900.&#13;
Panama Canal for Sale*&#13;
In order to remove the objection&#13;
raised by the isthmian canal commission,&#13;
the Panama Canal Co., with the&#13;
approval of the Colombian government,&#13;
has announced the terms on which it&#13;
will sell the Panama canal to the U. S.&#13;
The letter containing its proposition&#13;
was submitted to Rear Admira&#13;
Walker, chairman of the commission&#13;
by Dr. Martinez Silva, Colombian minister.&#13;
No price is set by the company&#13;
for its property and franchise&#13;
Charged With Cremating His Children. ,&#13;
On April 30 the house of Joa Parton;&#13;
at Hurdville, Ont., was destroyed by&#13;
fire and five children, the eldest aged&#13;
10, were burned On May 7 Parton was&#13;
arrested on a charge of murder, it being&#13;
alleged, that he deliberately cremated&#13;
the children. Parton, who is&#13;
70 years old, had, it is alleged, been in&#13;
the habit of cruelly beating the children,&#13;
but what evidence the crown&#13;
possesses on the murder charge has&#13;
not developed&#13;
Snlclded to Avoid Dtaaaler.&#13;
A man believed to be R. N. Pollock,&#13;
the missing bank president from Cleveland,&#13;
O., ended his life at Seattle,&#13;
Wash., on the 8th in the Hotel York&#13;
by sending a bullet through his brain.&#13;
A razor, a t w o ounce box of rough on&#13;
rats and a phial cbntaining 100 tablets&#13;
of aconite were found at h a n d All&#13;
papers belonging to the man had been&#13;
burned before committing the deed.&#13;
4&#13;
' : : . . • • . . v - n . • ' . • • ' t • , - , ' - ' * ! " • • ' . • , ,« • : • . , . . * • &lt; . . # , , . . ' • • •&#13;
'•S:,'''''-'::6^.'H::/,-'., '.&#13;
; r . • ' ' • • • &gt; • " *&#13;
•:?...*»/ : ^ •;'&#13;
r.;^;T:&#13;
,, •. • r * r '• , ?V' -1« ,»/:'&#13;
-4_&#13;
J .&#13;
^ &lt; « ' • ' " . {&#13;
ooo&#13;
*&#13;
. *&#13;
v ) BY M A R G A R E T B L O V N T .&#13;
J* Hall ^P&#13;
CHAPTER XIII.—(Continued.)&#13;
"Words cannot expreai the pain yon&#13;
%*ve given me tonight," 1» said; "$ut&#13;
let it pass. You are free, and I nave&#13;
no rigat to reproaeii you. Good-bye,&#13;
And God bless you, Rose!"&#13;
(He kissed her hand, but she snatched&#13;
It away and sprang Into the carriage.&#13;
She felt annoyed and out of temper.&#13;
tVhen tfhs reached home, she went up&#13;
into her own room and stood before&#13;
the glass. It was a very fair face that&#13;
she gazed at—he had often praised it,&#13;
•and she knew her.power well.&#13;
* "And lie thinks I am going to beg&#13;
and pray for forgiveness, does he?"&#13;
she said, tossing her head wilfully.&#13;
"We shall see, after all, what crime I&#13;
have committed, that I need to tremolo&#13;
and shrink from his eye., Tomorrow&#13;
I will not—tomorrow I will show&#13;
him that if he chooses to play the part&#13;
of a tyrant. I do not Intend to take&#13;
that ot a serf. He had better fetter mc&#13;
ntonce.**&#13;
•In that mood she went to bed.&#13;
But ah! we should be very careful&#13;
"how we part with those we love, even&#13;
though they only leave us for a few&#13;
hours, rjo "they • always- t'omu ba^k-?-&#13;
Of if they do come, do we always know&#13;
just how we shall meet them? It may&#13;
fce as utter strangers, for aught we&#13;
can say. I liave known those who&#13;
have loved each, other dearly as they&#13;
said good-bye, and yet within throe&#13;
months they stood face to face as coldly&#13;
as if they had never met.&#13;
* But the case of poor Rose was even&#13;
worse than thta, -for ftfe. Vere never&#13;
came again.&#13;
She had preserved a discreet silence&#13;
as to this episode in her history on&#13;
her return home. No one had ever&#13;
heard her mention Mr. Vere's namenot&#13;
one of her own family ever knew&#13;
that such a person was In existence.&#13;
Her woman's pride came to her aid.&#13;
She learned to live without him—to&#13;
fce happy without "him; yet he was not&#13;
forgotten.&#13;
And on this morning, when she sat&#13;
In her own room.thinking of the paat,&#13;
she had a letter in her hand from him.&#13;
It had 'been forwarded with others&#13;
from Mecklenburgh Square. The simple&#13;
words set her heart beating, so that&#13;
sue could scarcely see:&#13;
"Rose—I was too hasty, and harsh&#13;
with you long ago. Time has taught&#13;
i me_ihat there is nothing so precious&#13;
as your love7.—if 4—have^osTTtr^-am-p1'&#13;
coming home to try and gain it again&#13;
God grant I may not be too late.&#13;
"Ever yours,&#13;
"Stanley Vere."&#13;
Coming* home, and to win here? But&#13;
how, and when, and where?&#13;
CHAPTER XIV.&#13;
When and where, indeed? She could&#13;
"not hope for a meeting so romantic as&#13;
that of her two cousins had been; and&#13;
yet, in what other way could her lover&#13;
seek her presence?&#13;
For you must bear in mind that the&#13;
parent birtls had no idea that their&#13;
scarcely fledged nestling had tried her&#13;
wings in so bold a flight Rose in&#13;
love! Rose, who had scarcely given&#13;
up playing with her doll! The thing&#13;
was simply absurd!&#13;
So the young lady sat alone in her&#13;
room, and stared at the letter, and&#13;
wondered what on earth she should&#13;
do, and wished she had a confidante&#13;
who would give her some advice as to&#13;
the best way of extricating herself&#13;
from the dilemma. It would not do&#13;
to speak to her mother, and Catharine&#13;
would only laugh at her. At last she&#13;
thought of Marjorie, who had a romance&#13;
of her own, and thereby would&#13;
know how to sympathize with another.&#13;
She went.&#13;
^&#13;
She found the lady alone in the turet-&#13;
chamber. Charles was smoking a&#13;
cigar, in fear and trembling, in one of&#13;
the empty attics, and at the same time&#13;
setting a breath pf fresh air. So Rose&#13;
had her cousin all to herself, and told&#13;
ner tale without much loss of time.&#13;
Marjorie listened silently.&#13;
"Well,'* *b* said, when Rose had&#13;
4alshed. "the old fairy tale is true.&#13;
The Princess Perfect may be shut up&#13;
in the highest and most impregnable&#13;
of towers, and guarded by the fiercest&#13;
&lt;at drafonvyet in one way and another&#13;
. Pkiaee Imperfect will continue to get&#13;
.•*} ftfct starrs, and fall a£ her feet all&#13;
the same, ft is ccurlous, and, at the&#13;
same time, very edifying."&#13;
"B*t I am not Princess Perfect,"&#13;
said Rose.&#13;
•True/'&#13;
"Nor was I shut up in a tower."&#13;
4 "If you had been it would not have&#13;
mattered. But never mind that—do&#13;
you want to see the Prince?**&#13;
"Ah, yes/&#13;
_ "That is frank and to the purpose.&#13;
Why d\d you let him go?'&#13;
"He thought I flirted, my dear," said&#13;
Rose, firmly.&#13;
"Oh, indeed," replied Marjorie, with&#13;
a little cough.. "Men do take queer&#13;
fancies into their heads now and then."&#13;
"Very."&#13;
"However, I will do all I can to help&#13;
you—though, of course, you must&#13;
promise to be very good, and never,&#13;
under any consideration, to flirt&#13;
again."&#13;
"I'll promise."&#13;
"Then the -best way is for you to&#13;
come to us."&#13;
"Where?"&#13;
"I don't know—I'll make Charle3&#13;
take a house in town. Now that we&#13;
have scared your poor papa to death, I&#13;
suppose that we are not wanted any&#13;
longer here."&#13;
"Poor papa!"&#13;
"Yes! but it will do him good in the&#13;
end. Is he up yet?"&#13;
"No ;he has had some gruel in bed."&#13;
"May it make him penitent and more&#13;
inclined to obey the orders of his superior&#13;
officer, your good mamma.&#13;
Where would you llkf us to pitch our&#13;
tent in town, Ross?"&#13;
"Oh, somewhere near Mecklenburgh&#13;
Square."&#13;
"Injt, if you like, Charley is rich,&#13;
and can live where he pleases, thank&#13;
goodness. Then that is settled?"&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
"And you will come to us?"&#13;
"With pleasure."&#13;
"When?"&#13;
"As soon a3 we can get him back zo&#13;
town."&#13;
"And the preux chevalier? By the&#13;
way, what is his name?"&#13;
"Vere."&#13;
"Of what county.&#13;
Rose colored.&#13;
"Really I don't know."&#13;
"But where do his family reside?"&#13;
"I cannot tell you."&#13;
Marjorie elevated her eyebrows.&#13;
"Do you know nothing of him,&#13;
thon?"&#13;
"Very little. But General Grantham,&#13;
with whom I was staying at the time,&#13;
introduced him as the son of one of&#13;
his oldest friends. And he moved in&#13;
the best society."&#13;
"Well, time will show. At all events,&#13;
we can scon find out all about him If&#13;
we set to work the right way."&#13;
"Yes," said Rose; and leaning her&#13;
chin upon her hand, she fixed her eyes&#13;
upon the glaring coals, and fell to musing&#13;
about the lover of whom she knew&#13;
so little.&#13;
The door opened, and Mrs. Cowley&#13;
entered, looking worried and perplexed.&#13;
"I don't know what to do!" she exclaimed.&#13;
"What is the matter, aunt?" asked&#13;
Marjorie.&#13;
"I wish we hadn't played that fool's&#13;
trick last night.&#13;
"Why?" Is papa worse?" asked&#13;
Rose, looking up.&#13;
"No; I can't say that he is really ill;&#13;
but he seems so nervous and frightened.&#13;
If the door creaks, he jump3;&#13;
and I know what that feeling is so&#13;
well. I hr.d it all the time when we&#13;
first came to this horrible house."&#13;
v "0h, he will get over that!''&#13;
"Yes; but, after ail, I begin to think&#13;
it Vas not right to frighten him so.&#13;
A gr€at, strong man does not faint for&#13;
nothing. I can't think how I came to&#13;
let you do it"&#13;
"But as it Is done, let us try to repair&#13;
the mischief, if any there be. Get&#13;
him up, and send him down to the village,&#13;
shopping. He will come homo&#13;
&amp;B blithe as a lark."&#13;
"That is theVorst of it!"&#13;
"What?" \&#13;
"I can't get him\up."&#13;
"What do you mean?"&#13;
4H,e won't move. He says the whole&#13;
house is full of ghosts, and that he&#13;
means to stay where he can't see any&#13;
more; and oddly enough, I heard him&#13;
just now muttering to himself that he&#13;
wished Charles was here."&#13;
"My husband?"&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
"Then what can be easier than to&#13;
tell him that his wish is granted^*&#13;
"And that Charles is here?"&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
"My dear child, that would do ver;&#13;
well with some men, but not with Mr.&#13;
Cowley. He is as sharp as a needle;&#13;
and if he found out that Charles had&#13;
been in the house all night, he would&#13;
guess at once where the ghost of the&#13;
cabinet come from. And if he once&#13;
found that out, I'm sure I should have&#13;
a separate maintenance offered Jo—&#13;
ray, forced upon me tomorrow."&#13;
"Oh, no; not so bad as that," was&#13;
,t%e cheerful rfply. "I will manage it&#13;
so that he need never know we have&#13;
been here before. Rose, you have already&#13;
lent me half your wardrobe: give&#13;
me the other half—your out-door portion.&#13;
He will not recognise your hat&#13;
and cloak, I suppose?"&#13;
"No."&#13;
T T B y s ^ t ' v .."••'-'• i *&#13;
» ! « * ' • .&#13;
'•Mr&#13;
"The* bring th«a&gt; *** »«nd Charts*&#13;
tome.'''&#13;
Half an hour later, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Charles Cowley left the ,*«»•• on toot,&#13;
4md Walked away toward »T^airisy. And&#13;
as Mr. Cowley, senior, was partaking&#13;
of tea and toast at six p. »»'• ** the&#13;
seclusion of his own chamber &amp; fly&#13;
drove up to the door and a knock *&amp;*&#13;
given that nearly shook toe ha use&#13;
down.&#13;
Mr. Cowley dropped the cup and&#13;
saucer, and spilt the tea all over the f&#13;
bed.&#13;
"Good gracious! what can it be?**&#13;
"I will go and see, my dear. Lie&#13;
down and compose yourself."&#13;
Mrs. Cowley went, and returned with&#13;
a well-got-up face of astonishment&#13;
"Well, what Is it?" cried Mr. Cowley.&#13;
"Such a wonderful thing."&#13;
"Out with it!"&#13;
"The most extraordinary "&#13;
"But what?"&#13;
"In fact, I think the strangest circumstance&#13;
I ever heard of in my life."&#13;
"Confound it, ma'am!" bawled out&#13;
her husband. "Can't you say what It&#13;
is, and not keep me lying here in a&#13;
bath of lukewarm tea?"&#13;
"Well, Mr, Cowley, you were saying&#13;
you wished your nephew Charles&#13;
was here."&#13;
"So I do. I'd dig the whole place&#13;
up If I had him to back me, and never&#13;
think of feeling frightened."&#13;
"Well, Charles is here."&#13;
"Nonsense!" •&#13;
"I assure you he is. He has just&#13;
returned from Australia, and he came&#13;
to the door in.the_,gajUfiy JSy. .HeJiaa,,&#13;
•been to bur town house, and Mrs. Gray&#13;
directed him here. And his wife is&#13;
with him."&#13;
"Married?"&#13;
"Yes—to an English girl, though."&#13;
"If he had married a New Zealander,&#13;
tatooed from head to-fnot, I should&#13;
not care. Zounds! give'me my clothes,&#13;
Mrs. C! This ^rews is worth ten&#13;
pounds, at the least We'll rout the&#13;
ghosts out now, or my' name is not&#13;
Cowley."&#13;
"Yes, dear," replied his better half,&#13;
meekly, as she helped him to dress.&#13;
They went down to the drawingroom&#13;
together. No more ghosts now&#13;
—no suggestion of ghosts even. A&#13;
bright fire blazed upon the hearthlour&#13;
candles lit the table, which was&#13;
.laid for tea. Rose and Catharine, in&#13;
pretty evening dresses, ran forward to&#13;
meet their father as innocently as If&#13;
they had never dreamed of scaring&#13;
him half out of his senses. But he&#13;
pushed by them unceremoniously, and&#13;
rushed up to the hearth, where Charle3&#13;
Cowley was standing, like a true Briton,&#13;
with his back to the fire.&#13;
"My dear fellow!" said the banker,&#13;
shaking him by both hands. "You are&#13;
as welcome as the flowers in May!"&#13;
"Why, so I hear," replied the_&#13;
nephew"demurely. "You have been&#13;
getting yourself into a bit of a scrape,&#13;
I imagine, and want me to help you&#13;
out. Oh, you naughty old boy! But&#13;
let me introduce you to my wife."&#13;
iajifiw •;* : \ft.&#13;
It Seems as Though my&#13;
Ihwk Would Break." m&#13;
wi&#13;
CHAPTER XV.&#13;
Mr. Cowley shook hands' with Marjorie—&#13;
decided, after his flrat glance at&#13;
her, that she was a nice sort of a girl,&#13;
and then dismissed her from his mind&#13;
entirely. He was burning for an uninterrupted&#13;
ten minutes' conversation&#13;
with his nephew, alone, that he might&#13;
relate the* wonderful things that had&#13;
befallen him. Few men could boast&#13;
of having seen three real ghosts, one&#13;
alter another! And Marjorie, like the&#13;
other women, was sadly in the way&#13;
ju3t then.&#13;
However, there was no help for it.&#13;
Tea was waiting, and Mr. Cowley,&#13;
junior, fell to work upon the muffing&#13;
and ham, and tongue, like a man who&#13;
had fasted all the way from Australia.&#13;
When the cloth was taken away, his&#13;
uncle breathed freely again. The ladies&#13;
sat gossipping together before the&#13;
fire. The worthy banker rose, nudged&#13;
Charles in the side, and whispered,&#13;
"Come with me a moment" Charles&#13;
followed him from the room, merely&#13;
pausing at the door to give a nod and&#13;
a wink, expressive of great enjoyment&#13;
to the group he left behind.&#13;
Mr. Cowley seized his nephew by&#13;
the arm when they stood in the hall,&#13;
and dragged him up the stairs. A&#13;
lamp was burning in the turret-chamber—&#13;
a fire blazing on the hearth. Seeing&#13;
this, as he opened the door, Mr.&#13;
Cowley started back with a look of&#13;
extreme surprise.&#13;
"Why; those born fools cannot think&#13;
of putting you here ,to &lt; sleep!" he&#13;
ejaculated.&#13;
"Why no\?" asked Charles, looking&#13;
extremely Innocent.&#13;
'hy not? The jades! I'll have&#13;
no tricks played off on people under&#13;
my roof. I know it is the fashion to&#13;
put the guests in the haunted room,&#13;
to see if there really is a ghost there;&#13;
but, by George! we want no such tests&#13;
here! They shall give you another&#13;
apartment—it is like their impudence&#13;
to get this one ready.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
. Railroad bridge builders are adopting&#13;
tho fir Umber of the North Pacific&#13;
coast for bridge building because of&#13;
its remarkable strength.&#13;
Is it not true ? Women differ, feel the very life crashed&#13;
out of them, grow old before their time. Each morning&#13;
wake up determined to do so much before the day ends,&#13;
and yet—&#13;
Before the morning is very old the dreadful BACKACHE&#13;
attacks them, the brave spirit sinks back in affright; no&#13;
matter how hard they struggle, the "clutch" is upon them&#13;
and they fall upon the couch crying:&#13;
" Why should I suffer so ? What can I do?"&#13;
The answer is ready, your cry has been heard, and a&#13;
woman is able to restore you to health and happiness.&#13;
Backache is only a symptom of more fatal troubleheed&#13;
its warning in time.&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will&#13;
stop your torture and restore your courage. Your pains&#13;
come from unnatural menstruation or some derangement&#13;
of the womb. Let those who are suffering read Mrs. Morton's&#13;
letter and be guided by her experience.&#13;
AI* OPEN LETTER TO WOMEX&#13;
" DEAS MRS. PDTKHAM :—I have been so delighted&#13;
withL-ydiaE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
I thought I would write and thank you. My system&#13;
was entirely run down. I suffered with terrible backache&#13;
in the small «£ my back and could hardly stand&#13;
upright; was more tired in the morning than en retiring&#13;
at night. I had no appetite. Since taking your Compound&#13;
I have gained fifteen pounds, and am gaining&#13;
_eyery-week. My appetite,has improveKL-havo no hack •-,&#13;
ache, and I look better than I ever looked before.&#13;
" I shall recommend it to all my friends, as it certainly&#13;
is a wonderful medicine."—Mus. £. F. MOBTOX,&#13;
830 York St., Cincinnati, 0.&#13;
i i\\\yUdll\,&#13;
E.F MORTON II&#13;
When a medicine has been successful in restoring to health&#13;
more than a million women, you cannot well say, without&#13;
trying it, " I do not believe it will help me." If you are ill,&#13;
don't hesitate to get a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound at once, and write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for&#13;
special advice—it is free.&#13;
s 5000 REWARD Owing to the fact that some skeptical&#13;
people have from time to time qoesttened&#13;
_._ ___^ the genuineness of the testimonial letters - "" we are constantly pubtishio;, we have&#13;
deposited with the National City Bank, of Lynn, Mass., $5,000,&#13;
which will be paid to aay per» n wh&gt;- cz£ show that the above&#13;
testimonial is not genuiae, or was puiished before obtaining to*&#13;
writer's special permission.—LYDIA L. FU&lt;KHAM MEOXCWS CO.&#13;
:y&#13;
T h e St* Loui&lt; S h o w .&#13;
Everything is show, show, show.. In&#13;
1903 St. Louis will te.ebrate the Louisiana&#13;
purchase, an affair of some note&#13;
in the days of Thomas Jefferson, involving&#13;
disposition of 1.171.931 square&#13;
miles of virgin territory. The tract&#13;
reached from the Mississippi river to&#13;
the Rocky Mountains, from the Gulf&#13;
of Mexico to. British America, and&#13;
was about twenty-four tin*es as large&#13;
as the 6tate of New York. The price&#13;
paid was ^15,000,000, the cost of two&#13;
or three big office buildings in this&#13;
city at the present day. Now, the&#13;
Louisiana Purchase Exposition already&#13;
has in its treasury more money to&#13;
begin the show with in 1903 than our&#13;
government ,.paid in 1803 for nearly&#13;
the'entire west, a princely domain of&#13;
750,035.840 acres. The municipality of&#13;
St Louis has given $5,000,006, the federal&#13;
government $5,600,000 and the&#13;
people of Missouri by voluntary subscription,&#13;
$5,060,000; total. $15,000,000.&#13;
Add to this sum the amount already&#13;
received from concessonalres, or&#13;
agreed* upon, and you will have some&#13;
$17,000,000 or $18,000,000.—New York&#13;
Press.&#13;
«r«&#13;
Soattf Lakot* Farm*&#13;
Is the title of an illustrated booklet&#13;
just issued by the Chicago, Milwaukee&#13;
€-. St. Paul Railway, descriptive of the&#13;
&lt;,ountry between Aberdeen and th&#13;
Missouri River, a section hereto&#13;
unprovided with railway facilities^but&#13;
which is now reached by a new line of&#13;
the Chicago. Milwaukee &amp; St. Paul&#13;
Railway. Everyone contemplating a&#13;
change of location will be Interested^&#13;
In the Information contained in it, and&#13;
a copy may be had by sending a twocent&#13;
stamp to F. A. Miller, General&#13;
Passenger Agent, Chicago, 111.&#13;
Q O Y Q U&#13;
'COUCH&#13;
DONT DELAY&#13;
TAK£ *• _&#13;
BALSAM • • ' *&#13;
^ *&#13;
THE e--vcy ^&#13;
\^&#13;
tt Carta Totals, Cough*. Scr* Throat. Croup, to*&#13;
floenza, Whooehrg Couo/t. Pronchlthtwl A trmw.&#13;
* c«rtaJ i cure tor ; OM.i*j&gt;pttwi in flrst rta&lt;p*&lt;&#13;
and a n r e rrilaf in a t o n e d s'agat. Ust at&#13;
one*. Yoa «iM * M tfca axcelleftt elect after&#13;
taking th« I n t do**. Sold b| dealer* tv rf*&#13;
wtof* Urge tottlos Sfi canto and 60 canto;&#13;
IN 3 OR 4 YEARS&#13;
MIHDEPEH0EHCE ASSURED If you take tip your&#13;
boase in Western Can*&#13;
ado.Ute land of plenty.&#13;
Illustrated pamphlet*,&#13;
giving experiences of&#13;
fanners tuio have be*&#13;
come wealthy In BTOWlng&#13;
wheat, reports of&#13;
_ delegates, etc. and foil&#13;
Information aa 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. Grieve. Saginaw, Mich., or If.&#13;
V. Mclnnes, No. 8 Merrill Block, Detroit, Mica&#13;
Yfcea AiswerioD Advertisements Kiadl)&#13;
Mention This taper.&#13;
H I S O *S C'JRE. F o K .&#13;
!i&gt;;'J&#13;
MP"i ..„,,, A^^mmmnmsfw. ,u --.....- ' ' " ^ p ^ m w * ^ ^ \\.m „ ,,,, , s i mi n&#13;
?•.'• 1.&#13;
n&gt; V &lt;,. J, : . / . , •••; • •; . •'&#13;
IN&#13;
£• fc"&#13;
• *&#13;
r&#13;
'• i&#13;
I - i&#13;
ft&#13;
5*&#13;
1 a&#13;
•i&#13;
SOUTH MARION.&#13;
Bernard Glenn is reported on&#13;
the sick list&#13;
Mrs. ftann returned to her home&#13;
in Jackson last Thursday.&#13;
Mr. Green of Pinckney ;.s putting&#13;
down a well for C. Love,&#13;
The party at Will Blair's last&#13;
Friday night was well attended.&#13;
Miss AnnaJ£lein spent Saturday&#13;
and Sunday with Mae Brogan.&#13;
Mr. Peters children of Pinckney&#13;
are spending a few days at&#13;
K Pacey's.&#13;
— ^fegdanjes^-YcuuiglQvej Padley,&#13;
"Williston, Abbott and Bland, Sr.,&#13;
spent last Wednesday with Mrs.&#13;
Ann Gilks.&#13;
Mr. Brogan received a letter&#13;
from Tim Hayes that his horse&#13;
had strayed or been stolen from a&#13;
pasture near Jackson.&#13;
- L l ._ WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
Wendell Bates visited his parents&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Andrew Bates and wife spent&#13;
Sunday with his parents.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Gardner visited&#13;
the county seat Tuesday.&#13;
/""££ V. VanWinkle was in Chelsea&#13;
last Saturday on business.&#13;
Thos. Cooper of Stockbridge,&#13;
visited his parents over Sunday.&#13;
Miss Fannie Murphy was able&#13;
to be brought home Wednesday.&#13;
S. E. Barton was in Pinckney&#13;
last week caring for his brother&#13;
who is quite sick-&#13;
Grandma Sweeney gave a reception&#13;
at the home of her daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Gardner, on Wednesday,&#13;
to a number of friends&#13;
and neighbors who assisted in&#13;
celebrating her 82nd birthday.&#13;
All enjoyed the bountiful dinner&#13;
and a pleasant day was spent.&#13;
Mrs. J as. Pearson was quite ill&#13;
last week.&#13;
Albert Mills spent Sunday with&#13;
frieuds at Lakeland.&#13;
Alex Pearson was home from&#13;
the U. of M. last week.&#13;
Curt Olsaver and wife of Hamburg&#13;
were guests of W. H. Placeway&#13;
last Sunday.&#13;
Mre. G. W. Brown left Wednesday&#13;
for a two weeks visit with her&#13;
daughter, Mrs. D. M. Hodgeman,&#13;
of Gak Grove.&#13;
WEST MABION.&#13;
The new house of Henry Plummer&#13;
is progressing finely.&#13;
M rs. A. S. Wijhelm spent the&#13;
fpasfc—week—with her sister Mrs.&#13;
Dailey.&#13;
Miss Una Fnrrington is assisting&#13;
Mrs. Henry Smith in house&#13;
cleaning this week.&#13;
. Mrs. Geo. Miller and Mrs. W.&#13;
B. Miller attended the Hive at&#13;
Plainfield Saturday.&#13;
Some of the friends in this vicinity&#13;
"bFUrs." C. L. Bowman called&#13;
ou her one day this week rinding&#13;
her as well as was expected&#13;
with MiBS Nora Going assistant&#13;
in general house work.&#13;
In reading a short sketch in&#13;
your issue in regard to the use of&#13;
tobacco I can say there are some&#13;
young men in this neighborhood&#13;
that do not use tobacco in any&#13;
way, or profanity which is still&#13;
better.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Sheep shearing is nearly done&#13;
in this vicinity.&#13;
L. Whited is shingling Miss&#13;
Lucy Hincheys house.&#13;
Eugene Smith and wife are the&#13;
possessors of a new piano.&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Hot? and son Bert,&#13;
visited relatives in Handy Sunday.&#13;
Jas. Burden of Gregory was in&#13;
this place the first of the week&#13;
buying wool.&#13;
Jtfrs. David Walters of Howell&#13;
visited her farm here one day last&#13;
wtrfk^'&#13;
Mrs. L. Whiced and children&#13;
visited friends near Pinckney over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Fred Merrill, wife and son of&#13;
Iosco, attended the farmers club&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Wm. Ledgwidge* sold his team&#13;
last week and delivered them at&#13;
Leslie Monday..&#13;
Mrs. Fred Mackinder visited&#13;
her parents in Stockbridge the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Several from this place attended&#13;
the party at Will Blair's Friday&#13;
night and all report a fine&#13;
time.&#13;
Master Clifford Jubb and sister&#13;
Ethel, accompanied their teacher,&#13;
Lucius Wilson, home and spent&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. C. D. Bennett of Howell&#13;
•pent part of last week with Her&#13;
parents here Clarence driving&#13;
down Sunday.&#13;
Chas. Holmes, wife and son&#13;
Marble, drove through from Lan-&#13;
•iqg., Saturday visiting relatives&#13;
b«S-returning Monday.&#13;
Tom Gillman and family and&#13;
jttis. WyK* of n«ar Webberville&#13;
» t t « w ^ the isomers club at their&#13;
conaift1* Mr*. Eugene Smith.&#13;
David Bird of Ann Arbor and&#13;
Mabel Ives of Stockbridge visited&#13;
friends at this place Sunday and&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Geo. Hoy land and wifo of Howell&#13;
was the guest of his daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Pyper the latter part of&#13;
last week and the Qrst of this.&#13;
UNADILLA FABMER'S CLUB&#13;
Wjll meet at the home of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. David Westfall near&#13;
Plainfield Saturday afternoon&#13;
M ay 18. The following program:&#13;
Singing Club&#13;
Prayer&#13;
Inst. Music Miss Lottie Walker^&#13;
Recitation "Poverty and Wealth"&#13;
Bessie Howlett&#13;
Music Messrs. £. Glenn, J. Jackson&#13;
Select Reading Jennie Harris&#13;
—Sole—__ Mabel Hartsuff&#13;
Paper ' 'Systematic Housekeeping1^&#13;
Mrs. 0. B. Arnold&#13;
Discussion, Mrs. 0. Wood worth&#13;
Inst. Music Miss Georgia Westfall&#13;
Recitation "Hurrah for the Flag,"&#13;
Master Henry Bowman&#13;
Singing Hail Columbia&#13;
STILL MORE LOCAL.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
Mrs. Rachel Cole is quite sick.&#13;
Mrs. Henry Slover is nob much&#13;
better.&#13;
There is a good opening for a&#13;
good physician in this place.&#13;
John Davis will soon have his&#13;
store furnished and will be ready |&#13;
for a stock of new goods. John&#13;
is a hustler.&#13;
Dr. Parker moves to day to&#13;
€rraird ^ftarrk,-He has made&#13;
many warm friends here and we&#13;
are sorry to have him go.&#13;
Wm. Wolverton was in town&#13;
Friday and Saturday taking out&#13;
the water wheel from the old Cartier&#13;
mill and wi1! use it in his&#13;
mill at Lyndon.&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Wm. Pyper was in Stockbridge&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
Miss Nora Durkee of Anderson&#13;
was in town Friday last.&#13;
John Collins of Lyndon visited&#13;
friends at this place Sunday.&#13;
Fred Stowe and wife were in&#13;
Stockbridge one day last week.&#13;
The Gleaners of this place served&#13;
ice cream Tuesday evening.&#13;
Daniel Bird of Stockbridge vis*&#13;
ited at Ryal Barnum's last week.&#13;
Lyman Hadley and wife were in&#13;
Ann Arbor the first of the last&#13;
week.&#13;
The WCTU will meet with Mrs.&#13;
0. L. Smith of Gregory on Thurs-&#13;
May 16.&#13;
Frank and Kate Barnum visited&#13;
in Ann Arbor last Saturday and&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
J. D. Coulton of Chelsea visited&#13;
at A. C. Watson's lasj Friday and&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Smith and Mrs. Lyman&#13;
Hadley were in Chelsea last&#13;
week Wednesday.&#13;
Don't for jet the Unadilla Farmers&#13;
clnb 'at David Westfall's&#13;
next Saturday May 18.&#13;
Mrs. Frank Wot den of Gregory&#13;
was the guest of her sister Mrs&#13;
Fred Stowe last gunday.&#13;
Geo. Hoyland and wife, Wm.&#13;
Pyper, wife/ and daughter Ruth&#13;
and Mrs. A. C. Watson and son&#13;
Douglas WAR the guest of L. W.&#13;
Allen and wife of North Lake last&#13;
Friday*&#13;
Mrs M. A. Rose of Bay City is visiting&#13;
friends here.&#13;
Clayton Placeway who was so seriously&#13;
injvred several days ago is able&#13;
to ride out.&#13;
M. A. Davis ot near Pettysvitle has&#13;
a freak in the way of a lamb with&#13;
six legs.&#13;
Dr. H, F. Sigler is in Battle Creek&#13;
attending the State medical society.&#13;
He will read a paper before the medical&#13;
section toddy.&#13;
Mrs. Alvenia J. Daley wbor bfcs&#13;
lived in Eoseo the past 18 years moved&#13;
to Howell last Friday. We wish her&#13;
good succtss in her new home.&#13;
A letter received by Dr. H. F. Sigler&#13;
from Chas. Bious states that he is&#13;
still at Decatanr 111., and has recover&#13;
ed from bis illness so as to be around,&#13;
although unable to work.&#13;
A carload of of baled cotton caught&#13;
tire between Defter and Chelsea Sunday&#13;
afternoon. Train men found it&#13;
impossible to extinguish the fire so the&#13;
car was side-trcked at Kinnear and allowed&#13;
to burn. The car contained 35.&#13;
000 pounds of cotton.—Dexter Leader.&#13;
Want Column.&#13;
HIS DISTINGUISHED VISITOR.&#13;
I — — —&#13;
A. Pompouf Reception That AmaiU&#13;
President tircvy,&#13;
M. Severiaro &lt;le Heredia, the miniettr&#13;
of public works In the Rouvter cabinet&#13;
during the presidency of M. Grevy,&#13;
belonged to the fumoua naturalized Cuban&#13;
family, of which another member,&#13;
the Comte de Heredia, is one of the immortal&#13;
40 of the French academy. Most&#13;
of the family nave dark spina, suspiciously&#13;
mulatto, and other negro characteristics.&#13;
This baa, however, in nowise&#13;
Interfered with their standing in&#13;
Paris, where several of the family have&#13;
long been prominent. The former minuter&#13;
had also been president of the&#13;
municipal council of Farls and a deputy&#13;
from a Paris arrondlssemeut.&#13;
His dark skin led to a curious mistake&#13;
at the Elysee the day after he had&#13;
been appointed a member of the ltouvler&#13;
cabinet. According to Immemorial&#13;
custom,the new ministers called singly&#13;
on President Grevy to nay their respects.&#13;
Ou the same day, as it happened,&#13;
an official visit was expected&#13;
from the president of the republic of&#13;
Haiti, who was to present his letters to&#13;
the president. When M. de Heredia&#13;
arrived in the court of the palace, the&#13;
minor officials stationed there, who&#13;
were not familiar with the new minister's&#13;
features, judged from his complexion&#13;
that he was the Haitian dignitary.&#13;
The conrtyard became very ani-&#13;
-mated with guards hurrying to and fro&#13;
to their places, while one of the officers&#13;
of the president's military household&#13;
went to inform M. Grevy of the distinguished&#13;
visitor's arrival.&#13;
M. de Heredia received all this with&#13;
dignified composure, for, never having&#13;
been a minister before this, he thought&#13;
this ceremonial was probably the usual&#13;
one. Finally, with the beating of&#13;
drums, he was ushered into the reception&#13;
room, where the chief executive&#13;
stood ready to receive him. "What,"&#13;
cried he, "It's only you. Heredia!"&#13;
"Why, yes, M. le President," replied&#13;
the puzzled minister. Grevy began to&#13;
laugh. "Well," he cried, "you have&#13;
been minister only 2-1 hours and have&#13;
succeeded in turning my house upside&#13;
down. What will you do later on?"—&#13;
Chicago Herald.&#13;
M««d««*a hr ftollt«A«.&#13;
The Canadian northwest Is a probationary&#13;
haven for wealthy young Bngglishinen&#13;
of nomadic Instincts. Numbers&#13;
of them annually purchase bunting&#13;
and camping outfits from the Hudson&#13;
Bay company and strike into the&#13;
barren lands to prospect for minerals&#13;
or take up land on the prairies. Bat&#13;
most often they return to the civilisation&#13;
of the towns with nothing but&#13;
hard words for the wilderness.&#13;
The construction of the Temiacaming&#13;
railroad induced the younger son of&#13;
one wealthy English family to take a&#13;
trip Into that outlandish district/ He&#13;
returned to Ottawa a disappointed&#13;
man. "It's the most desolate country&#13;
you can imagine/' be said to his&#13;
friends. "1 have been ont prospecting&#13;
sometimes for a whole day without&#13;
seeing a sign of animal life. Once the&#13;
only living thing I came across was a&#13;
bird, and it was so disgusted that it&#13;
was trying to knock its brains out&#13;
against a tree."&#13;
He bad seen a woodpecker.—New&#13;
York Commercial Advertiser.&#13;
What Are We Comlns ToT&#13;
The fond mother had just killed 10 of&#13;
her 12 children.&#13;
She was a happy wife, and .her busband&#13;
came home early every night.&#13;
"Now," she said, with a contested&#13;
sigh, "John can close with the agent&#13;
for that bouse."&#13;
This was 20 years from bow. when&#13;
no landlord would accept a tenant with&#13;
more than two children.—New York&#13;
Sim.&#13;
Old cfboseberry For Sew Skips.&#13;
It may be ungenerous to dispel a pop*&#13;
ular delusion, but there Is no one&#13;
among the thousands who witness a&#13;
ship launch who does not believe that&#13;
the beautifully garlanded bottle of&#13;
wine broken against the stem of a ship&#13;
is anything but the choicest brand of&#13;
champagne drawn from the admiral's&#13;
cellar. Whenever a ship is launched in&#13;
a dockyard, the admiralty generously&#13;
allow £40 as the cost of the jubilation,&#13;
and included In this sum of £40 is the&#13;
item of 3 shillings for wine. Hence it&#13;
follows that not only Is the wine not&#13;
drawn from tbe admiral's cellar, but It&#13;
certainly Is not champagne of foreign&#13;
vintage.—English Navy and Military&#13;
Record.&#13;
Uadentood «t Laat.&#13;
"Hello, Central. Give me one triple&#13;
nought South."&#13;
"Whatr&#13;
"Don't you catch It? One zero, zero,&#13;
lero South."&#13;
"Wb-a-t?"&#13;
"South one double nought, nought."&#13;
"Can't yon speak plainer?"&#13;
"One thousand South —ten hundred&#13;
South. Get it now?"&#13;
"Oh, you mean South one ought, double&#13;
ought. All rlght."-Chlcago Tribune.&#13;
Snow falls on 15 days in the year at&#13;
Dublin. 71 at Moscow and 46 in Iceland.&#13;
Life and coat buttons often hang by&#13;
slender threads.&#13;
Strayed.&#13;
a full blood Po'and China pig weicn&#13;
ing about 200 pounds; a white spot on&#13;
no?e also ring in nose.&#13;
R. CLINTON.&#13;
STRAYED— Pair of colts: one a&lt;&#13;
brown mare three years old; one year-1&#13;
lini? horse colt, clipped on rump, and!&#13;
wearing halters when last seen.&#13;
PETER GORMAN&#13;
Chelsea, Mich.&#13;
For Male.&#13;
Twenty yards vt flood rag carpet&#13;
for $3.50. Also 25 lbs of carpet ra«s&#13;
all sewed and colored. Inquire at&#13;
this office.&#13;
FOR SALE—Brown Leghorn eggs&#13;
from one of tbe best laying Hock of&#13;
hens in Lpwer Mich. 25c per setting&#13;
at residence or 50c by express.&#13;
F. W. MACKINDEK,&#13;
t-26 Anderson, Micb.&#13;
CLOTHING!&#13;
W e have a little song to sing on Clothing,&#13;
W e want to interest you and show you that&#13;
we have the right arid proper lines.&#13;
Nobby styles of the leading&#13;
cloths, having all the features of&#13;
the Tailor-made.&#13;
Thats what you w a n t !&#13;
Along with the clothing you&#13;
might see something in gents&#13;
furnishings.&#13;
Fo&lt; Service.&#13;
Short Horn Bull, Duke of Plaintield.&#13;
$1.00 for season with privelege&#13;
ot returning. P . H . K E L L Y . 19tf&#13;
ft-or Sale,&#13;
A Half-blood Jersey Cow, new&#13;
milch, at P. H. KELLY'S. t21&#13;
For Salo.&#13;
A cow for sain, inquire of&#13;
I. J. ABBOTT.&#13;
Have the best assortment to be found&#13;
in any city; all bright new numbers that&#13;
carry beauty to the eye.&#13;
See us for your spring out-fit,&#13;
we can save you $$$.&#13;
If troubled by a weak digestion, loss&#13;
of appetite, or constipation, try a few&#13;
doses of Chamberlain's Stomach and&#13;
Liver Tablets. Every box warranted.&#13;
For sale by P. A. Staler, Pinckney.&#13;
Having recently purchased a&#13;
thoroughbred Hereford Hull 1 will&#13;
offer bis services at 11.00 tbe seaeon,&#13;
payable at time of service with return&#13;
privilege. 0. V. VANWINKLE. t-19&#13;
R * i M C « l r e » . W t t i o « t M i l k .&#13;
Tb on sands are doing it Cheaply and&#13;
*urcw!*fuMy with "Ulstchford's Cflftf&#13;
Meal" tbe perfect milk substitute.&#13;
For sale by Teeple &amp; Cadwetf. t-26&#13;
Gar fare&#13;
We deduct your car fare from&#13;
bills of $15.00 or over.&#13;
• 4 —&#13;
Yours For Business,&#13;
HOLMES &amp; DANCER,&#13;
Stockbridge, Mich.</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="36751">
              <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="6894">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch May 16, 1901</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6895">
                <text>May 16, 1901 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="6896">
                <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="6897">
                <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="6898">
                <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="6899">
                <text>1901-05-16</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6900">
                <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="996" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="924">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/cb3e94fba3b1ea7649972eb757665caa.pdf</src>
        <authentication>03e497c9fdd5df3285156f5fc4c7d75d</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="32310">
              <text>VOL. XIX. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MAY. 23. 1901. No. 21.&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
Welt Ballis was up from Jackson&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Henry .Beurnun, of Howell, was in&#13;
town last Friday.&#13;
Miss Georgia Gardner is spending a&#13;
eouple ot weeks in Detroit.&#13;
Bert Schoenbals, of Genoa, has seenred&#13;
a position in Owosso.&#13;
The Primary School and Library&#13;
moneys gives Putnam $150 21.&#13;
It is rumored that the Pere Marquette&#13;
By. will reduce its rates to 2&#13;
eentsper mile.&#13;
The Misses Maud and Mocco Teeplo&#13;
were in Ana Arbor the past week to&#13;
attend the May Festival.&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE&#13;
HOWELL. - MICHIGAN&#13;
A Rush of Business from a&#13;
Whirlwind of Bargains. W e Sell&#13;
' the Very Best at t h e Lowest Possible&#13;
Price. Come and look.&#13;
Dry Goods&#13;
Groceries&#13;
Hardware&#13;
China&#13;
AT&#13;
BAR&#13;
GAIN&#13;
c W h e n in Howell d r o p in a n d&#13;
see us.&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
Next to Post O f f i c e .&#13;
Mail orders&#13;
Carefully filled. {&#13;
A^AMA^kAMMtA^A^A^A^AmA&#13;
^ • y&#13;
O u r M o H o i " T h e Better the&#13;
Grade the Bigger the T r a d e . "&#13;
'«-Ni7\y-&gt;&#13;
Royal Tailoring&#13;
Stands at the Head,&#13;
is&#13;
The Very Best!!&#13;
Clothing is absolutely&#13;
made to your measure, and&#13;
in t h e latest styles. Satisfaction&#13;
is always guaranteed!&#13;
W e s o l i c l t y o u r p a t r o n a g e&#13;
K. H. Crane,&#13;
Local Agent.&#13;
F. L. Andrews visited bis people at&#13;
Parshailville from Friday till Monday&#13;
Unas. Burroughs and wife, of -near&#13;
Howell, visited friends in town the&#13;
last o) last week.&#13;
Mrs. Chapman, of Gregory, spent&#13;
the past week at the home ot Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Henry Barton.&#13;
Mrs. K. G. Jackson and sen, Harry&#13;
are spending a few weeks with her&#13;
people in Plymouth.&#13;
Howlett Bros., of Gregory, have&#13;
purchased the hardware stock of J . V.&#13;
Russel, at Stockurtdge.&#13;
Gen. A. A. James, U. S. pension&#13;
agent will ),e the orator at the Decoration&#13;
Day exercises at Howell.&#13;
Mrs. Ann F tzsimmons and Miss&#13;
Kate O'Conor are spending the week&#13;
at Cbas. Reads near Ann Arbor.&#13;
Mr. Ban- and a brother of Mrs. Nixon,&#13;
nf Findley Ohio, were guests of F,&#13;
H. Nixon and wife at Portaare, over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Herb Schoenhals and wife entertained&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Pardee and&#13;
Roy Schoenhals, ot Genoa, the last of&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mrs. John J. Temple 3tarted to-day&#13;
(Thursday) for a visit with her sons&#13;
Guy of Sault St Maria, Perey of Marquette"&#13;
and Roy of Manistique.&#13;
Several Detroit visitors were in&#13;
town Sunday, among tbera were Bert&#13;
Young and sister Grace, Erwin Mann,&#13;
Murry Walker and A, rs. Uertha&#13;
Mann.&#13;
The Ladies of M, E. society will&#13;
serve tea«at the home of Mrs. Leal&#13;
Sigler Wednesday, May 29, from 5&#13;
until all are served. Everyone is&#13;
cordially invited to attend.&#13;
Fredrick Trulin o" Genoa, was&#13;
found lead in his barn Saturday&#13;
morning May 18. .Neighbors nave&#13;
asked for an investigation as there&#13;
was a red mark across his forehead.&#13;
On Friday afternoon of next week.&#13;
May nil, the different departments of&#13;
the school here will observe decoration&#13;
day with appropriate exercises,&#13;
and will also decorate the graves.&#13;
Everyone invited to bo pre&gt;ent.&#13;
At the state tax sale last week Martin&#13;
Wilson secured lot No. 1 of first&#13;
addition to the village of Pinckney,&#13;
for $1.48; Jas. A. Greene lots No. 3&#13;
and 4 for $1.59; Mrs. Phebe J. Stowe,&#13;
of Marion, Iocs 3 and 4 of second addition.&#13;
Commodore Sacket of Dexter, was&#13;
run over by the cars at Ann Arbor&#13;
Saturday night and lost a log below&#13;
the knee. He was trying to catch on&#13;
a moving train and fell under it.&#13;
This makts two urothers who have&#13;
but one leg.&#13;
There \» a strip ot sidewalk on main&#13;
street that ought to be condemed, then&#13;
either torn up or re built before someone&#13;
gets a fall and fc^evillage have a&#13;
big damage suit on nand. It is not&#13;
Frank Erwin was home from Alma&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler was in Detroit on&#13;
business Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Vaughn is giving her bouse a&#13;
new dress of paint.&#13;
Mr. Wm. Potterton is putting a&#13;
new roof on his house.&#13;
Mrs. A. B. Green is a guest of her&#13;
son Bert at Stockbridge.&#13;
Mrs. F . A. Sigler is visiting her&#13;
daughter and other friends in Detroit.&#13;
Mort Mortenson and wife of Howell&#13;
visited his parents here over Sunday.&#13;
Rev. H. W. Hicks, is spending a&#13;
week with relatives in Washington,&#13;
D. C.&#13;
S. S, Smith who has been in the&#13;
north ;rn part of the state is home for&#13;
a short time.&#13;
Miss Blanche Martin was a guest&#13;
at the home of Horace Fick in Gragoi&#13;
v, the last of last week.&#13;
The pig which Richard Clinton ad&#13;
vertised last as strayed, was tound in&#13;
the corner of a fen&lt;*e dead.&#13;
Will Doyle spent the last of last&#13;
week wirh friends and relatives in&#13;
FowJerville and Webberville.&#13;
Ray Thomas of -Jackson and Grace&#13;
Bowman of Detroit were married a t&#13;
Detroit last week. They were well&#13;
known here.&#13;
Union memorial servise3 will be&#13;
held al the M. E. church Sunday&#13;
morning June 2, instead of May 26.&#13;
The meeting will be conducted by&#13;
Ravs. Hicks and Rice. A special invitation&#13;
is extended to all soldiers to be&#13;
present.&#13;
E. W, Kennedy received word the&#13;
past week from bis brother Ira in&#13;
MilJwaukee, that his residence and&#13;
contents were destroyed by fire Saturday&#13;
night, May 11. Tney barely escaped&#13;
in their night robes. Loss&#13;
about 125,000.&#13;
Died at her home in this village,&#13;
Sunday morning, of consumption&#13;
Miss Kate Roberts aged 17. She has&#13;
been a pattent sufferer for several&#13;
months. Funeral was held at St.&#13;
Mary's church conducted by Rev. Fr.&#13;
Comerford, Tuesday morning.&#13;
WANTED&#13;
The Ladies of Pinckney and vicinity&#13;
to know that we have a line of Millinery&#13;
Goods to suit everyone both&#13;
in Style and Price.&#13;
Those who buy&#13;
of us can't help saving money. You&#13;
may match the price but you can't&#13;
match the&#13;
Goods&#13;
at the price.&#13;
Geor 9i a Martin,&#13;
Opera House Block.&#13;
Notice! T o&#13;
Farmers&#13;
of the&#13;
2 0 t h Century.&#13;
Empire Drill agency for 1901 has been secured by lis&#13;
and we wish to call your attention to a few of the? new&#13;
features of this Drill, as well as sowing all kinds of grain it&#13;
will plant Sugar Beets four rows 21 inches apart, will plant&#13;
corn two rows 3l/£ feat apart, Bians three rows 28 inches&#13;
apart, or if desired the rows may be made closer together&#13;
or farther apart by simply closing a shut-off slide on inside&#13;
of box. Come and examine the Drill and you will be&#13;
convinced that it is the best Drill on earth.&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
only a disgrace to the council but the&#13;
entire village.&#13;
I Am&#13;
Still&#13;
Selling&#13;
CARPETS.&#13;
Can show you a large line of samples of&#13;
the best wearing Carpets made—you&#13;
will be pleased with the styles and the&#13;
prices will suit you.&#13;
A large line of Misses' aud Children's School Shoes of one of&#13;
the beat makes known—Burley Stephens &amp; Co.—an old firm who o e eafter&#13;
JAMES HENRY BARTON".&#13;
James Henry Barton was born in&#13;
the township of Putnam Feb. 25 1851&#13;
and died in Pinckney May 19 1901.&#13;
He was one of five children—a&#13;
daughter and four sons: he being the&#13;
eldest of tun sons. Two brothers survive&#13;
him. He was a man with a sunny&#13;
disposition and loving nature.&#13;
Being in business in this village for&#13;
many yearn he made many friends.&#13;
He was married to Miss Jennie E.&#13;
Clark Oct. 28 1884 and then lite together&#13;
was happiness. Mr. Barton's&#13;
health has been failing for several&#13;
years. About three year* ago he was&#13;
attacked with a,heart difficulty from&#13;
which he never recovered.&#13;
lie was by natuie endowed with a&#13;
scientific mind and everything he undertook&#13;
was, done thoroughly. A&#13;
keen interest was shown in all that&#13;
came into his life.&#13;
No one loved a home and its surroundings&#13;
more than he did. He was&#13;
thoughtful of others and won the love&#13;
and respect of friends and neighbors.&#13;
With sincerity and reverance be turned&#13;
his thoughts also to religion. On&#13;
Dec. 29 1899 at Lis request the rite ot&#13;
baptism was administered.&#13;
Although a great suffer he looked to&#13;
the future hopefully accepting&#13;
cheerfully 4ns share of joy and sorrow.&#13;
He expressed his tinrr belief that all&#13;
things would be explained in the nest&#13;
life. There is much to comfort the'&#13;
one who is left in loneliness and we&#13;
truely say "Thou shall understand&#13;
^ oc?o&#13;
"Sometimes her narrow fci'Jchen waif*&#13;
Stretched awefy lnti» s i a t c l y hails."&#13;
This happened to Maud Muller, but our&#13;
prices on&#13;
Wall Paper&#13;
J&#13;
Make it possible for it to happen&#13;
to everybody. Wall paper which&#13;
used to cost so much that it could&#13;
only be hung in tbe parlor, or in&#13;
stately halls, is now so cheap that&#13;
the kitchen walls can be made&#13;
really attractive.&#13;
have been shoe makers for over forty years. Yon will gat your mou&#13;
eya worth when you buy their shoes.&#13;
W. W. BARNARD.&#13;
The funeral services were held at&#13;
his late residence on Wednesday, May&#13;
22, at 2 p." in. conducted by Hev C. W.&#13;
Bice. ~^&#13;
Come in and &amp;ee our new&#13;
for 1901. Prices from 7 to 25 cents&#13;
per cloial&gt;le roll.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
Druflfsriat.&#13;
m "•#-'-- 'J!-1'. AcVi1. !fr&gt;i"; '«»' r :i'''».-*• v •'' • • ! " i v ' . . : v •.•,.• • -'• L •• ••*••&#13;
- . \ r ^ 1 h W&#13;
^ ' • . \ , * : f^&gt;':&#13;
'•"•.•••'.•:' , ••' ,. ; V..'. ...".•-' &gt;x. .•!•:.•• .,•• •'*,•"&gt;•• ••'.....•••'• •'•" •, &gt;\ '• • .,. •••&gt;•••::• f '• *'• , • ' ; r"4;-"vv:,. :".'.'•:•;.,^". - "•&#13;
I&#13;
, ; , ? • , * / ^&#13;
'••V,^. •'&#13;
B '"^•1&#13;
I •&#13;
K&#13;
wmmm&#13;
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *&#13;
Holloter Ash...&#13;
J» HaltJ&gt;&#13;
BY MA R G A R E T BLOUNT. 4¾&#13;
^tuu&lt;i uuo BvUdy of medicine, and,&#13;
with a proud heart, placed my name&#13;
CHAPrBR XV*.—(Continued.)&#13;
"What? Are the village tales really&#13;
true, then?" aske4 his nephew, with a&#13;
look of the greatest interest.&#13;
"What did they tell you?"&#13;
"i*hat you were In a haunted house&#13;
—With oot one or two, but a perfect&#13;
legloa of ghosts around you!"&#13;
Ale. Cowley groaned.&#13;
"They are in the right. I have been&#13;
introduced to four since my arrival;&#13;
and if you .had not come tonight, I&#13;
should have struck my tent and run&#13;
away in sheer terror and desperation."&#13;
"^our ghosts! You must be joking,&#13;
uncle. You never used to* believe in&#13;
such things, you know!"&#13;
"Ah, but I do now! It is no joke,&#13;
I can assure you, to see three such&#13;
-horrors as I have seen. And there Is&#13;
a beast of a cradle that will go on&#13;
rocking tn the butler's pantry. You&#13;
can't aee it, but you .hear it directly&#13;
under your feqt*'&#13;
"Ah! the girls were telling me something&#13;
of that. But I confess I thought&#13;
it was only some of their nonsense."&#13;
*'l wish it was! However, now that&#13;
you have come, I don't care so much&#13;
tor anything of the kind as I did before.&#13;
You'll see me through it, won't&#13;
yes, ray hoy?"&#13;
'"Through what?"&#13;
&lt;(Whyf Til dig the old place up by&#13;
•the roots but what I'll come to the&#13;
Sbottom of that cradle business. I fancy&#13;
that all the other disturbances arise&#13;
from that."&#13;
"And I am very willing to help you."&#13;
"I knew you would.be. And now&#13;
just look around this chamber,&#13;
Charles."&#13;
"Well, It is a very pretty room."&#13;
"We must sound these walls and&#13;
take up this floor. There's something&#13;
wrong here, too."&#13;
"Indeed."&#13;
*rWhy, I was sitting over in f cigar&#13;
the other night, as innocent as a Iamb,&#13;
When the door opened, and a great&#13;
hulking nigger came in, leading a&#13;
Weeding nun by the hand You&#13;
young villain, what are you laughing&#13;
a t r&#13;
"My dear uncle, it is too absurd to&#13;
think of such things happening in&#13;
this matter-of-fact century!"&#13;
•"Why, you puppy! do you mean to&#13;
•aay I am inventing the story?"&#13;
''Oh, no; but you might have fallen&#13;
asleep "&#13;
"A likely thing for me to do! I tell&#13;
you I saw them as plainly as I see&#13;
you now. And the nun's hands were&#13;
tied; and, by George! they came so&#13;
d o s e to me that I could have touched&#13;
them if I liked."&#13;
"Why didn't you?"&#13;
""Well, if you must know, they tried&#13;
to touch me, and 1 bolted."&#13;
Charles nodded his head and showed&#13;
U s teeth.&#13;
"The wisest thing you could possibly&#13;
•do, under the circumstances."&#13;
"I see you don't half believe the&#13;
story. But I swear I was not asleep.&#13;
And that was not the end of it—for&#13;
last night I saw another!"&#13;
~C-host?"&#13;
•"^Yes, sir; and in this very room."&#13;
His nephew looked incredulous.&#13;
""In this room, sir—a woman dressed&#13;
sn red, with a black mask. And she&#13;
held a confounded lock of hair in her&#13;
hand that I had seen before; and her&#13;
face You are laughing again, you&#13;
unfeeling wretch! I'll say no more.&#13;
Tft give no orders to have your room&#13;
changed! You shall sleep here tonight;&#13;
and I hope with all my heart&#13;
•she will appear to you, and make you&#13;
sing out of the other side of your&#13;
mouth. Laughing, indeed, at such a&#13;
story! I am quite ashamed of you!"&#13;
And the worthy gentleman trotted&#13;
indignantly back to the drawing-room,&#13;
and never spoke to his nephew again&#13;
that evening—not even when he took&#13;
his candle and bade them good-night.&#13;
CHAPTER XVI.&#13;
A day or two passed before Mr. Cowley&#13;
and his nephew could put their&#13;
valiant project into execution; Meanwhile&#13;
the ladies found the house exceedingly&#13;
dull. The two g3ntlemen&#13;
&lt;»rere always closeted together. The&#13;
weather was inclement; the box of&#13;
•books from Mudie's failed to come;&#13;
and, to crown the whole, Christmas&#13;
was fast approaching, and they knew&#13;
well that they ought to be in town,&#13;
On the evening of the second day&#13;
the/ were sitting together after tea,&#13;
in^ Marjorie's little turret-room. Mr.&#13;
Cowley and Charles were in the parlor,&#13;
natching some plot against the ghosts&#13;
together, and Mrs. Cowley gave a tremendous&#13;
yawn.&#13;
"So dull!" she exclaimed. "Rose,&#13;
child, do read something."&#13;
"Very well, mamma; here is the&#13;
iaew book papa brought the other&#13;
inight;" and the girl's eyes twinkled&#13;
-MAacnieroualr as she began:&#13;
T R B DOCTOR'S STORY.&#13;
uOa my eighteenth birthday I com*&#13;
upon the books of - — College. I had&#13;
heard much of the vagaries and madcap&#13;
escapades of medical students,&#13;
" 'You will live!' I whispered. 'DrlnJi&#13;
this—V will revive you.'&#13;
"I snatched a bottle from the shelf&#13;
beside me, and held it to his lips. I&#13;
thought It was a cordial—it was a&#13;
deadly poison!&#13;
"He drank, and fell back—dead thl3&#13;
time beyond all hope of revival. But,&#13;
as he died, he gasped out,,'You have&#13;
murdered me, and to the day of your&#13;
own death I will haunt you!'"&#13;
There was a long pause.&#13;
"Gentlemen," said Dr. Lee, solemnly,&#13;
"he has kept his word, h e a v e n is my&#13;
witness that I would not have harmed&#13;
him intentionally—but I killed him!&#13;
and night after night he comes to me.&#13;
but, to my surprise, I found myself -j j c a a hear him speak, and those dreadamong&#13;
a quiet and intelligent set of ful eyes look into mine wherever I&#13;
young men, who seemed much more intent&#13;
upon mastering the mys:eries of&#13;
the divine art of healing than upon&#13;
wrenching off knockers, and who&#13;
i?eemed more inclined to mend bon?s&#13;
than to break them. As I was studiously&#13;
disposed also we got on well together.&#13;
But w had an original character&#13;
runong us—a deinonstralor of anatomy,&#13;
who was on the most friendly&#13;
rerms with many of his class. He was&#13;
.*&gt;. dark, silent, unhappy looking man,&#13;
who seemed to have a most singular&#13;
and unaccountable repugnance for all&#13;
the details of the profession he had&#13;
chosen. He would shiver if by chance&#13;
he touched the skeleton In the lecture-&#13;
Hall; he would turn pale over operations,&#13;
and often faint in the dissecting-&#13;
'•oom, scalpel in hand. No one could&#13;
'magine why he had chosen to study&#13;
•uediclne. We often discussed the&#13;
'luestlon among ourselves; and one&#13;
night, when he entered the hall scon&#13;
«.fter we had been exhausting conjectires,&#13;
an inquisitive student asked him&#13;
point-blank the very question we all&#13;
'onged to hear answered.&#13;
"Dr. Lee, why do you dislike the36&#13;
'hlngs so?"&#13;
He was smoking; but he laid down&#13;
his cigar, looking very fcale, yet seeming&#13;
willing to answer.&#13;
"I will tell you why," he observed.&#13;
'Long after I had mastered the science&#13;
of anatomy, I received an invita-&#13;
Mon one evening to attend a private&#13;
'ueetlng at the rooms of a classmate&#13;
- a meeting where a fine 'subject*&#13;
rvould be dissected by the fitments&#13;
alone. I went gladly. The cL^rpoi lay&#13;
'ace downward on the floor, and they&#13;
r»ere trying to lift it on the frv.se I&#13;
had placed in readiness. I assisted&#13;
hem; and, as I did so: I fancied I felt&#13;
* slight pulsation cf the heart beneath&#13;
my hand. But when we laid it&#13;
on the board, I saw only a cold, pale&#13;
face and a stiff and rigid form. It&#13;
»as the face of a man some thlrty-flvc&#13;
j-ears of age—dark and cold and proud.&#13;
?iven the heavy hand of death could&#13;
r.ot erase the haughty curl of the lip&#13;
or the settled frown upon the brow.&#13;
His hair was long and dark, but slightly&#13;
sprinkled with gray; so were tho&#13;
thick mustache and beard. His eyes&#13;
were half-unclosed, and through- the&#13;
\ong lashes I could see that they had&#13;
been black as ' night. The careles3&#13;
•hough rigid attitude in which he lay&#13;
—the strong hand clenched, as if in&#13;
fome spasm after death.. and those&#13;
large eyes half revealed, filled me with&#13;
9. nameless terror. It seemed as if,&#13;
though dead, he yet had the power to&#13;
watch and understand our motions. I&#13;
had never seen a corpse that gave me&#13;
such a feeling before. Upon his breast&#13;
and face was the stain of blood! I&#13;
pointed it out to my companions.&#13;
" 'Buried alive, most probably,' said&#13;
one of them, carelessly, as he handled&#13;
the 3calpel. 'He must have struggled&#13;
hard, for he is a powerful fellow.'&#13;
" 'Look at his hand,' said another,&#13;
lifting it from the bench. 'It is&#13;
clenched so that the ring cut into the&#13;
palm below. Buried alive! It is astonishing&#13;
how people cai&gt; be so careless&#13;
now, when they have not even&#13;
ignorance for an excuse. There is&#13;
something in this face that unnerves.&#13;
Mr. , can you not close those eyes?'&#13;
" 'Nonsense! let the eyes alone—he&#13;
can sec the better that we do everything&#13;
right!' exclaimed the third. 'Are&#13;
you all turning cowards over a dead&#13;
body? Give me the sponge. Who begins?'&#13;
"He sponged the blood away. T&#13;
stood near, still looking at the face of&#13;
the corpse. The sponge, by some&#13;
strange chance, had been filled with&#13;
ammonia instead of water. The operator&#13;
flung it carele3faly upon the board&#13;
close to the face of the corpse. In an&#13;
instant, as the subtle vapor found Its&#13;
way upward, I saw a quick shudder&#13;
pass through the limbs. The operator&#13;
started away in terror.&#13;
" 'Good heaven! he is alive!' he exclaimed,&#13;
in a low, hoarse tone.&#13;
"I bent over him. I bathed his pale&#13;
face with water, and poured a cordial&#13;
between his shut teeth. Life came&#13;
back, hut slowly and painfully.&#13;
"He was quiet in my arms for a few&#13;
moments; then, with a desperate effort&#13;
he lifted his head, and took In the&#13;
whole scene at a glance. The lighted&#13;
skull—the shining instruments, and&#13;
the careless faces beyond—the love of&#13;
life taught him what they all meant&#13;
He was too weak'to speak; but he&#13;
groaned, and looked up in my face&#13;
with those eyes—and they were brimful&#13;
of horror and despair.&#13;
may go. My bitter repentance avails&#13;
me nothing. He will always be beside&#13;
me. This is the reason why my profession&#13;
terrifies me. And yet some&#13;
strange spell 'binds me here; I could&#13;
not go It I would. I know well what&#13;
the end v/ill be. Some day he will appear&#13;
to me—to all of you—as I saw&#13;
him that unhappy night. And then it&#13;
will be my time to go."&#13;
He ceased to speak,. and it was a&#13;
relief when, a few moments after, some&#13;
one started a conversation of the most&#13;
Imaginative kind. Dr. Lee listened as&#13;
we talked, smoked his pipe, but said&#13;
nothlnsr.&#13;
We heard no more from that day&#13;
of the vision that haunted him. His&#13;
fits of silence and gloom grew less frequent;&#13;
he mingled more with th* students,&#13;
and seemed in a measure to&#13;
lose his dread of the deathly objects&#13;
by which he was surrounded.&#13;
One day, at the college, on my way&#13;
to the dissecting-room. I opened the&#13;
door of the great hall and looked in.&#13;
It was empty and silent. The rows of&#13;
circular benches were deserted, but a&#13;
stray glove lay upon one of them; a&#13;
faint and sickening smell of chloroform&#13;
pervaded the place; and the foot&#13;
of the suspended skeleton, whose grinning&#13;
face was turned toward me, dangled&#13;
to and fro. as if he was kicking&#13;
it for his own amusement. I shut the&#13;
door, and left him to the solitude over&#13;
which he seemed to chuckle. •&#13;
The air of the dissecting-room was&#13;
never pure, but on that day it was peculiarly&#13;
fetid and nauseating. The mingled&#13;
odor of burnt flesh and muscles,&#13;
stagnant blood, and a certain indescribable&#13;
dead smell, such as any on©&#13;
may notice on entering a room that&#13;
contains a corpse, greeted me as I went&#13;
in.&#13;
Upon the table lay a headless body,&#13;
the corpse of a man in the prime of&#13;
life. I looked at it carelessly, wondering&#13;
why the head had^been removed.&#13;
Suddenly I saw somthing that made&#13;
my blood run cold.&#13;
The right hand was clenched closely.&#13;
Upon the little finger was a heavy&#13;
signet ring, and the strong pressure&#13;
had caused the stone to cut deep into&#13;
the palm beneath. It was a little&#13;
thing, but it brought the murdered&#13;
man before my eyes as plainly as If he&#13;
had been lying there instead of that&#13;
unknown corpse.&#13;
Hurrying from the room, I met a&#13;
classmate on the stairs. He looked&#13;
pale and excited.&#13;
"Have you seen it?" he asked eagerly.&#13;
"TVhrt?"&#13;
"The body?"&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
"And the head?''&#13;
"Mo."&#13;
"It is the most singular thing—perfectly&#13;
unaccountable. It gave me&#13;
quite a shock, in fact."&#13;
"But why?"&#13;
"My dear fellow, It is the very face,&#13;
feature for feature, of the man whose&#13;
story Lee told us; and the professor,&#13;
fearing some bad, if not fatal consequences&#13;
from this strange resemblance,&#13;
removed the head. It is lucky Lee&#13;
did not see it"&#13;
A "Lucky, indeed! I will keep him&#13;
away today," I replied.&#13;
I hurried to his rooms. Much to my&#13;
relief he was there, smoking and reading.&#13;
I pretended a severe headache,&#13;
and asked him to accompany me on a&#13;
long ramble in the country. He consented,&#13;
and we spent a long, happy&#13;
day among the green fields and lanes.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
K e r p Your Children B u s y .&#13;
Keep your children busy if you&#13;
would have them happy. "When the&#13;
occupation is some daily labor which&#13;
has been wisely allotted, see that it is&#13;
accomplished as well as 4t is possible&#13;
for the child to accomplish it under&#13;
existing circumstances. But whether&#13;
it be in work or play, let him understand&#13;
that no matter how well he may&#13;
have done today—and do not be chary&#13;
of your praise—he has within himself&#13;
that which will make it possible for&#13;
him to do still bettter tomorrow. This&#13;
treatment, Instead of discouraging,&#13;
will encourage, by Inciting the child&#13;
toward even better work, and will&#13;
early implant that spirit of divine discontent&#13;
which allows of no absolute&#13;
satisfaction in that which has been accomplished&#13;
until the achievement&#13;
reaches perfection. .This is the discontent&#13;
which Emerson preaches and&#13;
which is holy it doubt is not allowed&#13;
to creep in to mar the aspiration.—&#13;
Woman's Home Companion,&#13;
A GIFTED AND BEAUTIFUL GIRL&#13;
Threatened With Nervous Prostration,&#13;
PROMPTLY SAVED BY PE-RU-NA.&#13;
Miss Rose Cullen, President Young Woman's Club, of Butte, Mont,&#13;
writes from 921 Galena street, as follows:&#13;
"Peruna has many friends in Butte, I cannot say too much in&#13;
praise of it. While finishing school i became very nervous and&#13;
exhausted from over-study. I was weak and sick, and could neither&#13;
eat, sleep nor enjoy life. A couple of bottles of Peruna put new life&#13;
In me. I find that having It in the house and taking a dose off and&#13;
on keeps me in fine health.&#13;
«A large number of my friends place Peruna at the head of all&#13;
medicines.*'—Miss Rose Cullen.&#13;
where we thought all they did was&#13;
against her. She weighed about 190&#13;
pounds when she was in good health.&#13;
When she commenced with our family&#13;
physician in April, 1898, she weighed&#13;
about 130, but kept going down all the&#13;
time. She went to Atlanta, Ga., and&#13;
took treatment, but it did her no good.&#13;
Then she went to Harmony Grove, Ga.,&#13;
and took treatment from the best physician&#13;
there for three months. She&#13;
kept going down under his treatment*&#13;
although he was considered the best&#13;
physician in the county. She went&#13;
down from 130 pounds to 68, and we&#13;
saw she could not live long. She was&#13;
a skeleton. We consulted an old physician&#13;
who told her to use Peruna. She&#13;
gradually improved and got stronger.&#13;
She has gained 38 pounds since she&#13;
has taken Peruna, and is gaining every&#13;
day, and does her own housework.&#13;
"She was well known when she was&#13;
so low, and now everybody wantB to&#13;
know what cured her. She had indigestion&#13;
and catarrh of the stomach. It is&#13;
as good for children as for grown people.&#13;
We haven't had to have a doctor&#13;
for one of our children since 189i.M—&#13;
W. A. Mitchell.&#13;
If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory&#13;
results from the use of Peruna,&#13;
write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving&#13;
a full statement of your case and&#13;
he will he pleased to give you his valuable&#13;
advice gratis.&#13;
Address Dr. Hartman, President of&#13;
Tho Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O.&#13;
H o w P e r u n a Quickly Cures B a c k a c h e ,&#13;
t h o B a n e of W o m a n k i n d . MRS. G. W. HEARD, Hempstead,&#13;
Texas, writes:&#13;
"We have moved recently, and I&#13;
must have lifted something that was&#13;
too heavy for me in straightening&#13;
things up, for I had such a backache&#13;
and could hardly stand on my feet at&#13;
all. Beside, I was, so tired all the&#13;
time. My face was spotted and I was&#13;
very thin. I took one bottle of Peruna&#13;
and was soon real well. When&#13;
I feel tired and all run down I take&#13;
Peruna and feel all right before I finish&#13;
one bottle. I know it Is a wonderful&#13;
medicine, and both myself and&#13;
husband praise Peruna.&#13;
"There has been a great deal of&#13;
sickness through this part of the country,&#13;
but, thanks to Peruna. which we&#13;
use freely, our own family has escaped&#13;
with almost no sickness at all.&#13;
"Could you but Bee our baby Ruby,&#13;
(to whom we gave Peruna for bowel&#13;
trouble), you would see from her robust&#13;
looks that you need no better advertisement&#13;
in this little town. She&#13;
is so fat and rosy, is nearly five years&#13;
old now, and is a great believer in Peruna."—&#13;
Mrs. G. W. Heard.&#13;
Gtoen Up t o Die—All Doctor* F a l l e d - I t&#13;
ProTed t o b e C a t a r r h of N t o m a c h&#13;
a n d W a s C u r e d b y P e r u n a .&#13;
W. A. Mitchell, dealer in general&#13;
merchandise, of Martin, Ga., writes:&#13;
"I wrote you some time ago concerning&#13;
my wife's case. She had tried&#13;
all of the best doctors, and we got to&#13;
W.L.DOUCLAS&#13;
$3. &amp; $3.50 SHOES = . R e » l w o r t h or W . L . DotagUui 9t a n d&#13;
1M.SO s h o e s Is 8 4 t o S&amp;. M y « 4&#13;
O U t fUlge L&gt;tne c a n n o t b e e q u a l l e d&#13;
u.1 a n y price.&#13;
It Is not alone the beat&#13;
leather that makes ft first&#13;
eisasshoe it U the brains,&#13;
ithttt hare planned the best&#13;
style, lasts a perfect 'nortel&#13;
of the foot, and trt* construction of the shoe. Tt 1* mechanical sttlt and&#13;
knowledge that hare made W. 1.. Douplas shoes the best in the worM f'»r men.&#13;
T a k e • « auhatltute. Insist on having \V. I_ Oonjrlas shoes wttn name&#13;
and price stamped on bottom. Yonr dealer shonlrt keep them. If he does not,&#13;
•end for catalog glrlng fuU instructions how to order hy mail.&#13;
W . L&gt;. U O U O L A H . lsroekton. M a t s .&#13;
Turn the Rascals Out&#13;
We are speaking of the grip microbes&#13;
The well and strong can resist their poison,&#13;
the sickly and weak are their prey.&#13;
Baxter's Mandrake Bitters are na- j&#13;
turn's remedy for expellinp; all poison j&#13;
from the system. At druggists, in liquid ]&#13;
or tablets at 25 cents per bottle or box. j&#13;
Under no circumstances seek the&#13;
robe of a tyrant&#13;
Innocence is the lily in the flower&#13;
garden of life.&#13;
rlwlpa Brown's Great Keatdy&#13;
.-—, Bpifepsv »«H «11 rfet»otj»Dfce*»es.&#13;
O. PKBtrS BROWS, M Bvseiway, BUwswaa, a.t»&#13;
SEND US YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS&#13;
and upon receipt of same I will send yon a&#13;
proposition whereby you will he liberally&#13;
para far a few minutes of yonr time; no canvaattng.&#13;
as 1 have nothlai to *ell. It ooau&#13;
yoo absolutely nothing-. Write to-day.&#13;
W. C K U U N 8 ,&#13;
«00 Pine Street, ^ ^ St. Loots, Mo.&#13;
IN 3 Oil 4 YEARS&#13;
IN INDEPENDENCE ASSURED If you take op your&#13;
home in Western Canada,&#13;
tne land of plenty.&#13;
Illustrated pamphlet*,&#13;
firing experiences of&#13;
armers who have become&#13;
wealthy in growlot&#13;
wheat, reports of&#13;
delefstes, etc.,and full&#13;
information as to reduced raQway rates can be&#13;
had on application to the Superintendent of&#13;
Csnada,or to .&#13;
V.M«Iaaes,Ko.&#13;
l i n e ' s F a m i l y M e d i c i n e&#13;
Moves the bowels each day. In order&#13;
to be healthy this is necessary. Acts&#13;
jrently on the liver and kidneys. Curea&#13;
hick headache. Prices 25 and 50a&#13;
A wife's approbate on means much to&#13;
a husband.&#13;
B B 111 A D i &gt; "win bo paid&#13;
r t a s f f f%t%BV#toracaseoc&#13;
' backache* nervoosness, sleepless*&#13;
ness, weakness, hx*of vitality,fes*&#13;
clpieet kidney Jttaduar and urinary&#13;
disorder* that can s e t be en red bif KID-NE-01DS&#13;
the treat Rftlae*, trra* sad Wool&#13;
At all Druggist*. Write for free sajapta. Address&#13;
H l O - M K - O t D t , t u L o u i s , MO* ,&#13;
nVlHTFIsMK* TO *U-L do***. I f H i t I s a i l Liberal propositi**; if yea are eat&#13;
of employment and warn a profttabla steady situation&#13;
and wtU devota yonr Urn* to oar tmstrteM,&#13;
write ua. H A V A N A C I G A R C O M P A N Y ,&#13;
D e Sots) Balldlns*. «t. I,oata, Mo.&#13;
BINDER TWINE HRfZ&#13;
aganta. AUGUST t &gt; O t T , M O U t t O n , l O w a .&#13;
"JS'S&amp;.ISl llMM9s*.'iE|t Wat*&#13;
-. '.IKE Fv/K&#13;
#&#13;
# '&#13;
T H A N a V A A L WAH I T S M 3 .&#13;
War new* bam.tJifio»t entirely disapp&#13;
n n d from U M London press. "Lord&#13;
KHchrner content* himself with the&#13;
briefest possible bulletins summing up&#13;
t h e capture* from day to day, and the&#13;
meager prea* dispatches contain no details&#13;
of any interest. Lord Kitchener's&#13;
memoranda have proved that bands of&#13;
guerrillas were coming1, into the British&#13;
Uaes and surrendering, and that&#13;
Gens. Botha and DeTdreyTTad met with&#13;
heavy lemes in horses and cattle. The&#13;
evidence is not yet conclusive that the&#13;
end of the war is qcar. British reinforcements&#13;
are still going to the Cape&#13;
from Southampton, and the war office&#13;
is not suspending i t s active preparations&#13;
for a continuance'of the war.&#13;
The following w a s received from&#13;
Lord Kitchener, dated Pretoria, May&#13;
13: Grenfelt has occupied Louistrichart,&#13;
capturing 50 Boers, with rifles,&#13;
Louistrichart was previously held by&#13;
s i x British w i t h 40 surrendered Boers.&#13;
Other columns report 8 Bod's killed,&#13;
30 wounded, 133 prisoners, 34 surrenders&#13;
and a machine gun, 6,400 rounds&#13;
of ammunition, 150 wagons and 870&#13;
horses captured.&#13;
The report that a force of Boers is&#13;
concentrating under Delarey at Har ebeestefontein&#13;
is regarded with a feeling&#13;
of satisfaction. The British force&#13;
should far outnumber the Boers, and&#13;
as the latter must by this time have&#13;
lost practically all their guns, Delurey&#13;
cannot have any artillery with him.&#13;
This fact alone should place him at a&#13;
great ui sad vantage.&#13;
A dispatch from London, dated the&#13;
7th, says that the health of Mrs.&#13;
Botha, wife of Commandant-General&#13;
Botha, has broken down owing to&#13;
worry, and her constant journeys between&#13;
her husband and Lord Kitchener,&#13;
and that she is about to sail from&#13;
Delagoa Bay to visit Mr. Kruger, and&#13;
to appeal to him to persuade the Boers&#13;
to surrender.&#13;
Mrs. Louis Botha, who has obtained&#13;
consent to interview Mr. Kruger and&#13;
urge him to advocate peace, sailed&#13;
from Durban for Europe on the&#13;
steamer Dunvegaa Castle on the 13th.&#13;
m DUYINO PI8H«&#13;
C H I N A W A R N E W S .&#13;
Russia's efforts to facilitate the negotiations&#13;
respecting China, and to&#13;
hasten the withdrawal of foreign&#13;
troops from the Celestial empire, is&#13;
the subject of an official note, a copy&#13;
of which has just been received in&#13;
Washington. It contains the first&#13;
complete official statement of the&#13;
course of the Russian government that&#13;
has been made. The statement of&#13;
Russia's policy was made simultaneously&#13;
with her official declaration that&#13;
while maintaining the present temporary&#13;
situation in Manchuria in order&#13;
to preserve peace, the imperial government&#13;
is content calmly to await events.&#13;
It declares virtually that Russia has&#13;
kept steadily in view the fact that in&#13;
sending her troops into China no hostile&#13;
inteut was entertained toward&#13;
China; on the contrary, their presence&#13;
was for the purpose of rendering effective&#13;
aid to the government of China&#13;
in its struggle against the insurgents.&#13;
The answer of China to the statement&#13;
of the ministers of the foreign&#13;
powers as to the losses sustained by&#13;
nations and individuals in China has&#13;
been received. The answer commences&#13;
with an appeal for mercy, saying that&#13;
the country is impoverished. The&#13;
answer explains that the utmost China&#13;
can offer is 15,000,000 taels annually&#13;
for the next 30 years. This amount&#13;
will be derived as follows: From salt,&#13;
10,000,003 taels; from the likin U s ,&#13;
2,000,000, and from native customs,&#13;
3,00(),000. The communication further&#13;
asserts that were this done it would&#13;
leave the country unable to meet the&#13;
expenses of government without assistance.&#13;
It is therefore requested&#13;
that the foreign customs be increased&#13;
one-third and the receipts therefrom&#13;
to be given to China for the purpose of&#13;
government The ministers re use to&#13;
discuss this answer until it has been&#13;
considered by them in meeting.&#13;
At midnight on the the 18th Gen.&#13;
Chaffee issued his farewell order ending&#13;
the American relief expedition in&#13;
China. The troops will go direct tc&#13;
Manila.&#13;
CUBA A N D PHILIPPINE NEWS.&#13;
The IT. S. Philippine commission&#13;
finds that the internal revenue collections&#13;
in most of the provinces are not&#13;
sufficient to support the provincial&#13;
governments until the beginning oi&#13;
the collections of land taxes, a year&#13;
hence, and appropriation! of 82,000 U&#13;
13,0(10 will be made from the insulat&#13;
treasury in favor of several of the provinces.&#13;
These appropriations will b&#13;
considered to be loans. Inadditiou, the&#13;
provincial laws will be amended so a&#13;
to require a scdula of one peso from all&#13;
males over 18, half of which will go t&lt;&#13;
the province and half to the municipality.&#13;
The treasury at Waishin^ton has be-&#13;
&lt;run the p: yment of sundry army expenses&#13;
in the Philippines, includinrents&#13;
nnd rewards for surrendereu&#13;
arm*, formerly borne by the insular&#13;
treasury.&#13;
A dispatch from Constantinople an&#13;
nouneea the wholesale shooting of rev&#13;
olutionary Macedonians including women.&#13;
Twenty-four persons were executed&#13;
a t Men astir* 14 a t Berla, 18 at&#13;
lating, 18 at Seres and 29 at Uskub.&#13;
Simple £*le# for ;4fHr Owidanee of tb;e&#13;
Parehaaer.&#13;
Nothing is more difficult in marketing&#13;
than to tell whether a fish has been&#13;
properly killed. It should be killed as&#13;
soon as taken from the water, but too&#13;
frequently it Is allowed to gasp itself&#13;
to death and then treated so as to appear&#13;
properly slaughtered. The only&#13;
aboolutoly oafo way lo to buy a livo&#13;
flsh and have it killed before one's&#13;
ey&amp;a. This is not always practicable,&#13;
but there are certain rules which, if&#13;
observed, will result in the purchaser&#13;
setting flsh of good quality. Fish purchased&#13;
killed must not smell any different&#13;
from ordinary flsh odors; they&#13;
must have their natural color, and&#13;
should never bo covered with slime.&#13;
When the meat is slimy and fatty it&#13;
proves that the flsh is not fresh. Fish,&#13;
the meat of which looks bleached, with&#13;
spots on the «kin, sunken eyes and discolored&#13;
mouth and gills, should not be&#13;
bought under any consideration. Fresh&#13;
water flsh must be of brilliant color,&#13;
the scales must adhere closely to the&#13;
body, the eyes must be clear, the gills&#13;
rosy. Slimy flsh, with the scales loose&#13;
and projecting from the body, axe&#13;
spoiled and very unwholesome.&#13;
An "M. !&gt;'•" Open Letter.&#13;
Benton, 111., May 20—R. H. Dunaway,&#13;
M. D„ of this place, in an open letter,&#13;
makes the following startling statement:&#13;
"1 had Diabetes with all its worst&#13;
symptoms. I applied eveiTf remedy&#13;
known to the profession, as well as&#13;
every prescription suggested in our&#13;
books. In spite of all, 1 was dying,&#13;
and I knew it.&#13;
"As a last resort, and with scarcely&#13;
any faith whatever, I commenced&#13;
taking Dodd's Kidney Pills. In one&#13;
week I saw a great improvement. After&#13;
I had taken live boxes, I was sound&#13;
and well. This is ten months ago,&#13;
and I have not taken any medicine of&#13;
any kind since, and am convinced that&#13;
my cure is a permanent one.&#13;
"As a practicing physician with&#13;
years of experience, I most positively&#13;
assert that Dodd's Kidney Pills are the&#13;
best medicine in the world today, for&#13;
Diabetes or any other Kidney Disease.&#13;
Since using them myself, I have used&#13;
them in many cases in my practice.&#13;
and they have never failed.&#13;
"I am making this statement as a&#13;
professional man, after having made a&#13;
most thorough test of Dodd's Kidney&#13;
Pills, and because I feel it my. duty to&#13;
the public and to my professional&#13;
brethren. The truth can never hurt&#13;
anyone, and what I have said is the&#13;
absolute truth."&#13;
R. H. DUNAWAY, M. D.&#13;
It is no wonder that the public are&#13;
enthusiastic over this new medicine,&#13;
when our leading physicians themselves,&#13;
are being won over to its use.&#13;
W H A T WE HEAR FFCOM&#13;
A8S1NIBOIA, W E S T E R N C A N A D A .&#13;
"Don't rutok of Coming, bat Com*.**&#13;
To the Editor: The above is the emphatic&#13;
manner in which a friend in&#13;
Yorkton writes to a friend near St.&#13;
Paul, Minnesota, and it is pretty nearly&#13;
right, too, with the advantages&#13;
that Western Canada offers to those&#13;
seeking homes. The Assinibola district&#13;
is one of the best. The writer&#13;
from whose letter we quote goes on to&#13;
say:&#13;
"John, if you miss this chance you&#13;
are foolish, for you oan get out cheaper&#13;
when there are so many coming,&#13;
and I would not tell you to come if I&#13;
thought you could not do well, and&#13;
if you don't come in the spring you&#13;
will have to go away back, for you&#13;
do not want to think that thero is no&#13;
one living out here but us. I saw&#13;
nicer buildings out here than I ever&#13;
saw before, and if the country was no&#13;
good what would they want them for?&#13;
John, if you sold everything you have&#13;
and came out here you would be worth&#13;
more than ever you were before, and&#13;
if you can bring your team. You can&#13;
get anything you want on tick, and&#13;
when they do that with strangers they&#13;
are not afraid they can't make enough&#13;
to pay for it. I saw as nice wheat as&#13;
I ever saw in my life, and if they could&#13;
not grow grain what would the flour&#13;
mill be for, and it cost $20,000."&#13;
Now this was what Mr. Thomas&#13;
Fitzpatrlck, of Yorkton, Assinibola,&#13;
Western Canada, wrote to a friend.&#13;
There will be opened up this summer&#13;
new district* in Saskatchewan&#13;
and Assinibola at low prices, particulars&#13;
of which can be* had of any agent&#13;
of the government of the Dominion of&#13;
Canada, whose advertisement appears&#13;
elsewhere in the, columns of your&#13;
paper. Yours truly, An Old Reader.&#13;
What Do the Children Drink?&#13;
Don't give them tea or coffee. Have you tried&#13;
the new food drink called GRAIN-0» It to delicious&#13;
and nourishing, and takes the place of&#13;
coffee. The more Groin-O you give the children&#13;
the more health you distribute through their&#13;
systems. Orain-0 is made of pure grains, and&#13;
when property prepared tastes like the choice&#13;
grades of coffee, but cost* about hi as much. All&#13;
grocers soil it. 15c and 25c.&#13;
Jealousy is a demon t h a t should be&#13;
carefully avoided.&#13;
frail's Catarrh Cor*&#13;
Is taken internally. Price, 75c.&#13;
What a miserable attribute discontent&#13;
can be made.&#13;
•£«6or&gt;«4o0o6&#13;
Tied Up&#13;
When the muscles feel drawn and&#13;
tied up and the flesh tender, that&#13;
tension is&#13;
Pain—Wizard Oil. Use the last on&#13;
the first and you have neither one nor&#13;
the other.&#13;
Lie not, neither to thyself, nor man, nor God.&#13;
It Is for cawards to lie.&#13;
Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup.&#13;
For children teethUn?, soften*, the (rums, reduces inrtnnamatron,&#13;
aluyu pain, cures wind colic, Sfcw » bottle.&#13;
Noble natures pay conildence with gratitude;&#13;
ignoble on38 with treachery.&#13;
I am sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved&#13;
my life three years ago.—Mas. IHOS. ROBBINS,&#13;
Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y., Feb. 17, lwx).&#13;
The first street lighting in this country was&#13;
done in New York in 16B7.&#13;
Baseball players; Golf players; all players&#13;
chew White's Yucatan whilst playing.&#13;
and&#13;
Stiffoess |&#13;
from cold or over exercise. It&#13;
lasts bat a short time after&#13;
St Jacobs OB i&#13;
$ is applied. The cure&#13;
a is prompt and sore.&#13;
O e 0 e a « O e 0 e O e a e 0 e O e O € &gt; 0 . * e H &amp; #&#13;
W . N . U . — D E T R O I T — N O . 2 1 — t 0 O »&#13;
S0Z0D0NT for th&gt; Teeth , S S each 25*&#13;
MAIfWANTED&#13;
X&#13;
s^&#13;
With tig to sell o u r Poultry Mixture; straight sttlekry $15.00 per w e e k tvr*4&#13;
expenses; y e a r ' s contract; w e e k l y p a y , _ We furnish, be*.nk reference) ©I&#13;
reliability. Address with stamp, EUREKA MF*G CO., Dept. 53. East St. Louis. ML.&#13;
&lt;i-&#13;
Toasting - broiling&#13;
baking - ironing&#13;
a n y t h i n g t h a t c a n b e d o n e w i t h a w o o d c r c o a l fire i s d o n e&#13;
better, c h e a p e r a n d q u i c k e r o n a WICKLESS&#13;
m&#13;
V&#13;
Blue&#13;
Flame Oil Stove&#13;
Cadillac is already preparing plans&#13;
for a monster celebration this year on&#13;
July 4 and 5.&#13;
Do Your Feet Ache or Barn?&#13;
Shake into your shoes, Allen's Foot-&#13;
Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes&#13;
tight or New Shoes feel Easy. Cures&#13;
Corns. Itunions, Swollen, Hot and&#13;
Sweating Feet. At all Druggists and&#13;
Shoe Stores, 23c. Sample sent FREE.&#13;
Address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.&#13;
Sprin.fr fever germs are plentiful.&#13;
H e a t i s n o t diffused t h r o u g h -&#13;
o u t t h e house—'there i s n o&#13;
s m e l l , s o o t , o r d a n g e r , a n d t h e&#13;
e x p e n s e o f o p e r a t i n g i s n o m i -&#13;
nal. M a d e i n m a n y s i z e s ;&#13;
s o l d w h e r e v e r s t o v e s a r e s o l d .&#13;
I f y o u r dealer d o e s n o t h a v e&#13;
i t w r i t e t o n e a r e s t a g e n c y o f&#13;
STANDARD OIL&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
Tll!i i i HI! ii!&#13;
m !F&#13;
|.'i:ii'|i&#13;
liiifi't'&#13;
'i i l l&#13;
Bad Breath 1 Undigested, decaying food remnants, in the mouth and stomach, giving off pestiferous gases, are the cause&#13;
of that awful breath, so repulsive as to cause a halt in friendship, ''ection, love,—any form of intimacy.&#13;
Nobody can stand its overpowering stench, and it is a cause of terrible misery to those afflicted and their dear&#13;
ones. There is only one way to cure it—disinfect the digestive canal with CASCARETS! Clean it out, keep ft&#13;
clean, let CASCARETS stimulate the lining of mouth and stomach, and put it in shape to work naturally and&#13;
properly. Nothing but CASCARETS will bring about the desired result BE SURE YOU GET THEM!&#13;
ens.—Detroit Free P i . ^.&#13;
M I bawe been vatnc CASCARETS&#13;
and as a mild and effective laxative they are&#13;
simply wonderful. My daughter and I were&#13;
bothered with sick stomach aad oar breath&#13;
was very bad. After taking a few doses of&#13;
CHscarets we have improved wcaderfully.&#13;
They are a great help in the family.**&#13;
WiLHiuinTA NAGCU&#13;
1X8 BJtteahoose St., Cincinnati, Ohio.&#13;
"Well. TB» -lad to kno~» -Hon* *l»&#13;
a t&#13;
or 1«.&#13;
thro&#13;
ley&#13;
DO\&#13;
see »&#13;
hara&#13;
s s&#13;
ma*-&#13;
FOR BOWELS AND LIVER.&#13;
THIS IS&#13;
etc&#13;
THE TABLET %&#13;
»ad breath, aad »)aad» w l i ^ M t t * tlMuwh. Kaaiaa Wwc•t«e•.» feat a* ahteoaxdtaecah ea,a lda ddUgraex«Mlaeoa**». alWaalIeaM, yaeaatara aaefwteerl aM dteiii*A* lafrwverre t rreuwmala, retayU ?a•w«&#13;
* * » :&#13;
Vaaa^aaS&#13;
teaay.faw&#13;
CA1- fiJTAl&#13;
J0c&#13;
25c. 50c&#13;
NEVER SOLD IN BULK.&#13;
DRUGGISTS&#13;
aksi erelma. » HoTwO I t( ITs aSTBeir jtns anUllmfeaN t axeas« aa ytaeea r,f lgnr*e aWteri tal T CABlae&#13;
la «a&lt;&#13;
Ktaaaat '&#13;
i t o c e r e . .&#13;
• r t a e&#13;
&gt;TIII 1&#13;
leaa kw t wfc waeiwaaOa ehTyaM Tp.ae nffTTtcaaaMallaeeha *.laa a aedkewe la^ltle aij&#13;
sreat aawtt* ami&#13;
KxTOar*»*lat«ty&#13;
iwtU'&#13;
ltata*dai _ &gt; w h a t at**:&#13;
• »&#13;
M - / ¼ ; : v , , ' - . t - - ' ' V ' ^ - &gt;•„•' • '&#13;
. . . • • ' - ; • "&lt;ii&gt;'v&#13;
^•^Jlfj^t^-. ..vW, 1...1.. 1* ,^,,;A'rHulW&gt;&gt;N»li&gt;t4^&gt;MM »&#13;
, - . ' , ' &gt; . ; - V » ,:,- ; .J! ,,• -i _ .. . V , •'&#13;
. * \0$&lt;i^'':\ •...*.•••&lt;.-*', V ' V ,&#13;
,-,^.&#13;
»¥*•&#13;
^&#13;
* . # it:&#13;
• •.,'"&#13;
1,-&#13;
I. y:&#13;
I! pi&#13;
; i&#13;
HI&#13;
• &lt;&#13;
^&#13;
!'&#13;
t- i I:&#13;
If&#13;
' • '&#13;
Site fhwlwug ffepattfc.&#13;
r. L. ANDREWS &amp; CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THURSDAY, MAY. 23, 1901.&#13;
Soldiers widows should look out&#13;
for the smooth sharper that has&#13;
been victimiziug them to the extent&#13;
of $1.00 to $3.00.&#13;
TO C u r e a Cold i n One D a y&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.&#13;
AU druggnte refund the money&#13;
if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature&#13;
is on each box. 25c.&#13;
Governor Bliss has vetoed the&#13;
joint resolution appropriating $500&#13;
for n monument to be erected in&#13;
t h e cemetery at Byron in memory&#13;
of t h e army nurse, Miss May Tower,&#13;
who died while on duty in Porto&#13;
Bico.&#13;
Old Soldiers Experience.&#13;
M.M.Austin, a civil war veteran,&#13;
of Winchester, Ind.. write: ''My wifo&#13;
was sick a long time in spite of good&#13;
doctors treatment, but was wholly&#13;
cured by Dr. King's New Life Pi Ik&#13;
which worked wonders for her health&#13;
They always do. Try them. Only&#13;
25c at P. A. Sigler's drug store.&#13;
Queen Alexandria has a fad of&#13;
collecting t h e footgear of famous&#13;
m e n and women. T h e gem of her&#13;
large collection is a pair of shoes&#13;
once worn by Maiy Queen of&#13;
Scots. We do not wish her to&#13;
send for ours j u s L y e ^ Jbbere is a&#13;
little more wear in them.&#13;
Shudders at his past.&#13;
"I recall now with horror," says&#13;
Mail Carrier Burnett, Mann, of Levanna,&#13;
0., "ray three years years of suffer&#13;
in# from Kidney trouble. I was&#13;
hardly ever free from dnll aches or&#13;
acute pains in my back. To stoop or&#13;
lift mail sacks raademe groan. I felt&#13;
tired worn out about ready to give up&#13;
when I bej?an to use Electric Bitters,&#13;
but six bottles completely cured me&#13;
and made me feel like a new man."&#13;
They're unrivaled to regulate Stomach.&#13;
Liver, Kidneys, and Bowels&#13;
Perfect satisfaction guaranteed by P.&#13;
A. Sigler. Only 50 cents.&#13;
To Destroy Coddling Moth&#13;
A subscriber hands in the following&#13;
from a Canadian paper.&#13;
The suggestion comes from a high&#13;
authority and our subscriber vouches&#13;
for the virtue of the remedy.&#13;
An order in couucil just past by&#13;
the Ontario government makes&#13;
new regulations for the prevention&#13;
a n d destruction of t h e coddling&#13;
motlv These provide that it&#13;
ahull be the duty of the occupant&#13;
of every lot to scrape all rough&#13;
bark a n d all loose bark around&#13;
wounds from trees, and to place&#13;
heavy bands of sacking or other&#13;
suitable material upon all&#13;
bearing apple trees located upon&#13;
said lot, and such work shall be&#13;
completed to the satisfaction of&#13;
the inspector not later than t h e&#13;
10th day of J u n e each year. T h e&#13;
bauds shall between J u n e 20 and&#13;
September 20 be removed every&#13;
twelve days, and the larvae t h erein&#13;
destroyed.&#13;
I W. C. T. U- *&#13;
*j Kdlted by the W. C. T T',of Pluckoey f&#13;
All Eyes on Texas.&#13;
Great is Texas. Her vast cotton&#13;
crops and marvellous oil discoveries&#13;
amaze the world. Now follows the&#13;
startling statemeut of the wondertull&#13;
work at Cisco, Tex. of Dr. King's New&#13;
Discovery tor consumption. "My&#13;
wife contracted a severe lung trouble&#13;
writes editor J . J . Eairer. which caused&#13;
a most obstinate cc ugh and finally&#13;
resulted in prosuse hemorrhages, hut&#13;
she has been compl*t«ly cured by Dr.&#13;
King's New DiVoveiy." It's postivelely&#13;
guaranted for Coughs, Colds and&#13;
all throat and luntt troubles. 50c and&#13;
$1.00. 'Lnal botttes-rree-frfe-ft-A, Sigler's&#13;
di ug. store.&#13;
A bill that opens a way for townships&#13;
that have no incorporated&#13;
villages to have high schools, has&#13;
passed both houses. If the govern&#13;
o r signs it, all that wi1] be necessary&#13;
will be for one third of the&#13;
voters of a township to sign a petition&#13;
calling for an election on&#13;
th€ subject. If a majority of the&#13;
voters say so t h e township c m&#13;
raise money by taxation to establish&#13;
t h e high school.&#13;
It Saved his Leg.&#13;
-P. A. Dan forth, of LaGrange, Ga.,&#13;
suffered for six months with a trightiul&#13;
running sore on his leg: but writes&#13;
that Bucklen's Arnica Salve v bolly&#13;
cured it in five davs. For Ulcers,&#13;
Wounds, Piks. it's the best salve in&#13;
the world. Cure guaranteed.. Only&#13;
25c. Sold by F. A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
Strong Men.&#13;
The Roman soldiers, who built&#13;
such wonderful roads and carried&#13;
a weight of armor and luggage&#13;
that would crush the average farm&#13;
hand, lived on coarse brown bread&#13;
and sour wine. They were temperate&#13;
in diet and regular and&#13;
constant in exercise. T h e Spanish&#13;
peasant works every day and&#13;
dances half the night, y e t eats&#13;
only his black.bread, onion and&#13;
watermelon. T h e Smyrna porter&#13;
eats only a little fruit and sour&#13;
olives, yet he walks off with his&#13;
load of one hundred pounds. The&#13;
Coolie, fed ou rice, is more active&#13;
and can endure more than the negro&#13;
fed on fat meat.—Scientific&#13;
American.&#13;
Slop the Ceuffli nnri works off the&#13;
Lsxfitive Bromo-Quinine Tablets' cure&#13;
a cold in one day. No • are, no pay.&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
Shall We License the Suloou.&#13;
Our whole argument in this discussion&#13;
shall rest upon a matter&#13;
of fact. If t h e saloon is a divine&#13;
institution, if it is founded on the&#13;
principles of Christ, if it antagonizes&#13;
t h e wrong aud adheres to&#13;
the right, if it promotes peace on&#13;
earth and good will toward all&#13;
mankind, if it leads to morality,&#13;
manhood and intelligence, if it&#13;
discourages crime and vice, illegal&#13;
voting and false swearing, if it is&#13;
a friend to our civilation, obeying&#13;
the laws of the land and houoring&#13;
our nations flag, then there can be&#13;
no two sides to this question.&#13;
If t h e saloon is a blessing to the&#13;
land of the "free and the home of&#13;
the brave," then every patroitic&#13;
American, every man who loves&#13;
his country, owes it to his citizenship,&#13;
to his own sense of honor, to&#13;
stand by the saloon—talk for it,&#13;
work for it, vote for it; if he is a&#13;
praying man, pray for it, and if he&#13;
is a preacher he is than a humbug&#13;
if he will not preach for it.&#13;
But, on the other baud, if the&#13;
saloon is born of fraud and founded&#13;
upon dead men's bones and&#13;
broken hearts; if it is a system of&#13;
blasphemy, attributing hell andall&#13;
its works to our 1 eloved country,&#13;
attaining the spotless character of&#13;
C h r i s t ; if it violates the functions&#13;
of home, breaks t h e heart of women&#13;
and degrades childhood; if it&#13;
destroys virtue, and breathes mildevv&#13;
upon th« name of mother; if&#13;
it stimulates licentiousness and&#13;
fans t h e fires of lust; if it defies&#13;
the laws and causes men to swear&#13;
falsely upon the witness stand, or&#13;
in t h e jury box—in other words,&#13;
if it is an enemy to this government,&#13;
a traitor to t h e flag, aud a&#13;
foe to American civilization, a&#13;
menace to the laws of o u r laud,&#13;
then can anyone give a single&#13;
good reason why the saloou should&#13;
be licensed?&#13;
Two little girls were walking&#13;
with their father alonjj; t!je streets&#13;
of Chicago. They passed by a&#13;
gilded saloon and t h e e h W one&#13;
inquired: " W h o lives there?" to&#13;
which t h e younger one, who was&#13;
about four years old, replied,&#13;
the&#13;
Memorial.&#13;
The tollowing lines to the memory&#13;
ot Mrs. Itutb Grimes were read at the&#13;
regular monthly meeting ot the society&#13;
of churob workers held at the home&#13;
"Why, Ethel!&#13;
there!"&#13;
devil lives&#13;
The recent opening of the London&#13;
wool sales was weak, with&#13;
crossbreeds 5 to 5^ per cent lower.&#13;
Business comes in waves now. I n&#13;
place-of a score of buyers coming&#13;
into market and contracting for&#13;
wool as they need it, one or two&#13;
buyers, representing all the mills&#13;
in t h e large combine, come in and&#13;
take sufficient wool in a very short&#13;
time to satisfy the wants of aU&#13;
these mills. After this a dull period&#13;
ensues. Michigan buyers say&#13;
that there has been n o time since&#13;
last year's d i p was in that they&#13;
could unload and get their money&#13;
back. Naturally they are a little&#13;
timid this year and prices are low&#13;
and dull. T h e wool market is&#13;
opening slowly.—Ex.&#13;
• Try tbe new rt-medy fo^ costivenei»s&#13;
Cham bar lain V Stomach and Liver&#13;
Tablet*. Every box guaranteed.&#13;
Price 25, cent*. For sale by F, A.&#13;
8if ier, Pinckney.&#13;
finally dug out the lost key and&#13;
ring. T h e tap root of t h e beet&#13;
had gone through the ring, and as&#13;
it enlarged, had completely enveloped&#13;
it and th6 key as well.—Citizen.&#13;
"It is with a good deal of pleasure&#13;
and satisfaction that I recommeod&#13;
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and&#13;
Diarrhoea Remedy," says Druggist A.&#13;
W. SHwtelle, of Hartford, Conn. "A&#13;
Udy custon.fr, seeing the remedy exposed&#13;
for sale on my show ca«e, said&#13;
totne.,ll really believe that medicine&#13;
saved my life tbe past summer while&#13;
at tbe shore,' and she became so enthusiastic&#13;
over its merits that I a*&#13;
once made up my mind to recommend&#13;
it in tbe fnture. Recently a gentle&#13;
man came into my store so overcome&#13;
with colic pains that he sank to the&#13;
floor. 1 gave bim a do.se of this rempiiy&#13;
which helper^ him. ^ 1 repeated&#13;
the do*e and in til teen minute* be left&#13;
my store smilingly informing me that&#13;
be fait as well aa ever." Sold by F.&#13;
A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
CHASED THE SUPER.&#13;
T h e E x o t t l n s R a c e Between K e n n&#13;
a n d t h e Staaro Ilnnd.&#13;
Some strange tales have been told by&#13;
old timers In t h e stajro business about&#13;
the Keans. both tbe elder and t h e last&#13;
to be seen on t h e American stajre.&#13;
Some have said t h a t hard study made&#13;
them a little wrong a t times, and some&#13;
of t h e things they did certainly looked&#13;
queer.&#13;
I t Is told by an old New Orleans&#13;
horseman, who Is here from the Crescent&#13;
City, that when Kean t h e youn&#13;
Five years ago Bray ton Wright&#13;
lost a padlock key and a small&#13;
r-ing from his pocket. Search was&#13;
made b u t no avail, and the lock&#13;
has siuce hung useless on a nail&#13;
in t h e barn. One day last week&#13;
Airs. Wright was slicing u p beets&#13;
to feed to t h e cow, aud as she&#13;
whittled a large mangel-wurzel&#13;
the knife rasped against hard substance.&#13;
S h e examined closer and ger was playing there he nearly scared&#13;
a super to death and came near "pinking"&#13;
him.&#13;
It was in "Richard III," in the scene&#13;
where he sees the ghosts! The stage&#13;
manager was a bit the worse for drink&#13;
and determined to have some fun. He&#13;
did not like Keau, as he was a hard&#13;
man behind the scenes. Among the&#13;
supers was a raw Irish lad who had&#13;
never seen a stage before. The manager&#13;
told this* fellow that if he would&#13;
run across the stage when he gave him&#13;
the tip'he would stand to earn $2. The&#13;
poor fellow was broke, and a two spot&#13;
looked to him like a national bank.&#13;
He agreed, and the stage manager gave&#13;
him a gaudy oilcloth banner bearing&#13;
these words, "Smoke General Jackson&#13;
Cigars."&#13;
It was nearly a panic that this Irish&#13;
lad started. He ran across the stage,&#13;
and when Kean saw him he was furious.&#13;
He made a lunge at the unfortunate&#13;
super with his sword, and, as&#13;
the "rag" came whizzing down to a&#13;
hurryNeall, he chased the poor standard&#13;
bearer off the stage, down the passage&#13;
and to the street. For two blocks be&#13;
followed him in his Richard costume,&#13;
and finally the super escaped down a&#13;
dark alley.&#13;
What effect it had upon the show tbe&#13;
turfman does not say, but certainly It&#13;
jrai only the super's agility of foot that&#13;
saved him.—Cincinnati Enquirer.&#13;
olf Mrs Frank Sigler on Wednesday&#13;
afternoon May,l5, 1901:&#13;
Since hist, we met death has entered&#13;
one of our homes,, and removed a sister&#13;
worker, whom so many of us lovingly&#13;
called Aunt Ruth. Her cheerful!&#13;
sunny disposition, even when suffering&#13;
great, bodily pain endeared hot'&#13;
to all our hearts. Ww shall jfreatlv&#13;
miss her from our circle as a kind&#13;
neighbor and Iriend. "Although a&#13;
areat sufferer from asthma, yet she&#13;
very often managed to be at our meetings&#13;
and always .brought cheer and&#13;
sunshine with her. May the memory&#13;
ot her good life remain with us a benediction,&#13;
encompassing us round&#13;
about t'.ll we, too, are summoned one,&#13;
by one, to ford the deep dark river.&#13;
Her voice will never again be heard&#13;
in our meetings, but may the memory&#13;
ot her pure, consecrated, life, bo an&#13;
incentive to us all, for soon we, too,&#13;
shall sleep beneath the "low green&#13;
tent whose curtain never outward&#13;
swings," we, too/shall soon answer to&#13;
the last great roll call. We can now&#13;
but shed the sympathetic tear and&#13;
leave nil else to Him who doet i all&#13;
things well.&#13;
RESOLUTIONS.&#13;
The following resolutions were&#13;
written by a committeee appointed at&#13;
a special meeting of thn Young Ladies&#13;
Sodality of St. Mary's church,&#13;
P i n c k n e y .&#13;
WHEIIKAS:—Death for the first time has&#13;
entered our society and taken from us a&#13;
deaFTnentt HiTfrraelnirer, Knthcrino Koberfs,&#13;
who since the organization of the Sodality&#13;
1ms been a faithful member,&#13;
WHKRK.VS:—God in. his infinite mercy&#13;
and love h:ts released her from her sufferings&#13;
and called her to her eternal reward,&#13;
therefore be it&#13;
RESOI.VKD:— That we bow in humble&#13;
submission to his Divine Will and that our&#13;
prayers and Holy Communions be offered&#13;
for the repose of her soul at a Requiem&#13;
High Mas9 on Saturday June 1st.&#13;
RKSOLVKD—That we extend our heartfelt&#13;
sympathy to her bereaved father, and&#13;
further be it&#13;
RESOLVED:—That a copy of these resolutions&#13;
be sent to her father and that a&#13;
copy be printed in the Pinckney DISPATCH&#13;
alrso that they be recorded by the Secre-&#13;
11 ry.&#13;
•'(), wait!—to thee my weary soul is cryins;,&#13;
Wait for tne!--yot why ask it, when J see,&#13;
With feet nailed to the Crose,&#13;
Tliou 'rt waiting still for me"&#13;
{MARY K E L L Y&#13;
KATHKIUNE O'CONNOR&#13;
L E L A MONKS&#13;
*•*&#13;
Hamburg ami Putnam Farmers Club.&#13;
Program of Putnam and Hamburg&#13;
Farmers' Ciub, to be held at thn bomn&#13;
of .lohn Van Fleet Si\, Saturday May&#13;
25:&#13;
Tust. music&#13;
Keading&#13;
Snug&#13;
Recil-ution&#13;
Music&#13;
Reading&#13;
Song&#13;
Reading&#13;
Music&#13;
M&#13;
» • &lt;&#13;
Miss Grace Lake&#13;
Miss Ada Kice&#13;
Miss Iva Placewav&#13;
Bray ton Placewav&#13;
May VanFleet&#13;
rs. J . W. Placeway&#13;
Miss -Nettie Hall&#13;
Miss Flo Hall&#13;
Miss Grace Nash&#13;
NOTICK.&#13;
Notice is hereby given that the&#13;
Board of Review for the village of&#13;
Pinckney will meet at the Town Hall&#13;
in said yiihge on Monday and Tuesday,&#13;
May 27 and 28 for the purpose of&#13;
reviewing the assessment roll of said&#13;
village. All persons feeling themselves&#13;
aggrieved hy the assessment&#13;
are required to be present and heard&#13;
on the above mentioned date.&#13;
Dated, Pinckney Mich,, May 20&#13;
1901.&#13;
JAMES A. GREENE, Village Assessor.&#13;
W i l l i n g t o H e a r of It.&#13;
A Methodist critic, wlshln;? to put&#13;
his bishop "In a hole." or, as Dr. William&#13;
Everett would say. "to deposit&#13;
him In a cavity." asked In open mooting&#13;
whether or not the bishop came to&#13;
the conference in a Pullman car.&#13;
"Yes." the bishop cheerfully replied. !,Do you know any easier way?"—Boston&#13;
Christian Register.&#13;
All Off.&#13;
Tom-So your engagement with May&#13;
Is broken. 1 thought she fairly doted&#13;
on you.&#13;
Dick-So she did, but her father was&#13;
ft powerful antl-dote.-St Louis Republic&#13;
The Detroit, Howell and Laosiug&#13;
Electric By, has been incorporated&#13;
and the articles of incorporation&#13;
set forth that ¢100,000 of&#13;
the capital stock of the company&#13;
b a a hwpn anhftfirihttd anej t h a t &lt;lQf&#13;
000 of this amouut has been paid&#13;
iti. T h e company obtains rights&#13;
in its articl.s of association to&#13;
build a u d equip an electric line&#13;
from Detoit to Laueing, running&#13;
through t h e townships of Hamtramck,&#13;
Greenfield, Bedford, Livonia&#13;
a n d Plymouth in Wayne county,&#13;
Royal Oak, Southfield, Farmitigton,&#13;
Novi a n d Lyons in Oaklaud&#13;
county, Salem and Northfield&#13;
in Washtenaw county, Green Oak&#13;
P u t n a m , H a m b u r g , Unadilla, Iosco,&#13;
Marion, Genoa, Brighton,&#13;
Hartlaud, Oceoala, Howell, H a n d y&#13;
Conway, Deerfield and Tyrone in&#13;
Livingston county, Locke, Williamston,.&#13;
Meridian, Lansing, Delhi&#13;
Alaiedon, Wheatfield, Leroy,&#13;
White Oak, Ingham, Vevay a n d&#13;
Aureilus townships i n , I n g h a m&#13;
county.&#13;
T h e Hue which the company&#13;
proposes to take is not named in&#13;
the articles, but it is evideut that&#13;
a wide choice of routes has been&#13;
retained.&#13;
T h e company evidently intends&#13;
to build numerous branch tracks.&#13;
—Lansing Journal, May 18th.&#13;
B e w . i r c of n C e l d .&#13;
A cough is not a disease but a sympton.&#13;
Consumption and bronchitis,&#13;
which are the most dangerous and&#13;
fatal disease*, have for their first indication&#13;
a persistant cou^b, and if property&#13;
treated as soon a* this cough&#13;
appears are easi'y cured. Chamberlain's&#13;
Cough Remedy has proven wonderfully&#13;
successful, aud gained its&#13;
wide reputation and extensive sale by&#13;
its* success in or.ring the diseases&#13;
which cause coughing. If it is not&#13;
beneficial it will not cost you a cent.&#13;
For sale by P. A. Sigler, Pincknev.&#13;
Subscribe ior Dispatch.&#13;
WANTED—Salesman and Collector&#13;
to represent, well nsiablished business&#13;
of 50 years standing Small Honesty&#13;
Hond required, a liberal contract for&#13;
a good man.&#13;
D.E. Whipple,&#13;
?%3 South Main St.&#13;
Ann Arl or, Mich.&#13;
WANTED—Capable, reliable, person in every&#13;
county to represent !ar&lt;je company of solid flimacial&#13;
reputation. fcj:J« salary per year, p.jyable&#13;
weekly; J3 per day absolutely aure~and all expenses;&#13;
straight, hona-fide, rtertnate salary, no&#13;
comm'aaion; salary paid each Saturday and expense&#13;
money advanced each week. STANDARD&#13;
HOUSE, 334 Dearborn st. Chicago. t-2»&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
A AND STEAMSHIP LINES, J&#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 . T o l e d o&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
Sa«Uroa.4, T*,*x. 1 , 1 9 3 1 .&#13;
Train* leave South Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit and Eest,&#13;
10:36 n. m., 8:04 p . m., 8:58 p . m.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and West,&#13;
9:45 a. m., 2:08 p . m. 6:20 p . m.&#13;
For Sagtn** and Bay City,&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p . m., 8:58 p . m.&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10:36 a. m,&#13;
FRANK BiT, H.P. MOELLEU,&#13;
Agent, South LfOn. o. P. A.&gt; Detroit.&#13;
Wrand Trnwk Railway Syitoia.&#13;
g 0.44 a.m. iackaon. Detroit, and&#13;
* 6:45 p.m.&#13;
9&#13;
£ 4:45 R. m.&#13;
•»M*WH. unroii, aou b:]fl a. m. M intermedial* station* 5:15 p. m. ?&#13;
mail and *xp. *&#13;
Jacknon. Lenox, and&#13;
Intermediate station*&#13;
mixed. ':5Sa.m. &amp;&#13;
The 9(16 a. m. and 6:45 p, m. train* bars through&#13;
coach oatwara Jarkaon and Detroit.&#13;
W. J. Biatk, Agent, Rocka**&#13;
••WANTED "&#13;
Weak men, weak women, pale&#13;
man, rale women, nenous men, nervous&#13;
women, debilitated men, debilitated&#13;
women, to take KniU'a Rod Fills&#13;
for Wan People. They restore Health,&#13;
Strength ^and B&lt;v uty.—Waku np.&#13;
brace up by taking them before the&#13;
hot weather. They are the great body&#13;
builder and developer, Spring Tonic&#13;
and Blood medicine, 25c a box.&#13;
Knills While Liver Pills are the&#13;
great Liver Invitforator, Bowel Regu&#13;
later. 25 doses 25c.&#13;
KnillY Blue Kidney Pills core&#13;
Backache and Kidney troubles. 25c&#13;
a box.&#13;
NOVEL CURES.&#13;
Unlaw* Methods Emyloye* to Or«»-&#13;
eonae Certain DlMayaa*.&#13;
Freezing, baking. Illuminating, torturing,&#13;
frightening and bruising are&#13;
among the accepted ways of curing certain&#13;
diseases, says a writer in the Philadelphia&#13;
Times, For example, the bah&#13;
He Was Cautious.&#13;
Wederly—Tbe doctor says I must&#13;
take more exercise. Do you think I&#13;
ought to begin with dumbbells?&#13;
Mrs. Wederly—Suppose for a starter&#13;
you come out with me this afternoon&#13;
lud wheel the baby carriage?&#13;
Wederly — I • — er — really. Mary. 1&#13;
wouldn't think of it. I don't want to&#13;
iverdo the thing the first day.—Chicago&#13;
News. .&#13;
N o t F o r Hla H e a l t h .&#13;
Hubbubs-Why are you moving from&#13;
four suburban home?&#13;
fifubbubs— I am all run down.&#13;
Hubbubs—Malaria ?&#13;
Subbubs—No; gossipy neighbors,—&#13;
Philadelphia Kecord.&#13;
Miss PlovencH Newman, who ha*&#13;
been a wreat sufferer from muscular&#13;
rbeumatisam, sayt» UiambertainV I'ain&#13;
Balm is the only remedy that affords&#13;
her reliel. Mis* Newman is a much&#13;
respected resident, of the village cf&#13;
Gray N. Y., and makes this statement&#13;
for the benefit of others similarly nfflicted.&#13;
This lininifint is lor sale by&#13;
P. A. Sigler, Pmckey.&#13;
lag cure: When one baa a well developed&#13;
rheumatism, he la placed in a species&#13;
of stove and the crystals of uric&#13;
acid are literally melted out of bis body.&#13;
Another odd cure once tried for&#13;
rheumatism was burial in damp,&#13;
warm clay. The first rheumatic burial&#13;
took place at Menominee, Mich. The&#13;
treatment was not a success, and this&#13;
form of cure baa been given up.&#13;
The freezing cure: This was first Introduced&#13;
by a Swiss doctor. Paul Burdeyront&#13;
He placed his patients in&#13;
sheets immersed In ice water, packing&#13;
the patient all about with crushed ice.&#13;
This treatment Is today used in typhoid&#13;
fever cases.&#13;
Or the patient Is plunged into an ice&#13;
water bath. The treatment saves many&#13;
lives. Raging fever above 105 degrees&#13;
P. has been brought down by these&#13;
means to normal—98 2-5 degrees—In&#13;
less than ten minutes.&#13;
Neither of these modes of treatment&#13;
actually freezes one. A physician of&#13;
Paris. M. Figeau. introduced in 1890 an^&#13;
ammonia vapor method, which really&#13;
froze the patient. The body was placed&#13;
in a chamber into which certain chemicals&#13;
were introduced. Ammonia gas.&#13;
by sudden evaporation, then produced&#13;
intense cold, and the blood in the body&#13;
lost most of its heat.&#13;
M. Flgeau's method did not meet&#13;
with success. Some of his patients&#13;
succumbed to the drastic measures,&#13;
and the practice was abandoned.&#13;
novo* MarrleeL&#13;
"Mr. Buchanan, who waa the first&#13;
bachelor elected to the presidency, waa&#13;
65 years of age when elected and had&#13;
deliberately given himself to a life of&#13;
celibacy," writes William Perrine in&#13;
The Ladles' Home Journal.&#13;
"In the days when he was a young&#13;
lawyer of Lancaster, Fa., he had loved&#13;
Miss Coleman, a beautiful daughter of&#13;
a citizen of that town. They had been&#13;
engaged to be married, when one day&#13;
he was surprised to receive from her a&#13;
W»y Dlmoh Weyt.&#13;
Not lung ago a lieutenant; in the navy&#13;
was ordered away on a three years'&#13;
cruise. The order had been dreaded&#13;
for weeks, and when it came the young&#13;
wife, who was to be left in a Brook*&#13;
lyn flat with a baby and a colored servant,&#13;
was in despair.&#13;
She controlled her sorrow very welL&#13;
hftwaypp, until the actual moment of&#13;
parting came, and then she wept as&#13;
though her heart would break. The&#13;
cruiser was to leave the navy yard&#13;
request to release her from the prom- { early next morning, and the lieutenant&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
Salary $90d Y E A R L Y ,&#13;
SIci trie wetter of gnoi] address to i?&lt;reeent&#13;
• a, some to travel u; pointmpr HRfnta. others for&#13;
local work looking; after our interests. %0OO&#13;
salary guaranteed yearly; extra co missions and&#13;
expenses, rapd advancement, old established&#13;
bouse, Grand chance for earnest niau or woman&#13;
to secure pleasant, pern anent position, liberal&#13;
income and future. New, brilliant Hues tt rite&#13;
at once, M A f r t O l t l &gt; Pllf.Sft, t-33&#13;
*3 C h u r c h « t . , N e w H a v e n , C o n n .&#13;
T h e W h e e l P r o b l e m .&#13;
Which, at any given moment, is moving&#13;
forward faster—the top of a coach&#13;
wheel or the bottom?&#13;
The answer to this question seems&#13;
simple euough, but probably nine persons&#13;
out of ten. asked at random,&#13;
would give the wrong reply. \t would&#13;
appear at first sight that the top and&#13;
bottom must be moving at the same&#13;
i ^ i n &lt; n &lt; &gt; S &gt; S i S i l &lt; &gt; ' &gt; S ^ &gt; A &lt; &gt; l . ' 1 . H , | i , i v l ^ &lt; , f \ A l &gt; i i &gt; t (&#13;
I r l fik POSTAL 4 MOABV,&#13;
• I I I rflOPAicTofia.&#13;
Griswold •« modern,&#13;
up-to-&lt;iat«&#13;
Hotel, located&#13;
in the heart of&#13;
DETROIT. tl«eCity&#13;
rate—tnat is. the speed of tbe-carrtagfe&#13;
But by a little thought It will be discovered&#13;
that the bottom of the wheel&#13;
is in fact, by the direction of its motion&#13;
around its axis, moving backward,&#13;
in ah oppositedJreetloirtothat which&#13;
the carriage is advancing and is consequently&#13;
stationary in space, while&#13;
the point on top of the wheel is moving&#13;
forward with the double velocityrf&#13;
its own motion around the axis and&#13;
the speed at which the carriage moves.&#13;
lse. According to Mr. George Tick&#13;
nor Curtis, the separation originated In&#13;
a misunderstanding on the part of the&#13;
lady, who was unusually sensitive,&#13;
over some small matter exaggerated by&#13;
giddy and indiscreet tongues. ' Soon&#13;
after the estrangement she was sent&#13;
to Philadelphia and there died suddenly.&#13;
'•Throughout the rest of his life, or for&#13;
nearly half a century, Mr. Buchanan&#13;
is not known to have revealed to anybody&#13;
the circumstances of this romantic&#13;
tragedy. He would only say&#13;
that it had changed bis hopes and&#13;
plans and had led him. more deeply&#13;
than ever into politics as a distraction&#13;
from his grief. In his old age, long&#13;
after he had retired permanently to&#13;
private life, he called attention to a&#13;
package containing, he said, the papers&#13;
and relics which would explain&#13;
the causes of his youthful sorrow and&#13;
which be preserved evidently with the&#13;
idea of revealing them before his&#13;
death. But when he died and his will&#13;
was read lf~was found tbafr he had directed&#13;
that the package should be&#13;
burned without being opened, and his&#13;
injunction waB obeyed."&#13;
had gone to report for duty.&#13;
In the midst of her lamentations the&#13;
young wife beard a sniffing and sob*&#13;
bing in the dining room, and upon&#13;
glancing through the door she saw&#13;
Dinah, the colored maid, rocking her&#13;
body to and fro in a chair and weeping&#13;
violently.&#13;
"Why, D-D-Dinah, what's the m-matter?"&#13;
cried the mistress. "You seem&#13;
to t-t-take Mr. Blank's departure as&#13;
much,to heart as I d-do."&#13;
" 'Deed I doesn't, Mis* Blank; 'deed I&#13;
doesn't!" sobbed Dinah. "What am&#13;
boderin dis chile am de fac' dat a cullud&#13;
gem man friend o* mine am gwine&#13;
sail hisse'f on dat same ole cruisah!"—&#13;
New York Herald.&#13;
aeries.&#13;
. We the undertignedt do&#13;
agree to refund the rsonay on •&gt;&#13;
cent bottle of Down's Elixir if it does&#13;
not cure any cough, co!4, whoopiag&#13;
cough, or throat trouble. We also&#13;
guarantee Down's Elixir to care eon&#13;
sumption, when used according to d&gt;&#13;
ranting ftr m o n e y back. A fall dPSS&#13;
Rates, $2, $2.50, $3 per Day.&#13;
© • * . ONANO ftivt* a omswoL* ST.&#13;
" ) I M I W W » ) M &gt; I ' W ' I I ' W &lt; " I » ' M S I V &gt; M ' » ' I &lt; ' I | ' W S I S « *&#13;
S t M ^ ^ ^ A M M M ^ ^ ^ « M * « ^ i M ^ ^ ^ * M W * M * *&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
L&#13;
I&#13;
I&#13;
:&#13;
» •&#13;
»&#13;
)&#13;
I&#13;
•&#13;
FOR a PLEA8AKT OAT'S OUTIlB&#13;
TAKE »10X6 A&#13;
Stevens Favorite It la en aeearete rifle* pnt» every shot jn*t whew I&#13;
yew bold It; U light might, irtoenilly ont)ln«d, * boo*&#13;
Ms arm in *»p«arue« sad coBtiructlon; nothing cheap&#13;
abort li but Ot« price.&#13;
Jaat too thing tor an outlet where yon t u t a rifle wales&#13;
_ will not oott too mash, bat will do the work, llado in&#13;
i. ttm eaUbree—.J1,M and M ritn-nre. Weight 4½ lb*.&#13;
He, l T - P U I a Oaea Sl#ku » 6 , 0 *&#13;
Ma. 1 8 - T a i s * t * t « M a ~ &amp; » • .&#13;
IT IS A "TAKE DOWK."&#13;
Art yow dealer tor the "FftTsrite." If he doent&#13;
keep it, we will and prepaid on reoeipt ef Hit prte*.&#13;
5MOT Noma /or owr new 1St-p*a* t*t«U*f%4&#13;
entotning imtHpttom o/ MH» mMr* KM mi&#13;
J . STEVENS ASMS * TOSL OSv,&#13;
Bex *m . Caieeeee Fella, Mai&#13;
F l o t v e r G a r d e n * of t h e Sea.&#13;
The sea has Its flower gardens, but&#13;
the blooms are not on plants as they&#13;
are on the laud. It is the animals of&#13;
the sea that make the gardens, the&#13;
corals of the tropical waters particularly&#13;
making a display _oi floral beauty&#13;
that fairly rivals the gorgeous coloring&#13;
and delicate grace presented by&#13;
land flowers. So closely do they resemble'plnut&#13;
blooms that It Is bard to believi'&#13;
that tbey art' wholly animal in&#13;
organization. Dr. Blackford says that&#13;
among the roraj gardens there are&#13;
fishes of curious forms and flashing&#13;
colors (birth;;: about, just as the birds&#13;
and buncrfiM'w dart about plant ga:&#13;
&lt;'«'!:.&lt; en iatid.-t.'hicago Chronicle.&#13;
I r i s h L a c e m a k i n g ,&#13;
After the famine of 1847 lacemaking&#13;
waa revived In Ireland. Limerick, the&#13;
most successful Irish lace, Is not really&#13;
a lace at all, It is tambour work upon&#13;
net and muslin.&#13;
The Irish point, so called, is the ancient&#13;
cut work, being made In quite the&#13;
same way.&#13;
Net was first made by machinery in&#13;
1708. The machine was an ^adaptation&#13;
of the stocking loom to lacemaklng&#13;
and was cumbrous and not very effective.&#13;
In 1809 John Heathcbte. a farmer's&#13;
son, evolved from consciousness&#13;
and experience the first machine to&#13;
make true bobbinet with perfect six&#13;
sided holes. It brought a great hue and&#13;
cry about his earTTrom~hrceworkers,&#13;
who fancied tbey saw themselves thus&#13;
reduced to beggary.&#13;
The Luddites broke into the factory&#13;
where the machines were first set up&#13;
and made scrap iron and kindling wood&#13;
of them. The only result was to drive&#13;
the new manufacture to other and&#13;
safer quarters. For long the secret of&#13;
the machine's construction was most&#13;
jealously guarded by English manufac-&#13;
-turers^_NoL_satlsfled wjthjetters patent&#13;
they kept up a coast patrol to makT&#13;
sure that nobody took model or drawings&#13;
to France.&#13;
At last, though, they were outwitted.&#13;
A discharged workman who had the&#13;
plan of it in bis mind managed to get&#13;
safe over sea and build a machine in&#13;
France.&#13;
S o m e E x p l o d e d P o o d F a l l a c i e s .&#13;
Fish as a food of the brain worker&#13;
must be consigned to the limbo of&#13;
vanities, though certain forms of fish&#13;
are the cheapest of all foods, notably&#13;
the bloater. Oysters and turtle soup&#13;
are frauds. It would take 14 oysters&#13;
to equal the nourishment of one egg&#13;
and 223 to provide the same amount&#13;
of nutriment contained in a pound of&#13;
beef.&#13;
Salt fish, especially salt fat flsb, is&#13;
the most valuable food for the poorer&#13;
classes, and whole races in the south&#13;
of Ljrope live on the Newfoundland&#13;
rod. Cauned salmon we see at 18&#13;
pence a pound is no more expensive&#13;
than cod at sixpence. Millions of people&#13;
live on it, and the North American&#13;
settler who is not well provided with&#13;
cash finds it a good substitute and&#13;
change from flesh meat at times.&#13;
Frogs' legs are not of high nutritive&#13;
value, which need not .surprise us.&#13;
Turtle soup from the chemist's point&#13;
of view Is not worth a tenth of the&#13;
price paid for it—Exchange.&#13;
Too Classic For Them.&#13;
A resident in a small suburban town&#13;
on going*kto bed and small (doses dat*&#13;
inf? the day will care the most severe&#13;
cold, and stop the "most distressing&#13;
cough.&#13;
F. \ . Sigler„&#13;
W. B. Darrovr&#13;
Mht ghtrfttttji gwpatclt.&#13;
rCBLUUD SYBBY tVCBSOAT VOSJf t»« BY&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
JBdiior mmd t*r*prt*U&gt;r.&#13;
subscription Price $1 la Advance.&#13;
Entered at the Poatofflca at Pinekney, Michigan&#13;
as second-class matter.&#13;
Ad vertielng rates nude known en application.&#13;
Business Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
rtath and marriage notices published free.&#13;
Announcements ot entertainments may be paid&#13;
for, if desired, by pr 'seating the office with tickets&#13;
of ad miaaion. In case tickets are not bronght&#13;
to the office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter in local notice column will be chara.&#13;
ed at 5 centa per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
Insertion, where no time is specified, all notices&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. fcsr-All changes&#13;
yf adrertlsemeute MUST reach thia otfice as early&#13;
as TOTMDAT morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
tame week.&#13;
JOS ?nr# TTJV G /&#13;
in all ita branches, a specialty. We hareallkinda&#13;
ana the latest styles of Type, etc.. which enables&#13;
at to execute all kinds of work, aach as Books.&#13;
fampleu. Posters, Programmes, BUI Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., in&#13;
aaperior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
o-v as good work can b» none.&#13;
- L L BILLS caraBtr r u u r o r a r c s r MOSTH.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBEBIDSKT »; ...,^. C. L. Sigler&#13;
TIIUBTJIBS ri. Baker, B. H. Brwln,&#13;
F. &lt;i. Jackson, Geo Reason Jr.&#13;
Chas. Lore, Malachy Roche.&#13;
C L I B K . . . ...M...MM. ~.-....M*.......,..E. B. Brown&#13;
TRJUBtTBJtB... J. A. Cadwell&#13;
ABBISSOB.... , •••«,.... ......MM.Jas. A.Greene&#13;
STBSKT COMMISSION BB J. Parker&#13;
HEALTH u r n o a a Dr.H. P. blgier&#13;
ftTTOENBY&gt;,*MM*« MM«i»MMe«i**iMM»iM*Wi A . vlMTa*&#13;
illARSilALLt&gt;s)eee*%»«»««••— »«»»«—e« »»»»»»«»»»«»»«—»«S, firOgsYQ&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
-tadnr Thrtt*onr a A n w H k t a M ^ 4 t f 5 5 S S 3 K ^ K a ? S S S &amp; S ! 2 S S 2 i&#13;
D u d c e t .&#13;
The origin of the word "budget,"&#13;
Moaning an estimate of government&#13;
.ovenues and expenses, is thus explained:&#13;
Almost from time immemorial it was&#13;
the custom in England to put the estimates&#13;
of receipts and expenditures presented&#13;
to parliament in a leather bag.&#13;
the word budget being thus borrowed&#13;
from the old Normaa word bougette.&#13;
which signifies a leather purse. Curiously&#13;
enough, the word has passed back&#13;
again into France from England.—New&#13;
York Tribune.&#13;
Milwaukee &amp; Manitowoc via Rail and&#13;
lake.&#13;
The "Per© Marquette routes via Ottawa&#13;
Beach and Ludington to Mil*&#13;
waukee and Manitowac are now in&#13;
operatiou, with improved service and&#13;
equipment. Passengers en-route to&#13;
Hie \W*f and Northwest will find&#13;
t these routes desirable in tbe wav of&#13;
ow rates and gooi service. t 21&#13;
Ask aj^nrs for In') information.&#13;
60 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
&lt;ADC rV»",RKS&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS AC.&#13;
e.nAlenkyloyn aes sceenrtdaiinng oau srk eotpcthn iaonnd description may invention 1s probably patentab tlne.e Cwohmemthtemrt eaan- stteonnts fKrteret.c tOlylcdoensta dnesnenttcnyL f oHra •n©dcbuoroinkg o-pna Pteantte*n. ts&#13;
ajMPeafotJents taken throujrta Muim A Co. reoelre notice without obame, in tbe Scientific JUtterkatt. A handsomely illustrated weekly. I unrest cir-&#13;
* irnai. 'renns,1J3ft&#13;
byaiina&#13;
IBroMwiy, ^Q|^f&#13;
8U Waatalmton.&#13;
I unrest&#13;
year: foormontas.$L&#13;
Bilionstiess is a condition i:harart«*rized&#13;
by a distuihance of the dige&amp;tiv**&#13;
organs. Tbe stomach is debilitated,&#13;
the live** torbid, the bowels constipated.&#13;
The-'io is a loathing of food, pains&#13;
in fbe bowels, dizziness, coated tongue&#13;
and vomiting. nYst ot the undigested&#13;
or partly digested food and then ol&#13;
the bile. Chamberlain's Stomach and&#13;
Liver Tablets ally the disturbances of&#13;
the stomach and create a heaithy appetite.&#13;
They also tone up the liver&#13;
to a healthy action and regulate the&#13;
boweU. Try them and you are certu'n&#13;
to lie much pleased with the re&#13;
suit. For sal* by P. A. Sigler, Pmckuey.&#13;
The Torture ot a Plax Shirt.&#13;
The most trying ordeal that Booker&#13;
T. Washington was forced to endure as&#13;
a slave boy was the wearing of a flax&#13;
shirt. In his autobiography, "Up From&#13;
^Slavery," he says:&#13;
'TTn~fhe~porTloli of Virginia -where I&#13;
lived if was common to use flax us part&#13;
of the clothing for slaves. That part&#13;
of the flax from which our clothing&#13;
was made was largely the refuse,&#13;
which of course was the cheapest and&#13;
roughest part. I can scarcely imagine&#13;
any torture except perhaps the pulling&#13;
of a tooth that is equal to that caused&#13;
by pulling on a new flax shirt for the&#13;
first time. It is almost equal to the&#13;
feeling that one would experience if he&#13;
had a dozen or more chestnut burs or a&#13;
hundred small pin points in contact&#13;
with the flesh. Even to this day I can&#13;
recall accurately the tortures that I underwent&#13;
when pulling on one of these&#13;
garments. The fact that my flesh was&#13;
soft and tender added to the pain. But&#13;
I had no choice. 1 had to wear the flax&#13;
shirt or none, and had it been left to&#13;
mo to choose I should have chosen to&#13;
wear no covering.&#13;
"In connection with the flax shirt my&#13;
brother John, who is several years older&#13;
than I am. .performed one of the&#13;
most generous acts that I ever heard of&#13;
one slave relative doing for another.&#13;
On several occasions when I was being&#13;
forced to wear a new flax shirt he generously&#13;
agreed.to put it on in my stead&#13;
and wear it for several days till it was&#13;
'broken in.' Tntil I had grown to be&#13;
quite a youth this single garment was&#13;
all that I wore."&#13;
knew little English, but played the violin&#13;
well. One of this resident's neighbors&#13;
gave a "musicale," and of course&#13;
he and his visitor were invited- The&#13;
German took his violin, and when his&#13;
turn came he played one of his best&#13;
pieces from one of the great masters.&#13;
When he had finished, there was an&#13;
awkward silence and no applause. The&#13;
people were still looking expectantly at&#13;
the German, who looked disappointed&#13;
and flustered. The silence grew painful.&#13;
Finally the hostess, quite red in the&#13;
face, edged over to the side of the German's&#13;
friend.&#13;
"Can't you get him to?" she whispered.&#13;
"What do you mean?"&#13;
"Why, now that he's got tuned up,&#13;
isn't he going to play something?"—&#13;
London Tit-Bits.&#13;
H i s Lnte flour*.&#13;
"You never think of staying out late,"&#13;
said the convivial and ill bred person.&#13;
"Sometimes I think of it," answered&#13;
Mr. Meektou distantly.&#13;
"But you don't care for that sort of&#13;
thing."&#13;
"Not in the least."&#13;
"Perhaps you never had anv experience?"&#13;
"Oh. yes. I have. It was only last&#13;
right that I was out at half past 2 a.&#13;
m. Henrietta sort iv.e out to sec if 1&#13;
couldn't keep the hack gate from slamming."—&#13;
Washington Star.&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:Ho, and erery Siuvnttxdpa-y&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at cioa&#13;
lag service. LXAT. S I S L M , Sopt.&#13;
CONUiiBGAriONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Eev. C. W. Kice pastor. Service every&#13;
suaday morning at 10:80 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at T:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Taors&#13;
Jay evenings. Sunday school at eloeeof mora-&#13;
In* service. Ali»8 Kittie Uofl, dupt„ Maoel&#13;
Swarthout Sec.&#13;
^ T . MAUD'S 'JA.THOUC CHURCH.&#13;
i. M. J. Comtnarfo;&#13;
Sunday. fcorr&#13;
O Kev. Go miner [or d, Pastor. S a r vices&#13;
every&#13;
high mass with" sermon at 9:.% a. m.&#13;
at a :0u p. in., vespers and benediction at 7:8U p. m.&#13;
mass at 7:80 o'otook—&#13;
Catechism&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of this place, meets every&#13;
third Sundav intne Kr. VUtthew Hall.&#13;
JohnTuomey and il. T. Kelly, County Delegates&#13;
t^PWORTH LEAGUE. Meets erery Sunday&#13;
^evening at 6:00 oclock in the M. E. Church, A&#13;
cordial invitation la extended to everyone, especially&#13;
youog people. F. L. Andrews, Pres.&#13;
CHRISTIAN ESJEA.VOR SOSIErYT.'-Mdet&#13;
io?a every Sunday evenia* at 6:)1). Preslltrot&#13;
MLM L. M. COS; Secrjurr, MIBB Htttk C*rpoater&#13;
I^HB W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
month at 2:30 p. m. at tne home of Dr. H. P.&#13;
Sigler.&#13;
coartial&#13;
Jitta Duriee, Secretary.&#13;
Everyone interested in temperance is&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs. beal Sigler, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
The C.T. A. and B. society of this place, meet&#13;
every third Sataroay evening in tne Fr&#13;
thew 11. John Doaohue, ¥ resident.&#13;
e Fr. feat-&#13;
A T e l l t a l e B o a s t .&#13;
Xeil—She used to boast that she was&#13;
one of the charter members of the Woman's&#13;
Suffrage club. She doesn't appear&#13;
to be as proud of it now.&#13;
Belle—Oh. she's jnst as proud, but,&#13;
you know, the club was organized 15&#13;
years ago. and -she must have been at&#13;
least 20 when she joined.—Philadelphia&#13;
Record.&#13;
STATK of MICHIGAN, County of Livingston;&#13;
_ So. Notice is hujvby sriven that l«y nn order&#13;
of the Prohajp Court for tho county of Livingston,&#13;
made on the 'JOth day of April, A, P., 190:&#13;
Bis mwnths irom date were allowed for creditors&#13;
to i&gt;re»»»r.t their claur* agalnat the eatate of&#13;
THOMAS FITZS1MMON8, l»ccea«ed,&#13;
Aud all creditors of aald deceased are required&#13;
to present ttreirclaime to Mid Probate court, at&#13;
the Trooate Office in Mie tillage of Howell, for&#13;
examination and allowance, on or before the 31th&#13;
day of Onoher next, and that ntfch claims wuT&#13;
N» heard before said court on Saturday, the 90th&#13;
dnv of July, and on Monday, the Slth day of&#13;
Octoi-er uext, at one o'clock in the afternoon,&#13;
of each of mM daya.&#13;
Paled: Howell, Apr. 50th, 1001.&#13;
1,,81 , EUSKNK A. STOWK, Judge of Probate.&#13;
WANTKD-Capable" reliable person in every&#13;
connty to represent large company of aolid financial&#13;
reputation; $*W salarv per ye\r, payable&#13;
weekly; $3 per day absolutely sure aud all expenses;&#13;
stjai^ht, bona tide, definate salary, uo&#13;
commission; salary paid each Saturday and expense&#13;
money advanced each week. STASlMltO&#13;
HOUSE, 334 Pearbcrn at. Chicago t-i»&#13;
A Card.&#13;
I, the und*r«itfned, do herel-.y airrce&#13;
to refund the money on a 50 cent bottle&#13;
of Green's Warranted Svruo of&#13;
Tar if if fajU»s ro cure your cotujh or&#13;
cold. I also guarantee a'25-ceni bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money re-&#13;
I f NIGHTS OF MACCABBB8.&#13;
IVMeetevery Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
of the moon at their hall In the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Vieiting brothers are cordiallv invited.&#13;
CHAM. OAMPBKLL, Sir Knight Commandos&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 79, ? A, A. M. Keg'ilar&#13;
Cooiiuunication Tuesday evening, oa or before&#13;
the full of the moon. H. F. Sigler, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
4A.M. meeting, Mas. MAKY RSAD, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF MODERN WOODtf&amp;N Meet the&#13;
drat Toursday evening of each Month iu the&#13;
jiuct'ftbee nail. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACOABEJSS. Most every It&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachuaontn st i:30 p in. a&#13;
K. o. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially invited.&#13;
JULIA SIOLBB, Lady Com.&#13;
1 KNIGHTS OF THK LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every montninthe K. O.&#13;
T. M. Uall at 7:30o'docK. All visiting&#13;
Guarde welcome.&#13;
C. L, Grimes, Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
M. F. SIGLER M. D- C, L, SIGLER M, O&#13;
a DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surge.* i&gt;*. All calls prompt)&#13;
attended to day or uignt. OfBne on Mainstr&#13;
Piuckney, Mien.&#13;
tnnded. t23&#13;
Will B. Darrow.&#13;
4W£ Tbtf aifnatere is on erery box t tbe genuine&#13;
Laxative Brooio-Qtiiiiisie ™*«*&#13;
tbe iwMdy that mam %&#13;
DR. A. B.GREEN.&#13;
DENTIST-Eyery Friday; and on Thnreday&#13;
when having appointments. Office over&#13;
Sigler's Drug Store. 1*&#13;
V E T E R I N A R Y S U R G E O N .&#13;
Graduate of Ontario Veterinary O^ltega, al*o&#13;
the Veterinary Dentistry CoUeoe&#13;
Toronto Caaitdn.&#13;
Will promptly attend toaU diseases af tbe i t&#13;
masticated animal at a reasonable price. '&#13;
Horses teeth examined Free.&#13;
OTTlCeat ttlLL. PtNCKNU\&#13;
* • ' . ,&#13;
'•:!••&#13;
•••'.j,V&#13;
' it X&#13;
--4&#13;
'•So&#13;
'«:'&#13;
1\*-J&#13;
•;• • ••&lt; . •! . * t , V . ' ! • . . • • •&#13;
t"S,i,'i't 45- 'U,&gt;'A- • •* v&#13;
fl^f^^B^-^'7^'^:^^-: ' . •'• "'^l''^&#13;
** *&#13;
^ - ^ 4 - \.».~&#13;
vi r •;'!&#13;
v-4'i-.N'.*.i-&gt;r:&#13;
^ ¾&#13;
—m&#13;
'.V&#13;
•it&#13;
ginrtuw §i§ynhh.&#13;
m&#13;
F R A N K L. A N D U K W B , P u b l i s h e r .&#13;
P I N C K N E Y , "~. * . - M I C H I G A N .&#13;
ERRICLE TRAGEDY.&#13;
A s l u d i a n a Man Murders T h r o e a n d T h e n&#13;
ffommlts Satolde,&#13;
IH&#13;
Notwithstanding the large Number&#13;
of Smallpox Cases&#13;
NOT ONE DEATH OCCURRED&#13;
MINOR MICHIGAN MATTERS.&#13;
E r n e s t C o n w a y , a g e d 27, m a r r i e d , o f&#13;
E v a n s v i l l e . I n d , , s h o t a n d k i l l e d . C . W .&#13;
G a r r i s o n a n d w i f e , f a t a l l y w o u n d e d a&#13;
p a t r o l m a n , a n d d r i v e n t o d e s p e r a t i o n&#13;
b y t h a p o l i c e , k i l l e d h i m s e l f , o n t h e&#13;
19th. A f t » r k i l l i n g Mr. a u d M r s . G a r -&#13;
r i s o n , h i s n e i g h b o r s , h e s h o t t h e i r c o w s&#13;
a n d l a t e r s e t lire t o t h e Tiam. l i e t h e n&#13;
b a r r i c a d e d h i m s e l f i n m s o w n h o u s e&#13;
a n d w u e n a p a t r o l m a n a t t e m p t e d t o&#13;
a r r e s t h i m . h e s h o t h u n . A t t h i s p o i n t&#13;
a r i o t a l a r m w a s s o u n d e d a n d t h e e n -&#13;
t i r e p o l i c e d e p a r t m e n t t u r n e d o u t .&#13;
T h e y s u r r o u n d e d t h e h o u s e a n d w e r e&#13;
a b o u t r e a d y t o b r e a k i n w h e n t h e y&#13;
h e a r I a s h o t . L a t e r i t w a s l e a r n e d&#13;
t h a t C o n w a v h a d k i s s e d h i s w i f e g o o d -&#13;
b y e , r a n u p s t a i r s a n d s h o t h i m s e l f i n&#13;
t h e h e a r t .&#13;
n n r l ^ i g t*&gt;« M o n t h — l ' n ^ i n ^ n n i a ftnrt T n -&#13;
flaensa Letts P r e v a l e n t T h a n In M a r c h&#13;
—Scarlet F e v e r a n d T y p h o i d Fover A l s o&#13;
S h o w e d a S l i g h t Decrease.&#13;
Murder a t Connellavllle, Pa.&#13;
C o n n e L i s v i l l e , P a , w a s t h e s c e n e o f&#13;
a m u r d e r o n t h e n i g h t o f t h e 1 8 t h ,&#13;
w h e n a m o b b r o k e i n t o t h e j a i l w i t h&#13;
t h e i n t e n t p u r p o s e o f l y n c h i n g W m .&#13;
F a i r f a x , t h e n e g r o m u r d e r e r , a n d m u r -&#13;
d e r e d A s s i s t a n t Y a r d m a s t e r M o o r e i n -&#13;
s t e a d . T o a d d t o t h e n i g h t ' s e x c i t e -&#13;
m e n t a n o t h e r s h o o t i n g o c c u r r e d w h i c h&#13;
w i l l r e s u l t i n m u r d e r . T h e v i c t i m w a s&#13;
J o h n H u m a n a n d h i s a s s a i l a n t w a s&#13;
F r a n k J e t t , b o t h c o l o r e d . T h e l a t t e r&#13;
t w o m e n , t o g e t h e r w i t h a w o m a n , g o t&#13;
i n t o a q u a r r e l d u r i n g a d r i n k i n g b o u t ,&#13;
a n d H u m a n w a s s h o t i n t h e a b d o m e n .&#13;
H e c a n n o t l i r e .&#13;
Mrs. L y i n a u J. G a g e , w i f e of t h e&#13;
s e c r e t a r y o f t h e t r e a s u r y , d i e d a t h e r&#13;
h o m e i n W a s h i n g t o n o n t h e n i g h t o f&#13;
t h e 17th, a f t e r a n i l l n e s s o f n i n e w e e k s .&#13;
S h e w a s a v i c t i m o f t h e g H p .&#13;
T h e c r i s i s i n Mrs. M c k i n l e y ' s c o n d i -&#13;
t i o n w a s p a s s e d o n t h * 1 9 t h , a n d t h e&#13;
p a t i e n t w a s a b l e to-wit u p f o r a s h o r t&#13;
t i m e d u r i n g t h e a f t e r n o o n . H e r p h y s i -&#13;
c i a n s b e l i e v e s h e w i l l n o w c o n t i n u e t o&#13;
i m p r o v e .&#13;
K i n g E d w a r d ( w h o w a s b o r n N o v .&#13;
9, 1841) h a s d e c i d e d thu,:. h a s b i r t h d a y&#13;
s h a l l b e c e l e b r a t e d M a y 24, e a c h v e a r ,&#13;
t h u s p e r p e t u a t i n g t h e h o l i d a y h i t h e r t o&#13;
o b s e r v e d b y a l l t h e p u b l i c d e p a r t m e n t s&#13;
— Q u e e n V i c t o r i a ' s b i r t h d a y — a n d g i v -&#13;
i n g a n i m p e t u s t o t h e c o l o n i a l m o v e -&#13;
m e n t t o o b s e r v e t h e d a t o a s E m p i r e&#13;
d a y .&#13;
T h e r e v o l u t i o n a r y m o v e m e n t a m o n g&#13;
t h e l a b o r i n g c l a s s e s o f R u s s i a i s&#13;
s p r e a d i n g . T h e r e h a v e b e e n 400 a r -&#13;
r e s t * o f o p e r a t o r s d u r i n g t h e l a s t f e w&#13;
d a y s a n d a n u m b e r o f e d i t o r s a s w e l l&#13;
a s w o m e n h a v e b e e n a r r e s t e d . T w o&#13;
p r o f e s s o r s , w h o w e r e p l a c e d u n d e r a r -&#13;
r e s t , h a v e b e e n t r a n s f e r r e d t o p o s i t i o n s&#13;
i n t h e i n t e r i o r .&#13;
A F l i n t w o m a n , w h o ' w r s a f r a i d o f&#13;
b u r g l a r s , p l a c e d 833 i n b i l l s i n a n o l d&#13;
c i g a r b o x f o r s a f e k e e p i n g o v e r n i g h t .&#13;
I t ' w a s h o u s e c l e a n i n g t i m e a n d w i t h s o&#13;
m a n y o t h e r t h i n g s o n h e r m i n d s h e&#13;
f o r g o t a l l a b o u t t h e m o n e y i n t h e&#13;
m o r n i n g , a n d s e e i n g t h e o l d b o x l y i n g&#13;
a r o u n d she. t o s s e d i t i n t o t h e s t o v e t o&#13;
g e t i t o u t of t h e w a y . W h e n s h e r e -&#13;
m e m b e r e d , t h e r e w a s n ' t e n o u g h of t h e&#13;
b i l l s . a : t t o w a d a g u n ; n o t e v e n a&#13;
s m a l l g u n .&#13;
B A S E B A L L .&#13;
B e l o w w e p u b l i s h t h e s t a n d i n g o f&#13;
t h e A m e r i c a n a n d N a t i o n a l l e a g u e c l u b s&#13;
u p t o a n d i n c l u d i n g t h e g a m e s p l a y e d&#13;
o n S u n d a y , M a y 19:&#13;
AMERICAN LEAGirG.&#13;
Won&#13;
Detroit 16&#13;
Chicago 16&#13;
Baltimore n&#13;
Washington ll&#13;
Bostcm 8&#13;
Milwaukee. 8&#13;
Philadelphia o&#13;
Cleveland c&#13;
Lost. Psr or.&#13;
7 .69»&#13;
i&#13;
10&#13;
13&#13;
17&#13;
.647&#13;
.611&#13;
.444&#13;
.348&#13;
316&#13;
.'261&#13;
N A T I O N A L LEAGUE.&#13;
Won. Lost.&#13;
Cincinnati 13&#13;
New Vork 10&#13;
Pittsburg 11&#13;
Boston 9&#13;
Philadelphia 10&#13;
Brooklyn 9&#13;
Cajeairo ,. io&#13;
S u Louis 9&#13;
8&#13;
7&#13;
9&#13;
9&#13;
11&#13;
11&#13;
14&#13;
13&#13;
Por ct.&#13;
.619&#13;
.58»&#13;
.571&#13;
.500&#13;
.47«&#13;
.450&#13;
.417&#13;
.44»&#13;
THE MARKETS&#13;
N*w "York—&#13;
Best grades.....&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
Chleairn—&#13;
Lower grades&#13;
Detmtt—&#13;
Best prudes...&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
ItnflTalo—&#13;
Best grades....&#13;
Lower erodes.&#13;
Cincinnati—&#13;
Lower grades&#13;
Pittsbur*—&#13;
Best grade*....&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
•&#13;
Cattle Sheep Lambs&#13;
So 15&amp;5 90 14 50 $5 50&#13;
.3 'Wan 50 3 2) 5 00&#13;
.5 31^5 93 4 05&#13;
3 QOjio 00 4 15&#13;
.3 80^4 80 4 40&#13;
.a T5.&amp;3 7J 3 s ;&#13;
.4 90¾ 5 2&gt; 4 70&#13;
3 65^4 00 4 ©&#13;
.5'03^5 2» 4 ^&#13;
.3 90&amp;1 5J 3 75&#13;
.5 10¾ 60 4 40&#13;
• 4 50&amp;6 0) 4 0J&#13;
5 05&#13;
4 5}&#13;
4 93&#13;
4 i)&#13;
5 50&#13;
5 3J&#13;
8 03&#13;
5 23&#13;
5 15&#13;
4 50&#13;
Hoys.&#13;
16 20&#13;
6 10&#13;
5 95&#13;
555&#13;
5 70&#13;
5 55&#13;
6 10&#13;
5 75&#13;
5 65&#13;
525&#13;
5 90&#13;
5 65&#13;
G R A I N , ETC.&#13;
Sew York&#13;
^•Detroit&#13;
Toledo&#13;
Cincinnati&#13;
I'lttsbur*&#13;
Buffalo&#13;
Wheat&#13;
No. 2 red&#13;
79 7(79V4&#13;
71/171¾&#13;
75 175¾&#13;
.'5:675&#13;
77^77¾&#13;
Wfc76tf&#13;
Corn&#13;
No. 8 mix&#13;
50@50!/«&#13;
44 a 41¾&#13;
45@45&#13;
44T&lt;j44^&#13;
«J}46&#13;
47fft47&#13;
463)49&#13;
Oats&#13;
No. r] whlta&#13;
,34334&#13;
88¾¾.^&#13;
31(¾¾&#13;
84 :^3414&#13;
88 333½&#13;
N o t a D e a t h F r o m S m a l l p o x l a April.&#13;
T h e m o n t h l y b u l l e t i n o f v i t a l s t a t i s -&#13;
t i c s , i s s u e d b y t h e s e c r e t a r y o f s t a t e o n&#13;
t h e 13th, s h o w s t h a t n o t w i t h s t a n d i n g&#13;
t h e l a r g e n u m b e r o f c a s e s o f s m a l l p o x&#13;
i n M i c h i g a n n o t o n e d e a t h o c c u r r e d&#13;
d u r i n g t h e m o n t h . T h e r e w e r e 2,999&#13;
d e a t h s r e p o r t e d , e q u i v a l e n t t o a d e a t h&#13;
r a t e o f 15.3 p e r 1,()00 p o p u l a t i o n . T h i s&#13;
n u m b e r i s 489 l e s s t h a n t h e n u m b e r re*&#13;
p o r t e d f o r t h e p r e c e e d i n g m o n t h , a n d&#13;
47 l e s s t h a n t h e n u m b e r r e p o r t e d i n&#13;
A p r i l l a s t y e a r . T h e r e w e r e 497 d e a t h s&#13;
o f i n f a n t s u n d e r 1 y e a r o f a g e , 175&#13;
d e a t h s o f c h i l d r e n a g e d 1 t o 4 y e a r s i n -&#13;
c l u s i v e , a n d 884 d e a t h s o f p e r s o n s a g e d&#13;
65 y e a r s a n d o v e r . I m p o r t a n t c a u s e s&#13;
o f d e a t h w e r e a s f o l l o w s : P u l m o n a r y&#13;
t u b e r c u l o s i s , 2 )7; o t h e r f o r m s o f t u -&#13;
b e r c u l o s i s , 34; t y p h o i d f e v e r , 3 2 ; d i p h -&#13;
t h e r i a a n d c r o u p . 42; s c a r l e t f e v e r , 17;&#13;
m e a s l e s , 5; w h o o p i n g c o u g h , 15; p n e u -&#13;
m o n i a , 301; i n f l u e n z a , 142; c a n c e r , 1 0 1 ;&#13;
a c c i d e n t s a n d v i o l e n c e , 132. T h e p r i n -&#13;
c i p a l d e c l i n e d u r i n g t h e m o n t h w a s&#13;
s h o w n i n t h e d e a t h r a t e f r o m p n e u -&#13;
m o n i a a n d i n f l u e n z a , w h i c h w e r e c o n -&#13;
s i d e r a b l y l e s s t h a n t h o s e r e p o r t e d f o r&#13;
M a r c h . S c a r l e t f e v e r a n d t y p h o i d&#13;
f e v e r a l s o s h o w e d a s l i g h t d e c r e a s e .&#13;
W e a t h e r Crop Bulletin.&#13;
T h e U. S. w e a t h e r c r o o b u l l e t i n i s -&#13;
s u e d b y D i r e c t o r S c h n e i d e r , o f L a n -&#13;
s i n g , o n t h e 1 4 t h s a y s t h a t a m p l e o p -&#13;
p o r t u n e a n d v e r y b e n e l i c i a l s h o w e r s&#13;
| h a v e o c c u r r e d i n n e a r l y a l l a u n t i e s o f&#13;
t h e s t a t e ; t h e i r e f f e c t o n a l l v e g e t a t i o n&#13;
h a s b e e n w o n d e r f u l . W h e a t , r j ' e ,&#13;
m e a d o w s a n d p a s t u r e s h a v e g e n e r a l l y&#13;
&gt;ieen g r e a t l y i m p r o v e d . O a t s h a v e&#13;
g e r m i n a t e d r a p i d l y a n d a r e n o w i n a&#13;
| n r o m i s i n g c o n d i t i o n ; b a r l e y a n d p e a s&#13;
a r e a b o v e g r o u n d a n d l o o k h e a l t h y .&#13;
P a s t u r a g e i s q u i t e g e n e r a l l y f u r n i - h -&#13;
i n g f o d d e r a n d e a r l y p o t a t o s e e d i n g i s&#13;
T e r m i n a t i n g n i c e l y . W i n t e r w h e a t ,&#13;
a l t h o u g h u n e v e n , h a s n u d e i t s b e s t&#13;
r r o w t h o f t h e s e a s o n d u r i n g t h e p a s t&#13;
w e e k . T h e f r e q u e n t s h o w e r s h a v e ,&#13;
h o w e v e r , d e l a y e d field w o r k ; c o r n&#13;
p l a n t i n g i s a d v a n c i n g " s l o w l y a n d s u -&#13;
v a r b e e t s e e d i n g , i n s o m e c o u n t i e s ,&#13;
w a s a l m o s t s t o p p e d . P l o w i n g f o r c o r n ,&#13;
i c a n s a n d l a t e p o t a t o e s h a s m a d e f a i r&#13;
&gt;rosrress. A l l f r u i t p r o s p e c t s c o n t i n u e&#13;
g e n e r a l l y g o o d .&#13;
A l l e g a n B o y Struck it Rich.&#13;
J a y A u s t i n , a n A l l e g a n b o y , w h o&#13;
Teft t h a t p l a c e t w o y e a r s a g o t o . w o r k&#13;
for a n a r t i s t i n L o s A n g e l e s . C a t . , m e t&#13;
v i t h a s t r e a k o f l u c k a s h o r t t i m e a g o&#13;
h a t i s q u i t e p l e a s i n g t o h i s A l l e g a n&#13;
rriends. B a r o n L e h m a n , o f H o l l a n d ,&#13;
v i s i t e d t h e a b o v e c i t y , a n d h a v i n g a&#13;
^ e n c h a n t f o r h a v i n g h i s p i c t u r e t a k e n ,&#13;
•ailed o n t h e a r t i s t t o g o s i g h t - s e e i n g&#13;
v i t h h i m , s t a t i n g a l l h e w a s t o d o w a s&#13;
o t a k e h i s p i c t u r e w h e n e v e r h e d e -&#13;
s i r e d . H e w e n t , a n d w i t h h i s a s s i s t -&#13;
&gt;nt, d i d a l o t o f w o r k , c h a r g i n g $50 f o r&#13;
TWO d a y s ' w o r k . T h e B a r o n g a v e h i m&#13;
$150, a n d t h e n e n g a g e d A u s t i n t o g o&#13;
w i t h h i m o n a t o u r o f E u r o p e a t a s a l -&#13;
a r y o f 8200 p e r m o n t h . H e i s b u t 2 0&#13;
y e a r s o l d , a n d w a s g e t t i n g £ 0 0 p e r&#13;
m o n t h , a n d c o n s i d e r e d t h a t fine p a y .&#13;
»&#13;
M i c h i g a n B o y Murdered at the Capital.&#13;
J a m e s S, Aytjrs, aored 2 1 , o f P o r t&#13;
A u s t i n , w h o w a s e m p l o y e d a s a c l e r k&#13;
in t h e c e n s u s o l l i c e a t W a s h i n g t o n ,&#13;
v a s f o u n d d e a d i n h i s r o o m i n t h e&#13;
K e n m o r e h o t e l , n e a r t h e c a p i t o l , o n&#13;
t h e m o r n i n g o f t h e 1 5 t h . A r e v o l v e r&#13;
: o n t a i n i n g t h r e e e m p t y c h a m b e r s w a s&#13;
o u n d n e a r t h e b o d y . T h e c o n t e n t s o f&#13;
t h e c a r t r i d g e s w e r e l a t e r f o u n d i n t h e&#13;
d e a d m a n ' s b o d y . O n e e n t e r e d h i s l e f t&#13;
l e g , a n o t h e r h i s l e f t a r m a n d t h e t h i r d&#13;
o n e p e n e t r a t e d h i s b r e a s t i n t h e r e g i o n&#13;
«&gt;f h i s h e a r t . T h e m u r d e r t h e o r y i s&#13;
IOW b e i n g a d v a n c e d , a n d i t i s a l l e g e d&#13;
uhere w a s a w o m a n i n t h e c a s e .&#13;
•DotroU—Hay, No. I TImotiiy. 112 73 per ton.&#13;
Potatoes, 85c per bu. Live Poultry, spring&#13;
chickens, lie per ft; fowls, 10c; turkeys, l i e ;&#13;
duck*, 10c Eggs, strictly fresh, 12c per-dozeo.&#13;
Butter, best dairy, i5oper ft; creamery, 19c&#13;
Disease in t h e State.&#13;
R e p o r t s t o t h e s t a t e b o a r d o f h e a l t h ,&#13;
b y r e p r e s e n t a t i v e p h y s i c i a n s i n a c t i v e&#13;
g e n e r a l p r a c t i c e , i n d i f f e r e n t p a r t s o f&#13;
t h e s t a t e , i n d i c a t e t h a t r h e u m a t i s m ,&#13;
n e u r a l g i a , b r o n c h i t i s , i n f l u e n z a a n d&#13;
t o n s i l l i t i s , i n t h e o r d e r n a m e d , c a u s e d&#13;
t h e m o s t s i c k n e s s i n M i c h i g a n d u r i n g&#13;
t h e w e e k e n d i n g M a y 11. C e r e b r o -&#13;
s p i n a l m e n i n g i t i s w a s r e p o r t e d p r e s e n t&#13;
a t 7 p l a c e s ; w h o o p i n g c o u g h , 18; d i p h -&#13;
t h e r i a , 25; t y p h o i d f e v e r , 27; m e a s l e s ,&#13;
35; s c a r l e t f e v e r , 70; s m a l l p o x , lo;» a n d&#13;
c o n s u m p t i o n a t 199.&#13;
•&#13;
L o w e r Fare* o n t h e Wabash.&#13;
R a i l r o a d C o m m i s s i o n e r O s b o r n a n -&#13;
n o u n c e s t h a t t h e W a b a s h R a i l r o a d&#13;
c o m p a n y h a s p r o m i s e d t o r e d u c e i t s&#13;
r a t e s o f f a r e t o 2 c e n t s p e r m i l e i n&#13;
M i c h i g a n b e g i n n i n g M a y 20. T h e c o m -&#13;
m i s s i o n e r w a s a b o u t t o c o m m e n c e&#13;
m a n d a m u s p r o c e e d i n g s t o c o m p e l t h e [&#13;
c o m p a n y t o r e d u c e i t s f a r e s .&#13;
C o l d w a t e r c i t i z e n s h a v e o r g a n i z e d a&#13;
h u m n e s o c i e t y f o r t h e p r o t e c t i o n o f&#13;
d u m b b r u t e s f r o m h u m a n o n e s .&#13;
A l m a i s t o h a v e a n e w b a n k , w h i c h&#13;
h a s b e e n o r g a n i z e d u n d e r t h e s t a t e&#13;
l a w , w i t h $ 2 5 , 0 0 0 c a p i t a l T h e n e w i n -&#13;
a t i t u t i o n ' w i l l o p e n ^ f o r b u s i n e s s a b o u t&#13;
J u n e 20.&#13;
A f r e e r u r a l m a i l d e l i v e r y r o u t e h a s&#13;
b e e n e s t a b l i s h e d a t C o r e y .&#13;
T h e p r o p o s i t i o n t o b o n d O w o s a o f o r&#13;
t h e p u r p o s e o f p a v i n g a s t r e e t h a s b e e n&#13;
d e f e a t e d .&#13;
T h e v i l l a g e o f E r i e , M o n r o e , c o u n t y ,&#13;
w a s s c o r c h e d t o t h e e x t e n t o f ¢ 1 0 , 0 0 0&#13;
o n t h e 1 5 t h .&#13;
T h o P o n t i a c - L a p o e r e l e c t r i c r a i l r o a d&#13;
^ p r o m o t e r s h a v e b e e n g r a u t a d a f r a n -&#13;
c h i s e a t L a p e e r .&#13;
H o n . E d w i n F . U h l . o f G r a n d I t a p i d s ,&#13;
a f o r m e r U. S. e m b a s s a d o r , d i e d a t h i s&#13;
s u b u r b a n h o m e j u s t o u t s i d e o f t h a t&#13;
c i t y o n t h e 1 7 t h .&#13;
A b l o c k o f b u i l d i n g s i n t h e b u s i n e s s&#13;
s e c t i o n o f W e i d m a n w a s d e s t r o y e d b y&#13;
tire o n t h e 1 5 t h . L o s s , 9 1 1 , 5 0 0 ; o n l y&#13;
p a r t i a l l y i n s u r e d .&#13;
P r o m o t e r s o f a n e w e l e c t r i c l i n e a r e&#13;
h u s t l i n g f o r a f r a n c h i s e a t A d r i a n .&#13;
T h e p r o p o s e d r o a d i s t o r u n b e t w e e n&#13;
A n n A r b o r a n d A d r i a n .&#13;
T h e w o o l m a r k e t o p e n s i n T e k o n s h a&#13;
a t 11 t o 15 c e n t s p e r p o u n d . F a r m e r s&#13;
a r e d i s g u s t e d w i t . i t h e p r i c e a n d i n -&#13;
c l i n e d t o h o l d t h o p r o d u c t&#13;
T h e m a t t e r o f h o l d i n g a f a i r a n d&#13;
r a c e m e e t i n g t h e c o m i n g s u m m e r a t&#13;
M i n d e n C i t y i s b e i n g a g i t a t e d b y t h e&#13;
r e s i d e n t s o f t h a t v i l l a g e a n d t h e v i -&#13;
c i n i t y .&#13;
B y t h e p r e m a t u r e e x p l o s i o n o f p o w -&#13;
d e r a t t h e C h a m p i o n m i n e , n e a r C h a m -&#13;
p i o n , o n t h e 1 4 t h , o n e m i n e r w a s i n -&#13;
s t a n t l y k i l l e d a n d s e v e n o t h e r s w e r e&#13;
s e r i o u s l y i n j u r e d .&#13;
T h e p e o p l e o f L u d i n g t o n h a ? e t u m -&#13;
b l e d t o t h e f a c t t h a t m o n e y s p e n t i n&#13;
i m p r o v i n g t h e h i g h w a y s i s a g o o d i n -&#13;
v e s t m e n t , a n d a r e g o i n g i n f o r 5 6 0 , 0 0 0&#13;
w o r t h t h i s s u m m e r .&#13;
A g u n c l u b w i t h a b o u t 30 m e m b e r s&#13;
h a s b e e n o r g a n i z e d i n B r o n s o n . T h e&#13;
c l u b w i l l h a v e r e g u l a r s h o o t s a n d w i l l&#13;
a l s o l o o k a f t e r t h e g a m e a n d f i s h i n -&#13;
t e r e s t o f t h e l o c a l i t y .&#13;
! T h e r e c e n t o u t b r e a k o f d i p h t h e r i a&#13;
a t K a l k a s k a i s t h e w o r s t e v e r e x p e r -&#13;
i e n c e d t h e r e , a n d s e v e r a l d e a t h s h a v e&#13;
o c c u r r e d . H e r o i c e f f o r t s a r e b e i n g&#13;
m a d e t o s t a m p o u t t h e d i s e a s e .&#13;
A S a n i l a c c o u n t y f a r m e r w h o s o l o s t&#13;
h i s t e m p e r a s t o s t r i k e h i s h o r s e a viol&#13;
e n t b l o w i n t h e f a c e w i t h h i s fist g o c&#13;
q u i c k r e t r i b u t i o n , f o r t h e f o r c e o f t h e&#13;
b l o w b r o k e t h e b o n e s — o f - — b i s — h a n d ,&#13;
w h i l e t h e h o r s e w a s n o t i n j u r e d . ^~"&#13;
T h e f e a t u r e o f t h e M e m o r i a l D a y c e l -&#13;
e b r a t i o n a t B a t t l e C r e e k w i l l b e t h e&#13;
d e d i c a t i o n o f t h e fine m o n u m e n t&#13;
e r e c t e d t o t h e m e m o r y o f t h e s o l d i e r s&#13;
a n d s a i l o r s w h o g a v e u p t h e i r l i v e s f o r&#13;
t h e i r c o u n t r y i n t h e c i v i l a n d S p a n i s h&#13;
w a r s ,&#13;
I m l a y C i t y f o l k s a r e b o u n d t o b e u p&#13;
i n f r o n t o f t h e p r o c e s s i o n . T h o s e of&#13;
t h e m w h o a r e s u b j e c t t o h a y f e v e r rep&#13;
o r t t h a t t h e i r a n n u a l a t t a c k i s a l -&#13;
r e a d y b e g i n n i n g , w h e r e a s t h e u s u a l&#13;
t i m e i s n o t f o r s o m e t w o o r t h r e e&#13;
m o n t h s y e t .&#13;
T h e p r o s p e c t s f o r a l a r g o f r u i t c r o p&#13;
i n t h e v i c i n i t y o f H e s p e r i a a r e f l a t t e r -&#13;
i n g . E v e r y b i g a n d a n d l i t t l e t r e e a n d&#13;
o l d s c r u b w i t h o u t p r e t e n s i o n s i s l o a d e d&#13;
w i t h b l o s s o m s , a n d t h e s e a s o n i s s o f a r&#13;
a d v a n c e d t h a t i t i s n o t l i k e l y t h a t a n y&#13;
d a m a g e f r o m f r o s t w i l l o c c u r .&#13;
L a p e e r i s h u s t l i n g a f t e r n e w i n d u s -&#13;
t r i e s , a n d h a s s e c u r e d s e v e r a l , b u t&#13;
t h e r e a r e n o v a c a n t h o u s e s i n t o w n t o&#13;
a c c o m m o d a t e t h e w o r k m e n w h o w i l l&#13;
c o m e w i t h t h e n e w f a c t o r i e s . I t l o o k s&#13;
l i k e a e a s e o f h a v i n g t o b u i l d m o r e&#13;
h o u s e s b e f o r e l a n d i n g a n y m o r e i n s t i -&#13;
t u t i o n s w h i c h w i l l g i v e e m p l o y m e n t t o&#13;
l a b o r .&#13;
T h e i n s t a l l a t i o n o f w a t e r m e t e r s a t&#13;
H o u g h t o n h a s r e s u l t e d ^ n a b i g s a v i n g&#13;
of w a t e r . S i n c e t h e y w e r e p u t i n o n&#13;
t h e p r e m i s e s o f e v e r y u s e r o f t h e c i t y&#13;
w a t e r t h e b i g r e s e r v o i r s o n t h e h i l l&#13;
a b o v e t h e c i t y o v e r f l o w e v e r y n i g h t ,&#13;
w h e r e f o r m e r l y t h e y w e r e n e a r l y d r y&#13;
in e v e n t h e w e t t e s t w e a t h e r of s p r i n g&#13;
a u d fall.&#13;
M i s s D o r a M c D o n a l d , a g e d 2tf, o f D e -&#13;
t r o i t , w a s p r o n o u n c e d d e a d o n t h e&#13;
m o r n i n g o f t h e 1 2 t h b y t h e a t t e n d i n g&#13;
p h y s i c i a n , a f t e r h a v i n g l a p s e d i n t o a&#13;
s t a t e o f s u s p e n d e d a n i m a t i o n f o r t h e&#13;
s e c o n d t i m e d u r i n g h e r l i f e t i m e . A&#13;
p e c u l i a r q u i v e r o f t h e m u s c l e s a f t e r 43&#13;
h o u r s a n n o u n c e d t h e e n d . P a r a l y s i s&#13;
of t h e h e a r t w a s g i v e n a s t h e c a u s e o f&#13;
h e r d e a t h .&#13;
I t i s a g o o d s a f e rttle t o k e e p o u t o f&#13;
o t h e r p e o p l e ' s q u a r r e l s , a n d t h e r u l e&#13;
w i l l a p p l y a s w e l l t o t h e q u a r r e l s o f&#13;
d u m b a n i m a l s . A M e n o m i n e e y o u n g&#13;
l a d y s a w t w p d o g s fighting a n d t r i e d&#13;
t o s e p a r a t e t h e m , a n d b o t h o f t h e c a n -&#13;
i n e c o n t e s t a n t s d r o p p e d t h e i r o w n&#13;
q u a r r e l l o n g e n o u g h t o a t t a c k h e r .&#13;
O n e o f h e r h a n d s w a s v e r y b a d l y l a c ^&#13;
e r a t e d b e f o r e s h e c o u l d g e t a w a y .&#13;
DOINGS OP T H 8 418T SESSllOtt.&#13;
T h e f o l l o w i n g b i l l s w e r e p a s s e d b y&#13;
t h e h o u s e o n t h e 1 4 t h : A p p r o p r i a t i n g&#13;
140,000 f o r a n a d d i t i o n a l s t a t e n o r m a l&#13;
s c h o o l ; a p p r o p r i a t i n g 5,000 a c r e s o f&#13;
s t a t e t a x l a n d s i n t h e t o w n s h i p o f&#13;
W h i t n e y , A r e n a c c o u n t y , a n d i n t h e&#13;
t o w n s h i p o f S h e r m a n , I o s c o c o u n t y ,&#13;
f o r t h e p u r p o s e o f c l e a r i n g o u t t h e&#13;
c h a n n e l o f t h e A u O r e s r i v e r ; p r o v i d -&#13;
i n g t h a t In c o s e s b e f o r e t h e s t a t e c r o s s -&#13;
i n g b o a r d s t h e e x p e n s e s a n d p e r d i e m&#13;
c o m p e n s a t i o n o f t h o c t e r k s h a l l b e&#13;
p a i d b y t h e r a i l r o a d a p p l y i n g f o r s a i d&#13;
h e a r i n g ; p r o v i d i n g f o r t h c r e g i s t r a t i o n&#13;
o f g r a n g e l i b r a r i e s ; p r o v i d i n g f o r t h e&#13;
l i c e n s i n g a n d r e g u l a t i o n o f i t i n e r a n t&#13;
p e d d l e r s ; t o o r g a n i z e t h e t o w n s h i p o f&#13;
H a i s e n ; p r o v i d i n g t h a t t e a c h e r s m u s t&#13;
d e p o s i t t h e i r c e r t i f i c a t e s i n t h o c o u n t y&#13;
w h e r e t h e y t e a c h ; m a k i n g i t a m i s d e -&#13;
m e a n o r f o r m e s s e n g e r b o y s t o d i v H l g o&#13;
i n f o r m a t i o n e n t r u s t e d t o t h e m ; p r o -&#13;
v i d i n g f o r t h e a c c e p t a n c e a n d c o l l e c -&#13;
t i o n o f b e q u e s t s t o t h e s t a t e o f M i c h i -&#13;
g a n ; e x e m p t i n g s a l t m a n u f a c t u r e d b y&#13;
t h e W i l l i a m s &amp; A l b e r g e r p r o c e s s f r o m&#13;
i n s p e c t i o n ; c o m p e l l i n g t o w n s h i p t r e a s -&#13;
u r e r s t o h a v e t h e i r s t u b t a x r e c e i p t s&#13;
c o m p a r e d w i t h t h o s e o f t h e c o u n t y&#13;
t r e a s u r e r ; t o p r e v e n t t h o e m p l o y m e n t&#13;
o f w o m e n o r c h i l d r e n o n e m e r y w h e e l s&#13;
o r buf^MUr a n d - p l a c i n g s u c h e s t a b l i s h -&#13;
m e n t s u n d e r t h e c o n t r o l o f t h e l a b o r&#13;
c o m m i s s i o n e r ; a m e n d i n g a c t i n c o r p o r -&#13;
a t i n g A n c i e n t O r d e r o f U n i t e d W o r k -&#13;
m e n , s o a s t o p r o v i d e t h a t d e p e n d e n t s&#13;
a s w e l l a s b l o o d r e l a t i v e c a n s h a r e i n&#13;
t h e b e n e f i c i a r y f u n d ; a m e n d i n g l a w&#13;
r e l a t i v e t o f r a t e r n a l b e n e f i c i a r y f u n d ;&#13;
a m e n d i n g l a w r e l a t i v e t o f r a t e r n a l&#13;
b e n e f i c i a r y s o c i e t i e s s o a s t o d e f i n e&#13;
s p e c i f i c a l l y t h a t s u c h o r g a n i z a t i o n s&#13;
m u s t h a v e a l o d g e S3'stera a n d a r e p r e -&#13;
s e n t a t i v e f o r m o f g o v e r n m e n t ; s e n a -&#13;
t o r i a l r e - a p p o r t i o n m e n t b i l l ; r e p r e s e n -&#13;
t a t i v e r e - a p p o r t i o n m e n t b i l l ; c o n g r e s -&#13;
s i o n a l r e - a p p o r t i o n m e n t b i l l .&#13;
T h e s e n a t e f i n a l l y d i s p o s e d o f t h e&#13;
p a r n i s h e e b i l l o n t h e 1 4 t h b y p a s s i n g&#13;
it, 24 t o 2. I n c o m m i t t e e o f t h o w h o l e&#13;
S e n a t o r C a n n o n t r i e d t o h a v e t h e S4&#13;
e x e m p t i o n g r a n t e d s i n g l e p e r s o n s&#13;
s t r i c k e n o u t , b u t t h i s f a i l e d , a n d t h e&#13;
b i l l w a s a g r e e d to. W h e n i t c a m e u p&#13;
o n t h i r d r e a d i n g S e n a t o r H i g h r o s e t o&#13;
a q u e s t i o n o f p e r s o n a l p r i v i l e g e , a n d i n&#13;
a l o n g s t a t e m e n t e x o n e r a t e d F r e d Cozz&#13;
e n s , o f D e t r o i t , f r o m h a v i n g p o c k e t e d&#13;
a n y m o n e y i n c o n n e c t i o n w i t h t h o&#13;
m e a s u r e l a s t s e s s i o n . H e a l s o s t a t e d&#13;
t h a t h e w a s s a t i s f i e d t h a t C o z z ^ n s h a d&#13;
n o t m a d e t h e r e m a r k a t t r i b u t e d t o h i m&#13;
t o t h e e f f e c t t h a t m o n e y , h a d t o b e&#13;
r a i s e d t o g r e a s e t h e l e g i s l a t u r e . H i g h&#13;
r e a d a s t a t e m e n t s h o w i n 1 ' w h a t m o n c&#13;
33S 2555255¾&#13;
Among Indians of the Western&#13;
Reservation&#13;
ACCORDING TO SKMX AGENCY.&#13;
A&#13;
E v e r y s p r i n g t h e p e o p l e o f M u l l i k c n&#13;
t a l k a b o u t h a v i n g t h e v i l l a g e i n c o r -&#13;
p o r a t e d s o a s t o l&gt;e a b l e t o s e c u r e t h e&#13;
a d v a n t a g e s o f tire p r o t e c t i o n , b e t t e r&#13;
s i d e w a l k s , h i g h e r t a x e s , e t c T h e d i s -&#13;
c u s s i o n i s w a g e d w i t h g r e a t v i g o r o n&#13;
b o t h s i d e s f o r a m o n t h o r t w o , a n d&#13;
t h e n t h o w h o l e m a t t e r i s l a i d n w a y t i l l&#13;
t h e n e x t y e a r . T h e o p e n s e a s o n o f t h e&#13;
d i s c u s s i o n f o r t h i s y e a r i s n o w o n .&#13;
B u t o n e l o n e p r i s o n e r i n t h e c o u n t y&#13;
j a i l o u t o f a p o p u l a t i o n o f 35,000. A&#13;
s t r a n g e r w o u l d p r o b a b l y c o n c l u d e t h a t&#13;
S a n i l a c c o u n t y c o u l d t a k e t h e b i s c u i t&#13;
f o r s t r a i g h t f o r w a r d , u n d e v i a t i n g h o n -&#13;
e-sty, b u t t h e f a c t i s , s a y s t h e L e x i n g -&#13;
t o n N e w s , t h e o n l y r e a s o n w h y o u r&#13;
c o u n t y b a s t i l e ' i s n ' t f a i r l y b u r s t i n g&#13;
w i t h a g a n g o f u n m i t i g a t e d r a s c a l s i s&#13;
b e c a u s e j u s t i c e i s b e i n g c h e a t e d o u t o f&#13;
h e r d u e a&#13;
C o z z e n s h a d r a i s e d , a u d w h a t h e h a d&#13;
d o n e w i t h i t , a n d h e c o n c l u d e d b y u r g -&#13;
i n g t h e p a s s a g e o f t h e b i l l . I t w i l l&#13;
n o w h a v e t o g o b a c k t o t h e h o u s e for&#13;
c o n c u r r e n c e i n t h e $4 e x e m p t i o n .&#13;
T h e s e n a t e p a s s e d t h e f o l l o w i n g b i l l s&#13;
o n t h e H t h : T o a m e n d t h e c h a r t e r of&#13;
B a t t l e C r e e k : t o a m e n d G r a n d R a p i d s&#13;
c h a r t e r : t o a m e n d B a y C i t y o h a r t e r ;&#13;
t o o r g a n i z e t h e u n i o n s c h o o l d i s t r i c t o f&#13;
M i t c h e l l t o w n s h i p , A l c o n a c o u n t y ; t o&#13;
d e f e n d t h e l o y a l q u a l i f i c a t i o n s f o r k i n -&#13;
d e r g a r t e n , m u s i c a n d d r a w i n g t e a c h e r s ;&#13;
t o e n a b l e t h e f a c u l t y o f t h e A g r i c u l -&#13;
t u r a l c o l l e g e t o a p p o i n t a s e c r e t a r y ;&#13;
d a i r y a n d f o o d c o m m i s s i o n b i l l ; t o&#13;
l i c e n s e c m b a l m e r s ; g a r n i s h e e b i l l ; t o&#13;
a m e n d t h e a c t r e l a t i v e t o c o r p o r a t i o n s&#13;
f o r b u y i n g a n d s e l l i n g r e a l e s t a t e : t o&#13;
a m e n d t h e l a w r e l a t i v e t o q u a r a n t i n e&#13;
n u i s a n c e a n d o f f e n s i v e t r a d e s ; t o a m e n d&#13;
-j t h e l a w r e l a t i v e t o c o r p o r a t i o n s f o r&#13;
I o w n i n g office b u i l d i n g s , e t c .&#13;
T h e S e n a t e p a s s e d t h e f o l l o w i n g&#13;
! b i l l s o n t h e 1 5 t h : T o a m e n d P e t o s -&#13;
I k e y ' s c h a r t e r ; - t o e n a b l e A l p e n a t o&#13;
j b u i l d a n d o p e r a t e a n e l e c t r i c l i g h t i n g&#13;
! s y s t e m ; t o r e a r r a n g e s c h o o l d i s t r i c t s&#13;
i i n M a r a t h o n t o w n s h i p . A l p e n a c o u n t y ;&#13;
! t o v a l i d a t e s p e c i a l a s s e s s m e n t s f o r&#13;
' s e w e r p u r p o s e s i n H i g h l a n d P a r k ,&#13;
j W a y n e c o u n t y ; t o p r o t e c t fish i n S a g i -&#13;
j ;vaw r i v e r a n d t r i b u t a r i e s ; t o r e v i s e&#13;
i J a c k s o n ' s c h ^ C e r ; - t o a m e n d A l p e n a ' s&#13;
' c h a r t e r ; t o r e g u l a t e fishing i n O a k l a n d&#13;
I c o u n t y ; t o s e c u r e g r e a t e r c o m f o r t a n d&#13;
j s a f e t y f o r p e r s o n s t r a v e l i n g o n s u b u r -&#13;
! b a n s t r e e t r a i l w a y s ; t o a l l o w l i f e i n -&#13;
j s u i a n c e c o m p a n i e s t o d e p o s i t i n M i c h i -&#13;
g a n t h e b o n d s o f M i c h i g a n c o r p o r a -&#13;
t i o n s ; t o e x e m p t m o r t g a g e s f r o m t a x -&#13;
a t i o n .&#13;
T h e c o n f e r e n c e c o m m i t t e e s o n t h e&#13;
r a i l r o a d a d v a l o r e m t a x a t i o n m e a s u r e&#13;
r e a c h e d a n a g r e e m e n t o n t h e n i g h t o f&#13;
t h e H t h . T h e b i l l a g r e e d u p o n p r o -&#13;
v i d e s f o r t h e t a x a t i o n o f r a i l r o a d s ,&#13;
u n i o n s t a t i o n a n d d e p o t c o m p a n i e s , e x -&#13;
p r e s s c o m p a n i e s , c a r l o a n i n g , r e f r i g e r -&#13;
a t o r a n d f a s t l i n e c o m p a n i e s . T h e corp&#13;
o r a t i o n s e x c l u d e d f r o m t h e b i l l a r e&#13;
t e l e p h o n e , t e l e g r a p h tfSd s l e e p i n g c a r&#13;
c o m p a n i e s , a n d if t h e a g r e e m e n t a r -&#13;
r i v e d a t i s u p h e l d b y b o t h h o u s e s t h e y&#13;
w i l l c o n t i n u e t o piiy a speciti.3 t a x .&#13;
T h e f o l l o w i n g b i l l s w e r e p a s s e d b y&#13;
t h e h o u s e o n t h e 1 5 t h : A m e n d i n g&#13;
c h a r t e r o f A l p e n a : a l l o w i n g u s e o f b o b s&#13;
a n d t i p - u p s f o r fishing i n w a t e r s of&#13;
O a k l a n d c o u n t y ; i n c r e a s i n g s a l a r y o f&#13;
s t a t e l i b r a r i a n f r o m 81,200 t o ¢ 1 , 5 0 0 a&#13;
y e a r ; a u t h o r i z i n g s t a t e a u d i t o r s t o i n -&#13;
v e s t i g a t e c l a i m o f B e n S t r e s e n R e u t e r ,&#13;
of K a l a m a z o o , w n o w a s i n j u r e d b y t h e&#13;
e x p l o s i o n of. a r i d e a t I s l a n d L a k e ;&#13;
a g r i c u l t u r a l m i l l t a x , 8100,000 a y e a r ;&#13;
a u t h o r i z i n g s t a t e a u d i t o r s t o i n v e s t i -&#13;
g a t e t h e c l a i m o f F r e d L W a i t , o f Mas&#13;
o n , w h o w a s i n j u r e d w h i l e d r i l l i n g a t&#13;
I s l a n d L a k e ; p r o v i d i n g a n a d d i t i o n a l&#13;
s a l a r y o f 8 l , s o o a y e a r i»ach f o r t h e&#13;
t h r e e m e m b e r s o f t h e s t a t e b o a r d o f&#13;
a u d i t o r s , t o g e t h e r w i t h n e c e s s a r y&#13;
t r a v e l i n g a n d h o t e l e x p e n s e s .&#13;
T h e d a t e o f final.adjournment o f t h e&#13;
l e g i s l a t u r e i s t h e a l l - a b s o r b i n g q u e s -&#13;
t i o n j u s t n o w . T h e s p e a k e r s a y s t h o&#13;
8 » P e r s o n s a m Q u a r a n t i n e d Koar P l e r i * .&#13;
8. D.—Non-Union M e n Mobbed b y A l -&#13;
blans. t h e O a t c o m * o f a Street R a i l w a y&#13;
Strike—Other I t e m s .&#13;
N o n - U n i o n Men Mobbed*&#13;
U n d e r t h e e s c o r t o f a p l a t o o n o f&#13;
m o u n t e d p o l i c e a n d s u r r o u n d e d b y a&#13;
m o b o f 2,000 A l b a n i a n s , 3 0 0 n o n - u n i o n&#13;
m e n w e r e t a k e n a t m i d n i g h t t o t h e&#13;
Q u a i l s t r e e t c a r b a r n s o f t h e U n i t e d&#13;
T r a c t i o n c o m p a n y , w h i c h i s t h e m a i n&#13;
s t a t i o n o f t h e A l b a n y l i n e s o f t h e c o m -&#13;
p a n y , S t o n e s w e r e h u r l e d a t t h e n o n -&#13;
u n i o n m e n a s t h e y w e r e t a k e n t o t h e&#13;
b a r n s . T h i s i s t h e c o m p a n y ' s first s t e p&#13;
t o w a r d o p e r a t i n g i t s l i n e s w i t h n o n -&#13;
u n i o n n j e n . I t i s r e p o r t e d t h a t t h e&#13;
n o n - u n i o n m e n h a i l e d f r o m P h i l a d e l -&#13;
p h i a .&#13;
Soldiers a n d Strikers J o i n In Combat.&#13;
S o s e r i o u s w a s t h e s i t u a t i o n i n A l -&#13;
b a n y , N . Y . , o n t h o 1 5 t h , o n a c c o u n t&#13;
o f t h e s t r e e t c a r s t r i k e , t h a t Gov. O d e l l&#13;
p o s t p o n e d a c o n t i n u a n c e o f h i s t o u r t o&#13;
t h e s t a t e i n s t i t u t i o n s . N o t w i t h s t a n d -&#13;
i n g t h e f a c t t h a t p l e n t y o f s o l d i e r s&#13;
w e r e o n h a n d t o g u a r d t h e c o m p a n y ' s&#13;
p r o p e r t y , n o t a c a r w a s i n c o m m i s s i o n .&#13;
S e v e r a l c l a s h e s b e t w e e n t h e n o n - u n i o n&#13;
m e n a n d s o l d i e r s a g a i n s t t h e u n i o n ,&#13;
m e n o c c u r r e d d u r i n g t h e d a y . T h e&#13;
f o l l o w i n g d a y , h o w e v e r , t h e U n i t e d&#13;
T r a c t i o n c o m p a n y b e g a n p r e p a r a t i o n s&#13;
e a r l y i n t h e m o r n i n g t o m o v e i t s c a r s .&#13;
O n e e n t i r e r e g i m e n t o f s o l d i e r s w e r e&#13;
s t a t i o n e d a t t h e c o m p a n y ' s b a r n a n d&#13;
s e v e r a l c o m p a n i e s w e r e s t a t i o n e d a l o n g&#13;
t h e r o u t e . A t a c u r v e i n t h e r o a d a&#13;
b i g c r o w d h a d g a t h e r e d a n d t h e t r o o p s&#13;
e x p e r i e n c e d c o n s i d e r a b l e t r o u b l e i n&#13;
d i s p e r s i n g t l i e m . A t first t h e t r o o p s&#13;
w e r e f o r c e d b a c k , b u t w e r e i m m e d i a t e l y&#13;
o r d e r e d t o " c h a r g e b a y o n e t s " a n d t h e y&#13;
s t a r t e d f o r t h e c r o w d . J u s t a s t h e y&#13;
r e a c h e d t h e m t h e r e w a s a q u i c k r e -&#13;
v e r s e o f t h e g u n s a u d t h e b u t t s s m a s h e d&#13;
a g a i n s t t h e m o b . W i t h a h o w l t h e&#13;
c r o w d s t a r t e d b a c k , s o m e w i t h b l o o d y&#13;
f a c e s a n d s o m e w i t h b r o k e n b o n e s .&#13;
T h e m o b w a s n o t a l l o w e d t o s t o p u n -&#13;
t i l i t h a d b e e n d r i v e n t l i r e e b l o c k s .&#13;
T h i s a c c o m p l i s h e d d e t a i l s b e g a n t h e&#13;
w o r k o f c l o s i n g u p t h e s a l o o n s . C a r s&#13;
w e r e r u n a t i r r e g u l a r i n t e r v a l s d u r i n g&#13;
t h e d a y , b u t w e r e n o t p a t r o n i z e d v e r y&#13;
l i b e r a l l y .&#13;
T h e Strikers Win Oat,&#13;
T h e s t r i k e a t - A l b a n y w a s s e t t l e d o n&#13;
t h e 1 8 t h , t h e m c a w i n n i n g . A l l t h e&#13;
s c a b s w e r e s e n t b a c k h o m e a n d t h e&#13;
r e g u l a r m e n w e r e g i v e n t h e i r o l d p o s i -&#13;
t i o n s b a c k . T h e 19th w a s t h e first d a y&#13;
of a c t i v e o p e r a t i o n s o f a l l t h e r a i l w a y&#13;
l i n e s , b u t o w i n g t o t h e h e a v y r a i n f a l l ,&#13;
t h e d e m o n s t r a t i o n a t t h e s t a r t i n g o f&#13;
t h e first c a r w a s n o t a t t e n d e d b y a s&#13;
m a n y p e o p l e a s h a d b e e n a n t i c i p a t e d .&#13;
H o w e v e r , p i s t o l s w e r e fired, f l a g s&#13;
w a v e d , t o r p e d o e s w e r e p l a c e d o n t h e&#13;
t r a c k a n d e x p l o d e d , t h e m o t o r r a e n a n d&#13;
c o n d u c t o r s w o r e f l a g s o n t h e i r c o a t s&#13;
a n d f u l l y 200 m e n a n d w o m e n f o u g h t&#13;
f o r t h e p r i v i l e g e o f t h e f i r s t r i d e . T h e&#13;
f u n e r a l o f t h e t w o v i c t i m s s h o t b y t h e&#13;
n a t i o n a l g u a r d s m e n w a s h e l d o n t h e&#13;
a f t e r n o o n o f t h e 19th.&#13;
Kxplonlon in a .Mine Killed Six Men.&#13;
S i x m i n e r s l o s t t h e i r l i v e s , five w e r e&#13;
f a t a l l y i n j u r e d , a n d t h r e e w e r e s e r i -&#13;
o u s l y b u r n e d i n a n e x p l o s i o n a t t h e&#13;
s h a f t o f t h e ( J e o r g e ' s C r e e k C o a l &amp;&#13;
I r o n Co., a t F a r m i n g t o n , s e v e n m i l e s&#13;
w e s t o f F a i r m o u n t , W. V a . , o n t h e 1 5 t h .&#13;
T h e m i n e r s w o r k a t a l e v e l o f 2 5 3 f e e t&#13;
b e l o w t h e s u r f a c e . F i f t e e n o f t h e m&#13;
w e r e a s s i g n e d t o a p o r t i o n o f t h e m i n e&#13;
t h a t h a s b e e n w o r k e d f o r s o m e t i m e ,&#13;
a n d t h e r e m a i n d e r ^ w e r e p u t t o w o r k&#13;
o n h e a d i n g s q u i t e a d i s t a n c e a w a y .&#13;
O n e o f t h e m e n i n t h e r o o m s , i t i s a l -&#13;
l e g e d , h a d s m u g g l e d a t o r c h i n t o t h e&#13;
m i n e s a s i t g i v e s a m u c h b e t t e r l i g h t&#13;
t h a n t h e s a f e t y l a m p s p r e s c r i b e d b y&#13;
t h e c o m p a n y . T h i s i s t h e m o s t s e r i -&#13;
o u s e x p l o s i o n t h a t e v e r o c c u r r e d i n t h e&#13;
F a i r m o u n t c o a l r e g i o n .&#13;
S m a l l p o x Eplrtem 1c A m o n g Indians.&#13;
R e p o r t s r e a c h i n g t h e i n t e r i o r d e -&#13;
p a r t m e n t s h o w t h a t s m a l l p o x i s w i d e -&#13;
s p r e a d a m o n g t h e I n d i a n s o f t h e w e s t -&#13;
ern r e s e r v a t i o n s , A r e p o r t o n t h e 1 3 t h&#13;
^rora t h e C h e y e n n e r i v e r S i o u x a g e n c y&#13;
tn S o u t h D a k o t a s a y s s m a l l p o x i s p r e v -&#13;
a l e n t t h r o u g h o u t t h a t r e s e r v a t i o n a n d&#13;
hat m a n y d e a t h s h a v e o c c u r r e d . O u t&#13;
&gt;f 22 p e r s o n s q u a r a n t i n e d n e a r P i e r r e ,&#13;
x D . , t h e r e h a s b e e n 1 d e a t h a n d 1 6&#13;
a r s o n s a r e a f f e c t e d . S m a l l p o x i s&#13;
• a g i n g i n t h e v i c i n i ' t y o f t h e Y a n k t o n&#13;
i g e n c y , S. D . , a m o n g t h e w h i t e p o p u -&#13;
a t i o n . A t s o m e o f t h e u p - r i v e r a g e n -&#13;
c i e s n u m e r o u s d e a t h s h a v e o c c u r r e d .&#13;
At Y a n k t o n 10 e x t r a p o l i c e m e n h a v e&#13;
&gt;een s w o r n i n a s a n e m e r g e n c y m e a s -&#13;
ure.&#13;
3 5 Lives Lost In Accident.&#13;
A t e l e g r a m r e c e i v e d a t S t . L o u i s , M o . ,&#13;
»n t h e 1 3 t h , f r o m T o w a r , 111., a n -&#13;
n o u n c e s t h e s i n k i n g n e a r t h a t p l a c e o f&#13;
ae s t e a m e r C i t y o f P a d u c a h , o f t h e Sfc&#13;
l i o u i s &amp; T e n n e s s e e tSTver P a c k e t Co. Ifi&#13;
* r e p o r t e d t h a t 35 l i v e s w e r e l o s t A n&#13;
s c u r s i o n p a r t y w a s a b o a r d t h e b o a t&#13;
it t h e t i m e o f t h e a c c i d e n t&#13;
A n e x c e l l e n t c r o p o f f r u i t o f a l l&#13;
r i n d s i s p r o m i s e d in^ t h e v i c i n i t y o f&#13;
M u l r&#13;
/&#13;
- J-*-*. * . ? * _ * * * • mmmm&#13;
"It's lonesome—sorto' lonesome.-^-it's a&#13;
Sund'y day, to me,&#13;
It 'pears like—mor'n any day I nearly&#13;
ever see!&#13;
Yit, with the Stars and Stripes above,&#13;
a flutterin* in the air,&#13;
On ev'ry soldier*$ grave I'd love to&#13;
lay a lily there.&#13;
"They say, though, Decoration days is&#13;
ginerally observed&#13;
Most cv'rywheres—especially by soldier&#13;
boys that served—&#13;
But me and mother's never went—we&#13;
seldom git away—&#13;
In pint o'fact, we're alius home on&#13;
Decoration Day.&#13;
"They say the old boy3 marches&#13;
through the streets in columns&#13;
grand,&#13;
A-folrerin' the old war tunes they're&#13;
playin* on the band—&#13;
And citizens all jinin' in—and little&#13;
children, too—&#13;
All marchin' under shelter of the old&#13;
Red, White and Blue.&#13;
"With roses! roses! roses!— ev'rybody&#13;
in the town!&#13;
And crowds o' girls in white, just fairly&#13;
loaded down! —&#13;
Oh! don't the boys know it, from their&#13;
camp acrost the hill?—&#13;
Don't they see their com'ades coming&#13;
and the old flag wavin' still?&#13;
"Oh! can't they hear the bugle and the&#13;
rattle of the drum?—&#13;
Ain't they no way under heaven they&#13;
can rickollect us some?&#13;
Ain't they no way we can coax 'em&#13;
through the rises jest to say&#13;
They know that every day on earth's&#13;
their Decoration Day?&#13;
"We're tried that—me and motherwhere&#13;
Elias takes his rest,&#13;
In the orchard—in his uniform, and&#13;
hands acrost his breast.&#13;
And the flag he died fer, smiling and&#13;
a-ripplin* in the breeze&#13;
Abore his grave—and, over that—the&#13;
robin in the trees!&#13;
"And yet it's lonesome—lonesome! —&#13;
It's a Sund'y day to me,&#13;
It 'pears like—more'n any day I nearly&#13;
ever see—&#13;
Yit, with the Stars and Stripes above,&#13;
a-flutterln' in the air,&#13;
On ev*ry soldier's grave I'd love to&#13;
lay a lily there.&#13;
—James Whitcomb Riles.&#13;
a minute and turned her face toward Phebe Ann, with your being so sick,&#13;
the window. "It seems 'most too bad, , and all."&#13;
don't it?" she said, meditatively. I "Go—get some!" she panted. Her&#13;
"When she's done so much every motioning hand and her eager eyes&#13;
As? \K ? fl%li&#13;
EMEMBERED&#13;
BY MAKYE.WlLKgNS. ^&#13;
"I guess there won't be a great&#13;
show of flowers on Sylvester's grave&#13;
this year," said Sarah Cook. Her&#13;
voloe had a certain triumph in it, but&#13;
it ended In a decorous sigh.&#13;
"I guess there won't, either," returned&#13;
her sister Mrs. Kemp. "I&#13;
guess Phebe Ann is too sick to think&#13;
much about i t " Her voice sounded&#13;
like Sarah's.&#13;
litter Kemp dropped htr sewing for&#13;
year, and thought so much about it."&#13;
"I don't know - as I think it's too&#13;
bad," said Mrs. Kemp. "Of course I'm&#13;
sorry Phebe Ann is sick, but wlieu it&#13;
comes to these flowers she's always&#13;
covered Sylvester's grave with, Decoration&#13;
day, I guess there was a great&#13;
deal of it for show. It would have&#13;
seemed different if he had been in the&#13;
war, but I've thought a good many&#13;
times, when I've seen Sylvester's gravi&#13;
with more flowers on it than any of&#13;
the soldier's, that Phebe Ann had a&#13;
little eye to what folks would say, for&#13;
all she felt so bad."&#13;
"There's the band!" cried Lucy.&#13;
It was a very warm day for the season—&#13;
almost as warm as midsummer.&#13;
The windows were wide open. The&#13;
two. women and the girl leaned their&#13;
heads out and listened. They could&#13;
hear far-away music. Two little girls&#13;
with their hands full of flowers ran&#13;
past.&#13;
"They're just forming down at tka&#13;
town hall," said Lucy. "Annie Dole&#13;
and Lottie are just going."&#13;
"They came over here for flowers&#13;
this morning," said her mother, "and&#13;
I told 'em I hadn't any to give. AH&#13;
I had was lilacs, besides that little&#13;
early rose bush, and they'd got all the&#13;
lilacs they wanted of their own, ami&#13;
there was only just three roses on that&#13;
bush, and I could not bear to cut 'em.&#13;
The procession ain't coming—the music&#13;
don't sound a mite nearer. It&#13;
won't be here for an hour yet."&#13;
"I don't s'pose Phebe Ann's husband&#13;
will lift his finger to help us, even if&#13;
she should be taken away, and ho&#13;
left without a chick nor child in the&#13;
world," said Mrs. Kemp.&#13;
Phebe Ann's husband was her own&#13;
dead husband's brother, but she never&#13;
spoke of him by his own name.&#13;
"I wonder how much Phebe Ann's:&#13;
husband has got?" said Sarah Cook.&#13;
"Well, I gues3 he's laid by a littla&#13;
something. They must have, with no&gt;&#13;
family!"&#13;
"Mebbe he will do something if it&#13;
eveT happens that he ain't under anybody&#13;
else's thumb."&#13;
"It won't make any difference now&#13;
He's laid under the thumb so long that&#13;
he's all flattened out of the shape he&#13;
was made in. He used to bow tclnd&#13;
of sideways behind Phebe Ann's back&#13;
when I met him, but he don't do that&#13;
now. I met him face to face the other&#13;
day, and he never looked at me. I&#13;
don't know what poor Thomas would&#13;
say If he was alive. I wonder what&#13;
Lucy is picking lilacs for? Lucy!"&#13;
"What say?" Lucy's sweet, thin&#13;
voice called back. Her smooth, fair&#13;
head was half hidden in a great clump&#13;
of lilac bushes by the gate. She was&#13;
bending the branches over and breaking&#13;
off full purple clusters.&#13;
"What you picking those lilacs for?"&#13;
^1 just thought I'd pick a few."&#13;
"What for? I ain't going to have&#13;
any in the houso!They're too sweet—&#13;
they're sickish!"&#13;
"I ain't going to bring them into the&#13;
house," said Lucy. She let a branch&#13;
fly back and went across the yard with&#13;
a great bunch of lilacs in her hands.&#13;
"I wonder what she's up to?" said&#13;
her mother.&#13;
Lucy returned just before the procession&#13;
passed. The cemetery was a&#13;
little way beyond the house. Her*&#13;
rr-&gt;thcr and aunt, and a neighbor who&#13;
had come in stood at the windows&#13;
listening eagerly to the approaching&#13;
music. Lucy joined them. The procesisan&#13;
filed slowly past: The Grand&#13;
Army men, the village band, the inlnisteTs-&#13;
and--4oealdignitaries, and the&#13;
rear-guard of children with flowers.&#13;
An accompanying crowd thronged the&#13;
sidewalks.&#13;
"I re just been saying to Sarah that&#13;
Phebe Ann won't have Sylvester's&#13;
grave decked out much this year,"&#13;
said Mrs. Kemp. Her voice was pleasanter&#13;
and more guarded than before.&#13;
"I heard Phebe Ann was pretty&#13;
low," said the neighbor.&#13;
Phebe Ann's husband Went softly&#13;
behind the nurse to the^ bedroom.&#13;
Phebe Ann looked up at him and beckoned&#13;
imperatively. He went ctoso and&#13;
bent over her. "What is It, Phebe_.&#13;
Ann?" said he.'&#13;
"IB it—Decoration day?" she whispered&#13;
with difficulty, for she was&#13;
growing very weak.&#13;
"Yes, 'tis, Phebe Ann," said' her&#13;
husband.&#13;
"Have you got—any flowers for—&#13;
Sylvester!$ grave?"&#13;
"No, I ain't I ain't thought of it,&#13;
spoke louder than her tongue.&#13;
"Yes, I will, I will, Phebe Ann!&#13;
Don't you fret another mite about it."&#13;
The nurse followed him out of the&#13;
room.&#13;
"I can't go to the green-house!" he&#13;
whispered agitatedly. "It's five miles&#13;
away!"&#13;
"Land, get any kind of flowers!"&#13;
said the nurse. 'Get dandelions and&#13;
buttercups, if you can't find anything&#13;
else."&#13;
The old man took his hat down with&#13;
a bewildered air and went slowly out&#13;
of the yard. At the gate he paused&#13;
and looked around. There were no&#13;
flowers in the yard; there were several&#13;
bushes, rose and phlox, but it was too&#13;
early for them to blossom. Over at&#13;
the left stretched a field, and that was&#13;
waving with green and gold. Phebe&#13;
Ann's husband went over into th*»&#13;
field and began pulling the buttercups&#13;
in great handfulls, and the grass with&#13;
them. He had all he could carry&#13;
when he left the field and went solemnly&#13;
down the road. *&#13;
Sylvester's grave was at the farther&#13;
side of the cemetery. The old man.&#13;
with his load of buttercups and grass,&#13;
made his way to it. The soldiers'&#13;
graves were decorated with flags and&#13;
flowers, but the people had gone. The&#13;
cemetery was very still. When John&#13;
Kemp reached Sylvester's grave, h»&#13;
started and stared. There was a great&#13;
bunch of lilacs on the grave and three&#13;
charming, delicate pink roses in a&#13;
vase.&#13;
"I wonder who put those flowers&#13;
there!" he muttered. He laid the buttercups&#13;
and grass down on the grave:&#13;
then he stood still. It was over twenty&#13;
years since the boy Sylvester had&#13;
been laid there—a little soldier who&#13;
had fought only his own pain. "I&#13;
wonder who put those flowers theTe!"&#13;
John Kemp muttered again.&#13;
He went out of the cemetery^_ but&#13;
Instead of turning down the road&#13;
toward his own home, walked hesitatingly&#13;
the other way toward the&#13;
house of his sister-in-law—Thomas'&#13;
wife, as he always spoke of her.&#13;
Lucy's face was at one open window,&#13;
her Aunt Sarah Cook's at the&#13;
other.&#13;
"Lucy!" called the old man, standing&#13;
at the gate.&#13;
Lucy came out to him tremblingly.&#13;
Sarah Cook ran to tell her sister; she&#13;
thbught Phebe Ann must be dead.&#13;
"Do you know who put those flowers&#13;
there?" asked the old man in a&#13;
husky voice.&#13;
"I did," said Lucy. Her face flushed.&#13;
"I thought there wouldn't be anybody&#13;
to see to it, now Aunt Phebe Ann is&#13;
sick," she explained timidly.&#13;
Her uncle looked wistfully at her,&#13;
his eyes full of tears. "Sylvester was&#13;
a dreadful sufferer," he said.&#13;
Lucy did not know what to say. She&#13;
looked up at him, and her soft face&#13;
seemed to take on distressed lines like&#13;
his.&#13;
The old man turned abruptly and&#13;
"Yes'm."&#13;
"What did you put on?"&#13;
"Some lilacs and—roses."&#13;
You didn't pick those roses?"&#13;
"O, mother, the lilacs didn't seem&#13;
quite enough! Aunt Phebe Ann he&#13;
always done so much!" Lucy said&#13;
Her mother and her aunt looked a1&#13;
each other. "I shouldn't have though*&#13;
you'd have picked those roses wlthou*&#13;
saying anything about it," said he&#13;
mother, but her voic« was embarrassed&#13;
rather than harsh. She weir&#13;
back to the kitchen and proceeded&#13;
with her work of making biscuits for&#13;
supper. The sewing was all finished&#13;
Lucy set the table. After supper they&#13;
went out in the cemetery and strolled&#13;
about looking at the flowers, in the&#13;
soft, low light "Who brought all th.a:&#13;
mess of buttercups and grass, 1 won&#13;
der?" said Sarah Cook, as they stood&#13;
over Sylvester's grave.&#13;
"I guess it must have been Pheb*&#13;
Ann's husband—it looks just like a&#13;
man," Mrs. Kemp repfted. Lucy go*,&#13;
down on heT knees and straightened&#13;
the buttercups into a bouquet.&#13;
"I wonder if she'll liVe the night&#13;
out," said Sarah Cook, soberly.&#13;
"I've listened to near the bell tol'&#13;
eveTy morning this week," said Mrs&#13;
Kemp. "I don't believe she can live&#13;
much, longer. I'd go up there tonight&#13;
if I thought she wanted me to."&#13;
The next morning Mrs. Kemp, list-&#13;
WONDER WHO PUT THOSE&#13;
FLOWERS THERE?"&#13;
went away. "Phebe Ann is sinking,"&#13;
he said, indistinctly, as he went&#13;
Lucy's mother and her aunt rushed&#13;
to the door to meet her. "Is Phebe&#13;
Ann dead?" Sarah Cook called out&#13;
"No. she ain't dead."&#13;
"What did he want to see you for?f&#13;
asked Mrs. Kemp.&#13;
Lucy hesitated; a shamefaced look&#13;
came over her face. "What did no&#13;
want?" her mother asked, imperatively.&#13;
/&#13;
"He wanted to know who put some&#13;
flowers on-^-Sylveiter's gravtV&#13;
"Did you?"&#13;
"DO YOU KNOW WHO PUT THOSE&#13;
POLOWERS THERE?"&#13;
ening with her head thrust out of the&#13;
window in the early sunlicht, heard&#13;
indeed the bell tolling for Phebe Ann&#13;
"She's gone." she told Sarah Cook and&#13;
Lucy; and Lucy cried.&#13;
They all went to Phebe Ann's funeral&#13;
and followed her to the grave. Mr3&#13;
Kemp's and Sarah Cook's eyes wer*-&#13;
red when they came home. "There&#13;
were a great many good things about&#13;
Phebe Ann, after all." Mrs. Kemp said&#13;
"I always said there was," Sarah&#13;
returned defiantly.&#13;
The morning after the funeral John&#13;
\"&gt;mp came to the door. Lucv answered&#13;
his knock. He looked old and&#13;
dejected, but he tried to smile. "I&#13;
want to see you a'minute," said he&#13;
"No, I can't come in—not this morning.&#13;
I'm coming~before long. I hop?&#13;
things will be different from what&#13;
they have been. It was her wish. 1&#13;
went home that day and told Phebe&#13;
Ann how you'd put the flowers there&#13;
"d she beckoned to me to come and&#13;
lean over. Then she made out to tell&#13;
me. She wanted you to have Sylvester's&#13;
money that we put in the bank&#13;
for him when he was born. It's been&#13;
growing. We haven't spent any, excepting&#13;
for the flowers, and its near&#13;
five hundred dollars. She wanted m*&#13;
to give it to you right away, and&#13;
you're going to have it just as soon&#13;
as I can get it out of the bank. Pheb&gt;&#13;
Ann said you could have some more&#13;
schooling and not have to work so&#13;
hard. And I guess you'll have more&#13;
than that, too. some day. if you outlive&#13;
me. Phebe Ann, she thought&#13;
mebbe I could make some arrangements&#13;
with your mother and aunt to&#13;
come to our house and live, and tak?&#13;
care of it. She said she didn't want&#13;
any other women in there. She knew&#13;
they were good housekeepers and&#13;
would keep things the way she did.&#13;
You tell your mother I'm coming in&#13;
to see her some time before long."&#13;
John Kemp went feebly down the&#13;
walk, and Lucy returned1 to the kitchen.&#13;
The door had been ajar, and hemother&#13;
and Sarah Cook had heard&#13;
every wo?d. They were both crying.&#13;
"Coming just now when we didn't&#13;
know which way to turn!" sobbed&#13;
Sarah Cook. "Poor Phebe Ann!"&#13;
"Well,- there's one thing about it."&#13;
said Mrs. Kemp, brokenly, "there&#13;
sha'n't one Decoration day go by as&#13;
long as I live, without Sylvester's&#13;
grave being trimmed as handsome aa&#13;
•' his mother was alive!"—Youth's&#13;
Companion.&#13;
MaKmg r7&gt;&lt;r 7&gt;ay Complete.&#13;
There will be old soldiers at the&#13;
Decoration day ceremonies this year&#13;
who may never bo with us again; there&#13;
will be children present for the first&#13;
time, too. Then let us make the day&#13;
a never-to-be-forgotten one for the&#13;
child, a tender memory to the ones the&#13;
old soldier leaves behind. The early&#13;
inculcated lesson of patriotism will&#13;
never be effaced, and a few words of&#13;
appreciation to the veteran will mean&#13;
more than will the handsomest wreath&#13;
laid on his coffin when for him the last&#13;
bugle call has sounded, .&#13;
A FAMOUS OLD HOUSE.&#13;
The house, of Walter Baker 6 Cow,&#13;
whose manufactures of cocoa and&#13;
chocolate have become familiar in th*&#13;
mouth as household words, was established&#13;
one hundred and twenty-ono&#13;
years ago (1780) on the N e p o n s t river&#13;
in the old town of Dorchester, a suburb&#13;
of Boston. From the little wooden&#13;
mill, "by the rude bridge that arched&#13;
the flood," where the enterprise was&#13;
first started, there has grown "p the&#13;
largest industrial establishment of the&#13;
kind in the world. It might be said&#13;
t h a t while other manufacturers come&#13;
and go, Waiter Baker &amp; Co., go on forever.&#13;
What Is the secret of their great success?&#13;
It is a very simple one. They&#13;
have won and held the confidence of&#13;
the great and constantly increasing&#13;
body of consumers by always maintaining&#13;
the highest standard in the&#13;
quality of their cocoa and chocolate&#13;
preparations,* and selling them at the&#13;
lowest price for which unadulterated&#13;
articles of good quality can be put&#13;
upon the market. They welcome honest&#13;
competition; but they feel justified&#13;
in denouncing in the strongest terms&#13;
the fraudulent methods by which inferior&#13;
preparations are palmed off on&#13;
customers who ask for and suppose&#13;
they are getting the genuine articles.&#13;
The oest grocers refuse to handle such&#13;
goods, not alone for the reason that,&#13;
in the long run, it doesn't pay to do it,&#13;
hut because their sense ol fair dealing&#13;
will not permit them to aid in the sale&#13;
of goods that defraud their customers&#13;
and injure honest manufacturers.&#13;
Every package of the goods made by&#13;
the Walter Baker Company bears the&#13;
well-known trade mark "La Belle&#13;
Chocolatiere," and their place of manufacture&#13;
"Dorchester, Mass." Housekeepers&#13;
are advised to examine their&#13;
purchases, and make sure that other&#13;
goods have not been substituted.&#13;
An attractive little book of "Choice&#13;
Recipes" will be mailed free to any&#13;
housekeeper who sends her name and&#13;
address to Walter Baker &amp; Co., Ltd.,&#13;
158 State Street, Boston, Mass.&#13;
Looking toward the Electric Tower,&#13;
on either side of the Court of Fountain's,&#13;
the great exhibit buildings of&#13;
the Pan-American Exposition are seen&#13;
complete in their architectural grandeur.&#13;
The grays, yellows, browns and&#13;
blues of many shades make a harmony&#13;
of color that is a sight long to&#13;
be remembered by all lovers of the&#13;
beautiful. _&#13;
The decorations of Uncle Sam's great&#13;
buildings at the Pan-American Exposition&#13;
are exceptionally fine. Maroon&#13;
and•&gt; green are used and the effect i3&#13;
most pleasing. The whole dome is decorated&#13;
with flags, and some 400 fl^gs.&#13;
including the national colors and departmental&#13;
flags, will be hung about&#13;
the building.&#13;
Are You Cftlng AUen't Foot Ka*e?&#13;
It is the only cure for Swollen,&#13;
Smarting. Burning, Sweating Feet,&#13;
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's&#13;
Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into&#13;
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe&#13;
Stores, 25c Sample sent FREE. Address,&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.&#13;
Can a marriage certificate be called&#13;
a ''union label?"&#13;
WHY MRS. PINKHAM&#13;
I s A b l e t o H e l p S i c k W o m e n&#13;
W h e n D o c t o r s F a i l .&#13;
How gladly would men fly to woman's&#13;
aid did they but understand awoman's&#13;
feelings, trials, sensibilities,&#13;
and peculiar organic disturbances.&#13;
Those things are known only to&#13;
women, and the aid. a man would give&#13;
is not at his command.&#13;
To treat a case properly it is necessary&#13;
to know all about it, and full&#13;
information, many times, cannot be&#13;
given by a woman to her family phy-&#13;
M&amp;s. 6. H. CHAPPELX*&#13;
slcian. She cannot bring" herself to&#13;
tell everything, and the physician is&#13;
at a constant disadvantage. This is&#13;
why, for the past twenty-five years,&#13;
thousands of women have been confiding&#13;
their troubles to Mrs. Pinkhara,&#13;
and whose advice has brought happiness&#13;
and health to countless women i n&#13;
the United States.&#13;
Mrs. ChappeU, of Grant Park, IlL,&#13;
whose portrait we publish, advises all&#13;
suffering women to seek Mrs. Pinkham's&#13;
advice and use Lydia £. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound, aa they&#13;
cured her of inflammation of the ovaries&#13;
and womb; she. therefore, sp^atarfrom&#13;
knowledge, and her experience ought&#13;
to give others confidence. Mrs. Pinkham's&#13;
address is Lynn, Mass., sad ktff&#13;
sdvioe is absolutely tree.&#13;
i. -¾¾.&#13;
tf&#13;
i ,¥••••&#13;
:-£T.,, .,'&#13;
W&#13;
. St&#13;
mm&#13;
V-V-"!&#13;
f-^ •'&#13;
PARSHALLV1LLE.&#13;
Mrs. Frank Parker of Flint is&#13;
the guest of her mother Mrs. C.&#13;
M. Smith. .&#13;
Geo. Voorheis and ' Emma,&#13;
daughter of Darius Smith were&#13;
married on Wednesday of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mart VanCamp" and wife are&#13;
visiting their son and other relatives&#13;
in Owosso.&#13;
Myron Curdy who has been living&#13;
several years in Howell, has&#13;
returned to his farm in Oceola&#13;
and is building him a new residence.&#13;
GREGORY.&#13;
Dora Bullis was in Pinckney&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Maggie Bernie spent Sunday at&#13;
L. It. Williams.&#13;
Mrs. W. H. Marsh was in Jack'&#13;
son last Thursday.&#13;
Charlie McGee is improving his&#13;
home with a new feuce.&#13;
D. S. DenTon will work for&#13;
Howlett Bros, this summer.&#13;
N. T. McClear bad . a fine colt&#13;
cut on barbed wire last week.&#13;
N. T. and L. N. McClear were&#13;
in Howell on business last week.&#13;
E. W. Rick of Lenox has been&#13;
visiting old friends here the past&#13;
week.&#13;
E. T. Bush has moved his saw&#13;
mill to thii place and is now ready&#13;
for business.&#13;
Will Mapes was in this vicinity&#13;
last Friday buying wool.&#13;
Prof. Lister of Ann Arbor spent&#13;
Sunday under the parental roof&#13;
Rev. Powers preached at the&#13;
Presbyterian church last Sunday&#13;
as a candidate.&#13;
Mrs. F. W. Cleveland of Ypsil&#13;
anti is a guest at the home of her&#13;
brother, R. J. Gardner.&#13;
STILL MORE LOCAL.&#13;
fcAM &lt; u 1 .»AM.&#13;
J. Birnie and wife visited theiF&#13;
daughter Mary, in Howell, Satuiv&#13;
day and Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. J. Smith and children of&#13;
Pinckney visited at J. Burden's a&#13;
few days the past week.&#13;
Howlett Bros, have purchased&#13;
the Russell hardware stock at&#13;
Stockbridge and will sell part at&#13;
that place and move the balance&#13;
here.&#13;
Christian Denton attended the&#13;
wedding of Geo. Hopkins Wednesday&#13;
at Ypsilanti,-acting as&#13;
bridesmaid. Her sister Belva,&#13;
taught in her absence.&#13;
rt&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
Fred Burch is in Ypsilauti on&#13;
business.&#13;
Willie Doyle was in Webberville&#13;
last Friday.&#13;
Ella Murphy returned home&#13;
from Jackson Monday.&#13;
Wru. Gardner Jr. has been&#13;
quite sick the past week.&#13;
Mrs. O'Neil of White Oak is&#13;
visiting at John Connors.&#13;
H. B. Gardner was in Chelsea&#13;
on business Thursday last.&#13;
Wellington White called on his&#13;
brother in Hamburg Saturday.&#13;
David Kelly and family of Dexter&#13;
visited his parents here Sunday.&#13;
Georgia Gardner is spending a&#13;
couple of weeks with friends in&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Anna Spears is spending a couple&#13;
of weeks with her sister Mrs.&#13;
Wm. Doyle.&#13;
Sadie and Josie Harris visited&#13;
friends near Fowlerville Saturday&#13;
and Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Wellington VanCamp and&#13;
children of Leslie are visicing her&#13;
parents Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Bates.&#13;
A flock of sheep belonging to&#13;
Wm. Gardner were attacked by&#13;
dogs Monday, killing and injuring&#13;
several.&#13;
KAINREIA&#13;
James Wright is very low.&#13;
Master Edgar Sales is recovering&#13;
from inflame tion-of the lungp.&#13;
TheUnadilla WCHJ met with&#13;
Jigs* O. Smith af Gregory last&#13;
Thursday*&#13;
R. W. Lake spent Sunday in&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
Maud Culy spent Sunday with&#13;
her parents.&#13;
Mrs. N. N. Whitcomb was able&#13;
to call on friends here this week.&#13;
Chas. Brown and Alex Pearson&#13;
were home from the U. of M. over&#13;
Sunday. » /-&#13;
Jay Stanton of Websrer was the&#13;
guest of friends here the first of&#13;
the week. \ \&#13;
W. H. Placeway and family and&#13;
Maud Culy were in Howejll Thursday&#13;
of last week.&#13;
Mrs. Will Schifele of Green&#13;
Oak visited her mother, Mrs. Jas.&#13;
Pearson, Friday last.&#13;
Mesdames Wm. Wood and Ben.&#13;
Isham of North Lake were guests&#13;
of Mrs. J. R. Hall Thursday.&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
Will Daley is sick with appendicitis.&#13;
Mike Roche taught school Monday&#13;
a. in.&#13;
The first excursion of the season&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Bean picking began at the elevator&#13;
Monday. ^~&#13;
Will Roche visited his brother&#13;
Andy in'Ann Arbot over Sunday.&#13;
Nora Durkee visited relatives&#13;
in Lyndon a couple of days last&#13;
week.&#13;
Geo. Phelps and wife of Stockbridge&#13;
visited relatives here the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Isaac Paugborn's house is receiving&#13;
a coat of paint. Lynford&#13;
Whited is doing the work.&#13;
Miss Belle Fuester of Detroit&#13;
came tip Sunday and sDent the&#13;
day with her sister, Mrs. Seth&#13;
JPerry.&#13;
UNAOILLA.&#13;
Myrtle Smith visited at Thos.&#13;
Howlet'ts near Gregory, Saturday.&#13;
Mr. Ticheuor of Lansing transacted&#13;
business here the first of&#13;
this week.&#13;
Nora Durkee of Anderson visited&#13;
her aunt Mrs. Nancy May one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
Mrs. Lyman Hadley visited her&#13;
daughter Mrs. Lon Clark of Stockbridge&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. L. M. Harris and daughter&#13;
Jennie visited relatives at Waterloo&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Lizzie Ham mack of Waterloo&#13;
was the guest of Jean Pyper Tuesday&#13;
of last week.&#13;
A number from this place attended&#13;
Bentley's show at Stockbridge&#13;
Saturday evening.&#13;
S. Royce and wife of Lyndon&#13;
were the guests of their daughter&#13;
Mrs. Louis Roepcke Monday.&#13;
The Ladies Missionary society&#13;
of the Presbyterian church will&#13;
meet at the home of Wm. Pyper&#13;
and wife Wednesday, May 29.&#13;
Supper will be served and all are&#13;
invited.&#13;
The TJnadilla farmers cTub met&#13;
at the home of David Westfall&#13;
and wife last Saturday, was well&#13;
attended and a good time was the&#13;
report. The next one will be at&#13;
the home of Fred Marshall and&#13;
wife Saturday, June 15.&#13;
If troubled l»y a weak digestion, loss&#13;
of appetite, or constipation, try a few&#13;
doafs "I ChiiiubtHlam's Stomach and&#13;
Liver Tablets. Every box warranted&#13;
For sale by P. A. 8ip|er, Pincjwey, j For sale by Teeple &amp; Cadwell&#13;
Mrs. Jennie Battler of Hamburg&#13;
was in town Wednesday.&#13;
Will Steptoe and family of Webster&#13;
were tn Town W ndnesday.&#13;
An excellent rain UIH first of the&#13;
week—make grass and wheat grow.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Black and Mrs. B. Lynch&#13;
were in Dexter tbe last of lust week.&#13;
Hiram Chapman of Unadilla was a&#13;
pleasant caller at this office on Wednesday.&#13;
The Jackson association of Cong't&#13;
churches meets in Charlotte this week.&#13;
Rev. Rice is in attendance today.&#13;
Mrs J . M. Smith and daughters,&#13;
Edith and May, visited at E. Burden's&#13;
at Gregory from Friday until Monday.&#13;
The graduating class numbers only&#13;
three this year. Exercises will be at&#13;
the opera house June 19. Program&#13;
later.&#13;
There will be no preaching at the&#13;
M. E. church here or at tbe Lakin appointment&#13;
on Sunday ne?t owing to&#13;
the absence of Rev. Hicks. Sunday&#13;
school at usual hour.&#13;
\)ecoration day will be observed at&#13;
Hamburg on Wednesday, May 29 at&#13;
1 o'clock. P. J . Shields of Howell&#13;
will be the orator. There are twentvto&#13;
one graves to decorate and a good attendence&#13;
is looked for.&#13;
A post mortem examination of the&#13;
body of Mr. J. H. Barton showed his&#13;
disease to have been Asterio-Sclerosis&#13;
or hardening of tbe arteries leading&#13;
from the heart. The valves of the&#13;
heart were also hard like solid bone.&#13;
His disease was successfully diagnosed&#13;
two years ago and is pronounced a&#13;
rare case.&#13;
The Hen In Eaters.&#13;
"Resin eating," said a south Georgia&#13;
doctor, "is a habit acquired by the&#13;
Cracker settlers who live in the neighborhood&#13;
of a turpentine still. The resin&#13;
they use isn't the hard, shiny resin of&#13;
commerce, but has been dipped ont of&#13;
the cooking caldron nt an early stage vof the process, and when it cools it can&#13;
be kneaded between the fingers like&#13;
wax. The backwoods resin eater will&#13;
bite off an immense chunk and chew it&#13;
placidly until It disappears. The heat&#13;
of the mouth keeps it fairly soft, but if&#13;
the chewiug becomes too deliberate It&#13;
is apt to 'set,' as they say, and cement&#13;
the victim's jaws together in a grip of&#13;
iron.&#13;
"On one occasion a big, rawboned&#13;
backwoodsman who used to bang&#13;
around a still I operated came rushing&#13;
into my little office, clutching his face&#13;
in both hands and making a horrible&#13;
gurgling noise in his throat. *\Vhat on&#13;
earth is the matter?' 1 asked in alarm.&#13;
'Ills rosum's sot,' snid another Cracker,&#13;
who brought up the rear. I was nonplused&#13;
at first, but finally grasped the&#13;
fact that the man had been chewing a&#13;
monstrous slab of resin and had&#13;
thoughtlessly suspended operations&#13;
long enough to allow It to solidify and&#13;
clamp his teeth like a vice. We finally&#13;
pried his mouth open with a chisel and&#13;
broke a couple of molars in the operation.&#13;
Next day I saw him chewing&#13;
again."—Exchange.&#13;
Fish a n d t h e Alphabet.&#13;
Perhaps the funiiiest thing to be told&#13;
respecting the antiquity of fishing relates&#13;
to the holy wars which were&#13;
waged In ancient Egypt over the tinny&#13;
denizens of the water, tbe conflicts&#13;
arising from the circumstance that, as&#13;
often happened, one tribe would Insist&#13;
with the utmost Irreverence upon eating&#13;
up the fishes which the Inhabitants&#13;
of an adjoining territory held in divine&#13;
adoration.&#13;
The child of today, in learning bis alphabet,&#13;
calls the letters by their m m e s&#13;
simply because the ancient Phoenicians&#13;
were pleased to make similar figures&#13;
the symbols of certain sounds, and It is&#13;
thought very likely that tbe Phoenicians&#13;
have been driven to Invent that&#13;
alphabet by the necessity of corresponding&#13;
with peoples of various&#13;
tongues Incidentally to the great commerce&#13;
which grew out of the fishery.&#13;
The letter "p" Is like a selfish friend,&#13;
the first in pity, but the last In help,—&#13;
Chicago News.&#13;
In 1700 Pennsylvania had a colored&#13;
population of 10,274.&#13;
Reward Offered.&#13;
— Snrnaiime during the early (?)&#13;
moxningLhours, while tbe household&#13;
of was wrapped in slumber&#13;
some unknown person or persons entered&#13;
the barn and carried off valuabne&#13;
articles of food. That a lesson&#13;
may he taught and sneak thieving&#13;
stopped the sheriff offers a reward lor&#13;
apprehension of tbe thief.&#13;
T h e W h i t e S h a r k .&#13;
The shark of sharks, the real "man&#13;
eater" and the one most dreaded, is&#13;
the white shark. This variety reaches&#13;
a length of 35 feet and a weight of&#13;
2,000 pounds. Its head is long and&#13;
flat, and the snout far overhangs the&#13;
mouth. Its six rows of teeth are sharp&#13;
as lancets and notched like saws. Its&#13;
mouth is very large, so that one has&#13;
been known to cut a man's body completely&#13;
in two at a single snap of its&#13;
cruel jaws and another to swallow one&#13;
at a gulp. Near Calcutta one of these&#13;
Rharks was seen to swallow a bullock's&#13;
head, horns and all.&#13;
From the stomach of another a bull's&#13;
hide was taken entire, and the sailor&#13;
who made the discovery insisted that&#13;
the bull had been swallowed whole&#13;
and all except the hide had been digested.—&#13;
Ti&gt;ntn t&lt;m gtnpn&gt;nh of nnothnr&#13;
was taken a lady's workbox, filled with&#13;
the usual contents, scissors and all. It&#13;
Is commonly the white shark which&#13;
fojlows the vessel at sea day after day&#13;
and week after week.&#13;
Langrhter.&#13;
Laughter is a positive sweetness of&#13;
life; but. like good coffee, it should be&#13;
well cleared of deleterious substance&#13;
before use. Ill will and malice and the&#13;
desire to wound are worse than chicory.&#13;
Between a laugh and a giggle there&#13;
Is the width of the horizons. I could&#13;
sit all day and listen to the hearty and&#13;
heartsome ha, ha, of a lot of bright&#13;
and jolly people, but would rather be&#13;
shot than be forced to stay within earshot&#13;
of a couple of silly gossips. Cultivate&#13;
that part of your nature that is&#13;
quick to see the mirthful side of things,&#13;
so you shall be enabled to shed many&#13;
of life's troubles, as the plumage of the&#13;
bird sheds the rain. But discourage&#13;
all tendencies to seek your amusement&#13;
at tlve expense of another's feelings or&#13;
In aught that is Impure. It was Goethe&#13;
who said, "Tell me what a man laughs&#13;
at and I will read you his character."&#13;
T h e Firet Millionaire.&#13;
Who was the first millionaire? Solomon?&#13;
But come down to earth in modern&#13;
times. Solomon's wealth was fiction,&#13;
like that of Croesus, Midas and&#13;
W r o t e Sermons I n H*IB Sleep.&#13;
Narrating "Some Remarkable Cases&#13;
of Double Personality," Dr. R. Osgood&#13;
Mason cites in The Ladies' Home Journal&#13;
the case of a "young ecclesiastic&#13;
In the seminary with the Archbishop&#13;
of Bordeaux, France, who was in&#13;
the-habit-of-getting up at night- in-a&#13;
condition of somnambulism, going to&#13;
his study and composing and writing&#13;
his sermons in the dark. When he had&#13;
finished one page, he read it over and&#13;
properly corrected it. A broad piece of&#13;
cardboard interposed between his eyes,&#13;
and/ his writing made no difference to&#13;
him. He wrote, read and corrected&#13;
just the same as if there had been no&#13;
obstruction. Having completed his&#13;
work to his satisfaction, he returned&#13;
to bed, and in the morning he had not&#13;
the slightest idea of what he had done&#13;
in the night and had no knowledge of&#13;
it until he saw the manuscript in his&#13;
Dwn handwriting."&#13;
Want Column*&#13;
The geographical divisions of the ,&#13;
United States are the north Atlantic&#13;
group, the south Atlantic group, the '&#13;
north central group, the south central i&#13;
group and the western group.&#13;
the rest remaps you remember Pope's&#13;
lines—&#13;
When Hopkins dies, a thousand lights attend&#13;
The wretch who, living, saved a candle end.&#13;
John Hopkins was generally known&#13;
ns "Vulture" Hopkins from his rapacious&#13;
method of acquiring money. He&#13;
was the architect of his own fortune,&#13;
dying worth $1,500,000 In 1732.—New&#13;
York Press.&#13;
CLOTHING!&#13;
AH par.lies indebted to me piease&#13;
call and settle before the first of June.&#13;
ROBERT ERWIN.&#13;
*&#13;
STRAYED— Fair of colts: one a&#13;
brown mare three years old; one yearling&#13;
horse co'.t, clipped on' rump, and&#13;
wearing halters when last seen.&#13;
PETER GORMANChelsea,&#13;
Mich.&#13;
tor Male.&#13;
Twenty yards of good rai* carpet&#13;
for $3.50. Also 25 lbs. of carpet rags&#13;
all sewed and colored. Inquire at&#13;
this office.&#13;
FOR SALE—Brown Leghorn eggs&#13;
from one ot the best laying flock of&#13;
bens in Lower Mich- 25c per setting&#13;
at residence or 50c by express.&#13;
F. W. MACKINDER,&#13;
t-26 Anderson, Mich.&#13;
For Service.&#13;
Short Horn Bull, Duke of Plainfield.&#13;
$1.00 tor season with privelege&#13;
ot returning. P. H. KELLY. 19tf&#13;
t o r Sale,&#13;
A Halt-blood Jersey Cow, new&#13;
milch, at P. H. KELLY'S. t21&#13;
We have a little 8ong~~To~5fn3~ori dotlmlj.&#13;
W e w a n t to Interest you and show you that&#13;
w e have t h e right arid proper lines.&#13;
Nobby styles of the leading&#13;
cloths, having all the features of&#13;
the Tailor-made.&#13;
Thats what you want!&#13;
Along with the clothing you&#13;
might see something in gents&#13;
furnishings.&#13;
Have the best assortment to be found&#13;
in any city; all bright new numbers that&#13;
carry beauty to the eye.&#13;
See us for your spring out-fit,&#13;
we can save you&#13;
Car fare X,&#13;
We deduct your car fare from&#13;
bills of $15.00 or over.&#13;
Halve Calrea Wltuoai Milk.&#13;
Thousands are doing it Cheaply and&#13;
successfully with "BJatcbford's Calf&#13;
Meal" the perfect milk substitute.&#13;
t-26&#13;
Yours For Business,&#13;
HOLMES &amp; DANCER, Stockbridge, Mich.</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="36752">
              <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="6901">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch May 23, 1901</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6902">
                <text>May 23, 1901 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="6903">
                <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="6904">
                <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="6905">
                <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="6906">
                <text>1901-05-23</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6907">
                <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="997" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="925">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/6186336e6f8c0d26c12f9d8c2c66165f.pdf</src>
        <authentication>08457600957dc63cf87a121915bc3139</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="32311">
              <text>VOL. XIX. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MAY. 30, 1901. No. 23 .&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE&#13;
HOWELL MICHIGAN&#13;
Hammocks&#13;
Croquet Sets&#13;
Iron Express Wagons&#13;
Pipe Works.&#13;
We give cash coupons with,&#13;
every purchase. Beautifall gifts&#13;
given fr*»e with $2 iu trade.&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
Next to Post O f f i c e .&#13;
Mail orders&#13;
Carefully filled.&#13;
AdfeAAlfeAalfeA.&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
j ^ / ^ ~&#13;
O u r Motto: " T h e Better the&#13;
G r a d e the Bigger 1 he T r a d e . "&#13;
-T^^r&#13;
Royal Tailoring&#13;
Stands at the Head,&#13;
is&#13;
The Very Best!!&#13;
Clothing is absolutely&#13;
made t o your measure, a n d&#13;
in the latest styles. Satisfaction&#13;
is always guaranteed!&#13;
W e s o l i c i t y o u r p a t r o n a g e&#13;
K. H. Crane,&#13;
fcncaL Agent.&#13;
Decoration Day.&#13;
Chas. Love was in Howe 11 IJriday&#13;
lBSt.&#13;
The board of Supervisors will meet&#13;
Jane 24 at Howell.&#13;
M. Monks and son, Rill were in&#13;
Howell last Thursday.&#13;
Mesdames Vaughn and Durfee were&#13;
in Howell on Friday last.&#13;
E P . Campbell and Miss Uasing were&#13;
in Howell one day last week.&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler was in Dexter on&#13;
professional business Sunday.&#13;
A good many ot our citizens are in&#13;
Howell today celebrating Decoration&#13;
Day.&#13;
One hundred and fifty gallons of&#13;
youn^ perch has been placed in Island&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Mrs. Heman Smith died of consumption&#13;
Tuesday evening, May 28, aged&#13;
71 years. .&#13;
Anfiflers have been busy the past&#13;
week but so tar vve have heard no big&#13;
fish stories.&#13;
Several new names added the past&#13;
week, VVell that is what helps us pay&#13;
for out' home.&#13;
A number of plaster busts and&#13;
copies of noted paintings have been&#13;
placed in the different schools. in&#13;
Howell.&#13;
We hope those who are owing us ou&#13;
s u ':s 2 r ipllou will hotTorgeT TtiaT It&#13;
takes those small amounts to help&#13;
make payments.&#13;
The Ladies aid of Lakin appointment&#13;
will meet at V. G. Dinkle's&#13;
Thursday .June 6. All are requested&#13;
to be present as there is work to be&#13;
1 . Pink-eye has been the rage here the&#13;
past week and still continues.&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Clande Hause&#13;
of Perry, a daughter, May 14.&#13;
Francis Carr is in Detroit where he&#13;
will secure a position if be can.&#13;
Mrs. Allie Melntyre of White Oak&#13;
spent a couple of days with her mother&#13;
here.&#13;
Do not Inrget the decoration day exercises&#13;
at the school house Friday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Mr. a n j Mrs. Fred-Hill of near&#13;
Brighton were guests of Percy Swarthout&#13;
and wife Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Earnest Carr and daughter,&#13;
Doris, of Detroit ar« guests of her parents&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Sigler.&#13;
The one who desires dis wheat to be&#13;
free from rye this fall will do well to&#13;
cut the rye out now as it can be easily&#13;
se«n.&#13;
Miss Cora Devereaux will give a&#13;
picnic, at Reeves' Lake, for ber pupils&#13;
June 7 1901. A cord al invitation&#13;
is extended to all.&#13;
be held at Mi«s Lucy Hincheys Saturday&#13;
June 8 1901. All are cordially&#13;
invited to attend. Program will appear&#13;
next week.&#13;
Ami rose Nye, of Dakota, brother of&#13;
Mrs. N. N. Whitcomb and Mrs. Meivil&#13;
Jones of Vermont, sister, were called&#13;
here by the death of Mrs. Whitcomb.&#13;
This was the first time in 25&#13;
The Exchange bank is being decorated.&#13;
It. Oulhane and wife were in Dexter&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
H. W. Crofoot and wife spent part&#13;
ot the past week with his parents in&#13;
Adrian.&#13;
Mrs. Orr&lt; Waite and daughter of&#13;
Deqter visited Mrs. Wm. Black the&#13;
last, oflast week.&#13;
Ab. Bowin ot Wixom was in town&#13;
over Sunday, called here by the illmss&#13;
of Mrs. N. N . Wbttoomb.&#13;
A car-load or more of potatoes are&#13;
being shipped from here this week the&#13;
price paid being 20c per bushel.&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Brower who has been&#13;
spending several months in Detroit&#13;
and Ypsilanti returned to this placs&#13;
last week. She is with Mrs. L. Colby.&#13;
Union memorial services will he&#13;
held at the Methodist church next&#13;
Sunday at 10:30 a. m. to which alt old&#13;
soldiers are especially invited, Sermon&#13;
by the pastor. Similar services&#13;
at Unadilla the same day at 2:30 a. m.&#13;
Discussion led by H. C. Hall&#13;
Paper "Our Work" . .Miss Florence Mile*&#13;
Discussion General&#13;
Music .Noon .Mtuoc&#13;
Paper "The Growling Teachere" . . .&#13;
Miss Nettie L Holt&#13;
Discussion led by Miss Millie Garlock&#13;
Paper, "Methods in Arithmetic,"....&#13;
Miss Gertrude Timmons&#13;
Discussion General&#13;
Music&#13;
Paper, 'Primary Work in District Schools'&#13;
Miss Winifred Peters&#13;
Discussion.... .led by Miss May Comiskey&#13;
Music&#13;
Address, State Supt- of Public Instruction,&#13;
....Delos Fall&#13;
Music&#13;
It is desired that every teacher in&#13;
Livingston county be in attendance at&#13;
this association.&#13;
Want Column.&#13;
T4»e- An4e*4*m --Fawner-iLJClnh jadlL_ The mission of the ^onntry weekIy&#13;
years that the brother and sister hive&#13;
met&#13;
VWfWfWVWVIfcl-tfcWF fWW&#13;
Here You Are Again&#13;
If you want a good Blood P u r i -&#13;
fier go to Yake t h e Jeweler a n d&#13;
purchase a package of Brown&#13;
H e r b Tablets. I f not as recommended&#13;
your money returned.&#13;
Call a t store and get sample p k g .&#13;
Also an extra 1?hree S t a r Ointment&#13;
t h a t should have room iii&#13;
every house.&#13;
Mr. Yake will repair your&#13;
watches and clocks in t h e best of&#13;
style and if you have any auction&#13;
sales Mr. Yake will b e h a p p y t o&#13;
wait upon you as an auctioneer a t&#13;
moderate prices.&#13;
Yake The Jeweler,&#13;
Pinckney Mich.&#13;
done.&#13;
G. A. Sigler &amp; Son come out this&#13;
week with a new furniture delivery&#13;
wagon and hereafter will deliver furniture&#13;
anywhere within reasonable&#13;
distance.&#13;
The warm weather of TWO weeks&#13;
ago served to start out the several&#13;
small shows ot the state, but we have&#13;
*n idea that the past two weeks they&#13;
have wished they had waited for summer.&#13;
R.E. Finch has purchased the Dan&#13;
Richards blacksmith shop on Mill&#13;
street and will fix it up for a paint&#13;
shop and storeroom. Mr. F. spent several&#13;
years in a buggy shop and understands&#13;
the business.&#13;
Sylvester Andrews of Howe 1 died&#13;
at Harpers hospital in Detroit Friday&#13;
last. He was injured by a street car&#13;
some time ago, while on a visit to the&#13;
citv. He was one of Howells business&#13;
pioneers, aged 80 years.&#13;
Some improvements have been&#13;
made at the county poor far m. Partitions&#13;
have been changed in the house&#13;
and a general overhauling nas been&#13;
done. A morgue and a root and yeg*&#13;
e'able cellar has been built.&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
Martha A. Nye was born in Windsor&#13;
County Vermont, Feb. 26 1837.&#13;
On Mar. 12 1863 she married Nathaniel&#13;
Nye Whitcomb. In 1867 they&#13;
moved Irom Hamburg to the farm one&#13;
mile east of Pincknpy, where their&#13;
married life was spent. Here her&#13;
husband J.ied Aug. 24 1900.&#13;
Since that time she spent several&#13;
mouths with relatives in Wixom returning&#13;
to Pinckney in March, making&#13;
her boma-with-Mr^^ajixi^Mrs. JEld&#13;
Cook.&#13;
Having disposed of her property,&#13;
she was planing to visit her brother&#13;
in Dakota but was taken with pneumonia&#13;
from which atLack she nev*r&#13;
tully recovered. May 24, she was&#13;
stricken with apoplexy, not again regaining&#13;
consciousness. She died Sunday&#13;
May 26.1901.&#13;
Though of a retiring disposition,&#13;
her friendship was highly valued; she&#13;
has left, to ber friends and neighbors,&#13;
as a memorial, an upright life; patience&#13;
and forbearance being among&#13;
her many virtues.&#13;
A sister, Mrs. Henry Jones of Gaysville&#13;
Vermont, and a brother, Ambrose&#13;
Nye, of Detroit, S. Dakota, survive&#13;
her.&#13;
The funeral services were held&#13;
Wednesday afternoon at the .•!. E.&#13;
church. Rev. Chas. Simpson officiating.&#13;
%•&#13;
is not alone to disseminate 'he news&#13;
of its 'own. and to Ho it decently and&#13;
in order, as well as acurataly and in a&#13;
manner to depended upon. It is as&#13;
well to furnish a reliable and a satisfactory&#13;
medium through which the&#13;
selling fraternity can reach the buyiny&#13;
brotherhood; a me'dium of connection&#13;
between the merchant and the peo-&#13;
-ple. Many a paper is taken as much&#13;
for the axivs. that appear every week&#13;
as for the news. The UP-TODATE&#13;
merchant sees to it that his adv. appears&#13;
in every weeks issue with 'a&#13;
change of matter.&#13;
All parties indebted to me piease&#13;
call and settle before the first of June.&#13;
ROBERT EBWJN.&#13;
FOR SALE—Brown Leghoin eggs&#13;
from one ot the best laying flock of&#13;
hens in Lower Mich. 25c per setting&#13;
at residence or 50c by express. ~&#13;
F. W. MACKINDER,&#13;
t-26 Anderson, Mich&#13;
Fo Seivice.&#13;
Short Horn Bull, Duke of Plain-&#13;
Meld. 11.00 tor season with privelege&#13;
ot returning. P . H. KELLY. 19tf&#13;
Raiwe Calves Withoat Milk.&#13;
Thousands are doing it Cheaply'and&#13;
successfully with "Blatcbford's Calf&#13;
Meal" the perfect milk substitute.&#13;
For sale by Teeple &amp; Cadwell. t-26&#13;
Teacher's Examination.&#13;
If troubled by a weak digestion, loss&#13;
of appetite, or constipation, try a few&#13;
doses of Chamberlain's Stomach and&#13;
Liver Tablets, Every box warranted.&#13;
The Livingston County Teacher's For sale by F. A. Sisrler, Pinckney.&#13;
Association will inee': at the Howell&#13;
central school buitdicrur, Saturday June&#13;
8, 1901.&#13;
Program, 10:30 a. m. !&#13;
Music, Invocation, Music! The DISPATCH Job Department&#13;
Paper "Errors" Miss Nettie L. Hall' would like to print your envelopes.&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
6 lots in this village. Inquire of&#13;
SAMUEL ROBERTS.&#13;
OCX&gt;&#13;
" S o m e t i m e s her narrow kitchen w a l l s&#13;
Stretched a w a y inti* stately halls."&#13;
C\.vX&gt;&#13;
This happened to Maud Muller, but our&#13;
prices on&#13;
Notice! T o&#13;
Farmers&#13;
of the&#13;
20th Century.&#13;
Empire Drill agency for 1901 has been secured by us&#13;
and we wish to call your attention to a few of the new&#13;
features of this Drill, as well as sowing all kinds of grain it&#13;
will plant Sugar Beets four rows 21 inches apart, will plant&#13;
corn two rows 3j4 feet apart, B^ans three rows 23 inches&#13;
apart, or if desired the rows may be made closer together&#13;
or farther apart by simply closing a shut-off slide on inside&#13;
of box. Coma and examine the Drill and you will be&#13;
convinced that it is the best Drill on earth.&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
Card of Thanks.&#13;
I wish to thank my many friends&#13;
and neighbors for their kind assistance&#13;
during the sickness and death of my&#13;
beloved husband, and to the choir for&#13;
the beantifnl music.&#13;
Mav you all find.as loving and sympathetic&#13;
friends when sickness ard&#13;
death shall enter your homes.&#13;
MR*. J . H. BARTON.&#13;
To each and ev?ry on*, and especially&#13;
mv Protestant friends, I desire&#13;
to express my heartfelt thanks for the&#13;
many kindnesses shown me in my sad&#13;
bereavement.&#13;
*&#13;
Wall Paper&#13;
Make it possible for it to happen&#13;
to everybody. Wall paper which&#13;
used to cost so much that it could&#13;
only be hung in the parlor, or in&#13;
stately hails, is now so cheap that&#13;
the kitchen walls can be made&#13;
really attractive.&#13;
SAMVF.L KOHKRTS.&#13;
- • • • • • -&#13;
~-&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
There will be a meeting of the&#13;
Whitcomb cemntery association on&#13;
-Ha4wr4ay next, June 1 at l\p. m. All&#13;
interested are requested to be sore and&#13;
I be present.&#13;
ome in and see our new&#13;
for 1901, F*rice» from 7to 25 cents&#13;
per double roll.&#13;
I J. W. Phceway, Trustee.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
Mi '1A +** ma&#13;
l'V*/i&#13;
! C fcl%i i'V" I't^H&#13;
$\i I&#13;
.;* i # \ $&#13;
w'^T. xw\ MH • &amp; &amp; $ '.f,&#13;
, - ^ •'A'&#13;
'"••'^ ft ••&lt; ..jlf &lt;•;-+,• '^*'.&#13;
f ^ C&#13;
•if-- ' , ( « * • ^"'&#13;
&amp;!&amp; 1$:' w&amp;y&#13;
&lt;m ' „ • ! : * ;;JS«*.&#13;
I Holtoto Ash... *&#13;
B Y M A R G A R S T B L O U N T . %£&#13;
.&gt; /fa// .&gt;&#13;
CHAPTER XVI.—(Continued.)&#13;
We returned late, and very tired;&#13;
nod a s there were two beds in my&#13;
room, Lee consented to occupy one&#13;
of tnem, in the place of going home&#13;
to his own lodging3, which were at the&#13;
other end of the town.&#13;
It might have been three hours&#13;
later, when I was roused from a deep&#13;
sleep by the consciousness that something&#13;
was in the room, and bending&#13;
•over my bed. I had heard the words,&#13;
"Are you coming?" in a deep, low&#13;
tone close at my very ear; but when&#13;
I started up, I saw nothing. The&#13;
moon shone In at the window, broad&#13;
and full. I could discover nothing&#13;
more than the familiar furniture, ami&#13;
my little terrier, sleeping quietly on&#13;
his cushion in the corner.&#13;
That voice, BO deep and full, was&#13;
still ringing in my ear. A vague terror&#13;
was at my heart. I turned, upon&#13;
my pillow. As I did so I saw—I swear&#13;
I saw—through the curtains—that&#13;
face! And the cold and gloomy&#13;
black eyes were bent full upon me;&#13;
and the clenched hand, with its signet&#13;
ring, was raised to draw the curtains&#13;
farther away. The vision faded. I&#13;
looked over at the opposite bed. Lee&#13;
slept quietly with a smile upon his&#13;
lips.&#13;
1 was glad that he did so, even in&#13;
the midst of my horror. I did not dare&#13;
to raise my head again; but as I lay&#13;
counHns the Blow ticking of the- clock&#13;
upon the mantelpiece and expecting&#13;
every instant to feel that clenched&#13;
hand upon my own, a sudden drowsiness&#13;
seized me, and, in spite of my&#13;
terror I fell into a second slumber, as&#13;
.deep and dreamless as the first.&#13;
C awoke again and quite as suddenly.&#13;
I drew back the curtain and&#13;
looked out into the room.&#13;
"Are you there, Lee?" I asked.&#13;
No answer come. His bed was&#13;
empty. I rose at once and began to&#13;
dress. Far up the lonely, moonlit&#13;
road i could see a figure hurrying&#13;
toward the college. I knew that it&#13;
was Lee.&#13;
I knocked at the door of the next&#13;
room, where the janitor of our college&#13;
slept He came and opened it.&#13;
"For heaven's sake, dress quickly&#13;
and come to the college with me," I&#13;
said. "You have the keys?"&#13;
"They are in the hall," he said.&#13;
looking bewildered.&#13;
S. went to the nail—they were not&#13;
there.&#13;
"Lee has them—h—e has gone!" I&#13;
exclaimed wringing my hands. The&#13;
janitor seemed to comprehend everything&#13;
instantly and hurried on his&#13;
clothes in an Instant. Going cautiously&#13;
down the etairs, We closed the&#13;
aaU door behind us. We leaped the&#13;
hedge, for the gate was still locked,&#13;
•and ran swiftly up the road. But the&#13;
lonely figure I had seen, vanished before&#13;
we reached the college grounds.&#13;
I paused a moment under the portico&#13;
and leaned against one of the pildars&#13;
to recover my breath. The great&#13;
ball door was open; we entered and -&#13;
stole up the stairs without a word.&#13;
The moon lighted us.&#13;
We tracked him through the first&#13;
.and second hall, the lecture-room&#13;
and the library. Then we found the&#13;
door of the second staircase unlocked,&#13;
and knew by the faint, sickening smell&#13;
that came up that he had found his&#13;
way to the dissecting room. We&#13;
paused in the hall outside its door to&#13;
watch his movements. His eyes were&#13;
open, but it was evident that he was&#13;
still asleep, and my companion held&#13;
me back, whispering, "Don't make any&#13;
noise that will wake him suddenly.&#13;
If he finds himself here with that&#13;
corpse he will die of fear. We must&#13;
get him into the open air before we&#13;
speak to him."&#13;
The body lay as they had left il&#13;
that night—a— headless trunk—carved&#13;
and cut in many directions by ths&#13;
scalpel.&#13;
Lee bent over it with an absorbed&#13;
air. One hand held the keys he had&#13;
taken; the other grasped the cold&#13;
'douched fingers, seeking for the signet&#13;
ring. "He found it—then he raised&#13;
himself up with an anxious, thoughtful&#13;
air. He walked slow toward th*&#13;
window and seemed to look out,&#13;
though the heavy wooden shutters&#13;
were closed with bars of iron, and the&#13;
only light tht entered came through&#13;
the open door.&#13;
f sat down upon the stairs and&#13;
leaned my head upon my hand, for the&#13;
£etld air sickened me. An exclamation&#13;
of horror from my companion's&#13;
tips roused me before many moments&#13;
And passed and following his outstretched&#13;
fingers with my eyes I saw&#13;
Lee in the act of unlocking a closet&#13;
•doer.&#13;
"The head ia there!" whispered the&#13;
Jasrftor.&#13;
I sprang forward—he followed me.&#13;
The headless corpse was in our path.&#13;
Our sudden entrance jarrred the slight&#13;
boards and the body fell to the ground&#13;
with a dull, heavy sound, that woke&#13;
Lee from his sleep just as the key&#13;
turned in the closet door.&#13;
"Don't look there!" I cried wildly.&#13;
"Look at me, Lee only at me, and&#13;
you are safe!"&#13;
It was too late. That head, with the&#13;
dark and haughty face (which at that&#13;
moment seemed lighted up with a&#13;
fiendish smile) was the first object&#13;
that met his bewildered gaze. He&#13;
started back—the sudden movement&#13;
shook the shelves and (the head fell,&#13;
striking him full upon the breast,&#13;
and then bounding like a. ball upon the&#13;
the floor. He gazed at it a moment&#13;
with such a look as I pray I may&#13;
never see in human eyes again. A&#13;
sudden spasm distorted his face. Ho&#13;
threw up his arms with a wild cry,&#13;
and fell heavily upon the floor beside&#13;
the corpse.&#13;
I sprang to his side and raised his&#13;
head. But it drooped again, till the&#13;
dark brown locks mingled with the&#13;
black hair of that head.&#13;
"Lee, speak to me!"&#13;
He was dead.&#13;
"Oh, how horrible!" said Marjoric&#13;
shuddering. 'Rose, if you read anymore&#13;
such tales I cannot stay in this&#13;
house!"&#13;
"Very well,' said Rose, good-temperedly^&#13;
"I only wanted to amuse you&#13;
and myself. I think It have done&#13;
neither."&#13;
She shut the book and going to the&#13;
window looked out.&#13;
Presently she stole down stairs,&#13;
wrapped herself warmly in her cloak&#13;
and went out to walk in the grounds.&#13;
CHAPTER XVII.&#13;
By the five o'clock train and coach&#13;
of the evening a strange gentleman&#13;
arrived at a little roadside inn about&#13;
two miles from Holllow Ash Hall, and&#13;
four from Banley. He was a handsome,&#13;
foreign-looking man, apparently&#13;
about thirty-four years of age—"A&#13;
perfect gentleman!" as the landlady&#13;
rapturously called him because he&#13;
drank her weak tea without complaining&#13;
and afterwards sat quietly in his&#13;
parlor over the wine and cigars, without&#13;
giving any human being in the&#13;
house the least trouble.&#13;
Secured from all intrusion, he&#13;
watched the cold moonlight falling on&#13;
the distant fields, and listened idly to&#13;
the "Last Rose of Summer," played on&#13;
a cracked piano, without much regard&#13;
to tune or time, by his landlady's&#13;
daughter, in the room below.&#13;
He sat still and pensive "In golden&#13;
quiets of the moon," and thought of&#13;
his early, long-lost love, now so near&#13;
him once again.&#13;
Would any secret instinct tell her&#13;
that he was coming?&#13;
Would she feel his presence—his&#13;
love—even before he had assured her&#13;
of them?&#13;
Who shall say?&#13;
His thoughts grew dim and more&#13;
indistinct. The song below, and the&#13;
voices of the people at the bar beyond,&#13;
seemed to blend in one low,&#13;
continuous murmur, but faintly heard,&#13;
yet soothing from its very indistinct&#13;
ness.&#13;
His eyes closed—he slept—but in his&#13;
dream, Rose was still with him.&#13;
He awoke some time after with a&#13;
sudden start.&#13;
The moon, now high in the heavens,&#13;
shone full in his face, and showed the&#13;
deserted street beneath.&#13;
A clock struck upon the stairs. It&#13;
was just eight.&#13;
He uttered an exclamation of surprise,&#13;
took his hat and cloak and going&#13;
out at the open front door, took&#13;
his way alone toward Hollow Ash&#13;
Hall.&#13;
And, as he walked, he thought of&#13;
the quiet and beautiful English home&#13;
where most of bis boyhood had been&#13;
spent, and where, in after years, the&#13;
Rose of his life had bloomed for him&#13;
—bloomed, but never faded! Among&#13;
those trees and flowers his heart got&#13;
rooted in so deeply that to the day&#13;
of his death the fibres could never be&#13;
wrenched away. He had gone far&#13;
from the place; possibly he could&#13;
never look upon it r.gain; yet ever&#13;
and anon, as he wandered through the&#13;
world a violet springing at his feet,&#13;
a bird Btnging in the air, a little of&#13;
blue sky beyond the distant hills made&#13;
him young again, and brought the old&#13;
house so vividly before him, that he&#13;
could almost see the faces and hear&#13;
the voices, nay, catch the very words&#13;
of those who were living there, and&#13;
who had doubtless forgotten him entirely.&#13;
He thought of those old times wltth&#13;
a smile and a sigh as he walked&#13;
quickly along the village road. He&#13;
thought of Rose as he had seen her&#13;
there, evening after evening, laughing,&#13;
:H,&#13;
V&#13;
-singing and flirting—yet, certainly&#13;
flirting, like a prince 38 of love smoother&#13;
worshipers. He thought of s&#13;
night when they had quarreled, and&#13;
when he had left the house in anger&#13;
only to return and hide within the&#13;
grounds, watching her jealously, as the&#13;
curtains waving In the breeze gave him&#13;
glimpses now and then of the lighted&#13;
rooms. Oh, what sighs he breathed&#13;
against the rough bark of the tree&#13;
which supported him, as he saw her&#13;
beautiful face, sparkling with delight&#13;
and laughter, turned toward the window!&#13;
How, later on, he envied the&#13;
partner who held her hand, or clasnei&#13;
her waist! How he longed to be the&#13;
flower In her bouquet, the spangle in&#13;
her slipper, the very ground beneath&#13;
her feet, so that he might be touchod of&#13;
looked upon again by her. She had&#13;
never known of this passionate devotion,&#13;
and even, he, going to seek her&#13;
again, was half inclined to smile at&#13;
the remembrance as a folly of the past.&#13;
It was dead, that feeling; his affection&#13;
was more rational now, he said&#13;
to himself. But was he right? Do such&#13;
loves—does any love ever die? i&#13;
think not. What has once been a part&#13;
of us can scarcely fade into utter nothingness&#13;
again. In another and more&#13;
perfect state of existence, these elements&#13;
of happiness, disturbed here, but&#13;
peaceful forever there, will be our own&#13;
again. Their parting hail been very&#13;
much like all others, to all outward&#13;
seeming. The tearful eyes, the halfchoked&#13;
farewell, were all there; and&#13;
careless eyes looked on and careless&#13;
laughter arose around them. But I&#13;
doubt if ever there was a sorer heart&#13;
than Stanley Vere took with him as&#13;
the train moved slowly away, as he&#13;
caught the last glance from those soft&#13;
eyes, the last wave of that snowy hand.&#13;
In such separations pity is wasted on&#13;
the one who goes; it should be given to&#13;
the one who is left behind, to follow&#13;
each daily occupation, yet forever miss&#13;
the voice and eye that once lightened&#13;
and illumined them.&#13;
But the breaking up of such an attachment&#13;
is no light thing, and to him&#13;
the world seemed suddenly dark ana&#13;
cold. Missing Rose, he groped blindly&#13;
on his way, as if the light of his existence&#13;
had gone out. In fact, she"&#13;
was the only one who had stood between&#13;
him and the world. Others&#13;
might have a mother, a father, a brother,&#13;
or a sister,- to stand between them&#13;
and that harsh and cruel judge. He&#13;
had but her, and when she was taken&#13;
from him, all those sweet ties were&#13;
rent in the one that bound them together,&#13;
and he stood face to face with&#13;
all the antagonists, unarmed and unshielded.&#13;
He tried to supply her nlace&#13;
—not because he was inconstant, but&#13;
because he loathed loneliness. In every&#13;
Instance he failed. Those whom&#13;
he sought had other ties and friends;&#13;
at least, he could only occupy a secondary&#13;
place within their hearts. What&#13;
was more important to him than this&#13;
—they were of the common order of&#13;
women. Their souls were narrow—&#13;
brains capable of supporting but one&#13;
set of ideas. Probably he wearied&#13;
them, but it is certain that they&#13;
wearied him most unbearably.&#13;
Now Rose, with all her girlish fun&#13;
and gaiety, had a noble soul, that fed&#13;
upon high thoughts, and intimate association&#13;
with such a fresh, pure spirit&#13;
as hers had unfitted him for any lower&#13;
companionship. So it came to pass&#13;
that he still went on his way alone;&#13;
and in the valley of humiliation, or&#13;
on the mountains of peace, his cry&#13;
had ever been, "Will she ever come&#13;
back to me? Shall I find and win her&#13;
once again?" He asked that question&#13;
standing in the public road and looking&#13;
up at the white walls and lighted&#13;
windows of her present home. As he&#13;
gazed, he saw a figure—a female figure&#13;
—pacing up and down the lawn. His&#13;
heart told him who it must be. In a&#13;
moment he was by her side.&#13;
"Rose! Rose! Will you welcome me&#13;
back?" he cried in a voice that trembled&#13;
with eagerness.&#13;
And she, pale and startled, but&#13;
smiling all the while, put both her&#13;
hands in his.&#13;
"Dear Stanley, welcome!"&#13;
And so the question was answered.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
P o l l Taxes In A. D. 1 9 9 .&#13;
The Rev. Dr. William C. Winslow,&#13;
vice-president of the Egypt exploration&#13;
fund, says that in addition to the&#13;
papyri recently presented by the society&#13;
to several universities there is&#13;
a valuable lot of forty-three papyri&#13;
which have been received for distribution,&#13;
largely treating of business and&#13;
civil matters in the first centuries of&#13;
our era. Among the seven papyri for&#13;
Columbia university is a tax collector's&#13;
return showing items and how the collectors&#13;
made returns In A. D. 196.&#13;
There were poll taxes in A. D. 122.&#13;
The rise of the Nile was the greatest&#13;
annual event, and upon it taxes were&#13;
calculated. Hence one of the six&#13;
papyri sent to Johns Hopkins, treating&#13;
of the unwatered land tilled by&#13;
Ptollarous, A. D. 163, la peculiarly interesting.&#13;
She declares that her-field&#13;
at Euhemeria did not get the-water.&#13;
Her pleai In a word, ia: "No crops,&#13;
no taxes"&#13;
"I Followed Mrs.Pinkham's&#13;
Advice and Now I am Welly&#13;
A woman is sick—some disease peculiar to her sex is fast&#13;
developing ia her system. She goes to her family physician&#13;
and tefls him a story, but not the whole story.&#13;
She holds back something, loses her head, becomes agitated,&#13;
forgets what she wants to sav, and finally conceals&#13;
what she ought to have told, and this completely mystifies&#13;
the doctor.&#13;
Is it a wonder, therefore, that the doctor fails to cure the&#13;
disease ? Still we cannot blame the woman, for it is very embarrassing&#13;
to detail some of the symptoms of her suffering,&#13;
even to her family physician. This i s t h e reason why&#13;
hundreds o f thousands o f w o m e n are n o w i n correspondence&#13;
w i t h Mrs. P i a k h a m , a t Lynn, Mass. To&#13;
her they can give every symptom, so that when she is ready&#13;
to advise them she is in possession of more facts from her&#13;
correspondence with the patient than the physician can&#13;
possibly obtain through a personal interview.&#13;
Following we publish a letter from a woman showing the&#13;
result of a correspondence with Mrs. Pinkham. A l l such&#13;
letters are considered absolutely confidential by&#13;
Mrs. Pinkham, and are never published in any way or&#13;
manner without the consent in writing of the patient; but&#13;
hundreds of women are so grateful for the health which Mrs.&#13;
Pinkham and her medicine have been able to restore to them&#13;
that they not only consent to publishing their letters, but&#13;
write asking that this be done in order that other women&#13;
who suffer may be benefited by their experience.&#13;
Mrs. Ella Rice, Chelsea, Wis., writes:&#13;
*' DBAS MRS, PrwxatsUJ r—For two years I was troubled with falling&#13;
and inflammation of the womb, 1 suffered very much with bearing-down&#13;
pains, headache, backache, and was. not able to do anything, what 1&#13;
endured no one know* but those who haTe suffered as I did. I could&#13;
hardly drag myself across the floor. I doctored with the physicians of this&#13;
town for three months and grew worse instead of better. My husband&#13;
and friends wished me to write to your but 1 bad no faith in patent medicines.&#13;
At last I became so bad that I eonduded to ask your advice. I&#13;
received an answer at once advising me to- take your Vegetable Compound,&#13;
and I did so. Before I had taken t w o bottles I felt better, and after I had&#13;
taken five bottles there was no happier woman on earth, for I was well&#13;
again. I know that your Vegetable Compound cured me, and I wish and&#13;
advise every woman who suffers aa I did to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound. Believe me always grateful for the recovery of my&#13;
health."—Mas. ELLA. RICE, Chelsea, Wis*&#13;
REWARD Owing to the fact that some skeptical&#13;
people have from time to time questioned&#13;
the genuineness of the testimonial letter*&#13;
——-— " " ~ " ~"~ we are constantly publishing, we have&#13;
deposited with the National City Bank, of Lynn, Mass., $5,000,&#13;
which will be paid to any person who will show that the above&#13;
testimonial is not genuine, or was published before obtaining&#13;
tha writer's special permission,—LYDIA E. PINKHAM MEDICINE CO.&#13;
I n t o x i c a t i n g Criticism&lt; o f Two- Men.&#13;
Writing in the Critic of certain qualities&#13;
of Brander Matthews and Harry&#13;
Thurston Peck, "A Professor of Latin"&#13;
says: "Professor Brander Matthews&#13;
and Harry Thurston Peck possess&#13;
all the properties of a high-grade&#13;
intellectual Intoxicant. One reads them&#13;
to the points of dizziness, gets quarrelsome&#13;
as the draughts go down, and&#13;
suffers the inevitable headache after&#13;
it is all over; nor has any Keeley yet&#13;
appeared with an effective remedy.&#13;
And so when these two authorities fall&#13;
upon one another, one feels an fmmedlte&#13;
desire to have a hand in the scrimmage,&#13;
in favor of one or the otherv&#13;
both or neither, as the case may be.&#13;
Fear sut«ri Aged 91 Tears.&#13;
Four sisters, according to the Sallna&#13;
(Kas.) Union, registered from one&#13;
ward at the city clerk's office, presenting&#13;
themselves separately. Each ga've&#13;
her age as twenty-one.&#13;
BaD** Catarrh Cx&#13;
Is a coastitUfcioiial core. Price. 7Ba&#13;
Even a strong boarder can't always eat two&#13;
plates of hash without turning a bair.&#13;
FITS Permanently Cored. *ofltBora«rvowam«a!tet&#13;
•rtt day's »«e of Dr. Kline's Great Nerre Restorer.&#13;
Send for F R E E SW.OO trial bottle and treads*.&#13;
Btv R. H. Ku»a. Ltd.. »3i Arch St.. lblladeipala. Pa,&#13;
Military engineers are agreed that no material&#13;
for fortification is superior to earth.&#13;
Piso's Cure for Consumption in an infallible&#13;
medicine for coughs and oolds—N. W. SAMUEL,&#13;
Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17. 1900.&#13;
Millions In r e s t e d i n Texa* Oil.&#13;
Since the big Lucas oil geyser was&#13;
struck In the Texas oil fields last January&#13;
nearly 100 companies have been&#13;
organized to sink wells, with aggregate&#13;
capital of nearly $30,000,000. Six of&#13;
the companies are capitalized at $1,-&#13;
000.000 each.&#13;
Mm. Wlnnlow'a S o o t h i n g Syrup.&#13;
Tar- children teething, Roften» the jnims, reduces 1n&gt;&#13;
tr&amp;aunatlon, allays pain, cures wind colic. Kc a bottle.&#13;
A man likes to feel that he Is loved&#13;
and a woman likes to be told.&#13;
To civilize a man you must begin&#13;
with his ancestors.&#13;
Turn the Rascals Out&#13;
We ure speaking of the grip microbes&#13;
The well and strong can resist their poison,&#13;
the sickly and weak are their prey.&#13;
Baxter's Mandrake Bitters are nature's&#13;
remedy for expelling all poison&#13;
fro'Q the system. At druggists, in liquid&#13;
or tablets at 25 cents per bottle or box.&#13;
Nature's Priceless Remedy&#13;
DR. 0. PHELPS BROWN'S&#13;
PRECIOUS&#13;
HERBAL&#13;
It OCumINThTroMuahEthNe PTore s Address Br. 0.^,&#13;
Rheumatism, Neural* Sim, Week Back, Sprains,&#13;
urns. Seres ana all Pain*&#13;
SOWilldnSrWVSr i r h e dees aoiaeU It,»eo*&#13;
us bts name, and for jroer&#13;
trouhle. w e will Crass m?wn.MB'•wenayd, NYeowub au Trcrhia.llf trVlxfVfc&#13;
R E W A R D for a case of&#13;
bnaecssk,a wcheae,k nneersvs,o luossns eosfs ,v lstleelelptvie,s ItD** clplentkldney .bladder and urinary&#13;
dlsor that can not be cured bv&#13;
I*ftt year the number of boy.s and girls educated&#13;
free in Berlin was 807,51 J.&#13;
Some articles must be described. White's&#13;
Yucatan need* no description; lt'a the real&#13;
thing. I&#13;
Wo woman really enjoys wealth Unlet* she&#13;
feels that the Is Inspiring enry.&#13;
KID-NE-OIDS&#13;
the great kidney* liver and blood roedietne. BOo&#13;
At all Drugglau. Write for free sample. Address&#13;
KID-Na-OIOt, St. Louie, MO. i&#13;
P I S O S C U R E F o R&#13;
BastOteosutactaeS.y rBuopld. bTr^emvemeaOtsotaS.a , Vm&#13;
• • »&#13;
ON C7UM PTION&#13;
MSsMi 1 LiA.. n^ -.-tiaiii jtM^mmm&#13;
•.•••.• • • • , . . . • &lt; • • • , • .1 ' . + . } &lt;( -A , , : * • - . . ' . • •. ; . ' • • , - • . . . I . . • . - ; - • ' . • ' ,v-'' «•&#13;
X,:&#13;
k&#13;
i ; J ' '&#13;
THE HEROIC DEED OF A T E X A 8&#13;
MAIDEN.&#13;
After R*r Lover Had Newly Perlahed&#13;
1« an Endeavor to Satisfy liar C*price,&#13;
8be Snatched Him from the Jew* of&#13;
—Beam waea outers Faltered.&#13;
ArUftettV JM* 1*, T«J**k*a»&#13;
Artificial silk apparently can ba&#13;
'mate, but it answer* to the real thing&#13;
aa oleomargarine answers to butter.&#13;
Going the rounds of the papers of Continental&#13;
Europe is an item that three&#13;
factories for the production of artificial&#13;
silk are in operation; that one, in&#13;
Wolston, England, produces 6,600&#13;
pounds a- week; one in Besancon,&#13;
I Franre, 12,000 pounds. and one in&#13;
(Special Letter.)&#13;
The etory of extraordinary adventure,&#13;
equal to the moat thrilling tales&#13;
of fiction, comes from Marble Falls,&#13;
Tex., of a brave girl, who rescued her&#13;
lover from a perilous situation by risking&#13;
her own life. The young man,&#13;
Charlie Waynock, had set out from the&#13;
home of his sweetheart for the purpose&#13;
of hunting a bird of paradise. Miss&#13;
Kate Mayland, who is regarded as the&#13;
belle of the Guadaloupe valley, had&#13;
promised to become the young man's&#13;
wife, and, as she was a great admirer&#13;
of bright colors, had asked him to secure&#13;
for her the plumage of a bird&#13;
which she wanted to use on hdr wedcliag&#13;
day.&#13;
©» • Prrwlpioe.&#13;
The young man promised to £et the&#13;
bird. He knew that a colony of the&#13;
famous birds of paradUe had long&#13;
made their abode on a precipice of the&#13;
Gaudaloupc mountains. This range is&#13;
a stupendous mass of granite, rising&#13;
straight up irom the river 350 feet.&#13;
About 91 feat below the summit and&#13;
200 aboro the water there is a narrow&#13;
ledge upon which can be Seen a few&#13;
stunted -cedars. Waynock was familiar&#13;
with the -habits of the birds and went&#13;
straight to the top of the mountain.&#13;
He -saw &amp; number of the sweet singing&#13;
beauties rise before him and settle in&#13;
the branches .of an oak that stood almost&#13;
on the brink of the precipice.&#13;
Raising his gun he quickly flred and&#13;
one of the .birds fell to the ground.&#13;
Waynock ran forward to secure his&#13;
prize, but it struggled nearor to the&#13;
bluff. Once ho had a hand on one of&#13;
the wounded bird's wings, but it&#13;
slipped from his grasp, and, in his&#13;
anxiety, he slid after it again, reaching&#13;
as far as he could.&#13;
&lt;Qvor I h o B r i n k .&#13;
This last effort took him within a&#13;
few feet of the edge of the precipice,&#13;
and before he could turn back the&#13;
earth began to give way under him.&#13;
Slowly his body slid over the brink,&#13;
Spreitenbach. Germany, 3,600 pounds.&#13;
It is stated, furthermore, that other&#13;
factories will soou be built in Belgium&#13;
and in Germany. Before the Frankfort&#13;
Society of Natural Philosophy Dr.&#13;
Freund, in a recent lecture on the subject,&#13;
said that though artificial silk&#13;
can compete with natural silk, it is not&#13;
as valuable. Artificial silk has been&#13;
used as a covering for cables and as a&#13;
substitute for horsehair, but it has a&#13;
tendency to break if wetted,and, therefore,&#13;
it must usually be mixed with&#13;
natural silk and cotton. The artificial&#13;
riTk is cheaper than the natural, and&#13;
more brilliant effects can be produced&#13;
with it. This industry, which is said&#13;
to be purely chemical, is expected to bo&#13;
developed to its fulleset extent In a&#13;
tew years.—New York Pre£3.&#13;
« » ~ . ~ — ™ — . 1 . - — . M I — ~ ^ * — » w ~ &lt;&#13;
WESTERN CANADA'S&#13;
DECEMBER WEATHER&#13;
Equal to That of May in Minnesota.&#13;
To the Editor:—Thomas Regan and&#13;
C. Collins of Eden Valley, Minnesota,&#13;
went out to Western Canada last December&#13;
as delegates to look over the&#13;
grazing and grain lands that are being&#13;
offered at such low prices and reasonnble&#13;
terms.—This la what they gay&#13;
BRAVE DEED OF MISS MAYLAND.&#13;
and, with a wail, he shot forward Into&#13;
the air.&#13;
Old man Joy, who lived at Japonica,&#13;
happened to be riding along the&#13;
road below when he saw the form of&#13;
the young man shooting through the&#13;
air. He saw the body strike among&#13;
the cedars on the cleft, where the&#13;
birds nested, and lodge there. Spurring&#13;
his horse he set off towards his&#13;
house. He had not gone far before&#13;
he met five cowboys, who had just&#13;
started out to round up a herd of&#13;
steers, and on their way they met Kate&#13;
Mayland riding on her pony. Shouting&#13;
to her to follow, Joy led the way.&#13;
Not until they had all dismounted at&#13;
the spot from which young Waynock&#13;
had plunged did the girl know what&#13;
had happened. She proved to be of&#13;
heroic mold, and when one of the cowboys&#13;
peered down into the awful abyss&#13;
and said some one would have to go&#13;
down, as Waynock would be too weak&#13;
to hold the rope, she quickly offered&#13;
to go. A rope formed of the cowboys'&#13;
lariats was secured around the girl's&#13;
body, and with another in her hand,&#13;
.she was slowly let down over the&#13;
precipice.&#13;
Jnat In Tine.&#13;
The girl reached her sweetheart's&#13;
side just in time. Already the trees&#13;
were beginning to yield under his&#13;
weight. Quickly she slipped the noose&#13;
around the young man's body, just as&#13;
the tree gave way. Then signaling to&#13;
the cowboys she bade them haul Waynock&#13;
up first.&#13;
Curing all this time the brave Texas&#13;
girt never lost her presence of mind,&#13;
and i t was not until she was safe on&#13;
top of the cliff with her lover that she&#13;
yielded to the strain which she had&#13;
endured and swooned in her lover's&#13;
anna.&#13;
V e r d i c t Meant D e a t h . ,&#13;
Aldrich. Mo., May 27th.—Four of the&#13;
best doctors in the vicinity have been&#13;
in .attendance on Mrs. Mollie Moore&#13;
of this place, who has been suffering&#13;
with a severe case of nervousness and&#13;
kidney disease. Each of them told her&#13;
that she would die.&#13;
Hearing of Dodd's KidneyJMIls^ she&#13;
began to use them, and instantly noticed&#13;
a change for the better. Her improvement&#13;
has been continuous since&#13;
then. She says that the disease first&#13;
manifested itself by the appearance of&#13;
dark spots floating before her eyes.&#13;
Her nerves were so bad that many&#13;
times they would collapse completely,&#13;
and she would fall down as if shot.&#13;
The fact that Dodd's Kidney Pills&#13;
saved her after four doctors had given&#13;
her up, has caused no end of talk in&#13;
this neighborhood, and all are loud in&#13;
their praises of this new remedy—&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills—which' is curing&#13;
so many hitherto incurable cases, in&#13;
this state and elsewhere.&#13;
V a n d e r b l l t F o u n d t h e C o i n .&#13;
While out with a coaching party a&#13;
few days ago Alfred G. Vanderbllt&#13;
drew forth a handful of money to pay&#13;
for something in a hotel at Yonker3.&#13;
One of the coins dropped to the floor&#13;
and the millionaire spent several minutes&#13;
looking for it. He finally found&#13;
the coin, which proved to be a red cent.&#13;
"Take care of the pennies," muttered&#13;
a bystander.&#13;
L a n e ' s F a m i l y M e d i c i n e&#13;
Moves the bowels each day. In order&#13;
to be healthy this is necessary. Acts&#13;
gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures&#13;
sick headache. Prices 25 and 50a .&#13;
Electrocution might be appropriately&#13;
called a capital climax.&#13;
Woman is a conundrum that man&#13;
never seems to give up.&#13;
For weakness, stiffness and soreness&#13;
in a^ed people use Wizard Oil. Your&#13;
druggist knows this and sells the oil.&#13;
The stock ticker is always bundled&#13;
up in red tape.&#13;
"Wearrived in Calgary about the 20th&#13;
of December and although we had leu&#13;
winter in Minnesota and Manitoba, we&#13;
were surprised to find beautiful warm&#13;
weather at this point, quite equal to&#13;
what we have in May in Minnesota.&#13;
There was no snow nor trace of win--&#13;
ter to be seen, and the climate was&#13;
really splendid. Horses, cattle and&#13;
sheep were running out, in prime condition,,&#13;
with plenty of feed on the prairie,&#13;
and really better than that of our3&#13;
stabled in the south. We are impressed&#13;
with this country as one of the&#13;
finest mixed farming countries we&#13;
have ever seen. The imiriense tracts&#13;
of fertile lands well sheltered and&#13;
abundantly watered leave nothing to&#13;
be desired.&#13;
"Leaving Alberta we returned east&#13;
and visited the Yorkton district in&#13;
Assiniboia. We drove out about ten&#13;
miles at this point and were highly&#13;
pleased with the splendid samples of&#13;
grain we were able to see—wheat&#13;
yielding 25 bushels, oats 60 bushel3.&#13;
Roots were also good specimens. From&#13;
what we have seen, we have decided&#13;
to throw in our lot with the Yorktohcrs—&#13;
satisfied That this part of the&#13;
country will furnish good opportunities&#13;
for anyone anxious to make the&#13;
best of a really good country."&#13;
"Any agent of the Canadian government.&#13;
whose advertisement appears elsewhere&#13;
in the columns of your paper&#13;
will give you full particulars of the&#13;
new districts being opened out this&#13;
year in Assiniboia and Saskatchewan.&#13;
Vourc truly, Old Reader.&#13;
» • „ . . ; * • . .&#13;
The transportation facilities would&#13;
seem to be ample for all possible demands&#13;
of the mammoth orowds which&#13;
are expected at the Pan-American Exposition.&#13;
The entire street railway&#13;
system of Buffalo, driven by the power&#13;
of Niagara Falls, is so laid out as&#13;
to secure direct communication from&#13;
all parts of the city to the Exposition&#13;
grounds. At the northern boundary&#13;
of thft grounds there has been built&#13;
a fine steam railway station. A twotrack&#13;
steam belt line encircles the city&#13;
of Buffalo, reaching this station, and&#13;
all the steam railroads centering in&#13;
Buffalo have access to these tracks.&#13;
This means of transportation will be&#13;
extensively used both for excursion '&#13;
trains from out the city and for conveying&#13;
people from the various parts&#13;
of the city to the grounds,&#13;
The Government Building at the&#13;
Pan-American Exposition is rapidly&#13;
being filled and many moct interesting&#13;
exhibits have come in. The light&#13;
house exhibit is being put up. It will&#13;
contain a first-order flashlight, giving&#13;
twenty-four flashes at each revolution,&#13;
a flash every five seconds. A prismatic&#13;
lens will reflect rainbow colors.&#13;
The light is similar to the one on&#13;
Fire Island and at Great West Bay.&#13;
Try Graln-O! Try Oraln-O!&#13;
Ask your Grocer today to show you a pack-&#13;
•xpe of GKAIN-O, the new food drink that takes&#13;
ti.^ place of coffee. The children may drink it&#13;
without injury as well as the adult. All who&#13;
try k; like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal&#13;
brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from&#13;
pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives&#13;
it without distress. M the price of coffee,&#13;
toe and Uo cts. per package. Sold by all&#13;
grocers.&#13;
Even the cowardly engineer whistles&#13;
at danger.&#13;
P r i v a t e M a l ' l n g C a r d .&#13;
Private Mailing Card with colored&#13;
views of scenery on the Chicago, Milwaukee&#13;
&amp; St.""Paul Railway sent on&#13;
receipt of ten (10) cents in stamps.&#13;
Address F. A. Miller, General Passenger&#13;
Agent, Chicago, I1L&#13;
A soft answer sometimes turns away&#13;
talk.&#13;
S u m m e r Vuc itlona.&#13;
Spend yours this Summer, in California.&#13;
There is no telling when the&#13;
trip can again be made so cheaply.&#13;
July 6th to 13th inclusive, Round-Trip&#13;
Tickets will be sold to San Francisco&#13;
via the Southern Pacific Company's&#13;
routes at rates less than the regular&#13;
one-way fare and will be good for the&#13;
return until August 31st. These tickets&#13;
cover first-class passage and will allow&#13;
holder to stopover at various&#13;
points of interest en route either going&#13;
or returning, or both, and can be&#13;
purchased for passage going via any of&#13;
the Southern Pacific Company's three&#13;
routes, Sunset, Ogden or Shasta, returning&#13;
the same or either of the others.&#13;
Through Pullman Palace and&#13;
Pullman Tourist sleeping cars. For&#13;
particulars address W. G. Neimyer,&#13;
G. W. A., S. P. Co., 238 Clark street,&#13;
Chicago, 111.&#13;
Eaay W a y t o G e t I c e .&#13;
A Woolwich (Me.) man has filled his&#13;
ice house with cakes which have floated&#13;
down with a freshet. All the crew&#13;
has had to do has been to watch for&#13;
the fine, blue cakes and then float them&#13;
into the ice house.&#13;
Beauty i^ as beauty does, but justice&#13;
s just as it is.&#13;
FRAGRANT&#13;
§070PQNT&#13;
a perfect liquid dentifrice for the&#13;
Teeth and Mouth&#13;
New Size S0Z0D0NT LIQUID, 25c A P A&#13;
S0Z0DONTTOOTH POWDER, 25c M i l *&#13;
Urge LIQUID and POWDER, 75c fa«J&#13;
At all Stores, or by Mail for tho price.&#13;
HALL A RUCKEU N e w York.&#13;
^' ••'Jwi&#13;
f ,•?*!$;&#13;
• , ' • ' • ' ' "&#13;
• • . • ; • ^&#13;
' y jw&#13;
: • ) ' - ' ^&#13;
%&#13;
• *&#13;
IN 3 OR 4 YEARS&#13;
IK INDEPENDENCE ASSURED If you take up yottr&#13;
home in Western Cam&#13;
ada,the land of plenty.&#13;
Illustrated pamphlet*,&#13;
giving experiences of&#13;
fanners who have, become&#13;
wealthy In growing&#13;
wheat, reports ot&#13;
w^^m^^^ delegates, ete., and fuM&#13;
imormation as to reduced railway rates can bell&#13;
ad on application to the Superintendent at&#13;
Immigration. Department of Interior. Ottawa,&#13;
Canada, or to J. Grieve, Saginaw, Mich., or M.&#13;
V. Mclnnes, No., 2 Merrill Block, Detroit, Mich.&#13;
W.N.U.—DETROIT—NO. 2 2 — JOO&gt;&#13;
Vhco Answering Advertiseneits Kiwilp&#13;
- Mention This Taper.&#13;
W.L.DOUCLAS&#13;
$3. &amp; $3.50 SHOES = . B e u l w o r t h of W . L.. D o n i l a * S:i a n d&#13;
Sit.fiO • h o c * la 8 4 t o « &amp; . M y W4&#13;
G U t £ « l g e L i n e c a n n o t b e e q u a l l e d&#13;
a t a n y p r i c e .&#13;
It Is not alone the best&#13;
leather that makes a first&#13;
.•'lawshoe it is the brains,&#13;
kth»t have planned the be*t&#13;
style, lasts a p*&gt;rf»M* -nodel&#13;
of the foot, and the construction of the shoe. It is meohanteaJ skill and&#13;
knowledge that haYe made \V. 1,. I&gt;onelas shoes the best in the world for men.&#13;
'•"like n o »ut»«tHu|.*. Insint on having W. I. Hooplas sbr** with name&#13;
and price Btamped on bottom. Your dealer should keep them, if he does not,&#13;
•end lor catalou giving full instrn.-tions how to order by mail.&#13;
W . L.. U O U G L A B , B r o c k t o n , Maaa.&#13;
¢9&#13;
S©©SSC&lt;*w&#13;
Piles Cured While You Sleep&#13;
You are costive, and nature ts under a corstant strain to relieve the condition. This causes a rush of blood to the rectum, and before&#13;
long congested lumps appear, itching, painful, bleeding. Then you have piles. There are many kinds and many cures, but piles are not curable&#13;
unless you assist nature in removing-the cause. CASCARETS make effort easy, regulate and soften the stools, relieving the.tension, and&#13;
giving nature a chance to use her healing power. Piles, hemorrhoids, fistula, and other rectal troubles yield to the treatment, and Cascarets&#13;
quickly and surely remove them forever. D o n ' t b e p e r s u a d e d t o e x p e p i m e n t w i t h a n y t h i n g e l s e !&#13;
: « ' :&#13;
K#:&#13;
Site ffadtttflg ffepatefe.&#13;
r\ L. ANDREWS &amp; CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THURSDAY, MAV,«0,1901.&#13;
T h e b o n d e d i n d e b t e d n e s s o^ t h e&#13;
village of H o w e l l is-$62,000. T h e y&#13;
have 14 y e a r s to pay t h e same.&#13;
TO Cure a Cold in One Vny&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.&#13;
All druggut? refund the money&#13;
if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature&#13;
is on each box. 25c.&#13;
T h e r e were 2,999 d e a t h s reported&#13;
as o c c u r i n g in M i c h i g a n d u r -&#13;
i n g t h e m o n t h of Apri1 , e q u i v a l e n t&#13;
to a d e a t h r a t e of 15.3 p e r t h o u s -&#13;
a n d population. T h i s n u m b e r is&#13;
489 less than t h e n u m b e r r e p o r t e d&#13;
for t h e t h e p r e c e d i n g m o n t h a n d&#13;
47 less t h a n the n u m b e r of d e a t h s&#13;
r e t u r n e d for April, 1900.&#13;
Old Soldiers Experience.&#13;
M.M.Austin, a civil war veteran,&#13;
of Winchester, Ind.. write: "My wife&#13;
•was sick a long t'me in spite of good&#13;
doctors treatment, but was wlioilv&#13;
cured by Dr. King's New Life Pills.&#13;
which worked wonders for tier health&#13;
They always do. Try them. Only&#13;
25c at F. A. Sigler's drug store.&#13;
S o m e of t h e m a r v a e l o u s c h a n g e s&#13;
w r o u g h t by time in t h e appearance&#13;
of four of t h e e a r l i e s t settlem&#13;
e n t s on o u r A t l a n t i c arf&gt; strikingly&#13;
i l l u s t r a t e d in a series of&#13;
views w h i c h will s h o r t l y a p p e a r&#13;
in t h e T h e L a d i e s ' H o m e J o u r n a l .&#13;
T h e places a r e St. A u g u s t i n e ,&#13;
J a m e s t o w n , P l y m o u t h a n d New&#13;
York. T h e forlorn i n d i c a t i o n s of&#13;
J a m e s t o w n ' s decay a n d d e a t h as a&#13;
s e t t l e m e n t offer a most i n t e r e s t i n g&#13;
c o n t r a s t to t h e varied evidences&#13;
of t h e g r a d u a l d e v e l o p m e n t of St.&#13;
A u g u s t i n e and P l y m o u t h , a n d of&#13;
t h e g i g a n t i c g r o w t h of m o d e r n&#13;
N e w York.&#13;
Shudders at his past.&#13;
"I I'ecali now with horror," says&#13;
Mail Carrier Burnett Mann, of Levanna,&#13;
0., "my three years years of suffer&#13;
ing from Kidney trouble. I was&#13;
hardly ever tree irom dull aches or&#13;
acute paiiis in my back. To stoop or&#13;
lilt mail sacks made me groan. I felt&#13;
tired worn out about ready to give up&#13;
when I began'to use Electric Hitters,&#13;
but six bottles coraplete'v cured me&#13;
and made me feel like a i^w man."&#13;
They're unrivaled to regulate Stomach,&#13;
Liver,. Kidneys, and Bowels.&#13;
Perfect satisfaction guaranteed by F.&#13;
A. Sigler. Only 50 cents.&#13;
E v e r y child k n o w s a n d every&#13;
g r o w n p e r s o n r e m e m b e r s w h a t&#13;
fascination t h e r e is in t h e p a s t i m e&#13;
of b l o w i n g bubbles. T h e anxiety&#13;
a t t e n d a n t on t h e b u b ! le's g r a d u a l&#13;
e x p a n s i o n in size, t h e .delight in&#13;
its i r i d e s c e n t h u e s a n d c u r i o u s reflections,&#13;
and t h e satisfaction felt&#13;
w h e n t h e m i n i a t u r e g l o b e is finally&#13;
l a u n c h e d on it brief c a r e e r a r e&#13;
familiar to all. B u t t h i n k of&#13;
b e i n g able t o c a r r y a b o u t a b u b b l e&#13;
on a flower, or to p u t a flower inof&#13;
a b u b b l e , or to m a k e a p i n -&#13;
w h e e l revolve in one, o r play&#13;
m u s i c t h r o u g h one, or to p u t six&#13;
b u b b l e s inside of o n e a n o t h e r !&#13;
Magic? N o t at all. I t is easy if&#13;
e n o u g h you only k n o w h o w ; a n d&#13;
in an early n u m b e r of The"&#13;
L a d i e s ' H o m e J o u r n a l you will be&#13;
told all a b o u t it.&#13;
Going West Via Frankfurt Across Lake&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
T h e A n n A r b o r C a r F e r r i e s a r e&#13;
now m u n i n g on r e g u l a r s c h e d u l e&#13;
b e t w e e n F r a n k f o r t , Mich., a n d&#13;
K e w a n e e and Mauitowoc,—Wis.,&#13;
a n d b e t w e e n F i a n k f o r t a n d M e -&#13;
u o t u i n e e and G l a d s t o n e , Mich.&#13;
Aun A r b o r R. R. t r a i n s c o n n e c t a t&#13;
F r a n k f o r t with these b o a t s making&#13;
a most d e s i r a b l e r o u t e between&#13;
N o r t h e r n W i s c o n s i n a n d&#13;
t h e U p p e r and L o w e r P e n i n s u l a s&#13;
of Michigan. T h e p a s s e n g e r s&#13;
fare via t h i s route is lower t h a n&#13;
any o t h e r rail route.&#13;
All Eyes on Texas.&#13;
Great is Texas. Her vast cotton&#13;
crops and marvellous oil discoveries&#13;
amaze the world. Now follows the&#13;
startling statement of the wonderlull&#13;
work at Cisco, Tex. of Dr. King's New&#13;
Discovery tor consumption. "My&#13;
wile contracted a seveie lung trouble&#13;
writes editor J. J . Eager, which «aus&#13;
ed a most obstinate ccugh and finally&#13;
resulted in propose hemorrhages, but&#13;
she has heen compMely cured by Dr.&#13;
King's New Discoveiy." It's postive*&#13;
lely guaranted for Coughs, Colds and&#13;
all throat and lunar troubles. 50c.and&#13;
$1.00. Trial bottles free at P. A. Siller's&#13;
di ug store.&#13;
I w. a T. u-1&#13;
% Eiltted by the W. C\ T !\«f i&gt;lnekn*&gt;y f&#13;
It Saved his l e g .&#13;
P . A. Danfortb, of LaGrange, Ga.,&#13;
suffered for six months' with a irightful&#13;
running sore on his leg: hut writes&#13;
t r n t Bucklen's Arnica Salve v holly&#13;
cured it in rive davs. For Ulcers,&#13;
Wounds, Piles, it's the best salve in&#13;
the world. Cure guaranteed. Only&#13;
25c. Sold by P. A. Sigler, Piuckney.&#13;
"I love company." said a local Mrs.&#13;
Partington. "It makes things bright&#13;
and lively—it breaks the anatomy."—&#13;
New York Sun.&#13;
From a cWfl^OO feet high one with&#13;
clear vigion can see a ship at a distance&#13;
of 42 miles.&#13;
T h e village of H o w e l l h a s m o r e&#13;
free mail delivery r o u t e s t h a n&#13;
any o t h e r place in t h e s t a t e of J&#13;
M i c h i g a n . I t has six, while L a n -&#13;
sing, Owosso, S a g i n a w , St. J o h n s&#13;
and S a g i n a w W. S. a r e t h o only&#13;
places in the S t a t e ( o u t s i d e of&#13;
H o w e l l ) to boast of five routes.&#13;
T h e r e are now 48 r o u t e s established&#13;
in t h i s c o n g r e s s i o n a l district,&#13;
but t h e r e are a p p l i c a t i o n s in for&#13;
83 m o r e . T h e total n u m b e r n o w .&#13;
in o p e r a t i o n in the S t a t e of M i c h -&#13;
igan is 235, a n d a p p l i c a t i o n s a r e&#13;
p e n d i n g for t h e e s t a b l i s h m e n t of&#13;
534 o t h e r s , — E x .&#13;
S l o p t h e C o u i r U H I M I w o r l m o f f t h e&#13;
C o l d .&#13;
Li-xafive Bromo-Quinine Tablets cure&#13;
a cold in one day. No ' me, no pay.&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
Kamiftu'N L a k e o f F i r e .&#13;
"I doubt if many persons Realize flu&#13;
fascination to bo thrived from a whitei&#13;
spent in the Haliamas," said a visitor&#13;
just returned from there the other day.&#13;
"Down near Nassau, for example&#13;
.there is a curious sheet of water known&#13;
as the Lake of Fire that is worth-going&#13;
far to see. It is simply a phosphorescent&#13;
lake, but its weird effects cling&#13;
to one's recollection in an uncanny&#13;
way. It is about three miles from the&#13;
hotel. You drive through quaint and&#13;
narrow streets, with only here and&#13;
there a lamppost shedding a dim light.&#13;
and past the open doors of huts whose&#13;
occupants seem to fill every space in&#13;
the abodes to overflow-lug.&#13;
"The gates of the old estate of Waterloo&#13;
have long since disappeared, and&#13;
the house is in ruins, but you drive between&#13;
the posts which, still mark the&#13;
entrance down a grass grown roadway&#13;
to the edge-'of this wonderful pond.&#13;
The water is only a few feet deep, and&#13;
the pond is scarcely a quarter of a mile&#13;
long. We stepped into a rowboat by&#13;
the dim light of a lantern, and in a moment,&#13;
as the boat pushed off and the&#13;
oars broke the water into ripples, we&#13;
were surrounded by a sea of flame. The&#13;
divers who swam about seemed literally&#13;
merged in blue smoke, for the effect&#13;
of this phosphorescence is more like&#13;
smoke than water. It reminds one of&#13;
the butterfly dance seen on the stage.&#13;
The form of the diver is surrounded by&#13;
a luminous glow, and the fishes take&#13;
fright and dart away like little flames&#13;
into the dark and quiet waters. It is a&#13;
beautiful sight."—New York Sun.&#13;
"It is with a «ood deal of pleasure&#13;
and satisfaotition that I recommend&#13;
Clmml&gt;enain\s Colic, Cholera and&#13;
'Diarrhoea Remedy," says Druggist A.&#13;
W. Sawtelle, of Hartford, Conn. "A&#13;
lady fju.sloir.er, seeing the remedy ex&#13;
posed for sale on my show case, said&#13;
to me:kl really believe that medicine&#13;
saved my life the past summer while&#13;
at the shore," and she became so enthusiastic&#13;
over its merits that I a'&#13;
once made up my mind to recommend&#13;
it in the future. Recently a gentle&#13;
man came into my store so overcome&#13;
with colic pains that lie sank to the&#13;
floor. I gave him a do.&lt;e of tbis remft-&#13;
Jv which hnlr&gt;pd him. 1 rapeafrd&#13;
the dose .and in ti'teen minutes he left&#13;
my store smilingly informing ine that&#13;
he felt as well as ever." Sold ~by F.&#13;
A, Sigler, Piockney.&#13;
" T h e d r i n k t r a t h c in West Africa&#13;
is fast b e c o m i n g a t r e m e n d o u s&#13;
p r o b l e m . I n t b e d e l t a of lr'ger&#13;
g i n is p r a c t i c a l l y t h e c u r r e n c y ; so&#13;
that, if a p e r s o n w i s h e s to buy&#13;
food, i n s t e a d of t a k i n g n p u r s e of&#13;
m o n e y , h e m u s t be a r m e d with a&#13;
case or t w o of gin, a n d , u n l e s s he&#13;
will d o t h i s lie may even be d e -&#13;
p r i v e d of s o m e of n e c e s s a r i e s of&#13;
life. T h a t t h i s can b e allowed in&#13;
B r i t i s h possession is a d i s g i a c e to&#13;
a civilized nation.&#13;
T h e N a s h v i l l e A d v o c a t e s a y s&#13;
t h e n e t r e s u l t of t e m p e r a n c e work&#13;
in t h e T e n n e s s e e legislature,&#13;
w h i c h h a s j u s t closed its session,&#13;
is t h a t m o r e t h a u t h i r t y t o w n s&#13;
w h i c h w e r e " w e t " w h e n it b e g a u&#13;
a r e now " d r y . " T h e m e t h o d by&#13;
w h i c h t h i s result h a s been accomp&#13;
l i s h e d is a very s i m p l e o n e ; t h e&#13;
t o w n s have s i m p l y b e e n allowed&#13;
to s u r r e n d e r t h e i r c h a r t e r s , a n d&#13;
r e i n c o r p o r a t e u n d e r t h e g e n e r a l&#13;
s t a t u t e which gives to all towns&#13;
in t h e s t a t e " h e r e a f t e r i n c o r p o r -&#13;
e d " t h e benefit of t h e four-mile&#13;
law.&#13;
D i s c u s s i o n of " A l c o h o l an Alcoh&#13;
o l i s m , " a t a m e e t i n g of t h e New&#13;
Y o r k A c a d m e y of m e d i c i n e , s u m -&#13;
m a r i z e d by t h e N e w York S u n&#13;
from t h e Medical R e c o r d , cont&#13;
a i n s s o m e facts a n d inferences&#13;
t h a t are of g e n e r a l i n t e r e s t . As&#13;
to t h e p r e v a l e n c e of a l c o h o l i s m ,&#13;
D r . A l e x a n d e r L a m b e r t said t h a t&#13;
of t h e 24,300 p a t i e n t s in Uellevue&#13;
h o s p i t a l last year, o n e - f o u r t h went&#13;
t h r o u g h t h e alcoholic w a r d , a m o n g&#13;
tliem b e i n g m a n y w h o had t a k e n&#13;
t h e v a r i o u s " c u r e s . " D r . A l l e n&#13;
S t a r r said t h a t he h a d to "confess&#13;
t h a t t h e o n l y r e f o r m e d d r u n k a r d s&#13;
of w h o m li9&gt; h a d k n o w l e d g e were&#13;
t h o s e w h o h a d b e e n saved not&#13;
t h r o u g h medical, b u t t h r o u g h rel&#13;
i g i o u s influence."&#13;
S o r t o f a C n n n l h n l .&#13;
An old farmer for many years got his&#13;
dinner on market days at a small hotel&#13;
kept by a widow.&#13;
She had long suspected that he ate&#13;
more than tlw price (Is. Gd.i warranted,&#13;
so she determined to test him. She accordingly&#13;
arranged matters so that&#13;
there was no room for him at table, but&#13;
she took him into a private room'the&#13;
table of which was graced by a steaming&#13;
leg of mutton, lie set to in good&#13;
! earnest, and soon nothing was left but&#13;
'- the boues.&#13;
J Highly-delighted with his cheap feed,&#13;
! on passing the bar he tendered 'J shillings&#13;
for his dinner and a quart of ale.&#13;
The widow declined to take any payment&#13;
on the ground of having Inconvenienced&#13;
.him so much.&#13;
Chuckling to himself, the farmer lifted&#13;
down his market basket from a&#13;
hook, and. rinding it rather light, he&#13;
tore off the covering and shouted:&#13;
"Here. Mrs. Brown. Where's my leg&#13;
o* mutton?"&#13;
"Why, ye old silly," said the widow,&#13;
"ye have ate your leg for your dinner!"&#13;
—Loudon Answers.&#13;
MONTHLY REPORT&#13;
C o n v e n t i o n T h r o n j i t a P o r k .&#13;
An old Cambridge friend of mine who&#13;
had a good deal of the wisdom of the&#13;
serpent in him had a farmer in bis parish&#13;
in'Norfolk whom he could uot get&#13;
to church. Whenever he pressed upon&#13;
him his neglect or his bad example ne&#13;
was always met with the same excuse,&#13;
"You be too young and do hot know&#13;
enough to teach such as I." At last he&#13;
gave up the farmer in despair. But&#13;
one day he happened to pass by the&#13;
farm while hte parishioner was engaged&#13;
in killing a tine pig. My friend&#13;
said: "What a pig! Why, he weighs 34&#13;
stone!" "What dost thou know ot&#13;
pigs?" replied the farmer. "I only wish&#13;
he weighed as much." When they next&#13;
met, the farmer, to his surprise, told&#13;
my friend that the pig had been found&#13;
to weight just 34 stone. He added,&#13;
much to my friend's gratification. "And&#13;
thou wilt see me at church next Sunday,&#13;
parson."—Manchester (Juardlan.&#13;
Of the Pinekuey Public Schools for the&#13;
month ending May 24, 1901.&#13;
HIGH SCHOOL HEPAKTMKNT.&#13;
Whole number of pupils 2&amp;-&#13;
Total days attendance&#13;
Average attendance&#13;
Aggregate tardiness&#13;
Number of days taught&#13;
408.&#13;
21.&#13;
29.&#13;
20.&#13;
PUPILS X K l T i l t U AHSKNT NOR TARDY,&#13;
Millie Gardner. Maude Richmond,&#13;
Pacia Hinchey.&#13;
S'J'KPHKX D l ' l l F E K , S u p t .&#13;
tiKAMMAit DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Number of pupils 15&#13;
Total attendance 224&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 24&#13;
Daily attendance 13&#13;
Number days taught 20&#13;
PUPILS XiilTilKK ABSKXT &gt;TOK TAKDV,&#13;
Kllery JDtwfee, Ethel Durfee.&#13;
Fred Head.&#13;
C. L. GRIMES, Teacher.&#13;
INTERMEDIATE DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whole number of days taught 20&#13;
Total number days attendance 437&#13;
Average daily attendance 21.&amp;o&#13;
Whole number belonging 30&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 27&#13;
PUPIL NEITHER ABSEXT NOR TARDY.&#13;
Lloyd Grimes. Orpha Hendee.&#13;
Magolla Smith.&#13;
Gieudon Hiclmrds. LJIH Moran.&#13;
Mas. J. A. GREENE, Teacher.&#13;
r v i t y «i!rli» C n m o t T h r o w .&#13;
A great lUr.i of fun Is poked at girla&#13;
hi'causc they &lt;r.:n&gt;of throw a stone or a&#13;
!••••;.iiviwli and hit the person or thing&#13;
tlic.v :!!•(• a !"'i:'.i' at. The general idea&#13;
as K) v. liv 4:;;!s cannot throw as well n»&#13;
ii,.;.si -.-,8 ti-i i: «•&gt;• have nut acnulred the&#13;
KMii-r. l.-y j:'ia:ico as their brothers&#13;
l:::'e A n t h e r explanation Is given by&#13;
a medical uuin which lends to show&#13;
thru uirls could never loam the knack,&#13;
however mu"h they tried.&#13;
When a boy throws a stone, he&#13;
crooks his elbow and reaches back&#13;
with his forearm, and In the act or&#13;
throwing he works every joint from&#13;
shoulder to wrist. The girl throws&#13;
with her whole arm rigid, whereas the&#13;
boy's arm Is relaxed.&#13;
The reason* of this difference Is one&#13;
of anatomy. The feminine collar bone&#13;
is longer and is set lower than In the&#13;
case of a male. The long, crooked,&#13;
awkward boue interferes with the free&#13;
use of the arm. This is the reason tbat&#13;
girls cannot throw well.&#13;
The government navy carpenters&#13;
receive $1,200 to $1,803 a year. Only&#13;
a fevv CHrpmters are able to pass the&#13;
examination.&#13;
PRIMARY DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whole number of days taught 20&#13;
Total number of days attendance 532&#13;
Average daily attendance 20.ti&#13;
Whole number belonging 3o&#13;
Aggregate tardiness ")0&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
Bangs Richmond Florence Cook&#13;
Myra Burch Una Campbell&#13;
Iva Richmond Lucv Cook&#13;
Claude Black.&#13;
JESSIE GREEN, Teacher.&#13;
13ancrott residents ave been seeing&#13;
snakes the past week but now it is all&#13;
over. Two boxys of snakes were shipped&#13;
from the south for a circus, which,&#13;
makes its winter headquarters in the&#13;
village, and during the night one of&#13;
the monsters escaped, Saturday,&#13;
while a couple of citizens were conversing&#13;
in trout ot a business plane&#13;
the snake dropped Irom the cornice of&#13;
the building to the s'Idevvaik. Everyone&#13;
skipped for shelter and one of -the&#13;
circus aiHii was notified. He.soon had&#13;
hi-* snakeship back in his case and the&#13;
villager.-, came out, of their hiding&#13;
piaces and now breathe easier.-—Democrat..&#13;
Michael Dreimnger s larmer, residing&#13;
on the old Reeve homestead north&#13;
or Uext?r, m Webster township, last&#13;
one cow and another is sick. He had&#13;
13 cows in an old pasture when one&#13;
became biind and then delirious and&#13;
died. Whan the second cow was taken&#13;
with the sam&lt;i symptoms. The veterinarian,&#13;
tound the cow delirious, trying j&#13;
to climb into her manger, and was&#13;
convinced that the 'rouble was caused&#13;
by something the cow hid eaten, either&#13;
plant or something else. The o w s&#13;
have, be^n taken out of pasture and&#13;
80 far no other cows have been&#13;
taken sick.&#13;
S t a t e G e o l o g i s t L o w e r e p o r t s&#13;
t h e finding of a l a r g e m a s t o d o n&#13;
by s o m e f a r m e r s n e a r G r a n d L e d -&#13;
ge. H e s a y s it is t h e h a i r y e\e-p&#13;
p h a n t of p r e - h i s t o r i c times. T h e&#13;
t u s k s were a b o u t e i g h t i n c h e s i n&#13;
d i a m e t e r a n d t h e t e e t h a r e a b o u t&#13;
e i g h t i n c h e s by four. T h e y r e c k -&#13;
on it of c o n s i d e r a b l e i m p o r t a n c e&#13;
to t h e scientific w o r l d . — C h e s a n -&#13;
i n g A r g u s .&#13;
B e w a r e of a C a l d .&#13;
A cough is not a disease but a sympton.&#13;
Consumption and bronchitis,&#13;
which are the most dangerous and&#13;
fatal diseases, have for their first indication&#13;
a persistant cough, and if properly&#13;
treated as soon a&gt; this cough&#13;
appears are easi'y cured. Chamberlain's&#13;
Cough Remedy has&amp;proven wonderfully&#13;
successful, and gained its&#13;
wide reputation and extensive sale by&#13;
its success \v. curing the diseases&#13;
which cause coughing. If it is not&#13;
beneficial it will not co»t you a c^nt.&#13;
For sale by F. A. Sigler, Pmcknev.&#13;
S u b s c r i b e t o r D i s p a t c h .&#13;
W A N T E D - S a l e s n i a n and Collector&#13;
to represent well established business&#13;
of 50 years standing Small Honesty&#13;
Uond required, a liberal contract for&#13;
a good man.&#13;
I),E Whipple, •&#13;
Mtt South Main St.&#13;
Ann Ar' or, Mich.&#13;
W.\ N* I'KD—Caiuihte, reliable p.-rson in every&#13;
county to represent larjw coiupuiy of solid flnant-&#13;
ial reputation. S i Hi s-xlury j&gt;_«r 7e:ir, piyaMe&#13;
weekly: S;l per day absolutely aura and all experipes:&#13;
*trai^lit, Imna-ll le, tlfiiuito salary, no&#13;
commission; salary paid waoli Saturday and oxpense&#13;
umney advanced natli week. STANDARD&#13;
HOU&gt;dC, ;!;U Dearborn st Uliiea-,'0. t-29&#13;
The purest Chinese is spoken t^Mankin&#13;
and is called "the lftngnaffo n t h t&#13;
mandnrlns." f/&#13;
Try the new remedy fo- eo«ttv*i o i l&#13;
Chamberlain'* Stomach and ^ ?Cf&#13;
Tablets". Every " box guaranteed&#13;
Price 25, cents. For sale by- P. A .&#13;
Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
G u m p t i o n A b o u t C o w * .&#13;
Farm Journal folks figure that a cow&#13;
giving 5,000 pounds of 4 per cent milk&#13;
will produce only $."&gt;0 worth of butter,&#13;
while oue that will produce 8,000&#13;
pounds of 5 per cent milk will produce&#13;
$100 worth of butter, and her calf is&#13;
worth three times as much a s that of&#13;
the first.&#13;
There wlli be little difference in the&#13;
cost of keeping the two cows, so that&#13;
where the firxt gives a profit of $30 the&#13;
latter will net the owuer $100, If we&#13;
count the first cow's calf at $10 and&#13;
the other at $30.&#13;
Some people do not think there Is&#13;
much difference In cows, but some&#13;
cows forget to pay their board bills,&#13;
while others take great pleasure in&#13;
supplying the table with luxuries, paying&#13;
the interest, clothing the baby and&#13;
paying the hired girl.&#13;
The good cow is a poor farmer*!&#13;
friend.&#13;
O u r local t o b a c c o g r o w e r s h a v e&#13;
a fine c r o p of d o c k s comifcg o n .&#13;
T h o q u a c k s will b e u s e d t o p i c k&#13;
t h e w o r m s f r o m t h e t o b a c c o p l a n t s .&#13;
I t h a s b e e n n e c c e a s a r y heretofore&#13;
t o h a v e t h e w o r m s h a n d p i c k e d ,&#13;
b u t t h e d u c k s will d o tlie w o r k&#13;
e a u e i a n d c h e a p e r . A c o n s i d e r -&#13;
a b l e a c r e a g e of t o b a c c o will b e&#13;
c u l t i v a t e i n t h i s v i c i n i t y . — F e n -&#13;
t o n I n b e p a n d e n t .&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
&gt; AND STEAMSHIP LINES*&#13;
Popular route tor Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and lor&#13;
Howell, Owosso, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern Michigan. .&#13;
W..H . BENNETT,&#13;
G r P . A. Toledo&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
Sa«UroatfL, 7**».. 1, 1 3 3 1 .&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as follows*.&#13;
For Detroit and Kest,&#13;
10:36 a. m., S:04 p. rn., 8:5S p. m.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and West,&#13;
0:4.5 a. m., 2:0vS p, m. 6:20 p. m.&#13;
For Saginaw and Bav City,&#13;
10:36 a, m., 3:04 p. m.^ 8:58" p. m.&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10:36 a. m.&#13;
F R A N K BiY,&#13;
Agent, South Lyon.&#13;
H . P . M O E t t E U ,&#13;
O. P. A., Detroit.&#13;
tfrand Trnnk Railway System*&#13;
OfiTin7&#13;
S:l&amp;p. m.&#13;
j 6.44». m.&#13;
% 6:45 p. to.&#13;
£ 4:4ft p . m .&#13;
JaokaoD, Uetroit, and&#13;
int«rraeaiftt« station*&#13;
mnil and pxp.&#13;
Jack«ou. Lenox, and&#13;
Intermediate autiona&#13;
mixed.&#13;
3&#13;
7:Ma.m. I&#13;
The 9:18 a. m. and 6:45 p. m. train* have ihrougk&#13;
coaefa between Jackaon and Detroit. •_._&#13;
W. J. Blwk, Agent, Piockney&#13;
* , • ; • ' ' : &gt; '&#13;
• Vr' v . - , . •"•.(.-1 '-' "•' •.'•' - . . ; . ' : - ..'•;•',•:;•/ . : y. !•••.•'.' •"-'•]'• • - .'•..••"':- "; " . ' ''•:..•'. :•'••' ;*'&lt;-•'&amp;*•••••. : - ^ ^ , . : ^ / , . • •'" • » " ' '•'' &gt; ) " ' &gt;./' ". - ' • • - - . ^ - : , . . ' v - ' ^ " - : , - : - ¾ - • ' " . •"•' • • - ' v V ' • • ' • • • ^ '•.••.•&gt;••'. ' . . * ' " / • " . . .-'••;;. i it.;*y . . ^ : . ^ - 1 : . ^ , - , 4 , ,&#13;
• - ; . , y • • . . ' • • • . _ • . • • • ' - , . . • . ' ':", • ; ' • • . . • • • • . • . . . • • • •&#13;
$f*''&#13;
~*m&#13;
*• w A. &gt; T 13 I&gt; 9*&#13;
W»nl&lt; w e n , w e a l ; worn*-,*), p u l e&#13;
m e n , i KIH v\f m e n . n«r . Mt&gt; m e n , n e r -&#13;
v o u s v* n i n e n , d e b i l i t a t e d m e n . d e b i l i -&#13;
t a t e d woniHii, ( o lake, • K n i l i V U c d P i l U&#13;
t o r W a n P e o p l e . T h e y r e s t o r e H e a i t h ,&#13;
S t m i H t h mu\ \&lt;»- yity. W a k e u p .&#13;
l m m e u p I'.y t a k i n g t h " i n b e f o r e t h e&#13;
h o t w». a I iter. T h e y i r e t h e y r e a t l i 0 d y&#13;
b u i l d e r a e d il^VHhtjier. S p r i n g T o n i c&#13;
a n d •Hioi d m e d i c i n e . 25&lt;r a b o x .&#13;
K n i l l s H ' h i i p LiV'-r I'ilU a r e t h e&#13;
ureal' L i v e r In vitf» ral«&lt;r, lh&gt;wel Ix'euu&#13;
]*{• r. 2 o ring's 2 5 c .&#13;
Ktiill'x B i n * K i d n e y P i l i s c u r e&#13;
Ha.-t-indp' a n d K i d n e y i r o u M i - s . 2 5 c&#13;
a In*.&#13;
S n o h Stuff a a D r e a m t A r « H a d * Of.&#13;
T h e m a t e r i a l s o f d r e a m s m a ; b e&#13;
e n u m e r a t e d a s m e m o r i e s o f w a k i n g s e n -&#13;
s a t i o n s , m e m o r i e s o f w a k i n g t h o u g h t s&#13;
a n d n e w s e n s a t i o n s r e c e i v e d i n s l e e p ,&#13;
w h e t h e r f r o m w i t h o u t o r w i t h i n . D r .&#13;
G r e g o r y m e n t i o n s o f h i m s e l f t h a t h a v -&#13;
i n g o n o n e o c c a s i o n g o n e t o b e d w i t h a&#13;
b o t t l e o f h o t w a t e r a t h i s f e e t h e&#13;
JAPAN IN WINTER.&#13;
C o l d e r l a H o u s e s o f t h e R i c h M a i&#13;
T h a n l a O p e n S u n s h i n e .&#13;
"I s u p p o s e t h a t t h e A m e r i c a n p e o p l e&#13;
a n d t h e R u s R a n s a r e t h e o n l y w e s t e r n&#13;
r a c e s t h a t r&lt;jally k e e p w a r m In w i n t e r .&#13;
S t i l l t h o s e w h o d w e l l In o t h e r c o u n t r i e s&#13;
a d m i t t h a t t h e y h a v e t h e s a m e i d e a l b y&#13;
flH'n'mprt of w a l k i n g u p t h e &lt;rr**»* » ' ' t h e i r Inefficient e f f o r t t o a t t a i n t o i t . "&#13;
M o u n t E t n a a n d f e e l i n g t h e g r o u n d&#13;
w a r m u n d e r b l m . H e h a d a t a n e a r l y&#13;
p e r i o d o f b i s l i f e v i s i t e d M o u n t V e s u -&#13;
v i u s a n d a c t u a l l y f e l t a s t r o n g s e n s a -&#13;
t i o n o f w a r m t h In h i s f e e t w h e n w a l k -&#13;
i n g u p t h e s i d e o f t h e c r a t e r , a n d h e&#13;
h a d m o r e r e c e n t l y r e a d B r y d o n e ' s d e -&#13;
s c r i p t i o n o f M o u n t E t n a .&#13;
O n a n o t h e r o c c a s i o n , h a v i n g t h r o w n&#13;
off t h e b e d c l o t h e s In h i s s l e e p , h e&#13;
d r e a m e d o f s p e n d i n g a w i n t e r a t H u d -&#13;
s o n ' s b a y a n d o f s u f f e r i n g d i s t r e s s f r o m&#13;
t h e I n t e n s e f r o s t . H e h a d b e e n r e a d -&#13;
i n g a f e w d a y s b e f o r e a v e r y p a r t i c u -&#13;
l a r a c c o u n t o f t h e s t a t e o f t h e c o l o n i e s&#13;
d u r i n g w i n t e r . — C a ^ s e l l ' H M a g a z i n e ,&#13;
SAFE, SOLID,&#13;
^'ACCURATE.&#13;
^ Tb« Use U most complete,&#13;
.^,. '•mbrMiog pUtolt, hevrv&#13;
,/f riflet for target and hunting&#13;
purpo»e», light pocket rifle*&#13;
with ikeleton ttocki.&#13;
The "FAVORITE"&#13;
are corned by the una guarantee. The&#13;
bett in the world for boye. J art u reliable&#13;
and advisable for men.&#13;
No. lT~wltk PUla O m 81*kU.. .-96.00&#13;
No. 18-wltk Target 6i*huT 8.60&#13;
Where these riAei are not carried In itoek by dealen we&#13;
will «end, exprest prepaid, on receipt of price.&#13;
Smd Uamp for catalogue.&#13;
Jf. STEVUNS ABMS A t O O L CO.,&#13;
B i l i o u s n e s s is a c o n d i t i o n i-havuot^ri'z^&#13;
d b y a d i s t u r b a n c e o f t h e d i g e s t i v e&#13;
o r g a n s . T h e s t o m a c h is d e b i l i t a t e d ,&#13;
t h e l i v e r l o r b i d , t h e h o t e l s c o n s t i p a t -&#13;
ed. T h e r e is a l o a t h i n g of fond, p a i n ^&#13;
in ( b e b o w e l s , d / / . z i n e s s , c o a t e d f o u g u e&#13;
• a n d v o m i t i n g , H i » i . o f i h e undiira-ited&#13;
o r p a r t l v d i t r e ^ e d f o o d a n d flien ol&#13;
t h e hiie. O h a n i h e t I a i n ' s S t o m a c h a n d&#13;
L i v e r T a b l e t s a l l y i h e d i s t u r b a n c e s o^&#13;
t h e s t o m a c h a n d r i h a ' e a h e a l t h y a p -&#13;
p e t i t e . T l i e y a l s o t o n e u p t h e l i v e r&#13;
lit K 'liesilt h y Hi-lion ;tnd »»-•*/ u 1 a t f t h "&#13;
^mvel.-., Ti v t h e m m i d v o n ;-ii&gt;' e.i'r&#13;
•A\U t o be, m u e h j . l e ^ - e d ^ i t h tlte re&#13;
- i n t . Kor'siilti i&gt;y F. A~. rfiyler, l ' m e ^ -&#13;
n &lt;- v .&#13;
w r i t e s A n n a N . B e n j a m i n in A i n s i e e ' s .&#13;
" T h e J a p a n e s e w i n t e r Is m o s t t r y i n g o n&#13;
a c c o u n t o f i t s c o n t i n u a l d a m p n e s s , b u t&#13;
t h e J a p a n e s e a r e c o n t e n t t o r e m a i n&#13;
c o l d . T h e y m a k e a l m o s t n o e f f o r t t o&#13;
o v e r c o m e It. T h e o l d ' b u s h l d o ' ( c h i v a l -&#13;
r o u s ) i d e a o f t h e ' s a m u r a i ' ( k n i g h t s *&#13;
w a s t h a t It w a s e f f e m i n a t e t o f e e l c o l d ,&#13;
a n d s u c h Is t h e i r s e v e r e t r a i n i n g t h a t&#13;
t h e y d o n o t r e a l l y f e e l i t a s w e d o . T h e&#13;
W e t h e u n d e r s i g n e d d r a ^ ' - * * * * . oft*&#13;
e r a . e w a / d o f 5 0 c e n t s t o a n y p e r w m&#13;
w h o p m c h a s e s o f a s , t w o 2 5 o b o u t&#13;
of Baxter'* Mandrak* Bitters Tablet*&#13;
it' it fails to core coufHpation, bilioot*&#13;
ness, sick-headache, jaundice, loss of&#13;
appetite, soor stomacbe, dyspepsia&#13;
account seeme_d. . w_h o_ll_y _un_co_n sc°ion uisn ^olf[-l i:v e—r c-o.m ,rp.l^a i.n—t, !o r any o' f t•b e• diserars~e ** for which it is recommended. Frioa&#13;
A n E a r l y G e o r s - t a M o n s t e r .&#13;
I n t h e f o r e p a r t o f A u g u s t , 1 8 1 2 . a&#13;
p a r t y o f h u n t e r s f o u n d In a m o u n t a i n -&#13;
o u s r e g i o n n o w k n o w n a s R a b u n c o u n -&#13;
t y , G a . , a b e i n g n e a r l y e i g h t f e e t h i g h&#13;
c o v e r e d w i t h b l u i s h h a i r a n d h a v i n g a&#13;
h u m a n f a c e a d o r n e d w i t h i m m e n s e&#13;
e a r s r e s e m b l i n g t h o s e o f a n a s s . T h e&#13;
c r e a t u r e w a s s t o n e d e a f a n d o n t h a t&#13;
t h e m s e l v e s i n t o a p a r t y f o r t h e e x p r e s s&#13;
w e a j l n g o f s o m e e x t r a ' k i m o n o s ' a n d L p u r p o s e o f c a p t u r i n g t h e u n c a n n y b e -&#13;
t h e u s e o f a ' h l b a c h i / or b r a z i e r , in&#13;
w h i c h a r e a f e w t i n y s t i c k s o f l i g h t e d&#13;
c h a r c o a l , a r e t h e o n l y c o n c e s s i o n s t o&#13;
w i n t e r w e a t h e r . W i t h t h e ' h l b a c h i '&#13;
t h e y n e v e r p r e t e n d t o b e a t m o r e t h a n&#13;
t h e i r finger t i p s , w h i c h t h e y h o l d o v e r&#13;
t h e c o a l s . I t i s u s e d w h e n t h e h o u s e is&#13;
e n t i r e l y o p e n .&#13;
" T h e h o u s e s , a s e v e r y o n e k n o w s , a r e&#13;
b u i l t of t h i n , l i g h t w o o d , a n d t h e s l i d -&#13;
i n g p a n e l s w h i c h s e r v e for d o o r s a n d&#13;
w i n d o w s h a v e p a p e r p a n e s . T h e y a r e&#13;
a s a p t t o b e o p e n a s c l o s e d d u r i n g t h e&#13;
d a y . W h e n I t o o k m y first j i n r i k i s h a&#13;
r i d e t h r o u g h t h e s t r e e t s of N a g a s a k i . I&#13;
f o r g o t m y o w n s u f f e r i n g s i n m y s y m -&#13;
p a t h y f o r t h i s u n h a p p y n a t i o n , w h i c h&#13;
a s s u r e l y a s t h e e o l d c a m e e n d u r e d s u c h&#13;
m i s e r y f r o m it! T h e c o o l i e s w e a r t h i n&#13;
b l u e c o t t o n c l o t h e s a n d are a l w a y s padd&#13;
l i n g t h r o u g h t b e m u d . T h e s t o r e k e e p -&#13;
e r s s i t o u t in t h e i r o p e n b o o t h s , a n d t h e&#13;
w o m e n g o b a r e h e a d e d a b o u t t h e s t r e e t s .&#13;
I n t h e h o u s e s o f t h e rich t h e s t i l l c o l d&#13;
b e h i n d t h e c l o s e d p a n e l s is o f t e n m o r e&#13;
i n t e n s e t h a n t b a t o u t s i d e in, t h e s u n -&#13;
s h i n e , w h e r e t h e a i r Is s t i r r i n g . T i i e&#13;
s c h o o l s a n d p u b l i c b u i l d i n g s a r e e q u a J :&#13;
l y f r i g i d .&#13;
"It s e e m e d t o m e t h a t t h e o n l y w a r m&#13;
t h i n g s i n J a p a n w e r e t h e b a b i e s , w h o&#13;
l o o k e d l i k e b u n d l e s of g a y l y c o l o r e d&#13;
I.II'J Chlevre* Fall*&#13;
\ o r Q u i t e W h a t S h e M e a n t .&#13;
A very s t o u t l a d y w h i l e o u t , w a l k i n g&#13;
in a c e r t a i n p a r t o f E d i n b u r g h c a m e t o I c r a p e , t h e i r r o u n d h e a d s c o v e r e d b y&#13;
:i g a t e w a y w h i c h a p p e a r e d t o b e t h e i i i n i t c a p s . T h e y s l u m b e r p e a c e f u l l y&#13;
e n t r a n c e t o a p r i v a t e r o a d . N o t b e i n g \ t u c k e d d o w n t h e i r m o t h e r s ' b a c k s . T h e&#13;
i p r t a l u . h o w e v e r , s h e a s k e d o n e o f ; a t t e m p t t o k e e p w a r m in w i n t e r i s n o t&#13;
t w o m e s s e n g e r b o y s w h o w e r e s t a n d i n g e n t i r e l y a ' m o d e r n I m p r o v e m e n t , ' t h o u g h&#13;
a t t h e e n t r a n c e w h e t h e r s h e c o u l d g e t j jt g o e s w i t h w e s t e r n c i v i l i z n t i o n . T h e&#13;
K o r e a n s d o it v e r y t h o r o u g h l y , t h e C h i&#13;
M i s s F l o r e n c e N e w m a n , w h o h a s&#13;
b e e n a * r e a t s u f f e r e r f r o m m u s c u l a r ' t h r o u - h ^' g a t e w a y o r n o t&#13;
T h ? b o y l o o k e d h e r u p a n d d o w n a n d j D e s e t o a c e r t a i n e x t e n t . T h e J a p a n e s e ,&#13;
r h e u m a t i s a m , s a y s C h a m b e r l a i n ' s P a i n&#13;
B a l m i s t h e o n l y r e m e d y t h a t a f f o r d s&#13;
h e r r e l i e i . M i s s N e w m a n is a m u c h&#13;
r e s p e c t e d r e s i d e n t o f t h e v i l l a g e o f&#13;
( J r a y N . Y . , a n d m a k e s t h i s s t a t e m e n t&#13;
f o r t h e b e n e f i t of o t h e r s s i m i l a r l y a f -&#13;
flicted. T h i s l i n i m e n t is for s a l e b y&#13;
F . A . S i g l e r , P i n c l c e y .&#13;
a c r o s s . T h e n , w i n k i n g t o b i s f r i e n d , j a s a r a c e , c o n t i n u e to scorn it a s t h e y&#13;
he r e p l i e d : a l w a y s h a v e d o n e , a n d t h i s is m e r e l y&#13;
• i d'mna k e n , m i s s u s , b u t t h i n k y e ! o n e of a h u n d r e d e x a m p l e s w h i c h p r o v e&#13;
rniebt t r y . a s I s a w a h o r s e a n d c a r t&#13;
g a n g t h r o u g h a w e e w h i l e s i n c e . " — L o n -&#13;
d o n T ! t - B i t s .&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
. Salary $900 YEARLY.&#13;
Mei tnr wcrner. of good address to i s &gt;resent&#13;
»e, some to travel appointing agents, others, for&#13;
local work look in« after our interests. S 9 0 O&#13;
salary "iiarauteed yearly; extra COM missions and&#13;
expenses, rape! advamement, old established&#13;
house, (irand chanc*» for earnest man or woman&#13;
to secure pleasant, permanent position, liberal&#13;
income and future. New. brilliant lines&#13;
at once, • S T A F F O R D P U K S f o ,&#13;
J J &lt;:,, t i r r U St&#13;
Write&#13;
t-33&#13;
:&gt;« w H a v e n , C o n n .&#13;
l i e K n e w W h e n H e W a s W e l l Off.&#13;
T e J d i e s l e p t in a b i g b e d w i t h h i s&#13;
m o t h e r , a n d o n e w i n t e r ' s n i g h t , b e i n g&#13;
r i g h t In t b e m i d d l e o f It w h e n h i s&#13;
m o t h e r ' s b e d t i m e c a m e , s h e s u g g e s t e d&#13;
t o h i m t o m o v e o n h i s s i d e . H e b l i u k -&#13;
e d u p a t Iter r e b e l l i o u s l y : " N o , I t ' l n k&#13;
I Mim't m o v e . I t ' s c o l d e v e r y w h e r e 1&#13;
a l n ' f . " — H a r p e r ' s B a z a r .&#13;
5 0 Y E A R S *&#13;
E X P E R I E N C E&#13;
t h a t t h e J a p a n e s e a r e still t r u e t o t h e i r&#13;
t r a d i t i o n s i n t h e i r d a i l y life a n d a s y e t&#13;
l i t t l e a f f e c t e d In t b e o r d e r i n g o f t h e i r&#13;
h o m e s b y t h e i d e a s a d o p t e d f r o m t b e&#13;
w e s t . "&#13;
t h e a p p r o a c h o f t h e m e n . T h i s m o n -&#13;
s t e r s e e m s , f r o m o l d a c c o u n t s , t o h a v e&#13;
b e e n s e e n u p o n s e v e r a l o c c a s i o n s d u r -&#13;
i n g t h e n e x t f o u r y e a r s .&#13;
I n 1 8 1 0 a n u m b e r o f a d v e n t u r e r s&#13;
f r o m V i r g i n i a , m o s t o f t h e m s u r v e y o r s&#13;
w o r k i n g u p t h e u n e x p l o r e d p o r t i o n s o f&#13;
G e o r g i a a n d t h e C a r o l i n a s . f o r m e d&#13;
i n g if p o s s i b l e . T h e y f s c o u r e d t h e b i l l s&#13;
a n d v a l l e y s f o r s e v e r a l d a y s a n d a t l a s t&#13;
r e t u r n e d u n s u c c e s s f u l t o t h e s t a r t i n g&#13;
p o i n t&#13;
T h e m a n y t a l e s t o l d o f t h i s e x t r a o r d i -&#13;
n a r y b e i n g s e e m t o h a v e c r e a t e d q u i t e&#13;
a s t i r all a l o n g t h e A t l a n t i c c o a s t . A&#13;
p r i n t e d c i r c u l a r i s s u e d b y a l a n d c o m -&#13;
p a n y in 1 8 1 5 s a y s , " T h e c l i m a t e o f&#13;
G e o r g i a i s e x c e e d i n g l y m i l d , t h e soil&#13;
p r o d u c t i v e , a n d t h e d a n g e r o f a t t a c k&#13;
f r o m u n c o u t h b e a s t s w h i c h a r e repres&#13;
e n t e d a s b e i n g h a l f b e a s t a n d h a l f&#13;
m a n a r e f a i r y t a l e s n o t w o r t h y o f c o n -&#13;
s i d e r a t i o n . "&#13;
B a r r y m o r e a n d M o d j e a k a .&#13;
M a u r i c e B a r r y m o r e e a r n e d a r e p u t a -&#13;
t i o n a s a w i t a n d r e a l l y d e s e r v e d it.&#13;
H i s s t y l e c o u l d b e l e s s s u c c e s s f u l l y&#13;
t r a n s f e r r e d t o t h e s t a g e , a s h i s e f f o r t s&#13;
a t "comic w r i t i n g s h o w e d , b u t in i t s&#13;
s p o n t a n e o u s p h a s e s i t s e f f e c t a l w a y s&#13;
t o l d . O n e o f t h e s t o r i e s t o l d w a s a b o u t&#13;
h i s e x p e r i e n c e s w i t h M'me. M o d j e s k a ,&#13;
w i t h w h o m h e a c t e d f o r s e v e r a l y e a r s .&#13;
H e h a d b e e n a s c a r e l e s s a s h e o f t e n&#13;
w a s o n t h e s t a g e , a n d M i n e . M o d j e s k a ,&#13;
w i t h all t b e c o n s c i e n t i o u s n e s s o f a&#13;
g r e a t a r t i s t , p r o t e s t e d t h a t h e h a d n o&#13;
r i g h t to t a k e h i s c a l l i n g s o l i g h t l y a n d&#13;
t h a t if h e d i d n o t o w e it t o h i s r e p u t a -&#13;
t i o n t o d o h i s b e s t b e a t l e a s t o w e d it to&#13;
her, b e c a u s e s h e b a d d o n e s o m u c h in&#13;
h i s b e h a l f a n d h a d p u t h i m b e f o r e t h e&#13;
p u b l i c in a d i g n i f i e d a n d s e r i o u s l i n e o f&#13;
p a r t s .&#13;
" W h y , m a d a m . " h e s a i d , "it i s n o t&#13;
- y o u w t n r - b r u u g b t m e b e f o r e - t h e p u b l i c&#13;
a n d m a d e m e k n o w n . ' P e o p l e h a d&#13;
h e a r d of m e a l l o v e r t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s&#13;
w h e n t h e y t h o u g h t t h a t M o d j e s k a w a s&#13;
o n l y t h e n a m e o f a t o o t h w a s h . "&#13;
l t C W A B D .&#13;
25 utmit tor either tftblets or liquid.&#13;
We will also refund the raaney on one&#13;
package of either if it falls 4o give&#13;
satisfaction,&#13;
F, \ . Sigler,,&#13;
W, B. Darrow&#13;
P0BU8HKD BVXKT THCBSD1Y XOUTIVe ST&#13;
FBANK 1.. ANDREWS&#13;
Editor and 2*ropri*to*.&#13;
Subscription Price $1 In Advance.&#13;
Watered at the Poetofflce at Pincteney, Michigan&#13;
aa aecond-claaa matter.&#13;
Advertising rataa made: knows on application.&#13;
Baalneu Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
Peatb and marriage notices published tree.&#13;
Announcements o l entertainments may be paid&#13;
for, if desired, by yr &gt;senting the omce with tick*&#13;
ets of admission. In case tickets ar3 not brought&#13;
to the office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter in local notice column will be chart&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for eac.&#13;
insertion, where no time is specified, ail notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
• i l l be charged for accordingly* jcJT" All changes&#13;
of advertisements MUST reach this office as early&#13;
as TCBSXUT morning to insure an insertion t h e&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOB mijviixG/&#13;
in all its branches, a specialty. We hare all kinds&#13;
and the latest styles oi 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;
r.-v as gooti work can b» aoae.&#13;
- L L SILL4 PAS"ABL7 FIRST OP BVB8V KOXTU.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PRESISBNT....... . - C. L, Sigler&#13;
TKCBTJSKB H. Baker, K. H. Krwin,&#13;
F. G. Jackson, Geo Keasou Jr.&#13;
Chas. Love, Malachy Roche.&#13;
CLKBK ..MM« »M . . . E . B, Browd&#13;
TRKABGB&amp;B J. A. Cadwdll&#13;
ArtHBttsott. ......*..Jas. A.Greene&#13;
STKSKT UoMMisstosittt J. Parker&#13;
H E A L T H u r n c s a . . . . . D r . i l . r". siigler&#13;
ATTUHNKI..»..M MH.....MM Ma w . A . Oarr&#13;
MAUSHALL, „„. ...MMM ~..S. Brogan&#13;
A C r u s h e d L a w y e r .&#13;
S o m e t i m e a g o a w e l l k n o w n S a n&#13;
F r a n c i s c o a t t o r n e y , w h o p r i d e s h i m s e l f&#13;
u p o n h i s h a n d l i n g o f C h i n e s e w i t n e s s e s ,&#13;
w a s d e f e n d i n g a r a i l w a y d a m a g e e a s e&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
v c E r a o D i s T E P I S C O P A L C H U R C H .&#13;
Jrx Kev. H. VV . Htcka, pastor. Services erery&#13;
Sunday morula^ at ld:3u, aud every Sunday&#13;
eveaing at 7:uo o'clock. Prayer meeiiugThura-&#13;
•J.ty eveuings. Sunday school at cloae of morniu^&#13;
service. LEAI. SIULB*, Supt.&#13;
V • % . • , . . , . " , . • « . • «T»S»"»»*»»'X. ' » « " . ' * . « • , . . ' » . ^ » . " l . ' l . . » .&#13;
POSTAL &amp; .MORtV,&#13;
The enopfiirrom,&#13;
Griswold K&#13;
l i r - t -&#13;
'•I IH«,&#13;
mo-lfCM,&#13;
$ ? P /"** ii5&gt;-r&gt;»-&lt;l;.re&#13;
«a»a &lt;s &gt;•* ( i l ( ;l t . ] i e u t r OI&#13;
t u r e of aji o a t h w e r e u n d e r s t o o d , e t c . ,&#13;
h e b e g a n : " W h a t i s y o u r n a m e ? " " K e €&#13;
L u n g " " Y o u l i v e In S a n F r a n c i s c o ? "&#13;
" Y e s . " " Y o u s a b b i e G o d ? " " M r . A t&#13;
Rates, $2, $2.50, $3 per Day. &lt;&#13;
} Co«. C«*"&lt;0 Rive* 4 GmswokoSr. (&#13;
. ' » . » » . * • • " « • • • w ' . i ' l i ' l . ' W ' u ' l i ' l i ' t i i V l i ' S ' l . f M S A '&#13;
TfiADE ftf'.RKS&#13;
D E S I G N S&#13;
C O P Y R I G H T S A C .&#13;
Anvone sending a sketch and description mny&#13;
fiulokly nscertnin our opinion free whether an&#13;
invention is probably patentable. Cummujiica.&#13;
ttons strictly rontlduntlal. Handbook on Patents&#13;
sent froe. Oldost ni:eiiry fur securing putents.&#13;
Patents taken tlirnuzh Munn &amp; Co. receive&#13;
srrcitzlnotice, v^thout chnrco, iuthe Scientific Hromcan. A hnndaomeiv iHoatT-itfid w^pkly. I n c e s t dr.&#13;
culaiion of any scientific journal. Terms, | 3 a&#13;
year; four months, | L Sold by all newsdealers.&#13;
WUNNiCo.36'Broad^NewTork&#13;
Branch Office, 625 F SU WashiDKton, D. C.&#13;
Positive Quality&#13;
THE MIXED PAINT MADE BY&#13;
The Peninsular Lead &amp; Color Works, Ltd,&#13;
Is always of uniform excellence.&#13;
The certainty of reliable, uniform First&#13;
Quality is what the buyer desires and expects in&#13;
Mixed Paint. *&#13;
This certain quality means paint that is&#13;
strong and true in color—that will spread evenly&#13;
—-that will preserve as well as ornament—that&#13;
will not blister or scale or easily rub off—that&#13;
constantly looks well—that is sure to wear well.&#13;
In all these requisites the Mixed Paint of The&#13;
Peninsular Lead &amp; Color Works (Ltd.) Detroit,&#13;
has never disappointed any purchaser. It is always&#13;
as good a paint as pure ingredients, skilled&#13;
experience and modern equipment can produce.&#13;
^ Why experiment when you can buy sure&#13;
satisfaction ?&#13;
• O L D BY&#13;
T h e P r o f e s s o r ' * * W o o i n g .&#13;
T h e e x p e r i e n c e k n o w n a s " p o p p i n g&#13;
t h e q u e s t i o n " i s t h e b u g b e a r o f e v e r y&#13;
m a n , h o w e v e r c o n f i d e n t o f h i s c h a r m s&#13;
o r fhietit o f s p e e c h . M a n y o r i g i n a l&#13;
_jvay-^ o f a s k i n g .voting w o m e n ' t o m a r r y&#13;
t h e m h a v e b e e n resortedlo~l~)y~nasirrui ' t o r n e v . if Y o u m e a n ' D o I u n d e r s t a n d&#13;
m e n , b u t p e r h a p s t h e m o s t b r i l l i a n t j t | , p e n l j t y 0 f o u r C r e a t o r ? ' I w i l l s i m -&#13;
s u g g e s t i o n c a m e t o a l e a r n e d G e r m a n ! n i y s a y t h a t T h u r s d a y e v e n i n g n e x t 1&#13;
p r o f e s s o r , w h o . h a v i n g r e m a i n e d a '&#13;
b a c h e l o r till m i d d l e life, a t l a s t t u m b l e d&#13;
h e a d o v e r e a r s in l o v e w i t h a l i t t l e&#13;
flaxen h a i r e d m a i d e n m a n y y e a r s ' - h i s&#13;
j u n i o r .&#13;
O n e d a y . a f t e r v a i n l y e n d e a v o r i n g t o&#13;
s c r e w h i s c o u r a g e t o t h e s t i c k i n g p o i n t ,&#13;
t h e l e a r n e d m a n c a m e u p o n h i s tJreteh-,&#13;
e n a s s h e s a t a l o n e , d a r n i n g a s t o c k i n g ,&#13;
w i t h a h u g e p i l e o f t h e f a m i l y h o s i e r y&#13;
o n t h e t a b l e . T h e p r o f e s s o r a i m l e s s l y&#13;
t a l k e d o n g e n e r a l topics, w o n d e r i n g&#13;
h o w b e c o u l d l e a d u p to t h e s u b j e c t&#13;
n e a r e s t h i s h e a r t , w h e n a l l a t o n c e a&#13;
h a p p y t h o u g h t c a m e to h i m .&#13;
L e a n i n g f o r w a r d , lie p u t h i s b i g h a n d&#13;
o n t h e l i t t l e list d o u b l e d u p i n s i d e t h e&#13;
s t o c k i n g a n d s a i d h e s i t a t i n g l y :&#13;
" Y o u d a m v e r y b e a u t i f u l l y , f r a u l e i n .&#13;
W o u l d y o u l i k e t o d a r n m y s t o c k i n g s&#13;
o n l y ? "&#13;
F o r t u n a t e l y t h e f r a u l e i n w a s n o t s o&#13;
s i m p l e a s s h e a p p e a r e d . S h e g r a s p e d&#13;
t h e s i g n i f i c a n c e ol* t b e q u e s t i o n i m m e -&#13;
d i a t e l y a n d l o s t n o t i m e in a n s w e r i n g .&#13;
" Y e s . " — Y o u t h ' s C o m p a n i o n .&#13;
T h e S o n w o f t h e C i r o n s e .&#13;
C e r t a i n biixi**- w h e n t h e p e r i o d o f&#13;
c o u r t s h i p c o m e s r o u n d r e p a i r t o p a r t i c -&#13;
u l a r t r y s t i u g p l a c e s a n d a n n o u n c e Their&#13;
p r e s e u c e t h e r e b y w e l l k n o w n c a l l s o r&#13;
s i g n a l s .&#13;
T h e r u f f e d g r o u s e , a s e v e r y o n e&#13;
k n o w s , s e e k s a n o l d l o g or o t h e r c o n -&#13;
v e n i e n t p e r c h a n d d r u m s w i t h b i s&#13;
w i n g s , a h i n t t o a n y lady g r o u s e w i t h -&#13;
in h e a r i n g t h a t " B a r k i s is w i l l i n . "&#13;
T h e p e r f o r m a n c e o f the g r o u s e is o n e&#13;
f r e q u e n t l y h o a r d , bur c o m p a r a t i v e l y '&#13;
e e l d o m s e e n , a n d f o r m a n y y e a r s ( h e r o&#13;
w e r e n u m e r o u s c o m p e t i n g t h e o r i e s&#13;
c o n c e r n i n g t h e m o a n s b y w h i c h t h e&#13;
d r u m m i n g w a s p r o d u c e d . S o m e s a i d&#13;
t h a t t h e so nil d w a s vocal, a m i o t h e r s I&#13;
d e c l a r e d t h a t t h e g r o u s e s t r u c k t h e l o g )&#13;
w i t h i t s w i n g s . ' i ' v e n t o d a y t b e prec&#13;
i s e c a u s e o f t h e s o u n d i s n o t k n o w n ,&#13;
for, a l t h o u g h t h e bird h a s b e e n c l o s e l y&#13;
C ONUUEUAl'IONAL. CHUliCH.&#13;
Kev. c W. Uice paetor. Service every&#13;
I n s t e a d o f f o l l o w i n g t b e u s u a l ques-1 suadsy morning at 10:80 aud every Suad»y&#13;
«-~„„ „c »~ „ „ ~ , , ~„ciA^„„ it m ^ « o evening-»t ":0«; o'clock. Prayer inoetinj?T bars&#13;
t i o n s a s t o n ame , r e s i d e n c e , if t h e na- dd ay eevveenniinngg*e.. SSuunnddaayy icboutat cloae of mora-&#13;
Lair service. JJiss Kittie Iloff, Sapt„ Mauel&#13;
Swart bout Sec.&#13;
O T . M-AUY'S'JATlfOLlCCFI'JllCU.&#13;
O Kev. SI. J. Cooiiu-trlorJ, i'^tor. "ijrvij^a&#13;
niU0 ai7:iW&gt; o'cluck&#13;
m. Ot'.^'.'i'iam&#13;
every Sunday. Low&#13;
higit maes witu sermon at 9::i!j a.&#13;
at 3;0u p. oi., vesper** ana benediction at .': &gt;u p. in.&#13;
, 'Pli* A. O. H. Society of ttile place, mseta every&#13;
s a y . a g e n e r a l r o a r of i l u a n i s u ' v n v iatr»e Ft. u u t n e w tl*u.&#13;
foiifi l'iu:n-»y an I M. V. Kelly,Cjauty DiU'gitee&#13;
s h a l l a d d r e s s t h e S t a t e M i n i s t e r i a l a s&#13;
s o c i a t i o n o n t h e s u b j e c t o f t h e ' D i v i n i t y&#13;
of C h r i s t ' a n d s h a l l b e p l e a s e d t o h a v e&#13;
y o u a t t e n d . "&#13;
N e e d l e s s t o&#13;
l a u g h t e r s w e p t o v e r t h e c o u r t r o o m at&#13;
t h i s c l e v e r r a l l y , a u d it w a s s o m e m i n&#13;
u t e s . m u c h t o t h e d i s c o m f i t u r e o f t h r&#13;
l a w y e r f o r t b e d e f e n s e , b e f o r e o r d e t&#13;
w a s r e s t o r e d a n d t h e e x a m i n a t i o n proc&#13;
e e d e d u p o n o r d i n a r y l i n e s . — A r g o n a u t f&#13;
n o s i n g a n E l e p h a n t .&#13;
A dilMouli o p e r a t i o n w a s p e r f o r m e d&#13;
t h e ofljt'r d a y a t t h e z o o l o g i c a l g a r d e n s&#13;
at l l a n o e r r .\n . e l e p h a n t w a s sufferini:&#13;
great p a i n f r o m a g r o w t h o n the&#13;
l o w e i part ;.f mil' of i t s liitni feet, a n d&#13;
i: w a s (iot'iiii'tl n e c e s s a r y t o c u t t h i s&#13;
maii'oi'inatii a a w a y In o r d e r to r e u&#13;
d e l ' t i n - a n i m a l i n s e n s i b l e a d o s e of o'Oi'&#13;
g r a t i s ot mo:'])!::;! in s i x b o t t l e s o f r u m&#13;
w a • a . l m m i s t r r e d This d o s e took&#13;
a.V..:'. :::: i.e.::- I . l i n - a n y v i s i b l e e f f e c t&#13;
w a s !',"(..i'!ced Tin- e l e p h a n t t h e n fell&#13;
OM'V a&gt; a k i n d of s l e e p , a n d t h e o p e r a -&#13;
tion w a s s u c c e s s f u l l y c a r r i e d o u t w i t h - .&#13;
i OUT a ay f u r t h e r a d o . T h e o p e r a t i o n&#13;
la::i'd in all t h r e e d a y s . — L o n d o n G l o b e .&#13;
S O C l E T I E S r&#13;
L^I'WOUTrJ LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
i-L/eveaing at (5:00 oclock in tbe Al. E. Cnurcu, A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyone, especially&#13;
yuuug people. F. L. Andrews, Pre*.&#13;
CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR' S O ^ l S C ^ - M - i a t&#13;
io^3 every Suadnv ev^nin^ at rt:ll. I'tai IsaC&#13;
Miss L. M. Coa; $oer"*ury, .Vlts^ H ittLe C»rp-e.»tar&#13;
rilHE W. C. T. U. raeeta the first Fri lay of each&#13;
L month at d:&amp; p. m. at tne ho-ne of Or. H. F.&#13;
sigler. Everyone interested in temperance U&#13;
coaHlally invited. Mrs. '^eal Siijler, t'res; -Mra.&#13;
Etta Durfee, secretary.&#13;
The C. T. A-and B. »oci«uy of this place, n»*&lt;»t&#13;
every laird S&amp;turoay evenini; in the Fr. Aiattbew&#13;
Hall. * Johu Donohue, }-reeident.&#13;
SIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before foil&#13;
ol tbe moon at tlieir hall In the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CHAS. U4MPUEU-, Sir ivnicht Oominandei&#13;
r ivingeton Lodge, No. A, A. M. Kesnlsr&#13;
±j Comujunicatioa Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of tbe moon. H. F. aigler, W. M.&#13;
0 RDER OF EASTERN" STAR me^tseach month&#13;
the Friday evening foliosviu^ the regular F.&#13;
&amp;A,M. meeting, MRS. MAHV ii-i.iD, \V. M.&#13;
^•ires o f t h e s a m e t h i c k n e s s ! 0 a m ^ 2 ¾ ^&#13;
Of g o l d Will s u s t a i n 150Luaccabee nail. c&#13;
Of t h r e e w&#13;
o n e m a d e&#13;
p o u n d s , o n e m a d e o f c o p p e r 3 0 2 p o u n d s ,&#13;
o n e o f i r o n 5 4 0 p o u n d s .&#13;
•&#13;
DERN WOODMEN Heet the&#13;
venin^ of each -Month in the&#13;
L. Grimes V. 0.&#13;
\\ ANTED— CapaliltV reliable person in every&#13;
CM only t'"» represent hirc&lt;J c»uj',an&gt; of solid financial&#13;
r&lt;&gt;putati&lt;&gt;u; $'•*"&gt;•} sjlarv per ye-»r. payable&#13;
weekly; $3 p*r day absolutely s'-irt' at.d all expontes.;&#13;
staui^bt, horin tide, dortnate salary, no&#13;
eo in mission; salary paid each Saturday and expense&#13;
money advanced each week. STANDARD&#13;
HOUSE, .&gt;54 lVarbf r.'i st. Chicj»({o t-'i9&#13;
A C a r d .&#13;
I. t!-,e u n d e r s i g n e d , d o h e r e b y aLM-e»&#13;
w a t c h e d , i t s w i n g m o v e m e n t s a r e s o j t ° » ' ^ t n n d t h " m o n e y o n a 5 0 . ^ : ^ h o t -&#13;
S v r n p o f&#13;
Geo. W REASONS SON.&#13;
Pinekner Michr&#13;
a p i d t h a t it is n e x t t o I m p o s s i b l e t o&#13;
tell e x a c t l y w h a t t a k e s p l a c e . T h i s&#13;
m u c h , h o w e v e r , is k n o w n : D u r i n g t h e&#13;
p e r f o r m a n c e t h e g r o u s e s t a n d s u p o n&#13;
t h e l e g o r o t h e r p e r c h a n d s t r i k e s t h e&#13;
a i r in f r o n t o f h i s b o d y s o m e w h a t a f t e p&#13;
t h e m a n n e r o f a n e l a t e d b a r n y a r d c o o k .&#13;
T h e first f e w s t r o k e s a r e m e a s u r e d , b u t&#13;
t h e y b e c o m e f a s t o r a n d f a s t e r u n t i l t h e&#13;
' i n d i v i d u a l t h u m p s a r e l o s t , a s in t h e&#13;
r o l l i u g o f a d r u m . W h e t h e r t h e s o u n d&#13;
i s d u e e n t i r e l y t o b e a t i n g o f t h e a i r o r&#13;
w h e t h e r it i s i n c r e a s e d b y t h e s t r i k i n g&#13;
t o g e t h e r o f t h e w i n g tips i s a q u e s t i o n&#13;
y e t t o b e s e t t l e d . — I l a r t f o r U T i m e s .&#13;
fie of i . i r e e n ' s W a r r a n t e d&#13;
T a r if :1 fa l i e s 10 c u r e y o u r coiis/h or&#13;
d i d . 1 it's j j j n a r a n t e H a . 2 o - e e n r h o l -&#13;
ffe t" p r o v e s a t i s f a c t o r y ui m o n ^ y re*&#13;
T n n d e d . t 2 3&#13;
W i l l H. D a r r o w .&#13;
4&lt;HhA Tbia signature is on every hex i i h o genuine&#13;
Laxative BromC"Qiiiniiie Tabicu&#13;
tbo remedy that c u r c » u c o l a in o n e d a y&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Aleat every Is&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachuionth at "J ::io p in. •&#13;
E . o . T. XI. hail. Visiting sisters cordially invited.&#13;
JULIA SIULEK, Lady Com. V KNIGHTS OK THK LOYAL (iUARO&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every mouth in tbe (v. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:^0o'clocn. Ail visuing&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
C. L, Grimes, Capt. (*en.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
M. F. SIGLER M. O- C. L, SIGLER M, 0&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Fhysiciaud and Hai^e-ius. All caiia prompt I&#13;
attended to day or ui^ht. OftJ^e oa Maiqwtr&#13;
i in.ikney, Mich. ^&#13;
DR..A. B.GREEN.&#13;
DENTIST-Eyery Frid*j; and on Thareday&#13;
when having appolntmonta. Office over&#13;
Siller's Drue Store.&#13;
J. F. Mn*W£»&#13;
VETERINARY SURQEON^&#13;
Grad late of Out in&lt;j Veter&lt;nary C &gt;ll&gt;*&lt;4, aL&gt;o&#13;
the Veterinary Oentlatry College&#13;
Toronto C&amp;a*d*.&#13;
Will promptly attend to all dleeeees ot^tbe da&#13;
ueeticatod animal at a reasonable price.&#13;
Horees teeth examined Free.&#13;
o r r i C E a t / n l L L . P l N C K N a \&#13;
t '''V:3;&#13;
;"**•? «&#13;
• • • : ' • - - ^&#13;
-w.&#13;
•:M&#13;
".«i&#13;
mm^^*i*^^t*M&#13;
% . ; M ? # ' : ^ ' ^ : r ^ ^ •;•••'•••• ^,^::^:&#13;
sSV, • &amp; /&#13;
' ••, • . ?.;'" v •'" • .••• . '&#13;
• « . ; . • ' w '•", V:.&#13;
' % • •&#13;
•) •&#13;
«i''&#13;
•,&lt;•••&gt;&#13;
. * &amp; ' • &lt; &gt; » * ' &lt; , ! . • ' ' • . ; ! • » •&#13;
•r 'V-O ' " • / • . ' •&#13;
t &gt;-&#13;
fcV&#13;
« :&#13;
r&#13;
t. i .&#13;
I&#13;
T ±&#13;
m&#13;
FHANK L. AXDUEWS, Publisher.&#13;
PINCKNEY, - " - MICHIGAN.&#13;
The state legislatures havo 'beon ai&#13;
vidlng the respective states luto congressional&#13;
-districts.---••-Tno---tew-- undor&#13;
which they are acting calls * districts&#13;
made of contiguous and compact&#13;
territory, and containing as nearly&#13;
as practicable an equal number of&#13;
inhabitants. The legislatures should,&#13;
in fair play, live up to the spirit of&#13;
this law, even if the ways of enforcing&#13;
its letter are sh-^ndcd In some&#13;
uncertainty.&#13;
The CoiWicted Murderer of V. C,&#13;
Nichols, a Farmer,&#13;
HAS BEZN GRANTED NEW TRIAL&#13;
y llio Su:»:'or-»o Court—Vlie Cn'o Attracted&#13;
'lavlx Attention la Detroit Wiicro the&#13;
r.ir.-dev \.ii:i Connnlttoil—Ollu .• Invent*&#13;
-7 v. Wo?:: Ilrle^y Kcltttr'tl.&#13;
Fully 1,200 acres in the Pecos valley,&#13;
south from Roswell to Barstow, Tex.,&#13;
a distance of 170 miles, will be planted&#13;
this year to cantaloupes, with an estimated&#13;
yield of 1,000 carloads of the&#13;
melons, or something less than a carload&#13;
to the acre. The crop will be&#13;
shipped direct to Chicago, and will&#13;
have an average net market value of&#13;
¢450 a carload—the minimum a carload&#13;
being $300, with a maximum of&#13;
$600.&#13;
American public schools and educational&#13;
methods are going to the ends&#13;
of the earth. Cuba, Porto Rico, Hawaii,&#13;
and now the'Philippines, arc&#13;
making the acquaintance of American&#13;
teachers; and that they are good&#13;
teachers is plainly indicated by the&#13;
care with which the war department,&#13;
through the civil service commission,&#13;
is selecting them. Applications for&#13;
positions are pouring in at the rate of&#13;
twenty-five a day. Only those are&#13;
chosen who are graduates of either a&#13;
college or a normal school, have had&#13;
several years' experience in teaching&#13;
and now hold positions, and can offer&#13;
conclusive proof of success, in their&#13;
work.&#13;
Emperor William's public plaints&#13;
against the weakening authority of th?&#13;
oxown must raise a smile in Turkish&#13;
councils, where preventive measures&#13;
abound. "Avoid suggestive dots in&#13;
the_ body of an article,"_reads a recent&#13;
official circular to Turkish newspapers;&#13;
"they tend to raise suppositions&#13;
and disturb the tranquillity of&#13;
the reader's mind." Again: "Do not&#13;
publish rrticles too long for completion&#13;
in a single issue. ' The notice, 'To&#13;
be continued,' causes an uncomfortable&#13;
tension of the mind." Piquant formulas,&#13;
certainly; only the sultan seems&#13;
to forget that other phrase, "The end,"&#13;
which sooner or later must be written&#13;
for all governments not republican&#13;
in form. —&#13;
\Voat her Croi&gt; llullotlu.&#13;
The v.eouly weather crop bulletin&#13;
of the l'. S. climate and crop service,&#13;
issued at Lansing- on the 21st, says&#13;
that in most sections of the state the&#13;
rainfall lias been sullicient, but in the&#13;
extreme southeastern counties of the&#13;
lower peninsula the conditions are almost&#13;
droughty. Several sharp frosts&#13;
occurred, which were quite general,&#13;
but the damage, in nearly all cases,&#13;
was very light, and in most counties&#13;
confined to low lands; strawberries,&#13;
early g &gt;rden truck and early potatoes&#13;
were affected most; in the extreme&#13;
southern counties some early corn was&#13;
cut dowq and will have to be replanted.&#13;
\yheat and meadows are generally improved;&#13;
wheat continues very uneven,&#13;
some fields being reported in line condition,&#13;
while others are very poor: oats&#13;
and barley look healthy, have generally&#13;
made slow growth. Pasturage&#13;
has improved. Rye is heading and in&#13;
general promising condition. E;irly&#13;
potatoes have germinated nicely. Plowing&#13;
for torn and beans is well advanced&#13;
in most counties of the lower&#13;
^peninsula; corn planting is quite general&#13;
and in the extreme southern counties&#13;
nearly finished; sugar beet seeding&#13;
is well advanced ;ind in Monroe county&#13;
the early seeding is up, and being cultivated.&#13;
With but very few exceptions,&#13;
correspondents report that fruit prospects&#13;
continue very good.&#13;
The elevator cure is the latest. It&#13;
is widely known In New York, as an&#13;
elevator man in any big skyscraper&#13;
will tell you. "Three out of every four&#13;
women who ride in this car," said one&#13;
of the Battery Park building employes,&#13;
the other day, "are taking the 'elevator&#13;
cure.' How does it cure? And&#13;
what? Search me. The motion is&#13;
supposed to have a beneficial effect on&#13;
the circulation of the blood or something.&#13;
Some of the men try it, too,&#13;
but the women have it the worst.&#13;
Whenever a stranger comes up to me&#13;
and asks for a fictitious person, I&#13;
know they are after the ride and nothing&#13;
else. Some of the sharp ones generally&#13;
pick out a name in the directory&#13;
before they enter the car. They&#13;
never go into an office, however, and&#13;
always take the next car down."&#13;
Aseher Gets a New Tri.iL&#13;
Edward Aseher, convicted in Wayne&#13;
county of the murder of Yalmore C.&#13;
Nichols, was on the 21st granted a new&#13;
trial by the supreme court. Ascher's&#13;
case attracted widespread attention.&#13;
His alleged victim was interested in&#13;
spiritualism. He went to Detroit from&#13;
near Ypsilanti to consult a ..medium.&#13;
He made several visit*, anil on the&#13;
evening of August 10, 1SDS. he was&#13;
robbed, and his body thrown into the&#13;
river. Stones were attached to the&#13;
fe^t and bound around with copper&#13;
wire. His money was gone, and his&#13;
gold watch and other effects were in&#13;
his clothes. It is claimed that he had&#13;
worn a cotton belt containing S400 in&#13;
gold about his person. The day before&#13;
Nichols was found in the river he&#13;
rented a boat at Belle Isle, Detroit,&#13;
and was then accompanied by a man.&#13;
partially—identified on the trial as&#13;
Ascher. The supreme court finds errors&#13;
in the trial of the case sufficient&#13;
to warrant reversal.&#13;
MINOR MICHIGAN MATT EH 3,&#13;
Cart is to have a starch factory.&#13;
Manistee is to have a modern flour&#13;
milL&#13;
A "Jack the Hugger" is operating at&#13;
Grand Rapids.&#13;
There are several cases of smallpox&#13;
in Tuscola county.&#13;
South Haven is to have free mail delivery&#13;
service uu July 1.&#13;
The Central Michigan band tournament&#13;
will be held at Lansing, June 5.&#13;
Potatoes are still being shipped from&#13;
nurt in large quantities, the price being&#13;
33 cents.&#13;
Fairfield people are making groat&#13;
preparations for Memorial Day. S.&#13;
Milo Dole, of Adrian, will make the&#13;
addresa&#13;
Owosso's mayor has announced that&#13;
he will close up every business place in&#13;
that city on Sunday. Restaurants and&#13;
cigars store proprietor* and confectioners&#13;
complain bitterly.&#13;
The annual reunion of the oth Michigan&#13;
cavalry will be held in Ionia,&#13;
July 4. A fine program is being prepared,&#13;
including a description of the&#13;
battle of Monterey (Jap, July 4, 1803.&#13;
The 1.T-year-old son of-M-n and Mrs,&#13;
Geo. Landon, who reside just outside&#13;
the limits of Algonac was struck by a&#13;
Rapid railway car on the 19th, and received&#13;
injuries which caused his death&#13;
a little later.&#13;
Thos. Smith, aged 27, of Sturgis, suicided&#13;
at Mishawaka, Iud., onthenight&#13;
of the 31st. His wife left him some&#13;
time ago, .and this is supposed to have&#13;
prompted the deed.&#13;
Detroit capitalists have secured options&#13;
on 300 acres of valuable marl&#13;
lands at Coiou. The citizens of that&#13;
village immediately raised a bonus of&#13;
85,000. The plant is to have a capacity&#13;
of 1.000 barrels per day.&#13;
The Anril report of State Salt Inspector&#13;
Dunwell is as follows: Manistee&#13;
county. 176.301 barrels; M;ison. 03,-&#13;
31S-f St. Cli.ir, 48,140; Saginaw, 37.815-,&#13;
Hay, 20,09.-); Wayne. 2&gt;.7i 0; Iosco, 2.182;&#13;
Midland, 1,850: total, 370,273.:&#13;
Because his father pawned his&#13;
mother's shoes for drink, Eurl C. Truesdell,&#13;
agfed 17, a postal messenger at&#13;
Sasrinaw, secured an old shotgun&#13;
and shot his father between the eyes.&#13;
The wound is sarious but not fatal.&#13;
The village of Mcllain claims to have&#13;
the most efficient fire department for a&#13;
village of its sizo in the state. In two&#13;
minutes and 20 seconds after an alarm&#13;
was turned in the firemen had a stream&#13;
of water playing on the flames. The&#13;
fire was extinguished with small loss.&#13;
A good Stanton man was late home&#13;
from pra3'er meeting the other evening&#13;
and his angry spouse attacked him at&#13;
the door with a stick of wood. An&#13;
"ff'y gash in the head is the result.&#13;
Then people wonder why there are&#13;
more women in the churches than men.&#13;
A franchise has been granted to the&#13;
nnw *»Wt.rir» rnilwity nnmpany whirh is&#13;
DO1NC0 OP THE *1ST CCSSIQMV&#13;
Tlie nouso pissed tho following bills&#13;
on the 23d: Abolishing office of chief&#13;
deputy game warden; Detroit police&#13;
pensiettaet; amending charter of Port&#13;
Huron; amending Saginaw charter; appropriation&#13;
upper peninsula prison,&#13;
810,033; providing that officers ranking&#13;
levy on personal porperty shall file u&#13;
statement within 48 hours of where-&#13;
Oakmnn Ousted From Tut Commission,&#13;
The suprvme court has ousted Robt.&#13;
Oakman as a member of the state tax&#13;
commission. The opinion was written&#13;
by Chief Justice Montgomery and concurred&#13;
in by the four other justices.&#13;
As soon as the order of the court is&#13;
served upon Mr. Oakman he must re&#13;
to operate a line from Muskegon to&#13;
j Ludington. Right of way is being sef&#13;
cured along the route and there seems&#13;
| to be no question but that it will be&#13;
j built at an early date. The people of&#13;
j Oceana county are enthusiastic over&#13;
the enterprise.&#13;
It is said that a scourge of curl leaf&#13;
throughout the western Michigan&#13;
fruit belt, is threatened. The growj&#13;
ers and owners of peach orchards for&#13;
linquish his ottice to Wm. T. Dust, who j i n i l e s around report that the prolonged&#13;
was appointed by Gov. Rliss. The j&#13;
John Newman, formerly an Indin.ii&#13;
fighter and a pioneer of Arizona, IV-&#13;
•cently recovered a h: ;• nf bullion v,-orth&#13;
¢9,000, which he &gt;.:•.•.' buried in the&#13;
ground at the root of a tree near Phoenix,.&#13;
Ariz., more than thirty years ago&#13;
during an Indian attack. He was&#13;
driven out of the country, but mad2 a&#13;
map of the surroundings from memory.&#13;
He returned a year later, but&#13;
the face of the country was altered&#13;
and he could not find his map. He&#13;
went to Europe, and has been living&#13;
in London nearly ever since. A few&#13;
months ago he discovered the old map,&#13;
or chart, among some papers. He had&#13;
accumulated a little money by mining&#13;
in South Africa, and with it he purchased&#13;
a ticket to thia country, and,&#13;
with a friend, began a search for the&#13;
lost bullion. He located the tree and&#13;
recovered the bar.&#13;
cold and wet weather is causing great&#13;
facts surrounding Oakmans reappoint- | damage, and that unless a change is&#13;
meat by Gov. lTn^ree, his confirmation j ex peri encurt-soon, the loss will run&#13;
by the seriate ;md the immediate re- j h i - " i n every section,&#13;
consideration of the vote by which:. Mrs. Sarah Quimby, wife of a farmer&#13;
confirmation wsis had, and the refer- j living live miles south of St. Louis,&#13;
ence of the appointment to a commit- &gt; gave her two children^ a girl and—a—H) cents a mile for travel; providing Sir Thom is calculates that a delay of&#13;
tee, where it has ever since lain, are j boy, a fatal dose of- morphine on the&#13;
familiar. The contention of Oakman's | 10th, and then tried to suicide by the&#13;
counsel was that having once voted to j s;irae method, but failed. The chilconfirm&#13;
the appointment the senate ' dren she killed were those by her first&#13;
had no authority to reconsider such ' husband. She must now answer to&#13;
vote. This, the opinion says,-is the&#13;
most important question in the case.&#13;
1&#13;
the charge of murder.&#13;
Railroad Commissioner Osborn's&#13;
power to grant or refuse applications&#13;
from suburban street -railways for&#13;
grade crossings over steam railroad&#13;
tracks is curtailed by a bill which&#13;
passed the house on the 21st. It vests&#13;
the power in the state crossing board.&#13;
The bill also provides for a general&#13;
Already several steam plants have&#13;
made experiments with the newly developed&#13;
oil found at Beaumont Texas,&#13;
as so far the tests appear to have been&#13;
satisfactory. The Jennings Electric&#13;
Light and Power company put in the&#13;
necessary apparatus for using the oil&#13;
as fuel, and began its use in its large&#13;
plant, which supplies the town with&#13;
light and power. At Houston a!so experiments&#13;
have been made in the same&#13;
direction and with satisfactory results,&#13;
while several of the canal pumping&#13;
stations in Southwestern Lo&#13;
are getting ready to change their fuel&#13;
from coal and wood to oil. If after&#13;
full and sufficient experiments it is&#13;
found that the Beaumont oil will be as&#13;
cheap and as satisfactory in other respects&#13;
as coal, there is no telling the&#13;
extent of the demand that will be&#13;
made upon the oil wells for steaxnhtfttlBg&#13;
purposes.&#13;
Twatt All a Dream. \&#13;
Mrs. John Moon, the mother of Mrs. !&#13;
1&#13;
Ethel Cofctello. the Kalamazoo nurse, j&#13;
alleged to have recently fallen heir to&#13;
5300,000 through the death of a rich j&#13;
uncle of her first husband in Honduras, !&#13;
arrived in Kalamazoo from Marcellus j j a w f o r incorporation or reincorporaon&#13;
the 22d. She went directly to the i t i o n of suburban railways,&#13;
home of J. II Uostwick, where her j T h e yUnroc Traction Co. commenced&#13;
daughter had been engaged as nurse I p r a d i n ; , a&lt; M o n r o c o n t h e , o t h w i t h&#13;
alleged j 1 ( ) ) m e n a n d 1 ( ) t e a m s j t i9 n o w kewill&#13;
cot experience&#13;
. . , . , —V further trouble from abutting&#13;
tery. Mrs. Moon says that the story propcrtv owners. However, the priv&#13;
ef-her d a « g h t e T - h ^ n g - 4 a l ^ a t t h f i i n t o £ t h e L .&#13;
tne large estate was untrue, and also I s &amp; M s R v &gt; c r o s s i n j r h a s n o t b e e n&#13;
that her daughter was never married&#13;
but was informed that the&#13;
heiress had slipped away on the ISth {iev^j"thaT they&#13;
and that her whereabouts was a mys- further trc&#13;
to a man named Costelio, but after she&#13;
was divorced from her husband, Ira&#13;
Washington, she assumed the name&#13;
Costelio because of her dislike of both&#13;
of he» former names.&#13;
An Outrage at Lake Odeua.&#13;
A heavy charge of dynamite was&#13;
placed under the window of Mrs. Alice&#13;
Montague's residence at Lake Odessa&#13;
on the night of the 2Qth, and exploded.&#13;
All of the windows of the residence&#13;
torn out and the woman and- heir&#13;
daughter frightened so they have had&#13;
a doctor in constant attendance ever&#13;
since. Gossip has been running wild&#13;
about the woman, and it i&amp; evident&#13;
that this is the result Mrs. Montague&#13;
has always born a good reputation.&#13;
Her daughter is a teacher i s the&#13;
village schools. Great excitement pre*&#13;
vails and arrests may follow.&#13;
crossing&#13;
secured and it is still a question as to&#13;
how the crossing will be made.&#13;
In a smash-up on the Pere Marquette&#13;
at Sparta on the night of the&#13;
23d, more than a score of woman of&#13;
the Order of the Evening Star, who&#13;
were in a special car, were seriously&#13;
injured. All of the injured were from&#13;
Grand llapids and had been to Sparta&#13;
doing degree work. The car was sidetracked&#13;
and an engine running to meet&#13;
it crashed into the end of the car.&#13;
The—civil senrice commission will&#13;
hold examinations at all cities in Michigan&#13;
having free delivery on June 18,&#13;
for the positions of botauical clerk and&#13;
assistant zoological clerk and assistant&#13;
ethnologist The salaries of the positions&#13;
range from 9840 to $1,200. An&#13;
examination will also be held at South&#13;
Haven on Jnne 15 for the positions of&#13;
clerk and career at that pnstoffice.&#13;
goods are stored; setting aside certain&#13;
state lands in Crawford and Roscommon&#13;
counties for the use of the forest&#13;
reserve* commission; dairy and food&#13;
commission appropriation, S2.;,»;oi a,&#13;
year and increasing salaries of commissioner,&#13;
deputy and chemist; amendment&#13;
to the law relative to the taxation&#13;
of inheritances; repealing sparrow&#13;
bounty law; amending Detroit charter&#13;
so as to authorise tho common council&#13;
to license laundry branch offices; providing&#13;
for the drainage of highways&#13;
where it is necessary to secure priviite&#13;
right of way; authorizing the incorporation&#13;
of associations for the instruction&#13;
of embalmers; providing that pro*.&#13;
cesses against electric interurban railways&#13;
may be served on conductors outside&#13;
of cities; providing for the appointment&#13;
of boards to examine and license&#13;
"plumbers: placing the state census of&#13;
1904 under control of the secretary of&#13;
state; income tax, I per cent on incomes&#13;
over §2,o:)0; organizing the&#13;
township of Millen, Alcona county,&#13;
into a union school district; authorizing&#13;
the state board of health to examine&#13;
and license undertakers to embalm&#13;
bodies infected with Contagious&#13;
diseases for transportation; abolishing&#13;
political conventions in Kent county—&#13;
referendum attached; general military&#13;
bill.&#13;
The senate passed the following bills&#13;
on the 21st: To make a boulevard of&#13;
Lafayette ayenue, Detroit; railroad&#13;
taxation bill; to authorize Houghton&#13;
county to build a pest house; amend&#13;
Manistee charter; to pension Detroit&#13;
policemen; to reorganize school districts&#13;
in Sneinaw county; to fix the&#13;
salaries of officers of the legislature;&#13;
relative to the fees of registrar of&#13;
deaths: relative to the incorporation&#13;
of A. O. U. W. lodges; relative to the&#13;
incorporation of fratern 1 beneficiary&#13;
societies; relative to the incorporation&#13;
of soeietics'for the prevention of cruelty&#13;
to children; relative to estates in&#13;
remainder; relative to the duties of&#13;
salt inspectors; for a county abstract&#13;
system in Ontonagon county; to fix the&#13;
salary of the state superintendent of&#13;
fisheries; to empower the state board&#13;
of education to prescribe all courses of&#13;
study in state normal schools.&#13;
The following bills were passed by&#13;
tho house on the 21st: Revising laws&#13;
for the incorporation and regulation&#13;
of interurban railways; providing a&#13;
salary of SI.800 a year for the superintendent&#13;
of fisheries in lieu of all other&#13;
expense's; geological survey appropriation&#13;
of S2.S00; ad valorem taxation&#13;
bill; incrv-asing state tax commission&#13;
from three to five members, appropriating&#13;
5,000 acres of state tax lands for&#13;
the purpose of clearing the channel of&#13;
the Kawkawlin river, Bay county;&#13;
amending the charter of the city of&#13;
Adrian; amending the charter of Grand&#13;
llapids to provide for the election of&#13;
city attorney and to prevent defaulteis&#13;
from holding office; providing a specific&#13;
tax of 3 per cent on telephone and 7&#13;
per cent on telegraph; fixing compensation&#13;
of employes of senate and house;&#13;
amending charter of Manistee; authorizing&#13;
common council of Detroit to&#13;
make a boulevard of Lafayette avenue.&#13;
The following bills were passed by&#13;
the house on the 22d: Amending Saginaw&#13;
county salary bill; allowing members&#13;
of Wayne county jury commissiou&#13;
man&#13;
At Philadelphia —General Assembly&#13;
Takes Up Question of&#13;
• m i * . y . H H I W&#13;
REVISION OK THEIR CREED.'&#13;
rirc/ of the 203 ACembara As!: DIfmUwl&#13;
of SubJ»ot—Miay Attk Kevltion or an&#13;
Ilxplauutory Statement—An Indian Outbreak&#13;
Loo!: ad for iu Wyoialas.&#13;
ItovlHion of I'resbyterlun Confession.&#13;
The important question of revising&#13;
the creed, which for the last two years&#13;
has been ugitating the Presbyterian&#13;
church, came before the general assembly&#13;
at Philadelphia on the 23d.&#13;
The controversy regarding revision has&#13;
led to the formation of three groups&#13;
among the G40 commissioners to the&#13;
general assembly. One group opposes&#13;
change in doctrinal standards. Another&#13;
is desirous of setting aside the&#13;
confession of faith as not truthfully&#13;
expressing the belief of the church.&#13;
The third favors maintaining the old&#13;
confession with a few modifications,&#13;
and desires the adoption of a clear&#13;
"declarative" statement, setting forth&#13;
the most important doctrines. In answer&#13;
to tho questions submitted to the&#13;
presbyteries, 50 asked the assembly to&#13;
dismiss the whole subject, one was undecided,&#13;
four said they neither desired&#13;
a revision uor a supplemental statement,&#13;
nor tho dismissal of the whole&#13;
subject, and of the 233 presbyteries, 15&#13;
in the U. S. and 10 in foreign lands,&#13;
failed to respond. Of the remaining&#13;
presbyteries, nearly two-thirds of the&#13;
whole number ask for some change in&#13;
the erecdal statement, 47 desire a re^&#13;
vision of the confession, 11 an explanatory&#13;
statement, 1 revision and an explanatory&#13;
statement, 52 a supplemental&#13;
statement, 15 revision and a supplemental&#13;
statement, 1 an explanatory&#13;
statement and a supplemental statement,&#13;
14 a substitute creed, 1 an alternative&#13;
creed, and G some change, not&#13;
specified.&#13;
The Presbyterian general assembly,&#13;
by a vote which showed conclusively&#13;
that a revision of the confession of&#13;
faith is desired by the church, on the&#13;
21th defeated the amendment dismissing&#13;
the whole subject ottered the day&#13;
before by lie v. Geo. I). Uaker. of Philadelphia.&#13;
The assembly decided by an&#13;
overwhelming majority to continue&#13;
consideration of the great question.&#13;
Indian Oatbrcak Kxponted.&#13;
A dispatch from Lander, Wj-o., dated&#13;
the 21st, says an Indian outbreak is&#13;
imminent on the Shoshone reservation.&#13;
Six hundred Arapahoes have defied the&#13;
authority of the agent, Capt Nickerson,&#13;
who has refus d them permission&#13;
to hold their annual sun dance and&#13;
denied them passes. Trouble has been&#13;
brewing owing to an order giving them&#13;
rations but twice a month "'n.f. ;ut of&#13;
weekly, as heretofore, and i'.c failure&#13;
r&gt;f the government to issue sped grain&#13;
*or sowing. Capt Nickerson has applied&#13;
to the Indian department for U.&#13;
S. for troops to maintain his authority&#13;
and is fearful that a clash may occur at&#13;
any moment The Shoshons have not&#13;
yet joined the revolt.&#13;
Kins Edward had a Narrow Ksnapa.&#13;
The most dramatic incident in the&#13;
history of the America's cup occurred&#13;
on the 22d when a sudden squall on&#13;
the Solent completely wrecked the new&#13;
challencer and endangered the life of&#13;
King Edward and several distinguished&#13;
persons, including Sir Thomas Lipton.&#13;
specific tax of 3 per cent on gross earn- three weeks or a month in the date of&#13;
ings of sleeping car companies; estab- | the contest in American waters will&#13;
lishing union school district in Titta- enable him to cometo the scratch. He&#13;
bawassee township; authorizing sale says that he is greatly handicaped by&#13;
of delinquent tax lands in IJay Citv; [ the fact that he has no duplicate masts&#13;
amending charter of Sault Ste. Marie;&#13;
Detroit water board bill; same subject; :&#13;
publication of the laws and documents, i&#13;
The general military bill was finally&#13;
passed by the house on the 23d, by a&#13;
for tlie Shamrock II., but-by an unlimited&#13;
expenditure of money and energy&#13;
he believes the defects can be&#13;
remedied in time to sail this year.&#13;
voteo f "irt to 0 and if the senate concurs&#13;
to Rep. Ames' amendment relative&#13;
to a colored company the state ;&#13;
military board will be able to make j&#13;
the necessary preparations for a 10-&#13;
days camp, which this year will be&#13;
held at Manistee.&#13;
The senate passed the following bills&#13;
on the 22d: To amend Port Huron's&#13;
charter; to amend Saginaw's charter;&#13;
for the transfer of certain state lands&#13;
to the city of Lansing for highway&#13;
purposes: relative to pay of Saginaw&#13;
county officers; for the Torrcns system&#13;
of registering land titles.&#13;
Gov. Bliss has appointed the seven&#13;
members of the state road commission,&#13;
which was recently created by a bill,&#13;
as follows: Senators Earl and Paimer,&#13;
Heps. McKay, French and Goodrich,&#13;
and Capt E. (.P. Allen, of Ypsilanti,&#13;
and C. J. Munroe, of South Haven.&#13;
For all practical purposes the work&#13;
of the present session will be brought&#13;
to a close at noon on the 20th, the senate&#13;
concurring in the house resolution&#13;
Carnegie's IJlff Gift Gets a Cold Welcome.&#13;
Scotland is not very enthusiastic&#13;
over Andrew Carnegie's gift of $10,000,-&#13;
0()0 to establish free education in four&#13;
Scotch universities, Edinburg, Glasgow,&#13;
Aberdeen and St Andrews. Carnegie&#13;
stipulated that the beneficiaries&#13;
be his "Scotch fellow countrymen"&#13;
only, no English, Irish, colonials or&#13;
foreigners. Accordiiig to the education&#13;
authorities the administration of&#13;
Mr. Carnegie's gift presents considerable&#13;
difficulties and for this reason the&#13;
Scotch papers for the present, are&#13;
rather looking the gift horse in the&#13;
mouth, while the English press is inclined&#13;
to cavil at the method of Mr.&#13;
Carnegie's munificence.&#13;
New Garnishee Law.&#13;
The amount of wages of a workingman&#13;
with a family to support that can&#13;
be attached for debt is 20 per cent of&#13;
what he earns each week. If he earns&#13;
but $8 a week, the entire amount shall&#13;
be exempt. No matter how much he&#13;
earns, at least $8 a week shall be exprovidingfor&#13;
no further bu%iuo*a after cmpt In no case shall more than f3fr&#13;
that time and fixing the date of final Gf a family man's weekly wages be ex*&#13;
adjournment for June 0. empt from a garnishee writ If he is&#13;
A delegation of labor men from De- a single man with only himself to suptroit,&#13;
Grand Rapids and Flint had a port, at least 34 a week shall be exhearing&#13;
before Gov. bliss or. the 22d empt from garnishee, but in no case&#13;
on the garnishee bill, and they pre- ahail more than 81 &amp; in one WQAU y&#13;
sented numerous argument* to anp- exempt Working girls shall have the&#13;
port their petition that the governor tame amount of taejir wages exempt aa&#13;
veto the bill.,, • *- 1 I namarried men.&#13;
, ..- ...^-&#13;
S&#13;
^ fa&#13;
"JUDGING OTHERS" THE SUB.&#13;
JECT LAST SUNDAY&#13;
•tp&#13;
F r o m th« Following Bible Text: "Th« Lord&#13;
W*lffhettt th» Spirit*"—Pro*. XVI: »&#13;
—\V«l«b«d In the Divln* Hcalw—Nations&#13;
Llbo Individuals.&#13;
CCopyrieht, 1901, by Louis K l o p s c V N. Y.)&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n , May 26.—In this disc&#13;
o u r s e , from a s y m b o l of t h e Bible,&#13;
D r . T a l m a g e u r g e s the a d o p t i o n of a n&#13;
unusual m o d e of e s t i m a t i n g character&#13;
and s h o w s h o w different is t h e divine&#13;
w a y from t h e h u m a n w a y ; text, P r o -&#13;
v e r b s xvi, 2, "The Lord w e i g h e t h t h e&#13;
spirits."&#13;
T h e s u b j e c t of w e i g h t s and measures&#13;
la discussed a m o n g all n a t i o n s , is the&#13;
subject of l e g i s . a t i o n , a n d h a s much&#13;
t o d o w i t h t h e world's prosperity. A&#13;
s y s t e m of w e i g h t s and m e a s u r e s w a s&#13;
i n v e n t e d by Phidon, ruler of Argcs,&#13;
about 800 y e a r s before Christ. A n&#13;
o u n c e , a pound, a ton, were different&#13;
in different lands. H e n r y the III. decided&#13;
that a n ounce should be t h e&#13;
w e i g h t of G40 dried g r a i n s of w h e a t&#13;
from the m i d d l e of the ear. F r o m the&#13;
r e i g n of W i l l i a m the Conqueror t o&#13;
H e n r y VIII. t h e E n g l i s h pound w a s&#13;
t h e w e i g h t of 7,680 g r a i n s of wheat.&#13;
Queen E l i z a b e t h decreed that a pound&#13;
s h o u l d be 7,000 grains of w h e a t taken&#13;
from the m i d d l e of the ear. T h e piece&#13;
of p l a t i n u m kept a t t h e office of the&#13;
e x c h e q u e r in E n g l a n d in an a t m o s -&#13;
phere of 62 F . decides for all Great&#13;
B r i t a i n w h a t a pound m u s t be. Scientific&#13;
r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s from all lands m e t&#13;
i n 1869 in P a r i s and established international&#13;
s t a n d a r d s of w e i g h t s and&#13;
m e a s u r e s . * * *&#13;
T w o Kinds of Troth.&#13;
There are Christian people w h o had&#13;
faith t h a t China would be redeemed&#13;
a n d for t h i r t y years h a v e b e e n contributing&#13;
t o w a r d t h a t object, but t h e y&#13;
changed t h e i r m i n d s a n d n o w despair&#13;
of t h e F l o w e r y K i n g d o m since the&#13;
B o x e r s b e g a n their massacres. There&#13;
are t h o c e w h o were busy in N e w York&#13;
m i s s i o n s a n d expected t h e salvation of&#13;
our A m e r i c a n cities u n t i l recent dev&#13;
e l o p m e n t s s h o w e d t h a t the polics&#13;
were in c o m p l i c i t y w i t h crime, and&#13;
n o w t h e s e Christian w o r k e r s are despairful,&#13;
as t h o u g h all w e r e lost. Of&#13;
w h a t w o r t h is such a man's faith?&#13;
W h e n w e i g h e d , will t h e y h a v e what&#13;
t h e c h e m i s t s call a t o m i c w e i g h t ^ - t h e&#13;
w e i g h t of a n a t o m ? N o . Such faith is&#13;
no faith at all.&#13;
B u t t h e r e is a m a n w h o by repentance&#13;
a n d prayer has put himself into&#13;
a l l i a n c e w i t h the A l m i g h t y God. Made&#13;
all right b y the Savior's grace, this&#13;
m a n g o e s t o work to m a k e th« world&#13;
right. H e s a y s to h i m s e l h "God&#13;
launched t h i s world, and ht never&#13;
launched a failure. T h e garden of Eden&#13;
w a s a u s e l e s s morass compared with&#13;
w h a t t h e w h o l e world will be w h e n it&#13;
b l o s s o m s a n d leaves and flashes and&#13;
resounds w i t h its c o m i n g glory. God&#13;
will s a v e it a n y h o w , w i t h m e or w i t h -&#13;
out me, but I w a n t to do my share. I&#13;
h a v e s o m e equipment—not a s much&#13;
a s s o m e o t h e r s but w h a t I h a v e I will&#13;
use. I h a v e power to frown, and I will&#13;
frown upon iniquity. I have power to&#13;
s m i l e , and I will s m i l e encouragement&#13;
upon all t h e struggling. I h a v e a v o -&#13;
cabulary n o t so opulent as the vocabul&#13;
a r y of s o m e others, but I h a v e a storeh&#13;
o u s e of g o o d words, and I m e a n to&#13;
scatter t h e m in helpfulness. I will ascribe&#13;
right m o t i v e s to o t h e r s w h e n it&#13;
is possible. If I c a n s a y a n y t h i n g good&#13;
about o t h e r s , I will s a y it. If I can&#13;
say n o t h i n g but vile of them, I will&#13;
keep m y l i p s shut as t i g h t a s the lips&#13;
of the s p h i n x , w h i c h for 3,000 years&#13;
has l o o k e d off upon t h e sands of th?&#13;
desert and uttered not one word about&#13;
t h e d e s o l a t i o n . T h e s c h e m e of recons&#13;
t r u c t i n g t h i s world is too great for&#13;
m e to m a n a g e , but I a m not expected&#13;
to* b o s s t h i s job. I h a v e faith to believe&#13;
t h a t t h e plan is w e l l laid out and&#13;
will be w e l l executed. Give m e a&#13;
brick and a trowel and I will begin&#13;
n o w t o h e l p build t h e wall. I a m not&#13;
a soloist, b u t I can s i n g 'Rock of&#13;
Ages' t o a s i c k pauper. I cannot write&#13;
a great b o o k but I c a n pick a cinder&#13;
o u t of a child's e y e or a splinter from&#13;
under h i s t h u m b nail. I n o w enlist in&#13;
this a r m y , t h a t is g o i n g to take the&#13;
world for God, and I defy all the evil&#13;
powers, h u m a n and satanic, to discourage&#13;
m e . Count m e into the serv&#13;
i c e . I c a n n o t play u p o n a musical&#13;
i n s t r u m e n t , but I can polish a cornet&#13;
or s t r i n g a harp or applaud tho orchestra."&#13;
A Choorrnl Faith.&#13;
All t h r o u g h that m a n ' s experience&#13;
there r u n s A faith t h a t will keep h i m&#13;
cheerful a n d busy and triumphant. I&#13;
l i k e t h e w a t c h w o r d of Cromwell's&#13;
Ironsides, t h e m e n w h o feared nothi&#13;
n g and dared e v e r y t h i n g , g o i n g into&#13;
battle w i t h t h e s h o u t : "The Lord of&#13;
h o s t s is w i t h us, the God of Jacob i s&#13;
our refuge! S e l a h ! " N o balance that&#13;
h u m a n b r a i n ever planned or h u m a n&#13;
Hand e v e r constructed i s w o r t h y o f&#13;
w e i g h i n g s u c h a spirit. Gold a n d prec&#13;
i o u s s t o n e s are m e a s u r e d by the&#13;
carat, w h i c h is four grains. T h e deale&#13;
r p u t s t h e diamond or t h e pearl o n&#13;
o n e s i d e of t h e scales and the carat on&#13;
- t h e o t h e r s i d e and tells you t h e weight.&#13;
B u t w e n e e d s o m e t h i n g more delicatel&#13;
y c o n s t r u c t e d to w e i g h t h a t wonderful&#13;
q u a l i t y of faith w h i c h I a m g l a d t o&#13;
k n o w will be recognized a n d rewarded&#13;
for all t i m e and all eternity. T h e&#13;
e a r t h l y w e i g h m a n counterpoises o n&#13;
m e t a l l i c balances the iron, the coal,&#13;
t h e articles of h u m a n food, t h e solids&#13;
of e a r t h l y merchandise, but he cannot&#13;
test or announce the a m o u n t of t h i n g s&#13;
spiritual. Here is s o m e t h i n g w h i c h&#13;
t h e Attic a n d B a b y l o n i a n w e i g h i n g&#13;
s y s t e m s of the past and t h e metric&#13;
w e i g h i n g s y s t e m of t h e present c a n -&#13;
n o t manage, " m e Lord w e i g h e t h t h e&#13;
spirits. * * *&#13;
Get's D solplln* i&#13;
B u t look into the dream of t h a t&#13;
s c h o o l b o y w h o , w i t h o u t s a y i n g a n y -&#13;
t h i n g about it, is p l a n n i n g h i s lifet&#13;
i m e career. F r o m a n old book partly&#13;
w r i t t e n in Hebrew and partly writt&#13;
e n in Greek, bat both H e b r e w and&#13;
Greek translated into good E n g l i s h ,&#13;
h e reads of a great farmer like A m o s ,&#13;
a great m e c h a n i c like A h o l l a b , a great&#13;
l a w y e r like Moses, a great soldier like&#13;
J o s h u a , a great k i n g l i k e H e z e k i a h , a&#13;
great poet, like David, a groat g l e a n&#13;
l i k e R u t h , a great p h y s i c i a n like&#13;
Luke, a great preacher like Paul, a&#13;
g r e a t Christ like n o o n e on earth or&#13;
in h e a v e n because t h e superior of all&#13;
b e i n g s terrestrial or celestial. H e h a s&#13;
learned by heart the T e a C o m m a n d -&#13;
m e n t s ?.nd t h e s e r m o n o n t h s m o u n t&#13;
a n d has splendid theories about eve&#13;
r y t h i n g . B e t w e e n that fair haired&#13;
boy and the a c h i e v e m e n t of w h a t he&#13;
w a n t s and expects t h e r e are obstacles&#13;
a n d h i n d r a n c e s k n o w n o n l y t o the God&#13;
w h o is g o i n g to discipline h i m for&#13;
h e r o i c s magnificent. I hav^ no power&#13;
t o prophesy that different experiences&#13;
of h i s e n c o u r a g e m e n t and disappointm&#13;
e n t , of h i s struggle or his triumph,&#13;
but as sure a s God l i v e s t o m a k e his&#13;
h i s word come true t h a t boy w h o will&#13;
s l e e p t o n i g h t n i n e hours w i t h o u t waki&#13;
n g will be final victor. I d o not k n o w&#13;
t h e intermediate chapters of the volu&#13;
m e of t h a t y o u n g m a n ' s life, but I&#13;
k n o w the first chapter a n d the last&#13;
chapter. The first c h a p t e r is made of&#13;
h i g h resolves In the s t r e n g t h of God,&#13;
a n d the last chapter is filled w i t h t h e&#13;
rewards of a noble a m b i t i o n . A s h i s&#13;
obsequies p a s s out t o t h e cemetery the&#13;
poor will weep because t h e y will lose&#13;
t h e i r best friend. Many in whose&#13;
temporal welfare and eternal salvat&#13;
i o n he bore a part will hear of it in&#13;
various places and eulogize his m e m -&#13;
ory, and God will say to tho a s c e n d i n g&#13;
spirit, "To him t h a t overcometh will&#13;
I g i v e to eat of the tree of life which&#13;
is in the m i d s t of t h e paradise of&#13;
God." In the hour of t h a t soul's rel&#13;
e a s e and e n t h r o n e m e n t there will be&#13;
h e a v e n l y acclamation, as i n the royal&#13;
b a l a n c e s "the Lord w e i g h e t h the&#13;
s p i r i t s . "&#13;
Other balances m a y lack precision&#13;
and fail in counterpoise. Scales are&#13;
affected by c o n d i t i o n s of a t m o s p h e r e&#13;
a n d acid vapors. After all that the&#13;
n a t i o n s h a v e d o n e to e s t a b l i s h an invariable&#13;
standard, perfection has never&#13;
yet been reached, a n d n e v e r will be&#13;
reached. But the royal balances of&#13;
w h i c h I speak are t h e s a m e in h e a t&#13;
and cold, in all weathers, in all lands&#13;
and in all the h e a v e n s — j u s t and true&#13;
to the last point of j u s t i c e and truth.&#13;
T h e s a m e balance t h a t w e i g h e d the&#13;
t e m p t e d spirit of A d a m under the&#13;
frViit tree, and t h e spirit of Cain in&#13;
t h e first a s s a s s i n a t i o n , and the spirit&#13;
of courage i n Joshua d u r i n g the prol&#13;
o n g e d ' daylight, and t h e spirit of cruelty&#13;
of J.esebel, and the spirit of grief&#13;
in Jeremiah's l a m e n t a t i o n , and the&#13;
lua in- tragedy, a H e r o d o t u s and T h u -&#13;
c y d i d e s in history, a S o c r a t e s a n d&#13;
P l a t o i n p h i l o s o p h y , a Strabo i n g e o g -&#13;
raphy, a H i p p o c r a t e s in medicine, a&#13;
X e n o p h o n in literature, a P l u t a r c h i n&#13;
biography, a Miltlades and a n A l e x a n -&#13;
der i n battle a n d could b u i l d a t e m -&#13;
ple of D i a n n a a t EpheSus and t h e&#13;
acro-Corinthus at Corinth and could&#13;
c r o w n t h e Acropolis w i t h a P a r t h e n o n&#13;
— s u r e l y such a land, w i t h more g e n i u s&#13;
V/RCOK ON t A K B HURON.&#13;
was&#13;
t-phit of e v a n g e l i s m i n - P a u l b e t w e e n&#13;
t h e road to D a m a s c u s , w h e r e he first&#13;
s a w the light, and tho road to Ostia,&#13;
the place of h i s b e h e a d m e n t . is w e i g h -&#13;
i n g still and never y e t has varied from&#13;
t h e right one m i l l i g r a m , w h i c h is the&#13;
o n e s i x - t h o u s a n t h part of a grain. Th-3&#13;
o n l y perfect standard of w e i g h t s and&#13;
m e a s u r e s ever established was established&#13;
in the h e a v e n s before the world&#13;
w a s made and will c o n t i n u e to do its&#13;
w o r k after t h e world is burned up.&#13;
T o m e a s u r e t h e t i m e w e h a v e calendars.&#13;
T o m e a s u r e the l i g h t i n g w e h a v e&#13;
t h e electrometers. T o m e a s u r e t h e&#13;
h e a t w e h a v e t h e t h e r m o m e t e r s . T o&#13;
m a s u r e t h e atmospheric pressure we&#13;
h a v e t h e barometers. T o measure&#13;
s o u l s w e h a v e the r o y a l balance. "The&#13;
Lord w e i g h e t h the spirits."&#13;
Wel?h«d tn D'Tlne Sralm.&#13;
In the s a m e divine s c a l e s the spirit&#13;
of n a t i o n s andVclvilizations is weighed.&#13;
E g y p t i a n civilization did its work, but&#13;
it was cruel and s u p e r s t i t i o u s and&#13;
idolatrous and defiant of the Alm&#13;
i g h t y , — I t w a s c a s t o u t ^ a n d cast&#13;
d o w n . T h e tourist finds h i s chief int&#13;
e r e s t not in the g e n e r a t i o n t h a t n o w&#13;
i n h a b i t s the r e g i o n s watered by the&#13;
N i l e ' and sprinkled by her cascades,&#13;
b u t in t h e t e m p l e s t h a t are the s k e l e -&#13;
t o n s of a n c i e n t pride a n d pomp and&#13;
power1—her obelisks, h e r catacombs,&#13;
h e r mosques, t h e c o l o s s u s of R a m e s e s ,&#13;
t h e dead c i t i e s of M e m p h i s and&#13;
T h e b e s , t h e t e m p l e s of Luxor and&#13;
K a r n a k , t h e m u s e u m c o n t a i n i n g t h e&#13;
mummified forms of t h e p h a r a o h s . It&#13;
is not t h e E g y p t of t o d a y that w e g o&#13;
t o s e e , but t h e / E g y p t o f m a n y centuries&#13;
c o m p r e s s e d in s m a l l space t h a n in a n y&#13;
of t h e n a t i o n s of all t h e a ? e s , w i l l&#13;
s t a n d forever t r i u m p h a n t a m o n g surr&#13;
o u n d i n g nations. N o . . H e r pride of&#13;
heroics, her pride of literature, h e r&#13;
pride of architecture, m u s t be b r o u g h t&#13;
d o w n l o w e r and lower, and h u m i l i a -&#13;
t i o n m u s t f o l l o w h u m i l i a t i o n until i n&#13;
t h e latter part of t h e n i n e t e e n t h c e n -&#13;
t u r y s h e is compelled to s u b m i t to t h e&#13;
o u t r a g e s of a s u l t a n w h o s e h a n d s are&#13;
red w i t h the blood of 50.000 A r m e -&#13;
n i a n s . Had A t h e n s prayerfully l i s t e n e d&#13;
t o P a u l ' s s e r m o n o n Mars hill a n d&#13;
adopted his p r e c e p t s of brotherhood&#13;
a n d d i v i n e w o r s h i p s h e w o u l d h a v e&#13;
stood in her old power today, and all&#13;
Greece would h a v e stood w i t h her,&#13;
and t h a t c i v i l i z a t i o n s o l o n g dead u n -&#13;
der t h e carved pillars of her s h r i n e s&#13;
a n d under t h e m a r b l e of her "penteiican&#13;
m o u n t a i n s w o u l d h a v e been, perh&#13;
a p s for a l l Asia and for m u c h of&#13;
Europe, a l i v i n g civilization. B u t for&#13;
her arrogance s h e w a s cast out and&#13;
cast down. T h e Lord w e i g h e d har&#13;
snirit.&#13;
The Ye ?h1nqr of Nations.&#13;
And so the spirit of our A m e r i c a n&#13;
n a t i o n J s _ p u t i n t o t h e royal balance,&#13;
£ n d it will be w e i g h e d as certainly a s&#13;
all t h e n a t i o n s of t h e past w e r e&#13;
w e i g h e d and a s all t h e n a t i o n s of t h e&#13;
p r e s e n t are b e i n g w e i g h e d . W h e n w e&#13;
g o to e s t i m a t e t h e w e a l t h of t h i s n a -&#13;
tion, w e w e i g h i t s gold and silver a n d&#13;
coal and iron and copper and lead,&#13;
and all t h e steel y a r d s a n d all the balances&#13;
are kept busy. So m a n y t o n s of&#13;
t h i s a n d eo m a n y t o n s of that, a&#13;
m o u n t a i n f u l of t h i s m e t a l and a n o t h -&#13;
er mountainful of a n o t h e r metal. T h a t&#13;
i s well. W e w a n t to k n o w our m i n i n g&#13;
w e a l t h , our m a n u f a c t u r i n g wealth&#13;
our agricultural w e a l t h , and the bushel&#13;
m e a s u r e and t h e scales h a v e an i m -&#13;
portant work. B u t k n o w right w e l l&#13;
t h s r e is a divine w e i g h i n g in t h i s&#13;
c o u n t r y all t h e t i m e g o i n g on, and 1&#13;
can tell you our country's destiny H&#13;
y o u will tell m e w h e t h e r it shall be&#13;
a God h o n o r i n g nation, reverential t o&#13;
the o n l y book of h i s authorship, o b -&#13;
s e r v i n g the "shalt n o t s " of the law of&#13;
right given o n Mount Sinai and t h e&#13;
law of» love g i v e n on t h e Mount of&#13;
Beatitudes, o n e day out of the w e e k&#13;
observed not in revelry, but in h o l y&#13;
convocation, m a r r i a g e honored in cere&#13;
m o n y and in fact, b l a s p h e m y silenced&#13;
in all t h e streets, h i g h toned&#13;
s y s t e m s of m o r a l s in all parts of our&#13;
land, then our Institutions will live&#13;
and all the w o n d r o u s prosperities of&#13;
t h e p r e s e n t - a r e o n l y a faint hint of&#13;
the greater prosperities to come.&#13;
Keep the National Life Pare.&#13;
But if o u r character and behavior&#13;
as a nation are reversed and good&#13;
m o r a l s g i v e place to l o o s e l i v i n g and&#13;
God i s put a w a y from our hearts and&#13;
our s c h o o l s and o u r h o m e s and our&#13;
people and our literature be d e -&#13;
bauched and a n a r c h i s m and a t h e i s m&#13;
h a v e full s w a y a n d t h e marriage relation&#13;
b e c o m e s a joke instead of a&#13;
s a n c t i t y and the God w h o m Columbus&#13;
praved to o n t h e dav of his l a n d i n g&#13;
rwclvo rersotu, InoXadiaz a TToaaaa.&#13;
Drowned—Two Bosoned.&#13;
A d i s p a t c h from B a y City, d a t e d t h e&#13;
24th, says: A terriffc n o r t h e a s t e r b l e w&#13;
all d a y anu l a s t n i g h t o n L a k e H u r o n .&#13;
T h e s t e a m e r B a l t i m o r e , coal l a d e n ,&#13;
broke in t w o a n d s a n k b e t w e e n A u&#13;
S a b l e and F i s h P o i n t a b o u t 6 o'clock&#13;
this m o r n i n g . T w e l v e w e r e d r o w n e d ,&#13;
Including a w o m a a T h e s t e a m e r Bal-&#13;
C H I N A W A R « B W 3 . T&#13;
T h o s t a t e d e p a r t m e n t h a s b e e n moCe&#13;
fully a c q u a i n t e d b y Mr. R o c k h i l l w i t h&#13;
the character of t h e proposition a s t o&#13;
the floating of t h e i n d e m n i t y l o a n unfolded&#13;
a t P e k i n . W h i l e g r a v e objections&#13;
are perceived t o t h e R u s s i a n project&#13;
for a j o i n t g u a r a n t e e of t h e l o a n ,&#13;
because of the i m m e n s e difficulty of&#13;
s e c u r i n g the a s s e n t of c o n g r e s s to a n&#13;
a g r e e m e n t w h i c h w o u l d e n t a n g l e f o r&#13;
timore w a s s i g h t e d from All S a b l e more t h a n a quarter of a c e n t u r y a t&#13;
early t h i s m o r n i n g a b o u t m i d w a y be- least, t h e r e i s n o t h i n g in Mr. Rockt&#13;
w e e n t h e dead A u S a b l e a n d A u S a b l e hiU's i n s t r u c t i o n s w h i c h w o u l d cause&#13;
P o i n t w i t h ber e n g i n e s a p p a r e n t l y di*- him t o a n t a g o n i z e the proposition,&#13;
a b l e d a n d d r i f t i n g i n a h e l p l e s s condi- provided i t i s f u l l y developed so a s t o&#13;
tion. T h e O t t a w a l i f e - s a v i n g c r e w secure t h e s a f e t y of t h e loan w h i l e asw&#13;
e r e t e l e g r a p h e d for b u t w e r e d e l a y e d s u r i n g the i n t e g r i t y of China, I t i s&#13;
in r e a c h i n g t h e s c e n e a n d w e r e u n a b l e s u g g e s t e d t h a t t h e s e objects c a n be&#13;
t o . l o c a t e t h e w r e c k u n t i l l a t e t h i s b e s t secured by c a u s i n g China to d e&#13;
afternoon. T h e t u g Columbia, of De- liver to e a c h n a t i o n bonds b e a r i n g 4&#13;
troit, w i t h a g o v e r n m e n t s t e a m d r e d g e per c e n t i n t e r e s t t o t h e face value of&#13;
and o n e loaded l i g h t e r for t h e Soo, w a s t h e nation's i n d e m n i t y claim. T h e&#13;
c a u g h t in t h e storm. T h e l i g h t e r s a n d n a t i o n h o l d i n g t h e bonds could disd&#13;
r e d g e w a s lost, p a r t i n g t h e i r s i x - i n c h pose of t h e m a t its pleasure, i t could&#13;
cable, b u t ' w e r e a f t e r w a r d r e s c u e d affix i t s o w n g u a r a n t e e a n d s e l l t h e&#13;
w i t h their c r e w of s i x men. W h i l e b o n d s in t h e opan m a r k e t E n g l a n d ,&#13;
s e a r c h i n g for h e r t o w , t h e Columbia too, is opposed t o a j o i n t g u a r a n t e e of&#13;
picked u p an e n g i n e e r and a d e c k h a n d loan.&#13;
of t h e B a l t i m o r e on a raft. T h e y w e r e | Reports h a v e b e e n received from Pea&#13;
l m o s t dead, a n d w e r e t a k e n t o E a s t l d n t o t h e effect t h a t Field Marshal&#13;
T a w a s . T h e d e c k h a n d w e n t i n s a n e o n Count von W a j d e r s e e h a s i n f o r m e d t h e&#13;
the raft. Chinese t h a t t h e troops will n o t l e a v e&#13;
P e k i n u n t i l t h e court returns, and h e&#13;
h i m s e l f i s received in imperial audience.&#13;
T h e F r e n c h have w i t h d r a w&#13;
Allen's First Annual Report.&#13;
Gov. Charles U. A l i e n , of P o r t o Rico,&#13;
has presented t o t h e President, t h r o u g h . . .&#13;
the s t a t e d e p a r t m e n t , h i s first a n n u a l ; l™m&#13;
x}\*w&#13;
b h a n s J « P ; d l * ° » . and t h e&#13;
r e p o r t H e e x p r e s s e s t h e o p i n i o n t h a t E n g h s h have refused to t a k e a n y part&#13;
a s c h e m e of c o l o n i a l a d m i n i s t r a t i o n , « »*• X t l s Probable, there ore t h a t&#13;
t h e G e r m a n s w i l l oe c o m p e l l e d to g o&#13;
alone. In spite of c o n s t a n t and threate&#13;
n i n g difficulties, Count von Waldersee,&#13;
ago. Her spirit h a s departed. Her&#13;
d o o m w a s sealed. T h e Lord w e i g h e d&#13;
h e r spirit.&#13;
N o w cross over t h e D a r d a n e l l e s or&#13;
H e l l e s p o n t and s e e Grecian civilizat&#13;
i o n p u t in t h e royaLbalance*. Surely&#13;
t h a t is a n i m p e r i s h a b l e spirit. A land&#13;
t h a t produced a P i n d a r a n d a H o m e r&#13;
i n poetry, a S o p h o c l e s a n d a n A e s c h y -&#13;
s u c h as is found in t h e Danish, F r e n c h&#13;
and E n g l i s h W e s t Indies, m i g h t be&#13;
s a f e l y i n s t i t u t e d w i t h v a r i a t i o n s dep&#13;
e n d e n t u p o n t h e future policy of t h e&#13;
h o m e g o v e r n m e n t T h e g o v e r n o r refers&#13;
to t h e m a n y s u g g e s t i o n s offered&#13;
t h a t t h e form of territorial g o v e r n -&#13;
m e n t a d o p t e d b y t h e IT. S. be a p p l i e d&#13;
to P o r t o Rico, b u t p o i n t s o u t t h a t a&#13;
s t a n d a r d form of such g o v e r n m e n t ,&#13;
w h i l e useful i n t h e U. S., w o u l d n o t&#13;
a p p l y successfully t o t h i s island possession.&#13;
H e c a l l s a t t e n t i o n t o t h e f a c t&#13;
t h a t w h i l e in s u c h close p r o x i m i t y t o&#13;
t h e U. S. P o r t o Rico h a s been a comp&#13;
a r a t i v e l y u n k n o w n island t o Americans.&#13;
I n conclusion, Gov. A l l e n urged&#13;
t h e i n t r o d u c t i o n of fresh blood and&#13;
A n g l o - S a x o n p u s h and e n e r g y a s t h e&#13;
m e a n s of l i f t i n g t h e l i t t l e island o u t&#13;
of i t s lethargy* and by t h r i f t a n d ind&#13;
u s t r y , d e v e l o p i t s riches to t h e i r full&#13;
measure.&#13;
Threw Acid In Ills Face for Kevensr*.&#13;
Charles A. Spencer, better k n o w n as&#13;
"Doc" Spencer, c o m m i t t e d a c o w a r d l y&#13;
assault upon A t t o r n e y J o h n S. Starkw&#13;
e a t h e r a t t h e railroad s t a t i o n in&#13;
Romeo, on the 20th. As S t a r k w e a t h e r&#13;
e n t e r e d t h e door of the b u i l d i n g Spencer&#13;
sprang at h i m a n d t h r e w t h e cont&#13;
e n t s of a b o t t l e c o n t a i n i n g a s t r o n g&#13;
acid in the a t t o r n e y ' s face. Spencer&#13;
w a s i m m e d i a t e l y placed u n d e r arrest.&#13;
S t a r k w e a t h e r w a s badly burned a b o u t&#13;
t h e r i g h t eye, c h i n , m o u t h and breast,&#13;
b u t h i s i n j u r i e s are n o t serious. Spencer&#13;
says he i n t e u d e d to m a i m h i s vict&#13;
i m for life, a n d e x p r e s s e s n o r e g r e t&#13;
for h i s a c t H e s a y s h e h a s w a i t e d&#13;
for years for a n o p p o r t u n i t y to w r e c k&#13;
v e n g e a n c e upon S t a r k w e a t h e r . Spencer&#13;
used to live at Romeo, but h i s&#13;
h o m e is n o w at W e s t Bay City.&#13;
s i n g l e - h a n d e d , c o n t i n u e s to m a i n t a i n&#13;
the p r e s t i g e of f o r e i g n e r s in t h i s part&#13;
of China.&#13;
A dispatch from T a k u s a y s t h a t Gen.&#13;
Chaffee w a s told as h e w a s a b o u t t o&#13;
l e a v e P e k i n t h a t t h e r e w e r e t w o c a s e s&#13;
of s m a l l p o x a m o n g t h e I n d i a n t r o o p s&#13;
n o w i n c a m p at T o n k u , w h e r e t h e&#13;
A m e r i c a n s w e r e t o proceed t o board&#13;
t h e i r transports. Gen. Chaffee i s n o w&#13;
a w a i t i n g &lt;ievelopment*—In tbe-eventof—&#13;
b e i n g h e l d by q u a r a n t i n e he w i l l proba&#13;
b l y move u p the P e i river for t w o&#13;
w e e k s .&#13;
T h e f o r e i g n ministers' m e e t i n g a t&#13;
P e k i n on the 22d w a s very u n s a t i s f a c -&#13;
tory. N o p o w e r w a s w i l l i n g to accede&#13;
to the Americans' idea of a r e d u c t i o n&#13;
of the Chinese i n d e m n i t y t o 9'2 &gt;'&gt;,(KX),-&#13;
000, t h o u g h Great Britain recognizes»&#13;
the a d v i s a b i l i t y of some r e d u c t i o n .&#13;
T R A N S V A A L W A R I T E M S .&#13;
from v s t o r m y s e a s and w h o m B e n j a -&#13;
min F r a n k l i n publicly reverenced&#13;
w h e n h e moved amid derisive cries&#13;
the regular o p e n i n g of t h e A m e r i c a n&#13;
c o n g r e s s w i t h prayer s h a l l in our n a -&#13;
tional future be insulted and b l a s -&#13;
p h e m e d , t h e n it w i l l n o t be long before&#13;
w e will need a n o t h e r E d w a r d&#13;
Gibbons to write t h e decline and fall&#13;
of t h e United S t a t e s republic.&#13;
P y r r h u s w a s k i n g and had large d o -&#13;
m i n i o n , but w a s determined to m a k e&#13;
war a g a i n s t the R o m a n s , and Cineas,&#13;
t h e friend of t h e king, said to h i m ,&#13;
"Sir. w h e n y o u h a v e conquered t h e m ,&#13;
w h a t will y o u do n e x t ? " "Then S i -&#13;
cily is near at hand and e a s y to m a s -&#13;
ter." "And w h a t w h e n you h a v e c o n -&#13;
quered S i c i l y ? " "Then w e will p a s s&#13;
over t o Africa a n d t a k e Carthage,&#13;
w h i c h c a n n o t l o n g w i t h s t a n d u s . "&#13;
" W h e n t h e s e are conquered, w h a t will&#13;
y o u n e x t a t t e m p t ? " "Then w e will&#13;
fall i n upon Greece and Macedonia&#13;
and recover w h a t w e h a v e lost there."&#13;
"Well, w h e n all are subdued, w h a t&#13;
fruit do y o u e x p e c t from all "your&#13;
v i c t o r i e s ? " " T h e n , " said t h e k i n g , " w e&#13;
will s i t d o w n a n d enjoy o u r s e l v e s . "&#13;
"Sir," said Cineas, "may we n o t do it&#13;
n o w ? H a v e y o u n o t already a k i n g -&#13;
dom of your - o w n . and h e t h a t c a n n o t&#13;
enjoy h i m s e l f w i t h a k i n g d o m c a n n o t&#13;
w i t h t h e w h o l e world." I s a y t o y o u&#13;
w h o l o v e t h e Lord, t h e k i n g d o m is&#13;
w i t h i n y o u ; m a k e m o r e of t h e i n v i s i -&#13;
ble conquests. Study a peace w h i c h&#13;
t h e world h a s n o b u s h e l to m e a s u r e ,&#13;
n o steel-yards t o w e i g h . A s far a s&#13;
possible w e should m a k e our balances&#13;
N E W S Y B R E V I T I E S .&#13;
T h e n e w Shamrock y a c h t w a s a g a i n&#13;
b e a t e n by t h e old Shamrock o n the&#13;
2 1 s t&#13;
T h e e s t i m a t e s for Ontario rivers a n d&#13;
harbors passed by p a r l i a m e n t a m o u n t&#13;
to S400.9 «1&#13;
Heavy rains c a u s e d m u c h d a m a g e t o&#13;
property in N o r t h Carolina and T e n n -&#13;
essee on the 2 1 s t&#13;
T h e joi»n c o n f e r e u c c c o m m i t t e e railroad&#13;
t a x bill passed t h e h o u s e o n t h e&#13;
21st by a vote of 67 to 21.&#13;
E s t h e r Cleveland, t h e 9-year old&#13;
d a u g h t e r of t h e former p r e s i d e n t , is&#13;
suffering from d i p h t h e r i a .&#13;
Bresci, t h e a s s a s s i n of t h e l a t e K i n g&#13;
H u m b e r t , has c o m m i t t e d suicide a t the&#13;
p e n i t e n t i a r y a t San S t e f a n o , Italy.&#13;
N i n e h u n d r e d P o r t o R i c a n s embarked&#13;
on t h e s t e a m e r California a t&#13;
Guanica for H a w a i i o n the 21st, a n d&#13;
400 more are ready to sail.&#13;
Jack Moffat, the Chicago middlew&#13;
e i g h t , h a s b e e n m a t c h e d t o b o x 20&#13;
r o u n d s w i t h George Gardner of B o s t o n ,&#13;
at* S a n Franci&amp;co, on J u l y 4.&#13;
N e w York m a y h a v e a j u b i l e e e x p o -&#13;
s i t i o n i n 1905, to c o m m e m o r a t e t h e&#13;
p h y s i c a l c o n s o l i d a t i o n of t h e b o r o u g h s&#13;
of t h e m e t r o p o l i s by t h e c o m p l e t i o n of&#13;
t h e rapid t r a n s i t s y s t e m .&#13;
— D a v e Sutttvanr^htts- nrgrwd- to~-tighfr&#13;
Terry McGovern in a 20-round b a t t l e ut&#13;
L o u i s v i l l e n e x t A u g u s t D a v e t h i n k s&#13;
it i s n o c i n c h for Terry, b u t t h e r e are&#13;
o t h e r s w h o t h i n k o t h e r w i s e .&#13;
T w o m e n , B a r n e y J o h n s o n a n d&#13;
T h o m a s O'Malley, w e r e k i l l e d by a&#13;
flyer on t h e E r i e railroad i n Cleveland&#13;
o n t h e n i g h t of t h e 22d. T h e i r b o d i e s&#13;
w e r e badly c u t up. A card f o u n d n e a r&#13;
o n e of t h e m e n s h o w e d t h a t he h e l d&#13;
m e m b e r s h i p i n t h e l o n g s h o r e m e n ' s&#13;
u n i o n of Lorain, O.&#13;
W i l l i a m J. Cocker, of Adrian* a regl&#13;
i k e t o t h e d i v i n e balances.&#13;
B i t Gift for Tollers.&#13;
George Cadbury, t h e E n g l i s h chocolate&#13;
manufacturer, h a s presented t o&#13;
the city of B i r m i n g h a m a n e s t a t e of&#13;
416 acres, v a l u e d at 1900,000, u p o n&#13;
w h i c h to build house3 for w o r k i n g&#13;
people.&#13;
E i g h t h u n d r e d Boers h a v e crossed&#13;
t h e Orange river from t h e u o r t h w e s t ,&#13;
and have reinforced the c o m m a n d o e s&#13;
in t h e e a s t e r n district. T h e l a t e s t reliable&#13;
report l o c a t e s D e w e t near Philippolis,&#13;
in Orange River Colony, and n o t&#13;
far from the Cape line, w i t h 40 horsemen.&#13;
All t h e c o m m a n d o e s in t h e&#13;
Orange River Colony have i n s t r u c t i o n s&#13;
to cross t h e Orange river. Several&#13;
British patrols haves been ambushed.&#13;
A p a r l i a m e n t a r y paper just issued&#13;
s l u m s the t o t a l - o f British troops i n&#13;
South Africa, May 1, t o be 249,410.&#13;
T h e total d e a t h s were 14,978 a n d&#13;
w o u n d e d 17,209. In hospital April 15&#13;
there w e r e 13,797.&#13;
M a r t h i n u s Wessels P r e t o r i u s , t h e&#13;
first p r e s i d e n t of t h e D u t c h African&#13;
Republic, t h e t i t l e of w h i c h w a s&#13;
c h a n g e d in 1S58 to t h e S o u t h African&#13;
Republic, died M;iy 19 a t Potchefstroom,&#13;
T r a n s v a a l Republic.&#13;
B A S E B A L L .&#13;
B e l o w w e p u b l i s h the s t a n d i n g of&#13;
t h e American and N a t i o n a l l e a g u e c l u b s&#13;
up to and i n c l u d i n g the g a m e s p l a y e l&#13;
on Friday, May 24:&#13;
AMBUICAN LEAGUE.&#13;
Won.&#13;
Chicago 1*&#13;
Detroit IS&#13;
Baltimore It&#13;
Washington VI&#13;
Boston H&gt; i..&#13;
Milwaukee 8&#13;
Philadelphia 7&#13;
Cleveland ft&#13;
N ATXO » A L t. E AG CS.&#13;
Won. ]&#13;
New York 11&#13;
Cincinnati 15&#13;
Philadelphia 15&#13;
Pittsburg to&#13;
Brooklyn VI&#13;
Uosion .-.... 10&#13;
St. Louis 11&#13;
Chicago 11&#13;
ost.&#13;
8&#13;
9&#13;
0&#13;
9&#13;
11&#13;
15&#13;
15&#13;
18&#13;
&gt;s\&#13;
1&#13;
10&#13;
VI&#13;
v: 13&#13;
i i&#13;
i s&#13;
19&#13;
Per c .&#13;
.68.)&#13;
.667&#13;
.W?&#13;
.571&#13;
.476&#13;
.348&#13;
.318&#13;
.3U4&#13;
Per ct.&#13;
.647&#13;
.6.W&#13;
.556&#13;
.5X&gt;&#13;
. 4 «&#13;
.155&#13;
.407&#13;
.J47&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
e n t of t h e U. of M., died a t A n n Arbor&#13;
o n t h e 19th. Mr. Cocker w e n t t o A n n&#13;
Arbor on the It'.th t o a t t e n d a s e s s i o n&#13;
of t h e board of r e g e n t s . H e w a s app&#13;
a r e n t l y in h i s u s u a l h e a l t h , b u t w a s&#13;
t a k e n ill the d a y f o l l o w i n g a n d w h i l e&#13;
d r e s s i n g w a s seized w i t h a n a t t a c k of&#13;
h e a r t disease, and e x p i r e d i n a. f e w&#13;
m i n u t e s .&#13;
LTVK STOCK.&#13;
New Ynr*c- Cattle Shesp&#13;
Best grades... .*"&gt; i:&gt;^;&gt; 9J *4 ?0&#13;
Lower grades -J ?J^i 5J&#13;
-Chlr&gt;»sro —&#13;
Best grades 5 3 H.5 »*»&#13;
Lower grades. 3 itOj]5 U.&gt;&#13;
D e t r o i t -&#13;
Best jrmdc;s....3 812.4 8)&#13;
Lower grades-.. 75£J It&#13;
Hn(r»lo—&#13;
Best grades 4 003,6 i&gt;&#13;
Lower grades..3 G5rj,4 1&gt;J&#13;
Clnrtntiittl--&#13;
Best grades. 5 0l~ti&gt; :!"» 4 2'i&#13;
Lower grades..3 W3-1 5&gt; 3 75&#13;
Mtt»hnr«—&#13;
BestKrades. ...» 107,5 0) 4 40&#13;
Lower grades. 4 5J#5 0) 4 t)J&#13;
C.RAIX. KTC.&#13;
Wheat Corn&#13;
No. S re I No. 1 mix&#13;
7D5j,7»S 5U&amp;50V*&#13;
1"»- 4_L.i.-IP.'&#13;
3 i i&#13;
4 65&#13;
iJA&#13;
4 41&#13;
3 b&gt;&#13;
4 7&gt;&#13;
4 S3&#13;
ChUmg* , mtm Liii2&#13;
Oats&#13;
N c 2 wMto&#13;
» 3 3 *&#13;
_C84fc2! 8ii_&#13;
•l&gt;*tri&gt;U&#13;
TOICHIO&#13;
Cincinnati&#13;
nttubor^&#13;
LluITtlu&#13;
751.751¾&#13;
'5 7,75&#13;
7K5.7J&#13;
'Il77'i&#13;
715 76 i&#13;
4o^45&#13;
44344 S&#13;
&lt; 03*10&#13;
47(147&#13;
46^4J&#13;
3*0.32 4&#13;
*:&amp;'?£('4&#13;
310*3.}&#13;
S4134'*&#13;
"Detroit—Hay. No. 1 Ttraotly. I 75 por ton.&#13;
Potatoes, .T«c per bu. Ltvc Poultr?. spring&#13;
chickens, u ? PLV ft: fowK l)c: turkeys, ll-s;&#13;
ducks, lifc. Kw*s. strictly fres'i, ICJ p&gt;r a o z i x&#13;
Luuor, be*: uui.-y, I*.- p i ; &amp;; creamery, WJ.&#13;
^---:-.1¾&#13;
if&#13;
Aiii&#13;
Lamb*&#13;
85 50&#13;
5 00&#13;
ft 65&#13;
4 5)&#13;
• 9J&#13;
4 4J&#13;
5 50&#13;
5 30&#13;
8 0)&#13;
5 25&#13;
f» 15&#13;
4 5J&#13;
H07-*.&#13;
S3 i&gt;&#13;
0 IJ&#13;
5 95&#13;
5 5j&#13;
5 70&#13;
5 55&#13;
6 10&#13;
&amp; 7 J&#13;
5 65&#13;
5£»&#13;
5 90&#13;
5 to&#13;
-?;&#13;
'; i.,•••&lt;'' ""-r'--. '.;v„ '•'; .•y.-.'Vi* *•• '''' , ' • • , , " • • • ; • * •&#13;
w f V ^ j .; ' . ( ' i . . . J . * , ' • &gt; , &gt;•;•-'&lt;' ,'• • ' • • • • • , : . . .&#13;
• ' ' . ' ' • * ' ''. • '-.• • •: k * . ' . ' , ' ' " . *&#13;
^ft»fc^^:J£wJfei-i-4t«^i'.%^^^A^J&#13;
^ F ! " ! • : &gt; * :&#13;
• - , . " . • ' • " &lt; • '&#13;
!•&lt;' .' r - * i \ '&#13;
•4-&#13;
«K&#13;
Rtf ,';•&#13;
''.V'&#13;
ftV.Wti.&#13;
TO"-.&#13;
. ' ^ . • ; V&#13;
I *&#13;
John Fitch lost a valuable horse&#13;
this week.&#13;
WEST MARION.&#13;
A. B. FerHngtnn is on the,sick&#13;
sick list.&#13;
Emory Collier was in Howell&#13;
Saturday last&#13;
Katie Davis, called on friends&#13;
in this vicinity one day last week.&#13;
Clemena TVylie entertained&#13;
company from west Marion on&#13;
Friday last.&#13;
Edd Youngs and Geo. Hoff of&#13;
Ann Arbor passed through here&#13;
last Fuesday on their way to&#13;
North Wheeler.&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
Lucius Wilson waB home over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
WHAT SAID THE WINDt&#13;
[Hc-r thought.]&#13;
Tfce wind is waving u:l the trees;&#13;
They whisper in the sun,&#13;
And ever through the sweet, warm graM&#13;
The wayward shadows run.&#13;
Oh. turn you litre or turn you there,&#13;
Tho thought will not away&#13;
PETTYSVILLE.&#13;
P. W. Coniway was in Howell&#13;
last Friday.&#13;
Chas Smith is building a bed&#13;
spring factory at Lakeland.&#13;
J. W. Placeway and Myer Davis&#13;
aie in Howell to day on business.&#13;
Albert Bowen of Marion visited&#13;
at P. W. Coniways the first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
J as. Henry had a horse killed&#13;
by lighting during the storm last&#13;
Thursday night.&#13;
Will Caskey and sister of Iosco&#13;
visited at John Van Fleets Saturday&#13;
and Sunday.&#13;
Frank Hayner of Iosco purchased&#13;
a horse of Clyde Dunning&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Mallory of Ann&#13;
Arbor visited her mother Mrs. D.&#13;
Larkin the first of the week.&#13;
Mrs. Lyman Peck and daughter&#13;
Ethel visited relatives in White&#13;
Oak last Friday and Saturday.&#13;
There was a good attendance at&#13;
the farmers club at John Van&#13;
Fleets last Saturday and a very&#13;
pleasant and interesting meeting&#13;
was held. The next meeting will&#13;
be held at the home of Jacob&#13;
Kice the last Saturday in June.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
Nelson Jones and wife of Detroit&#13;
spent the Sabbath with his&#13;
parents T. N. Jones and wife.&#13;
The Ladiesof the Baptist church&#13;
hold their monthly meeting at the&#13;
home of Mrs. Y. T. Cole May "31.&#13;
Jack Townley is spending a few&#13;
days with his son Wells in his&#13;
new home in Antrim, Shiwassa&#13;
County.&#13;
The Edworth League, hold an&#13;
ice cream social Friday evening&#13;
May 31. in the basement of the&#13;
M. E. church.&#13;
The ladies Aid Society of the&#13;
Tyrone and Parshallville M. E.&#13;
churches hold a union meeting at&#13;
the home of Mrs. Geo. Westfail&#13;
Wednesday afternoon May 29.&#13;
The union memoral service at&#13;
the M. E. church last Sunday was&#13;
well attended, and the church&#13;
beautifully decorated. Rev.&#13;
Davis of the Baptist church gave&#13;
us a good patroitic speech.&#13;
Wm. Payne Sr. of Fenton was&#13;
buried here Monday afternoon&#13;
May 27. He was one of the first&#13;
settlers in this vicinity coming&#13;
from England when a young man&#13;
and settled oiL-a-piece-oJLwil&lt;ilanji&#13;
which he converted into a fine&#13;
home.&#13;
Lynford Whited has painted&#13;
his house.&#13;
Floyd Durkee of near Muuithj&#13;
visited his mother here over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Hoff visited her&#13;
daughter Kittie and other relatives&#13;
in Lansing last week.&#13;
Mrs. E. J. Durkee and daughter&#13;
Nora, visited Mrs. E. W. Martin&#13;
of Pinckney Thursday last.&#13;
Mrs. Than Coleman of Lansing&#13;
returned home the first of the&#13;
we«k after spendiug a week with&#13;
relatives here.&#13;
The party at Mr. and Mrs. D.&#13;
B. Smith's Friday night was&#13;
largely attended aud a general&#13;
good time was had.&#13;
Mr*..Chas. Bailey of Dakota accompanied&#13;
by Mrs. Jas. Hoff visited&#13;
at Fred Hemmingway's near&#13;
Pinckney Tuesday.&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Sheriff Finley, of Howell, was&#13;
in town last week.&#13;
Elmer Bullis was in Stockbride&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Ada Cone of Gregory is working&#13;
for Mrs. Flora Hadley.&#13;
Bert Hartsuflf, wife and family&#13;
called ou relatives at this place&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Wirt Barnum, wife and son&#13;
Clare, visited relatives in Mnnith&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mrs. Edd May and Mrs. Sylvester&#13;
Bullis were in Chelsea one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
Frank Voegts and wife of near&#13;
Chicago are visiting relatives and&#13;
friends in this vicinity.&#13;
Quite a number from this place&#13;
are at Howell this week attending&#13;
the Barrack-Pickell case.&#13;
- Erma Pypef"wa"8"T"the guest of&#13;
her aunt Mrs. L. W. Allen of&#13;
North Lake last week Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs. Z. A. Hartsuff and daughters,&#13;
Mabel and Pearl, were in&#13;
Chelsea the latter pare of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Rev. Hicks will preach a memorial&#13;
sermon in the M. E.&#13;
church next Sunday June 2 at&#13;
2:30 p. m.&#13;
Lightning struck Geo. Marshall's&#13;
new barn last Thursday&#13;
night damaging the roof quite&#13;
•badley, and killing two horses-&#13;
Edna Bunker who has been&#13;
spending several weeks with her&#13;
sister, Mrs. Wirt Barnum, returned&#13;
to hertrome in Munith last&#13;
Friday,&#13;
The Ladies Missionary Society&#13;
of the Presbyterian church that&#13;
was to meet with Sirs. Wm. Pyper&#13;
this week is postponed until next&#13;
week Wednesday June 5.&#13;
The TJnadilla boys played ball&#13;
with the Chelsea boys at Chelsea&#13;
Saturday; but on account of the&#13;
rain only two innings were played&#13;
with score 13 to 0 in favor Unadilla7&#13;
That love cornea us the wind comes,&#13;
And none may say it nay.&#13;
[His thought.]&#13;
The wind is ucatterinsf the leaves,&#13;
The clouds rush up the shy,&#13;
The vugrant snowflakes find no rest,&#13;
But whirl and toss and fly,&#13;
And still thought wanders with the wind,&#13;
Returning hut to say,&#13;
"Oh, lov? eoes as the wind .blows,&#13;
And none may hid it stay!"&#13;
—Aldis Dunbar in Ainslee's Magazine.&#13;
LATE POTATOES. l&#13;
B a r s Don't T r o u b l e Thorn and F a l l&#13;
RaJna Make T h e m l.artft\&#13;
We think It always best to plow early&#13;
for late potatoes and then work frequently&#13;
to kill weeds and conserve&#13;
ONE OF BROOKS' PUPILS.&#13;
He W m t'njuntly Ptmlahed, hut He&#13;
Forgave the Oflfenne.&#13;
After his graduation from Harvard&#13;
college Phillips Brooks became a&#13;
teacher in the Boston Latin school.&#13;
And here, on the very threshold of his&#13;
career, he met with failure. So much&#13;
had been expected of him that his&#13;
want of success was naturally a subject&#13;
of much comment at the time, and&#13;
after lie had. become a great preacher&#13;
his early failure was still referred to&#13;
and sometimes was used to point a&#13;
moral.&#13;
It was a turbulent class that Phillips&#13;
Brooks had to teach. Before he took&#13;
charge of it three teachers had been&#13;
driven away. The man who followed&#13;
Mr. Brooks, to fill out the year, confessed&#13;
himself so wearied by the frequent&#13;
resort to corporal punishment&#13;
that he was obliged to betake himself&#13;
to the mountains for the summer to&#13;
recuperate .his strength. The boys&#13;
were certainly in fault, but the blame&#13;
was not wholly theirs, and long slnco&#13;
they may be supposed to have repented&#13;
-of their mischief.&#13;
Phillips Brooks was then not yet 20&#13;
years old, little more than a boy. Naturally,&#13;
perhaps, he made mistakes. On&#13;
one occasion, says his biographer, he&#13;
punished a boy who had committed&#13;
no fault.&#13;
After Mr. Brooks had become bishop&#13;
of Massachusetts, as be was moving&#13;
in his majestic dignity across Boston&#13;
Common, he met this boy, then a mature&#13;
man occupying a post of trust and&#13;
Influence. Neither man had forgotten&#13;
the incident.&#13;
Looking down upon his old pupil, the&#13;
bishop made a certain appeal for forgiveness.&#13;
"Tell me, now," he said,&#13;
"that I did not make a mistake and&#13;
punish the wrong boy."&#13;
"Yes. you did make a mistake. You&#13;
punished the wrong boy," was the answer,&#13;
"but I have missed so many punishments&#13;
that 1 deserved that 1 ought&#13;
to be grateful for that one, which I did&#13;
not deserve^—Yjmlhjs^on.inauion.&#13;
A Corloua Chinese Custom.&#13;
According to the rule sanctioned by&#13;
.centuries of Chinese observance, no&#13;
-document can have the authority of the&#13;
imperial throne of China unless it bears&#13;
a red spot placed there by the sovereign.&#13;
To the grand council the tsungli-&#13;
yamen and all other departments of&#13;
state take their business, and the grand&#13;
council in its turn considers all documents&#13;
and attaches, to each a piece of&#13;
red paper ou which its own decision is&#13;
written. Each morning at daybreak&#13;
the grand council proceeds to the palace!-&#13;
to_sJubmit the papers to the sover^&#13;
eign, who as each document is produced&#13;
signifies approval by making a&#13;
small spot with a brush on the margin&#13;
of the red paper. With the red spot&#13;
upon it tiie paper is the most sacred&#13;
thing in the world to a Chinaman; without&#13;
it it may be torn to shreds with impunity.—&#13;
Leslie's Weekly.&#13;
IA8T PUTNAM.&#13;
Mrs. J. B. Hall and Flo Hall&#13;
Visited relatives iii Chilson Thursday&#13;
last.&#13;
Geo. Pearson sold Floyd Reason&#13;
last week eight head of cattle that&#13;
averaged him $44 per head.&#13;
Misses Clella and Mabel Fish&#13;
Bpent Saturday in Gregory, Mabel&#13;
taking the eighth grade examination.&#13;
Mrs. W. H. Placeway and son&#13;
Braytou, spent a couple of days&#13;
last week with Mrs. Frank Boylau&#13;
^tfcJa Lyon.&#13;
Ann Arbor flnilroad Sleeping Car&#13;
Service.&#13;
Sleeping cer service on the Ann&#13;
Arbor R. R. between Toledo and&#13;
Frankfort will be resumed Monday&#13;
June 3. Going north sleeping&#13;
car will be attached to train&#13;
No. 3 and will Frankfort 7:30 a.&#13;
m^ connecting: _with Mjhis_company's&#13;
steamers for points in Wis.&#13;
and upper Peninsula. Double&#13;
berths in sleeping car $1.&#13;
Many women first show signs of age&#13;
oy a droop In the eyelid. This Is caused&#13;
by strained eyesight excessive weeping,&#13;
111 health or years. It can be overcome&#13;
by dally faithful manipulation.&#13;
Out of His L a t i t u d e .&#13;
lie understood all about the sun and&#13;
thejnoon and the stars and something&#13;
about the weather. Indeed, he was&#13;
popularly supposed to regulate this&#13;
last, and his indication of probabilities&#13;
was received as gospel by his admiring&#13;
fellow citizens In a certain southern&#13;
colony of Australia. He went to England&#13;
for a well earned holiday.&#13;
He was shown over a celebrated fruit&#13;
garden there. He was observed to be&#13;
sniffing about as if something were&#13;
wrong. They asked him what was the&#13;
matter. "Well," he replied, "these funny&#13;
fellows have trained their peach&#13;
trees against the south side of the wall&#13;
to get the midday sun Instead of&#13;
against the north."—London Truth.&#13;
An E d i t o r i a l E r r o r .&#13;
"Did anybody ever try to start a&#13;
newspaper hero?" asked the Intellectual&#13;
looking man with glasses.&#13;
"Yes," answered Broncho Bill; "but&#13;
It failed. The editor wouldn't tend to&#13;
business."&#13;
"Was he a dissipated man?"&#13;
"No; but he insisted on sitting at his&#13;
desk with his back to the door when,he&#13;
ought to have been standing with a six&#13;
shooter in his hand and his eye at a&#13;
kuprhote:"— Wn^ffifrgToirStfr;&#13;
A L o n g Mile.&#13;
The Swedish mile is the longest mile&#13;
In the world. A traveler in Sweden&#13;
when told that he is only about a mile&#13;
from a desired point wouhl better hire&#13;
a horse, for the distance he will have&#13;
to walk if be chose In his ignorance to&#13;
adopt that mode of travel is exactly&#13;
11,700 yards. -&#13;
moisture and warm up the ground and&#13;
then not plant until about the middle&#13;
ef June. The seed will have to be looked&#13;
after to keep , it from sprouting, j&#13;
TJita can be done by spreading it out j&#13;
thinly in a light place and shoveling it •&#13;
over about twice a week. It will wilt j&#13;
and shrink up some, but this won't&#13;
hurt it. It can be Cut a few days before&#13;
planting if kept dry and protected&#13;
from the sun.&#13;
If you have no regular potato planter,&#13;
furrow out deep with a shovel plow&#13;
and cover with something drawn by&#13;
the team. If the sun shines hot, the&#13;
seed should be covered as fast as dropped,&#13;
for the hot sun will soon Injure it&#13;
as it lies in the furrows. Uuu the harrow&#13;
over the patch once or twice before&#13;
the vines come up, and you will&#13;
get rid of nearly all weeds.&#13;
The potatoes will come up in about a&#13;
week if the weather is warm and the&#13;
ground damp and continue to grow&#13;
from the start. Planting at this time&#13;
of the year will bring it out of season&#13;
for the first crop of bugs, and by the&#13;
time the second crop comes on the&#13;
vines will not bother much. Bugs don't&#13;
like rank vines, as they don't seem to&#13;
be just suited to their taste.&#13;
The vines will be small without any&#13;
tubers on them in the dry part of the&#13;
season, and by the time fall rains come&#13;
the potatoes will be formed and large&#13;
enough to require all the moisture there&#13;
is likely to be, and they will grow very&#13;
rapidly. They should not be dug until&#13;
the vines are killed by the frost, and it&#13;
is always best to let them remain in&#13;
the ground for some time after, as they&#13;
will ripen up and be of better quality.&#13;
They should be dug before too hard&#13;
freezing and before the ground becomes&#13;
soft and muddy, iiour judgment&#13;
must be used in these things.&#13;
If not muddy, they can be picked up&#13;
without waiting for them to dry and&#13;
stored as fast as dug. It won't hurt&#13;
them to store when damp, as they always&#13;
have to go through the sweat&#13;
when stored in large piles, concludes&#13;
I. U. Cowdrey of Michigan, writing to&#13;
Ohio Farmer.&#13;
eis tne rack is lifted from the wagon,&#13;
being gradually raised as the wagon&#13;
passes along.&#13;
i&#13;
N u t r i t i o n In Short Grass.&#13;
Such dry seasons as that of 1900 seem&#13;
not to be so disastrous to the stock industry&#13;
as might be expwied. The short,&#13;
dry grass produced in such seasons is&#13;
apparently more nutritious than the&#13;
longer, softer grass of wet seasons, and&#13;
stock keeps in better condition when&#13;
supplied with large quantities of the&#13;
ta41. soft grass. The chief fear of the&#13;
stock grower in dry seasons is that he&#13;
will not be able to cut sufficient quantities&#13;
of hay for winter feeding.&#13;
THE HORSE TO RAISE.&#13;
The One P a r E x c e l l e n c e F o r t h e&#13;
F a r m e r — A l w a y s HUB Biff V a l u e .&#13;
l)r«ift horses of good/form sell almost&#13;
according to weight, except that1&#13;
as weights increase prices rise at a&#13;
much greater ratio, so that extreme&#13;
weights bring enormous prices if only&#13;
the boue is satisfactory. Prices range&#13;
from $123 to $300, with an occasional&#13;
one higher aud with an increase of&#13;
about 10 per cent when matched in&#13;
teams. These pr4ces—are sometimes&#13;
exceeded, and dealers iusist that prices&#13;
were never so low that a span of draft&#13;
horses would not bring $000 if only&#13;
they were good enough.&#13;
This is par excellence the horse for&#13;
the farmer to raise. Only the blood of&#13;
the best draft breeds and the heaviest&#13;
and best boned stallions is suitable.&#13;
Even then the demand for extreme&#13;
weights necessitates the use of large&#13;
mares that are good milkers. In no&#13;
other way can colts be produced with&#13;
sufficient bone and feeding quality to&#13;
attain the size and finish demanded by&#13;
the markets. Even then the youngster&#13;
must be supplied with the best of feed&#13;
in large amounts from the very first.&#13;
Plenty of good pasture, clover hay,&#13;
oats and corn is imperative, and there&#13;
is no better feed for young horses than&#13;
green corn cut from the field aud fed&#13;
whole. Only the best blood should be&#13;
used, and then every effort must be&#13;
made to keep the horse gaining from&#13;
the first If he is tjo top the market.&#13;
All this is much like growing beef,&#13;
and these are the horses to produce on&#13;
the farms. They can be produced nowhere&#13;
else to advantage* and when it&#13;
is remembered that the draft horse is&#13;
really the highest priced standard horse&#13;
in the market it is easy enough to see&#13;
what horse the farmer should raise.&#13;
He not only sells for more average&#13;
money, but if bred with the same care&#13;
there are fewer culls, and no training&#13;
Is required beyond light tfomihon work&#13;
to familiarize him with the harness&#13;
and with drawing. The disposition of&#13;
the draft horse Is so docile and his ancestors&#13;
have labored so long that he&#13;
works almost by instinct, and he requires&#13;
no special training to go upon&#13;
the markets,—E. Davenport.&#13;
HARD ON SMOKERS.&#13;
Old Time Legislation Affalntt the&#13;
Use of Tobacco.&#13;
It is one of the curiosities of old time&#13;
legislation that the use of tobacco was&#13;
In early colonial days regarded by the&#13;
magistrates and elders as far more injurious,&#13;
degrading and sinful than that&#13;
of intoxicating liquors. Both the use&#13;
and the planting of the weed were forbidden,&#13;
the cultivation of it being permitted&#13;
only in small quantities, "for&#13;
meere necessitie, for phisick, for preservation&#13;
of the health, and that the&#13;
same be taken privately by anncient&#13;
men." But the "creature called tobacko"&#13;
seemed to have an indestructible&#13;
life. Mrs. Alice M. Earle writes of&#13;
these early restrictions about tobacco&#13;
in "Stagecoach and Tavern Days:"&#13;
Landlords were ordered not to "suffer&#13;
any tobacco to be taken into their&#13;
houses" ou penalty of a fine to t h e .&#13;
"victualler" and another to "the party&#13;
that takes it." The laws were constantly&#13;
altered and enforced, and still&#13;
tobacco was grown and was smoked.&#13;
No one could take it "publlcquely" nor&#13;
in his own house or anywhere else before&#13;
strangers. Two men were forbidden&#13;
to smoke together.&#13;
No one could smoke within two miles&#13;
of the meeting house on the Sabbath&#13;
day. There were wicked backsliders&#13;
who were caught smoking around the&#13;
corner of the meeting house and others&#13;
on the street, and they were fined and&#13;
set in the stocks and In cages.&#13;
Until within a few years there were&#13;
New Englaud towns where tobacco&#13;
smoking in the streets was prohibited,&#13;
and innocent cigar loving travelers&#13;
were astounded at being requested to&#13;
cease smoking.&#13;
Mr. Drake wrote in 18S0 that he&#13;
knew men, then living, who had had to&#13;
plead guilty or not guilty in a Boston&#13;
police court for smoking in the streets&#13;
of Boston.&#13;
In Connecticut in early days a great&#13;
indulgence was permitted to travelers—&#13;
a man could smoke once during a journey&#13;
of ten miles.&#13;
H a y r a c k Unloaded W i t h o u t Lifting.&#13;
One of the easiest ways to unload a&#13;
hayrack without lifting it off Is to set&#13;
four posts in such a manner as to be&#13;
far enough apart one way to miss the&#13;
DEVICE FOB UNLOADING A HAYRACK.&#13;
running gears of the wagon and far&#13;
enough apart the other to hold a 16&#13;
foot rack.&#13;
Top boards are nailed to the posts.&#13;
These are pointed at one end and by&#13;
driving throuch between the two. oan-&#13;
HE DID HIS BEST.&#13;
C e l e b r a t e d MiiNtdmi's A d v e n t u r e In&#13;
a Swiss C o u n t r y V i l l a g e .&#13;
The late Sir Jchn Staiuer, one of&#13;
Eiipliind's most celebrated musicians&#13;
and composers, was several years ago&#13;
in a small Swiss village, and the English&#13;
clergyman was on the lookout for&#13;
a musician to assist at the service.&#13;
Stabler- was in the smoking room of&#13;
the hotel Winn the clergyman found&#13;
him find started the conversation with&#13;
"Do you play the harmonium?" "A little,"&#13;
was the reply of the ex-organist&#13;
of St. Paul's cathedral. "Will you,&#13;
then, be good enough to help us out of&#13;
our difficulty on SundayV We will&#13;
read the psalms, and the hymns shall&#13;
be the simplest 1 can select," added&#13;
] the delighted parson. " 1 . will do my&#13;
best." said Stainer. with a smile.&#13;
The service passed off all right, but&#13;
the congregation, instead of rushing&#13;
away at the close, listened to a brilliant&#13;
recital. When the parson heard the&#13;
name of his assistant, he asked him to&#13;
dinner. "Do you smokeV" he said at&#13;
the close. "1 will do my best," muttered&#13;
Stainer, and the ensuing laughter&#13;
was the prologue of an entertaining&#13;
exchange of Oxford reminiscences.&#13;
Stainer was a great story teller. One&#13;
anecdote he was fond of relating had&#13;
reference to the days when there were&#13;
amateur orchestras in churches. The&#13;
"Messiah" was being sung, and as the&#13;
line "Who is the King of Glory?" approached&#13;
the man playing double bass&#13;
whispered to the violoncellist in front&#13;
of him, "Let us have your rosirr, and F&#13;
will show 'em who is the king of glory&#13;
!'V London Tit-Bits.&#13;
CITATE OF MICHIGAN, County of Llvingstoa&#13;
At a session of the Probate Court for said County,&#13;
held at the Probate Office in the Village of&#13;
Howell, on Tuesday the V8th day of May. In&#13;
the year one thou and nine hundred and one,&#13;
Present, Eupone A. £to\ve Judge of Probate,in&#13;
the Matter of the Estate of&#13;
•TAMKS H. BARTON, Deceased.&#13;
On readtn* and flllna the petition duly verified ot&#13;
Geo. AT. Taeple, praying that a certain instrument&#13;
now on file In this conrt, purporting tobe _theJfttt-&#13;
Wili and Testament of naiil doceasod, may be ad&#13;
milted to probate.&#13;
Thereupon it la ordered that Friday, the 21st day&#13;
of June next, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, at said&#13;
Probate Otflce, bo assigned for the hearing of&#13;
said petition.&#13;
It is further ordered that a copy of this order be&#13;
published imthe PINCKNKY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulating in SMIU county, three&#13;
aucceMive weeks pM&lt;viousto said day of hearing.&#13;
__ EUURHS A, BTOWB,.&#13;
t-8&amp; J ndge of Probate&#13;
&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="36753">
              <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="6908">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch May 30, 1901</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6909">
                <text>May 30, 1901 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="6910">
                <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="6911">
                <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="6912">
                <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="6913">
                <text>1901-05-30</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6914">
                <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="998" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="926">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/d1644e23c833b35483154ed7e99530c9.pdf</src>
        <authentication>12c38e035be6fe60287628fa4bcb5a22</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="32312">
              <text>VOL. XIX. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, JUNE, 6, 1901 No. 23.&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE . . . . .&#13;
HOWELL. • MICHIGAN&#13;
Hammocks&#13;
Croquet S e t s&#13;
Iron Express Wagons&#13;
Fire Works.&#13;
We give cash coupons with&#13;
every purchase. Beautifull gifts&#13;
given free with $2 in trade.&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
N e x t to Post O f f i c e .&#13;
Mail orders&#13;
Carefully filled.&#13;
_ t ^ / ^ -&#13;
O u r M o t t o t " T h e B e t t e r t h e&#13;
G r a d e t h e B I S A e r t h e T r a d e . "&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
&gt;w&#13;
Royal Tailoring&#13;
Stands at the Head,&#13;
is&#13;
The Very Best!!&#13;
Clothing is absolutely&#13;
made to your measure, a n d&#13;
iu t h e latest styles. Satisfaction&#13;
is always guaranteed!&#13;
W e s o l i c i t y o u r p a t r o n a &amp; e&#13;
K. H. Crane,&#13;
Local Ageut.&#13;
VWVWTW* JW1&#13;
Here You Are Again&#13;
If you want a good Blood P u r i -&#13;
fier go to Y a k e t h e Jeweler an d&#13;
purchase a package of B r o w n&#13;
H e r b Tablets. I f not as recommended&#13;
your money returned.&#13;
Call at store and g e t sample p k g .&#13;
Also an extra T h r e e S t a r O i n t -&#13;
ment t h a t should have room i j i&#13;
every house.&#13;
Cold waather for June.&#13;
Eugene Mclntyi-e was homo over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
There is talk of paving the main&#13;
street in Chelsea.&#13;
Born to Clarence Bullis and wife&#13;
last wee If, a son.&#13;
Anna Dolan of Jackson spent Sanday&#13;
wUh her parents here.&#13;
Cbas Root andfam.ly of Hamburg&#13;
were in town decollation day.&#13;
Fowlerville will have a big field&#13;
day on Saturday of this week.&#13;
The trees on the village square are&#13;
making a fine growth this year.&#13;
Mrd. F. L. Andrews spent the past&#13;
week with friends in Parsballville.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Curlett of Dexter was the&#13;
guest of Mrs. Geo. Sigler Saturday.&#13;
Special communication Livingston&#13;
Lodge No. 76 F. &amp; A. M. June 11. M.&#13;
M. degree.&#13;
A pickerel weighing. 17&amp; pounds&#13;
was recently caught at Island Lake&#13;
near Brighton.&#13;
It is a fact worthy of notice in&#13;
newspaper*, that 'n Livingston county&#13;
at least, it did not sto&gt;-m decoration&#13;
day.'&#13;
While attending Mrs. Heman&#13;
Smith's funeral on Friday' last, Geo.&#13;
Younglove was kicked by ahorse and&#13;
severely injured.&#13;
The exercises at the school last Fridav&#13;
were excellent and well attended.&#13;
After the exercises, the graves were&#13;
decoratad in both cemeteries.&#13;
C. P. Sykes has secured the job of&#13;
putting in a steam heating plant in&#13;
the Hamburg school building. The&#13;
school board of that place have made&#13;
no mistake in giving the contract to&#13;
Mr. Sykes. &lt;&#13;
We notice by the Fowlerville Review&#13;
that Edgar Bennett who is now&#13;
at Byron, and Miss Anna Harper of&#13;
the same place, were married last&#13;
week. Edgar has many friends who&#13;
extend congratulations.&#13;
Sunday, June 9 the RHV. Father&#13;
Considine of Chelsea will open the&#13;
forty hours devotion in St. Mary's&#13;
church, at this place, for Rev. M. J .&#13;
Comertbrd, who will officiate in St.&#13;
Mary's church Chelsea, on that day.&#13;
One of our citizens tried an experiment&#13;
the past week by putting a little&#13;
gasoline upon the crown of burdocks.&#13;
He showed us a stalk that was completely&#13;
withered in a very short time.&#13;
He thinks a gallon would be enough&#13;
to kill on one acre.&#13;
Mr. Yake will repair your . Quite a good. deal of cement walk&#13;
. . -i i i_ • A t i. * is being built in this village this vear.&#13;
watches and clocks in t h e best of 1 _ „ - „ „...,_._ . . ,__.,-•__ ^ ._&#13;
style and if you have any auction&#13;
sales Mr. Yake will b e h a p p y t o&#13;
wait upon you as an auctioneer a t&#13;
moderate prices.&#13;
Yake The Jeweler,&#13;
Pinckney Mich.&#13;
Dr. H. F . Sigler is building it on&#13;
both streets. Rev. Fr. Comerford is&#13;
having put. it in front of the&#13;
church and parsonage and Teeple &amp;&#13;
Cadwell will have it in front of their&#13;
store. Let the good work go on—&#13;
once built it will stay.&#13;
Notice! To&#13;
Farmers&#13;
ofiiie&#13;
2.0fh Century.&#13;
Empire Drill agency for 1901 has been secured by us&#13;
an$ we wish to call your attention to a few of the new&#13;
features of this Drill, as well as sowing all kinds'of grain it&#13;
will plant Sugar Beets four rows 21 inches apart, will plant&#13;
corn two rows 2&gt;% feet apart,'Beans three rows 23 inches&#13;
apart, or if desired the rows may be made closer together&#13;
or fartherapart by simply closing a shut-off slide onside&#13;
of box. Come and examine the Drill and you will be&#13;
convinced that it is the best Drill on earth.&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
I Several from here were in Detroit&#13;
Snnday.&#13;
Miss Nora Going was home over&#13;
Snnday.&#13;
Mrs. C. P. Sykes is visiting ber father&#13;
in Munith.&#13;
R. H. Erwi&gt;-spent the first of the&#13;
week in Jackson.&#13;
M. T. Kelby was down from Jackson&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Fred Grieve and family are visiting&#13;
her sister in Marquette.&#13;
Do not forget the meeting, at the&#13;
town hall Friday evening.&#13;
Miss Ethel Durfee spent Saturday&#13;
with brother in Stockbridge.&#13;
Tom Dolan of Gregory spent Sunday&#13;
unier the parental root.&#13;
Miss Mary Love visited relatives in&#13;
Stockbride from Saturday until Monday&#13;
of this week.&#13;
Frank Newman has a fine mail&#13;
wagon for route No. 1, purchased of&#13;
Teeple &amp; Cadwell.&#13;
Mabel Sigler and Carrie Erwm&#13;
spent last Thursday with Dr. Erwin&#13;
aud wife of Howell.&#13;
Mesdames A.. B. Green and Stella&#13;
Graham spent Sunday with Mrs. Wm.&#13;
Potterton at Hamburg.&#13;
Malarhy Roche was out exercising&#13;
his '"Huron Boy" colt Saturday eveuing.&#13;
The colt promises to be a good&#13;
one.&#13;
Rev. Hicks returned from Washington&#13;
last week, bringing a young&#13;
grandson with him to spend the summer.&#13;
Mesdames J . W. Smith and Andrew&#13;
WUhelm visited friends in Howell&#13;
and Oak Grove the last of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Born to Mr. and'Mrs. H. W. Ellis&#13;
ot Cohoctah, a 10 pound son. Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Ellis were recent residents&#13;
ot our village.&#13;
Mrs. E. A. Howe who has been&#13;
spending the winter with her daughter&#13;
Mrs. R. H. Erwin is visiting relatives&#13;
in Jackson and Mason.&#13;
Drayman Briggs has so much to do&#13;
these days that he sprung an axile of&#13;
his dray trying to catch up. Do not&#13;
try to draw it at one load next time&#13;
E . J .&#13;
Rev. C. VV. Rice, pastor of the&#13;
Gong'l ohurrh at this place, tendered&#13;
his resignation Sunday morning to&#13;
take effect Sept. 26. Rev. Rice and&#13;
wife have many warm friends here&#13;
who will miss them very much.&#13;
A couple of ladies drove into town&#13;
one day last week and on reaching&#13;
under the biggy seat for a tiestrap&#13;
found a faithful biddie in&#13;
charge of a nest. She was left alone&#13;
and made the trip home very contentedly.&#13;
Rev. H. W. Hicks delivered a memorul3ermon&#13;
at the M. E. church Snnday&#13;
morning last that was the best&#13;
ever delivered in this place. The&#13;
church was crowded but all were interested&#13;
listeners for more than an&#13;
hour.&#13;
C. P. Sykes secured the job last&#13;
week of putting in a gasoline sras machine&#13;
in a residence at Stockbridge.&#13;
This ia the second of the kind Mr. S.&#13;
has p t t in at that place and they are&#13;
giving the bpst of satisfaction. I t&#13;
not only furnishes light but is used in&#13;
a gasoline stove"as well.&#13;
An Aged Company.&#13;
While at Dinnor at Heman Smith's&#13;
on Friday last it was remarked there&#13;
were quite a number of old people at&#13;
the taUe. Out of twelve who sat at&#13;
the table there were eight whose comned&#13;
ages were 608 years. The following&#13;
were the eight:&#13;
Mrs. Horace Alderman&#13;
Isaac Bennett&#13;
Helam Bennett&#13;
Heman Smith&#13;
Harvev Harrington&#13;
Mrs. ftarvey Harrington&#13;
Mrs. Helen Bennett&#13;
Martha Smith&#13;
The common council met Saturday,&#13;
Monday and Tuesday evenings the&#13;
past week.&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
Catherine E . Mead was born in St.&#13;
Lawrence Co, New York, June 15,&#13;
1828. Died May 28 1901 at her home&#13;
in Putnam.&#13;
At the age of 15 she moved to Michigan&#13;
with her father, living in the&#13;
township of Marion, At the age of&#13;
£0 she was married to Heman Smith&#13;
Dec. 13 1848,settling first in the township&#13;
of Hamburg. In 1852 they&#13;
moved on the farm where she liyed&#13;
unti 1 her death.&#13;
She was the mother of seven children&#13;
three ot whom survive her. Mrs.&#13;
Frank Denison and Mrs. Stephen&#13;
Bucknell, both of Moscow, Washington,&#13;
and Wirt D. of Putnam.&#13;
She was a kind and loving wife and&#13;
mother, and was a patient sufferer in&#13;
ber last illness. She was a constant&#13;
reader ot the bible and loved to tell of&#13;
Christ and his good work. She died&#13;
trusting all in him and calling the&#13;
Lord to take her.&#13;
NOTICE—To the Ladies1 of Pinckney&#13;
Hive: Zenith Hive of Gregory&#13;
extend a cordial invitation t o meet&#13;
with them at their regular review on&#13;
Jane 18. NETTIE M*. VAUGHN.&#13;
Record Keeper.&#13;
Want Column.&#13;
WANTED—A girl for general&#13;
housework. $2 50 a week no washing.&#13;
Address. Mrs. N. B. MASK,&#13;
547 Lincoln Ave., Detroit.&#13;
Shall We Celebrate.&#13;
Cnly a month and the eagle will&#13;
scream throughout this country in the&#13;
usual Fourth of Julv style. There is&#13;
some talk of celebrating here and in&#13;
order to come to some definite conclusion&#13;
at an early date it is requested&#13;
that the citizens meet at the town hall&#13;
on Friday evening of this week to talk&#13;
over the matter. Do not leave it for&#13;
the few to decide but everyone be&#13;
present and have a voice in the matter.&#13;
Do*not forget that it is Friday&#13;
evening of this week.&#13;
ffotlce,&#13;
Pinckney, May 27.1901.&#13;
To the patroDS of the Pettysville&#13;
poBtoffice in the county of Livingston&#13;
State of Michigan, notice is hereby&#13;
given that the post office at Petty3-&#13;
ville has this day, May 17, been discontinued&#13;
by order of Postmaster&#13;
General. Said discontinuance to take&#13;
effect Jane 29 1901. Thereafter delivery&#13;
will ne opened at the post office&#13;
in Pinckney tor all mail addressed to&#13;
said office (Pettysvilie). All those&#13;
situated on R. F. D. routa No. 1. from&#13;
Pinckney can, by putting op suitable&#13;
boxes, have their m&amp;Tl delivered in&#13;
said boxes. VeW Respy.,&#13;
t 26 Wm. S. SwUaTHotfr.&#13;
Postmaster.&#13;
FOR SALE—Brown Leghorn eggs&#13;
from one of the best laying flock of&#13;
hens in Lower Mich. 25c per setting&#13;
at residence or 50c by express.&#13;
F. W. MACKINDEK,&#13;
t-26 Anderson, Mich&#13;
I'd Set vice.&#13;
Short Horn Bull, Duke of Plain-&#13;
Held. $'1.00 for season with privelege&#13;
ot returning. P . H . K E L L Y , 19tf&#13;
Card or Thanks.&#13;
We wish to thank the many friends&#13;
who so kindly assisted us in our last&#13;
bereavment.&#13;
J . A. NYE&#13;
MELVINA JONES.&#13;
R a L e Calve* W i t h o u t M i l k .&#13;
Thousands are doing it Cheaply and&#13;
successfully with "Blanchford's Calf&#13;
Meal'' the perfect milk substitute.&#13;
For sale by Teeple &amp; Cadwell. t-26&#13;
For Sale.&#13;
6 lots in this village. Inquire of&#13;
SAMUEL ROBERTS.&#13;
o&amp;v.&#13;
" S o m e t i m e s her n a r r o w k i t c h e n w a l l s&#13;
S t r e t c h e d a w a y Into s t a t e l y h a l l s . "&#13;
ooo&#13;
This happened to Maud Muller, but our&#13;
prices on&#13;
Wall Paper&#13;
Make it possible for it to happen&#13;
to everybody. Wall paper which&#13;
used to cost so much that it could&#13;
only be hung in the parlor, or in&#13;
stately halls, is now so cheap that&#13;
the kitchen walls can be made&#13;
really attractive.&#13;
85&#13;
83&#13;
80&#13;
80&#13;
73&#13;
71&#13;
71&#13;
m&#13;
Come in »nd see our new cleaifgns&#13;
fb&gt;-i*"3rtHH^ PriooB^Pom 7 t a 2 5 cent*&#13;
pei* double roll.&#13;
4 \&#13;
F. A. SIGLER&#13;
o&#13;
$&#13;
W&#13;
Dragnriat&#13;
*&gt;- j i i . . . • , . &gt; . * &gt; • - " " •&#13;
, - i ^ -&gt;••.*•• .''••••»«».-''&#13;
• • • M l MJWL LAIlif J M M W A I M&#13;
v :••&#13;
• : ^ . - ' V f&lt;&lt;' 5§feV.v •-•'•',•.. ' : »•.;. • Mr,.,.;. • - ; / ; ' »• • (.; :. .-'&#13;
;;;;; »-,;/&gt;;&#13;
• * • •&#13;
4¾-&#13;
".fH") '!»'&#13;
&amp;:&#13;
i&amp;-&#13;
I&#13;
•V.&#13;
• ' &gt; •&#13;
K '&gt;''&#13;
*• Holloto Ash... \&#13;
^ _&#13;
M A R G A R E T B L O U N T . —- ^&#13;
CHAPTER XVIII.&#13;
It was a beautiful morn tng-*-almoat&#13;
safmlid «s (f It had been autumn, rathe*&#13;
than a December day. The sun had&#13;
advanced just high enough in the&#13;
tioarons to pour down his mildest and&#13;
warmest beams, and the near village&#13;
suul the distant hills were bathed in&#13;
&lt;ft* golden light, as, of old, the fair&#13;
Sjdeu spread its beauty forth f~r&#13;
mam's admiring eyes.&#13;
It was a Messed day. The most&#13;
oareJes* heart oould but drink In its&#13;
beauty iu a thankful mood; the fresh,&#13;
ejjpreet air brought a color to the most&#13;
oallid cheek. It was hard to look out&#13;
open the glorious scene and realize&#13;
tfcat a world so lovely and so fair&#13;
should be the home and haunt of all&#13;
Uhat was contemptible and base-^-that&#13;
t&amp;6 serpent Slander and the gaunt&#13;
ifend Care, and the demon of Murder,&#13;
with his red right hand, could fling a&#13;
shadow over all this beauty and cause&#13;
each heart that had loved it once, almost&#13;
to curse its memory in after&#13;
years.&#13;
And yet, even the singing of the&#13;
blithe birds on that lovely winter's day&#13;
seemed to say that this might be so—&#13;
seemed to say that the little children&#13;
sfeoxtlng joyously in the village street&#13;
might live to feel that blighting scorn&#13;
which worldly spirits only understand;&#13;
that those pleasant rustic homes, scattered,&#13;
like visible blessings here and&#13;
taera,. might be the haunts of fiends in&#13;
human form, and the burial place of&#13;
the heart's best affection?.&#13;
For the singing of the birds, in some&#13;
strange way, seemed to speak that&#13;
morning of one sorely tried and temptoft&#13;
in her earthly pilgrimage, but now&#13;
*$ rest where no earthly malice could&#13;
disturb her—of one whose sweet eyes&#13;
would have gazed in calm contemplaf$&#13;
Dn on that lovely scene, had no false&#13;
words ever kindled the flame of love&#13;
NSjHShin her breast, and then left it to&#13;
"^&gt; out in darkness, in bitternczs, in&#13;
; tears and death!&#13;
Yet, on that lovely day, a deed ap-&#13;
• jaarently ansuited to the sylvan IQVOtfness&#13;
of the scene, was about ta be&#13;
• dene. On that day, the record of the&#13;
past was to be rudely searched—the&#13;
g^ve made to give up its secrets and&#13;
its dead.&#13;
Having undertaken the task, Mr.&#13;
• Cowley was determined to accomplish&#13;
it; and yet, he would have giver&#13;
worlds, as the hour drew nigh, that&#13;
~ Ife had never meddled with the matter—&#13;
never come to Hollow Ash Hall.&#13;
His nephew also seemed nervous&#13;
and ill at ease. As for the ladies,&#13;
they scarcely spoke, but sat huddled&#13;
* eogethor over the drawing-room fire—&#13;
all except Rose, and she was wandering&#13;
over the house like an uneasy&#13;
: spirit, till at last they missed her endfceir.&#13;
The morning was rapidly wanin?&#13;
away, and at last Mr. Cowley rose&#13;
fcfSnm his easy-chair with the air of a&#13;
inan who had made up his mind beyond&#13;
the power of a change.&#13;
"Come, Charies, let us get it over,"&#13;
he-said, gravely.&#13;
They wont out Into the hall. Rose&#13;
inet them there, and by her side stood&#13;
a tall and handsome gentleman, with&#13;
a foreign air and appearance.&#13;
"Father/' said the girl eagerly, come&#13;
hack into the library for a moment.&#13;
This gentleman knows the secret of&#13;
the haunted house, and is about to&#13;
teU i t to you."&#13;
Mr. Cowley started, as well he might.&#13;
"And who may this gentleman be?"&#13;
he asked, somewhat stiffly.&#13;
"A friend of the Vernons," was the&#13;
quick reply. "Let him tell you the&#13;
atory of the haunted room/'&#13;
They went back Into the library together,&#13;
and this was the substance&#13;
o f the story which he told them of the&#13;
dead girl, the ruined family, and the&#13;
deserted house:&#13;
Marion Escourt had been a favored&#13;
child from the very hour of her birth.&#13;
True, her young mother died that she&#13;
Blight live, bat a sister of that mother,&#13;
good and pure as she. took the infant&#13;
to her heart, and cherished it for the&#13;
sake of the dead. Marlon's aunt was&#13;
•one of earth's saints, and, under her&#13;
loving care the child grew mild, and&#13;
good and gentle—beloved by every one&#13;
who knew her. Her father was an old&#13;
man. and, being the possessor of great&#13;
wealth, he chose to indulge his only&#13;
and darling child in every wish she&#13;
expressed. He seemed but to live that&#13;
if** might please her; yet, strange to&#13;
say, In spite of all this injudicious&#13;
(fondness, she was quite unspoiled.&#13;
• A slight touch of haughtiness there&#13;
might have been fn her manner, Itut&#13;
4fte was no more to blame for that&#13;
tlmn that her eyes were so large and&#13;
.or her 'form so reed-like and&#13;
graceful. With the beauty of her&#13;
mother, she had inherited the stately&#13;
manner of her father, and though she&#13;
moved among her friends with the stately&#13;
dignity of a young princess, no one&#13;
seemed disposed to quarrel with what&#13;
became her so well, and was so sweetly&#13;
tempered with modesty and gentleness,&#13;
and all good gifts.&#13;
Years passed on and added the arch&#13;
fascinations of girlhood to her other&#13;
charms. Her playmates were forced&#13;
to select their cavaliers from the list&#13;
of her rejected lovers, and yet her&#13;
heart seemed all untouched.&#13;
At last she made her choice. It surprised&#13;
every one. Her second cousin,&#13;
George Vernon, a graceless, drinking&#13;
and diceing Oxford student, won the&#13;
treasure for which so many had longed&#13;
in vain. Won it almost without an&#13;
effort on his part—won it without&#13;
knowing of its value, or knowing how&#13;
to appreciate i t&#13;
When by the advice of a dear friend&#13;
she knelt at her father's feet and told&#13;
him of her love, the old man burst&#13;
into a storm of anger, threatened her&#13;
with the loss of home and friends;&#13;
threatened her also with his own&#13;
curse; but it was all in vain! She&#13;
was his own child. She inherited all&#13;
his pride and haughtiness, though&#13;
these qualities had been kept in the&#13;
background by the gentle teachings of&#13;
her aunt; and when he attempted to&#13;
thwart her dearest wishes so openly&#13;
and determinedly, her pride and will&#13;
were aroused, and her soul opposed&#13;
in all its native fierceness to his own.&#13;
That night she fled! The morning&#13;
brought a letter from her, saying that&#13;
she had chosen to share poverty with&#13;
her lover, rather than enjoy wealth&#13;
without him. At the same time she&#13;
prayed her father not to cast her utterly&#13;
from his heart, but to think of&#13;
her in kindness and morcy, for the&#13;
rake of the long and happy year3 they&#13;
had loft behind them forsver.&#13;
Marlon was by no means one to be&#13;
discarded and for*otton where she had&#13;
once been loved, and though at first&#13;
her stern old father forbade all mention&#13;
of her name and threatened to&#13;
disinherit her at once, her memory,&#13;
gentle, kind and loving as she had always&#13;
been till that fatal night, gradually&#13;
disarmed him, and by decrees&#13;
they came to sp»ak of her again around&#13;
the home hearth, and to send many a&#13;
loving wish and thought to follow her&#13;
in her wanderings.&#13;
It may be that her father felt that&#13;
he had driven her to desperation by&#13;
his harshness, for as time softened the&#13;
first sting of agony, he grew more kind&#13;
and gentle, and often encouraged bis&#13;
faithful housekeeper to sit and talk&#13;
for hours with him of her they had&#13;
both loved BO well. At that time, If&#13;
she had returned, he would gladly&#13;
have welcomed and forgiven her. But&#13;
ah! as the poet says, "if only the dead&#13;
could know at what hour&#13;
"To come back and be forgiven!""&#13;
They do not know, nor do the living,&#13;
till the appointed time has gone&#13;
by, and either the forgiveness or the&#13;
time for receiving it has passed away.&#13;
No tidings came directly from Marion&#13;
—her father did not even know the&#13;
exact place of her residence. A fly ins&#13;
rumor reached him now and then;&#13;
but all was uncertain and mysterious;&#13;
and at last even this scanty information&#13;
ceased, and her name was spoken&#13;
softly and tenderly, as&#13;
"The household name&#13;
Of one whom God has taken."&#13;
Her father mourned for her silently,&#13;
but sincerely; and all could see by the&#13;
bending of the stately form and the&#13;
silver threads that glistened in his&#13;
jetty hair, how the estrangement/and&#13;
silence, and separation were eating his&#13;
very life away!&#13;
Her life should have been a happy&#13;
gentleman who is supposed to be&#13;
mixed up with the affairs of mortals,&#13;
who must, I think, have laughed in&#13;
his sleeve when chance sent 8 young&#13;
widow to dwell In the vicinity of the&#13;
newly married pair.&#13;
She was a woman of good birth and&#13;
high family, though so reduced in circumstances&#13;
as to he obliged to add to&#13;
her scanty income by private tuition&#13;
in the more genteel families around&#13;
Banley. She was a fine classical scholar,&#13;
an artist, an authoress, and, ta&#13;
addition, danced like a fairy, played&#13;
and surik like an angel, and rode like&#13;
Die Vernon herself. Her tall, elegant&#13;
figure, her deep mourning, the easy&#13;
grace of her motions and the dignity&#13;
of her manners had already moved&#13;
George Vernon strangely, and though&#13;
she was a brilliant rather than a beautiful&#13;
women, with her, wondrous smile,&#13;
her flashing eyes, her bewitching&#13;
manners and easy grace, she placed&#13;
him where she had so often placed&#13;
his betters—at her feet!&#13;
The dusky gentleman of whom I&#13;
have already alluded, having his implements&#13;
upon the ground, lost no time&#13;
In using them. Mr. Vernon and the&#13;
governess met often, and it needed no&#13;
spoken word to tell the enchantress ail&#13;
he was feeling. Hit word*—his sighs&#13;
—the long ardent glances of his handsome&#13;
hazel eyes, told the story only&#13;
too well, and smiling sometimes to&#13;
herself at this new proof of her power&#13;
or rascinatloh, she gave—hlxxrwomeslight&#13;
encouragement from time to&#13;
time. He did not love her, and yet,&#13;
at last, he walked up and down his&#13;
room at midnight, thinking, while she&#13;
was sleeping quietly and would hare&#13;
laughed heartily at his employment&#13;
had she known it He was only doing&#13;
what a thousand men have done before&#13;
him—what a thousand more will&#13;
do ,after him—flinging himself at the&#13;
feet of a woman who would lead him&#13;
through a tempest of passion and leave&#13;
him at last bankrupt of faith, of feeling&#13;
and honesty, and all else that to&#13;
the noble heart makes life at all worth&#13;
living.&#13;
CHAPTER XIX.&#13;
And all this time what was Marion&#13;
doing?&#13;
This house was even more lonely&#13;
then than it is now. There were few&#13;
country seats around, and even with&#13;
their tenants, Mr. Vernon had little or&#13;
no intimacy. People did not quite understand&#13;
him or his position. There&#13;
were rumors afloat that touched his&#13;
character closely; and even Marion&#13;
was supposed to be—not a lady, a relative&#13;
and his wife—but a person of Inferior&#13;
birth; some even thought her&#13;
a servant, who had consented to reside&#13;
with him without troubling herself&#13;
about the formal ceremony of marriage.&#13;
He must have known that this&#13;
was the general impression, and yet&#13;
he never contradicted it in any way.&#13;
So no one ever came to the Hall, and&#13;
Marion wondered a little at the unsocial&#13;
neighborhood and heard nothing&#13;
for a long time of the dangerous intimacy&#13;
her indifferent husband had&#13;
formed.&#13;
At last the tale leaked out through&#13;
the good offices of her own maid. She&#13;
was shocked and indignant, but something&#13;
impelled her to seek Mr. Vernon&#13;
at once and know the truth. She went&#13;
down into the study, where ho was&#13;
lounging iu an easy chair, smoking a&#13;
cigar, and thinking, probably, much&#13;
less of Mrs. Vernon than of Mrs.&#13;
Moore. He laid aside the cigar and&#13;
she sat down beside him and began&#13;
her hope'ess task.&#13;
Hopeless—how hopeless every woman&#13;
must know. For all men, even the&#13;
best and bravest, and gentlest, are&#13;
cowardly in their dealings with women,&#13;
and will evade a downright inquiry&#13;
if it is in their power to do so.&#13;
It happened, therefore, as a mere matter&#13;
of course, that Mr. Vernon told his&#13;
wife an absolute falsehood, and made&#13;
her believe at last that she bad been&#13;
slandered, by the reports she had heard&#13;
—highly colored ones, let us own.&#13;
She believed him.&#13;
But the next day both he and Mrs.&#13;
Moore were missing.&#13;
The had fled to Australia together.&#13;
The shock drove MaTion mad for the&#13;
time. And in her frenzy she destroyed&#13;
the life of Iier infant, which was born&#13;
before she recovered.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
E&gt;Kcor«r«d a Usofal Secret.&#13;
Lite many other useful inventions,&#13;
the art of bottling beer was discovered&#13;
by mere accident. It is attributed to&#13;
Alexander Nowell, 'head master of&#13;
Woodbridge school. England, who was&#13;
noted for hds erudition, his piety and&#13;
his penchant for angling. His portrait&#13;
in the hall of Brasenose college,&#13;
Oxford, represents him with his bible&#13;
before him and his fishing rods on&#13;
either side, and bears the inscription,&#13;
Piscator Hominum. It appears that&#13;
once while fishing, as his habit was&#13;
at Hadham, he mislaid his bottle of&#13;
ale in the long grass on the banks of&#13;
the river Ash. Stumbling upon It some&#13;
time afterward he found it, in the&#13;
quaint words of Fuller, "not a bottle,&#13;
but a gunr such the sound of it when&#13;
opened, and this, as c~sua!ty is the&#13;
mother of more inventions than industry,&#13;
is believed the original of bottled&#13;
ale in England." Nowell was presented&#13;
to the living of Great Hadham in&#13;
1562, and the date of his discovery&#13;
must be about 1530.&#13;
Tr—ch— for fier Hn»b%nd.&#13;
Wearied and almost ready to collapse&#13;
from overwork, Rev. Mr. Cle?g&#13;
of Tanner8ville, Pa., on a recent Sunday&#13;
evening permitted his wife to occupy&#13;
his pulpit, and the congregation&#13;
that listened to the discourse was&#13;
greatly pleased. "Sin came into the&#13;
world by my sex, and it is my duty&#13;
to get all the sin out of the world I&#13;
can," said Mrs. Clegg in her sermon.&#13;
She conducted her entire service for&#13;
her husband and her sermon was interesting&#13;
from beginning to end. The&#13;
announcement that the minister's wife&#13;
was to preach brought out a very&#13;
large congregation and late comers&#13;
stood two deep in the corridor. Rev.&#13;
D. W. Lecrone, the Lutheran pastor of&#13;
the village, dismissed hie evening&#13;
service in order to hear Mrs. Clegg.&#13;
He was invited to a seat on the platform&#13;
and accepted. Pastor Clegg, who&#13;
is an Englishman, introduced his wife&#13;
to the congregation. ,&#13;
T R A N S V A A L WAR 1 T * M 4 .&#13;
Special dispatches from S t Petersburg&#13;
assert that Dr. Hendrick Muller&#13;
and Dr. Leyds, representing the Boer&#13;
republics have appealed formally to&#13;
The Hague arbitration court, promising&#13;
to abide by the decision of the tribunal&#13;
regarding the issues involved in&#13;
the soutn African war and pointingout&#13;
that several of the paragraphs of&#13;
the constitution of the court of arbitration&#13;
signed by the power* represented&#13;
at tUo peace conference bear&#13;
directly upon the South African cose.&#13;
A dispatch from Pretoria, d.ted the&#13;
2Sth, says the Boer general Schoeman&#13;
and his daughter have been killed and&#13;
his wife and two others have been&#13;
badly injured by the explosion of a&#13;
shell. Gen. Schoeman, his family and&#13;
some friends were examining a 4.7 inch&#13;
lyddite shell which they kept in the&#13;
house as a curiosity when the shell ex.&#13;
ploded, killing the jreneral on the spot&#13;
and mortally wounded his daughter,&#13;
and severely injuring his wife and two&#13;
other persons.&#13;
The following was received from&#13;
cradock on the 27th: "Kritsinger's invaders&#13;
of Cape Colony captured a&#13;
British post of 41 men near Marais*&#13;
burg after a stout resistance."&#13;
liSIWpTlM ft-&#13;
GIRL'S 8*?UL IN A PUPPY.&#13;
Seven Tenons Drowned.&#13;
A rowboat containing a merry party&#13;
of eipht young persons was swept over&#13;
Flat Rock dam in the Schuylkill river&#13;
on the 30th and seven of them—five&#13;
girls and two boys, all of Philadelphia,&#13;
Pa.,—were drowned. The young man&#13;
saved is John Moore, atred 21. The&#13;
party is composed members of the Elm&#13;
Social club, one of the numerous associations&#13;
in that city, organized for the&#13;
promotion of picnics and other social&#13;
functions. Early in the morning the&#13;
entire party embarked in gaily decorated&#13;
wagons and pitched their camp&#13;
at Rose Glen, along the Schuylkill&#13;
river, on the northern outskirts of the&#13;
city. After dinner the party splH up&#13;
for a row on the river, eight deciding&#13;
to j?o in one boat. Ail the girls were&#13;
huddled in the stern, oue of the boys&#13;
was rowing and the other was sitting&#13;
on the bow of the boat. After pettin?&#13;
in the middle of the river and finding&#13;
the current too swift for comfort, the&#13;
boat was rowed in toward shore. During&#13;
this time it was enrried slowly&#13;
down stream. The boy doing the rowing&#13;
decided to go through the locks and&#13;
n» he appronched the dam, he was&#13;
hailed by the lockkeeper not to approach&#13;
nny closer. The warning was&#13;
not heeded nnd the young oarsman&#13;
kept on rowing until he found that&#13;
the lock was closed. The boat and&#13;
entire party was carried over tho damT&#13;
and the live girls never rose to the surface.&#13;
•Mgelav M M of » California&#13;
BMentlr Seie»v«d*&#13;
Mrs. M. E. Halpruner of Alameda,&#13;
Cal., believes that the soul of her dead&#13;
daughter, Lillian May H&amp;lpruaer*&#13;
dwells in the body of a little splsi dog&#13;
she possesses.&#13;
"I treaT the~aoTaTTwoTprmy own&#13;
child/' says the mother with confident&#13;
affection, and she gives reasons for her&#13;
faith. A year ago, on her daughter's&#13;
birthday, she had been told a snow*&#13;
white spitz pup was to be given her&#13;
by a neighbor. The white puppy ran&#13;
away from Mrs. Hslprunner. In its&#13;
stead darted out and nettled to her a&#13;
golden haired puppy. At once 1 saw&#13;
my daughter's gestures duplicated by&#13;
the dog, and, believer in reincarnation&#13;
that I am, I knew Lillian's soul had&#13;
come back to be near me. The soul of&#13;
my daughter had entered the body of&#13;
my golden spits dog, Earl of Glengower,&#13;
and X treat him as X would my&#13;
child." At night this dog sleeps em a&#13;
slik-covered down pillow beside U s&#13;
owner's bed. "He puts his little paws&#13;
together for a few minutes in prayer&#13;
just as Lillian did," declared Mrs. H«l~&#13;
pruner. "Then he stretches his limbs&#13;
with just her motions, rolls his head&#13;
from side to side, and with a cbild*s&#13;
happy sigh goes to sleep. Yes, I know&#13;
that my darling's soul dwells in hisbody/'—&#13;
St Louis Republic.&#13;
Howie Says He 1» Klljah.&#13;
UI am Elijah the Proptiet. who appeared&#13;
first as Elijah himself, second&#13;
as John the Baptist and who now&#13;
comes in me, the restorer of all things,&#13;
Elijah was a prophet, John was »&#13;
preacher, but I combine in myself the&#13;
attributes of prophet, priest and ruler&#13;
over men. Gaze on me then; I say it&#13;
fearlessly. Make the most of it. you&#13;
wretches in ecclesiastical garb. I am&#13;
he that is the living physical and&#13;
spiritual embodiment, of Elijah and&#13;
ray coming to earth a thirti time hasbeen&#13;
prophesied by Malaohi, by God&#13;
himself, by his son Jesus, hf Peter and'&#13;
three thousand years ago by Moses.&#13;
All who believe me to be in very truth&#13;
all this, will stand up," And over&#13;
3.&lt; 00 people rose to their feet and&#13;
greeted the declaration with cheers,&#13;
and haudcl 'pping. The occasion wasa&#13;
large meeting of Dowieitcs held in&#13;
Chicago on the 2d.&#13;
Five California Men Lynched for SteaUng,&#13;
Details hitve been received of the&#13;
lynching of five men at Lookout, Modoc&#13;
county, CaL, early on the morning&#13;
of the 31st. The men lynched* hud been&#13;
suspected of stealing for some time,;&#13;
and recently they were arrested, and a&#13;
search of their premises revealed the&#13;
stolen plunder. On the day in- Ojues-!&#13;
tion a mob, variously estimated at from&#13;
3d to 50 people, suddenly made their&#13;
/aopearance at the hotel ami,, pointing&#13;
their guns at the two officers cm pttard, I&#13;
commanded them to observe silence&#13;
while they secured the five prisoners.!&#13;
placed ropes around their' necks and&#13;
dramred them to a nearby bridpe, and&#13;
strung the entire bunch np» One of&#13;
the prisoners made such strong resistance&#13;
that the mob hanged him beforei&#13;
it got to the main bridtrev Both of the&#13;
ff-uards were compelled to&gt; accompany&#13;
the prisoners to the scene of the execution.&#13;
St Men Killed la MfcM- KxpfrMI—»&#13;
At the Richland mine of the Dayton&#13;
Coal &amp; Iron Co, two miles fretr. Dayton,&#13;
on the 27th, a tcrriflc explosion of&#13;
coal dnst resulted im the death of SI&#13;
men* all white, and most of them mar*&#13;
ried and with families. The explosion&#13;
WSJK caused by what is known among&#13;
miners as a "blown blast.w It is the&#13;
custom of the miners to place blasts&#13;
and fire them off at quitting time each&#13;
afternoon, leavingthe coal thus thrown&#13;
down to be loaded and hauled from the&#13;
mine next morning. The Richjand&#13;
mine is destitute of water and great&#13;
volumes of fine particles of coal dust,&#13;
invisible to the naked eye. accumulate&#13;
at the eye of the mine. The oust is&#13;
subject to explosion If exposed to&#13;
flame. Thirty-four men were In the&#13;
mine at the time, and 21 of them were&#13;
killed and nine of the.m burned, most&#13;
of them fatally,&#13;
A BtaeU»mUh'« btrnngt LxptrlttMM.&#13;
Goodland, Kan., June 3.—N. E. Aibertson,&#13;
our leading blacksmith has&#13;
been a great sufferer from rheumatism.&#13;
He was so bad that he could not sleep&#13;
for the great pain in his arms and&#13;
shoulders. He had been afflicted for&#13;
years, bv.t lately he was so muca wors3,&#13;
that he thought he would have to glYe&#13;
up his shop altogether.&#13;
Then a strange thing happened. A&#13;
friend of his recommended a new&#13;
medicine called Dodd's Kidney Pills,&#13;
said to be a cure for Rheumatism. He&#13;
commenced to use them, and at once&#13;
began to recover. His. pain has all left&#13;
him, and he is a well man today, and&#13;
entirely free from any symptom of&#13;
Rheumatism.&#13;
To say that he is thankful, is putting&#13;
It very mildly. He is delighted.&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills deserve credit&#13;
for having cured this very severe and&#13;
almost hopeless case.&#13;
From recent reports, there does not&#13;
seem to bs any thine that they will not&#13;
cure, as very bad cases of Bright's Disease,&#13;
Diabetes, Dropsy, Kacumatism/&#13;
and Heart Trouble, have been cured by&#13;
Dodd's Kidney Pills, even after having&#13;
been given m&gt; hv ou^ best doctors,&#13;
MU«lft*li&gt;nt'» hm*11 V » t « ,&#13;
Mississippi has a total population of&#13;
over 1,500,000 and yet the total vote of&#13;
the state last November was under&#13;
60,000.&#13;
S P O R T IN W E S T E R N C A N A D A !&#13;
While the Farmer's Orain 1« Btponlag&#13;
»Ad HJ» Stock Growing Fat £l« May&#13;
H » T « Plaaty of Shooting.&#13;
There is probabjy no country on the&#13;
American Continent where the life of&#13;
the farmer carries with it that assurance&#13;
of comfort and success aa does&#13;
Western Canada. Nor is there to be&#13;
fouod anywhere else such a pleasant&#13;
combination. Game abounds everywhere&#13;
and nowhere does it afford such&#13;
perfect amusement. A noted sportsman,&#13;
writing of the favorite pastime&#13;
says: "There 'is one particular spot&#13;
where I saw a man drop seventy mallards&#13;
one morning and bring them all&#13;
to bag, too, for they dropped in open&#13;
water or on flat prairie. At the risht&#13;
season of the year you can see black&#13;
lines and triangles cut sharply out&#13;
against the sky all round yoiytnovlng&#13;
very swiftly, and you begin-to wonder&#13;
whether you have enough cartridges&#13;
to hold oui. You can hear the prair.e&#13;
chicken crowing like barn-door fowls,&#13;
and a little to the northeast is a hit&#13;
of marshy ground, cattle-poached and&#13;
dappled with gleaming pools, where&#13;
the snipe are nearly as thick as niosonitoes.&#13;
A thin column of blue smoke&#13;
curling up in the distance shows you&#13;
where a few wandering Indians have&#13;
pitched their camp, but there is no&#13;
other indication of civilization in&#13;
sight Still, the neighborhood is wellsettled,&#13;
and a short drive will bring&#13;
you to a farmhouse, where you can&#13;
bay the finest butter and the freshest&#13;
eggs for uncivilized prices.&#13;
A very short railway journey will&#13;
bring you to a country full of deer and&#13;
the lordly wapiti, the king of the deer&#13;
tribe the world over, and down on the&#13;
flat, boggy land by the lake shores the&#13;
moose will stand knee deep in water&#13;
on the summer evenings ready to lie&#13;
down when the flies get bothering.&#13;
All day you breathe the w i n free air&#13;
of the prairie, and at night you are&#13;
lulled to sleep by the surge and ripple&#13;
and splash of the waves on the beachv&#13;
broken now and then by the wierd&#13;
banshee-cry of strange water-fowl**&#13;
Particulars regarding settlement of the&#13;
lands of Western Canada can be had&#13;
from any agent of the Canadian government,&#13;
whose advertisemert appears&#13;
elsewhere m your columns.&#13;
OLD READER. *&#13;
f S O s « : U R E FOR&#13;
I- .tawtS.iPuiE au, tut r*i« _. n&#13;
U M i ' lUOTSJ.&#13;
^&#13;
-'.•!: ^ ; v&#13;
/• T * • • •&#13;
7f;v ''' •• •&#13;
X&#13;
*\&#13;
,up'p:- ^vv'!^ v^¾&gt;^''•'•r.^:^y;:'i'''J•'^ .&gt;;&gt;•"'•" -•""**:'"•*^&gt;v:""';.: •• •&gt;• •"';•';:*- :,.*v -f;'" / , :' • ;.*•;.'•."'•..'."''":'";"' '.'•','':'" '• ••'•T-'/' '••'^ V' -•" ':•."'' ^ ^ ' '"''}'*•.'•'" ' •'. •.• " '" •'.'•''"'.V--"''.vi •"••&gt;•:.• %'^M;:,*&gt; ••";'''•";'•.,-::-&#13;
" ' * : «&#13;
,;»a&#13;
•ai&#13;
•\V&#13;
«*»• * •»&#13;
PATHETIC IIFE STOEY&#13;
•T"&#13;
THE DISAPPOINTING CAREER&#13;
« O P PRANCES RAYMOND.&#13;
AefttwM 'asMl, Writer l?at Bait a Bard&#13;
Boftd to Tr*val—-Coarted D«ath and&#13;
tha Curtain bell oa * Seene of&#13;
—aaiakjai .&#13;
The filial chapter of the pathetic life&#13;
story oX Frances Raymond, a woman&#13;
of rare beauty and undoubted ability&#13;
who has sought to make a name tor&#13;
herself on the stage and in literature&#13;
and who, after bright prospects In both&#13;
fields, had failed, was written last&#13;
week when she successfully courted&#13;
death. Mrs. Raymond's handsomely&#13;
attired body was found Sunday in her&#13;
fashionable apartments in New York&#13;
after life had been extinct several&#13;
hours as a result of asphyxiation.&#13;
Frances Raymond was for a brief&#13;
time in her life of 32 years an actress.&#13;
Her stage career closed in 1894 after&#13;
she had attained a small degree of success&#13;
and she then devoted ber talents&#13;
to literature. She was possessed of an&#13;
active, brilliant mind and after three&#13;
years placed in tbe hands of publish*&#13;
era a novel which many critics praised&#13;
highly. It did not take with the reading&#13;
public, however, and her efforts&#13;
went for naught. Her failure to achieve&#13;
fame on the stage or as a writer was&#13;
most depressing to Mrs. Raymond and&#13;
she became melancholy and morose.&#13;
The final disappointment which blasted&#13;
all her hopes was the unhappy termination&#13;
of a love affair. A young&#13;
physician who had been devoted to&#13;
her at the time of her deepest tribulation&#13;
and whom Mrs. Raymond loved&#13;
deeply deserted her and then she apparently&#13;
lost all interest in worldly&#13;
affairs and determined upon death as&#13;
a release from her trials.&#13;
Mrs. Raymond had been married and&#13;
divorced. Her name before she appeared&#13;
upon the stage was Mrs. M.&#13;
Schaffer, she assuming a portion of&#13;
the name of Franklin Raymond Wallace,&#13;
a Montana millionaire, who educated&#13;
her for the stage career and&#13;
FRANCES RAYMOND,&#13;
whom she afterwards sued for breach&#13;
of promise, her suit being unsuccessful.&#13;
Tbt&gt; life of Mrs. Raymond was one of&#13;
many adventures, each of which, it&#13;
seemed, resulted disastrously. Through&#13;
her whole career ran a vein of romance&#13;
and, though her affairs of love were&#13;
few, she was disappointed in each and&#13;
the last determined her to seek release&#13;
from earthly care in the seclusion and&#13;
peace cf the grave.&#13;
rnbllety Floirc«i.&#13;
For the first time in twenty year3 a&#13;
thief was publicly flogged at the 'shipping&#13;
post in New Jersey the other d;:y.&#13;
The culprit was a white man na.me.l&#13;
James Fisher, and he was accused of&#13;
stealing a diamond pin. Nearly all of&#13;
the city officials of Dover were present&#13;
when the punishment was dealt&#13;
out. Many ladies of the town occupied&#13;
bos seat3 as the lash whlzsc:!&#13;
through the air and fell upou the&#13;
white skin with a dull sound as though&#13;
striking putty; others pressed in&#13;
against the fence surrounding the pest&#13;
and expressed their approbation in various&#13;
ways. After the punishment was&#13;
over and the shackles loosened an&#13;
overcoat was thrown over the man's&#13;
bleeding back and he was taken back&#13;
to the Jail where ointment was applied,&#13;
The ,T»p« flare Great Rnrlaratire.&#13;
The Japanese are a Spartan race.&#13;
Many things besides their resistance to&#13;
cold prove it. The most of them live&#13;
in simplicity. They can go a long time&#13;
without food. The coolies perform&#13;
marvelous feats of strength and endurance;&#13;
they draw a "Jinriklsha" all&#13;
day or carry travelers over the steepest&#13;
mountains. Every summer a colony&#13;
of foreigners go to Mt, Hel-eizan near&#13;
Kioto. Their camp is several miles up&#13;
the steep mountain side, but early each&#13;
morning the Japanese bring up the&#13;
mail, fresh vegetables and milk, and&#13;
women often carry trunks to the summit&#13;
on their heads. In the upper&#13;
classes the old "samurai" ideals inculoated&#13;
endurance, courage and simplicity.&#13;
The P«Mta«* fimmp^ I&#13;
The postage stamps that never stick&#13;
to anything else can always be counted&#13;
on to stick together. |&#13;
Tnrjpotswi frota Meant fttnal*&#13;
The Egyptian tarouoises, so ceiled,&#13;
come in reality from Mount Sinai. The&#13;
highly-valued Persian stones are obtained&#13;
from Nishapur in the most&#13;
primitive manner. A wooden wheel,&#13;
operated by the feet of two men lying&#13;
on their backs, brings the broken rock&#13;
to the surface in bags; the fragments&#13;
are smashed with hammers, and when&#13;
a turquoise is discovered It Is put aside&#13;
and sent with the next Datch to uesnea&#13;
to be cut.&#13;
What Do the Children Drink?&#13;
Don't give them tea or coffee. Have you tried&#13;
the new food drink called GBAIN-O' It la delicious&#13;
aod nourishing, and takes the place ot&#13;
coffee. The more Grain-O you give the children&#13;
tbe more health you distribute through their&#13;
systems. Gi a n-0 Is made of pure grains, and&#13;
when p.-operly prepared tastes like the choice&#13;
grades of coffee, but costs about M as much. All&#13;
grocers sell it. 16o and S5o.&#13;
Tbe man who is never idle has no&#13;
time to be mean.&#13;
Ladles Can Wear Shoes&#13;
One size sma'ler after using Allen's Foot-&#13;
Ease, a powder. It makes tight or new&#13;
shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating,&#13;
aching feet, ingrowing nails, corns and&#13;
bunions. All druggists and shoe stores, ffic.&#13;
Trial package FREE by mail. Address&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.&#13;
A fountain works when it plays and&#13;
plays when it works.&#13;
Hamlin's Wizard Oil Co. send song1&#13;
book free. Your druggist sells the&#13;
oil and it stops pain.&#13;
When language fails a woman she&#13;
resorts to tears.&#13;
Kid-Ke-OidB, the new discovery for kidney&#13;
diseases and back-ache, has merit; that accounts&#13;
for the immense sale. Druggists, HOC&#13;
thWosee oshf owualdsp esn adnde avboere st.o avoid extremes—like&#13;
Mrs. Wlnalow's S o o t h i n g Syrup.&#13;
For rhildren teething, soften* the gums, reduces in.&#13;
tlammnUoa, allays pain, cures wind colic. 8&amp;c a bottle&#13;
Be like the promontory against which the&#13;
waves continually break.&#13;
Piso's Cure is the best medicine we ever used&#13;
for all affections of the throat and lungs,—WM.&#13;
O. ENDSLEY, Vanburen, Ind., Feb, U, 190J.&#13;
Beware of the fr end that advises you to go to&#13;
war or get marrk d.&#13;
When cycling, take a bar of White's Yucatan.&#13;
You can ride further and easier.&#13;
toMo benu syw htoo wtrourskt. in Providence are generally&#13;
MISS LUCY ANNIE HEISER, OP MINNBAPOLISy MINN.&#13;
Miss Lucy Annie Heiser, a graduated nurse of nine years' experience,&#13;
trained and graduated from the Homeopathic Hospital of Minneapolis, Minn.,&#13;
writes as follows: _ • --&#13;
Albert Lea, Minn,, Nov. S, 1899.&#13;
The Peruna Medicine Co., Colombo*, Ohio:&#13;
Gentlemen—"Although my school does not believe in patent medicines, 1&#13;
have found it to be a fact that Peruna is a grand and valuable medicine, 1&#13;
Save known it to cure Mrs. Sampson, suffering with an inflamed womb, aggravated&#13;
by malaria, after the doctors had failed to help her. Another of my&#13;
former patients suffered with a complication of female diseases; she was so&#13;
thin, nothing but skin and bones, but Peruna cured her and she Is to-day in&#13;
good health and good flesh. Facts prove that Peruna revives lost strength and&#13;
restores to the sick that most wonderful blessing of life—health. t&#13;
Lucy Annie Heiser,&#13;
If all the tired women and all the nervous women, and all the women that&#13;
needed a tonic would read and heed the words of these fair ladles who have&#13;
spoken right to the point, bow many invalids would be prevented and how&#13;
many wretched lives be made happy.&#13;
Peruna restores health in a normal way.&#13;
Peruna puts right all the mucous membranes of the body, and in this way&#13;
restores the functions of every organ.&#13;
From Mrs. Amanda 8buat*k«r, w l p /&#13;
has charge ot the Grammar P t p t r l i m l&#13;
ofthePubIi«8cs«)l«c4CkdmmWs&gt;&lt;Sl*^&#13;
Wash., also Past Grand of Msnsjs**&#13;
ent Order of Good Tempters, Dr. E s r V&#13;
man received the following lotto*: J"&#13;
Columbia Ctty, W a s *&#13;
"1 can speak only food word* of fto*&#13;
repeated benefits I have had from fbs&gt;&#13;
use of Peruna.&#13;
"Too constant application to worjt&#13;
last winter caused me to have&#13;
head and backache and draggit&#13;
1 tit to go oa. Reading ot the&#13;
tidal results from the use ot PcmnmM&#13;
purchased a bottle and within a tmr&#13;
days after using It, began to teeibettfh&#13;
"I constantly improved and batti&amp;p&#13;
the seventh bottle was completer&#13;
used, all pains were gone, my s t r e a m&#13;
was restored, and I now s e e n l e a&#13;
years' younger.&#13;
"If I get tired or feel bad, Penmft s$&#13;
once helps me, and I feel you d e s e r y&#13;
praise for placing such a coofidenttaOa&#13;
medicine before a suffering public*&#13;
Mrs. Amanda Shumate?,&#13;
Mattie B. Curtis, Secretary Legknosrf&#13;
Loyal Women, Hotel Salem, Boetpp,&#13;
Mass., writes:&#13;
"/ suffered Jbi»S"""»»""nmiimtt \&#13;
over a year with:&#13;
genera/weakness I&#13;
and debility, «&#13;
manifested en-:&#13;
peclally In severe:&#13;
backache and':&#13;
headache.&#13;
"My physician •&#13;
prescribed differ- ;&#13;
e n t medicines, *&#13;
n o n e of which :&#13;
seemed to help :&#13;
me any until a :&#13;
c l u b associate: Mattia * Ootm&#13;
advised me to anuMmiwimm&#13;
try Peruna as it cured her of coi&#13;
tional headache and stomach troubles.&#13;
I at once ordered a bottle and DofOre&#13;
it was used, felt greatly improved.&#13;
"I have taken four bottles and for&#13;
two months have been entirely free*&#13;
from these maladies. Several of ngr&#13;
friends are using Peruna with beneficial&#13;
results, especially in cases • &lt;&#13;
troubles with the kidneys and other&#13;
pelvic organs, together with weaknesses&#13;
peculiar to women."&#13;
Peruna is a specific for the catarrhal&#13;
derangements of women.&#13;
If you do not derive prompt and satisfactory&#13;
results from the use of Plpruna,&#13;
write at once to Dr. Hartmaa,&#13;
giving a full statement of your oasis&#13;
and he will be pleased to give yon Ills&#13;
valuable advice gratia&#13;
Address Dr. Hartman, President&#13;
The Hartman Sanitarium, CoIumbusJ&#13;
.m&#13;
"F"VW9&#13;
•*»'.: m&#13;
\f HKxxxxxxxxxxxMxxxxxxxxKxxxx^sao&amp;QsoacssstxioaosoaosociX&#13;
Dyspepsia&#13;
" Most people eat more than is good for them. The stomach tries to digest ell that's put Into ft, but If repeatedly overloaded, it goes on&#13;
a strike. That's indigestion. Rich, over-sweet, indigestible food weakens the stomach and makes it unable to take care of the material put&#13;
into it. More food taken into a weakened stomach than the stomach can digest, stays there, forms gases and rots, bringing on all the horrors of&#13;
dyspepsia. The onry way to cure dyspepsia is to clean out the digestive canal with CASCARETS. Keep it clean wifh Cascarets, eat light&#13;
food sparingly, and give the stomach a chance to rest up and get strong again.&#13;
Be sure you get fhe genuine G A R G A R E T S !&#13;
JO&#13;
/ t o&#13;
-« is&#13;
when he is pt wing to a heiress, do yon?&#13;
—Indianapolis uournal.&#13;
•• Por six years I w u a victim of dyapapala&#13;
in its worse form. I could eat notbinf&#13;
but milk toast, and at times my stomach&#13;
would not retain u d direst even that Last&#13;
March I began taking CASCARETS and since&#13;
then I hav« steadily improved, untU I am as&#13;
well as lerer was in my lite."&#13;
-- jucBPar, Newark. O.&#13;
yx&#13;
ha*«&#13;
mur&#13;
mr*&#13;
you.&#13;
up&#13;
S3&#13;
ZH25ZS&#13;
f! THE TABLET&#13;
/&#13;
10c,&#13;
25c 50c&#13;
NEVER SOLD m BULK.&#13;
DRUGGISTS *•*]O.bIrTeaAtKh,A tHedT £b£lD«a To,O w CtaTtTl RoEa a ltlh %e aawt*olm fr*a*v*tb, lbvleo. »atp«Upe nbd*wleHtt«te, , rbeat ll iwmaoca—th,, phelraxdtaocah ea,a dla ddlfniwstfl oe—a,, pltmHalient , yp«aalnr a baaftweer tse attflaena't, lmiv»erro trroeucbaltea,r slay Uyewaa &lt; fattlag •tek. Coaatlaatloa btlU more peaale tana all other dlMaoee towel&#13;
I t l e a starter Pr~ "-- — •* ~ ' " -&#13;
rdaTNe&#13;
aTfotne rwwiallr dn*e. ver rifftat. T a k e o a&#13;
&gt; t» aura or&#13;
towether.&#13;
ley reiaa&lt;&#13;
CA-METTM W M told. Mew It 1« over six aiUlfoa bo&#13;
•laiUar medtclae In the^world.&#13;
ir beet t*et!aoalal. _ _&#13;
raaraaferd to care or aioaey refaaded.&#13;
T a l i |e abxolate&#13;
the&#13;
v&#13;
• r e t&#13;
__.^ -. greater taaa&#13;
We have faith, aad will&#13;
•rcis.&#13;
t h e n a fair, hoaejt trial, ae per statale dtrectloaZ, aadTr&#13;
&gt;MreuriMt, aaaawy absolutely&#13;
«al• tebry awcatall , o* Mr thMe de rakn«ril, st froat w l&gt;aefc for both Hoxe*. T a k e oar adi&#13;
WSDTSS^MIV^9' n"d wmmretara&#13;
the aayaosae da aSrOeb* abeoexd aIta, da atdh ea ee*aytaetayr .i , yaodaT tweei—ll abole assi atthtoe rd warh aTOt Wa lfilar eyte as—tarsttaerdt ttaodoaaya*o free by mall. Adds STsauxahtmSBT 09., Mm Twk e / r 7&#13;
x^asoaoor?cocs»css&lt;ooo&amp;Kiooficooaocfiooooo»ooofi&lt;&#13;
He who is unwilling to lace failure&#13;
can never secure success.&#13;
Are Yoa Using Allen's Foot-Ease?&#13;
It is the only cure for Swollen.&#13;
Smarting. Burning, Sweating Feet,&#13;
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's&#13;
Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into&#13;
the^hoes. At all Druggists and Shoe&#13;
Stores, 25c Sample sent FREE. Address&#13;
Alien 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.&#13;
The educated pig did not acquire his&#13;
knowledge in a day.&#13;
• HalTs Catarrh Coro&#13;
. Is taken internally. Price, 75c&#13;
Tha freatest liar is he who talks&#13;
meat of himself.&#13;
A man likes to feel that he is loved&#13;
and a woman likes to be told.&#13;
To civilize a man you must begin&#13;
with his ancestors.&#13;
Turn the Rascals Out&#13;
We are speaking of the grip microoes&#13;
The well and strong can resist their poi»&#13;
son, the sickly and weak are their prey.&#13;
Baxter's Mandrake Bitters are nature's&#13;
remedy for expelling all poison&#13;
from tbe system. At druggists, in liquid&#13;
or tablets at 33 cents per bottle or box&#13;
• a l Q I s f ^ w a l JOHN W.lftWaUUm.&#13;
"so^re" er^s*l. lums* MmttmPitn *•** SD20D0NT for thi Teeth imi Breath 25°&#13;
« SSSWM, or by Ml for DM srkt. ULLI M i t t , It* Ytrk.&#13;
SPEED!&#13;
A high-grade tire, to be worthy of&#13;
its name, should pooesi four&#13;
virtues — ipeed, easy riding&#13;
etufities, ability to wear, ease&#13;
of repair.&#13;
G tc J Tires have sS these&#13;
virtues. $7hen punctured,&#13;
take off the outer cover, repair&#13;
the inner tube aad go on&#13;
your way in a Jirry.&#13;
So simple a child can do it.&#13;
Catalogue nee.&#13;
Q A J&#13;
TIRE COMPANY,&#13;
lad.&#13;
ri»&#13;
IN 3 OR 4 YEARS&#13;
INDEPENDENCE ISSOBEi If yon take vp jpot&#13;
home In Western Cat&gt;&#13;
ada,the land of pleats.&#13;
Hlustrated pampMeSV&#13;
giving; experience* j r&#13;
farmers who have become&#13;
wealthy in L&#13;
lnjr wheat, report* i&#13;
delegates, etcandfj&#13;
iniormation as to reduced railway rates eaa&#13;
had on application to the Superintendent&#13;
Immigration, Department of Interior, Ottat&#13;
Canada, or to J. Grieve. Saginaw. Mich., or,&#13;
V. Mclanes, No. i MerriU Block. Detroit, aOdh.&#13;
W.N.U.—DETROIT—NO. 2 3 — 1 9 C 1&#13;
. • —&#13;
Wsei lasweritg Myertiseaests I M t &gt;&#13;
Hestios This Tsptt.&#13;
-;W&#13;
•&lt;-fu&#13;
st&#13;
••''•J' ; . £ • . ' ; • " • . : ' - • . • ; • •• • ; - • " . • " • • • ' • • . ' • , • ' • &gt; ' • /&#13;
• " ' &gt; • ; : » • . "&#13;
• . • - • : • « " « : • ' " . *&#13;
gftt f itwtumj ftejwtrii.&#13;
r. L. ANDREWS A CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
tf^X&amp;LU&#13;
T h e g a r n i s h e e bill a s i t finally&#13;
p a s s e d t h e l e g i s l a t u r e , p r o v i d e s&#13;
for a flat e x e m p t i o n of $ 8 for al)&#13;
except u n m a r r i e d m e n . B e t w e e n&#13;
$8 a n d $30, t w e n t y p e r c e n t of t h e&#13;
w e e k l y w a g e s c a n Le g a r n i s h e e d ,&#13;
a n d t h e m a x i m u m a m o u u t t h a t&#13;
c a n b e g a r n i s h e e d is 180.&#13;
A Oped Cougb Medicine.&#13;
It sneaks well for Chamberlain's&#13;
Cough Remedy when druggists use it&#13;
m their own families in preferance to&#13;
any other. k,I have sold Chamberlain's&#13;
Cou«h Remedy for the past five&#13;
years with complete satisfaction to&#13;
myself and customers," says Drupgist&#13;
J . Goldsmith, Van Etten, N . Y. " I&#13;
have always used it in my own family&#13;
both for ordinary coughs and colds&#13;
and for the coutfh following la g r i p p e&#13;
and find it very efficacious." For sale&#13;
by P . A. Sigler, Pinckney. _&#13;
O n e of t h e q u e e r t h i n g s a b o u t&#13;
t h e G o v e r n m e n t is k n o w n as t h e&#13;
"conscience fund." I t is m a d e u p&#13;
from a n o n y m o u s c o n t r i b u t i o n s&#13;
from w r i t e r s w h o d e c l a r e t h a t&#13;
t h e y h a v e c h e a t e d o r r o b b e d t h e&#13;
G o v e r m e n t in t h e p a s t a n d d e s i r e&#13;
t o m a k e r e s t i t u t i o n . I t now am&#13;
o u n t s to $311,963. T h e first,&#13;
c o n t r i b u t i o n was received in 1811&#13;
a n d a m o u n t e d for t h e y e a r t o&#13;
1250. T h e s m a l l e s t s u m e v e r received&#13;
in o n e y e a i was 16 atfd^ t h e&#13;
l a r g e s t *29,155.&#13;
Toledo, Sunday, June 15.&#13;
T r a i n will leave S o u t h L y o n at&#13;
10:15 A. M. E e t u r n i n g , leave T o -&#13;
ledo a t 6:00 p. M. K a t e $0.70.&#13;
t-24&#13;
Henceforth, regiments* sent to tbe&#13;
Philippines will remain there for&#13;
tbree years. This period n a year&#13;
l o n ^ r than it was expected would be&#13;
the ea^e, mo&gt;t officers bein* of the&#13;
oppinion that it would be detrimental&#13;
to the health of the officers and men&#13;
to remain in the Philippines or at any&#13;
tropical station for a longer time than&#13;
two years. The lack of men, bowever,&#13;
and emergency of the service in&#13;
tlie Philippine* requires that each&#13;
regiment shall remain at least three&#13;
yeavs-&#13;
Didu't Marry For Money.&#13;
The Boston man, who lately married&#13;
a sickly rich young woman, is&#13;
happy now, lor he got 1).*. Kin&gt;?'*&#13;
New Life PilU.wliieh restored her to&#13;
perfect health. Infallible for J a u r -&#13;
dice. Biliousness, MAlaria, Fever and&#13;
Ague and all Liver and Stomach&#13;
troubles-. Gentle but effective. Only&#13;
25c at F. A. Sigter's drug store,&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
List week's Vassar newspaper has&#13;
a startling small-pox tale for Tuscola&#13;
county. It is stated tbat Dr. Kanney&#13;
of the state hoard of health has been&#13;
investigating cases there and found 24&#13;
people with the disease scattered over&#13;
three townships. There .-earned to 1»H&#13;
little quarantine, some of those not&#13;
yery ill, coming and goin# at will.&#13;
WHEN THE BEES SWARM.&#13;
B o w to Hive Tbeiu With a Basket.&#13;
The Queen Trup a Xent Affuir.&#13;
If the cluster Is low, It Is easy to&#13;
hive a swarm of bees. Slip a basket&#13;
right up under the cluster and jar the&#13;
limb.—If the bees navy clustered high&#13;
up In a tree, get a pole long enough to r&lt;wo F O M K C Plants That Are Wow&#13;
reach them and fasten the basket to Cominjjr to the F*ont.&#13;
the end of it. A common peach basket Two crops that have lately assumed&#13;
will do very well. When you have the prominence in this country are Canada&#13;
EXPERIMENTAL CROPS.&#13;
will drop into the basket,&#13;
hive under&#13;
in front&#13;
like an army. - - . , , ,&#13;
raised an inch or two in front to give \ was 42 bushels per acre,&#13;
them air. The bees will commence to} The BlaeU Marrowfat was sown on&#13;
give a contented hum, and if there are! May 17 and harvested Sept. 5. I h e&#13;
any remaining on the tree they will' ^ n c s were thcu 19_^et long, audUiie&#13;
hear it and join the rest. In the even-&#13;
TO Cure a Cold in One D n y&#13;
Take1 Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab-&#13;
Jets. All druggiit? refund the money&#13;
if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature&#13;
is on each box. 25c.&#13;
A force of men removed the buildings&#13;
that belonged to the htate at I.-&#13;
land lake the past week, putting them&#13;
on flat cars. They will be shipped to&#13;
Manistee where the encampment wiH&#13;
be held.&#13;
A bill that opens a w«y for townships&#13;
tbat have no incorporated villages&#13;
to have high schools, has passed&#13;
both hon--&lt;'«. If the vnvernor t'njr)* it&#13;
a'l that will b* - necessary wil be lor&#13;
one third o\' the voters of a township&#13;
ro sign a petition calling for an election&#13;
orr the subject. If a majority of&#13;
the vofers 5ay so the township can&#13;
rai^e monev by taxation so establish&#13;
ih&lt;j high school.&#13;
NO JUNE DROP.&#13;
The Cultivator and Not the Plow&#13;
Used In a New Jersey Orchard.&#13;
Many farmers leave their orchards&#13;
until all the other spring work, such as&#13;
sowing oats and planting corn, la finished.&#13;
Then about the 1st. of June,&#13;
when a good sod has formed, they go&#13;
in and rip up and ridge up the soil&#13;
with the plow. This is, 1 believe, a&#13;
radically wrong method, for, in addition&#13;
to leaving unsatisfactory surface&#13;
conditions (alternate ridges and furrows),&#13;
the fibrous roots that are thrown&#13;
out for the sustenance of the fruit are&#13;
cut off, and the "June drop" and the&#13;
forced fruit of July almost invariably&#13;
follow. During the last live years on&#13;
3.000 trees I have had no June drop&#13;
and not a basket of forced fruit, and I&#13;
have not bad a plow in my orchard in&#13;
that time, but have used a cultivator&#13;
exclusively.&#13;
Some 12 years ago I contrived a cultivator,&#13;
having i:i view two principal&#13;
objects—to relieve the team from the&#13;
annoyance of being driven close to the&#13;
trees and.to save time by rapid work.&#13;
As the cultivator does not need to run&#13;
ing the hive can be carried to the location&#13;
where it is to remain.&#13;
Sometimes a swarm will cluster on&#13;
the trunk of a tree or wall; then it will&#13;
be necessary to use a brush to get&#13;
them into the basket. The ringing of&#13;
bells and beating of pans and all such&#13;
notions are of no avail. A first swarm&#13;
will most always settle. I have never&#13;
yet seen It to miss, provided the queen&#13;
was with them, and if the queen is not I&#13;
^vith them they will most surely return |&#13;
to their hive. Sometimes a swarm will;&#13;
hang on a tree all day, and then again |&#13;
they may depart in a little while. It is ;&#13;
better to hive them within a half hour j&#13;
after they have issued if possible. j&#13;
Still a better way is to have queen j&#13;
-traps ou the hive to catch the queen. |&#13;
With the queen traps it is a delight to i&#13;
hive swarms. When the swarm issues, i&#13;
the queen cages herself and cannot i&#13;
leave with the bees. The swarm will!&#13;
cluster on some tree, when the apiarist I&#13;
can replace,the otd hive with an empty j&#13;
one and place the trap with the queen j&#13;
in front of the new hive on the old .&#13;
/stand. The bees will remain from 10&#13;
to 20 minutes, when- they will return ;&#13;
and enter the new hive. The apiarist&#13;
can then release The queen, and she&#13;
will run in with the swarm, and the&#13;
yield was 34 bushels per acre. Wet&#13;
weather caused both varieties to blossom&#13;
until harvest time. Both are recommended&#13;
as very strong growers, and&#13;
Mr. W. S. Wbedon, Cn-hier of the&#13;
First national Bank of Wintered,&#13;
l o v a , in a recent letter gives some experience&#13;
with a carpenter in his employ,&#13;
that will be of value to other&#13;
mechanics. He says: "I had a "carpenter&#13;
working for me wbo wa&gt;&#13;
obliged to stop work several days on j more than two or three inches deep,&#13;
account of being troubled with diarr- \ the-roots of the trees are but slightly&#13;
" disturbed, the surface remains level,&#13;
less tendency to wash is noticed, the&#13;
soil is kept free from weeds, and the&#13;
trees show a" vigorous and healthy&#13;
jrrowth.&#13;
All this is not secured by one cultivation.&#13;
We begin as early In the&#13;
spring as the ground and weather will&#13;
dose cured him, and he is again at his {permit, and by the middle of July we&#13;
work." For sale by F , A . Sigler j have gone through the orchard seven&#13;
p . ' or eight times. After tbat we do no&#13;
finchney. m o r e C U j t l v a t j n g unt\\ t u e D e x t spring.&#13;
" ^ I believe thorough cultivation is abso-&#13;
The banking firm of G. .1. Baetcke l u t e l y essential if you would keep your&#13;
&amp; Co. are in receipt of a check of $4, ! trees vigorous and make them long&#13;
171,.28 from the bankers' Mutual Cas- lived.-S. B. Voorhees.&#13;
hiving is done, says F. G. Herman in \&#13;
Farm Journal. ^ ^ _ _ _ j&#13;
DEVICE FOR DRAWING HAY.&#13;
It Is E a s i l y Mnde and Comes In Handy-&#13;
When Stacking.&#13;
The cut shows an easily made device&#13;
for drawing hay when stacking in the&#13;
field, and for those who sun cure their&#13;
hay. without pulling shocks apart, it&#13;
will be found useful, says a writer in&#13;
an exchange. To make it select a 10&#13;
or 12 foot straight pole three to four&#13;
Inches In diameter at one end and tapering&#13;
at the other end. which is sharpened.&#13;
Smooth the pole and make an&#13;
inch hole through it near the large end.&#13;
Through this hole put a trace chain,&#13;
drawing If up till the T on chain is&#13;
close to the underside of the pole. Attach&#13;
a single tree to the chain just&#13;
ituDDie growing new, thrifty plant! tw«&#13;
to six Inches high in spite of the light&#13;
September and the killing October&#13;
frosts.&#13;
The first snow fell on Nov. 7, retelling&#13;
a depth of 18 inches on Nov. 15.&#13;
The thermometer had registered as&#13;
ow as 10 degrees, yet on Nov. 16 the&#13;
l e w - grown plaTTTSTnitter t h e snow, «•"&#13;
;eell as the lower leaves of the old&#13;
plants on the remaining uncnt portion&#13;
of the plot, were apparently unhurt&#13;
and thrifty, while the leaves above the&#13;
snow were not seriously damaged.&#13;
One Thlnv and Another.&#13;
An "everlasting" radish is the latest&#13;
Japanese novelty. It does not grow&#13;
woody or pithy, but remains tender&#13;
throughout the season.&#13;
A fungous or parasitic growth similar&#13;
to smut on wheat is reported as causing&#13;
apprehension among flax growers&#13;
In the northwest. It is worst on ground1&#13;
that has been for two seasons or more&#13;
in wheat.&#13;
It is said that Idaho will grow a considerable&#13;
flax crop this season.&#13;
The California station believes that&#13;
the profits in the olive industry He&#13;
principally in the production of pickles,;&#13;
the larger fruit being used for this purpose&#13;
and the small sized made into olL&#13;
Germans, Scandinavians and Canadians&#13;
make good farmers and good&#13;
farm help, says a farmer-editor, who&#13;
thinks they have been a great help to'&#13;
the northwest.&#13;
— r —&#13;
Exception.&#13;
Tencher—As I have been telling you,,&#13;
there are two general classes of work-1&#13;
ers. Tommy, does your father make&#13;
his living by using his brains or by]&#13;
using his muscles?&#13;
Tommy—Neither one, ma'am. He's 8&#13;
policemam-Ghicago Tribune.&#13;
S u b s c r i b e t o r D i s p a t c h .&#13;
IMPROVED PRUSSIAN BLUE FIELD PEAS.&#13;
both were entirely free from insects.&#13;
The fact that the Black Marrowfat&#13;
was sown on much lower ground may&#13;
account for the difference in yield.&#13;
As the question of cheap pork production&#13;
assumes greater proportions,&#13;
forage peculiarly suited for pigs must&#13;
certainly come to the front. It is well&#13;
known that the pig thrives on grass&#13;
or green feed alone,'but the importance&#13;
and necessity of feeding him on such&#13;
are very often overlooked. The conditions&#13;
governing feeding operations,&#13;
however, enter into this matter, and frequently&#13;
such crops as can be most conveniently&#13;
produced or utilized must&#13;
take precedence over others better&#13;
adapted to the end In view.&#13;
Of the various crops more or less ex-&#13;
WANTED—Salesman and Collector&#13;
to represent well esi.abli'bed business&#13;
of 50 years standing Small Honesty&#13;
Hond required, a liberal contract for&#13;
a pood man.&#13;
D.E. Whipple,&#13;
- 3 0 3 South Main St.&#13;
A n n Ar! or, Mich.&#13;
s&#13;
boea. I mentioned to him that I bad&#13;
been similarly troubled and tbat&#13;
Cbamberians Colic, Cboleia, and Diarboea&#13;
Remedy had cared me. He&#13;
bought a bottle of it from the druggist&#13;
here and informed me that one&#13;
FOR DRAWING HAY&#13;
above the pole by usiug a ring and twe&#13;
open links. To the other end of the&#13;
I chain attach a short piece of rope. This&#13;
completes the device. Hitch to it with&#13;
i a horse, drive to a shock of hay. unhitch&#13;
the singletree from pole and push&#13;
the small end of the pole under the&#13;
TATJ5 OP MICHIGAN, Conntj of Livingston&#13;
SB.&#13;
^ At &amp; session of the Probate Court for saM County,&#13;
held at the Probate OiHce in the Village of&#13;
Howell, o» Tuesday trm vStli day of May, iu&#13;
tue year one thou-and nlnu hundred and one.&#13;
Present, Eupene A. stowo Judge of Prooate, ia&#13;
the Matter of the Eetate of&#13;
JAMES H. BAUTON, Deceased.&#13;
On reading and Ming the uotition duly verified of&#13;
Geo. A'. T«eple, praying that a certain instrument&#13;
now on file in this court, purporting to be tho last&#13;
Will and Testament ot said deceased, miy b'.&gt; ad&#13;
tuitted to probate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Friday, the ^latduy&#13;
of June next, at lit o'clock iu the forenoon, nt said&#13;
Probate Otlice, bo assigned lor the hearing of&#13;
said petition.&#13;
It is further ordered that a copy of this order be&#13;
published in the PINCKNKY DISPATCH, anewnpaptensivelv&#13;
cultivated for pig feed during | ^ Printed and circulating in s:iiu county, three&#13;
the past' few years one which has given j »»^-^"lve weeks previous to OHIII dny of /.earing.&#13;
extremely satisfactory results is rape. |&#13;
The variety best suited for forage is j&#13;
Dwarf Essex. ; •-" — • ^ ^&#13;
A s an element in the production Of i WAN rKD—Capable, reliable person in every&#13;
their famous bacon Canadians are giv- , county to &gt;epres«nt large company of solid rrnuing&#13;
It considerable attention. In cer- |f.!j\.^, , ^f°.n :i ^*,, , : l ,&#13;
I *7l '&gt; j r ^ . / 1 ^ 1 ^&#13;
tain districts it is DOW largely used as ''"""' ' ' ' ,"""'"&#13;
a forage crop for sheep, swine and&#13;
ElOKNE A. STOWK,&#13;
Judge ot Probate&#13;
steers, and undoubtedly still larger&#13;
areas in the. future will be sown for&#13;
this purpose. One of these farmers&#13;
says:&#13;
"From a study of the habits of the&#13;
pigs pasturing on rape I should say&#13;
that the best results would be secured&#13;
weekly; &gt;J per day absolutely Hiir* and all ns-&#13;
I peneee; straight, bona-ti le, dolnuto salary, no&#13;
j commission; salary paid «acli Saturday and et-&#13;
' pense money advanced each week. STAND A RD&#13;
J KOLISK,.'!.!-{ Dearborn st Chicago. t-29&#13;
shock on the ground in the center until by sowing the rape in rows 24 to 30&#13;
the large end comes ft) the edge of the inches apart at the rate of-about three&#13;
shock. Put the chain over the top of pounds of seed (Dwnrf Essex) to the&#13;
ualty Co., of Des Moines, Iowa, in pay&#13;
ment for the loss sustained by the recent&#13;
bank robbery. This amount does&#13;
not cover damages done to vault.&#13;
glass etc., which will also be paid by&#13;
the Insurance Co,—Brighton Argus.&#13;
Favorite varieties with New Jersej&#13;
celery growers are Perfection, Heartwell&#13;
and Golden Self Bleaching.&#13;
the shock as near the ceuter as possible&#13;
and after wrapping it round the&#13;
pole a few times tie as shown in the&#13;
illustration. Hitch on and start the&#13;
horse straight with the pole. As large&#13;
shocks as the horse can draw may be&#13;
handled this way and with a great saving&#13;
of time and labor.&#13;
Call at F . A. Sitrler's drug store and&#13;
net a free sample of Chamberlain s&#13;
Stomach and Liver Tablets. They are&#13;
an elegant physic. They also improve j porch where It seems to sag there at&#13;
One on the Tenant.&#13;
Landlord—I just came over to tell&#13;
you that I've decided to raise your—&#13;
Tenant • (interrupting) — Well, you&#13;
needn't bother about It. I've decided&#13;
to move.&#13;
Landlord—Oh, I merely desired to&#13;
say that I had decided to raise your&#13;
the appetite, strengthen and regulate&#13;
the Liver and Bowels. They are easy&#13;
to*fake and.pleasant in effect.&#13;
Mrs. M:r.Mi!:y ;i &gt; h.-r i'.'^bfliK'.. excitod!&#13;
yi-i:un for the doet-o:-, Pat. The&#13;
child has swallowed the halfpenny yt-u&#13;
gave him to play with.&#13;
"Ob, keep your iniud aisy. Pridget,"&#13;
replied Pat. "It was a bad one any-&#13;
Way." *&#13;
A boy boasti of what be Is going to&#13;
tf* when lie .becomes a man, and an old,&#13;
mcni&gt;rag« of what be did when be was*&#13;
i&gt; hoy.—Cbicago News. J&#13;
the corner, and also to paper the bedrooms;&#13;
but. of course, you will not,&#13;
since you have decided to move, care to&#13;
hear anything further about my plans.&#13;
Good day. I hope you'll like it where&#13;
you're going.—Chicago Herald.&#13;
acre. When thus sown, this can be&#13;
cultivated by horsepower when young j&#13;
and has a tendency to branch out and |&#13;
develop a large leaf crop. j&#13;
"It is most interesting to watch the&#13;
nteeness of discrimination exercised by j&#13;
your practiced rape eating pig as he&#13;
strolls leisurely down the row5 and selects&#13;
the juicy leaves that best please&#13;
Hogi in tUe Northwest. ! his fancy. 1 have observed, too, that&#13;
It may be said that there is a broad 3-our trained pig is equal to the best of&#13;
field for the farmers of the Pacific chemists in picking out those parts of&#13;
northwest to occupy in producing a su- the plant most valuable for food. He&#13;
perlor article of bacon and other pork Soon learns to shun the large or old&#13;
products. The climate and feed con- leaves and feasts upon the young, the&#13;
ditions are the very best that can be tender, the juicy."&#13;
found for producing a grade of pofk i The cost of growing an acre of rape,&#13;
which cannot be excelled in the world. Including rent of land, has been esti-&#13;
There Is not a day In the year over mated at $14.17.&#13;
large areas in this section when hogs j The cut shows a plot of Dwarf Essex&#13;
cannot have Bome form of green sue- rape at the upper Michigan station&#13;
culent food. Pastures of clover, grass- sown on June 10 last year. Aside&#13;
es and annual plants can be provided from slight damage to leaves by cab'&#13;
that furnish a large amount of food bago worms, the plants grew to perwhich,&#13;
supplemented with a small ra- fection, reaching a height of SG Inches&#13;
tiou of grain, will produce a superior at the close of the season,&#13;
article of meat product. The foreign ; The greatest portion of the plot wa9&#13;
us well as the domestic market de- cut with a mowing machine at various&#13;
inands a better pork product, especial--. times between Sept. 20 and Nov. 5. the&#13;
|y in the hams and bacon.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
^fsSfirflfo&#13;
&gt; A,YD STEAMSHIP LINE St J&#13;
Popular ronta tor.Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points East, South, and lor&#13;
Howell, Owo&gt;so, Alma, Alt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern i h c b i n a n .&#13;
W. H . BENNETT,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
Irrigation Before Frnlt R i p e n i n g .&#13;
Irrigation before fruit ripening, says&#13;
Wlckson, is given In a single application&#13;
of about three acre Inches per acre j&#13;
Trouble Breeding Condition.&#13;
Robblns—Funny, but young people&#13;
who seem to love one another the most&#13;
devotedly are oftentimes the first peo- j after the early ripening fruits have&#13;
p!e to fight after marriage. reached good size and just before they ;&#13;
Wrcn-The trouble Is. vou see. they Lbegln the final swell which determ.r.ps&#13;
endeavor to protract the "two souls size. This reaches the circulation of the&#13;
=£&#13;
with but a single thought" Idea too far.&#13;
Two persons with bat a single thought&#13;
between them cannot help hating one&#13;
another looser or later.—Boston Transcript.&#13;
. . . . „ -&#13;
tree In time to-materially aid i n the a t&#13;
tainment of satisfactory size. In some&#13;
cases this not only does this, but enablea&#13;
the tree to bold its foliage and&#13;
growth the balance of the season.&#13;
PERE ftlARQUETTE&#13;
B a i l t O A i j 3**.».. 1 . l O O i .&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit and Eest,&#13;
10:30 a. m., 3:0-1 p. m., S:o8 p. m.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and West,&#13;
9:45 a . m . , 2:0S p. m. 6:20 p. JO.&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay City,&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p. m., 8:"&gt;8 p. ra.&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10 :36* a. ra.&#13;
FKASK Biv, H. F. MOELLElt,&#13;
Agent, South LfOn. * &lt;*. P. A., Detroit.&#13;
Urand Trunk Ball war System.&#13;
,0.&lt;Ufi. m.'Jftckunn. Jtetrnft. Hnd&#13;
6:45 p. in.&#13;
4:45 p.m.&#13;
interra etilAte »utl»u«&#13;
mail sari *xp.&#13;
Jackson. Lenox, snd&#13;
tntenotdlste stations&#13;
mixed.&#13;
? Prlfls. iu.&#13;
5:15 p, m. i 7:55 a.m. St&#13;
Ths fcifl s, m. sad 6:4¾ p, m. trains na?s throu j i&#13;
aoacb bstwsen Jackson and Detroit.&#13;
W. J. Blast, Agwt, Plaetotr&#13;
• ) • • ) • • ' : . . " • • ;&gt;'&gt;(.,..';'&#13;
, ; t •'''••''• • X&#13;
'^ ' -.'&#13;
'".' «*•*:•&#13;
'^'•'&#13;
. • * •&#13;
.) • '&#13;
&lt;! &gt;&#13;
, * ,'&#13;
:-r&#13;
- &gt; . ' ' • ' ' / • ,&lt;•-" •• - . * • - ' • : • ' . • - y . - . . . . . - . - - . . • • • * • • • • ; v • . • . ' : ' ' . , : • • ' " ' - l . "•• , : - • • . • • ' . • ' • • • • : • • • • : • . : • . . " • • f - :&#13;
Sares Two Prom Death.&#13;
"Our little daughter bad an almost&#13;
fatal attack of wboopinp cough and&#13;
bronchitis," writes Mrs. W. K. Havi&#13;
land, of Armonk, N. Y , " b u t when all&#13;
other remedies failed, we saved her&#13;
life with Dr. KiflVs new Discovery.&#13;
Our niece, wTio Lad consumption in&#13;
an advanced stage, also used this wonderful&#13;
medicine and to day ehe is perfectly&#13;
well'' Desptrate throat and&#13;
lung diseases yield to Dr, K i n c s New&#13;
Discovery as to no other medicine on&#13;
earth. Infallible for Coughs and&#13;
Colds. 50(; and $1 00 bottles guaranteed&#13;
by P. A. Sig'er. Trial bcttles&#13;
free.&#13;
Great Patent Nation.&#13;
' The United States grants 25,000 pattnts&#13;
per annum, or nearly as many as&#13;
all the rest of the world. England&#13;
grants 8.000 per annum and France&#13;
and Germany each about 7.000, and&#13;
fucn countries as Canada, Australia,&#13;
Austria. Italy and Russia grant about&#13;
4,000 each. An interesting and hopeful&#13;
fact is .that more patents are granted&#13;
!n proportion to the applications than&#13;
ever before in the history of the patent&#13;
•fflce, showing that mechanical genius&#13;
is not chasing as many rainbows as&#13;
formerly. American inventive genius&#13;
is shown in all lines of inventiou, but&#13;
It greatly predominates in machinery&#13;
for manufacturing, transportation and&#13;
labor saving. Europe and the orient&#13;
have begun to find that without American&#13;
industries they would be unable&#13;
to go ahead,—Success.&#13;
P a y y o u r S u b s c r i p t i o n t h i s m o n t h&#13;
6to w A. TS r .12 i &gt; 9 9&#13;
Weak men, weak women, pnle.&#13;
rrun. ja!e we men , nui «&gt;u&lt; men, nervous&#13;
v», omen, debilitated men, debilitated&#13;
women, to ti'fce Knill's Krd Pills&#13;
for Wjiu People, They restore lir-;'iih,&#13;
Strength and B e n t y . VYaKe np,&#13;
nraee mi bv tulvinor th^rri before tlie&#13;
hot vveafiicr. They tire the ^reat hody&#13;
huilJi'i' fini developer. Spring Tonic,&#13;
und Hlord medicine, 25c a box.&#13;
KnilU White Liver Pills are the&#13;
meat Liver Tnviffprator, Bowel Regulat-'&#13;
r. 25 do&gt;»is 25c.&#13;
K'ui!l\ Blue Kidney Pilis cnte&#13;
Ba..lci;h'j and Kidney troubles. 25c&#13;
ft l;OX.&#13;
ALL IS SELFISHNESS.&#13;
T n e W l « « M a n ' s T h e o r y a n d H o w 11&#13;
W a a E x p l o d e d .&#13;
"After all," said the wise man, "what&#13;
is it but selfishness? The optimist who&#13;
goes through life whistling and singing&#13;
aongs of cheer Is not entitled to any&#13;
special credit, because It is a pleasure&#13;
*e4rf» te be 4mppy, It i t didnlt make_&#13;
him glad to be happy, he wouldn't be&#13;
that way. So you see selfishness lies&#13;
at the bottom of bis good cheer.&#13;
"Then there Is the pessimist. Is he&#13;
discouraged because he thinks it is his&#13;
duty to mankind to paint dark pictures?&#13;
Not at all. His Is another clear&#13;
case of selfishness. He gratifies himself&#13;
by being unhappy and trying to&#13;
make others so. Love, too, is selfishness.&#13;
The maiden doesn't love the man&#13;
to make him glad. It's her own happiness&#13;
that she promotes in looking upon&#13;
him as the noblest work of God. Man's&#13;
love for woman has back of it the same&#13;
selfish motive.&#13;
"So, too, the philanthropist's love of&#13;
the world. He loves it and loves to do&#13;
great things for it because It gives him&#13;
a satisfaction to know that he is doing&#13;
well.&#13;
"Consider it from whatever standpoint&#13;
you please, and yon must always&#13;
arrive at the same conclusion.. Everything&#13;
that man does he docs selfishly.&#13;
It is always a case of gratifying bis&#13;
own inclinations. It"—&#13;
•Just then the wise man turned a somersault&#13;
and skinned his nose against a&#13;
water plug. When he got up and looked&#13;
around, with the look cf one who&#13;
was beginning to remember things that&#13;
bad long been forgotten, bis pupil&#13;
asked:&#13;
"Was it selfishness that impelled you&#13;
to stub your toe? Did you do it because&#13;
it brought a sense of gratification&#13;
to your"—&#13;
"Say, you confounded Jdiot," the wise&#13;
man replied, "you ought to have that&#13;
grin.photographed. It would make a&#13;
good frontispiece to Darwin's works."—&#13;
Cblcago Herald.&#13;
0OT A SENATOR'S HAT.&#13;
A c t o r C r a n e A p p r o p r i a t e d t h e B e a d -&#13;
r e a r o f a K a n s a s S t a t e s m a n .&#13;
Among the stories that are retailed&#13;
in the cloakroom of the senate when&#13;
that body is in session at Washington&#13;
is one of how William H. Crane, the&#13;
actor, put the finishing touches upon&#13;
his great character study, "The Senator."&#13;
" ~&#13;
"As you well know," said one of the&#13;
group, "Crane took his character almost&#13;
directly from Senator Plumb of&#13;
Kansas. Crane had just started out&#13;
with 'The Senator* and bad opened in&#13;
Washington. We had all seen the performance&#13;
and liked it immensely. But&#13;
I thought I saw one defect. Crane&#13;
wore a high silk hat. which was not at&#13;
n\\, according to my thinking, in keeping&#13;
with the imitation or Plurub. who&#13;
always wore the characteristic broad&#13;
brimmed hat of the southerner. One&#13;
evening when Crane, Ingails. Plumb&#13;
and myself happened to be dining together&#13;
I remarked to Crane about the&#13;
matter of the high hat.&#13;
" 'You really ought not to wear it,&#13;
for it is not in keeping with the character.'&#13;
said I. 'You ought to wear one&#13;
like Plumb's/&#13;
"Crane did not say much tn answer,&#13;
but when he arose from the table he&#13;
reached out for Plumb's hat and calmly&#13;
put it on. Leaving his own hat for&#13;
Plumb, Crane went off down the street&#13;
with the old felt affair jammed down&#13;
over bis forehead. The senator was&#13;
too surprised to offer objection. The&#13;
next night~ Crane appeared tm the&#13;
stage with Plumb's bat on his head&#13;
and thereafter wore it at every performance."—&#13;
Chicago Chronicle.&#13;
%&#13;
HE KNOWS BEANS:&#13;
The&#13;
m l.mi»mt Tint Inn m AbOttt T n e t q&#13;
by a n O h i o G r o w e r .&#13;
old saw "Too poor to raise&#13;
The Chinese began to write books before&#13;
they migrated from the region&#13;
south of the Caspian sea.&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
Salary $900&#13;
Me: Lir wcrner of gocxl artrtrYossE toA Rr?'LreYce,n t i&#13;
« s , SMIIIH I') travel ni&gt;iM&gt;intii&gt;y jwnls. otliern fur !&#13;
local work iui&gt;l;i:i,f iifter our irUtm-sts. *t)0O&#13;
salary LMiiisuitfi'd yearly; extra en•-IIHSKIOIIH aixi '&#13;
•x,)t*nsos. rn(» &gt;1 a'ivrtiKeuient, old entuhlisliM j&#13;
house. *ir;irul rh;inc»- for e«rtpeet.iv.au i.r w'oinsin&#13;
4o .st'otm! i.l'Vtsfi'it, pern uni'iit position, liberal&#13;
'hiconiH null future. New. brilliant lint's, w rile&#13;
. ftt unco. M ' A t l O K D P l t l . J i * , t-:5a&#13;
2 3 Clint rett »»tM !&gt;'civ I l i i v c i i . C o u n .&#13;
You mav ^ well expect to run a&#13;
steam engine without, water a-&gt; to find&#13;
rin active, energetic man with &lt;i torpid&#13;
iiver and you may know that his liveils&#13;
torpid whon he does not relish his&#13;
food, or tee Is dull and languid after&#13;
eiting. oiten has headache and sometimes&#13;
dizzin)»s. A few doses of&#13;
Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver&#13;
Tablets will re.-tore ins liver to its&#13;
nor;uiU.turnlion, renew_ his vitality,&#13;
Seven Years In Hod. improve his digestion and make him&#13;
Wiil wonder ever ctwv," inquire t*el like a new man. ' Price, 25 cents&#13;
the friends of* Mrs L. Pease, of. Law Samples free at P. A. Sigler's d r u *&#13;
rence, Kati. They knew &lt;h* hid been store, Pinekney.&#13;
unable, to leave her tied in seven yen as&#13;
on account of Kidney find liver i rouble,&#13;
nervous prostration and i.'ene&gt;ai&#13;
debility- ; but. "Three b &gt;tHes of E'ect'ic&#13;
Hitlers enabled me to u\iik," &gt;he&#13;
-W-ri-tes,''• and in three months I felt&#13;
like a new ' persrn." Women snfleritiLf&#13;
from Headache, Hackjiclie, Ne..'-&#13;
vousnes:-., Slnrple^sne.-s, Melunchoty,&#13;
Paint ink; and 1 i/./v Spells will find it&#13;
j, |.i ire,'o&gt;-s l;|..,&gt;inj Trv M Sal if-i "Sonny, you had better be careful&#13;
laciion is .ni.u-au.eei. 0-. iv ft() t-nt&lt; \ i l 0 W . y o u „ d . r l . v e , l . h a t , d ° U , bV»gy. o f&#13;
beans" is usually associated with the&#13;
idea that the bean crop can be'made a&#13;
last resort on wornout soil and that,&#13;
other crops falling, beans may be planted.&#13;
So they may. but only in exceptional&#13;
instances and under extraordinarily&#13;
favoring conditions would the&#13;
crop be worth the harvest and thrashing.&#13;
It is true that beans may be grown&#13;
on certain soils that are low in fertility&#13;
NOTICE. .&#13;
We the undersigned, do hereby&#13;
auree to refund the money oft ft 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 care con&#13;
sumption, when used according to dtrftfftinns,&#13;
o r m o n e y b a c k . A f a l l d08Q&#13;
on ffoing'jto bed and small doses daring&#13;
the day will cure the moat severe&#13;
cold, and stop the 'most distressing&#13;
oouffh.&#13;
P. A. Sigler,,"&#13;
W. B. Darrpw&#13;
She ghtrimn} §i$ptth.&#13;
PDBU8HM&gt; ZVKBY TBUftJUUY MOASIHe BY&#13;
F R A N K L.. A N D R E W S&#13;
Editor and Proprietor.&#13;
Uobacrlptlon Price $1 In Advtnce.&#13;
Saterea at the Poatofllce at Finclcaay, Michigan&#13;
as aecond-clasB matter.&#13;
Advertiaing rate* made known on application.&#13;
Bcalneea Car da, $4.00 per year.&#13;
I^aia and marriage notice* published free.&#13;
Announcements ot entertainments may be paid&#13;
Cor, if desired, by i&gt;r renting the office with ticketa&#13;
of ad mission. l a case ticket* are aoc broaght&#13;
to ttie omce, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter in local notice column will be cnara.*&#13;
exl at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for each.&#13;
insertion. where no time is specified, all notices&#13;
will l&gt;e inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
• i l l be charged for accordingly, idaT"ail change*&#13;
at advertisemeuta MUtiT reach tblsotnce aa early&#13;
»8 TUESDAY morning to insure an insertion t h e&#13;
same week.&#13;
JO'S PEZJVIIJvGf&#13;
lu all its branches, a specialty. We h*?eall kinds&#13;
and the latest styles or Type, etc., which enables&#13;
us to execute aU kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Panipleta, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., In&#13;
superior styles, upon ibe shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
r-v a* guod work can b&gt;i aone.&#13;
EFFECT OF FEr.TiT&gt;rz:;n (»*» B&amp;ura.&#13;
with a limited degree of success. But&#13;
the yield and the profitable returns will&#13;
always be found limited Ly the amount&#13;
of readily available plant food obtainable&#13;
by the feeding plant. To illustrate&#13;
the food requirements Of the bean&#13;
p l a n t an Ohio Earnier correspondent&#13;
gives results of experiments in growing&#13;
navy or pea. beans in a clay field&#13;
so poor that even the Canada thistles*&#13;
in it_ were puny and undersized.&#13;
Group No. 1 represents the product"&#13;
harvested and thrashed from a certain&#13;
measured length of row on a plot&#13;
manured with a complete commercfal&#13;
fertilizer said to contain in a high&#13;
grade form the three principal elements&#13;
of fertility iu the following proportions:&#13;
Nitrogen, in sulphate of ammonia&#13;
and organic forms, three-fourths&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PRESIDENT C. L, Sigler&#13;
I1IU8TKE8 ft. Baker, li. H. Erwin,&#13;
P. U. Jackson, Geo Keaaon Jr.&#13;
Cbas. Love, Malauhy Roche.&#13;
CLEKK..., ,.MM. ««.......,..E. R. Brown&#13;
TrtEABfHEQ J, A. Cadwell&#13;
Assassin; , ...Mw.Jii). A.Greene&#13;
STREET C O M * i * s t o s e a J. Parker&#13;
HsALTuOFFicBa Dr. ki. r*. s&gt;ii&lt;ier&#13;
&lt;\rToiiNKV........,,.,..,,,,..........,,.........,.,w« A. Oarr&#13;
-MAKBUALL, M — S. Broganr&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
W h a t M l « h t H a v e H a p p e n e d .&#13;
A sporty young gentleman of the city&#13;
who drives a dainty runabout which IS&#13;
the envy of the other young men of his to 1¼ per cent; phosphoric acid, avail&#13;
able in the form of dissolved bone, 5&#13;
to 6 per cent, and potash, actual, 1½&#13;
to 2 per cent, it was applied a t the&#13;
&lt;aught the bit and sat the horse upon I rate of 500 pounds per acre at the time&#13;
its haunches without apparent effort i o f drilling with the pea and bean attend&#13;
then complacently remarked to the&#13;
driver:&#13;
set was driving down Main street the&#13;
other day when he nearly ran over a&#13;
•ix foot countryman. The countryman&#13;
! J&#13;
-)d b y I-1 \ . S i l l e r . I'tacV ,l-&gt;\\&#13;
50 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
H w l t i n i 1 i » , l S t &gt; l &lt; " S ' &gt; ' U ' l &lt; , V ' &lt; . ' ' l * ' l ' u &lt; &gt; . ' , i « , l A &gt; ' &lt; l l&#13;
P 0 9 T A L &amp; M O R I V ,&#13;
The PHOPHICTOfiS.&#13;
Griswold&#13;
House&#13;
A_&#13;
etrictly&#13;
flret-&#13;
H.'VHfl.&#13;
modern.&#13;
your'n. If I hadn't collared this here&#13;
horse, you would 'a' run that thing into&#13;
me and smashed it all to kindling."—&#13;
Mempfeis Scimitar.&#13;
up-to-date&#13;
in the heart of \&#13;
DETROIT. theCit*&#13;
Rates, $2, $2.50, $3 per Day.&#13;
'.«»»••&#13;
C O M . G R A N D R I V C N 4 C m a w o t o S T .&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C .&#13;
A MVOTIO finding askelrli nnd description may&#13;
(mistily .-lsi-nrtiun i\:\? opinion t'reo wlietlier an&#13;
"liveiition is prritinM)-patentHblo. Comiriujiion.&#13;
tionsstriot :&gt;-t'onililunMai. Hnndbodkou Patents&#13;
st-tit frf:o. &lt;»li(i'^t iiu'«-!!.cv -for sftonrltip patonts.&#13;
i*5it«!its tuUen tlirouirh Munu ft Co. receive&#13;
Bprciul notice, ve'iouc ciinrce, in the $&gt;:mm American. A handacw.pl? illustrated wooklr. I.nrceat clrcjiiarion&#13;
ut any prie7itinc Journal. Terms, J3 a&#13;
v.?ur : lour raonths, $l. Sold by all newsdealers.&#13;
MUNN &amp; Co.3eiBr"ta'- New York&#13;
Priori Offloo. (25 V Ht^ Washington, D. C.&#13;
A S p r n i i i i v l A n k l e Q u i c t t l j C u r e d .&#13;
'• At one time I suffered lr.om a severe&#13;
sprain of the ankle," says Geo E.&#13;
i/ary, editor ot the Guide, Washington&#13;
Vn. "After using several well recommended&#13;
medieint's without sin.c^^.s&#13;
i tried OhAm'^erlrtin's Pain Bi-ilm, and&#13;
im pleased to sav that relief came as&#13;
-. O't as [ ben-an its use and a complete&#13;
i-ur.e speedily followed." Sold by F .&#13;
A. Siller, Pincikney.&#13;
LooKsWell&#13;
Wears Well&#13;
This is what a man expects from Paint—this&#13;
is what his money entitles him to receive. There&#13;
are many disappointments, but never any regrets&#13;
when the purchaser is safeguarded with the label&#13;
of&#13;
The Peninsular Lead &amp; Color forks, Ltd.,&#13;
DETROIT.&#13;
Why experiment when you can buy sure satisfaction&#13;
in Paint ? Profit by the experience of others.&#13;
Buy the Paint that "looks well, wears well''&#13;
—that preserves as well as beautifies^—gives large&#13;
covering capacity—spreads evenly and stays on.&#13;
SOLD I V&#13;
Geo. W. REASON ^ SON.&#13;
Pineknev Mich.&#13;
D i f f i c u l t D u t c h .&#13;
The Dutch language is of a good old&#13;
fashioned tongue. It is so difficult that&#13;
English speaking people cannot without&#13;
difficulty acquire it. In fact, some&#13;
foil: say it is more like unto English&#13;
than it is to German. The Boers ID&#13;
South Africa use the Dutch tongue as&#13;
it was spoken 200 years ago.&#13;
tachment on the potato planter directly&#13;
along the row of seed, being mixed&#13;
With the soil by an attachment on the&#13;
machine. , This plot also had an application,&#13;
given at three different times&#13;
during the season, of nitrate of soda&#13;
at the rate of 300 pouuds p\y^acre, the&#13;
tirst dressing being made iuTvr the&#13;
beans were well up and growing at the&#13;
rate of 100 pouuds per acre.&#13;
Group No. 2 represents the product&#13;
from a row on a plot receiving the application&#13;
of commercial fertilizer alone,&#13;
together with the addition of humus&#13;
iu the form of leaf ami straw mold.&#13;
Group Xo. 3 is the product from an&#13;
exactly equal length of row on a plot&#13;
immediately adjoining the first twe&#13;
that had received no fertilizer, manure&#13;
or added humus of any kind.&#13;
The soil for beans should be light,&#13;
loose, loamy or "fluffy" uaturally or&#13;
made so by humus artificially supplied&#13;
to produce such conditions. Any marked&#13;
acidity of the soil should be removed&#13;
by the application of lime.&#13;
The field should have sufficient drainage&#13;
to prevent water from remaining&#13;
in any considerable quantity ou the&#13;
surface of the ground after heavy&#13;
rains.&#13;
\i&gt;£THOJDlST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
iVl. Kev. H. W . Hicks, pastor, oervicaa every&#13;
&amp;uaday morning aC 10:2k!, and nvery Sunday&#13;
evening at 7.00 o'clock. Prayer meeting ThuraiUy&#13;
evenings. Sunday aclioot at cloao of inoraiu,,'&#13;
service. LSAI. riioLEB, Supt.&#13;
t^ONUrtEUAl'IONAL CHUKCH.&#13;
/ Kev. C. W. Rice pastor. Service every&#13;
| Sunday morning- at 10:30 and erery Sunday&#13;
! e.'rjuini? at 7:oc o'cljck. Prayer meeting, Tnnre&#13;
i d&gt;y eveninga. Hdaday actiool at close of moraj&#13;
ink.r service. .Uisa Kittie lioff, Supt,, Mabel&#13;
i swanhout Sec.&#13;
C T . MAU.l'8 'J.VTIIOUC CHUttCil.&#13;
O Kev. M. J. Couiui+riorJ, t\nu&gt;f. 8&lt;»rvice«&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:ttO o'clock&#13;
iiij»li maea wiili aermoQ «U 9;:lba. in. C it"cuianv&#13;
at o:lxj p. ui., vee pore ana ueueaictioD at 7M(U p. in.&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
I^h.i A. O. H. Society ot tliia pU'ia, onets every&#13;
tnr'r'l S.iiriiv- i-itn*» t"r. Uitt.U'J.V d i l l .&#13;
n ; i i i u ; i i . " .iti "I. T. Kelly, C^Jtity DjlJifitea&#13;
I^PWOKTH LEAGUK. Meets every Sunday&#13;
ll/ovenins' at tituo oclock in tlie Al. E. Ctiurcu. A&#13;
[ortr'dial invitation is exteadel to evoryoue, espacially&#13;
youug people. F. L. Andrews, Prea.&#13;
n - I U I S T l A N&#13;
Oi^^s every Snadav nv-iiin^ at &gt;.\). i*ce§i lout&#13;
E*m-:\vzii *) : i a r f : - ij^t&#13;
aduv *».'•; iin^ a&#13;
Miss L. M. Co); Secretary, Mm ItuCie Cirpt.iC^r&#13;
'iMit: W. C. X. U. meji'3 the tirat Kriday of eaoh&#13;
I month at^:*j"p. m. at tne home of Dr. H. F.&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested ia temperance ia&#13;
] coaMially invited. Mrs. '..eal Siller, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
Etta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
i , . — — — . — The C. T. A. and B. Sociewy of thle place, »«wt&#13;
every tiiird Saturaay evening in tae Fr. Aisti&#13;
thew Hall. John Donohue, President,&#13;
! I f SIGHTS OF MAUCAUJSES.&#13;
j IvMeeteverY Friday evening on or before f a l l&#13;
• •)! tne moon at tlicir hall la the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
I Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CHAS. UAMPBELL, Sir Knleht Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.7¾. F&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
! iiielull of the moon.&#13;
A A. M. KesuViT&#13;
tag, on or before&#13;
II. F. Sigler, W. M,&#13;
a&#13;
i :&#13;
•&gt;!&#13;
U'&#13;
ladv&#13;
Paldoc-&#13;
&gt;ore&#13;
A Terrible Explosion.&#13;
"Of a gasoline ?tove. burned&#13;
here triyhtfully," write.* X.&#13;
rnnr, of Kirkman, Ia. "Ti:e b'&#13;
tors couldn't heal ttie runu":&#13;
that followed, but IJiickleuV Arnica&#13;
salve, entirely cured iiHr." Ia aiiible&#13;
io; I'nts, Corns, Sores I'ois, l&gt;i-Lii&gt;t&gt;&gt;,&#13;
Skin l&gt;iswi*i?s und Piles. 25.: at r\ A.&#13;
Siglrn-'s drug store, ""&#13;
S l o p ( t i c C o u y u i i n i l w o r k ! * o f f t b e&#13;
C o l d .&#13;
L. xattve Broino-Quinine Tablet- cure&#13;
,t cold in one d;&lt;y. No &lt; are, no pay.&#13;
i'i ;::c 25 cenis.&#13;
Piiu-kuev.&#13;
I&#13;
T a r k l M h R k n b n r b .&#13;
Possessing a savor all its own, we&#13;
come on scores of large cases full of&#13;
big, irregular blocks of a bright yellow&#13;
colored root. "Rhubarb," says our&#13;
guide. Indicating it. k4Ah! Then i t ) '&#13;
W A-NTE l)--Capable* retWole pti'son. in every&#13;
cotiniy to r»jpre&gt;cnt l.'trjjt- comvaay ot solid lkianlia!&#13;
reiuitatioo; $'.C&gt; sal.u-v per y'jtr.' payable&#13;
weekly ; $;l per'day iiosolutely sure ai.d ail t»xpe,&#13;
nsv&gt;; s&lt;tJ«i4lit , lnui» li'.ie, detinate salary, no&#13;
cu:)iini*^l.&gt;n; salaiy paid each Saturday and expei'.&#13;
ssi' uu'uo.v ;il\auiet! faoli week. *&gt;'1'AN i.'.-\lcl)&#13;
Hi.'L'SE, 3:&gt;i i'l'arijtrn st. Chu-aj,'o '' l-ii&#13;
OROEKOF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the rezalar F.&#13;
A A.M. meeting, MKS. MAKY HKAD, W. M.&#13;
/ AUDEK OP MaPERS&#13;
V/lirst Thursday eveniu&#13;
.u.iccalKH? uall.&#13;
WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
of each Month iu the&#13;
C. L.Grimes V. O.&#13;
LADIES OF TtfE MACOABEKS. Meat eTery t s&#13;
and •ir'i Saturday of eachaionth at ••i'.'lv p ui. a&#13;
A. »&gt;. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially invited.&#13;
J L ' H A SIC.LEUS Lady Com.&#13;
^&#13;
A C a r d .&#13;
I. t h e u n t l c r ^ i g n r d , d o h e r e b y atrrew&#13;
1'iMuri'i l i i e m o n e y o n a 5 0 &gt;:eni b o t -&#13;
) o f i i i u i ' i i ' s N N a r r a n t e d S y r&#13;
Y,-)v if it r'.-oie.s I O e n re y o u r r o u g h&#13;
of&#13;
or&#13;
i,o;d I ;is,&gt; iruarantee' ;* 25-ceiit bottle&#13;
to prove saii*fao.tory or money refunded.&#13;
t23&#13;
Will L\ Darrow.&#13;
comes from Turkey'.'" we cry joyfully,&#13;
glad to display our learning for once,&#13;
but our friend smiles contemptuously.&#13;
"There Is no such thing as Turkey&#13;
rhubarb," be says, "and, what is more,&#13;
there never has been." All the rhubarb&#13;
of commerce bails from China,&#13;
reaching us through Russia for the&#13;
most part, but because In olden days it&#13;
made its journey by way of Turkey&#13;
it became known as Turkey rhubarb,&#13;
anil T u r k t - ^ r t r t - r ^ ^&#13;
cause of tbe conservative tendencies&#13;
of the British publlc.^Uood- Words,&#13;
€9h&amp;&#13;
S *&#13;
Laxative Bromo-Quim^e Tablets&#13;
Ur* ra-Mdy thai&#13;
KNIGHTS op TUB LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
eveuins; of every mouth in the £ . O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:30 o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
O. L, Grimes, Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. D- C, L, SKM.ER M, 0&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Puysictaatj ana aur^e JUS. All c»lls proinptl &lt;&#13;
attended today or night. Omce o a M a l n s t r&#13;
Pinckuey, Mich. . •&#13;
DR&gt; A , B. GREEN. • '&#13;
DEN'TIsr-Eyery Krid.fj; and on ThaflH&#13;
day nhen having appointments. O m c e o f t r&#13;
Siller's i)ruc Store.&#13;
VeTERlMARY SURQEON&#13;
Q| OttUrio VeAennary C&gt;Ue«Kj4M&#13;
""' VeuHa*ry Dentlairy 0 ^ 1 « » . ^ ^&#13;
%wai^-.9SNsM'tiMad«. .&#13;
WiUp*^KMfitM4&#13;
meetioated anlmll at «1&#13;
Hore«e teetk «s»miaed&#13;
T &gt;-• .&#13;
4iMa«&gt;« &lt; | k t d i&#13;
r»'i^'iTL»'^'' l l M i * ' ! ^-^^-^=1&#13;
•siW*&#13;
I&#13;
f A •• r&#13;
» ^ i" J « V&#13;
t'A&#13;
far&#13;
t .&#13;
— ^ •&#13;
/&#13;
ghtckftl! £i&amp;M.&#13;
m&#13;
FRAMC L. ANDREWS, Publisher.&#13;
PINCKNEY, *"*- * • MICHIGAN.&#13;
Anton Dvorak, tho Bohemian compcwr.&#13;
1ms been made a member of tho&#13;
Austrian house of Lords.&#13;
Id Hung Chang probably would be&#13;
willing to pay the indemnity himself&#13;
If the empress dowager had net been&#13;
BO rode to him in the earlier stages of&#13;
the game.&#13;
President Schwab of the steel&#13;
trust will have the meat luxurious private&#13;
car in the country. That alone&#13;
should sell several million dollars&#13;
worth of the common stock.&#13;
Green and yellow chartreuse may no&#13;
longer be manufactured in France if&#13;
the bill against religious associations&#13;
goes through, as the head of the organization&#13;
of Carthusians, the mpuks&#13;
of the Grande Chartreuse, is situated&#13;
outside of France.&#13;
Detroit will soon celebrate the two&#13;
hundredth anniversary of its founding&#13;
by CadLiac. Eastern people are apt&#13;
to forget that there is so old a city in&#13;
the west. In the story of the settlement&#13;
and progress of Detroit much is&#13;
revealed of the history of "the northwest&#13;
under three flags."&#13;
The latest Paris idea is to pave the&#13;
streets with glass, and experiments are&#13;
now being tried to that end. According&#13;
to the Telegraph's correspondent,&#13;
pure glass is used without admixture&#13;
of cement, but subjected to a special&#13;
treatment, cabled devttrifactio'n. The&#13;
result is a hard, smooth substance,&#13;
opaque/absolutely non-porus, absorbing&#13;
no foreign matter, and thus retaining&#13;
no dampness or unpleasant&#13;
odors.&#13;
The varied character of the Manila&#13;
population is shown by such items as&#13;
these, taken at random from one issue&#13;
of a local daily: "Sim Viaco, a Filipino,&#13;
ran. amuck on Calle A n d a o n&#13;
Thursday night and attacked Lu Tang&#13;
with a heavy scantling. Mandarin&#13;
Chang Quing, son of Carlos Palanca,&#13;
the Chinese millionaire of Manila, has&#13;
been appointed ambassador to Mexico,&#13;
and is expected by his father to visit&#13;
Manila about April 1."&#13;
Ex-Empress Eugenie has given to&#13;
the municipality of Paris the cradle of&#13;
Prince Louis Napoleon, the only son of&#13;
Napoleon III. and the Empress. Prince&#13;
Louis was killed in the Zulu war in&#13;
South Africa in 1879. The body of the&#13;
cradle is made of rosewood and is decorated&#13;
with enamels in antique silver&#13;
and chiseled bronze. The frames are&#13;
of silver. A statue holds the imperial&#13;
crown, in gilt and bronze, over the&#13;
pillow, which is of white satin embroidered&#13;
in gold with the letter "N."&#13;
The cradle was originally a gift from&#13;
the municipality of Paris to Empress&#13;
Eugenie.&#13;
Fanners of Wabash county, Indiana,&#13;
are building good roads by co-operation&#13;
and at much reduced cost. They&#13;
have an agreement among themselves&#13;
on road-building, each owner of land&#13;
abutting on a highway to be improved&#13;
pledging in work or cash $1,50 per acre&#13;
within half a mile of the road. Payment&#13;
may be made within three years,&#13;
and the burden thus distributed is&#13;
hardly felt. The work is done in dull&#13;
seasons, and gravel roads have replaced&#13;
the old mud highways, over&#13;
many miles of •turnpike. On the completion&#13;
of a road the task of malntaing&#13;
it is assumed by the county authorities.&#13;
Happenings of the Week Driefty&#13;
Related.&#13;
m&#13;
The French military authorities,&#13;
after protracted experiments, are said&#13;
to be so far satisfied with the value&#13;
of the motor car in war time, that&#13;
they are making arrangements&#13;
to acquire, if necessary, the whole of&#13;
the auto-cars for military service in&#13;
the event of the army entering the&#13;
field. Notices are said to have be*m&#13;
sect to owners of auto-cars, asking&#13;
them if they are disposed to sell their&#13;
vehicles to the government whenever&#13;
the country should find itself threatened&#13;
with war, and also requiring&#13;
them to fix prices of the cars. The actual&#13;
purchasing price will be decidrvl&#13;
upon by the military authorities when&#13;
the vehicles are handed over after&#13;
talcing into account the depreciation&#13;
they may have undergone in the meantime.&#13;
WILL INTEREST MiCHIGANDERS&#13;
Have You Money Coming From the State&#13;
ait the Result of Paring Double Tare*&#13;
--rofco#key llarber m Trouble — JaoJc-&#13;
• noa Woman Sues Her Hubby,&#13;
Machinist* Cause Trouble In Detroit.&#13;
Whai threatened to be a lively riot&#13;
occurred at the Olds Motor Works, in&#13;
Detroit, lute on tho afternoon of May&#13;
31, but the prompt arrivul of the police&#13;
averted serious trouble, yet just a little&#13;
blood was shed. There tire at present&#13;
about CO men, mostly machinists, employed&#13;
there. The cause of the trouble&#13;
is that non-union men were suspected&#13;
to be working there. When tho&#13;
excitement commenced there wereomy&#13;
about a luilf dozen strikers present.&#13;
But by the time the extra squad of policemen&#13;
arrived fully 500 men, comprised&#13;
principally of workmen of different&#13;
shops, had assembled. More&#13;
police protection was telephoned ior&#13;
and upon their arrival the ringleaders&#13;
of the crowd hud succeeded in working&#13;
their listeners up to a point where&#13;
they were willing to make a rush on&#13;
the works and cause the non-union&#13;
men to cease working. W"hen the signal&#13;
was given the crowd started, and&#13;
for awhile the scene presented was&#13;
similar to that of a lot of boys playing&#13;
"pom, pom, pull-a-way." Finally some&#13;
members of the crowd made a rush for&#13;
the opposite side of the building and&#13;
in this way came in contact with the&#13;
non-unionists. Three of the latter received&#13;
badiy swollen and black eyes&#13;
and suffered with bloody noses, but&#13;
th« police reached the building1 in time&#13;
to prevent anyone from being badly&#13;
h u r t The police accompanied tho&#13;
company's men away from the s c e n e i t&#13;
quitting time, and patrolmen went&#13;
most of the way home with the" more&#13;
nervous of the workers.&#13;
nrrrlen Township Farmers Trapped.&#13;
Numerous tanner* in Bernon township&#13;
are chewing the bitter oud of reflection&#13;
now that they connot recall&#13;
what they had to say to several gentc«l&#13;
personages who visited them during&#13;
the past few days for the alleged purpose&#13;
of purchasing farm land. The&#13;
visitors in question were* land experts&#13;
who wftra st»nt nut by the state tax&#13;
Arc You AlFcctPtl.&#13;
Policyholders of the defunct Citizens'&#13;
Mutual Fire Insurance company,&#13;
of Jackson, are u p i n arms. The cause&#13;
of the excitement is :m assessment by&#13;
Receiver F. Cy iixdgley of former policyholders&#13;
to the tune o/ nearly 8133,-&#13;
00O. I t developed that the liabilities&#13;
only amounted to- $18,000, and the&#13;
cause of the excessive assessment is&#13;
said to be the likelihood of the assessments&#13;
of many stockholders proving&#13;
uncollectible. It is claimed that policyholders&#13;
re not liable beyond the&#13;
amount fixed in the premium note&#13;
signed by the applic int for insurance,&#13;
therefore the exhoritant assessment is&#13;
held to be illegal. The assessable policyholders&#13;
are scattered all over the&#13;
southern part of the state,&#13;
" * ~&#13;
Have Money Coming.&#13;
Certain property owners iu the state&#13;
arc receiving postal cards from persons&#13;
at Lansing who pore over books in the&#13;
auditor-general's office, to the effect&#13;
that they are entitled to a refunding&#13;
of a given sura occasioned by a double&#13;
payment of taxes. Those who have&#13;
something coming are informed that&#13;
for a consideration thev will be furnished&#13;
with valuable information. Auditor-&#13;
Geueral Powers notified county&#13;
treasurers to notify these property owners&#13;
who may come under his notice.&#13;
that the. auditor's department will&#13;
cheerfully furnish this information&#13;
gratis These persons have received&#13;
notices t i n t they are entitled to refunding,&#13;
from the auditor's office, but&#13;
have overlooked tlvm. .&#13;
commission to ascertain whether or&#13;
not the township supervisors in Berrien&#13;
county, are doing their duty by&#13;
assessing land at its actual cash value.&#13;
The deputation struck Berrien Center&#13;
the other day and unraveled a pi a usable&#13;
tale about being-sent into that section&#13;
by a colony of people who had recently&#13;
located in northernr~Mtcn1gan, where,&#13;
owing to tho nature of the soil, they&#13;
were unable 1O raise satisfactory crops,&#13;
hence they desired to purchase more&#13;
productive soil in the Michigan fruit&#13;
belt. A prominpnt citizen of Berrien&#13;
Center, who is well-known amoog the&#13;
farmers, volunteered to accompany the&#13;
prospective buyers, and introOuced&#13;
them to the land owners, who&#13;
were eager listeners to the yarn&#13;
told by the agents of the tax commission.&#13;
The outcome was that land&#13;
which the owners iniun.Lain_edj._in_ the&#13;
presence of the township supervisor,&#13;
as not worth above $40 or ¢50, suddenly&#13;
increased amjizingly in value.&#13;
No farms were for sale short of 875 to&gt;&#13;
Sl&lt;)0 per acre, and in most cases the&#13;
owners held that the land was really&#13;
worth more than was asked for i t&#13;
The strangers departed and the supervisor&#13;
of Berrien township hus been&#13;
notified by the tax commission to raise&#13;
the assessment to the amount which&#13;
the owners claim the land is worth.&#13;
The deputation of innocent lambs tried&#13;
the same wrirkle in Niles township,&#13;
but the farmers had a tip in advance,&#13;
hence the men from northern Michigan&#13;
found farms for sale at a bargain&#13;
in this vicinity.&#13;
Frnit Grower* ar»» Discouraged.&#13;
Fruit growers in the v.ciuity of Henton&#13;
Harbor are nearly discouraged over&#13;
the prolonged cool weather. The prospects&#13;
for a big strawberry crop as given&#13;
out is not what it was 10 days ago.&#13;
The big melon growers are still holding&#13;
their plants in hot beds waiting&#13;
^or a warm vmid-aiKh^lready-many-of&#13;
these plants are dumping down. On&#13;
the big peach farms hardly an old tree&#13;
will bear a peach and this means twothirds&#13;
of every farm. The cause, as&#13;
heretofore announced, was the early&#13;
fall frcezo before the limbs had beenv&#13;
tempered by any frosts.&#13;
M I N O R M I C H I G A N M A T T E R S .&#13;
D O I N G S O F T H f 4 1 9 T S E S S I O N ,&#13;
The house passed tho following bills&#13;
on the 88th: New barbers' latf; correcting&#13;
errors in Bay City charter; constitutional&#13;
amendment relative to the&#13;
division of state and county taxes and&#13;
finances; authorising Crystal Falls&#13;
township school to borrow money to&#13;
erfct building; authorizing Ontonagon&#13;
The general design for the naval&#13;
arch, which is to be erected at the&#13;
Battery. New York, has been approved&#13;
by the trustees of the Naval Arch Association&#13;
and the organization of the&#13;
finance committee for the collection of&#13;
the funds, with which to construct it&#13;
will be effected at once. The design&#13;
was prepared by Ernest F'agg. It is&#13;
estimated that the arch, including the&#13;
statuary, will cost ¢850,000, while the&#13;
sea-wall, beacons and monuments will&#13;
cost $300,000 more. In organizing the&#13;
committee for the collection of the&#13;
fund, every care is to be taken to&#13;
make it as representative as possible,&#13;
In order to give perfect confidence in&#13;
the project.&#13;
I'etnftkey 31. D. Fled on Ills WbecL&#13;
Dr. Parquhar Mcliao, a whilom doctor,&#13;
of Petoskey, who is the proprietor&#13;
of a fine barber shop, fled on his wheel&#13;
on the 27th to escape a warrant for alleged&#13;
criminal assault that was being&#13;
prepared on the complaint of A. Cohn,&#13;
a raerch »nt of that city, whose 14-yearold&#13;
daughter was an alleged victim.&#13;
McRae, who is 48 years old and married,&#13;
has been known for years to be&#13;
conducting a shady resort, but has&#13;
heretofore-escaped arrest, IIis flig it,&#13;
and that of his porter, reveals a shocking&#13;
state of depravity among the young&#13;
men and women who have frequented&#13;
his place. More flights or arrests may&#13;
follow. _&#13;
Sue* Her Iltuband for Damage*.&#13;
Mary J. Creech, of Jackson, on the&#13;
27th began suit in the circuit court&#13;
ngainst her divorced husband, David&#13;
H. Cheech. This is a sequel of ashooting&#13;
affray which occurred at the home&#13;
of Mrs. Cheech when, following a decision&#13;
of the supreme court sustaining&#13;
the lower court in granting her a divorce,&#13;
Cheech shot his wife four times&#13;
in tho bead, badly wounding her. She&#13;
recovered from the wound and now&#13;
sues for 8T&gt;,000 for injuries sustained&#13;
and expenses incurred.&#13;
Court Must Deride.&#13;
Suit for S7,000, growing out of the&#13;
recent failure of the FirstNational bank&#13;
of Niles, has been begun in the U. S.&#13;
circuit court against the First National&#13;
bank of Chicago. The action is brought&#13;
by Jos. W. Selden, receiver of the insolvent&#13;
Niles bank, to recover drafts&#13;
presented a t thf defendant bank after&#13;
notice of the insolvency of the other&#13;
institutions had been sent o u t&#13;
Memorial Day was appropriately observed&#13;
throughout Michigan.&#13;
Monroe has a good chance to secure&#13;
a beet sugar factory, and may land it.&#13;
Work was commenced at Rockwood&#13;
on the -8th on the electric road running&#13;
between Detroit and Toledo.&#13;
Martin Tiffany, of Mankatau, suicided&#13;
at Chicago on the 30th by the&#13;
carbolic acid route. Motive unknown.&#13;
Bears are wandering about near the&#13;
village of llatton and the children&#13;
don't require a curfew bell to keep&#13;
them in at night&#13;
The frost did quite a lot of damage&#13;
around West Branch. It is feared that&#13;
the huckleberries arc ruin d, as llvey&#13;
are just in bioom.&#13;
Cold water h.is not far from 40 miles&#13;
of Portland cement sidewalks; in fnct&#13;
the city claims to have the best sidewalks&#13;
in America for a town of like&#13;
size.&#13;
. A small boy at Athens called the village&#13;
marshal a blockhead, ; nd the officer&#13;
proved that the hoy was right by&#13;
arresting him aud taking him to the&#13;
lockup.&#13;
The recent petty thieving a t Detroit&#13;
has led the poliej to believe th.it it is&#13;
the work of au organized band of boys,&#13;
and they arc now working on this&#13;
theory.&#13;
Since promising coal indieationshave&#13;
been found in Meridian township, lugham&#13;
county, the farmers there are enjoying&#13;
good times, as capitalists nre&#13;
buying leases of all the land they can&#13;
secure.&#13;
Obeying the instructions of the&#13;
mayor.Marshal Ross, of Qwosso, keot&#13;
his eagle eye open on the 20th with the&#13;
result that he got evidence ngainst&#13;
seve*n deaiers for selling cigars on Sunday&#13;
contrary to his honor's orders.&#13;
The decomposed body of an unknown&#13;
man was found on the tir&gt;th on the top&#13;
of a wild and desolate hill known as&#13;
Uuzzard's Iloost, which overlooks the&#13;
Vermilion river in Illinois. From the&#13;
fact that the he-id was cut off it is&#13;
thought he wjis decoyed there and murdered.&#13;
The man had been dead about&#13;
six months.&#13;
The Howard City high school was&#13;
the scene of muc'i excitement on the&#13;
27th. Prof. Fuller undertook to punish&#13;
Wm. Steenman, who retaliated on&#13;
the professor in John L. style, giving&#13;
him three hard blows The professor&#13;
then blacked H teen man's eyes and put&#13;
him out of school. Steenman would&#13;
have graduated this yeitf.&#13;
The project to connect Saginaw and&#13;
Grnnd Rapids by means of an electric&#13;
railway is now assured of success, the&#13;
compnny having been incorporated&#13;
with $1,000,000 capital and the bonds&#13;
having been taken by an c'astern syndicate.&#13;
The route will be from Grand&#13;
Rapids to Greenville, thpnee to Stanton,&#13;
Ed more, Lake Odessa, Alma and&#13;
St Lou's.&#13;
county to maintain an abstract sysTeno;&#13;
authorizing Ulissfleld to borrow money&#13;
to improve bridge across the Raisin&#13;
river; detaching certain territory from&#13;
school district No. S, Marion, and attach&#13;
ng same to district Na 6; amending&#13;
Saginaw charier relative to the pay of&#13;
nldermen when acting as supervisors;&#13;
Detroit bridge bonding bill; extending&#13;
time of payment of indebtedness of&#13;
count'es and townships; freight classification&#13;
bill; providing that no person&#13;
acting as an agent for a contract with&#13;
a deceased person shall be a competent&#13;
witness equally within the knowledge&#13;
of decendent unless called by the heirs;&#13;
authorizing eounty road commissioners&#13;
to grant street railway franchises for&#13;
territory within t h e i r / jurisdiction;&#13;
amending compulsory education law so&#13;
as to provide that children between 8&#13;
and 15 years shall attend school at&#13;
least 10 half days each week and five&#13;
months a year, instead of eight half&#13;
days and four months a year; authorizing&#13;
common carriers to sell perishable&#13;
freight within 24 hours after&#13;
charges have not been paid, and animals&#13;
within a week; regulating the&#13;
granting of franchises in the city of&#13;
Detroit; Ann Arbor charter. '&#13;
The senate passed the following bills&#13;
on the 28th: Amending the Grand&#13;
Rapids primary election law by providing&#13;
for independent candidates and&#13;
decreasing the fee for some minor candidates;&#13;
to amend Saginaw charter;,to&#13;
authorize Detroit to build another&#13;
bridge to Belle Isle; authorizing Blissfield&#13;
townsh!p, Lenawee county, to&#13;
borrow money; relative to school taxes&#13;
in Crystal Falls; to reorganize school&#13;
districts in Marion township, Osceola&#13;
county; amended byiwuse—relative to&#13;
the East Saginaw-^efiool biw; liarnaby&#13;
primary election bill for Kent county;&#13;
to make Monroe county the 3Sth&#13;
judicial circuit.&#13;
The house passed the following bills&#13;
on the 2'Jth: Proposing nn amendment&#13;
to the constitution relative to indeterminate&#13;
sentences: general budget bill,&#13;
carrying £0.544,ftul. 12; regulating railway&#13;
service on ste un railways; compelling&#13;
county and municipal officers&#13;
to keep accounts; amending railroad&#13;
incorporation act so that projectors of&#13;
interurban electric railways need secure&#13;
the consent of only two-thirds of&#13;
the abutting property owners for a&#13;
right of way.&#13;
The senate passed the following bills&#13;
on the 27th: To amend Saginaw's&#13;
clnrter; to amend Sault Ste. Marie's&#13;
charter; to give Detroit pow«r to license&#13;
branch laundries; to amend Bay&#13;
City'8 charter; relative to assessments&#13;
in Detroit; Detroit water board bonding&#13;
bill; giving the state auditors&#13;
power to settle with H. M. Kingsl^y,&#13;
•of Van Buren county; to prohibit net&#13;
fishing in waters tributary to the Saginaw&#13;
river; to allow lilissfield to bond&#13;
for £5,000.&#13;
Gov. Biiss on the night of the 27th&#13;
^scut to the senate the names of ex-&#13;
Senator Ira T. Sayre, of Flushing, and&#13;
Giaham Pope, of Houghton, as the two&#13;
additional member^ of the state tax&#13;
commission. Sayre gets the long term&#13;
to l')00 and Pope's term will expire in&#13;
1904. '•&#13;
The house passed the following bills&#13;
on the 27th: Amending Grand Rsipids&#13;
primary election law; authorizinc the&#13;
village of I'.lissfield to borrow 8ft.000&#13;
for street improvements; amending&#13;
horse-hoers"1 act so as to provide for&#13;
renewal of licenses.&#13;
The budget made up by the state&#13;
accountant shows the total for IS)01&#13;
and lu' 2 to be £6.927,781.24. which is&#13;
an increase of 8203,20.).57 over the total&#13;
taxes levied by the last legislature.&#13;
Tho .Recent Supreme Court Decision&#13;
in Porto Rico 7*&#13;
MAY NECESSITATE NEW LAWS,&#13;
ir the Tariff Schedule Promolffatad by tho&#13;
President is Insufficient Cnuxress Will&#13;
be ObUfirml to Act or Import* Alar Un*&#13;
toe Froo—I&gt;etil»lui»» Kxpl ilnod.&#13;
Constitution Blast Follow the Vhis.&#13;
In the Dovvncs case the U. S. w&gt;&#13;
preine court declares, in an opinion by&#13;
Justice Itrown. that while Porto Rico&#13;
is a territory of the U. S., it is not such&#13;
for tariff purposes and that the Foraker&#13;
act is constitutional. The judgment&#13;
of the circuit court w,as affirmed.&#13;
The following were the pnneipai&#13;
points of the majority decision;&#13;
1. Territory cannot be foreign and&#13;
.domestic simultaneously.&#13;
2. Porto Rico is not foreign territory.&#13;
3. Congress has jHjrthojriijLJJ*-CiffllJ3l&#13;
and""legislate for territory acquired by&#13;
war or treaty.&#13;
4. Territory acquired by treaty bo.'&#13;
'ongs to the U. S. und is subject to the&#13;
disposition of congress.&#13;
5. Congress derives its authority not&#13;
necessarily from the territorial clanse&#13;
of the constitution but from necessi*&#13;
ties of the case and the inability of the&#13;
states to act.&#13;
G. Tho collection of duties on Imports&#13;
from Porto Rico since acquisition&#13;
is illegal.&#13;
7. Porto Rico became domestic territory&#13;
the moment it was ceded to the&#13;
U. S., no act of congress being necessary&#13;
to make it such.&#13;
8. Import duties, levied in Porto liieo&#13;
after ratification of the treaty of peace&#13;
with Sp.iin are held9 to bo invalid&#13;
Four justices dissent&#13;
Philippine Turllf Duties In • Mmtdle.&#13;
Continuing the lo^io of the decision&#13;
in the Deli ma case it is appirent that&#13;
the whole Philippine tariff situ ition is&#13;
upset. It was decided t h a t ^ o o d s eoming&#13;
into this country after the ratitl'&#13;
cation of the Paris treaty and before&#13;
the ennctment of the Foraker bill were&#13;
entitled to be admitted free. In the&#13;
ease of Porto Rico the duties received&#13;
under the Fomher act will bo kept.&#13;
The Dingley duties collected previously&#13;
wili be refunded. In the case of th*&#13;
Philippines there has been no Foraker&#13;
act. Duties have been charged on&#13;
Filipino goods under the Dingley law&#13;
since the ratification of the Paris&#13;
treaty. The force of the present decision&#13;
would be that all duties collected&#13;
on goods coming from the Philippines&#13;
mus^t be refunded. This would&#13;
make a difference of millions of dollars&#13;
to shippers.&#13;
Under the authority of congress the&#13;
President has the power to institute a&#13;
new Philippine tariff. Under this authority&#13;
he might by executive order&#13;
institute a tariff similar in effect to the&#13;
Foraker act and thus stop the Philippine&#13;
goods from coming into thiseonutry&#13;
free. At this point the question&#13;
would arise as to whether the congress&#13;
could delegate its constitutional&#13;
authority to the executive or an officer&#13;
of the executive. If the congress cannot&#13;
empower, and did not empower,&#13;
the President to issue such an order&#13;
for a Philippine tariff then it will become&#13;
necessary for congress to be&#13;
cailed into extra session to pass such&#13;
a 1 i\v. If the President cannot make&#13;
the order, congress must be called or&#13;
the aroods will continue to come in&#13;
dury free.&#13;
Stabbing Affray at Monroe.&#13;
A stabuing affray occurred at Monroe&#13;
on the afternoon of the 30th that&#13;
mny result in murder. Win. Stokes,&#13;
colored, stabbed William Rudert, a&#13;
butcher,' with a puttv knife du ing an&#13;
altercation in Jtcob nermann's saloon,&#13;
on Monroe street. The men had been&#13;
drinking heavily all day and nt the&#13;
time of the trouble both were intoxicated&#13;
and quarrelsome. The knife entered&#13;
between the two lower ribs on&#13;
the left side and went through the&#13;
lung and into the spleen. Stokes was&#13;
immediately arrested. In the meantime&#13;
a crowd had collected at the police&#13;
station with the determination to&#13;
break into Stokes* cell und take him&#13;
out and hang him to a tree in the park.&#13;
While tbe crowd* was raving outside&#13;
the officers took Stokes out of the back&#13;
door of the station house and down the&#13;
alley to the county jail, where he is&#13;
now confine I awaiting the result of&#13;
Rudert's injuries&#13;
l»rotty fJlrl Vlnltr-ft Saloon* on %ar*lay.&#13;
Miss;Addie Uerry, the l(&gt;year-old&#13;
daughter of Frank Rerry, of CarlyJe.&#13;
111., has inaugurated a sort of Came&#13;
Nation erusude ;ig;&gt;inst the saloons in&#13;
that city. On the 26th she created&#13;
consternation among the drink dispensers,&#13;
visiting every place where intoxicating&#13;
beverages are sold. The&#13;
saloons are not kept wide open on&#13;
Sunday, but a person can obtain entrance&#13;
via side or rear doors. Miss&#13;
Iterry has assumed the responsibility&#13;
of putting a stop to this practice. She&#13;
went into the interior of saloons, pencil&#13;
and tablet in hand, and leisurely v J&#13;
jotted down the nnmes of those w h o " * *&#13;
were in the room at the time.&#13;
Didn't Want to Kill thn Kalier.&#13;
A newsp per published in Verrnn,&#13;
Italy, reports the attempted suicitfo of&#13;
a youth'ul blacksmith named Pietrucci,&#13;
who has confessed that he belonged&#13;
to a society of anarchists&#13;
and was chosen by lot to kill the Emperor&#13;
of Germany. He preferred snicide&#13;
to making the, a t t e m p t In his&#13;
confession he also disclosed the names&#13;
of certain of his corarndes who bad&#13;
been selected to kill Queen Tlelena, of&#13;
Italy.President Loubet, of France, and&#13;
the Czar, of Russia.&#13;
The office of the Wenona Coal Co,,&#13;
near the month of tho Kawkawlin river,&#13;
WAS burglarized on the night of the&#13;
27th. The roobers got 925 in cash and&#13;
$27 worth of postage stamps.&#13;
The project of forming now local&#13;
military companies is being actively&#13;
agitated at Ionia and Luctington, which&#13;
cities are now not represented in the&#13;
state national gu&gt;rd. There is also&#13;
considerable t«lk at Escanaba along&#13;
tho sanoa line.&#13;
Pnsndftd to Death by Robber*&#13;
Christian S t a h l . a farmer living near&#13;
Navarre, O., was brutally murdered by&#13;
two masked burglars on the night of&#13;
the 26th. The men broke into the&#13;
house and demanded Stahl's money.&#13;
On being refused, they bound him and&#13;
the other members of tho family wfth&#13;
ropes, and after beating Stahl until ho&#13;
was unconscious tho men left the&#13;
house. Stahl's sister managed to frse&#13;
herself and gave the alarm. Stabl died&#13;
after be^ng freed from bis bond*.&#13;
N&#13;
TALJiA(iE*S 8KRM0N.&#13;
r%*&#13;
EWOOURAOEMINT FOR THE DISCOURAGED.&#13;
THE SUBJECT.&#13;
Wrom Vkm T r x t , M a t t h e w X X V j 1 5 — " T o&#13;
Attottoar O a a " - ~ T h a D u t y a n d t » a J o y&#13;
C a r U t t a a 1« t o Garry G o o d&#13;
• 3 h — — T a U u t * f l*«r»OMloa*&#13;
&lt;CAprrtjrht WOl, b y Louis K l o p s e h , N . Y.)&#13;
Washington, June 2,—Thia is a discourse&#13;
by Dr. TaJmage for those given&#13;
to depreciate themselves and who have&#13;
an idea that their best attempts amount&#13;
to little or nothing. Text, Matthew&#13;
xxs% 15; T o another one."&#13;
fiipei tret from this parable of the&#13;
talents the word "usury." It ought to&#13;
have been translated "interest" "Usury"&#13;
is finding a man in a tight place&#13;
and compelling him to pay an unreasonable&#13;
sum to get o u t "Interest" is&#13;
a righteous payment for the use of&#13;
money. When the capitalist of this&#13;
parable went off from home, he gave&#13;
&gt; to his stewards certain sums of money,&#13;
wtihlmr t o ^rave^them Tromably"Jn=&#13;
vested. Change also your idea as to&#13;
the value of one talent» You remember&#13;
the capitalist gave to one of his&#13;
men for business purposes five talents,&#13;
to another two, to another one. What&#13;
a small amount to this last, you think,&#13;
and tow could he be expected to do&#13;
anything with only one talent? I have&#13;
to ten you that one talent was about&#13;
17,200, so that when my text says, "To&#13;
another one," it implies that those&#13;
who have the least have much.&#13;
W a « t l n « t h s T a l e n t - .&#13;
We bother ourselves a great deal&#13;
about those who are highly gifted or&#13;
h&amp;ve large financial resource or exalted&#13;
official position or wide reaching opportunity.&#13;
We are anxious that their&#13;
wealth, their eloquence, their wit, be&#13;
employed on the right side. Ont, of&#13;
them makes a mistake, and we say,&#13;
"What a n awful disaster." When one&#13;
a€ them devotes all his great ability&#13;
to useful purposes, we celebrate it; we&#13;
enlarge upon it; we speak of it as&#13;
something for gratitude to God. Mecn-&#13;
" while ve~gTve no time at all-to-conslder&#13;
what people are doing with their&#13;
one talent, not realizing that ten people&#13;
of one ^alent each are quite as important&#13;
as one man with ten talents.&#13;
In the one case the advantage or opportunity&#13;
is concentrated in a single&#13;
personality, while in another it is divided&#13;
among ten individuals. Now&#13;
what we want to do in this sermon is&#13;
to waken people of only one talent to&#13;
appreciation of their duty. Only a few&#13;
people have Ave talents or ten talents,&#13;
while millions have one. My short&#13;
text Is like a galvanic shock. "To another&#13;
one."&#13;
Ctirrr G«wx1 Che^r.&#13;
Is ft a cheerful look? Carry that&#13;
look wherever you go. It must come&#13;
_frora a cheerful heart. It is not that&#13;
inane smile which we sometimes see&#13;
which is an irritation. In other words,&#13;
ft must be a light within us so bright&#13;
that It illumines eye, cheek, nostril&#13;
and month. Let ten men who are accustomed&#13;
to walking a certain street&#13;
every day resolve upon a cheerful&#13;
countenance as a result of a cheerful&#13;
heart, and the influence of such a facial&#13;
fcrradiatlon would be felt not only&#13;
in that street, but throughout the&#13;
town. Cheerfulness io catching. But&#13;
a cheerful look IB exceptional. Examine&#13;
the first twenty faces that you meet&#13;
going through Pennsylvania avenue or&#13;
Chestnut street or Broadway or State&#13;
street or La Salle street or Euclid avenue,&#13;
and nineteen out of the twenty&#13;
faces have either an anxious look or&#13;
a severe look or a depressing look or&#13;
an avaricious look or a sneering look&#13;
or a vacant look. Here .Is a missionary&#13;
work for those \vh« have trouble.&#13;
Arm yourself with gospel comfort.&#13;
Let the God who comforted Mary and&#13;
Martha at the loss of their brother, the&#13;
God who soothed Abraham at the loss&#13;
of Sarnti and the God of David, who&#13;
consoled his bereft spirit at the loss&#13;
of his hoy by saying, "I shall go to&#13;
him;" the God who filled S t John&#13;
with doxology when an exile on barren&#13;
Palmos and the God who has given&#13;
happiness to thousands of the bankrupted&#13;
and persecuted, filling thorn&#13;
with heavenly riches which were more&#13;
than the earthly advantages that arc&#13;
wiped out—let that God Jielp. .them.&#13;
IT he tikes fall possession of your nature,&#13;
then you will go down the street&#13;
a benediction to all who see you, and&#13;
those who are In the tough places ot&#13;
life and are run upon and belied and&#13;
had their homes destroyed will say:&#13;
•'If that man can be happy, I can be&#13;
happy. He has been through troubles&#13;
as b!g as mine, and be goes down the&#13;
street with a face In every lineament&#13;
of which there are joy and peace and&#13;
heaven. What am I groaning about?&#13;
From tho same place thot man got his&#13;
cheerfulness I can get mine. 'Why art&#13;
thou cast down, 0 my soul, and why&#13;
art thou disquieted within me?&#13;
K » w R a c e of M l n U t e r s .&#13;
More people go new to church than&#13;
ever rn^the world's history, and tho&#13;
reason is in all our denominations&#13;
_lhere Is a new race &lt;.f ministers stepping&#13;
Into the pulpits which are not the&#13;
apostles* of humdrum. Sure enough,&#13;
we want in tho Lord's army the heavy&#13;
artillery, but we want also more men&#13;
who, like Burns, a farmer at Gettysburg,&#13;
took a musket and went out on&#13;
bis own account to do a little shooting&#13;
different from the other soldiers. The&#13;
church of God is dying of the proprieties.&#13;
People who in every other kind&#13;
of audience show their emotions in&#13;
their countenances in religious assemblies&#13;
while we are discussing coming&#13;
release and the joys of heaven look&#13;
as doleful as though they were attending&#13;
their own funeral. My friends, If&#13;
you have the one talent of wit or humor&#13;
are you using ft merely to make&#13;
a few people laugh winter nights&#13;
around the stove in the corner grocery?&#13;
Has it never occurred to you&#13;
that you have a mission to execute&#13;
with that bright faculty? Do you employ&#13;
it only in Idle conundrum or low&#13;
farce or harlequinade or humiliating&#13;
banter? Quit that and swing that&#13;
flashing scimiter which God has put in&#13;
your hand for the slaying of sin and&#13;
the triumph of righteousness. Or is&#13;
your talent an opportunity to set a&#13;
good example? One person doing&#13;
right under adverse circumstances will&#13;
accomplish more than many treatises&#13;
ahouT what Is right The census has&#13;
never been taken of lovely old folks.&#13;
Most of us, if we have not such a one&#13;
in our own. house now, have in our&#13;
memory such a saint. We went to&#13;
those old people with all our troubles.&#13;
They were perpetual evangelists, by&#13;
their soothing words, by their hopefulness&#13;
of spirit, and inexpressible help.&#13;
I cannot see how heaven could make&#13;
them any lovelier than they are or&#13;
were. But there are exceptions. There&#13;
is a daughter in that family whose&#13;
father is impatient and the mother&#13;
querulous. The passage of many years&#13;
does not always improve the disposition,&#13;
and there are a great many disagreeable&#13;
old folks. Some of them&#13;
forget that they were ever young&#13;
themselves, and they become untidy in&#13;
their habits and wonder how, when&#13;
their'asthma or rheumatism is so bad,&#13;
other people can laugh or sing and go&#13;
on as they do. The daughter in that&#13;
family bears all of the peevishness and&#13;
unreasonable behavior of senility&#13;
without answering back or making&#13;
any kind --of- complaints If you should,&#13;
ask her what her Jive talents are or&#13;
her one talent ia, she would answar&#13;
that she has nq talent at all. Greatly&#13;
mistaken is she. Her one talent is to&#13;
forbear and treat the childishness of tho&#13;
old as well as she treats the childishness&#13;
of the young. She is no musician,&#13;
and besides there may not be a piano&#13;
in the house. She cannot skillfully&#13;
swing a croquet mallet or golf stick.&#13;
Indeed, she seems shut up to see what&#13;
she can do with a ladle and a broom&#13;
and a brush and other household Implements.&#13;
She is the personification&#13;
of patience and her reward will be as&#13;
long as heaven. Indeed, much of her&#13;
reward may be given on earth. She is&#13;
in a rough college, from which she&#13;
may after a while graduate into&#13;
brightest domesticity. She is a heroine,&#13;
though at present she may receive&#13;
nothing but scolding and depreciation.&#13;
Her one talent of patience under trial&#13;
will do more good than many morocco&#13;
covered sermons on patience preached&#13;
today from the tasseled cushion of the&#13;
pulpit "To another one."&#13;
T h * T a l e n t of H o n e s t y .&#13;
There is a man in business life&#13;
whoee one talent is honesty. He has&#13;
not the genius or the force to organize&#13;
a company or plan what is called a&#13;
"corner in wheat" or "a corner in&#13;
stocks*' or "a corner" in anything. He&#13;
goes to business at a reasonable hour&#13;
and returns when it is time to lock up.&#13;
He never gave a check for $20,000 in&#13;
all his life, but ho is known on the&#13;
street and in the church and in many&#13;
honorable circles as an honest man.&#13;
His word is as good as his bond. He&#13;
has for thirty years been referred to&#13;
as a clean, upright, industrious, consistent&#13;
Christian man. Ask him how&#13;
many talents he has and he will not&#13;
claim even one. He cannot make a&#13;
speech, he cannot buy a market, he&#13;
cannot afford an outshining equipage,&#13;
but what an example he is to the&#13;
young, what an honor to his household,&#13;
what a pillar to the church of&#13;
God, what a specimen of truth and integrity&#13;
and rJl roundness of character!&#13;
Is there any comparison in usefulness&#13;
between that man with the one talent&#13;
of honesty and the (lashing operators&#13;
of the money market, who startle the&#13;
world first with a "boom" and then&#13;
with a "slump?" I tell you that the&#13;
one man with the one talent will live a&#13;
happier life and die a more peaceful&#13;
death and go to a better place than&#13;
his brilliant but reckless^ contemporary.&#13;
"To another one."&#13;
The chief work of the people with&#13;
many talents is to excite wonderment&#13;
and to startle and electrify the world.&#13;
What use is there in all that? No use&#13;
at all. I have not so much interest in&#13;
the one man out of a million as I have&#13;
in the million. Get the great masses&#13;
of the world right and it does not&#13;
make much difference about what the&#13;
exceptional people are doing. Have&#13;
all the people with the one talent enlisted&#13;
for God and righteousness, and&#13;
let all those with Ave or ten talents&#13;
migrate to the north star or the moon,&#13;
and this world would get on splendidly.&#13;
Tho hard working, industrious classes&#13;
of America are all right and would&#13;
give no trouble but it is the genius&#13;
who gives up work and on a big salar?&#13;
goes around to excite dissatisfaction&#13;
and embroilment, the genius who quits&#13;
work and steps on the stage or political&#13;
platform, eats beefsteak and quail&#13;
on toast and causes the common laborers,&#13;
compelled to idleness, to put their&#13;
hands into empty pockets and eat&#13;
gristle and gnaw bones. The world&#13;
would be mightily improved if It could&#13;
slough off about 6,000 geniuses, for&#13;
there are more than that on our plane&#13;
t Then the man or woman of one&#13;
talent would take possession of the&#13;
world and rule it in a common sense&#13;
and Christian way. There wonld be&#13;
less to amaze and startle, but more to&#13;
give equipoise to church and state and&#13;
world. "To another one."&#13;
T h « T a l e n t of Persuasion*&#13;
la your talent that of persuasion?&#13;
Make good use of it. We all have it&#13;
to some extent, yet none of us thinks&#13;
of it as a talent. But it is the&#13;
mightiest of talents: Do you know&#13;
that this one talent will fetch the&#13;
world back to God? Do you knew It is&#13;
the mightiest talent of the high heavens?&#13;
Do you know that it is the one&#13;
talent chiefly employed by all the angels&#13;
of God when they descend to our world&#13;
—the talent of pei'suasion? Do youreslize&#13;
that the rough lumber lifted into a&#13;
cross on the hill back of Jerusalem&#13;
was in persuasion as well as sacrifice?&#13;
That Is the only, absolutely the only,&#13;
persuasion that will ever induce the&#13;
human race to stop its march toward&#13;
the city of destruction and wheel&#13;
around and start for the city of light.&#13;
Now may the Lord this moment show&#13;
each one of us that to a greater or&#13;
less extent we have that one talent of&#13;
persuasion and impel us to the right&#13;
use of i t You say you cannot preach&#13;
a sermon, but cannot you persuade&#13;
someone to go and hear a sermon?&#13;
You say you cannot sing, but cannot&#13;
you persuade some one to go and hear&#13;
the choir chant on Christmas or Easter&#13;
morning? Send a bunch of flowers&#13;
to that invalid in the hospital, with a&#13;
message about the land where the inhabitants&#13;
never say "I am sick." There,&#13;
is a child of the street. Invite him into&#13;
the mission school. -There is a man&#13;
who has lost his fortune in speculation.&#13;
Instead of jeering at his fall go and&#13;
tell him of riches that never take&#13;
"wlhgiTand fly away. Buckie on that&#13;
one talent of persuasion, O man, O woman,&#13;
and you will do a work that&#13;
heaven will celebrate 10,000 years.&#13;
T h e T ' a a l Bovtoir-&#13;
After the resurrection day and all&#13;
heaven is made up, resurrected bodies&#13;
joined to ransomed souls, and the gates&#13;
which were so long open are shut there&#13;
may be some day when all the redeemed&#13;
may pass in review before the great&#13;
white throne. If so, I think the hcst3&#13;
passing before the King will move in&#13;
different divisions. With the first division&#13;
will pass the mighty ones of earth&#13;
who were as good and useful as they&#13;
were great. In this division will pass&#13;
before the throne all the Martin Luthers,&#13;
the John Knoxes, the Wesleys,&#13;
the Richard Cecils, the Miltons, the&#13;
Chrysostoms, the Herschells, the Lenoxes,&#13;
the George Peabodys, the Abbot&#13;
Lawrences, and all the consecrated&#13;
Christian men and women who were&#13;
great in literature, in law, in medicine,&#13;
in philosophy, in commerce. Their&#13;
genius never spoiled them. They were&#13;
as humble as they were gifted or opulent&#13;
They were great on earth and now&#13;
they are great in heaven. Their surpassing&#13;
and magnificent talents were&#13;
all used for the world's betterment. As&#13;
they pass in review before the King onthe&#13;
great white throne to higher and&#13;
higher rewards, it makes me think of&#13;
the parable of the talents, "To another&#13;
ten." I stand and watch the other divisions&#13;
as they go by, division after division,&#13;
until the largest of all the divisions&#13;
comes in sight It is a hundred&#13;
to one, a thousand to one. ten thousand&#13;
to one, larger than the other divisions.&#13;
It is made up of men who never did&#13;
anything but support their families&#13;
and give whatever of their limited&#13;
means they could spare for the relief&#13;
of poverty and sickness and the salvation&#13;
of the world, mothers who took&#13;
good care of children by example and&#13;
precept, starting them /on the road to&#13;
heaven, millions of Sabbath school&#13;
teachers who sacrificed an afternoon's&#13;
siesta for the listening class of young&#13;
immortals, women who declined the&#13;
making of homes for themselv3s that&#13;
they might take care of father and&#13;
mother in the weaknesses of old age,&#13;
ministers of the gospel who on niggardly&#13;
stipend preached in the backwoods&#13;
meeting houses, souls who fojr_&#13;
long years did nothing but suffer, yet&#13;
suffered with so much cheerful patience&#13;
that it became a helpful le?son&#13;
to all who heard of it; those who served&#13;
God faithfully all their lives and&#13;
whoee name never but once appeared&#13;
in print and that time in three lines of&#13;
the death column which some survivor&#13;
paid for, sailors who perished in the&#13;
storm while trying to get the life line&#13;
out to the drowning, persecuted and&#13;
tried sou!s who endured without complaint&#13;
malignity and abuse, those who&#13;
had only ordinary equipment for body&#13;
and ordinary endowment of intellect.&#13;
yet devoted all they had to holy purposes&#13;
and spiritual achievement. As&#13;
I see this, the largest of all the divisions,&#13;
from all lands and from ~aM&#13;
ages, pars In review before the King&#13;
on the great white throne I am reminded&#13;
of the wonderful parable of&#13;
the talents and moro especially of my&#13;
text, ~To another ope."&#13;
earned te U * gtetep,&#13;
Fred Eociwlle, a Negro, aged SS,&#13;
who at noon on the Z8tb, criminally&#13;
assaulted and then murdered Mrs.&#13;
Bene Taggart, a well-known and respectable&#13;
white woman, of Bartow,&#13;
Fla,, was burned to the stake in that&#13;
city on the night of the 20th. The assault&#13;
and murder was one of the boldest&#13;
and coldest-blooded 'crimes ever&#13;
committed in Florida. On the day in&#13;
question, Mrs. Taggart went fi king in&#13;
a •mall boat that she kept at the city&#13;
bridge over Placo creek. This is in&#13;
fall view of the public thoroughfare.&#13;
A few minute* before noon, desiring&#13;
to return home, she rowed her boat to&#13;
the bridge and made it fast She&#13;
started' home and had proceeded only a&#13;
few steps In the swamp toward the&#13;
open prairie and thence to the street,&#13;
when she was approached by Eocbelle,&#13;
who had been hiding in the swamp.&#13;
He seiz'd her and she broke loose and&#13;
screaming ran from the swamp into&#13;
the prairie, where he overtook her.&#13;
After the assault, while she was prostrate,&#13;
he held her with his han&lt;is and&#13;
knees and taking his knife from hi&#13;
pocket, cut her throat from ear to ear,&#13;
causing instant death. He then took&#13;
the bleeding form in his arms and carried&#13;
it back to the Bwamp, threw it&#13;
down, and escaped into the interior of&#13;
the swamp. After his arrest the prisoner&#13;
was taken from the jail to the&#13;
scene of the crime, chained to the stake&#13;
and saturated his clothes and some&#13;
wood with kerosene oil and a match&#13;
applied. Fifteen minutes later nothing&#13;
remained of the body but the charred&#13;
bones.&#13;
aar.&#13;
"COUMUN1TV OF INTEREST/*'&#13;
S o m a of t h e Kffaate of (fc» Groat BaMr&#13;
o a d C h a n g e * Wblefa A r o O s — w i n g .&#13;
"Community of Interest" seems to be&#13;
the watchword among the great rail*&#13;
road corporations, nowadays, and certain&#13;
persons who are apt to decide&#13;
upon topics of general interest, especially&#13;
new ones, without thinking upoa&#13;
the facts, have supposed that this&#13;
meant an arrangement of interest only&#13;
to the railway companies participating&#13;
in the deals, traffic arrangements,&#13;
leases, etc., which show in the stoek&#13;
transactions and engage the thought&#13;
and ability of traffic and passenger&#13;
agents. It is undoubtedly the financial'&#13;
interest of the corporations which&#13;
moves their officers to enter into contracts,&#13;
but the consideration of this&#13;
topic necessarily includes that of the&#13;
convenience, comfort and attractions&#13;
which they can offer to their patrons,&#13;
If competition be less intense, and rate&#13;
wars be relegated to the dead past,&#13;
it means that more attention will be&#13;
paid to those inducements which will&#13;
bring business to up-to-date lines of&#13;
transportation.&#13;
An instance of the early profit of the&#13;
public is most worthy of mention. Un*&#13;
der the plan uf arrangements fcuowa-&#13;
Cracks In t h e E a r t h .&#13;
The strange sliding movement of&#13;
the city of Butte, Mont, which has&#13;
been noticeable at intervals for several&#13;
years, has ag:«in manifested itself by&#13;
five large eracks in the earth at different&#13;
sections of the city i o the western&#13;
part of the city a crack 12 inches&#13;
wide and of considerable length and&#13;
depth has appeared. Three of the&#13;
openings occur on the west side of the&#13;
town and two on ihe east side. There&#13;
is no caving but a distinct parting of&#13;
the earth and the granite walls can&#13;
easily be seen in them. The gas and&#13;
water companies have much trouble&#13;
from the stransre movement, which&#13;
frequently breaks their underground&#13;
pipes.&#13;
Onr D e a l i n g * W i t h France.&#13;
I n a f u r t h e r s e r i e s of e x t r a c t s f r o m&#13;
t h e f o r t h c o m i n g v o l u m e t w o of c o m -&#13;
m e r c i a l r e l a t i o n s d e a ; in % w i t h U n i t e d&#13;
S t a t e s ' t r a d e i n F r a n c o , C o n s u l l,lritt&#13;
a i n . o f N a n t e s , n o t e s t h e d e v e l o p m e n t&#13;
o f t h e t r i d e in A m e r i c a n m a c h i n e r y i n&#13;
w e s t e r n F r a n c e . D u r i " £ t h e p a s t&#13;
s e a s o n , h e s a y s , a b o u t 810 r e a p e r s ,&#13;
m o w e r s a n d h o r s e h a y r a k e s a r r i v e d a t&#13;
t h a t p o r t . A m e r i c a n m o w e r s g i v e&#13;
p o o d s a t i s f a c t i o n a n i l t h e i n c r e a s e d&#13;
p r i c e s a s k e d f o r f a r m l a b o r w i l l s t i m u -&#13;
l a t e t h e d e m a n d f o r s u c h m a c h i n e r y i n&#13;
t h e f u t u r e . T h e A m e r i c a n m o w e r s&#13;
w e r e a c o m m o n s i g h t i n t h e h a y fields&#13;
l a s t s u m m e r .&#13;
C H I N A W A R N E W S .&#13;
as "Community of Interest" very close&#13;
relations have been established by the&#13;
MiESOuri Pacific System with the Denver&#13;
and Rio Grande railway, the Rio&#13;
Grande Western Railway and the&#13;
Southern Pacific Railway and other&#13;
lines diverging from junction points.&#13;
So that now, for the first time in the&#13;
railway history of the country, a passenger&#13;
may take train at S t Louis and&#13;
remain therein until he has reached&#13;
San Francisco. The route is one of the&#13;
most popular because of its great&#13;
scenic beauty, and because it gives the&#13;
traveler the benefit of variety of altitude&#13;
and climate, taking him across&#13;
the sml'ing plains of Kansas into the&#13;
wonderful canyons of Colorado, and&#13;
through her most noted mining localities,&#13;
and by the great inland salt sea.&#13;
where a great religious organization&#13;
has huilded a city of magnificence i s&#13;
an oasis of the desert, and whose po*-&#13;
litical power has been maintained in&#13;
spite of the objections of the concentrated&#13;
power of the United States and&#13;
in the face of all the obstacles which&#13;
have ever, from the dawn of Christianity,&#13;
contended against Its establishment&#13;
by any sect or creed.&#13;
These places are of great interest to&#13;
the traveler of today, and since they&#13;
may be visited with such ease in the&#13;
magnificent trains of thi3 monster system&#13;
of railway, the tide of tourist traffic&#13;
is being turned to them by natural&#13;
selection. The Missouri Pacific and&#13;
the Rio Grande reach all polnt3 ia&#13;
Colorado, Utah and the West, nnd thus&#13;
"Community of Interest" among the&#13;
railroads already benefits the public in&#13;
such an everyday way as to convince&#13;
the thoughtless person that he musl&#13;
revise his hasty judgment&#13;
A G A T I Z E D W O O D .&#13;
f a n - A m e r i c a *&#13;
A dispatch received at the war department&#13;
from Gen. Chaffee at Taktt,&#13;
says that the transport* Sumner and&#13;
Lennox sailed on the 37th and that all&#13;
of the troops that are to leave China&#13;
are off for Manila.&#13;
BASE BALL.&#13;
Below we publish the standing of&#13;
the American and National league clubs&#13;
up to and including the games played&#13;
on Sunday, June 3:&#13;
AMERICAN LEAGUE.&#13;
Won. L o v , Perc*..&#13;
Chicago. 2J&#13;
Washiugton 18&#13;
Detroit - 20&#13;
Baltimore 14&#13;
Boston 14&#13;
Philadelphia is&#13;
M i l w a u k e e— 12'&#13;
Cleveland 8&#13;
11&#13;
11&#13;
14&#13;
12&#13;
12&#13;
17&#13;
21&#13;
.593&#13;
.5*8&#13;
. 5 «&#13;
.533&#13;
.344&#13;
NATIONAL LSAGCS.&#13;
W o *&#13;
New York 16&#13;
Philadelphia 1*&#13;
Cincinnati ,. 17&#13;
Pittsburg 17&#13;
St. Louis , 15&#13;
Brooklyn. XC~. 14&#13;
Boston V . 11&#13;
Chicago • 12&#13;
Los*~&#13;
0&#13;
13&#13;
13&#13;
1»&#13;
17&#13;
13&#13;
IX&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
4 S) b b)&#13;
4 «J&#13;
4 10&#13;
I.TVK STOCK.&#13;
- » T T Tor*— Cattle Shofli LaT\b&lt;&#13;
Besmrado*....?:* 0016 13 io 0.) ** H&gt;&#13;
Lower »?T*uriss..tt 4Jj&gt;» o)&#13;
Chlo*c»—&#13;
Best prades. S O "'C 0"i&#13;
t o w e r « , T s 3 o s ..4 40 i a 4 &gt;&#13;
Detroit—&#13;
Best srrados..v 3 8T&gt;.3 11 4 4)&#13;
Lower crudes.'. 2 7ij&gt;J /» 3 bO&#13;
B n f f a l o -&#13;
Best jrrade*..... 4 9 ^ 5 2» 4 7 &gt;&#13;
Lower grades..3 63^4 ft) Z ii)&#13;
Cincinnati—&#13;
Best grades. . . . . 5 l)~Ki 7i 4 2S&#13;
Lower tirades-.2 b)j&gt;{ t&gt;&gt; 8 9J&#13;
M t u b n n r - -&#13;
Best erodes..... * &gt;V&gt; v% 8*&gt; 4 »&#13;
Lower grades..3 bj,j&amp; l ) 4 OJ&#13;
ft 65&#13;
4 1»&#13;
b 2"»&#13;
4 8»&#13;
5 80&#13;
6 65&#13;
6 51&#13;
4 &amp;J&#13;
5sn&#13;
5 10&#13;
v n l q v * S p e c i m e n * a t t h e&#13;
E x p o s i t i o n .&#13;
A most beautiful, Interesting an*&#13;
decidedly unique exhibit has just been&#13;
set up in the Mines Building of tho&#13;
Pan-American Exposition. It is that&#13;
of the agatized wood specimens from&#13;
Chalcedony Park, Apache county, Arizona,&#13;
in charge of Mr. El F. Batten,&#13;
who represents the Drake Company&#13;
of SL Paul, Minn. These specimens&#13;
consist of cross sections of trees polished&#13;
to a high degree of brilliancy,&#13;
and showing most beautiful colors.&#13;
These sections of trees are generally&#13;
found projecting from volcanic&#13;
ash and lava, which is covered with&#13;
sandstone to the depth of twenty io&#13;
thirty feet, and lie exposed in gulches&#13;
and basins where water has worn&#13;
away the sandstone. Many scientific&#13;
men, whose study of geology has been&#13;
^ 7 all that years of toil and observation&#13;
i could embrace, have during the p i s '&#13;
PeT p^ ( few years visited this wonder of won-&#13;
.wo ders, and all seem to be lost scientif-&#13;
-*81 ically; their theories are like the pieces&#13;
'.531 ot silicified wood—no two alike. U&#13;
.*4«9 Is. however, generally conceded that&#13;
'** this was a tropical wood, transformed&#13;
in a prehistoric era from a living,&#13;
growing forest to the present recumbent&#13;
sections of interblended agate,&#13;
jasper, jade, calcide, amethyst, etc Although&#13;
silicified wood is found in many&#13;
localities, never before was seen audi&#13;
variety of coloring, with sound heart*&#13;
of large trees, and sound bark- Whilthe&#13;
quantity of material is great, th*&#13;
sound sections are very limited, and&#13;
after years of lahor in selection of material&#13;
fit for working, and the erection&#13;
of costly machinery for cutting and&#13;
polishing, It is and must ever remain&#13;
a rare and costly article, sineo in hardness&#13;
it is only three degrees from a&#13;
diamond. Steel will not scratch it nor&#13;
can it be stained by ink.&#13;
.423&#13;
.3oJ&#13;
Ho?5».&#13;
96 2.-»&#13;
&amp; U&gt;&#13;
C 00&#13;
&amp;a*&#13;
5 SO&#13;
5 63&#13;
6 10&#13;
5 8J&#13;
5 83&#13;
6 3 J&#13;
5 »&#13;
&amp;S3&#13;
OR A IN. KTC.&#13;
Srvt York&#13;
•Detroit&#13;
T o l e d o&#13;
Cincinnati&#13;
IMtUborj&#13;
llttlfrlO&#13;
Wheat&#13;
No. 2 re \&#13;
M^8IH&#13;
^4 / ? 4 \&#13;
75 773¾&#13;
7 4 * 7 4 \&#13;
7»(67V-t&#13;
77^77¾&#13;
73376¾&#13;
Corn&#13;
No, 2 nix&#13;
4914V&#13;
44 an&#13;
42 142 &lt;&#13;
44 $44 '4&#13;
44 344&#13;
U 144½&#13;
43 X S i&#13;
Oat*&#13;
No. 2 watt*&#13;
S31SS&#13;
£»®2S*&#13;
SI $81¼&#13;
» 3 2 9&#13;
snai&#13;
33 733S&#13;
Even the cowardly engineer whistle*&#13;
at danger.&#13;
A soft answer soxneti mea turns away,&#13;
talk.&#13;
•Detroit—Hav, No. t Tiraotlv. $12 73 per too.&#13;
Potato©*, h*c par bu. Live Poultrv, aprln?&#13;
encken*, 10j per ft; fowls, 9 &lt; 3 : turkcrt, 9 J ;&#13;
duckH, 103. ESRS, s t n o U / fres&gt;. ISJ pjr d o i i a .&#13;
Butter, best dairy, 14£j&gt;or ft; creamery, 18a&#13;
Try O m l n - O t T r y Ornta-O!&#13;
ARk vour Grooer today to »bow you a pockv&#13;
o or OKAIN-O, the new food drink that takes&#13;
t«. * place of coffee. The children may drink ft&#13;
wtt.-out Injury as well a s the adult. All who&#13;
trv U like it. GRAIN-O has that rtoh aeal&#13;
brown of Mocha or Java, but it to madt Jrota&#13;
pare grain*, and t o e most delloote stomach re*&#13;
w i v e s U without distress. M the prtoe of ooffee.&#13;
1.V; and S3 ct*. per pocka«a Sold by all&#13;
tfrocen*.&#13;
w V'-.. v1';"' • „ - . • . . - •&#13;
: ; . ^ &gt; ' v '''•^^•'•s v'J. &gt; •• .;?.*&lt;"• -v. l - . , - ^ • •••• ••-, ;:Vv*v - ^&#13;
..•» . • • • •&#13;
* . • * - &lt; # • _ *&#13;
P:&#13;
MW,&#13;
&gt;v&#13;
1¾ * ,fc&#13;
I&#13;
*&#13;
it.&#13;
4'&#13;
f&#13;
rV&#13;
&amp;*.?•&#13;
LS-,-&#13;
M*.&#13;
rv«:&#13;
PUUNFIELO.&#13;
The Farmers would like t o see&#13;
warmer weather.&#13;
Tim Isham visited Leslie friends&#13;
Saturday and Sunday,&#13;
What little wheat came through&#13;
the winter is being rapidly destroyed&#13;
by insects.&#13;
Horace Mapes and wife of&#13;
Stockbridge visited at E. J. Gardners&#13;
last Saturday.&#13;
A. G. Miller and wife were in&#13;
town Wednesday placing flags on&#13;
the soldiers graves.&#13;
E. T. Bush has the contract for&#13;
extending the Bural telephone&#13;
line in this locality.&#13;
Frank Voogts and family are&#13;
visiting their many relatives and&#13;
friends in -this vicinity.&#13;
A union Missonary meeting&#13;
will be held at Mrs. S. T. Watson's&#13;
Thursday afternoon.&#13;
E. T. Bush is getting out the&#13;
finishing lumber for Henry Plumm&#13;
era new house in Marion.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Younglove of Marion&#13;
and Mrs. S. L. Case of Detroit&#13;
visited Mrs. L. C. Gardner last&#13;
Wednesday and Thursday.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
13. F. Andrews was in Linden&#13;
on business last Friday.&#13;
The Ladies' Aid will meet with&#13;
Mrs. Frank Johnson June 12.&#13;
Emma Sanborn of Linden visited&#13;
relatives here the last of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Will Conine and wife of Oak&#13;
Grove visited her parents, Al.&#13;
White and wife over Sunday.&#13;
Wells Avery is in Highland for&#13;
medical treatment under the care&#13;
of Drs. St. John and West.&#13;
John Wolverton and wife were&#13;
called to Owosso last Friday to&#13;
attend the funeral of his uncle.&#13;
Mrs. Chester VanCamp had the&#13;
misfortune to run a nail into her&#13;
foot which is giving her considerable&#13;
trouble.&#13;
Owing to the cold weather&#13;
spring crops are coming slowt&#13;
wheat is a failure, but hay will be&#13;
the largest for several years.&#13;
Married, at the home of Henry&#13;
Slover, Wednesday May 29, by&#13;
Rev. Davis, Miss Effie Cole of&#13;
tliia place, and Fred Reed, of Sarinac.&#13;
Paul Burns and two daughters&#13;
went to Redford Saturday. The&#13;
daughters will remain for a few&#13;
weeks visit. Mr. Burns returned&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Wells White and wife of Whitmore&#13;
Lake, a:e spending a few&#13;
weeks with his parents. He has&#13;
been teaching the past two years&#13;
at Whitmore and will return for&#13;
another year.&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Vina Barton spent last week at&#13;
home.&#13;
Ed Crauna was in Putnam last&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Mabel Ives is visiting relatives&#13;
in towu this week.&#13;
Jean Pyper visited friends in&#13;
Chelsea Friday and Saturday,&#13;
Alex Pyper and wife visited relatives&#13;
in Webster over Sunday.&#13;
L. W. Allen and wife visited&#13;
relatives in Howell the past week.&#13;
A number from this place attended&#13;
church at Gregory Sunday&#13;
oiening.&#13;
Elinor Bird of Stockbridge visited&#13;
at Ryal Barnums the first of&#13;
the week,&#13;
Mrs. Watson Lane and daughter&#13;
Bessie were in Chelsea last&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Mesdames Frank Hopkins and&#13;
Will Marshall visited at North&#13;
lake Monday.&#13;
A number of farmers in this vicinity&#13;
are complaining of corn rotting&#13;
in the ground.&#13;
Erma Pyper and Vina Barton&#13;
were the guests of Alice Barton of&#13;
West Putnam Friday last&#13;
Thos. Criswell and wife of&#13;
Stockbridge visited her sister Mrs.&#13;
Fred Stowe the past week.&#13;
Geo. Read Jr. of Lyndon, purchased&#13;
the Spencer Noble farm in&#13;
Unadilla township last week.&#13;
Look out girls, Chas. Doody&#13;
was seen driving tjirough town&#13;
with a new carriage Saturday.&#13;
A. C. Watson is having a boathouse&#13;
put up for his gasoline&#13;
launch in Glenn's grove at North&#13;
lake.&#13;
The Unadilla farmers club will&#13;
meet at the home of Fred Marshall&#13;
and wife Saturday, June 15.&#13;
Program next week.&#13;
Children's day exercises will be&#13;
held in the Presbyterian church&#13;
Sunday, June 9. Rev. Milo C.&#13;
Powers will deliver the address.&#13;
The Gleaners of this place will&#13;
give an ice cream social at the&#13;
home of Chas. Hartsuff, on Friday&#13;
evening, June 7. Everybody in.&#13;
vited.&#13;
The ladies' aid society of the M.&#13;
E. church will hold a strawberry&#13;
and ice cream social in the basement&#13;
of the church, Wednesday&#13;
evening, June 12. A cordial invitation&#13;
to all.&#13;
Alice Slanker of Stanton is the&#13;
guest of A. C. Watson and wife&#13;
this week. Miss Slanker i3 on&#13;
her way home from Floaida where&#13;
she has been spending the past&#13;
year teaching.&#13;
WETTEYSVIUA&#13;
Fannie Teeple of Jackson spent&#13;
Sunday with her parents.&#13;
Ettie Shehan of Jackson spent&#13;
Sunday under the parental rool.&#13;
Ray. Tompkins of Whitmore&#13;
Lake called on friends here Sunday.&#13;
Jas. Nash and wife visited relatives&#13;
in Webberyille Saturday and&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mr. Austin of- Toledo visited&#13;
friends at Lakeland part of the&#13;
past week.&#13;
R. C. Reed and son Jay of Oceola&#13;
visited at J . W. Placeway's&#13;
last Wednesday.&#13;
Iva Placeway was obliged to&#13;
close her school in the Hause district&#13;
on account of scarlet fever.&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
Patrick Kennedy was in Howell&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Mike Murphy returned home&#13;
from Jackson Monday.&#13;
Thos. Cooper was home from&#13;
Stockbridge over Sunday.&#13;
Glenn Gardner and Lee Barton&#13;
were in Ann Arbor Saturday.&#13;
John Spears visited his sister,&#13;
Mts. Wm. Doyle the first of the&#13;
-week,—&#13;
Chas. Dyer of Fowlerville called&#13;
on friends heie the first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
May Brown of Hamburg is&#13;
spending a few weeks at Robert&#13;
Kelly's.&#13;
L. B. W h i t e a n d family visited&#13;
at John D. White's near Howell&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mesdames H. Gardner and D.&#13;
Monks visited friends in Pinckney&#13;
T hursday last.&#13;
Laura Doyle was the guest at&#13;
the home of Lawrence McClear of&#13;
J * b n Vanllorn and wife C. Wei- Gregory one day^last week.&#13;
U r and wife visited friends in Mrs, Frank Allen of Hamburg&#13;
H a r t U n d and Oceola the past'is spending a few days with her&#13;
g ^ k J parents, L. B. White and wife.&#13;
ANDERSON.&#13;
Wm. Ledwidge is the owner of&#13;
a new surrey.&#13;
Elva Hoff of Uowell visited her&#13;
parents here Sunday night.&#13;
Mrs. E. J. Durkee visited Mrs.&#13;
Nancy May in Lyndon Tuesday.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Phelps of Stockbridge&#13;
called on relatives here Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Seth Perry and Edith&#13;
Wood were, in Howell Wednesday.&#13;
Lester Williams and wife visited&#13;
friends in Anderson Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Josie Cranna visited relatives&#13;
in Anderson the first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Anna Black of Perry visited&#13;
her brother Geo. and family t h e&#13;
past week.&#13;
Mrs. Fred Merrill and son Alger&#13;
of Iosco visited friends here&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
Max Ledwidge, who has been&#13;
confined to the house for 13 weeks&#13;
was able to ride out Monday.&#13;
Nora and Dillivan Durkee were&#13;
guests of W. H. Placeway and&#13;
family Saturday night and Sunday.&#13;
Forest McCavetfc had the misfortune&#13;
to smash his foot in a bicycle&#13;
Sunday. Dr. C. L. Sigler&#13;
dressed the wound.&#13;
The farmers club meets at the&#13;
home of Miss Lucy Binchey Saturday,&#13;
p. m. June 8. Supper will&#13;
be served. The following program&#13;
has been arranged:&#13;
Recitation, Avbrey Gilchrist.&#13;
Solo, Nellie Gardner.&#13;
Recitation, Susi* Smith.&#13;
Recitation, Joseph Eisele.&#13;
Paper, Fred Sprout.&#13;
Disscuasion. \ ^&#13;
Solo, Villa Martin. - ^&#13;
Recitation, Clare Ledwidge.&#13;
Solo. I.. E. Wilson.&#13;
Recitntion, Ednu "Webb.&#13;
Music, -M. and A. Clinton.&#13;
GREGORY.&#13;
E. A. Kuhu was at the county&#13;
house Tuesday.^&#13;
T. P. McClear and wife were in&#13;
Williauiston Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Geo Arnold is spending a&#13;
few weeks in Deerfield.&#13;
School closes this week Friday&#13;
for the summer vacation.&#13;
John Moore has lumber drawn&#13;
on his place for n new barn.&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Burden attended decoration&#13;
services at Fowlerville.&#13;
L. R. Williams and wife visited&#13;
friends in Howell a few days last&#13;
week.&#13;
F. A. Daniels has erected a fine&#13;
monument to the memory of his&#13;
father.&#13;
E. A. Kuhn and C. N. Bullis&#13;
spent a few days fishing at Crooked&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Stanley Marsh of Ann Arbor&#13;
spent a day with his parents the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Several ladies from this place&#13;
spent decoration day fishing at&#13;
Sharpe's Lake.&#13;
The Ladies' Aid meet with Mrs.&#13;
W. H. Clark next Friday. Tea&#13;
will be served.&#13;
Miss S. A. McClear went to&#13;
Jackson the first of the week to&#13;
secure millinery goods.&#13;
JT-A. McClear and A. S. Brearly&#13;
are at Pleasant Lake this week&#13;
doing some carpenter work.&#13;
Maggie Stiles h a s returned&#13;
from Pleasant Lake where she has&#13;
been caring for a sick sister.&#13;
Mrs. Will Ledwidge and son&#13;
Max of Anderson visited ac Mrs.&#13;
E. T. McClear's last Monday.&#13;
Geo. Abbott and wife of Fowlerville&#13;
visited their niece Mrs. F .&#13;
A. Howlett Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
F. J, Yoegts, wife and daughter&#13;
o( Belvidere, 111. spent a few d a y s&#13;
the past week with his sister Mrs.&#13;
M. E. Kuhn.&#13;
' SOUTH MARION.&#13;
Panl Brogan supports a new&#13;
boggy. j&#13;
Bertha Dinkle visited Lulo Abbott&#13;
last Wednesday.&#13;
Lynn Gardner and wife visited&#13;
Geo. Younglove one day last week.&#13;
Mae Biogan spent Friday and&#13;
Satnrday with friends in Pinck-j&#13;
ney.&#13;
John Hayes of Jackson called&#13;
on friends in this vicinity last&#13;
week.&#13;
Eobt Russell occupied the pulpit&#13;
at Wright's chapel last Sunday&#13;
evening.&#13;
May Itsell closed a term of&#13;
school in the Lakin district last&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Carlie Hart spent last Tuesday&#13;
and Wednesday with her parents,&#13;
Darwin Carr and wife.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Bennett and John&#13;
Chambers and wife spent Suuday&#13;
with Will Bland and wife.&#13;
Sam'l Wilson closed a very successful&#13;
term of school in the&#13;
Y o u n g W e district last Friday.&#13;
H. M. Padley and wifoand Mrs.&#13;
X. J. Abbott spent last Thursday&#13;
afternoon with Horace Williston&#13;
and family.&#13;
Lulo and Cressa Abbott, Fred&#13;
Durkee of Anderson and Paul&#13;
Brogan visited Mae Brogan's&#13;
school last Thursday afternoon.&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Williston and Mrs.&#13;
Carl Root spent last week with&#13;
Horace Williston's people. Mrs.&#13;
Roo*t returned to Bay City Saturday.&#13;
Mrs. Williston expects to&#13;
spend the summer with her son.&#13;
She is 86 years old.&#13;
f.AST PUTNAM.&#13;
W. H. Placeway was in Howell&#13;
Friday last.&#13;
Dr. H. E. Brown of Stockbridge&#13;
was in this place Monday.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Brown was in Hamburg&#13;
Monday and Tuesday.&#13;
Claude Rolison of Brighton&#13;
spent Sunday with Guy Hall.&#13;
Dillivan Durkee and sister Nora&#13;
of Anderson spent Sunday at W.&#13;
H. Placeway's.&#13;
F. Cortnoy and wife of Webster&#13;
were guests of Mrs. Thomas&#13;
Eagan Sunday.&#13;
John Chambers J r . and wife&#13;
were guests of Will Bland and&#13;
wife in Marion Sunday.&#13;
Clare Markey and friend from&#13;
Ann Arbor were guests of Beit&#13;
Hicks the first of the w^ek.&#13;
Chas. Brown has been home&#13;
from Ann Arbor for a couple of&#13;
weeks on account of illness.&#13;
Frank Williams and wife of&#13;
Webster were guests in the home&#13;
of John Chambers last week.&#13;
Misses Bessie and Lucile Mc-&#13;
Quillau of Pettysville were guests&#13;
of relatives here over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Bert Hicks and son, Roy,&#13;
spent the last of last week and the&#13;
first of this with relatives in&#13;
Stockbridge.&#13;
The C. E. meetings are growing&#13;
both in interest hnd helpfulness;&#13;
a number from the North&#13;
Hamburg society were present at&#13;
the last meeting.&#13;
Cora Shehan who has been visiting&#13;
in Detroit for a conple—of^&#13;
weeks returned the first of the&#13;
week; she was accompanied home&#13;
by her nephew Clair Shehan.&#13;
STILL MORE LOCAL.&#13;
Do not forget that the commencement&#13;
exercises will be at the opera&#13;
houst) June 19. Reserved seats on sale&#13;
at Sifflers drug store, 10 cents. Regular&#13;
admission 10 cents.&#13;
Root. Russell will preach at Wrights&#13;
chapel in Marion, every Sunday until&#13;
conference, alternating morning and&#13;
evening, Sunday June 9 at 10:30 a. at&#13;
Juce 16 at 8 p. m. and so on.&#13;
Three mills on the dollar is the way&#13;
the assessment will be spread thie&#13;
vear. Tbis is a raise of one mill from&#13;
last y«&gt;ar. Wei), it costs money to&#13;
make improvment and we certainly&#13;
need them,&#13;
RESOLUTIONS.&#13;
Pinekncy Chapter No. 145, of the Order&#13;
of Eastern Star passed the following resolutions:&#13;
WHEREAS:—Another link haa been severed&#13;
from our fraternal chain and Divine&#13;
Providence has called from our midst our&#13;
sister* Martha A. Whitcorab, who was ever&#13;
faithful and consistent in her Chapter life,&#13;
ever ready to perform her allotted duties,&#13;
we feel tlfat her example ia one which we&#13;
would do welt to follow.&#13;
Of our fraternal dead we have only&#13;
words of love and tender remembrance.&#13;
She has passed to where, beyond the sorrows&#13;
and cares of this life, there is a peace&#13;
and rest. Therefore, be it&#13;
RESOLVED:—That the charter be draped&#13;
in mourning for thirty days, also that&#13;
these resolutions be inscribed on our records,&#13;
that a copy of them be published in&#13;
the village paper and that copies be sent&#13;
to her brother and sister.&#13;
NETTIE M. VAUOHN.&#13;
Committee, •{ C. E. RICHARDS.&#13;
W. MANN. (NETTI&#13;
C . E .&#13;
LUCY&#13;
A Ordinance Repealed.&#13;
Be it ordained by the common council&#13;
of the Village of Pinckney, that an ordinance&#13;
enacted June 1 1901 relative to&#13;
sidewalks be and is hereby repealed.&#13;
Dated this 3rd day of June A. D. 1901,&#13;
C. L. SIOLER, President.&#13;
E. R. BROWN, Clerk. '&#13;
Ordinance of March 2, 1896, Amended.&#13;
Be it ordained by the President and&#13;
Trustees of the Village of Pinckney:&#13;
SEC. I.—Whereas, it being manifest&#13;
that public convenience will be best subserved&#13;
by the Common Council of said village&#13;
of Pinckney assuming entire control&#13;
of the sidewalks therein:&#13;
THEREFORE, be it ordained that all sidewalks&#13;
heretofore built and now existing iu&#13;
said village of Pinckney; that^the same may&#13;
and shall hereafter be repaired, renewed or&#13;
reconstructed as may be deemed necessary&#13;
or expedient by the Common Council of said&#13;
village of Pinckney, and the cost and expense&#13;
thus concurred by the repairing or&#13;
reconstructing of said sidewalks shall be&#13;
paid out of the general fund as assessed&#13;
upon the assi$sment roll of said village of&#13;
Pinckney. except such walks as shall be&#13;
hereafter constructed or reconstructed of&#13;
cement, in which case the adjacent property&#13;
owner shall bear one-hslf of the expense&#13;
of such sidewalk the village of Pinckney&#13;
assuming the other half.&#13;
SEC. II.—The provisions of the foregoing&#13;
section shall not apply to any board&#13;
sidewalks that may hereafter be built within&#13;
said village upon ground where no artificial&#13;
sidewalk is in existence at this date,&#13;
but all board sidewalks that may hereafter&#13;
be construe ted upon such ground shall be&#13;
constructed at the expense of the adjacent&#13;
property owner, of such material and in&#13;
such manner as may be directed by tire&#13;
Common Council of said village of Pinckney&#13;
and when such sidewalks have been&#13;
so constructed and accepted by the Common&#13;
Council of village of Pinckney, said&#13;
sidewalk shall frum thenceforth and thereafter&#13;
be subject to the provisions of section&#13;
one of this act.&#13;
Accepted and adopted by the village of&#13;
Pinckney, June 3, A. D. 1901.&#13;
C. L. SIOLER. President.&#13;
E. R BROWN, Clerk.&#13;
Mrs. Leal Siller is in Marshal! attending&#13;
the state WCTU.&#13;
W. B. Darrow has the job ot lisrhtinpr&#13;
the street lamps the coming year.&#13;
Cba*. S. Hixon of Laporte Ind., was&#13;
in town this week in the inteiests of&#13;
the Mutual Lyceum Bnrean of that&#13;
place. This is the agent who made&#13;
the arrangements for last seasons lectures&#13;
and when sickness prevented the&#13;
committee from carry in cr ont the work&#13;
he kindly cancelled the contract. We&#13;
sincerely hope our citizens will take&#13;
bold of the matter again (bis year. f&#13;
Side Walk Ordinance.&#13;
The President and Trustees of the village&#13;
of Pinckney 'ordains:&#13;
That .there shall be constructed and&#13;
maintained within the village of Pinckney&#13;
a sidewalk upon the lines and of such dimentions&#13;
and material as hereinafter more&#13;
particularly specified, to wit:&#13;
1st.—that the hew sidewalk be constructed&#13;
on the west side of Stewart street, commencing&#13;
" at the southeast corner of lot&#13;
eight, block five, range seven, owned by&#13;
John A. Cad well', running north along the&#13;
east line of said lot eight and along the&#13;
east side of lot one in block five, range&#13;
•even, owned by Floyd Reason to the inter*&#13;
section of Stewart and Putnam . street.&#13;
Said sidewalk to be four feet in width and&#13;
to be contracted of cement and the expense&#13;
thereof to be defrayed as provided by ordinance&#13;
adopted June 3rd A. D. 1901.&#13;
Dated this 4th day of June A. D. 1901.&#13;
C. L. SIOLKR, President&#13;
E. R. Baowx, Cler k.&#13;
f&#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="36754">
              <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="6915">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch June 06, 1901</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6916">
                <text>June 06, 1901 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="6917">
                <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="6918">
                <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="6919">
                <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="6920">
                <text>1901-06-06</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6921">
                <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="999" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="927">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/29c3b227e767bb975d470c682299a029.pdf</src>
        <authentication>79d05b8a7467bf643c271c60d25acf11</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="32313">
              <text>VOL. XIX. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, JUNE. 13,1901. No. 24.&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE&#13;
HOWELL. - MICHIGAN&#13;
Hammocks&#13;
Croquet S e t s&#13;
Iron Express Wagons&#13;
Fire Works.&#13;
We give cash coupons with&#13;
every purchase. Beautifull gifts&#13;
given free with $2 in trade.&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
Next to Post O f f i c e .&#13;
Mail orders '&#13;
Carefully filled.&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
« - / \ / N - J&#13;
OurMottot "The Better the&#13;
Grade the Bigger the Trade."&#13;
Howell young men are forming a&#13;
military company.&#13;
Miss Nellie Qardner visited in Ann&#13;
Arbor the last of last week.&#13;
The citizens of FowiervUle are&#13;
going after the boys who are using&#13;
the target gun on song birds.&#13;
Howell will raise 75 cents per $100&#13;
this year in taxes. They have $955,-&#13;
735 real and $831,730 personal valuation.&#13;
Wra. Going drew a load of gravel&#13;
last Saturday weighm* 4641) pounds,&#13;
with tne wagon. Good lor small&#13;
horses.&#13;
The Christian Endeaver Society at&#13;
a recent business meeting at the&#13;
Cong'l parsonage voted to adjourn indefinitely.&#13;
— — -&#13;
r^/\y-t&#13;
Royal Tailoring&#13;
Stands at the Head,&#13;
The Very Best!!&#13;
Clothing is . absolutely&#13;
made to ypur measure, and.&#13;
iu the latest styles. Satisfaction&#13;
is always guaranteed!&#13;
W e s o l l c f t your patronage&#13;
K. H. Crane,&#13;
Local Agent.&#13;
Here You Are Again&#13;
If you want a good Blood Purifier&#13;
go to Yake the Jeweler and&#13;
purchase a package of Brown&#13;
Herb Tablets. If not as recommended&#13;
your money returned.&#13;
Call at store and get sample pkg.&#13;
Also an extra Three Star Ointment&#13;
that should have room in&#13;
every house.&#13;
Mr. Yake will repair your&#13;
watches and clocks in the best of&#13;
style and if you have any auction&#13;
sales Mr. Yake will be happy to&#13;
wait upon you as an auctioneer at&#13;
moderate prices.&#13;
Yake The Jeweler,&#13;
. Pinckney Mich.&#13;
Miss Honora Fohey closed a successful&#13;
year ot school in ir&amp;ctional district&#13;
No. 8, Hamburg and Webster ou Friday&#13;
ot this week.&#13;
Mrs. VV. W. Barnard spent last&#13;
week witu her uioiher iu dovveil.&#13;
Mr. Harnard was in Howell Sunday&#13;
aud the returned with him.&#13;
Do not tail to attend the commencement&#13;
exercises at the opera house on&#13;
Wednesday evening next. Admusion&#13;
.10 cents, reserved seau 10 cents.&#13;
June 17 is the date of the opening&#13;
ot the June term of circuit court. As&gt;&#13;
no jury has been drawn all such cases&#13;
will prouably be put over until 'November&#13;
term.&#13;
A Howell fruit, grower expects to&#13;
put on the market homegrown strawberries&#13;
this week. Mr. Lewis just&#13;
east of this village has been selling&#13;
them here since Saturday, June 1.&#13;
Kirk Haze dropped into our office&#13;
one evening last week and gave us a&#13;
few selections on the guitar. He understands&#13;
tbe instrument apd has our&#13;
thanks. We understand he has a&#13;
class ot six or eight.&#13;
The price of potatoes bas been moving&#13;
upward tbe last ten days and as&#13;
high as 56 cents per bushel lave teen&#13;
paid. Nearly all in this vicinity have&#13;
now been m aTtreied and occassionally&#13;
farmers desirous of benefiting a littie&#13;
by tbe rising market have brought in&#13;
small lots of a few bushels.—Milford&#13;
Times.&#13;
I Orla Hendee of Cadillac was home&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
Bom, to Mr. and Mrs. Root. Kelly&#13;
a 11$ pound boy.&#13;
The tew warm days serve to start&#13;
people lakewards.&#13;
J as. Roche and son Bert are in&#13;
Cleveland with horses.&#13;
Miss Villa Martin is in Gregory,&#13;
sewing for Mrs. H. A. Fick.&#13;
E. J. Bripgs and wile visited friends&#13;
in Howell Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Miss Inez Lyons of Detroit is visiting&#13;
her friend M iss Lacy Mann.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Sykes of Detroit is spending&#13;
a few weeks with relatives here.&#13;
Miss Marie Bates of Mason was tbe&#13;
guest of Mrs. Malachy Roche tbe past&#13;
week.&#13;
Fred Campbell, Roger Carr and&#13;
Raymond Sigler were in Howell Saturday.&#13;
The advertisements of an up to date&#13;
man are not jokes. Th«y are straight&#13;
pointed facts written especially for&#13;
tbe benefit of the readers of the local&#13;
paper and it's to your interest to read&#13;
them. You'll find in them bargains&#13;
and inducements that are well worth&#13;
your time in perusing the ad columns.&#13;
When new goods arrive, the advertising&#13;
man tells you about them;&#13;
when the enterprising merchant wants&#13;
to make a special sale and offer some&#13;
of bis goods at rare bargains he tells&#13;
you about it in his space. The wise&#13;
merchant advertises bis (roods; the&#13;
wise customer reads tbe ads.&#13;
Notice! T o&#13;
Farmers&#13;
of the&#13;
20th Century.&#13;
Empire Drill agency for 1901 has been secured by us&#13;
and we wish to call your attention to a few of the new&#13;
features of this Drill, as well as sowing all kinds of grain it&#13;
will plant Sugar Beets four rows 21 inches apart, will plant&#13;
corn two rows 3j4 feet apart, Baans three rows 23 inches&#13;
apart, or if desired the rows may be made closer together&#13;
or farther apart by simply closing a shut-off slide on inside&#13;
of box. Gome and examine the Drill and you will be&#13;
convipced that it is the best Drill on earth.&#13;
*&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
Maude Heningan of Webberville is&#13;
the guest of her cousins, the Wright&#13;
families.&#13;
Miss Lizzie Winters of Bunker Hill&#13;
is the guest of her sister Mrs. Malaeby&#13;
Roche. _&#13;
Prof. Durfee was in Fowlerville&#13;
Sunday visiting a brother who was&#13;
there from Colorado.&#13;
Cbas. Mercsr and wife of Hartiand&#13;
visited their daughter Mrs. K. H.&#13;
Crane the last of last week.&#13;
C ildrens day will bo ob. arved at&#13;
tbe M. E. church next Sunday morning.&#13;
All are invited to attend.&#13;
Geo. Reason Jr. and family and&#13;
Mrs. Mame Carr visited at Herbert&#13;
Schoenhals in West Putnam Sundav.&#13;
Childrens day exercises at tbe&#13;
Cong'l church Sunday morning were&#13;
very fine and the house was crowded.&#13;
Exercises appropriate to Chi'drens&#13;
d-ty will be held at the M. E. church&#13;
Sunday morning and the baptism of&#13;
children will be observed.&#13;
Mrs. H. F. Sigler visited at Jackson&#13;
last Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Ray&#13;
A. Thomas and found tbem eozily situated&#13;
at 414 West Trail st where they&#13;
will be pleased to see their friends.&#13;
The City of Detroit is making great&#13;
preparations to celebrate its hicentenary&#13;
on Ji lv 24-25-26. No expense is&#13;
being spared to make it one of tbe&#13;
greatest times Detroit has ever seen.&#13;
Cards are out announcing the wedding&#13;
of Miss Alice McMahon and Avery&#13;
LJaker at the home of the bride's&#13;
parents in Dearborn, Tuesday, June&#13;
18. Their friends here wish them success.&#13;
The society ot Church Workers will&#13;
hold their monthly tea at the home of&#13;
Mrs. Harriett Brown next Tuesday,&#13;
June 18. Tea will be served from 5&#13;
until all are seryei. A cordial invitation&#13;
to all.&#13;
The fine rains of the past week have&#13;
set things growing.&#13;
Henry Jackson and son of Conway&#13;
were guests ot Stephen Durfee and&#13;
family tbe past week.&#13;
G. W. Teeple attended the meeting&#13;
of the state bankers association at&#13;
GranoVRapids this week, —&#13;
Commencement Week,&#13;
Commencement week begins Sunday&#13;
evening at tbe M. E. church, when&#13;
Rev. H. W, H*cks will deliver tbe&#13;
baccalaureate address before tbe class.&#13;
On the Wednesday evening following&#13;
June 19, will occur the regular commemencent&#13;
exerercis at the opera&#13;
house. Tbe following is the program&#13;
tor the evening:&#13;
Music Orchestra&#13;
Invocation R&lt;*Y. Fr, Come&#13;
Music Orchestra&#13;
Salutatory, "Our Lives are what we make&#13;
them" .Will J. Dunbar&#13;
Class History and Prophesy&#13;
, Charles P. Poole&#13;
Music Orchestra&#13;
Valedictory, "Environment".:&#13;
Maude L. - Richmond&#13;
Music Orchestra&#13;
Address, "Self Culture"&#13;
: . . . . Prof. F. A. Barbour&#13;
Music Orchestra&#13;
Presentations of Diplomas&#13;
Prof. S. Durfee&#13;
Benediction Rev. C. W. Rice&#13;
Music Orchestra&#13;
Want Column,&#13;
W A N T E D - A girl for general&#13;
housework. $2 50 a week no washing.&#13;
Address. Mrs, N. B. M A S S , ".&#13;
547 Lincoln Ave., Detroit.&#13;
Teacher's Examination.&#13;
A Kpecial examination of appticairtrof&#13;
Second and Third grade certificates&#13;
will be held at Fowlerville, Thursday&#13;
and Friday, June 20 and 21,1901.&#13;
JAMES H. WALLACE,&#13;
County Commissioner of Schools.&#13;
JfoUce.&#13;
Pinckney, May 27.1901.&#13;
. To the patrons of the Pettysviile&#13;
postoffice in the county of Livingston&#13;
State of Michigan, notice is hereby&#13;
given that the post office at Pettysviile&#13;
has this day, May 17, been dis-&#13;
—by- order- of Postmaster&#13;
General. Said discontinuance to take&#13;
effect June 29 1901. Thereafter delivery&#13;
will oe opened at the post office&#13;
in Pinckney tor alLmaiLaddressed to&#13;
said office (Pettysviile). All those&#13;
situated on R. F. D. routd No. 1, from&#13;
Pinckney can, by putting up suitable&#13;
boxes, have their mail delivered in&#13;
said boxe3. Very Respy.,&#13;
t-26 Wm. S. SWABTHOUT.&#13;
Postmaster.&#13;
&gt;m&gt; ' •&#13;
Free Rural Delivery.&#13;
I am pleased to inform the patrons&#13;
along the routes that the F. R. D. Nos,&#13;
1 and 2 are ordered by tbe postal department&#13;
to start from Pinckney July&#13;
1,1901. All who have not already&#13;
done so, will be required to put up a&#13;
regulation box which must be uniform&#13;
on the^ route, a sample of which can&#13;
be seen at the post office. The boxes&#13;
should be up as soon as June 28 so&#13;
the carriers can go over the line and&#13;
make a record of them.&#13;
W . S . SWARTHOUT, P . M.&#13;
Pinckney, June 19, 1901.&#13;
FOR SALE—Brown Leghorn eggs&#13;
from one ot the best laying flock of&#13;
hens in Lower Mich. 25c per setting&#13;
at residence or 50c by express.&#13;
F. W. MACKINDEB,&#13;
t-26 Anderson, Mich&#13;
R a h e Calvet Without IHilk.&#13;
Thousands are doing it Cheaply and&#13;
successfully with "Blatchford's Calf&#13;
Meal" tbe perfect milk substitute.&#13;
For sale by Teeple &amp; Cadwell. t-26&#13;
Tbe DISPATCH Job Department&#13;
would like to print your envelopes.&#13;
Tor Sale.&#13;
6 lots in this village. Inquire&#13;
SAMUEL ROBERTS.&#13;
of&#13;
- OOP -&#13;
" S o m e t i m e s her narrow kitchen weril*&#13;
Stretched a w a y Into stately halls."&#13;
This happened to Maud Muller, but our&#13;
prices on&#13;
Sunday evening a person entered the&#13;
residence of Geo. Lumm while they&#13;
were at church and took a new copper&#13;
boiler. They will save expense and&#13;
and exposure if the aruilty will return&#13;
tbe same as they are known.&#13;
Several of the little friends of Floreuoe&#13;
Reason assisted her in celebrating&#13;
her eleventh birthday on Saturday&#13;
afternoon with games and an excellent&#13;
supper by Mrs. Keason. The&#13;
little folks bad a very pleasant time./"&#13;
Tbe Michigan Press Association&#13;
will visit the Pan-American this&#13;
month leaving Detroit by boat June&#13;
22, returning one week later. Although&#13;
we had intended to make this&#13;
trip, business cares and extra expenses&#13;
will forbid. We hope the members&#13;
may have an excellent time.&#13;
Through tbe courtesy ot Miss G. L.&#13;
Martin this office had a very fine bouquet&#13;
of carnations and roses on our&#13;
desk. The flowers came from tbe&#13;
green house of her sister Mrs. Crabb&#13;
of Grand Rapids, who sent them by&#13;
the hundred (o be used for decoration&#13;
at the Cong'l church for children day&#13;
j and they made a beautiful sight.&#13;
Wall Paper&#13;
'•i Make it possible for it to happen&#13;
to everybody. Wall paper which&#13;
used to cost so much that it could&#13;
only be hung in the parlor, or in&#13;
stately halls, is now so cheap that&#13;
the kitchen walls can be made&#13;
really attractive.&#13;
Come in and ^ee our new clesigpna&#13;
for lOOl. Prices from 7 to 25 centi|&#13;
per donole roll. &amp;&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
Drufri£i»t&#13;
vH$ y.&lt;-- '«"•'./'' • * • / . ' • Mft&#13;
-••JH-'Atf "•&gt;•(•&#13;
tor;-• &gt;'{« '&amp;Wl ,&gt;i '...V'&#13;
iPW'TSf r ^¾½ «V*'-- ••VJV.'f&#13;
K&#13;
™*. &gt; ; ^&#13;
-in.*&#13;
|;V'&gt; &amp; r . • : • • • • . ; ^ - v , - . : . . • • - ; ,&#13;
9^::¾ 'i;&lt;».&gt;~«V ffi^•' *# •l&gt;- •••• A S L * * ,-Viv.&#13;
'*• '•',&#13;
' . » '&#13;
:-tt' *to: &gt;%tf, :.^-v^vT&#13;
;••?&gt;:&#13;
£0.&#13;
ft&#13;
y*&#13;
tm a WOTf*&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
H0II0W Ash •&#13;
Jo Hall J*&#13;
BY M A R G A R E T B L O V N T .&#13;
OO&#13;
«^^^^^^^C^^^#^%^^%^^^^^^^^&#13;
CHAPTER XX.&#13;
The etraager ceased to speak, and&#13;
Mr. Cowley stared at him with much&#13;
bewilderment&#13;
"How did you know all this?" he&#13;
4flked at laat&#13;
"Becauae I am Stanley Vernon, the&#13;
•only brother of that unhappy man,"&#13;
he said* totally.&#13;
Rose uttered a little cry of astonish-'&#13;
ment&#13;
"Yes;' he added, "this shameful family&#13;
history made me almost loathe my&#13;
name. I have borne that of Vere&#13;
for many years. Under that name I&#13;
met and loved your daughter, sir—under&#13;
my own, I shall soon ask you for&#13;
her hand! But for the present let it&#13;
be my task to clear up this mystery.&#13;
ul came home from Italy as soon&#13;
-as I heard this house was let. It was&#13;
a mistake upon the part of the agent;&#13;
but I should be the last on .earth to&#13;
regret it. But I must take precaution&#13;
against a similar event. This is no fit&#13;
habitation for any one."&#13;
"Then it is really haunted~P asked&#13;
Mr. Cowley.&#13;
"I fear it is. Rose, will you go to&#13;
your mother, and, gentlemen, will you&#13;
follow me."&#13;
They obeyed him without a word.&#13;
He went straight to the butler's pantry&#13;
and took up a spake and pickaxe, already&#13;
placed there by Mr. Cowley.&#13;
My brother's wife died delirious, and&#13;
no one ever knew where she had&#13;
buried the child, which I was quite&#13;
certain she had destroyed. I had my&#13;
suspicions at the time, but I longed to&#13;
hush the whole thing up as speedily as&#13;
possible. Now, however, all must be&#13;
made clear."&#13;
With a few vigorous'str^esTTie'took&#13;
up the floor of the room. A tiny skeleton,&#13;
half-bedded in the moist ground,&#13;
met their eyes, and Mr. Cowley turned&#13;
aside to hide his tears.&#13;
"Poor thing!" he said sadly,&#13;
"Charles, don't tell your aunt, or wife,&#13;
or cousins, but get them away—take&#13;
them to the town this very afternoon.&#13;
xMr. Vernon and I will follow as soon&#13;
as this poor little creature has been&#13;
properly buried. There, go, my dear&#13;
boy, and, above all, not a word to the&#13;
girls of what we have found today."&#13;
•a * * * * *&#13;
'So Mrs. Cowley had her way, after&#13;
all, and spent a happy Christmas Day&#13;
at Mecklenburgh Square, surrounded&#13;
by all the members of her family, and&#13;
waited upon at table by no less a person&#13;
than Mrs. Macarthy, to whom she&#13;
clung as a kind of fellow sufferer from&#13;
the whims of the head of the house.&#13;
Christmas and New Year's Day having&#13;
passed gaily away, there only remained&#13;
the wedding of Rose, and for&#13;
that I need not hint that the greatest&#13;
preparations were made.&#13;
The happy day came slowly on. The&#13;
tidings of the romantic betrothal had&#13;
awakened much curiosity among those&#13;
to whom the pair were known, and the kchurch was crowded when the carriage&#13;
drove to the door.&#13;
Rose faltered slightly as she stood&#13;
on the threshold of the church and&#13;
jgazed upon the concourse of people;&#13;
tout a glance from the dear companion&#13;
at her side reassured her, and calm&#13;
and happy she moved onward and took&#13;
her place before the altar.&#13;
Not to the haunted house, however,&#13;
but to a pleasant villa upon the seacoast,&#13;
Mr. Vernon took his fair young&#13;
bride.&#13;
And as they sat hand in hand in&#13;
their new home—the doubts and follies&#13;
of the past all forgotten and forgiven—&#13;
the moon rose slowly above the water,&#13;
and a bright path stretching out over&#13;
the waves of life's sea, and waiting&#13;
but for the footsteps, seemed lying&#13;
there before them.&#13;
He put the fancy into words, and&#13;
whispered it to Rose.&#13;
She looked up in his face with a&#13;
frank, truth-telling gaae. Those were&#13;
the very soft, clear eyes, clear and^&#13;
quiet as a mountain lake, yet with a&#13;
slight shadow in their depth, that&#13;
seemed to tell of stormier elements below,&#13;
of which he had dreamed for&#13;
years, and wfcTcI Ee^^acTonTy" seen&#13;
twice in his life—once in a picture of&#13;
the Virgin by Murillc— once here!&#13;
Here was the only heart his own&#13;
had sought—the only being for whom&#13;
he had ever really suffered the pangs&#13;
and pleasures of that mad fever which&#13;
we call by the name of love. No other&#13;
could claim her from him, no other&#13;
could watch that bright young face in&#13;
all its bewitching changes. No other&#13;
could rest that pretty head upon his&#13;
bosom, and play with those silky curls.&#13;
No other kiss the broad, high forehead,&#13;
the beautiful eyes, or the full,&#13;
warm, loving lips! But still he murmured&#13;
in hjer-eac—as-he held her.&#13;
closely to his heart that first evening&#13;
in their common home, "Are you happy,&#13;
Rose? Are you sure you are happy?"&#13;
There was no need to ask that question.&#13;
A perfect stranger coming into&#13;
that pretty cottage by the deep blue&#13;
sea might well have answered it for&#13;
him.&#13;
«&#13;
It was a pleasant spot: rone the less&#13;
so, that everywhere were traces of the&#13;
presence of its pretty mistress. A&#13;
spaking portrait hung over the piano,&#13;
a smile lingering archly on its parted&#13;
lips; her favorite book* were on the&#13;
table; her little dog played about the&#13;
grounds; her horse neighed in the stable,&#13;
and a rafry-lIke~Tjbat, DearThg~Ber&#13;
name upon the stern, rocked at anchor&#13;
upon the pebbly beach below."&#13;
Running down the graveled walk,&#13;
with the little dog barking and leaping&#13;
at her side, feeding her horse with&#13;
snowy bread; presiding with all the&#13;
grace of a woman, yet with the sweet,&#13;
shy bashfulness of a child, at her table,&#13;
or singing and playing, after the&#13;
evening meal, sweet, low ballads and&#13;
dear old songs such as she loved best,&#13;
filling every spot with beauty and&#13;
grace, and forming the delight of her&#13;
husband's eyes, as well as the yride of&#13;
his heart—is she not happy?&#13;
I assure you, dear reader, their home&#13;
is one of the sweetest spots on earth.&#13;
And full of content with the bliss or&#13;
the peaceful present, and the promise&#13;
of a cloudless future, they have quite&#13;
forgotten the tragic and painful past,&#13;
and have no wish to go back to their&#13;
early years, or to visit that scene of a&#13;
heart rejected and a slighted love&#13;
avenged.&#13;
For Hollow Ash Hall Is a ruin!&#13;
Given up to the bats and the owls, and&#13;
carefully avoided by everything human,&#13;
it has fallen gradually into total&#13;
decay; but the ground has been sold&#13;
and an enterprising cockney talks of&#13;
building a soap factory there—so It is&#13;
within the bounds of possibility that&#13;
the ghost may yet be exorcised by alkalies&#13;
and noxious gases.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Cowley still reside in&#13;
Mechlenburgh Square, with their&#13;
nephew and niece; and Mrs. Macarthy&#13;
now reigns supreme over the whole&#13;
household. But Catharine Is no longer&#13;
with them; she is tin wife of a dashing&#13;
Guardsman, and poes to Court, and&#13;
is so fine, generally, that so humble a&#13;
pen as mine shrinks nervously from&#13;
attempting to record her daily life.&#13;
George Vernon die-rl penniless and&#13;
forsaken in Australia soon after the&#13;
mystery of Hollow Ash Hall was made&#13;
clear.&#13;
THE END.&#13;
^ 0 ¾ ¾ ^&#13;
^ ^ - _ -^ 1 &gt;- m A Character O U S l c ! Sketch&#13;
B y P h i l i p V e r r i l l M i g h e l s&#13;
CHAPTER I.&#13;
Down through the grey of the sagebrush,&#13;
on a hill that was jeweled with&#13;
patches of the melting snow of winter&#13;
all but gone, shambling alone as lazily&#13;
as the blear-eyed dog at his heels, a&#13;
Washoe Indian of Western Nevada arrived&#13;
at the edge of a hurrying brook.&#13;
Removing a hat, all battered and fuz-&#13;
• sy, that once had been of silk and&#13;
proudly high, he gruntingly descended&#13;
to lie on his stomach at the selvedge&#13;
green of the water's brink and thrust&#13;
in his lips for a short, eager drink.&#13;
The dog lapped above him. Both returned&#13;
the march again, for the Indian&#13;
school was near at hand and the way&#13;
. all a carpet of stubble.&#13;
To the kitchen door the Washoe&#13;
•touched, and awed the young mahalaa,&#13;
who, with red la their facet from the&#13;
glowing range, were up to their elbow3&#13;
in the arts of civilized cooking.&#13;
"Injun Jim, he's wants my Injun&#13;
girl!" he announced.&#13;
"Lordee!" cried the teacher, jumping&#13;
nervously, "you frightful object!&#13;
You startled me dreadful. Now, what&#13;
in the name of goodness do you want?"&#13;
The Indian maidens stood In attitudes&#13;
of stoic amazement—one excepted.&#13;
She, the brightest and the tallest,&#13;
merely gazed at the visitor in dumb&#13;
appeal, her hands going slowly, reluctantly&#13;
back to the strings of the&#13;
apron that hung about her waist.&#13;
"Injun Jim, he's wants my Injun&#13;
girl!" the Washoe repeated.&#13;
"Want what?" screamed the teacher.&#13;
"Want Susie? Nonsense, you dirty&#13;
old thing! You're supposed to be dead;&#13;
we have all believed you dead and&#13;
you plenty biscuit-Iahpoo. Your Sus!«&#13;
go to school—she very smart girl."&#13;
"No biscult-lah-poo. Heap ketchum&#13;
erirl, you sabbes? What's Injun goin&#13;
do at white man's school? He's don"t&#13;
learn nuthin' goot for us. He's heap&#13;
Injun all same. Injuns can't vote; Injuns&#13;
can't make no laws. Heap no&#13;
goot, you sabbe??"&#13;
The woman wa,s speechless. She&#13;
started abruptly to run to the agent,&#13;
but suddenly halted, remembering&#13;
sharply that against the wishes of as&#13;
Indian parent the government was&#13;
powerless to hold a pupil.&#13;
A silence fell on the Indian maidens&#13;
and the baffled teacher. A few quick&#13;
words in the Washoe tongue delivered&#13;
by the father to his child and Susie&#13;
laid her apron on the table. Then silently&#13;
she walked to her teacher,&#13;
kissed- her ttafbtly on the hair and&#13;
turned to follow where the man already&#13;
shambled slowly toward the brush. Her&#13;
head bowed submissively forward, her&#13;
hands hanging listless at her.side, she&#13;
trod in his trail, and the dog shuffled&#13;
patiently behind.&#13;
The sun was casting long, slender&#13;
filaments of shadows. Into its ruddy&#13;
glory passed the silent procession, out&#13;
through Jtho paths of the grey, lonely&#13;
sage brush, over the flat and the ridges&#13;
to the foothills far across the valley.&#13;
Late in the darkness shone at length&#13;
the dim red eye of the dark and smoky&#13;
wigwam; and there at last, on the&#13;
chilling earth, sat Susie in the night,&#13;
and watching the greying "of the glow&#13;
to the death^ her chin on her breast,&#13;
her finger8 idly toying with a rounded&#13;
bit of pebble.&#13;
There in the morning Wanda, the&#13;
mother, whined with her wrinkled&#13;
mouth and bade the silent Susie stand&#13;
and go to Chloride Hill, to beg at the&#13;
rear of the cabins. Together they&#13;
went, while her father wrapped his&#13;
blanket about him and strode away,&#13;
with his dog, in search of others in the&#13;
mining camp, whose worldly possessions&#13;
he hoped to win at the subtleties&#13;
of "Pass the stick."&#13;
Winding through the stuntad brush&#13;
the women came to the outlying&#13;
houses. A door at the back of one of&#13;
these'was standing awfde. A man&#13;
within was clattering dishes, cups of&#13;
tin and iron knives and forks, to a&#13;
clumsy pyramid on the table.&#13;
"Here," said he, when he found the&#13;
mahala gazing in, "squaw, heap wash&#13;
'um dishes, sabee? Two-bits, plenty&#13;
grub I give; mahala wash table, dishes,&#13;
floor—hey?"&#13;
At the mention of 25 cents the woman&#13;
waa oddly alive. With many a&#13;
grunt and with plenty of hybrid whistle-&#13;
and-mutter, she Impressed the girl&#13;
to the service. The man made ready&#13;
for departing to the mine that was on&#13;
the hill.&#13;
"Come every day." he presently&#13;
added, after glancing keenly at Susie,&#13;
as he piled some food on a stool near&#13;
by ahd brought up the money from a&#13;
pocket. "I pay every week for wash&#13;
'um floor and dishes."&#13;
The girl, when he went, proceeded&#13;
deftly to cleaning the table and placing&#13;
utensils and dishes in order—the&#13;
order they taught at the school. It&#13;
gave her a pleasure, but of this and&#13;
of other emotions there was never a&#13;
sign.&#13;
Day after day she returned, not&#13;
alone. Her mother went begging at&#13;
other of the cabins. With hands caressful—&#13;
and rounded hands oC dimpled&#13;
broaze they were—ske touched&#13;
these kitchen possessions fondly and&#13;
with grateful dveams of the school&#13;
across the valley.&#13;
"See here/' said the man one morninsr,&#13;
as he watched her at the labor,&#13;
"you needn't scrub the floor, I guess.&#13;
I hate to see a woman doing that."&#13;
"I thank you," she quietly replied,&#13;
"but I like to do'it. 1 like to see it&#13;
clean."&#13;
He looked at her astonished. "Where&#13;
in the world did you learn your English?"&#13;
he rudely inquired.&#13;
She blushed beneath the softened&#13;
bronze of her rounded checks, and the&#13;
lasiics drew her eyelids ti«midly down&#13;
to curtain the wide-open orbs of dark&#13;
and lustrous onyx.&#13;
"At the Institute." she faintly answered.&#13;
"Oh! Wc:i, the dishes I like to have&#13;
you fix, of course, but not the floor,&#13;
please."&#13;
•She reddened again, and shot him a&#13;
glance that resemblod the questioning&#13;
gaze of a doe, not trained to fear, yet&#13;
always shy.&#13;
"If you—care for—books—or anything&#13;
here—you're welcome," he stammered,&#13;
and walked away. He beat&#13;
himself a blow on the breast, yet he&#13;
knew not why, and shook himself in&#13;
the breeze that blew.&#13;
The mine on the hill was a hundred&#13;
rods from the trail to Greasewood&#13;
Canon, but the forking path was well&#13;
defined where his boots had scarred&#13;
the near-lying rocka, and ground the&#13;
sand persistently/&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
Nutmegs grow on MttJe trees which&#13;
look like plat UeetT, and w e gonorelly&#13;
Hostess—Dear me, the conversation&#13;
Is flagging. What can we do to amuse&#13;
our guests? Host—I don't kaow un esj&#13;
we leave the drawing room for a few&#13;
minutes and five them a chance to talk&#13;
about ua&#13;
A CLAY THAT DYES THE HAIR&#13;
RED.&#13;
rho«« W h o W a n t A u b u r n I.r,c' • C a t&#13;
H a v e T h « i n MtiU* t o O r d e r — T w o t o&#13;
T w e l v e Hour* Uequlrttd l u t h e Xeocm&#13;
oJ D / e l u g .&#13;
The earth is being put to a new use.&#13;
It has been turned Into hair dye. Not&#13;
all the earth, by any means. Only one&#13;
little corner of it—a little red clay&#13;
corner in this state, says a Denver&#13;
writer. If you ask Mrs. Frances&#13;
Sherman where that corner is she will&#13;
reply: 'That's my secret." And you&#13;
really can't blame her when you consider&#13;
that if we knew the secret we&#13;
could all come to Colorado and pick&#13;
up a pnftVfltfni of cJay Jumps which&#13;
would turn us into auburn-haired&#13;
beauties within a day. No wonder&#13;
Mrs. Sherman prefers to keep her clay&#13;
bed as her own property. Nothing but&#13;
a common reddish-brown clay it is to&#13;
all appearances, and what magical&#13;
chemical properties lurk in it she does&#13;
not know. All she does knows of its&#13;
workings is that, applied to the hair it&#13;
changes it to a dark shade of reddish&#13;
gold, such a shade as no other hair dye&#13;
has ever succeeded in producing. It is&#13;
only a few weeks since she learned&#13;
the secret of the clay, and. at first she&#13;
exprimented with it very gingerly. She&#13;
tried it on locks of hair that she cut&#13;
from ai iterenTh^dsrand iirevery casethe&#13;
same results occurred. The hair&#13;
was dyed to a beautiful shade of&#13;
brown, having a bright tinge, and was&#13;
darker or lighter, according to the&#13;
length of time of the application. Its&#13;
preparation is a slow one. First it&#13;
must be ground into a mortar; next it&#13;
is put through an 80-sieve, which&#13;
means a fine one; fins* iy it is sifted&#13;
through bolting cloth. The lumps of&#13;
hard red clay, which look very much&#13;
like adobe, come out from the bolting&#13;
cloth operation in the form of a fine&#13;
powder. From this it has been found&#13;
that two kinds of dye can be made.&#13;
For one, the powdered earth is simply&#13;
mixed with water until it becomes a&#13;
stiff paste, and there you are. For the&#13;
other, the clay and water paste is&#13;
baked until it turns an inky black.&#13;
The baked clay is used for the darkest&#13;
shades of dye. Never was anything&#13;
more simple than the use of the dye.&#13;
It is applied warm—that is, all that&#13;
has to be remembered. The operator&#13;
warms the pan of paste, then with a&#13;
brush dipped in It, goes carefully all&#13;
over the hair, brushing the paste fn&#13;
from roots to ends. It is a queer thing&#13;
that ft does not in any way affect the&#13;
skin or scalp where it touches, although&#13;
ft has so ^ulck an effect upon&#13;
the hair. It washes off readily from&#13;
the skin. Mrs. Sherman is a pioneer&#13;
in the use of the X-ray for scalp treatment&#13;
and also as a physician of many&#13;
years' standing on matters connected&#13;
with the hair she has experimented&#13;
most carefully and thoroughly with&#13;
this new discovery. All the gray hairs&#13;
must be captured and colored, and this&#13;
takes a great deal of time and much&#13;
patience, but once done the job is over&#13;
until the new hair begins to grow out&#13;
after some months. It has been proved&#13;
that the dye is permanent. Whatever&#13;
shade it gives after being applied that&#13;
shade it keeps forever after, and there&#13;
is no daue^r of waking up some day to'&#13;
find yourself a green-haired lady or a&#13;
blue-beard\ as in the days of old-time&#13;
hair dyeB. The chemical properties of&#13;
the clay are so powerful that one application&#13;
is all that is needed. After the&#13;
paste has been thoroughly brushed in,&#13;
the pastee sits, in all the patience with&#13;
which she can possess her soul, for so&#13;
long as the desired color requires. A&#13;
lisrht shape close to a Titian takes only&#13;
two hours' waiting: the darkest auburn&#13;
wants twelve hours. At the end&#13;
of that tfme she is shampooed in half&#13;
a do^en waters, and then she may face&#13;
herself in the glass and get acquainted&#13;
with her new appearance.&#13;
not 9?er twenty ieet high. The flow*&#13;
era are much like the lily of the valley.&#13;
They are pale and very fragrant. The&#13;
nutmeg is the seed of the fruit, and&#13;
mace is the thin covering over the&#13;
seed. The fruit fs about as large as&#13;
a peach. When ripe it breaks open&#13;
and shows the little nut inside. The&#13;
trees grow on the islands of Asia and&#13;
in tropical America. They bear fruit&#13;
seventy or eighty years, having ripe&#13;
fruit upon them all the seasons.&#13;
A fine tree in Jamaica has oyer&#13;
4,000 nutmegs on it yearly. The Dutch&#13;
used to have all this nutmeg trade,&#13;
as they owned the Bands islands, and&#13;
conquered all the other traders and1 destroyed&#13;
the trees. To keep the price&#13;
up they at once burned /three pile*&#13;
of nutmegs, each of which was as Ifcrg?&#13;
as a church. Nature did not synrptt-&#13;
M.hlze with such meanness. The nutmag&#13;
pigeon, fminrt fn all the, Indian_&#13;
islands, did for the world what the&#13;
Dutch had determined could not b&gt;&#13;
done—carried those nuts, which are&#13;
their food, into all the surrounding&#13;
countries, and trees grew again and)&#13;
the world had the benefit.&#13;
Stveptn? t h e Month* A w i r f .&#13;
When Johnstone appeared ia Fark&#13;
Row yesterday, an acquaintance eagerly&#13;
gripped his hand and Inquired where&#13;
he had been so long. "I have been&#13;
asleep," said the magazine contributor&#13;
"Last December I sent a story to&#13;
Blank's,- another to Thankav another&#13;
to Crank's and one to, Tank's. All were&#13;
accepted with the understanding that&#13;
they were to be paid for when pub&#13;
lished, so I went to sleep to save&#13;
clothes and vital energy until the happy&#13;
day should came round. And hang&#13;
me if I haven't woke up too soon!&#13;
Here I am wandering about with not a&#13;
line in print and not a cent in pocket.&#13;
And there is neither law nor justice on&#13;
my side. I exist on sufferance."—New&#13;
York Press.&#13;
Victoria Gave Indian BhawW.&#13;
Queen Victoria's favorite form ol&#13;
gift was an Indian shawl. Thousands&#13;
of them were presented to her In the&#13;
course of her long reign. Her son,&#13;
King Edward, exhibits partiality for&#13;
distributing etchings and engraving*&#13;
unong hia friends. While heir appar*&#13;
-mt he collected a vast number ol&#13;
these.&#13;
Couldn't W e a r 8 h o n *&#13;
Sumpter, 111., June 10th.—Mrs. J. B.&#13;
Flanlgan, of this place, had suffered&#13;
with dropsy for fifteen years. She was&#13;
so very bad that for the last three&#13;
years she has not been able to wear&#13;
her shoes. She had doctored all the&#13;
time, but was gradually getting worse.&#13;
Last winter Mr. Flanlgan, who was&#13;
jrery much discouraged, called for some&#13;
medicine at Mr. J. J. Dale's drug store&#13;
in Carmi. Mr. Dale persuaded him to&#13;
have his wife try Dodd's Kidney Pills,&#13;
and he bought six boxes. His wife used&#13;
five out of the six, before she was entirely&#13;
cured. She is now as sound and&#13;
as well as ever she was, completely restored&#13;
to health, and free from any&#13;
symptom whatever of dropsy.&#13;
To say that Mrs. Flanlgan is pleased&#13;
at her wonderful deliverance does not&#13;
half express her feelings, and she and&#13;
Mr. Flanlgan are loud in their praises&#13;
of Dodd's Kidney Pills, and of Mr.&#13;
Dale for recommending this wonderful&#13;
remedy to them.&#13;
The fact that Dodd's Kidney Pills&#13;
cured Mrs. Flanlgan of such a severe&#13;
case of dropsy, after the doctors had&#13;
given her up, has made them the most&#13;
talked of remedy ever known in White&#13;
county.&#13;
• • • • " ' - r - " | I —&#13;
N*&gt;«r YorK'* D e a t h R a t e .&#13;
New York city's Health Department&#13;
was created in 1866. At that time, according&#13;
to the Public Health Record,&#13;
the death rate in the city was 34.92&#13;
per 1,000, with a population of 767,979.&#13;
In 1900 the death rate had decreased to&#13;
21.04 per 1,000 in a population of&#13;
3,444,675. '&#13;
Sozodont A Perfect Liquid Dcutif rico for the Teeth »&lt;"&gt; Breath&#13;
25«&#13;
Sozodont&#13;
Tooth Powdor Both forma of Sozodont at the Stores or by&#13;
* T;prico, 25c each; Largo Sizes, togother, Wo&#13;
WALL A RUOKEl, Hew York&#13;
Rheumaiwn, neuralgia,&#13;
Weak Back, Sprains,&#13;
Burna, Sores and ail Pain.&#13;
Cn«»l»|WGetlt of your&#13;
oQBCIal dniKKlst, tt, Mte.&#13;
irhe doos not sell it, send&#13;
us his name, »nd {or your&#13;
trouble, w e wHl Crfta&#13;
Send, You a Trial M BBi&#13;
B'way,Newburgh,«. x.&#13;
BA^^I^M^MAM IBfeb^^k^^L^^^K P a M M ^ d u&#13;
mist B a 1 l a n m n c n n i&#13;
M . O . PHELPS BROWN'S&#13;
PREOiOUS&#13;
HERBAL&#13;
OUnWEHT It CureaThfOtton the Pores&#13;
Addjrts»Zte.O.P.Bt own. 0 8&#13;
PATENT AND :&#13;
MECHANICAL&#13;
.ENCYCLOPEDIA&#13;
V? NVEM--3 5HG&lt;j;;0.bL" WTnOOr THfS BOOK&#13;
•:r:sr F03TrAlirON.REQUfc.5T&#13;
KEYSTONE LAW^PATENJCO&#13;
BETZ BLDG;-PHILADELPHIA PA.&#13;
3PF.OIAI. iiTFf.P. ;r Mrt.'-MLNT .&gt;N TrUJ.pArFJ5&#13;
Turn the Rascals Out&#13;
Wc nr« speakipg ol the grip intcrooes&#13;
Thei well uud strong can resist their poison,&#13;
the sickly and weak are their prey.&#13;
Baxter's Mandrake Bitters are nature's&#13;
remedy for expellinj? all poison&#13;
fro^n the sy*»tom. At drugpists. in liquid&#13;
or tablets iit 25 cents per bottle or box.&#13;
B W A l l Ufyro«:a».ouf&#13;
backache, ticrvou«ne»«, sleeplessness,&#13;
weakness, Uisaof vitality, la*&#13;
ctplent kluney,bladuer aud urinary&#13;
disorders that can not he cured by KID-NE-01DS&#13;
the frmat kidney, Hrer and blood xncdlctne, SOO&#13;
At all Druffglftu. Write for free "ample, Addreaa&#13;
K I D - N E - O I D 8 , S t . L o u i e , MQ»&#13;
IN 3 OR 4 YEARS&#13;
IN INDEPENDENCE ISSURED If yon toko up jtmr&#13;
hoa* In Western Co»&#13;
sulajhe land of plenty.&#13;
IllMBtrated pamphtoMt&#13;
trtrtiir experience* of&#13;
laraera who have be.&#13;
^•ane wealthy la mow*&#13;
*&#13;
. S^legwahtee*a,t ,e trceapaour)t *f uolfl&#13;
information oa to redwvd railway rates can be&#13;
had on application t*&gt; the Superinteadent ot&#13;
Immigration, Depurunwat of Interior. Ottawa,&#13;
Canada, or to J. Urtete, Saginaw, Mtoa., or M&#13;
V. Melnnea, No. ftMaxrW Block, Detroit, Mica.&#13;
V I ;&#13;
s&#13;
^s&#13;
, * &gt; ' - . ^ . v &gt; - - ^ : . . . " * , - : - ^ . ^ . - *••»•••'•*•'.'&lt;•.• :- r * ' V ' ' - v • . • • ' , * - • ' W ' " . - r » . - ; V- " % • " • • , - • • • ' * • • ' ••' • ' • ' / • ' • " " • ' • • " • • • " • • ' • ' • • • • • - . • • • • * • • • • . - . ' • ' '• • •• • • • - / '&#13;
P :-t/*.&#13;
•^f.&#13;
A^A*&#13;
I&#13;
'A "'.&#13;
«•?• 9&#13;
A HiSTOitlO HOMK.&#13;
O t N . S H S f t t f A N ' S HQU9K T O B E&#13;
T O R N D O W N *&#13;
I t I T M Given to Ulm by the Cltlseas of&#13;
•to boats* bat the Uet»»rel Kever JBa-&#13;
Joyetl It to a Great B*tent—JLeft the&#13;
Cttgr to Anger*&#13;
T h e old m a n s i o n of General W i l l i a m&#13;
T e c u m a e h Sherman, a t t h e corner of&#13;
Garrison and Bell a v e n u e s , St. Louis,&#13;
U t o be converted i n t o a f a m i l y hotel.&#13;
E a s t e r n capitalists h a v e obtained p o s -&#13;
s e s s i o n of t h e historic old residence,&#13;
a b o u t w h i c h cluster s o m a n y m e m o r i e s&#13;
of t h e great m e n w h o s e presence mado&#13;
t h e abode sacred in the m i n d s of the,&#13;
public.&#13;
B u t the ruthless hand of c o m m s r -&#13;
clalisro - -whteh l e v e l e d the. Indian,&#13;
m o u n d s , from w h i c h St. Louis derives&#13;
t h e n a m e mound citly, i s . n o t to bo&#13;
s t a y e d by memories, of former greatn&#13;
e s s and historic a s s o c i a t i o n s . T h e&#13;
old h o u s e is o n e of the best k n o w n in&#13;
t h e city, a n d in the c o u n t r y .for t h a t&#13;
matter,, h a v i n g often b e e n the abode&#13;
t e m p o r a r i l y of s o m e of t h e m o s t d i s -&#13;
t i n g u i s h e d c i t i z e n s of A m e r i c a .&#13;
T h e h o u s e and l o t w e r e donated t o&#13;
G e n e r a l S h e r m a n b y tbe c i t i z e n s of&#13;
S t L o a l s s h o r t l y after tfefe &lt;civil war.&#13;
I t w a s b u i l t a t a c o s t o f ¢20,000, w h i c h&#13;
w a s raised b y popular subscription.&#13;
G e n e r a l S h e r m a n first itoofe mp his&#13;
i d e n c e in t h e h o u s e in 1567 and lived&#13;
t h e r e w i t h h i s f a m f J r f o r s e v e n years,&#13;
a n d t h e y h a d a d i s p u t e -wiifh the city&#13;
©facials o v e r t h e p a y m e n t of his water&#13;
t a x e s . It w a s not s o m u c h the paym&#13;
e n t - o f w a t e r ;rat«fi Cham 'Gen. Sh&#13;
m a n objected to* as the h i g h rate i m -&#13;
p o s e d o n him, TTittmately he paid the&#13;
t a x e s , b a t he ^wns (offended w i t h ithe&#13;
c t t y officiate and &lt;chagrineB 'by the incident,&#13;
a n d t h i s , coupled w i t h the att&#13;
a c k s of a n editor w h o m he had&#13;
•drummed «mt o f Kte c a m p a s a correspondent,&#13;
caused 'him tto leave the&#13;
r l t y .&#13;
Cjion tire general'* death t h e G. A.&#13;
R . offered t h e heirs $13,000 for the&#13;
nousa, t o bee used f o r Iheadquarters, but&#13;
e r - — r&#13;
Instant Have a W i W o w ,&#13;
U n d e r t h e l e a d e r s h i p o f Chief Table&#13;
Qtttgno, t h e F o t t a w a t o m t e s w i l l s a i l&#13;
from S t J o s e p h o n t h e e v e n i n g of J u n e&#13;
33 t o fulfill t h e i r t h r e a t of s q u a t t i n g o n&#13;
t h e m o s t picturesque piece of l a n d i n&#13;
t h e c i t y of Chicago. Because h e w a s&#13;
l u k e w a r m to t h e proponed invasion,&#13;
Chief P o k a g o n , t h e direct d e s c e n d a n t&#13;
of t h e first k n o w n ruler of t h e Potta*&#13;
w a t o m i e s , w a s o n t h e 7th deposed b y&#13;
t h e tribe, and t h e y o u n g e r a n d more&#13;
e n t h u s i a s t i c buck elected to h i s place o n&#13;
t h e Indian throne. F o k a g o n ' s council&#13;
of seven, w h i c h is t h e r u l i n g legislat&#13;
i v e body of t h e P o t t a w a t o m i e s , w a s&#13;
also deposed, t h e f o l l o w i n g leaders i n&#13;
t h e i n v a s i o n m o v e m e n t b e i n g elected&#13;
to succeed t h e m : F r a n k Williams,&#13;
F r n n k S a w a l k , J. H. Cushway, S t e p h e n&#13;
Tnpash, J o s e p h MotHy. Charles Motay&#13;
a n d A n d r e w Kapp. I m m e d i a t e l y after&#13;
t h e i r e l e c t i o n . Ciiief Quigno and t h e&#13;
n e w j c o u o e i l . o f s e v e n w e n t i n t o secret&#13;
s e s s i o n a t Hartford. T h e session l a s t e d&#13;
for several hours. W h e n it w a s over&#13;
m e s s e n g e r s w e r e d i s p a t c h e d to the var&#13;
i o u s l u d i a n s e t t l e m e n t s to notify t h e&#13;
w a r r i o r s of t h e proposed advance o n&#13;
Chicago, J u u e -'2. T h e p o w - w o w a t&#13;
w h i c h P o k a g o n w a s ousted from t h e&#13;
s e a t of h i s f a t h e r s w a s held i n the vill&#13;
a g e of Hartford o n t h e 7th. I t -was&#13;
oalled t o hear t h e r e p o r t of t h e s c o u t s&#13;
« e n t to Chicago r e c e n t l y to confer w i t h&#13;
C a p t Streeter and t h e police.&#13;
City of Erie—Tiubmoo Race.&#13;
I n t h e g r a n d e s t s t e a m b o a t race i n&#13;
t h e history of A m e r i c a n n a v i g a t i o n ,&#13;
t h e Buffalo s t e a m e r City of Erie on t h e&#13;
4 t h e s t a b l i s h e d her r i g h t t o t h e title of&#13;
"Queen of the i n l a n d seas.r&gt; For four&#13;
h o u r s and 19 m i n u t e s s h e s t r u g g l e d&#13;
w i t h Detroit's s p l e n d i d s t e a m s h i p&#13;
'ashnioorttnd w h e n t t w t t s a i l over t h e&#13;
t w o magnificent e r a f t Had raeed for&#13;
n e a r l y a hundred m i l e s a n d w e r e b « t&#13;
a f e w seconds a p a r t a t t h e finish. N o&#13;
o t h e r such s t r u g g l e i s k n o w n in history.&#13;
As the City o f Erie s t a r t e d first&#13;
a n d finished first, o o o o e seemed t o&#13;
k n o w w h i c h had w o n , b u t i t soon developed&#13;
t h a t s h e w o n by a m a r g i n of&#13;
b u t 45 seconds. H o w m u c h m o n e y w a s&#13;
l o s t and w o n o n t * race wiJl never be&#13;
e x a c t k n o w n . I t arcaoTinted to m a n y&#13;
t h o u s a n d s , some s a y $100,00(¾.&#13;
"mi' i&gt;&gt;?« . i ""• i^m*i»~mi&#13;
O L D S H E R M A N M A N S I O N ,&#13;
t h e offer w a s declined. Since then i t&#13;
h a s been rented t o v a r i o u s families,&#13;
but Is still pointed t o by St. Louisiana&#13;
a s t h e Sherman m a n s i o n .&#13;
Tfee Center of the Apple Industry&#13;
T h e center of t h e apple Industry in&#13;
t h e United S t a t e s and the c o u n t y w h i c h&#13;
h a s more acres of apple orchards than&#13;
a n y other section of t h e world is Clay&#13;
county, Illinois. T h e largest apple orchard&#13;
in the country contains 640&#13;
acres. W i t h i n t h e corporate limits of&#13;
Flora, t h e c o u n t y seat, a r e found&#13;
more than 300 acres, and the major&#13;
portion of which is bearing, and from&#13;
an eminece on the n o r t h w e s t e r n boundary&#13;
m a y be seen 1,000 acres of t h e&#13;
best commercial apple orchards in the&#13;
state. Clay county h a s w i t h i n its confines&#13;
a total slightly in e x c e s s of 40,-&#13;
000 acres 6f apple trees. On a.n a v e r a g e&#13;
60 trees are s e t t o the acre, m a k i n g ,&#13;
therefore, a total of 2,000,00© trees in&#13;
t h e county. T h e a v e r a g e age of the&#13;
orchards i s l i years, and consequently&#13;
a n o t h e r year will Eae t h e m in their&#13;
prime. T h e Illinois apple belt e x t e n d s&#13;
from N e w t o n , in Jasper County, s o u t h&#13;
to Fairfield, in W a y n e county, and&#13;
from Olney, R i c h l a n d county, to C e n -&#13;
t r a l i s , in the e x t r e m e southwestern&#13;
portion of Marlon county. The counties&#13;
embraced in this territory contain&#13;
70,000 acres of apple orchards, or o n e -&#13;
half of t h e total a r e a g e of the s t a t e of&#13;
Illinois. T h e soil s e e m s peculiarly&#13;
adapted t o the raising of t h e typical&#13;
t r e e , t h e prodution of the, perfect apple.&#13;
M u r d e r e d Hl« Wlfr^a M o t h e r mad S u t e l d e d.&#13;
Robert Fulford. a prosperous Chieag©&#13;
contractor, murdered h i s mother-inl&#13;
a w , Mrs. Robert McCord, and b l e w&#13;
h i s o w n brains o u t a t t h e McCord farm&#13;
in London t o w n s h i p , n e a r London,&#13;
Ont., on the n i g h t o f t h e #tb. Fulford&#13;
w e n t to London s e a r c h i n g tor h i s&#13;
y o u n g w i f e w h o , i t i s a l l e g e d , d e s e r t e d&#13;
him three w e e k s a g o , a n d n o t finding&#13;
her at the h o m e o f her parents, upbraided&#13;
h i s m o t h e r - i n - l a w for secreti&#13;
n g h i s wife, a n d k i l l e d her. Before&#13;
a n y one could reach htm, the despera&#13;
t e m a n had placed t h e m u z z l e of a&#13;
second revolver i n his mouth a n d&#13;
b l e w his o w n brains o u t&#13;
T h e body of Dr. Daly, of P i t t s b u r g ,&#13;
Pa., w a s found i n t h e bathroom b y&#13;
M i s s Mary Short, h i s housekeeper, o n&#13;
t h e 0th, l y i n g i n a pool of blood w i t h a&#13;
38-caiiber revolver l y i n g on the floor.&#13;
I n a b a t t l e w i t h the i n s u r g e n t s a t&#13;
Li pa, province o f B a t a n g a s , Lieuts.&#13;
Springer a n d R a m s a y , of the 21st inf&#13;
a n t r y , w e r e k i l l e d and Capt. Wm. H.&#13;
W i i h e l m , of t h e s a m e regiment. Lieut.&#13;
T i t ah u g h Lee, Jr., and five e n l i s t e d&#13;
m e n w e r e w o u n d e d .&#13;
B A S E B A L L .&#13;
B e l o w w e p u b l i s h the standing" of&#13;
t h e American and N a t i o n a l l e a g u e c l u b s&#13;
up to and i n c l u d i n g t h e g a m e s played&#13;
on Sunday, J u n e 0:&#13;
AMERICAN LEAGUE.&#13;
Won.&#13;
Cliicrwo "JO&#13;
Washington 18&#13;
Detroit 21&#13;
Baltimore lti&#13;
Boston it)&#13;
Philadelphia 17&#13;
Milwaukee. • i t&#13;
Clevelund II&#13;
NATIONAL LEAGUE&#13;
Won,' ]&#13;
New York id&#13;
^Cfticinnati 20&#13;
P i t t s b u r g 21&#13;
Philadelphia 19&#13;
Brooklyn 18&#13;
St. Louis 18&#13;
Boston 12&#13;
Chicago 15&#13;
B r e a d In«t&lt;*4 of R l c « f o r Chin***.&#13;
E c o n o m i s t s w h o h a v e been s t u d y i n g&#13;
t h e social and industrial problems of&#13;
eastern Asia predict t h a t the Chinese&#13;
w i l l soon become a bread-eating i n -&#13;
stead of a rice-eating people. The presid&#13;
e n t of t h e S a n F r a n c i s c o chamber of&#13;
c o m m e r c e said a t t h e rate of the prese&#13;
n t enormous increaae in flour exports&#13;
t o China there will, w i t h i n t h r e e years,&#13;
b e e m p l o y m e n t for 40 first-claag m e r -&#13;
c h a n t m e n carrying flour from Pacific&#13;
c o a s t ports t o t h e Orient.&#13;
Lost.&#13;
13&#13;
13&#13;
16&#13;
15&#13;
16&#13;
19&#13;
23&#13;
£&gt;&#13;
..0^,&#13;
12&#13;
15&#13;
17&#13;
18&#13;
18&#13;
19&#13;
18&#13;
35&#13;
Per ct.&#13;
.667&#13;
.h8l&#13;
.579&#13;
.r&gt;!6&#13;
.MX)&#13;
.472&#13;
.378&#13;
.306&#13;
Per et.&#13;
.613&#13;
.571&#13;
.583&#13;
.514&#13;
.f&gt;00&#13;
.486&#13;
.400&#13;
.373&#13;
^ :&gt;r- T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
N&gt;w York— Cattlft Sheep Lambs&#13;
Best«fades....f4 50£6 0a 14 00 16 55&#13;
Lower grades 3 O-Ji 3J&#13;
China'* Most Vntuhl« Prodoet.&#13;
Undoubtedly the m o s t useful plant in&#13;
China—perhaps in t h e world—is t h e&#13;
b a m b o o . It furnishes m a n y varieties&#13;
o f food, i s manufactured i n t o d r e s s&#13;
g o o d s , paper, furniture, i s used In&#13;
b o a t and shipbuilding, constructing&#13;
h o u s e s , etc. I t - 1 | called t h e "universai&#13;
m a t e r i a l " In C m n a , a n d is p e r h a p t h e r&#13;
m o s t valuable product.&#13;
Chloi%fro—&#13;
Best grades.....5 50^8 10&#13;
Lower (trades. 4 zojA 4&gt;&#13;
Detroit-&#13;
Best grades....3 83¾¾ 23&#13;
Lower Krades.i 73^3 7J&#13;
Bnffaln— *&#13;
Best grades. ....4 ¢0¾¾ 2i&#13;
Lower grades..3 63£4 0J&#13;
Cincinnati—'&#13;
Best grade*..... S 41^5 7&gt;&#13;
Lower grades..2M&amp;1 «)&#13;
FMtahnra—&#13;
Bestitrad«v...&gt;K*&amp;3 8"i&#13;
Ijjoirer grades.vSW^5 1)&#13;
4 23&#13;
390&#13;
4 &amp;&#13;
4 15&#13;
3 75&#13;
4!T&gt;&#13;
3 9J&#13;
4 33&#13;
4 0J&#13;
5 75&#13;
5 25&#13;
a 0)&#13;
5 10&#13;
4 75&#13;
5 20&#13;
6 00&#13;
6 50&#13;
4&amp;J&#13;
5 30&#13;
6 10&#13;
HOSTS.&#13;
18 30&#13;
6 2 5&#13;
6 0 0&#13;
5 7J&#13;
5 83&#13;
5 70&#13;
6 03&#13;
5 7 J&#13;
6 80&#13;
5 30&#13;
fi95&#13;
5 2 5&#13;
G R A I N . E T C&#13;
Kftw Torfe&#13;
CMe*x9&#13;
'Detroit&#13;
Toledo&#13;
Cincinnati&#13;
Ptttabarz&#13;
Buffalo&#13;
Wheat&#13;
No. 2 re 1&#13;
:3 ?«»4&#13;
74 ? 7 4 *&#13;
:3 j:.i i&#13;
74 *74 &lt;•»&#13;
70 ^76¾&#13;
75® 75?»&#13;
Corn&#13;
No. S -nix&#13;
4 8 ? 4 9 *&#13;
43 *433i&#13;
f 43*43*&#13;
«344&#13;
441144¾&#13;
45345 Vfi&#13;
44344H&#13;
Oats&#13;
No. 2 whits&#13;
53(133&#13;
C8&amp;28I6&#13;
31@S1H&#13;
»$£8*4&#13;
3033J*&#13;
S3 2*3 H&#13;
•Detroit-Hay, No, I Timothy. $12 73 per toa&#13;
Potatoes, 55c per bu. Live Poultry, spring&#13;
chickens, 10j per lb: fowls, 9*o; turke^K Ps;&#13;
duckn. 10?. Ejfjrs, RtricUv frcs.i, no per down.&#13;
Butter, bent diwry. H„* per 7&gt;; crrtunerfi ISo.&#13;
T h e familiar controTersy never l a n -&#13;
g u i s h e s . . W h a t i s the origin o f Dfxie's&#13;
L a n d or D i x i e Land, o r D i x i e ? Oa,&#13;
o n , i t goes. I believe i t w a s r i g h t&#13;
h e r e o n M a n h a t t a n Island, a n d t h a t&#13;
t h e fellow w h o wrote a b o u t i t b e i n g&#13;
a "land of cotton, 'slmmon seed, a n d&#13;
s a n d y bottom" w a s a chump. Old Man&#13;
D i x i e w a s a slaveholder o n M a n h a t t a n&#13;
Island, w h o removed his s l a v e s t o t h e&#13;
S o u t h e r n states, where t h e y had t o&#13;
w o r k harder and fare w o r s e ; ao t h e y&#13;
w e r e a l w a y s s i g h i n g for their old&#13;
h o m e , which t h e y called "Dixie Land."&#13;
T h e "nigger" i m a g i n a t i o n soon adv&#13;
a n c e d this island into a sort of Del&#13;
e c t a b l * Country, or Land ef Beulah.&#13;
— N e w York Pr?ss.&#13;
Try Grain-O! Try Ciraln-O!&#13;
Ask your Grocer today to show you a packsge&#13;
or GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes&#13;
U«J place of cotfee. The children may drink It&#13;
without injury an well as the adult. All who&#13;
try ft. like ft. aHAIN-O has that rfeh seat&#13;
brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from&#13;
pure grainx, and the most delicate stomach receives&#13;
it without distress. H the price of coffee.&#13;
15c and 2o els. per package. Sold by ail&#13;
yrocers.&#13;
Preacher Betrays Snlrfier Comrade*.&#13;
After proving a traitor to h i s c o m -&#13;
rades in a r m s i n the Philippines in a&#13;
selfish endeavor to mitigate t h e rigors&#13;
of h i s o w n prison life, s a y s a S t Paul&#13;
d i s p a t c h , the R e v . Leonidas B r o w n of&#13;
S t Paul i s t h o u g h t t o have fallen a&#13;
v i c t i m to t h e bolos of the insurgents.&#13;
CTffTffffTfTji^rorffi&#13;
Peculiar to Sammir Ps-ro-M filvts Prtapt&#13;
and Permanent Relief.&#13;
HalTs Catarrh. C«re&#13;
lis a oootstituooxtal core, Price. 75a&#13;
Dignity consists not in possessing honors but&#13;
in tfceconsciousness that wedeserve them.&#13;
When » woman deaies an accusation and&#13;
tracts to prove her innocence sue cries.&#13;
FITS Permanently Cnred. J?ofltBorn&lt;?rvon8ne»jaft*T&#13;
first day's u«e of Dr. Kline'n Great Nerve Kentorer.&#13;
fiend for F R E E 9 2 . 0 0 trUl bottle and treatise.&#13;
U*. R. H. JCUMK. Ltd.. «»1 Arch S t . MUlari&amp;lpOl*. Pa,&#13;
Our greatest glory consists not in never falling&#13;
but in rising every time we muy fall.&#13;
The less veracity a man has of his own the&#13;
satire he admires it in other people.&#13;
- -Sir.&#13;
. .i ''' . - &lt; . " . : • • -&#13;
•&#13;
1 ,&#13;
1&#13;
t, t&#13;
\&#13;
'*'&#13;
-\&#13;
• '•: / .•}!*&#13;
C l e m O. Moore, E d i t o r of t h e A d v o c a t e - D e m o c r a t of Crawfordsville, Ga.,&#13;
w r i t e s t h e P e r u n a Medicine C o m p a n y a s f o l l o w s :&#13;
Gentlemen—"After four yean of Intense suffering, caused by systemic&#13;
catarrh, which i contracted while editing, and traveling for my paper, I have&#13;
been greatly relieved by the use of Peruna. I gave up work during these yearn&#13;
of torture, tried various remedies and many doctors, but all the permmnemt&#13;
relief came from the use of Peruna, My trouble was called Indigestkm, but It&#13;
was catarrh all through my system, and a few bottles of Peruna made me team&#13;
like another person, noting the Improvement after I bad used the first battle*&#13;
Peruna Is undoubtedly the best catarrh remedy ever compounded*—Clem Q.&#13;
Moore*&#13;
Mrs. Winnlow's Soothing Syrup.&#13;
For children teething, softens the SPITHS, red we* inflammation,&#13;
alluys pain, cures* wiud colli'. &amp;*: a bottle&#13;
The bicycle maid may wear breeches, but she&#13;
doesn't go to any great lengths.&#13;
Piso's Care cannot be too highly spoken of as&#13;
a«ou?hcure.~-J, W. O'BKXEX, 3.'^ Third Ave.,&#13;
X., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 19 X).&#13;
Every time an argument gains you a new&#13;
friend it loses you two old ones.&#13;
Baseball players: Golf players; all players&#13;
chew White's Yucatan whilst playing.&#13;
Captain P e r c y W. Moss, P a r a g o u l d ,&#13;
Ark., s a y s : "I t h i n k P e r u n a is u n d o u b t -&#13;
edly t h e finest a n d s u r e s t catarrh c u r e&#13;
ever prepared, and it h a s t a k e n b u t t w o&#13;
bottles t o c o n v i n c e m e of t h i s f a c t "&#13;
J u d g e W m . T . Zenor, of W a s h i n g t o n ,&#13;
D. C , w r i t e s from 213 N. Capital Street,&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n , D. C :&#13;
"I t a k e pleasure in s a y i n g t h a t I c a n&#13;
cheerfully r e c o m m e n d the u s e of P e -&#13;
r u n a a s a r e m e d y for catarrhal t r o u b l e&#13;
a n d a m o s t e x c e l l e n t t o n i c f o r g e n e r a l&#13;
c o n d i t i o n s . " — W m . T. Zenor.&#13;
If y o u do n o t derive p r o m p t and:&#13;
s a t i s f a c t o r y r e s u l t s from t h e u s e o f P e -&#13;
runa, w r i t e a t o n c e t o Dr. H a r t m a n ,&#13;
g i v i n g a full s t a t e m e n t of y o u r e a » o&#13;
a n d h e w i l l be pleased t o g i v e y o n bJs&#13;
valuable a d v i c e gratis.&#13;
Address Dr. H a r t m a n , P r e s i d e n t o f&#13;
T h e H a r t m a n S a n i t a r i u m , ColnmbuavO.&#13;
UGLAS&#13;
50 SHOES ffi.&#13;
It isn't the timber of a voice burning In its&#13;
range that gives it warmth.&#13;
i&#13;
W . N . U . — D E T R O I T — N O . 2 4 — 1 Q O I&#13;
w o r t h o f W . It. Douajaa • * oa&lt;l&#13;
Iae c a n n o t b e eqiutfled&#13;
a n y p r i e e .&#13;
It 1« not alon* the hert&#13;
heather that makes a first&#13;
&lt;'1&amp;M »hoe it U the brains,&#13;
t?mt nave planned the best&#13;
«t7le. larts a perfect Miodel&#13;
of the foot, and the ronstnirtion of the shoe. It i« mechanical skill and&#13;
knowledge that have made W. I.. Douglas shoes the hest in the world for men.&#13;
T s t k e aw auhatltute. Insist oh having W. 1« l&gt;ougla* shoes wiJh name&#13;
and price stamped on bottom. Yonr dealer should keep them, if he does not,&#13;
* tor catalog giricg full instrnctiens how to order by mail.&#13;
W.L.. l»OUC&gt;JLA&amp;. U r o c k t o a , M&#13;
APPENDICITIS that dreadful fiend that threatens the&#13;
life of rich and poor, can attack and&#13;
kill only those whose bowels are not&#13;
kept thoroughly cleaned out, purified&#13;
and disinfected the year round* One&#13;
whose liver is dead, whose bowels&#13;
and stomach are full of half decayed&#13;
food, whose whole body is unclean&#13;
inside, is a quick and ready victim&#13;
of appendicitis.&#13;
If you want to be safe against the&#13;
scourge, keep in good health all the&#13;
time, KEEP CLEAN INSIDE! Use&#13;
the only tonic laxative, that will&#13;
make your bowels strong and healthy,&#13;
And keep them pure and clean, protected&#13;
against appendicitis and ALL&#13;
EPIDEMIC DISEASES- It'sCASCARETS,&#13;
that will keep and save&#13;
you. Take them regularly and you&#13;
will find that all diseases are absolutely&#13;
I&#13;
25c&#13;
ALL DRUGGISTS. SOLD IN BULK.&#13;
«11 b o w e l t r o a b l e * . appentffcltla, bll*&#13;
Plipc loaaneaa, b a d b r e a t b , b a d b l o o d , w i n d 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 o n t h e e t o m a e h * b l o a t e d b o w e t a , foul&#13;
V W 1 1 aw m o v t b , h e a d a c h e , l n d i s e e t l o n , pSmplea,&#13;
p a l n a after e a t i n g , l i v e r t r o u b l e , a a l l o w c o m p l e x i o n&#13;
a n d dlxKinesa. w h e n y o n r b o w e l s d o n ' t m o v e rega&lt;*&#13;
l a r l y y o n a r e f e t t t a x atek. C o n s t i p a t i o n k l l l a ntoro&#13;
p e o p l e t h a n a l l o t h e r d i s e a s e * t o g e t b e r . I t Is a&#13;
starter for t h e c h r o n l e a i l m e n t s a n d l o n g y e a r s o f&#13;
snflferlns; t h a t earn* a i t e r w a r d a . N o m a t t e r w h a t&#13;
a l l s y o n , s t a r t t a k i n g CASCARKT9 to-day* f o r y o n&#13;
w i l l n e v e r g e t w e l l a n d b e w e l l a l l t h e t i m e n n t l l&#13;
y o n p u t v o u r b o w e l s r i g h t . T a k e o u r a d v i c e } atari&#13;
w i t h CA&amp;CARBTS to-day* u n d e r a n a b s o l u t e g u a r -&#13;
a n t e e to c u r e or m o n e y r e f u n d e d . m&#13;
GUARANTEED •Ha l i a r a t e e i e l a e l a i s * w o r l d .&#13;
* r « u t saerls, a a 4 ewr beat teatlnyoalal&#13;
w i l l **ll C A S C A B K T S akM ^ ^&#13;
atoaey r e f a a d e d . . € &gt; « s « y ted&#13;
T O C T M t&#13;
ftjtwt be:&#13;
« T » W M •&lt; ever six aslltlea&#13;
&gt;ftKl' .sreater&#13;
Tbt« IfLabaelw .&#13;
aave .&#13;
to&#13;
t t l a&#13;
., ^ •• lt_abaal«te n r o e r e r&#13;
1»1 CJbA£fbfCSVA^Jft*KtJtTmfn% ,!anbmeUa,:il' ately «vs • * • ***• tSam aad)&#13;
flair, hoa«tl t r i a l , a« a«r all ar, t&#13;
- _ . »j»le dlreetlaaat&#13;
aboata aaaatdta tUeeea ,e manpt»yr nb»olsa jtro eaa*e eb«ye mboazlt , a* ta&lt;&#13;
t f&#13;
re tarn the na&lt; «&#13;
i&#13;
wh o y a a aar cSoaed If, a ad s e t y a a r&#13;
b o x e s . T a k e a « r advtee—so m&#13;
d a y . H e a l t b w m e n l e k l y fallow,&#13;
y o u flnt star««d ta a m e o i n n A 4 0 A Idilrem STaaUNu &amp;KM&#13;
mVKmstaadjay&#13;
KD» e6.rSEW f O a ^ w S a K s m V l&#13;
®he f hwfctMg § ijspatrti.&#13;
r. I . ANDREWS &amp; CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
J — — — — — — — — — — i « f ^ m * m m i ••&gt; l a i n • • —i—n» M .I..M.MI . . . . —&#13;
THURSDAY, J U N E 13, 1901.&#13;
This world is not so old. An&#13;
Albion man celebrated his one&#13;
hundredth birthday recently and&#13;
a local paper remarked that a line&#13;
of nineteen such men "would&#13;
reach back into history to the time&#13;
of Christ, and the sixtieth man in&#13;
such a line would be found in the&#13;
Garden of Eden making goo-goo&#13;
eyes at the new woman,"&#13;
A Good C o u g b M e d i c i n e .&#13;
tt sneaks well for Chamberlain's&#13;
Cough Remedy when druggists use it&#13;
in their own families id preferanee to&#13;
any other. "I have sold Chamberlain's&#13;
CouKb Remedy for the past five&#13;
years with complete satisfaction to&#13;
myself and customers," says Druggist&#13;
J. Goldsmith, Van Etten, N . Y. i l I&#13;
have always used it in my own family&#13;
both for ordinary coughs and colds&#13;
and for the cough following la grippe,&#13;
and find it very efficacious." For sale&#13;
by F . A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
T o all a p p e a r a n c e s t h e m e n&#13;
whom P i n g r e e p a r d o n e d d o n o t&#13;
feel at h o m e i n t h e i r n e w positions,&#13;
for t h e y a r e n e a r l y all m a k -&#13;
i n g an effort t o o b t a i n a n o t h e r s u i t&#13;
of stripes. A s fast as c o n s i s t e n t&#13;
t h e v a r i o u s c o u r t s a r e m a k i n g t h e&#13;
m e n r e t u r n e n g a g e m e n t to a J a c k -&#13;
son house.&#13;
: SWSQJ1HPEN&#13;
THE LEAF ROLLER.&#13;
I n j u r i o u s t o t h e S t r a w b e r r y P l a n t&#13;
W h e n a n d H o w t o T r e a t It.&#13;
There are a number of species 01&#13;
small caterpillars that feed upon thi&#13;
foliage of strawberries and a number&#13;
that fold or web up the leaves in whoh&#13;
or in part, but there is only one that occurs&#13;
in such numbers as to be reallj&#13;
injurious. This is the larva of the lit&#13;
tie moth pictured, many times its natural&#13;
size, in the cut.&#13;
Dr. J. B. Smith of New Jersey presents&#13;
this original sketch of the mott&#13;
Toledo* Sunday, Juae 15.&#13;
Train will leave South Lyon at&#13;
10:15 A. M. Beturning, leave Toledo&#13;
at 6 lOOj^M^JRate $0.70.&#13;
TO Cure a Cold in One Hay&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.&#13;
All drugguts refund the money&#13;
if it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's s'ignature&#13;
is on each box. 25c.&#13;
Tobacco g r o w e r s a r o u n d H o l l y&#13;
a r e t a l k i n g of b u i l d i n g a l a r g e&#13;
w a r e h o u s e , c e n t r a l l y located, for&#13;
t h e c u r i n g of t h e weed. T h e ave&#13;
r a g e farmer would grow s o m e tobacco,&#13;
if h e had a g o o d p l a c e in&#13;
which to cure i t . — F e n t o n I n d e -&#13;
p e n d e n t .&#13;
Mr. W . S . Wbedon, Cashier ot the&#13;
First national Bank of Winterest.&#13;
lova, in a recent letter jjives some experience&#13;
with a carpenter ia his employ,&#13;
that will be ot value to other&#13;
mechanics. He says: "I had a carpenter&#13;
work hip for me who was&#13;
obliged to stop work several days on&#13;
account of being troubled with diarrhoea.&#13;
I mentioned to him that I had&#13;
been similarly troubled and that&#13;
Chamberlan's Colic, Cholera, and Diarhoea&#13;
Remedy had cured me. He&#13;
bought a bottle of it from the druggist&#13;
here and iniovmed me that one&#13;
dose cured him, and he is again at his&#13;
work.1' For sale by F. A. Sigler&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
W. C- 7. U- J&#13;
• Edited by t h e W, C. T r.of Pluckn«j f&#13;
O n e n e e d s t o be p r e s e n t t o a p -&#13;
p r e c i a t e t h e e a r n e s t n e s s , i n t e l l e c t&#13;
a n d c u l t u r e of t h e s t a t e W C T U .&#13;
W e v e n t u r e to say t h a t n o l e g i s -&#13;
l a t u r e b o d y could h a v e b e e n c o n -&#13;
d u c t e d m o r e ably. W e a r e s u r e&#13;
t h a t n o t h i n g was t h r o w n a b o u t&#13;
t h e room e x c e p t now a n d t h e n a&#13;
b a d i n a g e of w o r d s a n d k n o w t h a t&#13;
n o t h i n g was c a r r i e d away b u t&#13;
good r e s o l u t i o n s , p l e a s a n t m e m o r -&#13;
ies a n d g r e a t e r love for t h e "work.&#13;
T h e a u d i t o r i u m of t h e P r e s b y -&#13;
t e r i a n c h u r c h w h e r e 2 4 t h a n n u a l&#13;
c o n v e n t i o n w a s h e l d was b e a u t i -&#13;
fully d e c o r a t e d w i t h w h i t e a n d&#13;
yellow t h e colors of t h e u u i o n&#13;
while h e r e a n d t h e r e old g l o r y&#13;
m i n g l e d h e r folds w i t h h e r s i s t e r&#13;
e m b l e m s of p u r i t y a n d freedom.&#13;
A n i n t e r e s t i n g p a r t of t h e d e c -&#13;
o r a t i o n s w e r e t h e t w o s t r i n g s of&#13;
t h e 300 t o t a l a b s t i n e n t p l e d g e&#13;
c a r d s s i g n e d b y t h e A m e r i c a n&#13;
s o l d i e r s in t h e P h i l i p p i n e s .&#13;
S t r e t c h e d f r o m ' t h e four g r e a t&#13;
c h a n d e l i e r s t h e y w e r e a s i l e n t test&#13;
i m o n y to t h e work of t h e o r g a n i -&#13;
zation of h o m e c o u n t r y lovers.&#13;
T h e floral d e c o r a t i o n wus profuse&#13;
a n d b e a u t i f u l . Sweet m u s i c b o t h&#13;
vocal a n d i n s t r u m e n t a l a d d e d&#13;
m u c h to t h e e n j o y m e n t . T h e&#13;
k e y s of t h e city were t u r n e d over&#13;
t o t h e W h i t e R i b b o n e r s .&#13;
T h e c o n v e n t i o n VAas welcomed&#13;
by M a y o r P o w e l l in behalf of t h e&#13;
C i t y by S u p t . L o h r in behalf of&#13;
ihe schools by M r s . Soloau in b e -&#13;
half of t h e d i s t r i c t by M r s . W i n -&#13;
scn in b e h a l f of t h e local u n i o n .&#13;
T h e city g a v e t h e ladies a 2 h o u r&#13;
d r i v e T h u r s d a y afternoon 34 carr&#13;
i a g e b e i n g in the procession. H&#13;
was w o r t h while to s p e n d o u r t i m e&#13;
to see a n d h e a r M r s . S t e v e n s t h e&#13;
n a t i o n a l P i e s , a n d A n n a G o r d a n&#13;
t h e best loved and i n t i m a t e f r i e n d&#13;
of o u r l a m e n t e d F r a n c i s W i l l a r d&#13;
each g i v i n g a d d r e s s T h u r s d a y eveing.&#13;
y rs. S t e v e n s cited t h e fact&#13;
t h n t m o s t r a i l r o a d employs, a r e&#13;
n o t allowed to r e t a i n t n e i r position&#13;
a n d i n d u l g e in t h e l i q u o r&#13;
h a b i t . S h e referred to t h e effort&#13;
t o h a v e t h e a n t i - c a n t e e n law repealed&#13;
a n d said t h a t the p e o p l e of&#13;
t h e g r e a t n a t i o n w h o w e r e t h e&#13;
m e a n s of t h i s law b e i n g e n a c t e d&#13;
w o u l d n e t s t a n d by and see it replealed.&#13;
M r s . S t e v e n s h a s a b e a u -&#13;
tiful faith t h a t some t i m e tb&lt;rt grower to poison the foliage so early&#13;
w o r k e r s in t h i s g r e a t c a u s e will&#13;
s c o r e a t r i u m p h a n t victory. W h e n&#13;
t h e g r e a t a d v a n c e which t h e W C&#13;
T U h a s m a d e in the p a s t 20 y e a r s&#13;
is t a k e n i n t o c o n s i d e i a t i o n w h e n&#13;
we w i t n e s s t h e e a r n e s t n e s s a n d&#13;
zeal of s o m e of t h e best w o m e n of&#13;
sucfc the juice out of tbe body of the&#13;
aphis.&#13;
The "brush and cultivator" ||ietbod&#13;
of fighting the pea louse is accepted us&#13;
the most generally effective. For this&#13;
it is necessary that the peas be planted&#13;
in rows, and when the insects are noticed&#13;
the vines are brushed backward and&#13;
forward with a good pine switch in&#13;
ront of a cultivator drawn by a single&#13;
,\orse. In this manner the plant lice&#13;
ire covered up as soon as they fall to&#13;
the ground, and a large proportion of&#13;
them are destroyed.&#13;
Peas &amp;awu late or on poor ground&#13;
sustain most damage. The pea aphli&#13;
is sketched, many times enlarged.&#13;
FOLDED LEAFLETS—LEAF ROLLEB MOTH.&#13;
and that of leaflets folded by singU&#13;
larvae in a recent report, in which hi&#13;
says&#13;
SUCCESSFUL SPRAYING.&#13;
A p p a r a t u s o n L a r g e a n d S m a l l&#13;
Scales—Main P o i n t s of It* Hue.&#13;
Successful results TiT"spraying r e -&#13;
quire the breaking up of the liquid into&#13;
a tine mist. Tbe essential features of&#13;
such an apparatus are a force pump,&#13;
several yards of one-half inch cloth reenforced&#13;
hose with bamboo hoisting&#13;
rod and a spray tip. The size of the&#13;
apparatus will depend on the amount&#13;
of vegetation to be treated. For limited&#13;
garden work and for the treatment&#13;
of low plants the knapsack pumps or&#13;
the small buiket force pumps are suitable,&#13;
the former costing about $14 and&#13;
the latter from $1! to $0.&#13;
Ready fitted pumps—knapsacks and&#13;
others—for the application of insecticides&#13;
are now made by all the leading&#13;
pump manufacturers of this country&#13;
and also large reservoirs with pump&#13;
attached for extended orchard operations,&#13;
the price of the latter ranging&#13;
from $25 to $75.&#13;
The cost of a spraying outfit for orchard&#13;
work may be greatly reduced by&#13;
combining a suitable pump and fixtures&#13;
with a home constructed tank or&#13;
barrel to be mounted on a cart or wagon.&#13;
A spray tank having a capacity of&#13;
Prompt Jmatie*.&#13;
In the "History, of Beverly,** Mass.,&#13;
the following anecdote Is related of a&#13;
good justice of the peace In the old colonial&#13;
times. On a cold night in winter&#13;
a traveler called at his house for lodg-&#13;
I n g * f h e ready hospitality of the justice&#13;
was about being displayed, when&#13;
the traveler unluckily uttered a word&#13;
which his host considered profane.&#13;
Upon tills he iuformed his guest that&#13;
be was a magistrate, pointed out the&#13;
nature of the offense and explained tbe&#13;
necessity of its being expiated by sitting&#13;
an hour .u the stocks.&#13;
Remonstrance was unavailing, for&#13;
custom at that time allowed the magistrate&#13;
to convict and punish at once, and&#13;
in this case be acted as accuser, witness,&#13;
jury, judge and sheriff, all in one.&#13;
Cold as it was our worthy justice,&#13;
aided by his son, couducted the traveler&#13;
to the place of punishment, an open&#13;
place near the meetfhg~house where&#13;
the stocks were placed. Here the traveler&#13;
was confined in the usual manner,&#13;
the benevolent executor of the law remaining&#13;
with him to beguile the time&#13;
of its tedium by edifying conversation.&#13;
At the expiration of the hour he was&#13;
reconducted to the house and hospitably&#13;
entertained till the next morning,&#13;
when the traveler departed with, let us&#13;
hope, a determination to consider his&#13;
words more carefully before giving&#13;
them utterance in the hearing of a con-&#13;
Brlpntlons maclstrate.&#13;
The moths make their appearance ir ( about loO gallons is a very satisfactory&#13;
the strawberry field during the flrsl size and may be conveniently made 4&#13;
half of May. Iu an ordinary sensor, feet long by 2½ wide by 2 deep, inside&#13;
they may be looked for almost nDj measurements. It should be carefully&#13;
time after Mav 1. The eggs are pal« ; constructed, so as to be water tight,&#13;
green in color.' almost exactly like tin : and should bo strengthened by four&#13;
underside of the strawberry leaf, auc \ iron bolts or rods across the ends, one&#13;
are almost invisible to any but most | each at the top^and bottom. A good&#13;
careful examination. When the-young j double acting force pump may be obcaterpillar&#13;
hatches, it must make o j tained from any of the leading pump&#13;
journey from the underside of the leal | manufacturers at a cost of from $10 to&#13;
on which it was born to the upper sid( I $20.&#13;
of the same or -another leaft and 11 i The more economical spray tips on&#13;
feeds for a day or two at least, prac j the amount of liquid required are the&#13;
tically exposed upon an open surface | different styles of cyclone nozzles, the&#13;
Moths may be found on the vines unti j best form of which is known to the&#13;
late in May or even in early June market generally as the vermorel n.oz-&#13;
Then they disappear, and during th«&#13;
first days of June the presence of tlu&#13;
larvae becomes noticeable, increasing!}&#13;
so as the month advances.&#13;
As soon as it is batched the little cat&#13;
erpillar makes its way to tin? upper sid&lt;&#13;
of a half grown leaf where the sepa&#13;
rate leaflets are not yet fully cxpaudec&#13;
and stretches itself along the midrib&#13;
It eats Into the midrib or along th«&#13;
side close to It, and very soon the upper&#13;
faces of the leaflet or lobe art&#13;
brought together and held in place bj&#13;
numerous silken cords, while the insect&#13;
spins a partial tube or lining inside, ir&#13;
which it lives for the balance of its life&#13;
It has been shown that just after it&#13;
Is hatched and while the larva is yet&#13;
very small it wanders from its place&#13;
of birth to the upper side of the leaf,&#13;
feeding here and there, before settling&#13;
down. It must be the object of the&#13;
zle. These are manufactured by the&#13;
leading pump companies. Other good&#13;
nozzles are also on the market. The&#13;
common garden spraying and hose&#13;
nozzles are much too coarse for satisfactory&#13;
work and are wasteful of the&#13;
liquid.&#13;
Entomologist Marlatt. giving this Information&#13;
about apparatus in a recent&#13;
bulletin on important insecticides, further&#13;
advises that a prime essential in&#13;
spraying, especially where the large&#13;
P u n U h m e n t a n d R e w a r d .&#13;
Whenever a certain Atchison boy is&#13;
bad. bis mother makes him put on his&#13;
Sunday clothes. She finds that this Is&#13;
punishment enough, though it is reward&#13;
for her girls when they behave.-&#13;
Atchison Globe.&#13;
Subscribe tor Dispatch.&#13;
WANTED—Salesman and Collector&#13;
to represent well established business&#13;
ot 50 years standing Small Honesty&#13;
Bond required, a liberal contract for&#13;
a good man.&#13;
D.E .Whipple,&#13;
303 South Main St.&#13;
Ann Ar! or, Mich.&#13;
A s t h e s t a t e fair is t o b e h e l d&#13;
in P o n t i a c t h i s y e a r t h e M i l f o r d&#13;
association a r e t a l k i n g o f d r o p p i n g&#13;
t h e i r fair for t w o y e a r s a s it&#13;
m i g h t interfere w i t h t h e o t h e r .&#13;
Call at F . A. Siffler's drug store and&#13;
cet a free sample of Chamberlain's&#13;
Stomach and Liver Tablets. They are&#13;
an elegant physic. They also improve&#13;
tbe appetite, strengthen and regulate&#13;
the Liver and Bowe's. They are easy&#13;
to take and pleasant in effect.&#13;
C h e l s e a will p a v e h e r m a i n&#13;
streets. . T h e village is to s t a n d&#13;
o n e - t h i r d of t h e cost a n d t h e p r o -&#13;
p e r t y o w n e r s t h e r e s t .&#13;
Didn't Marry For Money.&#13;
The Boston man, who lately married&#13;
a sickly rich yonng woman, is&#13;
happy now, for he got D:. King's&#13;
New Life PiHs,which restored her to&#13;
perfect health. , Infallible for J a u n -&#13;
dice. Biliousness, Malaria, ^ever and&#13;
Ague and all Liver and Stomach&#13;
troubles. Gentle but effective. Only&#13;
25c at F . A. Sigler's d r a g store,&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
In the season that when the j'oun?&#13;
caterpillar starts feeding it can find&#13;
no foliage that it can safely eat.&#13;
Therefore as soon as moths are found&#13;
flying in fair numbers spray with paris&#13;
greeu or some other arsenite. As the&#13;
plants grow rapidly and new leaves&#13;
are being constantly added, spray j&#13;
again a week later and a third time&#13;
the week thereafter. This will catch&#13;
t h i s a n d o t n e r l a u d s in thi s g r e a t the great bulk of the caterpillars that&#13;
c a u s e w h o shall say t h a t M r s . ! w o u l d b t -&gt; c o n i e injurious In June.&#13;
.„ ' , , ,, A single spraying will do compara-&#13;
S t e v e n s p r o p h e c y rdiali n o t s o m e t i v e l l i t t l e d t l ) c c a u s e the moths&#13;
t i m e c o m e to p a s s ? PlJES.&#13;
O r i g i n of "Whiff."&#13;
Several reasons have been assigned&#13;
to account for the word "Whig." universally&#13;
known to all the English&#13;
speaking people. By some the word is&#13;
supposed to be a contraction of a longer&#13;
one, "whiggamore," which in some&#13;
parts of England and Scotland, especially&#13;
Scotland, signifies a drover or&#13;
herder.&#13;
I t . w a s in 1079 that the word first&#13;
became common in tfte-JMtish isles,&#13;
when the struggle was in progress between&#13;
the peasantry and the aristocracy&#13;
to have or not to have the bill&#13;
passed by parliament to exclude the&#13;
Duke of York from the line of succession.&#13;
All who were opposed to placing&#13;
the duke in the line of succession were&#13;
derisively called "whiggamores," or&#13;
"drovers," just as the city dude of today&#13;
speakers of the "grangers," tbe&#13;
"grays," the "chin whiskers" and the&#13;
"hayseeders."&#13;
But Scotch tradition gives altogether&#13;
a different reason for the existence of&#13;
the word. It Is this: During the early&#13;
religious wars iu Scotland the weakest&#13;
of the factions used the words "We&#13;
Ilcpe hi Co 1" as n motto.' The initials&#13;
of i!;"s.' word* were placed ou I heir&#13;
bauneis thus. "\\\ LI. I. ti.." and soon&#13;
t!J ;he followers of that clan were given&#13;
the litle of "Whig," which was afterward&#13;
attached us a party nickname.&#13;
tively little good, because the moths&#13;
extend the egg laying period over sc&#13;
long a time. The first larva? nre al-&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN, County of Livingston&#13;
88.&#13;
At &amp; session of the Probate Court for said County,&#13;
held at the Probate Offlce in the Village of&#13;
Howell, on Tuesday tnw 28th day of May. in&#13;
the year one thousand nine hundred and one.&#13;
Present, Euycne A. Stowe Judge of Probate, ia&#13;
the Matter of the Estate of&#13;
JAMKS H. BAHTON, Deceased.&#13;
On reading and tiling thepetltionduly verified ot&#13;
Geo. W. Teeple, praying that a certain instrument&#13;
now on file In this rourt, purporting to ho the last&#13;
Will and Testament of said deceased, may* he ad&#13;
m it ted tu probate.&#13;
Thereupon It is ordered that Friday, the :21stday&#13;
of June next, at 10 o'cluck la the forenoon, at eald&#13;
Probate Office, be assigned for the heaving of&#13;
said petition.&#13;
It is further ordered that a copy of this order be&#13;
published in the PISCKNKY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulntlngj in .snit". county, three&#13;
eiiccet-sivo weeks previous to said day of hearing.&#13;
ElliKNE A. 8T0WK,&#13;
t-25 Judge of Probate&#13;
WANTED—Capable, reliable person in every&#13;
county to represent large company of solid financial&#13;
reputation. $J*&gt; ttiinrv par p ^ r , piyjjWlA&#13;
weekly; $:3 per day absolutely sure and all expenses;&#13;
straight, bona-tide, delimits salary, no&#13;
commission; salary paid wach Saturday and expensiMiioney&#13;
advanced eauh week. STANDARD&#13;
HOUSE, : m Dearborn st. Chicago. t-2*&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
ORCHAKD SritAYTNG.&#13;
reservoirs are employed, is to keep the&#13;
most full grown before the last eggs ] liquid constantly agitated to prevent&#13;
are hatched. The actual date of spray- j the settling of the poison to the bot-&#13;
Ing depends upon the season and the ! torn of the tank. This may be accomtlme&#13;
of appearance of the moths. When j plished by constant stirring with a padthe&#13;
fruit is well advanced, all poisons \ die, by shaking, but preferably by&#13;
must be of necessity kept off.&#13;
T h e N e w P e a Peat.&#13;
The new pest, the destructive pea&#13;
aphis, has in the last two years inflicted&#13;
enormous losses in various regions&#13;
where peas are grown for canneries, as&#13;
Maryland, Delaware. New Jersey, New&#13;
York and Connecticut. Michigan and&#13;
Wisconsin also have suffered from it.&#13;
Some of the scientists claim that it is&#13;
naturally more an enemy of clover thao&#13;
T B S DESTBUCOTS PEA L0U8B.&#13;
of peas. An encouraging feature noted&#13;
in Canada is that wherever tbe aphis&#13;
occurred It was attacked by parasitic&#13;
enemies, tbe most vigorous of these being&#13;
tbe small orange larvae of a specie*&#13;
of dlplosls — minute maggots - which&#13;
throwing a stream of the liquid back&#13;
into the tank. Many of the larger&#13;
pumps arc now constructed with two&#13;
discharge orifices with this latter object&#13;
in view or are provided with special&#13;
agitators, and the use of such is&#13;
recommended.&#13;
In spraying orchard trees it will be&#13;
found convenient in going between the&#13;
rows to spray on each side, half of&#13;
each tree in the row at a time and finish&#13;
on the return rather than attempt&#13;
to spray ail sides of one tree before&#13;
taking up another.&#13;
The object in spraying is to coat&#13;
every leaf and part of the plant as&#13;
lightly as compatible with thoroughness,&#13;
and to avoid waste in doing this&#13;
a mist spray is essential. The application&#13;
to any part should stop when water&#13;
begins to drip from the leaves. A&#13;
light rain will not remove the poison,&#13;
but a dashing one will probably necessitate&#13;
a renewal of the application.&#13;
&gt; AHD STEAMSHIP LINES.&#13;
Popular ronte 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;
Never give up to children if they are&#13;
in the wrong. Do not rob them ot*&#13;
memory thaT their mother and f t t h « r&#13;
were always true to their prindpletv-&#13;
Ladiet' Home Journal.&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
laallroaJL, T**x. 3., l O O l .&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit and Eest,&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p. m., S:5S p. m.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and West,&#13;
9:45 a. m., 2:0S p. m. 6:20 p. JJ.&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay City,&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p. ra., 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10 :30 a. m,&#13;
FRANK BAY, H. F. MOELLEK,&#13;
Agent, South Lyon. «i. P. A., Detroit.&#13;
Wrand Trnnk Railway System.&#13;
« 0.44 a.m.&#13;
8 6:45 p.m.&#13;
u&#13;
£ 4:4Sp.m.&#13;
JacksonX Detroit, and&#13;
Intermedial* •tatioui&#13;
mail and exp.&#13;
.Tackaon, Lenox, and&#13;
Intermediate station*&#13;
mixed.&#13;
5nT». m.&#13;
5:15 p. m. 3&#13;
7:55a.m. S&#13;
r *&#13;
The 0:16 a, m. and 0:45 p. m. traJoa have through&#13;
coach between Jackeoa and Detroit.&#13;
W. J. BlMk, Agent, PinekMy&#13;
HP!&#13;
•A* ~&#13;
• * v \&#13;
- '•• * " , ••.'••••• , ' &gt; f / j - v - •m VWf&#13;
T "&#13;
..^•.'."•, T :&#13;
~" S i m Two From Dtath.&#13;
"Oar little daughter bad an almost&#13;
fatal attack of whooping cough and&#13;
bronchitis" writes Mrs. W. K. Haviland,&#13;
of Armonk, N. Y., ,lbut when all&#13;
other remedies failed, we saved her&#13;
life with Dr. King's new Discovery.&#13;
Our niece, who bad consumption in&#13;
an advanced stage, also used this wonderful&#13;
medicine and today she is perfectly&#13;
well." Desperate throat and&#13;
lung diseases yield to Dr. King,s New&#13;
Discovery as to no other medicine on&#13;
earth. Infallible for Coughs and&#13;
Colds. 50c and $1.00 bottles guaranteed&#13;
by F. A. Sig'er. Trial bcttles&#13;
free.&#13;
Going West This Summer.&#13;
—^Are you goiag west to visit~*el*&#13;
atiyes?&#13;
Are you going west to seek a&#13;
home?&#13;
Are you going west on business?&#13;
The Pere Marquette direct&#13;
route via Ottawa Beach and Milwaukee&#13;
is a short line and makes&#13;
a quick trip and a pleasant one.&#13;
Connections at all points on the&#13;
system with through trains to Otawa&#13;
Beach. Boat leaves the&#13;
Beach daily at 11.:05 p. m., arriving&#13;
Milwaukee at 6:30 a. m.&#13;
Direct connections to the west&#13;
and northwest. Tickets sold&#13;
through to destination. Ask your&#13;
Agent. t-25&#13;
Special Excursions To Mtoaeftoto*&#13;
Commencing June IS and continuing&#13;
until Sept 10, the Ann&#13;
Arbor B . B . will sell excursion&#13;
tickets to St. Paul, Minneapolis&#13;
Duluth at very low rates for the&#13;
round trip. Call on agents for&#13;
particulars, or write.&#13;
J. J. KlRBY,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo, Ohio.&#13;
fcfc WANT E I&gt; 99&#13;
Weak men, weak women, pale&#13;
men, pale women, ner&gt; (-us men, nervous&#13;
women, debilitatfd men, debilitated&#13;
women, to take Knill'a R«d Pills&#13;
for Wan People. They restore Heaitli,&#13;
Strength and Beauty. Wake up,&#13;
_brace up by ta k[nj^_tbem tiefore the&#13;
hot weather. They are 1he&gt; preat body&#13;
builder and developer, Spring Tonic&#13;
and Blood medicine, 25c a box,&#13;
Knills White Ljver Pills are the&#13;
great Liver Invigorator, Bowel Regulator.&#13;
25 doses 25c.&#13;
Knill's Blue Kidney Pills cure&#13;
Backache and Kidney troubles. 25c&#13;
a box.&#13;
A Terrible Explosion.&#13;
uOf a gasoline store burned a lady&#13;
here frightfully," writes N. E. Palmer,&#13;
of Kirkman, la. ,4Tbe best doctors&#13;
couldn't heal the running sore&#13;
that followed, but Bucklen's Arnica&#13;
salve entirely cured her.'' In allible&#13;
lor Cuts, Corns, Sorea BQUA, Bruises,&#13;
Skin Diseases *nd Piles. 25c at F. A.&#13;
Sigler's drug store, Pinckney.&#13;
N. F . Parsons, earlier on rural&#13;
route No. 1, has just completed&#13;
his first year and we take the following&#13;
from his report, which will&#13;
show something of the magnitude&#13;
of his work: He traveled 8,138&#13;
miles, delivered 11,860 letters, 2,-&#13;
357 cards, 46,914 papers, 1,471&#13;
packages' 3,304 circulars and 14&#13;
registered leters, making a total&#13;
of 65,940. He li as collected 8,452&#13;
letters, 897 cards, 6Q papers, 164&#13;
packages, 9 circulars, 6 registered&#13;
letters, 160 money orders, making&#13;
total of 9,756 pieces and a grand&#13;
total of pieces delivered and collected&#13;
75,696. These figures make&#13;
interesting reading for any one&#13;
that is at all interested in rural&#13;
delivery.—Fowlerviile Keview.&#13;
Seven Years In Bed.&#13;
"Will wonder ever cease,'" inquire&#13;
the friends of. M r s J ^ Pease, of Law&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
Salary $900 YEARLY.&#13;
M€i inr ' wcmot of good address to r? &lt;resent&#13;
• 8, some to travel a:&gt; pointing agents, others for&#13;
local work looking after our interests. $ 0 0 0&#13;
salary euaranteed yearly; extra con missions and&#13;
expenses, rap d advancement, old established&#13;
bouse. Grand chance for earnest man or woman&#13;
to secure pleasant, perrcanent position, liberal&#13;
income and future. New, brilliant lines. Write&#13;
at once, STAt'FOIftD P K K S S , t-38&#13;
9 3 C b u r c b S t „ N e w H a v e n * C o n n .&#13;
HW^««%«»N^««S«S«"WN&lt;»w»WVH.(S&lt;«W*.»&lt;.r&gt;^S«*W&lt;t«&#13;
POSTAL 4 MORBV,&#13;
The PROPRIETOR*. '&#13;
Griswold A&#13;
strictly&#13;
firstolaes,&#13;
House DETROIT.&#13;
modern,&#13;
up-to-date&#13;
Hotel, located&#13;
in the heart of&#13;
the City.&#13;
rence, Kan. They knew she hid been&#13;
unable to leave her bed in seven yeaas&#13;
on account of Kidney and liver trouble,&#13;
nervous prostration and general&#13;
debility; but, "Three bottles or1 Electric&#13;
Bitters enabled me to walk," she&#13;
writes, " and in three months I felt&#13;
like a new person." Women suffering&#13;
from Headache, Backache, Netvousness,&#13;
Sleeplessness, Melancholy,&#13;
Fainting and Dizzy Spells will rind it&#13;
a priceless blessing- Try it. Satisfaction&#13;
is guaranteed. Only T&gt;0 cents.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
5 0 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
T R A D E M A R K S&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C .&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch and description may&#13;
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an&#13;
invention ts probably patentable. Communications&#13;
strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents&#13;
sent free. Oldest Agency for securing patents.&#13;
Pntents taken through Munn &amp; Co. receive&#13;
STTB&#13;
9 w w tsST "«MJ"4An*»"&#13;
A good story 1» told In Missouri at&#13;
the expense of its once famous governor,&#13;
Claiborne F. Jackson. Before he&#13;
solved the e^jma of lovelock be bad&#13;
married flvr sisters in reasonable&#13;
lapses of consecutiveness. After one&#13;
wife bad been lost and appropriately&#13;
mourned be espoused anotber, and be&#13;
The July edition ol the 4)elia^&#13;
aetor was 625,000. A copy came&#13;
to our table the past week and it&#13;
U a beauty. The three color&#13;
printing illustrating the Pan-American&#13;
is a marvel. The magazine&#13;
is forging ahead to a high mark&#13;
as nn art magazine and should beH kept bis courting witbin a uarrow cir&#13;
, e ele of bis own relatives, for be rattier&#13;
in every home. U k e d t h e f a m I i y .&#13;
Tbe antiquated father of these girls&#13;
was almost deaf, and when tbe governor&#13;
went to this octogenarian to ask&#13;
for his surviving daughter tbe following&#13;
conversation ensued:&#13;
"I want Lizzie."&#13;
"Eh?"&#13;
•'I want you to let me have Eliz-abeth."&#13;
"Oh, you want Lizzie, do you? What&#13;
for?"&#13;
"For my wife."&#13;
Yon may as well expect to run a&#13;
steam engine without water.a# to rind&#13;
an active energetic man with a torpid&#13;
liver and yon may know that bis liver&#13;
is torpid when be does not relish bis&#13;
food, or feels dull and languid after&#13;
eating, often has headache and sometimes&#13;
dizzimss. A few doses of&#13;
Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver&#13;
Tablets will restore his liver to its&#13;
normal function, renew bis vitality,&#13;
improve bis digestion and make him&#13;
feel like a new man. Price, 25 cents,&#13;
Samples free at F. A. Sigler's drug&#13;
store, Pinckney.&#13;
Edison claims to hav ediscovered&#13;
a process by which Portland&#13;
cement can be made as cheap as&#13;
salt—$1.00 per barrel. There is&#13;
little doubt that it is to be the&#13;
coming building material. The&#13;
raw deposits of material are inexhaustible.&#13;
A Sprained A n k l e Q u i c k l y Cured.&#13;
" At one time I suffered troi'f a severe&#13;
sprain of the ankle," says Geo E.&#13;
uary, editor of the (iuide, Washington&#13;
Va. "After using several well recommended&#13;
medicines without success&#13;
I tried Chamberlain's Pain Balm, and&#13;
am pleased to say that relief came as&#13;
soon as [ began its use&gt; and a complete&#13;
cure speedily followed." Sold by F .&#13;
A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
tpeeial notice, without charge, to the" Scientific American. AJbandsomely illustrated weekly.&#13;
Rates, $2, $2.50, $3 per Day.&#13;
C O M . G R A N D R I V B R * Q m s w o i * S T ,&#13;
Largest clr-&#13;
culatton of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a&#13;
year; four months, $L Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN 4 0 0 . ^ - ^ - New York&#13;
Branch Office, 636 F S t , Washington, D. C.&#13;
One hundred and fifty gallons&#13;
of young perch has been placed in&#13;
Island Lake.—Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
Which is the first time we ever&#13;
heard of the "gallon" being used&#13;
as a unit for fish measurement.—&#13;
Dexter Leader. If Bro, Thompson&#13;
would get outside of Dexter&#13;
he would find that the govern-,&#13;
meut measures fish by the gallon.&#13;
"For life."&#13;
"I want—to—marry—her."&#13;
"Oh, yes. Just so. 1 bear you, boy."&#13;
"I'm precious glad you do," muttered&#13;
Ibe governor.&#13;
"Well," slowly responded tbe veteran,&#13;
"you needn't halloo so that tbe&#13;
whole neighborhood knows it. Yes,&#13;
you can have her. You've got 'em all&#13;
now, my lad, but for goodness' sake, if&#13;
anything happens to that 'ere poor misguided&#13;
gal. don't come and ask me for&#13;
the old woman!"&#13;
Jackson solemnly promised that be&#13;
never would.&#13;
Nitrate of Soda Pays.&#13;
At the New Jersey station "nitrate of&#13;
soda when used in relatively small&#13;
amounts" has been found to affect&#13;
earliness of crops in a marked degree.&#13;
In one experiment with beets "for every&#13;
Hollar invested in nitrate of soda&#13;
nearly $3 was returned in tbe increased&#13;
value of tbe crop."&#13;
3 • ;;v:-r:«l&#13;
agree to refund tbe money on a 50&#13;
cent bottle of Down's Elixir if it d o *&#13;
not core any cough, cold, whooping&#13;
cough, or throat trouble. We at»o&#13;
guarantee Down's Elixir to care con&#13;
sumption, when used according to di«&#13;
rections, or money back. A full dose&#13;
on ffoingjjkTbed and small dose3 dur*&#13;
iag the day will care tbe most severe&#13;
cold, and stnp the "most distressing&#13;
cough.&#13;
P. A. Sigler„&#13;
W. B. barrow&#13;
PCBUBBBD SVBK1* THVMSaY MO&amp;VISQ BT&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
Subscription Price $1 in Advance.&#13;
Entered at the Poetofflce at Pinclmey, Miehifan&#13;
ae second-da* matter.&#13;
Advertising rates made known on appUcation.&#13;
Basinets Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
I^eaih and marriage notices published tno.&#13;
Announcements o l entertainment* may be paid&#13;
for, if desired, by presenting the office with tickets&#13;
of admission. In case tickets are not brought&#13;
to the office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter in local notlca column will be cnar&#13;
insertion. Where no tiute is specified, ail notices&#13;
ed at 5 cents per Una or fraction thereof, for eac&amp;&#13;
K e w i a n d N o t e s .&#13;
The presence of the Hessian fly in&#13;
wheat is reported from an almost unprecedentedly&#13;
large number of states.&#13;
The production of sugar cane in the&#13;
Hawaiian Islands is estimated at 310,-&#13;
DOO tons for 1V.00.__:&#13;
Sugar beet factories are now in sue-&#13;
Pay your Subscription this month&#13;
A Knotty&#13;
Q u e s t i o n&#13;
You cannot know which may be the B e s t&#13;
P a i n t until time has tried them—the test of&#13;
exposure tells the quality of Paint&#13;
J o u r n a l i s t i c Errors.&#13;
I do not allude to what are obviously&#13;
mere misprints, such as when The&#13;
Morning Tost announced at the head of&#13;
its fashionable intelligence that Lord&#13;
ralmerston had gone down into Hampshire&#13;
with a party of fiends to shoot&#13;
peasants, but I refer to blunders due to&#13;
crass ignorance of a pretentious order.&#13;
Perhaps the best instance was when&#13;
one of tbe "young lions" of The Daily&#13;
Telegraph In a leading article enumerated&#13;
the great masters of Greek sculpture&#13;
as Phidias, Praxiteles and Milo,&#13;
ignorant of the fact that Mllo is not a&#13;
sculptor, but an island.&#13;
The Times was even worse when.&#13;
IfiTsTafrtftg' Prussia for Austria. 11 devoted&#13;
a whole leader to discussing why&#13;
Prussia had joined the zollverein. The&#13;
Saturday Review once explained at&#13;
great length that the population might&#13;
be nourished gratuitously on young&#13;
lambs if killed unweaned before they&#13;
had begun to crop grass, having therefore*&#13;
cost nothing to feed. Many other&#13;
instances will doubtless occur to your&#13;
readers.—Notes and Queries.&#13;
tessful operation in California, New&#13;
Mexico. Utah. Nebraska, New York,&#13;
Oregon, Minnesota, Illinois, Washington.&#13;
Colorado and Michigan.&#13;
Reforestation with oak in France&#13;
is said to represent a t the end of 34&#13;
years G per cent annually on tbe investment.&#13;
The disappearance of the ''old fashioned&#13;
apple" is a frequent lament. The&#13;
modern fruit is fair to look upon, but&#13;
genuine flavor is too often absent.&#13;
The King of Siam, said to be the finest&#13;
orange ever grown, is the sensation&#13;
among epicures. It is grown in&#13;
Florida and California and looks like a&#13;
tangerine, with a loose, rough Skin.&#13;
The output of the 175 canneries in.&#13;
Maine is $5,000.000 annually. In ordinary&#13;
years $350,000 is paid to farmers&#13;
for sweet corn alone.&#13;
The Doctor's Indiscretion.&#13;
"There is no profession which calls&#13;
for tbe use of more discretion than the&#13;
profession of medicine." remarked a&#13;
well known physician of this city.&#13;
"Just to give you an instance:&#13;
"I came home late one evening after&#13;
a very busy day and was told by the&#13;
office boy that a certain Mrs. R. had&#13;
. _ &gt; •&#13;
The Peninsular Lead &amp; Color Works, Ltd.,&#13;
Detroit, Mixed Paint has solved the knotty question&#13;
under the test of practical experience. It&#13;
has been tried by time and exposure—and never&#13;
disappoints.&#13;
It is strong and true in color—always of&#13;
uniform excellence, and of great durability.&#13;
Why experiment? Buy the Paint sure to satisfy.&#13;
SOLO * Y&#13;
«eor W. REASON^^SONr&#13;
Pinckney Mich.&#13;
A H l x e d w e d d i n g Party.&#13;
"The collegeroonimate of a friend of&#13;
mine was engaged to a lady in New&#13;
York." writes the Rev. D. M. Steele in&#13;
his article on "Some People 1 Have&#13;
Married" in The Indies' Home Journal.&#13;
"His people are Congregationalists.&#13;
but while at Yale he became a&#13;
Unitarian. Her parents are Roman&#13;
Catholics, but she was a member of the&#13;
Ethical Culture society.at Carnegie&#13;
hall. In compliance with her mother's&#13;
wish he asked five different priests .to&#13;
marry theiii, but all refused. In despair&#13;
he came for me. I married them, an&#13;
Episcopalian, with tbe ritual service in&#13;
a Presbyterian chapel. The Roman&#13;
Catholic brother of the bride and the&#13;
Congregational sister of the groom&#13;
were preseut. T-his sister acted as one&#13;
witness; the other witness was a Jewess."&#13;
called me up three times on the telephone.&#13;
As her young hopeful had scarlet&#13;
fever and I was afraid he had taken&#13;
a sudden turn for tbe worse, I got 'central'&#13;
to connect me with her house&#13;
without delay."&#13;
" 'The missus has gone to bed, sir,'&#13;
said the voice of a maid In reply, 'but&#13;
she was so anxious to -know if she&#13;
could wash Tommy's face.'&#13;
"I called back that she had better ask&#13;
the nurse if it was dirty. Now they&#13;
have another doctor."—New York Mail&#13;
and Express.&#13;
Stop the C o u g h a n d w o r k s off t h e&#13;
Cold.&#13;
L?xative Brorno-Quinine Tablets cure&#13;
&lt;i cold in oue day. No &lt; ure, no pay.&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be cnaiged for accordingly. ej-All changes&#13;
of advertisements H UST reach this office as early&#13;
as TUESDAY morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
JO "8 2&gt;£ZJV 2IJV Q /&#13;
In all its br anc bes, a specialty. We hare all kinds&#13;
and the lateat styles or Type, etc.,. which enables&#13;
us to execute ail kinds of work, such as Books,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., i n&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
o-v as good work can bo none.&#13;
. L l BILL* PA.7A.BL7 Ifl&amp;ST OF SVSRlf ICOKTS.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBBBIDBNT.. ^ . C. L, Sigler&#13;
TaUSTEES it. Baker, R. H. Erwin,&#13;
F. G. Jackson, Geo Reason Jr.&#13;
Chas. Lore. Malacby Roche.&#13;
CLERK . . _ ^ . E. R. Brown&#13;
Asanasoii M . . J * S . A.Greene-&#13;
STUEBT C O M M I S S I O N ! ! ! . . . . J. Parker&#13;
HiCALTHOrric«B D r . U . F. Sigler&#13;
MARSHALL. S. Brogan&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
V f E T H O D l S T EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
i l l Rev. H. W . Hicks, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at lu:3o, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close ot morning&#13;
service. L E A i . SIOLEB, Bupt.&#13;
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. U. W. Rice pastor. Service e v e r j&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'ciyck. Prayer meeting Thars&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at close of moroinc&#13;
service. Alias Kit tie doff, Supt,, Maoel&#13;
Swarthout Sec.&#13;
ST. MARV'8 CATHOLIC CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Comuierford, Pastor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:3« o'clock&#13;
high mass witusermon at 9:30a. in. Catechism&#13;
at 3:00 p. in., vespers ana benediction at 7:4i&gt; u. m.&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
rnhe A. O. H. Society of this place, meats every&#13;
1 third S'mrtar in tne Fr. Mittuew tUll.&#13;
John ruoiney and i l . T. Kelly, Coauty Delegates&#13;
L^PWORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
fitfevening at 0:ix) oclock in the tf. E. Church. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyone, especially&#13;
youog people. F. L. Andrews, Pres,&#13;
CHRISTIAN E S D E W O R Sf&gt;JIE r\f:- M &gt;9t&#13;
ini»3 every Suuday evening at ti-A). Prj*i tjut&#13;
Miss L. i£. Cos; Secretary, .Vitas Untie C*rpaatar&#13;
n^HE W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
I mouth at 2:&amp; p. m. at tne hoineof. Dr. 11. F.&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested in temperance is&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs. Leal Sisler, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
£ t t a Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
WANTED-Capable' reliable person in every&#13;
conntv to represent large coin;?anyjof solid finan-&#13;
^cial reputation; $938 salary per yetr, payable&#13;
Veekly: $3 per day absolutely sure and all expenses;&#13;
8Ui.Uht, bona tide, deflnate salary, no&#13;
commission; salary paid each Saturday and expense&#13;
money advanced each week. STANDARD&#13;
HOUSE, ; m Deartxru at. Chicago t.-*)&#13;
Carefnl Statement.&#13;
"Was this mau Dennis an entire&#13;
strnnjrer to you?" asked the cross examining&#13;
counsel of a witness in an iui-&#13;
|&gt;ort:uit c:isi«.&#13;
"Sorr?" said the witness, whose stupid&#13;
face was crossed with wrinkles of&#13;
juixiel.v, for he had been warned to be&#13;
The C . T . A. and B. society of thlB place, n»eet&#13;
%v&lt;dtj third Saturaay evening in the Fr. Jnatthew&#13;
Hall. J o h n Donohue, President.&#13;
KNIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before f a l l&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially Invited.&#13;
CUAS. U A M P B E U . , Sir Knight Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 7¾. F 4; A, M. Regular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the full of the moon. H. F. Sigler, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN SJ TAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
4A.M. meeting, M.&amp;S. MARY READ, W. M.&#13;
RDER OF MODERN WOODMEN !tteet the&#13;
hrst Tnursday evening of each Month in the&#13;
•uacuabee nail. C. L.Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACOABEJSS. Meet every la&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachinonth at :4:30 p in. a&#13;
K. O. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially invited.&#13;
JULIA SIOLKR, Lady Com.&#13;
1 A L G U A R D&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every mouth in tbe K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:30 o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guarde welcome.&#13;
C. L. Grimes, Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
A-Card.&#13;
• •"!, the undersigned, do hereby apree&#13;
to refund the money on a 50 cent bottle&#13;
of Gre°n's Warranted Syrup of&#13;
Tar if it failes vo cure your coutfb or.&#13;
cold. 1 also guarantee a, 25-cent bottie&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money refunded.&#13;
t23&#13;
lamious and exact in his answers. Will B. Darrow.&#13;
The lawyer repeated his question.&#13;
"Well. no. sorr," said tbe witness,&#13;
with M sudden gleam or enlightenment.&#13;
"Ele couldn't be that, for he bad but&#13;
the wan arrm, sorr. but he was a&#13;
parrtial stranger, s o r r ^ — a i ^ ^ v ^ r w o t t ^ ' ^ 1 * f4ia«lM» j§ on every box&#13;
him befoor."—Youth's Companion.&#13;
&lt;SfrA&#13;
laxative&#13;
trie remedy tnat&#13;
1 tbe genuine&#13;
Tablets&#13;
H. F. SIQLKR M. O- C, L, SIGLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons. All calls prompt!&#13;
attended to day or night. Ofllce on Mala str&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
•Every Frldmy; and on T h u r f&#13;
appointments. Office over&#13;
DENTISTdsy&#13;
when having&#13;
Sigler's Drug Store.&#13;
V E T E R I N A R Y S U R Q E O N T&#13;
Graduate of Outarlo. Veterinary College, also&#13;
the Veterinary Dentistry College&#13;
Toronto Canada.&#13;
Will promptly attend to all diseases ot^the do&#13;
meeticated animal a t a reasonable price. _&#13;
H o m e teeth examined Free. ~~&#13;
ornccat AILU PINCKNUV&#13;
• • . ^ &lt; J * I |&#13;
•' W.i%\&#13;
m&#13;
; . - &gt; ' • • ' • ' * • •&#13;
» ;\&#13;
. *&#13;
d&#13;
• ••'V ?&gt;'',,,&lt;vvl.; m . • • * ; '&#13;
*&#13;
VI'&#13;
v «. v f "-• f " . • &gt; ' •&#13;
m&#13;
\ .,&#13;
mm&#13;
•' ' V .&#13;
i-'. •&#13;
f.rwi*' *:?'&amp;' ; • * ' LV&#13;
-.^,. ' ' &gt; • •&#13;
?&gt;'•*&#13;
fc.&#13;
g'mthxw gfi&amp;atch.&#13;
F R A N K L. ANDKKWS, Publisher.&#13;
PINCKNEY, ~T*""~I MICHIGAN.&#13;
Happenings of a Week in Our&#13;
Great State.&#13;
Turkey, o r b i n g a new warship SELECTED AND S T E W E D DOWN.&#13;
without paying what is due on past&#13;
contracts, recalls the optimism of the&#13;
ulater, who, falling from a tower, remarked&#13;
as he passed each story,&#13;
"All's well so far."&#13;
Killed&#13;
Seven Were Injured.&#13;
WRECKOCCURREDIN NEW YORK&#13;
The Odelsthing, the lower house of&#13;
the Norwegian Farliament, has adopted&#13;
a bill introducing universal communal&#13;
male s ge, and another providing&#13;
communal suffrage for women&#13;
-s on an income of at least&#13;
300 crowns.&#13;
fcccordlnff to the Weekly Crop Bulletin&#13;
the Hewlau Fly 1» Doing* Considerable&#13;
Damage to Wheat—Other Happenlnfa&#13;
of a Week Briefly Related. '&#13;
King Leopold has conceived the idea&#13;
of a vast network of electric railways&#13;
connecting Antwerp and the coast&#13;
with Brussels, and comprising also a&#13;
line connecting Brussels and Paris,&#13;
with cars capable of making the journey&#13;
between the two capitals in two&#13;
hours.&#13;
Booker T. Washington has been&#13;
placed at the head of the negro department&#13;
of the South Carolina Interstate&#13;
and West Indian Exposition and has&#13;
issued an address to the colored people&#13;
of the United States, inviting them, to&#13;
show the progress made by them since&#13;
the date of their emancipation.&#13;
Farmers in Florida, in the low&#13;
country of South Carolina and in the&#13;
southern part of Georgia are experimenting&#13;
with fond expectation in the&#13;
Cultivation of cassava and sugar cane.&#13;
In the hope of developing two ideal&#13;
money crops. Their interest has been&#13;
excited by the success of an experimental&#13;
cassava starch factory in De-&#13;
Land.&#13;
The innumerable admirers of M.&#13;
Wheat Badly Damaged by the Fly.&#13;
The weekly crop bulletin suys: The&#13;
ir.ean daily temperature for the week&#13;
inding June 1 was 50.9 decrees or "8.5&#13;
below normal; the average total precipitation&#13;
was 0.33 or 0.4L of aja inch&#13;
beiow normal; sunshine averaged 35 of&#13;
the possible amount. Continued low&#13;
temperatures which were continuously&#13;
from f&gt; to 11 degrees below normal,&#13;
high relative humidity, considerable&#13;
cloudiness and light showers during&#13;
the past week have greatly delayed&#13;
field work and almost checked the&#13;
growth of much vegetation, and the&#13;
germination of corn. The cool, damp&#13;
weather has been favorable to wheat,&#13;
rye, grass and pastures. Gi*eat damage&#13;
on account of the r a v n g e s o f the&#13;
Hessian lly in wheat is reported. This&#13;
damage is almost general in the three&#13;
southern tiers of counties, correspondents&#13;
saying that wheat is crinkling&#13;
and filling rapidly. Oats have made&#13;
fair progress, but are rather short.&#13;
Rye and barley are in good condition.&#13;
Hay prospects are generally good, especially&#13;
from new meadows. Com is&#13;
germinating very slowly and in a few&#13;
cases has rotted, and necessitated replanting.&#13;
Considerable corn has now&#13;
been in the ground nearly two weeks&#13;
without germinating. Corn that is up j&#13;
1 toks rather yellow. Sugar beets, although&#13;
growing very slowly, are doing&#13;
welL Early seeding is up and being&#13;
thinned and weeded. Early potatoes&#13;
Brutal Mm4«r at f l i n t&#13;
One of the most cold-blooded murders&#13;
that has ever happened in Flint&#13;
was committed on the evening of the&#13;
5th, when Mrs. Jennie ParUh wassh6f. p j v e P e r s o n s W e r e&#13;
through the lower part of the heart&#13;
twice by Louis Weeks, an employe of&#13;
W. A, Patterson's carriage factory.&#13;
The murder was the result of Weeks*&#13;
maddened jeslousy, be having threat- |&#13;
ehed before that be would kill her. !&#13;
During^ the forepart of the evening&#13;
Wm. Ferguson, who ia employed by&#13;
the Grand Trunk road as freight handler,&#13;
a &gt;d who has kept company with&#13;
the Parish womsn for some time past,&#13;
called at her home and was in her company&#13;
about two hours. During that&#13;
t'ino he saw nothing of Weeks, though&#13;
Mrs. Parish demanded that Ferguson&#13;
leave early to avoid a clash l&gt;etween&#13;
the two men, between whom bad&#13;
blood had existed for some time past.&#13;
He did as she requested had faft °y&#13;
the side door, while Weeks entered at&#13;
the front. W thout any undue ceremony&#13;
he pulled a revolver and shot the&#13;
woman, killing her instantly.&#13;
Game Warden'* Keport for May.&#13;
State Game Warden Morse, in his&#13;
monthly report to the secretary of&#13;
state, suys that during May the department&#13;
investigated more complaints&#13;
for violations o t t h e game and&#13;
fish laws than in any previous month&#13;
in its history. A large majority of the&#13;
complaints were for violations of the&#13;
fish laws, both in inland and commercial&#13;
waters. There were 202 complaintsinvestigated,&#13;
vBSuttrog—rn r2£&#13;
( ] : i 1 I . 1 1 mmm&#13;
and&#13;
Jules Verne will learn with regret that a r e u p a n d D e i n g c u it ivated. Plowing&#13;
the author of "Dr. Ox's Experiment" f o r j a t e potatoes and beans is quite&#13;
and of so many other delightful scien- « e n e r a i , a n d i a t e potato planting has&#13;
7 1 « : ~mZ.TZ.Z- ±- —_ » - l i . J i . ™ ^ » T i 5 . » - &gt; . A » « l i " » l V o W - - » . - 1 J . J&#13;
arrests, 110 being for violations of the&#13;
fish laws and 16 for violations of the&#13;
game laws. One hundred and two convictions&#13;
were secured., with one aoquittal,&#13;
two dismissals and 13 cases&#13;
pending. Twenty-seven seizures of&#13;
immatui and illegally-caught fish&#13;
and fishing apparatus were made.&#13;
Quail, and partridge are reported in&#13;
good condition, and with good weather&#13;
in June," the warden says, there will be&#13;
a plentiful field of game birds for the&#13;
coming season.&#13;
Dismembered Coital Were Found About&#13;
a Quarter of a Mile From the Been*&#13;
of the Accident — Many Freight Carat&#13;
Were Burned*&#13;
, —&#13;
llustta and Japan May go to War.&#13;
Advices from tue orient are far from&#13;
reassuripg as to the maintenance of&#13;
peace in the future, even after the successful&#13;
adjustment of the existing difficulties&#13;
between China and the powera&#13;
Those wTio~1iwe rcceutry "corao -from&#13;
Japan confirm the reports of trained&#13;
observers there that the Japanese are&#13;
generally preparing for early war with&#13;
Russia. Iutimations have several times&#13;
been given since the close of the war&#13;
between Cuina and Japan in 18U5 that&#13;
Japan would regard interference with&#13;
the autonomy of Korea as a hostile act.&#13;
The Japanese, including their representative&#13;
ministers,"."have" firmly made&#13;
up their minds that when the results&#13;
of Russian intrigues are disclosed in&#13;
an ouen movement hostile to Japan,&#13;
the Japanese army shall be landed in&#13;
Korea, and Russia warned that she&#13;
must retrace her steps or fight.&#13;
&lt;5W1NA WAR N E W l T&#13;
Tificfairy ta.es Is lyiug yexy3iriously&#13;
111 at his residence at Amiens. M.&#13;
Verne was taken suddenly unwell some&#13;
three months ago, and has been obliged&#13;
to keep his chamber ever since, nis&#13;
sight being greatly affected.&#13;
-begun. Warm weatl«&#13;
for all vegetation.&#13;
.needed&#13;
1U&#13;
Khonld Heed the Warning*.&#13;
The state communicable disease&#13;
spector reports a peculiar case&#13;
smallpox. The child sick with the disease&#13;
slept for a few nights on a feather&#13;
bed on which one of his relatives, a&#13;
Sirs. Qalmoy's Confession.&#13;
Prosecuting Attorney Kiruy, of St.&#13;
Louis, reports that Mrs. Quimby confessed&#13;
on the: :Wn that her husband,&#13;
Eimer Quimby, helped her to murder&#13;
her two children some three weeks&#13;
ago, and who is now lingering in the&#13;
". j county jail for trial. She slated that&#13;
The rector of St. George's, a fashionable&#13;
church In Brooklyn, has deemed&#13;
it necessary to issue a circular in which member of a family in which smallpox&#13;
he announces that in future "audible&#13;
courtship" will not be permitted in&#13;
his church while service is in progress.&#13;
He does not particularly object&#13;
to such mild forms of expressing affection&#13;
as the holding of hands, but&#13;
the more strenuous manifestations&#13;
must be reserved for less public places.&#13;
Mrs. Hanna Omeger of New York&#13;
city, according to Law Notes, recently&#13;
recovered $750 damages for injuries&#13;
sustained by an icicle falling from a&#13;
tank on top of the defendant's building&#13;
through the skylight of her house and&#13;
striking the good dame on the crown&#13;
of her head. She was not only knocked&#13;
senseless, but was interrupted in the&#13;
midst of her dinner, which, when she&#13;
recovered, had grown cold. For all of&#13;
existed, laid in Missouri about two&#13;
years ago. There was no other known&#13;
source from which the disease could&#13;
h;ive been contracted by the child.&#13;
The feather bed was recently sent to&#13;
the family in Michigan by the Missouri&#13;
relatives. This, the state board&#13;
says, should be a warning to persons&#13;
having dangerous communicable diseases&#13;
in their families, to make sure&#13;
that all articles used are thoroughly&#13;
disinfected before being used again.&#13;
Quimby gave the poison to the children,&#13;
gave them water to drink, ordered her&#13;
to write the letter, waiting until she&#13;
had partly written it, then left the&#13;
house. After he was gone she lost her&#13;
nerve and sent for the neighbors.&#13;
Pension Figures.&#13;
The commissioner of pensions states&#13;
results of the efforts of the bureau for&#13;
May 31, as follows: Original pensions&#13;
have been granted: On Hccount of war&#13;
of 1S12, widows, ?: on account of Indian&#13;
wars, widows 112. survivors 7; on&#13;
account of Mexican war, widows 325,&#13;
survivors 14; for account of service&#13;
prior to 1861, (5, making a total of 4Gf&gt;&#13;
pensioned for account of service prior&#13;
to the civil svar. On account of the&#13;
civil war there have been pensioned&#13;
for disabilities incurred in service: Invalids,&#13;
1,051; for disability as provided&#13;
hy act of lSVK), invalids 10.853: for widdows&#13;
under old law,• 3.001; for widows&#13;
under act of 1800 and amendments, 14,-&#13;
479; for nurses 25, makiug'a total original&#13;
issues account of the civil war of&#13;
35,:J'JS.&#13;
Field Marshal Count von Waldersc*&#13;
has relinquished bis command and left&#13;
Pekin.&#13;
The officials of the Russian foreign&#13;
office state that contrary to certain reports&#13;
Russia has never favored the&#13;
notion of all the constitutional power*&#13;
guaranteeing the Chinese loan. She&#13;
replied in term* similar to t h e U. S.&#13;
that the executive could not guarantee&#13;
without the consent of the legislative&#13;
branches. Russia prefers a speedy settlement&#13;
to a guarantee. The officials&#13;
also say it is not true that Russia is&#13;
bitter atrainst Britain for offering the&#13;
plan now discussed. Her relations&#13;
with Great Britain are nearer than&#13;
for a long time.&#13;
The Chinese express great satisfaction&#13;
at the announcement of the intention&#13;
of the c »urt to return to Pekin&#13;
. in September, AU the foreign troops,,&#13;
with the exception of the legation&#13;
guards, are expected to withdraw ere&#13;
the middle of that month, the only&#13;
troops not already under orders of&#13;
withdrawal being the Japanese, wnose&#13;
government is sending reliefs. It is&#13;
said, however, at the Japanese legation&#13;
that when Japan is absolutely certain&#13;
the other powers are evacuating, her&#13;
own troops can be withdrawn o n two&#13;
d.tys^Tnotiee.&#13;
There was an affray at Tien Tsin on&#13;
the 2d between international troops.&#13;
Some British fusiliers who were acting&#13;
as police at that place sousfht to prevent&#13;
French soldiers from housekreakiagT&#13;
when they were attacked- w i t h&#13;
bayonets and bricks. Tho fusiliers, in&#13;
self "defense, fired in the air. This&#13;
brought a number of Germans to the&#13;
aid of the Frenchmen. They numbered&#13;
together 200 m e a Five fusiliers&#13;
fired again, kilting a Frenchman and&#13;
wounding three others. In subsequent&#13;
fighting four fusiliers, five Germans,&#13;
and one Japanese were wounded. The&#13;
arrival of a German officer and a strong&#13;
guard ended the fray.&#13;
T R A N S V A A L WAR I T E M S .&#13;
MINOR M I C H I G A N MATTERS.&#13;
these&#13;
ages.&#13;
things she asked $15,000 dam-&#13;
A citizen of Owosco, Mich., raised a&#13;
howl to the city assessor, claiming&#13;
that his property was assessed at an&#13;
extravagantly high figure. He wound&#13;
up hy declaring that if Mr. Laverock&#13;
could sell the property at the valuation&#13;
named the city official named&#13;
could have a commission of 2 per cent.&#13;
In less than two hours Mr. Laverock&#13;
had sold a fine residence and two business&#13;
bk&gt;ck8. The taxpayer backed&#13;
water, but the assessor declares he will&#13;
have his commission, which amounts.&#13;
to $400, if he has to sue for it.&#13;
It corcran liatlon of the Nut Ional Guard.&#13;
Gov. litiss on the 3d signed the bill&#13;
for.the reorganization °f ^bc National&#13;
Guard, and it is ntfw a law of the&#13;
state. The new law makes several important&#13;
changes in tf»c government of&#13;
the N tional Guard. The governor is&#13;
given greater power, the membership&#13;
of the military board is increased, by&#13;
the addition of the brigadier-general&#13;
tind the commandii.nt of-the Naval Reserves,&#13;
the board is empowered whenever&#13;
it is deemed expedient to increase&#13;
the number of military companies to&#13;
more than 40, to muster in a company&#13;
of colored troops; the state encampment&#13;
will last 10 days instead of six,&#13;
and a more rigid military government&#13;
will be the result of the new law.&#13;
Living representatives of four generations&#13;
of one family are not uncommon.&#13;
In the United "States, but living&#13;
representatives of four generations&#13;
who all have the same birthday anniversary&#13;
are surely not frequently met&#13;
with. This is said to be true of the&#13;
family of Mrs. Edith Ford, who live&#13;
near Grensburg, Ind. She is the greatgrandmother,&#13;
was born in Scott county,&#13;
Ky., and is 86 years old. Her&#13;
,daughter is 56 years old; the next representative&#13;
of the family is 36 years&#13;
old, and the fourth member is three&#13;
years old. Their birthdays all fall on&#13;
July 9.&#13;
ACTIO Mnst Serve Oat If IN Sentence.&#13;
' Jov. Bliss on the 3d issued an order&#13;
for the reincarceration of Louis Arno,&#13;
_a Detroit convict, who was paroled&#13;
by Gov. Pingree. Arnold was serving a&#13;
life sentence for criminal assault at&#13;
the time his parole was signed. Since&#13;
his release he has distinguished himself&#13;
by several acts in violation of his&#13;
parole, and was under arrest for embezzlement&#13;
when Gov. Bliss was prevailed&#13;
upon to put him behind the&#13;
bars again. He will return to Jackson&#13;
to serve out his sentence.&#13;
R. R. BuftineM Shown Improvement.&#13;
Railroad Commissioner Osborn has&#13;
issued a statement showing the Michigan&#13;
earnings of the railroads of the&#13;
state for the month of April. The total&#13;
earnings for the month were 83,-&#13;
414,984.30, as against 83,183,733.70 for&#13;
the s;tme month in 100Q, the increase&#13;
being S231,230.54. For the four months&#13;
A departure from old methods of log o f IOOI, ending April 30, the total earntransportatlon&#13;
has been recently made i n j r s o f Michigan roads were «12,533,-&#13;
on the Columbia river. This consists 8Q9.03, an increase of 8433,888.39 over&#13;
In building huge rafts so substantially t n e corresponding period last year,&#13;
that they can be towed to San Fran- Tlje per cent of increase was 19.01.&#13;
Cisco. It is no small undertaking to U J • — -&#13;
put to sea With a Stupendous, U n w l e l d P y ^ Society Woman Terrorised Hubble*.&#13;
ly raft and successfully tow It almost C h i * f Morton, of S t Joseph, on the&#13;
a thousand miles'; but the trip has been 4th ran down the writer of the anonyof&#13;
times and mous letters which have been terror-&#13;
-fzing St Joseph husbands. The writer&#13;
is a prominent society woman, who&#13;
accomplished a number&#13;
promises to become a regularTusTness;&#13;
The logs are principally for piling and&#13;
posts and one raft will contain as much&#13;
as 500,000 lineal feet. The rafts are&#13;
built somewhat in the shape of a colossal&#13;
cigar, and each log is fitted carefully&#13;
into its place. The whole is fastened&#13;
together with tons of chains, till&#13;
the danger of going to pieces at aea&#13;
is reduced to a minimum.&#13;
Alma was visited by a 813,000 fire-on&#13;
the 5th.&#13;
Gov. Bliss has designated June 14 as&#13;
flag day.&#13;
Sixteen weddings were solemnized at&#13;
St. Joseph on the 9th.&#13;
The early strawberry crop in the vicinity&#13;
of St. Joseph is now considered&#13;
a failure.&#13;
Both houses of the legislature adjourned&#13;
sine die, without incid_entj__at_&#13;
n ooif orf TfieTftb.&#13;
The business section of Fennvilie&#13;
was swept by fire on the- 0th. Loss,&#13;
835,000; insurance, 8ir&gt;,000.&#13;
Gov. Bliss' sawmill and Thompson &amp;&#13;
Lamb's planing mill and lumber yards&#13;
at Carrollton was damaged to the ex-&#13;
TenTTof~8iVy,000 by fire on the night of&#13;
the 4th.&#13;
It is claimed thr.t the Boyne river&#13;
has wonderful curative properties, and&#13;
that m»ny people have been cured of&#13;
rheumatism hy simply wading in its&#13;
waters.&#13;
Jas. A. Heme, the well-known actor&#13;
and playwright, died at his home* in&#13;
New York on the 2d of acute bronchitis&#13;
and pneumonia after an illness of&#13;
eight weeks.&#13;
Supt. E. P. Church, of the state school&#13;
for the blind, who has been suffering&#13;
from an abscess of the ear, died on the&#13;
4th after a painful illness of several&#13;
weeks, aged 06.&#13;
Capitalists are investigating the extensive&#13;
marl beds near Lake Odessa,&#13;
with a view to utilizing them. It is&#13;
reported*that th^ largest marl deposits&#13;
to be found anywhere in the state is to&#13;
be found there.&#13;
The new medical regulation law was&#13;
sustained by the supreme court on the&#13;
4th in the case against Aug. G. Reetz,&#13;
who was prosecuted for his failure to&#13;
comply with the medical registration&#13;
law, and convicted.&#13;
Coal prospectors who have been&#13;
working the Saginaw valley fields the&#13;
past few years say that there is a vein&#13;
of coal between 400 and 500 feet below&#13;
the surface which it would pay the&#13;
operators to go after.&#13;
Speaker J. J. Carton has issued invitations&#13;
to prominent members of the&#13;
Michigan bar and the Genesee county&#13;
bar association to attend a gala day on&#13;
his large farm in Clayton township,&#13;
near Flint, on Jun^ 22.&#13;
Edward Gordon, o t Tekonsbav—ia&#13;
Our Trwte With Scamtln ivlan CountrJen.,&#13;
Frank 11. Hitchcock, chief ot the foreign&#13;
markets sections of the aqrricultural&#13;
department, has prepared a comprehensive&#13;
article on the growth of the&#13;
trade between the U. S. and the Scandinavian&#13;
countries—Denmark, Sweden&#13;
and Norway—during the 10 years from&#13;
1890 to 1900 inclusive. It shows that&#13;
in the 10 years subsequent to 1S90 outexports&#13;
to these three countries rose&#13;
from 89,000,000 to nearly 829,000.000.&#13;
Our imports from Scandinavia are very&#13;
small, being below 84.000,000 in 1890&#13;
"and only a little more than 85,000,000&#13;
in 1900, which was the record year in&#13;
imports. Denmark is the principal&#13;
factor in our Scandinavian trade, the&#13;
exports to that country for 1900 havlng~&#13;
a value of more than SIS70TJ37*W9T---&#13;
while the combined shipments to&#13;
Sweden and Norway were valued at&#13;
about 810,0()0,000.&#13;
'Twas a Holt! IIuUl-Up.&#13;
One of the most d riny hold-ups ever&#13;
perpetrated in Pennsylvania took place&#13;
in Ell wood City on the 3d. Thive unmasked&#13;
men met Costen Burns, an&#13;
aged and wealthy resident of that&#13;
place, who was on the way to his quarries&#13;
with ^2,100 to pay his hands. Tne&#13;
hold-up men seized him by the throat,&#13;
and made off with the cash. A posse&#13;
was hastily organized and came upon&#13;
the highwaymen about two miles from&#13;
the scene of the robbery. A heavy exchange&#13;
of shots took place between&#13;
pursuers and pursued. One of the&#13;
robbers was crippled by a shot and&#13;
was an easy victim, while the leader&#13;
was captured after his ammunition exhausted.&#13;
Over $400 was found on the&#13;
second robber's person, but the third&#13;
man escaped, and is yet at large with&#13;
81,700 of the stolen money.&#13;
According to a dispatch from Lord&#13;
Kitcl ener. Jamestown was surrendered&#13;
to Kritzinger's commando on the morni&#13;
n g o f thii-2d, after four hours^ghtiog-&#13;
The governor of Bermuda has received&#13;
notification that the transport&#13;
Armenian will arrive at Hamilton&#13;
July 3 with 900 Boer prisoners and that&#13;
two companies of the Royal Warwickshire&#13;
regiment will act as their guards.&#13;
After a long and somewhat embittered&#13;
discussion of the policy of the&#13;
British-war office in buying horses for&#13;
use in South Africa th* house of commons&#13;
by a vote of 159 to 0 • on the 6th&#13;
voted the sum of £15,779,00J for transports&#13;
and re-mounts.&#13;
Col. Wilson, with 240 of Kitchener's&#13;
scouts, surprised and routed 400 Boers&#13;
belonging to the Beyers command, 34&#13;
mil .is west of Warm Baths, on the 5th.&#13;
The Boers resisted stubbornly, bnt&#13;
finally broke and tied, leaving 37 dead,&#13;
100 prisoners and all their wagons and&#13;
supplies, including 8,0 )0 cattle, in the&#13;
hands of the British. The lo*s of the&#13;
latter was 3 men killed and 15 wounded.&#13;
The Rev. II D. Von Broeckhuiaen,&#13;
-of-Hriitoxia*.Soutli-Afrkjartbe "minister&#13;
who closed the Volksraad with prayer&#13;
after President Krnger's ultimatum,&#13;
had been read to that l;ody, is in New&#13;
York. His brother, Dr. H. J. Von&#13;
Bioeckhuizen, of the Orange Free&#13;
State, who served in the Boer armies,&#13;
accompanies him. Their mission in&#13;
raise money for ther&#13;
children now in&#13;
wrote the letters to vival society leaders,&#13;
exposing the alleged immorality&#13;
of their husbands. She confessed in&#13;
full, and on promise to stop anonymous&#13;
correspondence the officers agreed to&#13;
keep her name a secret. The letters&#13;
almost ruined the happiness of a numb*&#13;
v of the best homes in the city&#13;
winning fame as a chicken farmer. He&#13;
runs a largo number of incubators and&#13;
brooders and raises chickens by the&#13;
thousand. When the chicks w e i g h&#13;
two pounds they are placed on the&#13;
market, the price being 12 to 1£ cents&#13;
a pound. Mr. Gordon claims the chicks&#13;
cost about five cents each when ready&#13;
Ufor rnr'-ket. .&#13;
Five Dead-Seven Injured.&#13;
Five men were killed and seven injured&#13;
in a wreck at Vestal, N. Y., on&#13;
8th. Seven others, all but t w o of&#13;
them train men, were injured. Several&#13;
of those who were Thought to be fatally&#13;
hurt recovered from the concussion&#13;
and figure in the list of the&#13;
slightly hurt. On the 9th the rescuers&#13;
toiled about and among the burning&#13;
freight cars at the scene of the explosion,&#13;
but It was not until late in the&#13;
afternoon that portions of the last dismembered&#13;
body accounted for were&#13;
discovered a quarter of a mile from&#13;
where the explosion occurred, while&#13;
the tracks of the Delaware, Lackawanna&#13;
&amp; Western railroad were completely&#13;
blocked.&#13;
Eight Killed by an Explosion.&#13;
Eight Italian miners were killed in&#13;
the Ludington shaftof theChapin mine&#13;
on the 4th.—Damp powder ignited and&#13;
tnis country is to&#13;
Bo?r women and&#13;
refuge c raps.&#13;
Details regarding the fighting at&#13;
Vlakifontein, show that it was one of&#13;
the most desperated engagements of&#13;
the war. Gen. Dixon's column was traversing&#13;
the district iind establishing&#13;
posts, when it was attacked by 1,200&#13;
Boers under Commandant Kemp. The&#13;
Boers were so close that 5t) British fell&#13;
at the first volley. The Yeomanry held&#13;
the position, protecting the guns until&#13;
they were nearly decimated; and then,&#13;
fin in? it impossible to save the guns,&#13;
the artillerymen shot the gun horses&#13;
to prevent the Boers movm? the guns.&#13;
CUBA A N D PHILIPPINE N E W S .&#13;
has&#13;
im-&#13;
Aguinaldo, through Guevarra,&#13;
advised Gen. Callies to surrender&#13;
mediately.&#13;
About the first of next month full&#13;
civic eovernment will be set up in the&#13;
Philippine islands, exactly a s projected&#13;
by the Philippine commission.&#13;
As soon after that date as an administrative&#13;
machinery can be made ready&#13;
for it the new Philippine tariff will oe&#13;
proclaimed, also following out the original&#13;
plan formed before the announcement&#13;
of the decision of the supreme&#13;
court recently. It also has been&#13;
decided that there is no reason for an&#13;
extra session of congress.&#13;
BRIEF N E W S P A R A G R A P H S .&#13;
burned, and the men were suffocated&#13;
by the fumes. In attempting to escape&#13;
one fell down a ladder to the&#13;
eighth level, and was run over by an&#13;
ore car. Two others died in a cross&#13;
out, and the other nvo were found together&#13;
in slope No. 2, How the powder&#13;
caught fire is not known. Thirtyone&#13;
children arc left fatherless.&#13;
The annual commencement exercises&#13;
of the Central state normal school, M t&#13;
Pleasant, will be held June 0 to 13.&#13;
Destructive fires are raging in the&#13;
grain belt 18 miles sonthwest of Los&#13;
Banos, Cat. i t is estimated that, i;u,-&#13;
000 acres of grain and fodder lands already&#13;
have been burned over.&#13;
Importations of merchandise into&#13;
the Philippine islands for the first&#13;
three-quarters of 1900 snowed an increase&#13;
of $«58,321, or 72 per cent over&#13;
the amount for the sn me "period of 1801a&#13;
They amounted to$i,:-71,075.&#13;
tin «fc.^ ik(^j*i .^.jiilMMHte**&#13;
"*/? m j» ?t"&#13;
&lt;;'&gt;''" . " ^ V .'. #^V • • ' ) »&#13;
^ - ^ ^ : «wjt&amp;&#13;
- ' ^ V ^ , d ^ t f * M ^ , * ^ ^ i i W t i ^ _ « i&#13;
f^TWw ??::&amp;.&#13;
• - &gt; - • - , . &lt; • • » * : • t'C. •'&lt; *&#13;
TAU \tJ&amp;&amp;% - eMiAlO&amp;r&#13;
A R R A I O N 8 T H E P R E S E N T ERA&#13;
OF PROFIT SEEKINO.&#13;
Condtmn* tfc# Method* of Speculation&#13;
' That Hat • Tendency to Male* Mankind&#13;
Overlook the iteal Purpose* of&#13;
Oar Live*&#13;
(Copyright, 1901, by Louis Klopsch, N. 7.)&#13;
Wtuutl&amp;gton, June y.—In this discourse&#13;
Dr. Taiinage arraigns the spirit&#13;
of wild speculation and gives some account&#13;
of the financial ruin of other&#13;
days; Proverbs, xxiii, 5, ' 'Riches certainly&#13;
make themselves wings; they fly&#13;
away as an eagle toward heaven."&#13;
Money is a golden breasted bird with&#13;
diver beak. It alights on the office&#13;
desk or on the parlor centpr* table. Men&#13;
and women stand and admire it. They&#13;
do not notice that it has wings larger&#13;
than a raven's, larger than a flam in*-&#13;
go's, larger than an eagle's. One wave&#13;
of the hand of misfortune and it&#13;
spreads its beautiful plumage and is&#13;
gone—"as an eagle toward heaven,"&#13;
my text says,though sometimes I think&#13;
it goes in the other direction.&#13;
Wall 8tre«-t Condemned*&#13;
What a verification we have had of&#13;
the flying capacity of riches in Wall&#13;
street? And Wall street is one of the&#13;
•longest streets in the world. It does&#13;
not begin at the foot of Trinity&#13;
church, New Yprk, and end at the East&#13;
river, as many suppose. It reaches&#13;
through all our American cities and&#13;
across the sea. Encouraged by the&#13;
revival of trade and by the fact that&#13;
Wall street disasters of other years&#13;
were so far back as to be forgotten,&#13;
speculators _run_Jip_ the stocks from&#13;
point to point until innocent people on&#13;
the outside suppose that the stocks&#13;
would always continue to ascend. They&#13;
gather in from all parts of the country.&#13;
Large aum*. of money are taken&#13;
into Wall street and small sums of&#13;
money. The crash ccmes, thank God,&#13;
in time to warn off a great many who&#13;
who were on their way thither, for the&#13;
sadness of the thing is that a great&#13;
many of the young men of our cities&#13;
who save a little money for the purpose&#13;
of starting themselves in business&#13;
and who-have ¢500 ~or $1,COT or ¢2,000&#13;
or $10,000'go into Wall street and&#13;
lose all. And if there ever was a time&#13;
for the pulpit to speak out in regard to&#13;
certain kinds of nefarious enterprises&#13;
now is the time.&#13;
Stocks rose and fell, and now they&#13;
begin to rise again, and they will fall&#13;
again until thousands of young men&#13;
will be ruined unless the printing pres3&#13;
and the pulpit give emphatic utterance.&#13;
My counsel is to countrymen, so far&#13;
as they may hear of this discourse,&#13;
if they hr ve surplus to invest it in first&#13;
mortgages and in moneyed institutions&#13;
which, though paying comparatively&#13;
small interest, are sound and safe beyond&#13;
dispute, and to stand clear of the&#13;
Wall street vortex, where so maiiy&#13;
have been swamped and swallowed.&#13;
What a compliment it is to the healthy&#13;
condition of our country that these recent&#13;
disasters have in no way depressed&#13;
trade! I thank God that Wall&#13;
street's capacity to blast this country&#13;
lias gone forever.&#13;
A Btreot wltu a History.&#13;
Across the island oi New York In&#13;
1G35 a wall made of stone and earth&#13;
and cannon mounted was built to keep&#13;
off the savages. Along by that wall a&#13;
street was laid out, and as the street&#13;
followed the line of the wall it was appropriately&#13;
called w a n street. It is&#13;
narrow, it is unarchitectural, and yet&#13;
Its history is unique. Excepting Lombard&#13;
street, London, it Is the mightiest&#13;
street on this planet. There the government&#13;
of the United States was born.&#13;
There Washington held his levees.&#13;
There Mrs. Adams and .*lrs. Caldwell&#13;
and Mrs. Knox and otuer brilliant women&#13;
of the Revolr-.ion displayed their&#13;
charms. There Vfitherspoon and Jonathan&#13;
Edwards and George Whitefleld&#13;
sometimes preached. There Dr. Mason&#13;
chided Alexander Hamilton for writing&#13;
the constitution of the United States&#13;
without any God In it. There negroes&#13;
were sold in the slave mart. There&#13;
criminals were harnessed to wheelbarrows&#13;
and, like beasts of burden, compelled&#13;
to draw or were lashed through&#13;
the street behind carts to which they&#13;
were fastened. Their fortunes havu&#13;
come to coronation or burial since the&#13;
day when reckless speculators in powdered&#13;
hair and silver shoe buckles&#13;
dodged Dr. r.n, the governor general of&#13;
his majesty, clear down to yesterday&#13;
at 3 o'clock. The history of Wall street&#13;
is to a certain extent the financial,&#13;
commercial, agricultural, mining, literary,&#13;
artistic, moral and religious history&#13;
of this country. They are the best&#13;
men in this Country and there are the&#13;
worst. Everything from unswerving&#13;
integrity to tip-top scoundrelism—&#13;
everything from heaven born charity&#13;
to bloodless Shylockism. I want to put&#13;
the plow in at the curbstone of Trinity&#13;
and drive it clear through; to Wall&#13;
street ferry. And so it shall go if the&#13;
hor-ses are strong enough to draw the&#13;
p!ow. • * * *&#13;
JaatlSahla Speculation.&#13;
Again, I have to remark that Wall&#13;
street is a type throughout the country&#13;
of legitimate speculation o a the one&#13;
hand and of ruinous gambling on the&#13;
other. Almost every merchant is to&#13;
some extant a speculator. He depends&#13;
a o t •mUr opoa t b * difference between&#13;
the goods and the retail at which he&#13;
disposes of them, but also upon the'&#13;
fluctuation of the markets. If the markets&#13;
greatly rise, he greatly gains. If&#13;
the markets greatly sink, he greatly&#13;
loses. It is as honest to deal in stocks&#13;
as to deal in iron or coal or hardware&#13;
or dry goods. He who condemns all&#13;
stock dealings as though they were iniquitous&#13;
simply shows his own ignorance.&#13;
Stop all legitimate speculation&#13;
in this country and you stop.ail banks,&#13;
you stop all factories, you stop all&#13;
storehouses, you stop all the great&#13;
financial prosperities of this country.&#13;
A stock dealer is only a commission&#13;
merchant under another name. He&#13;
gets his commission on one style of&#13;
goods. You, the grocer, get your commission&#13;
on another style of goods. The&#13;
dollar that he makes Is Just as bright&#13;
and fair and honest a dollar as the dollar&#13;
earned by the day laborer. But&#13;
here we must draw the line between&#13;
legitimate speculation and ruinous&#13;
gambling. You, a stock operator without&#13;
any property behind you, financially&#13;
irresponsible, sell $100 of nothing&#13;
and get paid for it. You sell 100 shares&#13;
at $10,000 at 3d days. If at the end of&#13;
30 days you can get the scrip for $9,000,&#13;
you have made a thousand. If at the&#13;
end of SO days you have to pay $11,000,&#13;
then you have lost a thousand. Now&#13;
that is trafficking in fiction; that is&#13;
betting on chances; that involves the&#13;
spirit of gambling as much as anything&#13;
that ever goes on in the lowest gambling&#13;
hell.&#13;
HU tor leal Gambling Scheme.&#13;
But France must have its gambling&#13;
expedttton^and that waa-in 1716. John&#13;
Law's Mississippi scheme, it was called.&#13;
The French had heard that this&#13;
American continent was built out of&#13;
solid gold, and the project was&#13;
to take it acroaa_the ocean and&#13;
drop it in France. Excitement beyond&#13;
anything that had yet been&#13;
seen in the world. Three hundred&#13;
thousand applicants for shares. Excitement&#13;
s o great that sometimes the&#13;
mounted military had to disperse the&#13;
crowds that had come to buy the stock.&#13;
Five hundred temporary tents built to&#13;
accommodate the people until they&#13;
could have opportunity of interviewing&#13;
John Law. A lady of great fashion&#13;
had her coachman upset her near the&#13;
place where John Law was passing in&#13;
order that she might have an interview&#13;
with that benevolent and sympathetic&#13;
gentleman. Stocks went up to 2,050&#13;
per cent, until one day suspicion got&#13;
into the market, and down it all went&#13;
—John Law's Mississippi scheme—&#13;
burying its projector and some cf the&#13;
greatest financiers i n ^ l l France, and&#13;
was almost as bad as a French revolution.&#13;
Sedate England took its chance in&#13;
1720. That was the South Sea bubble.&#13;
They, proposed to transfer all the gold&#13;
of Peru and Mexico and the islands of&#13;
the sea to England. Five millions'&#13;
worth of shares were put on the market&#13;
at £o00 a share. The books open,&#13;
in a few days it was all taken and&#13;
twice the amount subscribed.&#13;
Excitement followed excitement until&#13;
all kinds of gambling projects came&#13;
forth under the wing of this South Sea&#13;
-enterprise.—JTbxrs~^wa^~^~laTg«~CTj&#13;
pany formed with great capital for providing&#13;
funerals for all parts of the&#13;
land. Another company with large&#13;
capital—£5,000,000 of capital—to develop&#13;
a wheel in perpetual motion. Another&#13;
company with a capital of £4,-&#13;
000,000 to insure people against loss by&#13;
servants. Another company with £ 2 , -&#13;
500,000- capital to transplant walnut&#13;
trees from Virginia to England. Then,&#13;
to cap the climax, a company was&#13;
formed for "a great undertaking, nobody&#13;
to know what it is." And, lo,&#13;
£600,000 in shares were offered at&#13;
£100 a share. Books were opened at&#13;
9 o'clock in the morning and closed at&#13;
3 o'clock in the afternoon, and the first&#13;
day it was all subscribed. "A great&#13;
undertaking, nobody to know what&#13;
it is."-&#13;
Th* I-Argest Swindle*.&#13;
But it was left for our own country&#13;
to surpass all. about thirty-seven years&#13;
ago. We have the highest mountains&#13;
and the greatest-- cataracts and the&#13;
longest rivers, and, of course, we had&#13;
J to have the largest swindle. One&#13;
would have thought that the nation&#13;
j had seen enough in that direction dur-&#13;
| ing the morus multicaulis excitement.&#13;
! when almost every man had a bunch of&#13;
crawling silkworms in his house, out&#13;
of which he expected to mako a fortune.&#13;
But all this excitement wa3 as&#13;
nothing compared with what took&#13;
place in 1864 when a man near Titusvllle,&#13;
Pa., digging for a well, struck oil.&#13;
Twelve hundred oil companies call for&#13;
a billion of stock. Prominent members&#13;
of churches, as soon as a certain&#13;
amount of stock was assigned them,&#13;
saw it was their privilege to become&#13;
presidents or secretaries or members&#13;
of the board of direction. Some of&#13;
these companies never had a foot of&#13;
ground, never expected to have. Their&#13;
entire equipment was a map of a region&#13;
where oil might be and two vials&#13;
of grease, crude and clarified. People&#13;
rushed down from all parts of the&#13;
country by the first train and put their&#13;
hard earnings tn the gulf. A young&#13;
man came down from the oil regions of&#13;
Pennsylvania utterly demonted, having&#13;
sold his farm at a fabulous price be*&#13;
cause it was supposed there might be&#13;
oil there—coming to a hotel in Philadelphia&#13;
at the time I was living there,'&#13;
throwing down a $5,0w check to pay&#13;
for his noonday meal and saying he&#13;
did not care anything about the&#13;
change! Then he stepped back to the&#13;
gas burner to lighf his cigar with a&#13;
$1,000 note. Utterly insane.&#13;
Frayer for Sacoe**&#13;
O men of Wall street and of all&#13;
streets, stand back from the nefarious&#13;
enterprises. J o i n that - great company |&#13;
of Christian men who are maintaining&#13;
their integrity, notwithstanding all the&#13;
pressure of temptation. In the morning,&#13;
when you open business in the&#13;
broker's office or in the banking bouse,&#13;
ask God's blessing, and w h e n you close&#13;
it pronounce a benediction upon it. A&#13;
kind of business that men cannot engage&#13;
in without prayer is no business&#13;
for you. I wish that the words of&#13;
George Peabody, uttered in the hearing&#13;
of the people of his native town—Danvers,&#13;
Mass.—I wish that those words&#13;
could be uttered in the hearing of all&#13;
young men throughout the land. He&#13;
said: "Though Providence has granted&#13;
me unvaried and universal success&#13;
In the pursuit of fortune in other lands&#13;
I am still in heart the humble boy who&#13;
left yonder unpretending dwelling.&#13;
There is not a youth within the sound&#13;
of my voice whose early opportunities&#13;
and advantages are not very much&#13;
greater than were my own, and I have&#13;
since achieved nothing that is impossible&#13;
to the most humble boy among&#13;
you." George Peabody's success* in&#13;
business was not more remarkable&#13;
than his integrity and his great hearted&#13;
benevolence. I pray uporryi&#13;
protecting and prospering blessing. I&#13;
hope you may all make fortunes for&#13;
time and fortunes for eternity.&#13;
The Day of Accounting.&#13;
Some day when you come out of your&#13;
place of business and you go to the&#13;
clearing house or the place of custom&#13;
or the bank or your own home—as you&#13;
come out of your place of business just&#13;
look up at the clock in the tower and&#13;
see by the movement of the hands how&#13;
your life is rapidly going away and be&#13;
reminded of the fact that before God's&#13;
throne of inexorable judgment you&#13;
must yet give account for what you&#13;
have done since the day you sold the&#13;
first yard of cloth or the first pound&#13;
of 3Ugar. I pray for you all prosperity.&#13;
Stand close by Christ, and Christ will&#13;
stand close by you. The greater the&#13;
temptation the more magnificent the&#13;
reward. But, alas, for the stock gambler—&#13;
what will he do in the judgment?&#13;
That day will settle everything.&#13;
That to the stock gambler will&#13;
be a "break" at the "first call." No&#13;
smuggling into heaven.' No "collaterals"&#13;
on which to trade your way in.&#13;
Go in through Christ the Lord or you&#13;
will forever stay out. God forbid that&#13;
after you have done your last day's&#13;
work on earth and the hushed assembly&#13;
stands around with bowed heads at&#13;
your obsequies—God forbid that the&#13;
most appropriate text for your funeral&#13;
oration should be, "As a partridge sltteth&#13;
on eggs and hatcheth them not, so&#13;
he that getteth riches, and not by right,&#13;
shall leave them in the midst of his&#13;
days, and at the end he shall be a&#13;
fool," or that them^sralSpTbprTate funeral&#13;
psalm should be the words of the&#13;
poet:&#13;
Price of many a crime u n t o l d -&#13;
Gold, gold, gold, gold.&#13;
SKUUUXL MBttJfittl.&#13;
ARTIPtqtAX A * T E R 1 € 9 T H E L A T -&#13;
E S T SCIENTIFIC T R I U M P H .&#13;
CINEER1NO.&#13;
A Rostian Surgeon Perform* an Operation&#13;
Ueretoiore Regarded a« Flatly&#13;
ImpoMlble—Dr. KalnUfcy Cute AwaT&#13;
About Four lachee of. an Armory*&#13;
T H E ROOSTER IS M U T E N O W .&#13;
Hut I t Goes to Alt the Trouble That&#13;
Accompanies Crowing.&#13;
Now that warm weather is at hand&#13;
and windows are open in the early&#13;
morning, many complaints are being&#13;
received by the police about the crowing&#13;
and cackling of chickjens kept by&#13;
persons in the residence~~portion of the&#13;
city, says the Washington correspondent&#13;
of the Baltimore Sun.The police&#13;
regulations prohibit the keeping of&#13;
such fowls when they are an annoyance,&#13;
and a fine on the owner may be&#13;
imposed. Inquiry at police headquarters&#13;
to-day elicited the information&#13;
that such complaints should be supported&#13;
by the testimony of two witnesses&#13;
from different houses to show&#13;
that the noise is a nuisance. In this&#13;
connection a story was t o d of a man&#13;
in the northwestern section whD had a&#13;
rooster whose crowing qualities were&#13;
of the best and whose voice could be&#13;
heard all over the neighborhood. Finally&#13;
his neighbors could endure the&#13;
noise no longer and they hauled the&#13;
owner of the rooster into court. Here&#13;
he promised the bird should troub'.e&#13;
them no more, and on that promise&#13;
was released. The next morning the&#13;
neighbors saw the rooster in the yard&#13;
and held an indignation meeting.&#13;
Calling on the owner, they wanted to&#13;
know why he had not kept his promise.&#13;
' H e asked them If the bird was&#13;
annoying any one. It had not yet. but&#13;
they thought it might. He thereupon&#13;
pointed to the rooster, which was napping&#13;
its wings and going through all&#13;
the motions accompanying crowing,&#13;
but without a sound issuing from his&#13;
throat, and informed them that he had&#13;
taken It to a veterinarian, who bad.removed&#13;
its vocal chords. It is said the&#13;
antics of the dumb rooster while attempting&#13;
to crow are most amusing.&#13;
Surgery has reached a point a t which&#13;
almost any marvel may be expected,&#13;
but it has remained for a Russian surgeon&#13;
to attempt—and succeed in performing—&#13;
an operation hitherto regarded&#13;
as flatly impossible. He ha&#13;
repaired the great femoral artery; has&#13;
spliced on to it an artificial length&#13;
just as a plumber might solder a piece&#13;
of leaden pipe to a brass one. The&#13;
better to comprehend exactly how radical&#13;
and difficult a thins Dr. Kaintsky&#13;
accomplished it is necessary to explain&#13;
something of t h e nature and functions&#13;
of arteries. In the first place an artery&#13;
differs entirely from a vein. If&#13;
a vein is cut the blood escapes fo&#13;
a while and after a little the vessel&#13;
lies fiat and collapsed. An artery does&#13;
not. Its inner coat is so arranged that&#13;
a series of stiff fibrous rings surround&#13;
it and prevent it from collapsing. That&#13;
is one of the reasons w h y when an artery&#13;
is severed blood continues to flow&#13;
from it. These were only some of the&#13;
problems which confronted Dr. Kaintsky&#13;
when they brought to his hospital&#13;
In St. Petersburg a very rich farmer&#13;
and cattle raiser named Ivan Poitinkosh.&#13;
This man, while driving in a&#13;
sleigh, had collided with a stumpT&#13;
Poitinkosh was hurled out violently&#13;
and in falling was practically impaled&#13;
upon a broken branch. The jagged&#13;
piece of wood struck him just belowthe&#13;
hip joint and ranged down for&#13;
about four inches. The wound produced&#13;
was an exceedingly ugly and&#13;
ragged one. It was directly over and&#13;
in line with the fermoral artery,&#13;
which supplies the entire leg with&#13;
blood; but, although this great vessel&#13;
was entirely laid bare and badly&#13;
bruised it forunately escaped puncture.&#13;
The injured man was not&#13;
brought to the hospital unttl three&#13;
-days after the aeeideat,-and i t was-at&#13;
once evident to Dr. Kaintsky that only&#13;
heroic measures would save either life&#13;
or leg to his patient- It appeared to&#13;
Dr. Kaintsky that gangrene was&#13;
threatened. As nearly as the surgeon&#13;
could estimate he had just three day3&#13;
before an operation became absolutely&#13;
imperative. He had already determined&#13;
upon the heroic operation of removing&#13;
the injured part of the femoral artery&#13;
and replacing it with an artificial substitute.&#13;
Dr. Kaintsky wanted to make&#13;
a tube six inches long which so closely&#13;
resemble the actual tissue of a human&#13;
artery that it would be borne without&#13;
protest by the organism in which it&#13;
was to be placed. At the end of those&#13;
three days Dr. Kaintsky, tired but&#13;
triumphant, emerged from his laboratory.&#13;
Poitinkosh was anaesthetized&#13;
and carried to the operating table.&#13;
Dr. Kaintsky pointed out to the watching&#13;
surgeons and students the signs&#13;
on the foot of the patient_that marked&#13;
the onset oi gangrene, and theiTSe told&#13;
them that he intended to remove part&#13;
of the injured artery and replace it&#13;
with an artificial substitute. Under&#13;
the best conditions the dissection of&#13;
the femoral artery is a dangerous piece&#13;
of work, and hers was a case where&#13;
the vessel was almost concealed by injured&#13;
tissues. At last the artery was&#13;
freed and the surgeon showed his wondering&#13;
assistants that nearly four&#13;
inches of the vessel was ready to disintegrate.&#13;
All eyes watched Dr.&#13;
Kaintsky as he himself placed clamps&#13;
upon the big artery. The artery clamp&#13;
having been fixed, Dr. Kaintsky cut&#13;
away about four inches of the artery.&#13;
From the pocket in front of his op?rating&#13;
gown Dr. Kaintsky drew a silver&#13;
aseptic case. This he opened and from&#13;
it drew a small, hollow, elastic, almost&#13;
colorless tube about five inches long.&#13;
Almost imediatelv Dr. Kaintsky besan&#13;
to place the artificial artery in position.&#13;
He drew it between his lingers&#13;
so as to expel all air and placed a&#13;
pair of artery forceps upon one end.&#13;
Then he slipped one end of the artery&#13;
into the tube and stitched it into place.&#13;
Quickly the same procedure was carried&#13;
oa at the other end. and then Dr.&#13;
Kaintsky removed the clamp whic^i&#13;
was holding back the blood from th?&#13;
mended artery. The blood rushed&#13;
through Its new channel, pumping out&#13;
the collapsed tube, and it was actually&#13;
difficult to tell the artificial artery&#13;
from the real one. At the same instant,&#13;
too, a good healthy pulsation&#13;
could be felt in the patient's ankle.—&#13;
Philadelphia Times.&#13;
The voluntary offerings to the&#13;
Church of England during the last&#13;
year amounted to £7.771.000.&#13;
» w German Flr*arm.&#13;
A new firearm is being introduced&#13;
Into the German army. It Is of rather&#13;
a complicated design, but it is claimed&#13;
to be a perfect weapon regarding ita&#13;
firing capabilities. The barrel has been&#13;
made more substantial than that of the&#13;
Mauser, while the soldier's magazine is&#13;
protected from t h e ~ b e a t - o f Tapid fir--&#13;
ing. The magazine is loaded from a&#13;
charger, instead of the clip, the advantage&#13;
of which Innovation Is that it&#13;
can be loaded with great rapidity either&#13;
from the right or left, -&#13;
S T U P E N&#13;
Tnnneled Thtqjjjjrw*******'«*•'•&#13;
GrtMt* aJM|£k***«tt. *h» RiffljT.&#13;
The wondefHift^slitevoiatnt *of tunneling&#13;
a. big sNMHlfain at Sherman,&#13;
Wyo., by the $ « • » facitic, in order to&#13;
reduce the - ftMlto' a n d shorten the&#13;
track, has basm satemplished, and on&#13;
May 1 st reg-ala* jtatwice began on the&#13;
new line from Batord to Tie Siding,&#13;
which becomes part of the main line of&#13;
*'The Overland Route."&#13;
— The «00 tract for this- work was—&#13;
awarded about a year ago, and its completion&#13;
is reckoned one of the most&#13;
astonishing feats of railroad engineering&#13;
yet accomplished.&#13;
Tne general public has no idea of the&#13;
gigantic fills and marvelous tunnel tag&#13;
through the Rockies in connection with&#13;
this work.&#13;
The Sherman Tunnel, forming a very&#13;
important part of the project, is situated&#13;
between Dale Creek and Tie Siding,&#13;
nearly half a mile long. In the&#13;
mountain it pierces, is foundjthe Archchean&#13;
formation, one of the hardest of&#13;
granite rocks, from which comes Sherman&#13;
gravel, so extensively used on the&#13;
Uuion Pacific for ballast.&#13;
Standing conspicuously out in /this&#13;
great engineering work are two fills.&#13;
Lone Tree Fill and Dale Creek FilL&#13;
The embankment at the last named&#13;
fill is 145 feet in the highest place, 900&#13;
feet long, 40 feet wide at the top, 115&#13;
feet at the bottom. The Lone Tree Fill&#13;
is southeast of the town of Sherman.&#13;
The embankment is 130 feet high at&#13;
the highest point. These two fills involved&#13;
the handling of 500,000 cubic&#13;
yards of earth and stone.&#13;
Two other embankments adjacent&#13;
required the moving of 250,000 yards,&#13;
so that this particular part of the work,&#13;
all within a distance of a mile, necessitated&#13;
the moving of more than ?f&gt;0,-&#13;
000 cubic yards of earth and rock.&#13;
Through the embankments pass large&#13;
concrete and iron culverts, to provide&#13;
for the drainage of the large area obtaining&#13;
on Dale Creek.&#13;
The famous Dale Creek Bridge will&#13;
now be a thing of the pust, and the&#13;
uniqu memorial to the energies and&#13;
enterprise of the builders of the Union&#13;
Pacific, known as the Ames Monument,&#13;
will no longer be seen by tourists.&#13;
Jn their place thc-new line-abounds&#13;
with Scenery of grandeur and preat&#13;
sublimity, and unending attractions&#13;
all through.&#13;
The new tunnel is so well constructed&#13;
with freedom from density of air, that&#13;
one m.iy see clearly with the naked&#13;
eye from one end of the tunnel to the&#13;
other.&#13;
The saving in motive power to the&#13;
Union Pacific by the construction of&#13;
the new line will be immense, and is&#13;
evidenced by the fact that the maximum-&#13;
grada per mile is reduced from&#13;
97.68 per cent to 43.3 per cent between&#13;
Bufonl. and Laramie alone. The Union&#13;
Pacific will now be able to make faster&#13;
time to all western points, and haul&#13;
heavier loads than before.&#13;
Record-* Ii. i't lu C£tlmn»«.&#13;
The city of ;is»uth Norwalk, Conn.,&#13;
keeps a part of Its records in a&#13;
chimney. This unique "safe" is found&#13;
at the municipal electric lighticg&#13;
plant. The space usually utilised as a&#13;
soot pit in the base~-of-*ne SOO-fost—&#13;
brick smokestack has'been utilized for&#13;
keeping the records and books of the&#13;
plant.&#13;
A GLORIOUS SIGHT.&#13;
Field* of Wheat in Which the ShorUa&#13;
Wtr» ?o Thick It Was Almost Impossible&#13;
to Drive lietween&#13;
Tbero.&#13;
To the Editor: A gentleman from&#13;
Duluth made a trip through a portion&#13;
of Western Canada last summer and&#13;
writing of what he saw. says:&#13;
"Wheat, for instance, will average&#13;
twenty-five or thirty bushels to the&#13;
acre. I saw shocks so thick in the&#13;
field that it would be almost impossible&#13;
to drive between them. Winters.&#13;
it is said are longer than near Di&gt;-&#13;
luth. but the Japan current, warm&#13;
chinook winds and dry atmosphere&#13;
make the winters comparatively mild."&#13;
Thousands of such testimonials are&#13;
to be had from settlers who have taken&#13;
advantage of the low-priced lands of&#13;
Western Canada. During the present&#13;
year new districts will he opened up&#13;
in the Saskatchewan valley and advantage&#13;
should be taken of this ut&#13;
once. Information ear. be had from&#13;
any agent of the government, who-e&#13;
advertisement iippears; elsewhere in&#13;
your columns. Yours truly.&#13;
OLD READER.&#13;
The independent man is a favorite&#13;
of fortune.&#13;
What Do the Children Driuk'.*&#13;
Don't (rive thorn tea or coffee. Havo ynu tritnl&#13;
the new food drink called GRAIN' O* It is dt&gt;&#13;
llcious and nourishing, and takes the pl-.e- of&#13;
coffee. The more Orain-O youfrive thev-iildren&#13;
the more health you distribute throuirh their&#13;
systems. Gra'n-6 Is mode of pure ?ruin&gt;. ami&#13;
•when p."operly prepared tastes like the choice&#13;
grades of coffee, but casts about •% us much. Alt&#13;
grocers sell It. 15c and 25c.&#13;
We often desire much more than we&#13;
deserve.&#13;
Many ffoodnphysician* and nurses ns**&#13;
Wizard Oil for obstinate rheumatism&#13;
and neuralgia. It's the right thing&#13;
t o do.&#13;
•: --'.fV«' •••dyl&#13;
&gt; - r , 1 ' . ' • , ' ; - &gt;&#13;
h- )(•. f; -1&#13;
*.::.M&#13;
••'•A&#13;
• : .•&gt;' *"&#13;
t V - '[ ''•&#13;
. 4 - - ^&#13;
tVars are the diamond chips of sorrow.&#13;
jltW~M3lnxV .&#13;
•9/fi+r*:&#13;
1¾&#13;
w 3.¾.&#13;
kV'.j£iiV;ViT7W*Jp &gt;»flf • V-''S™ .tut vv&#13;
i&#13;
•«" ; m «&#13;
ft 4'&#13;
ItWtjk'i&#13;
"&gt;&gt;:•. r.&#13;
- . - : ' i '&#13;
\ F'X,&#13;
tT.'l.M&#13;
WEST MARION.&#13;
.Vance Miller-is on the.sick list.&#13;
-¾&#13;
?*&lt;•&#13;
^ . .&#13;
**{'&#13;
^ -&#13;
; /&#13;
Ifr&#13;
Messrs Rock wood and Miller&#13;
were in Howell Tuesday.&#13;
Grace Wellman is assisting Mrs.&#13;
Flummer in general house woik.&#13;
Bev. Heminger is holding revival&#13;
meetings at this place this week.&#13;
Some of the men of this vicinity&#13;
spent one day last week fishing.&#13;
.jjt.. „ — - - _ _ . .&#13;
; V Kirk Drown is assisting in the&#13;
carpenter work on H. Plummers&#13;
new house.&#13;
The ladies aid met with Mrs.&#13;
" Henry Love on Thursday of last&#13;
week. All enjoyed a very pleasant&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
Nellie Gardner visited friends&#13;
„ in Ann Arbor last week.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Gardner visited at&#13;
Mrs. O. P . Noah'srat Itfbrth lake&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
Wm. McQuillan and family of&#13;
Hamburg Tisited^rt Patrick Reily's&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. C. D. Bennett of Howell&#13;
is visiting her sister, Mrs. Kirk&#13;
Van Winkle.&#13;
Ernest White of near Howell is&#13;
spending a few days with his&#13;
grand parents here.&#13;
James Sweeney and wife of&#13;
Chilson visited at Wm. Gardner's&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
EAST PUTNAM. ^&#13;
Samuel Placew-ayof near Gregory&#13;
was a^oaiTer here Tuesday.&#13;
^^A^has Dunning of Hamburg&#13;
c a ^ e d o n relatives here Monday&#13;
last.&#13;
Raymond Kennedy spent Sunday&#13;
with Burr Fitch in Stockbridge.&#13;
Messrs W. H. Placeway and&#13;
Frank Newman were in Hartland&#13;
this week.&#13;
Mrs. Bert Hause and Children&#13;
are spending a few week with Mrs.&#13;
i l e a JkowjL_&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Will Pixley&#13;
June 6 a son.&#13;
F. G. Voegts returned to his&#13;
home in Belvidere last Saturday.&#13;
S. T. Wasson and wife of Plainfield&#13;
spent Suuday at F. A. Daniels.&#13;
Morgan Sherman of Chicago is&#13;
visiting his mother Mrs. H. Gregory.&#13;
A number from this place attended&#13;
the childrens day at Un adilla.&#13;
Howlett Bros, are moving their&#13;
stock of hardware from Stockbridge&#13;
this week.&#13;
Rev. P. P. Farnham's two&#13;
daughters of Toledo came home&#13;
Saturday evening to spend the&#13;
summer vacation.&#13;
\&#13;
Levi Hiscock of Earlville 111.&#13;
was the guest of Geo. Hicks and&#13;
wife last week.&#13;
NBjiie Fish and Flo Hall spent&#13;
TuesdaXwith friends in Chilson.&#13;
They brought home with them as&#13;
a result of two hours spent on&#13;
Walker lake, seventy fine fish.&#13;
PETTYSVILLE.&#13;
Wm. Mercer was at the county&#13;
seat Wednesday.&#13;
J. W. Placeway and daughter&#13;
were in Howell Friday last.&#13;
Art Flintoff and wife entertained&#13;
friends from ^Milan Sunday.&#13;
Iva Placeway spent Saturday&#13;
and Sunday with Maude Richmond.&#13;
Mrs. Crofoot and Mabel Swarthout&#13;
of Pinckney spent last Wednesday&#13;
at H. H. Swarthouts.&#13;
Word reached here from Oregon&#13;
that Mr. and Mrs. Bert Cordley&#13;
are the proud parents of a&#13;
baby girlr.&#13;
Ed. Mercer and sister Ella of&#13;
Toledo visited their parents Sunday.&#13;
Ella expects to remain here&#13;
this, summer.&#13;
Childrens day exercises were&#13;
held at North Hamburg last Sunday.&#13;
The church was beautifully&#13;
decorated and a good program&#13;
rendered. The singing by&#13;
Miss Westfall of Brighton was especially&#13;
fine.&#13;
-GREGORY.&#13;
*'"~*^&amp;J$»qhn was in Jackson last&#13;
Mrs. Dtto Duriac of Detroit is&#13;
**V&lt; visiting her daughter in this vicinity.&#13;
Mrs. 0 . L. Smith and Mrs. P.&#13;
P. Fainham spent a greater part&#13;
of last week in Marshall attending&#13;
the meeting of the WCTU.&#13;
The Lady Maccabees expect to&#13;
have a good time iu connection&#13;
with the regular review on Thursday&#13;
June 13. A cordial invitation&#13;
has been extended to Pinckney&#13;
hive. Lunch of ice Cream and&#13;
strawberries will be served.&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
Ladies' Aid met at the home of&#13;
Mrs. Frank Johnson Wednesday&#13;
of this week.&#13;
Mrs. Byron Morgan has a sister&#13;
and her family from Pontiac visisting&#13;
her this week^,&#13;
Oscar Earle-alid wife of Fenton&#13;
are visiting their daughter Mrs.&#13;
,Jefcn Davis of this place.&#13;
Jack Voorhies and his two&#13;
younger children spent the Sabbath&#13;
with his sister Mrs. Lucy&#13;
Wakeman.&#13;
Mrs. Joseph Marlin an old resident&#13;
of Hartland died Saturday&#13;
night and was buried Monday the&#13;
10, funeral at M. E. church.&#13;
As X. T. Cole was leading a&#13;
horse up the west hill Sunday&#13;
morning, a bicycle ridden by&#13;
Charlie Townsend collided with&#13;
the horse. The wheel was quite&#13;
badly fractured and the young&#13;
man bruised, otherwise no harm&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Gertrude Webb spent last week&#13;
under the parental roof.&#13;
Willis Hoyland of Webberville&#13;
is visiting relatives here.&#13;
Bessie Howlett of Gregory was&#13;
the guest of Myrtle Smith Sunday.&#13;
Rose Glenn of North lake was&#13;
the guest of Gertrude Webb Sunday.&#13;
Erma Pyper and Pearl Hartsuff&#13;
were sick with chicken-pox last&#13;
week.&#13;
Charlie Runciman of Waterloo&#13;
was the guest of Inez Marshall on&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Misses Jean Pyper and Alice&#13;
Slacker called on friends in Stockbridge&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
A. C. Watson, wife and son and&#13;
Miss Alice Slauker visited relatives&#13;
in Chelsea last Wednesday.&#13;
A large crowd attended the&#13;
children's day exercises Sunday&#13;
and a good program was rendered.&#13;
&amp; #&#13;
r#* -.,&#13;
U&#13;
Cress Townley and Emory&#13;
Myers while coming out of Hartland&#13;
Saturday evening driving at&#13;
a good gait, collided with Frank&#13;
Townsend who was riding his&#13;
wheel quite fast. The young man&#13;
was quite badly bruised up and&#13;
the wheel was torn to pieces, one&#13;
wheel being on the horses hind&#13;
feec and the other fastened in the&#13;
hind wheel of the carriage.&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
Theo. Heise is having his house&#13;
painted.&#13;
C. E. Bullis Sr. was able to ride&#13;
out Sunday.&#13;
Bean picking began at the elevator&#13;
Monday.&#13;
L. E. Wilson was in Detroit&#13;
last week; his brother Sam taught&#13;
for him.&#13;
Miss Villa Martin of Pinckney&#13;
spent Saturday night with Mrs.&#13;
G. W. Black.&#13;
N. D. and L. E. Wilson attended&#13;
the teachers' association at&#13;
Howell Saturday.&#13;
Some from this place attended&#13;
the children's day exercises at Unadilla&#13;
Sunday afternoon.&#13;
Several from this locality attended&#13;
the party at Carey Roche's&#13;
in Marion Friday evening. All&#13;
report a fiue time.&#13;
There will be a social at the&#13;
home of Mr. and Mrs. S. Placeway&#13;
Friday evening, J u n e 21, for&#13;
the benefit of the ladies aid of&#13;
Gregory. All invited.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Bennett and&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Van Winkle&#13;
toc% dinner at Jas. Marble's Sanday.&#13;
Mrs. Bennett returned home&#13;
with Mrs. Van Winkle for-* Tisit&#13;
TOADILLX FIRMER'S CLUB&#13;
The Unadilla Farmers' Club&#13;
will meet at the home of Fred&#13;
Marshall and wife Saturday J u n e&#13;
15. The following program will&#13;
be given:&#13;
Singing Club&#13;
Prayer&#13;
Minutes of last meeting&#13;
Solo Mrs. Geo. Westfall&#13;
Recitation Kate Collins&#13;
Paper ''Practical Culture"&#13;
Foster Chapman&#13;
Discussion led by Thos. Howlett&#13;
"We'll have to mortgage the Farm"&#13;
Quartette&#13;
Recitation Florence Andrews&#13;
Inst. Music Mrs. I.ulo Marshall&#13;
Recitation Uessie Howlett&#13;
Question Box conducted by W. B. Collins&#13;
Solo F. L. Andrews.&#13;
MARION&#13;
Miss Agnes Hinkley is helping&#13;
Mrs. E. S. Nash.&#13;
Mrs. A. Burden is visiting her&#13;
sister at Marshall.&#13;
Josie Smith'entertained friends&#13;
from Handy Sunday.&#13;
A. Barnhart and wife visited at&#13;
W. A. Clark's Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Lee left Monday for&#13;
Lennon to visit-he^r-peepiev&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Driver was seriously&#13;
ill Saturday night with appoplexy.&#13;
Mrs. Ellen Murnigan of Howell&#13;
is visiting her children in Marion.&#13;
Ira Kinkum of Fair Haven is&#13;
spending a few days with relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Bean planting is in full blast in&#13;
these parts; some farmers are putting&#13;
in 40 or 50 acres.&#13;
Mrs. Lucy Driver spent the&#13;
past week with an old neighbor,&#13;
Mrs. D. House of Deerrield.&#13;
STILL MORE LOCAL.&#13;
^iss Addie Carey of Jackson h the&#13;
guest of Mrs. Percy Swartbout.&#13;
Mrs. Bertha Mann graduates from&#13;
tbe Detroit School of Pharmacy this&#13;
week. Success to her.&#13;
Pinckney will not celebrate this&#13;
year, enough interest not being manifested&#13;
by the business men.&#13;
The Washtenaw connty pioneer association&#13;
met at Dextei Wednesday.&#13;
Rev. H. W. Hicks was in attendance.&#13;
Mrs. Hiram Backus of Marion was&#13;
the guest of Mrs. A . J . Wilhelm and&#13;
other friends here tbe first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
Will Monks is among tbe graduates&#13;
from the dental department of the V.&#13;
of M. next week. We wish him unbounded&#13;
success.&#13;
A basket of very fine strawberries&#13;
from tbe vines of Ban Richards graced&#13;
our table tbe first of the week. Unless&#13;
something happens they will have a&#13;
fine crop.&#13;
The Forty hour Mission closed at St.&#13;
Mary'i church Tuesday. All services&#13;
were well attended and were impre*pive.&#13;
Rev. Fr. Comerford was assisted&#13;
by several other Priests. Wn were&#13;
unable to secure farther information.&#13;
DEEP OR SHALLOW f&#13;
Common Sense Notions an* Expert&#13;
enoe In Potato Planting.&#13;
An experiment has been conducted&#13;
at the Canadian experimental farm&#13;
duriny the past three years in phmtinf&#13;
potatoes at different depths in row*&#13;
2½ feet apart and l'J inches apart in&#13;
the rows. The sets had at least three&#13;
eyes each and were about uniform in&#13;
size. The soil was sandy loam both&#13;
years. Level cultivation was adopted,&#13;
and thus very little soil was thrown&#13;
on the potatoes after they were covered&#13;
at the time of plautiug. The best&#13;
yields were obtained from planting the&#13;
sets only an inch deep.&#13;
In 1800 and 1000 it was found that&#13;
most of the tubers were formed within&#13;
four inches of the surface of the soil,&#13;
even where the set had been planted&#13;
six, seven and eight inches deep. Where&#13;
the sets were plauted less than four&#13;
inches deep nearly all the tubers were&#13;
formed between that and the surface&#13;
of the soil.&#13;
The potato grows more rapidly in&#13;
warm soil than in that which is cooler.&#13;
The soil within the tirst tliree-ur four&#13;
inches of the surface is warmer than&#13;
that three or four iuches lower down;&#13;
hence the conditions are more favorable&#13;
for the potato. The tubers when&#13;
the potato is in the wild state develop&#13;
near the surface or on the surface of&#13;
the ground,—It seems natural* therefore,&#13;
that the cultivated potato should&#13;
be planted shallow. •&#13;
Ou the other hand, much of the success&#13;
of shallow planting will depend&#13;
News a n d No^a*.&#13;
A fine promise for wheat ajftd a generally&#13;
good hay outlook was America*&#13;
Agriculturist's summary at the begin*&#13;
ning of May. ''&#13;
A miniature Louisiana ficefleld, witlfr&#13;
canal, pumps and thrashing machine*&#13;
Just as found in the Crowley district; if&#13;
»ne of the unique features devised for&#13;
tbe rice growers' exhibit at Buffalo,&#13;
New orange and grape fruit groves&#13;
are reported as being constantly planted&#13;
in Florida the past three years, the&#13;
rock lands of Dade county having proved&#13;
a pleasant surprise as far as successful&#13;
orange growing Is concerned.&#13;
Good earth roads are still needed.&#13;
Drainage by one line of properly laid&#13;
tile is recommended 1^..an .expert as&#13;
the best thing in road improvement&#13;
A Canadian bee man thinks that instead&#13;
of working for long tongues tbe&#13;
effort should be to obtain a new clover&#13;
by crossing red and white or red and&#13;
alsike.&#13;
In a few months there will be 42 beet&#13;
Bugar factories in operation in this&#13;
country, no less than 13 being now In&#13;
tourse of erection.&#13;
A JOSSHOUSE.&#13;
on tKenloTsture^T^tue^s^Tt^rihe-sea^&#13;
son is very dry. the first two inches of&#13;
soil may be so dry that the potato will&#13;
not take root readily, and the season of&#13;
growth will thUs be shortened. Once&#13;
the roots begin to grow they speedily&#13;
reach a depth where plenty of moisture&#13;
is found.&#13;
It seems reasonable to conclude that&#13;
where the soil is uot dry the best results&#13;
can be obtained from shallow&#13;
planting. In any case, early planted&#13;
potatoes will probably succeed best&#13;
when plauted shallow, as the ground&#13;
will be wanner. In places where the&#13;
spring is late or where the ground is&#13;
cold, best results will probably be had&#13;
by shallow planting.&#13;
Although the best results have been&#13;
obtained in sandy loam soil by planting&#13;
the sets one inch deep, this method&#13;
is not recommended for Held culture.&#13;
Unless the surface of the soil&#13;
is kept loose and free from weeds, the&#13;
potato crop will not be large. In order&#13;
to kill a large proportion of the weeds&#13;
which grow, the ground should be&#13;
harrowed once or twice before the potatoes&#13;
come up or just as they are&#13;
coming up. If the sets were planted&#13;
only one inch deep and the soil harrowed,&#13;
many of them would be dragged&#13;
out; hence about four inches deep&#13;
would be tbe best.&#13;
Pen Picture of t h e One In San F r a n -&#13;
cisco's Chinese Quarter.&#13;
In one corner is a miniature wooden&#13;
warrior,-frantically riding' a fiery «teed&#13;
toward a joss who stands in his doorway&#13;
awaiting the rider's coming. A&#13;
teapot of unique design, filled with&#13;
fresh tea every day, and a very small&#13;
THE FOOTPROOF TROUGH.&#13;
Practical Device For DlstrTlinilnsT&#13;
Food F o r Hogi,&#13;
A method of setting a hog trough So&#13;
as to keep it clean is shown in the accompanying&#13;
cut from the Ohio Farmer.&#13;
The arrangement is seen from the&#13;
cup and saucer are always ready for&#13;
the warrior. This represents a man&#13;
killed in battle, whose noble steed,&#13;
missing his master, refused to eat and&#13;
so pined away and died. A welcome&#13;
is assured to them iu the better&#13;
land If the work of man can accomplish&#13;
it. The horse and rider are to&#13;
them (the Chinese) what the images of&#13;
saints are to Christians. In another&#13;
corner Is a tiny bowl of water. The&#13;
gods occasionally come down and&#13;
wash. At certain times of the year di:&#13;
rect questions are written on slips of&#13;
paper and put into the hands of one&#13;
of the greatest josses. These disappear,&#13;
and then the joss either nods or&#13;
shakes his head in answer.&#13;
On the altar or altars are several&#13;
brass and copper vessels, in which the&#13;
worshiper leaves a sandalwood punk&#13;
burning in such a position that the&#13;
ashes will fall on the fine sand in the&#13;
vessel. When one of these 4s full, it is&#13;
emptied into an immense bronze vase&#13;
on the balcony, and this, in turn, is&#13;
emptied Into the ocean. The Chinese&#13;
take good care of their living and never&#13;
forget their dead. Onoe a year, the&#13;
fourteenth day of the seventh mouth,&#13;
they have a solemn ceremony by which&#13;
they send gold and sliver And cloth to&#13;
the great army of the departed.&#13;
A furnace is a necessity in a jossbouse.&#13;
It is lighted on ceremonial&#13;
days, and paper representing cloth,&#13;
gold and silver is burned, the ashes of&#13;
the~~maTerials beTiTgT^f^eTF^iTnds,&#13;
useful in spirit land. Private families&#13;
send to their relatives and friends&#13;
whatever they want by throwing the&#13;
gold, the silver aud the cloth paper,&#13;
also fruits, into a tire built iu the street&#13;
in front of their houses. The days of&#13;
worship come on the 1st and 15th of&#13;
each month.—Modern Culture.&#13;
TROUGH CLOSED—TROUGH OPEN.&#13;
inside of the pen or feeding lot. The&#13;
trough is set just outside the inolosure.&#13;
From 18 inches to 2 feet of tbe bottom&#13;
of the partition or fence, as tbe case&#13;
may be, is made to swing, being fastened&#13;
by strong hinges to the parallel&#13;
boards above. When feed is being&#13;
placed in the trough, this Is allowed to&#13;
hang in its natural position and is secured&#13;
there by the lever whose lower&#13;
end catches on the Inside of the trough,&#13;
as shown in the upper figure.&#13;
After the feed is ready the lever is&#13;
pushed to one side until its lower end&#13;
clears the Inside of the trough, and the&#13;
partition is then swung out and secured&#13;
to the outer edge of the trough&#13;
by the lever again being pushed In position.&#13;
The lever is attached to tbe&#13;
swinging partition by a single bolt.&#13;
This arrangement keeps the hogs away&#13;
from the trough until the feed is distributed&#13;
ready for them and also keeps&#13;
them from getting their feet in tbe&#13;
trough while eating.&#13;
THE TALE OF A TACK. /&#13;
How an Italian Tenor Was Enabled&#13;
to Reach High C.&#13;
"There was once an Italian tenor at&#13;
Coveut Garden of the name of Tasca,&#13;
who, I am sorry to say, sang his own&#13;
praises better than the score," says Mr.&#13;
William Parry, the stage director at&#13;
the Metropolitan Opera House.&#13;
"For this and other reasons he was&#13;
strongly disliked by all the workmen.&#13;
One day he came to me and said, with&#13;
great show of mystery:&#13;
" 'Tell me the exact spot.'&#13;
"I could not for the life of me understand&#13;
what he wauted.&#13;
" 'You know well enough what 1&#13;
mean,' he persisted. " 'Show me the&#13;
spot where Tamberlik sang the high C.&#13;
There is always one spot on the stage&#13;
that is better than all the others to&#13;
stand on when you sing. Where is it?'&#13;
" 'I'll show you later,' 1 replied. 'But,&#13;
remember, never a word. It would&#13;
cost me my place if it should leak out*&#13;
"Then I drove a brass tack into one&#13;
of the stage boards, and he was overjoyed&#13;
when I solemnly pointed out the&#13;
exact spot,' and so were the workmen&#13;
at the prospect of a joke at his expense.&#13;
That night he carefully stood on the&#13;
tack and sang the high C. Rushing&#13;
into the wings, he exclaimed: 'Beautiful!&#13;
Wonderful!' Ever afterward, no&#13;
matter what part of the stage demanded&#13;
his presence, he would rush to the&#13;
tack when the time for the high C&#13;
came and there deliver it."—Saturday&#13;
Evening Post.&#13;
Feelings a n d Finn-ers.&#13;
A boy was asked which was the&#13;
greater evil, hurting another's feelings&#13;
or his finger. -&#13;
•Tbe feeling**" he said.&#13;
"Right, my dear child," said the gratified&#13;
qiwstkmer. -But why it It worse&#13;
to hurt tbe feelings r&#13;
"Because you can't tie a rag round&#13;
them."&#13;
'£&amp;&gt;-&lt;&#13;
•, .'.v-iaff«&#13;
: **;.&#13;
isafti •laiaa^L ^•itiiyii</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="36755">
              <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="6922">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch June 13, 1901</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6923">
                <text>June 13, 1901 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="6924">
                <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="6925">
                <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="6926">
                <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="6927">
                <text>1901-06-13</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6928">
                <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="1000" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="928">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/79e3460d7497e96aec3f48c617ffded9.pdf</src>
        <authentication>255b2f7be617d6640ff511991bcadb2e</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="32314">
              <text>VOL.XIX. PINGENEY, LIVINGSTON GO.TMIGH.v THURSDAY, JUN .1901. No.HB5r&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
DEPARTMENT&#13;
STORE&#13;
HOWELL. - MICHIGANHamitiocks&#13;
Croquet Sets&#13;
Iron Express Wagons&#13;
PI re Works.&#13;
Best Glass Jelly Tumblers&#13;
full half-pint size,&#13;
2 0 c per doz.&#13;
We give cash coupons with&#13;
every purchase. Beautifull gifts&#13;
given fr»e with $2 in trade.&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
N e x t t o P o t l O f f i c e .&#13;
Mail orders&#13;
Carefully filled.&#13;
^** LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
liobi-&#13;
3^^b»_&#13;
O u r Mottot " T h e Better the&#13;
G r a d e the Bigger the T r a d e . "&#13;
rs7\/~&gt;&#13;
Royal Tailoring&#13;
Stands at the Head,&#13;
is&#13;
The Very Best!!&#13;
Clothing is absolutely&#13;
made to your measure, and&#13;
iu the latest styles. Satisfaction&#13;
is always guaranteed!&#13;
We solicit your patronage&#13;
Kt H. Crane,&#13;
Local Agent.&#13;
$&#13;
Here You Are Again&#13;
If you want a good Blood P u r i -&#13;
fier go to Yake t h e J e w e l e r a n d&#13;
purchase a package~"of Brown&#13;
H e r b Tablets. If not as recommended&#13;
your money returned.&#13;
Call a t store and get sample p k g .&#13;
Also a n extra T h r e e Star O i n t -&#13;
ment that should have room i n&#13;
every house.&#13;
Mr. Yake will repair y o u r&#13;
watches and clocks in t h e best of&#13;
style and if you have any auction&#13;
sales Mr. Yake will be happy t o&#13;
wait upon you as an auctioneer a t&#13;
moderate prices.&#13;
Yake The Jeweler,&#13;
Pinckney Mich.&#13;
Glover will be a big crop in&#13;
gun tbis year.&#13;
3 . A. Darwin has had bis house reshingled&#13;
and some other repairs made.&#13;
The village of Stock bridge will raise&#13;
a tax of four mills on the dollar tbis&#13;
year.&#13;
Miss Nora Henry, who has been&#13;
confined to the bouse was able to ride&#13;
out the padt weeK.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Brown, of New York is&#13;
visiting her sister Mrs. Lizzie Camp&#13;
bell who is very ill.&#13;
A large lot of cement walk is already&#13;
made and being made and still&#13;
there's more to follow.&#13;
Cyrus Gardner has returned home&#13;
from his first years course at the U. of&#13;
M. medical department.&#13;
A barn dance will be given at J. E.&#13;
Armstrong's in Webster Friday evening&#13;
June 21 of this week.&#13;
Tinrflrgh SehooHAlumui hold-their&#13;
annual receptiou Thursday evening of&#13;
this week at Hotel San to I'd.&#13;
Miss Nettie Hall closed a successful&#13;
year's school at Pettysville last Friday.&#13;
She will teach the same school next&#13;
year.&#13;
Frank Shields and Sheriff Finley&#13;
of Howell were in town Friday last on&#13;
business. -Tbey-wsrepleasant callers&#13;
at this office.&#13;
Through the compliment* of President&#13;
Angell we are in receipt of the&#13;
U. of M. calendar for 1900-01. What&#13;
is the matter of getting one out of the&#13;
P. H. S.&#13;
A good many fields of wheat tiave&#13;
been plowed1 up and planted to beans.&#13;
Several farmers in the county did not&#13;
sow any wheat last fall so ate ahead&#13;
their feed at and rate.&#13;
Mrs. Flora Grimes attended the&#13;
graduating exercises of the ' Detroit&#13;
medical college last Thursday evening&#13;
at which time her daughter, Mrs.&#13;
Bertha Mann graduated from the&#13;
pharmacy department.&#13;
In conversation with Tins, liirkett&#13;
the past week bo said the e ectric&#13;
road wonld surely be built through&#13;
here to Lansing. Boland and Angus&#13;
are both looking after it acd one or&#13;
the the other will put it through when&#13;
they get the ones they are now working&#13;
on completed. This opens up a&#13;
country they want as a feeder.&#13;
Don't write vour business letters on&#13;
stationary furnished with a soap firms&#13;
or some other advertising device upon&#13;
it. it gives the impression that yon&#13;
can't afford to use stationery of your&#13;
own. If it pays firms to give it to you&#13;
don't you think it would pay you to&#13;
advertise your own business? Think&#13;
of it. It's a small matter but may be&#13;
of more consequence than you imagine.&#13;
When you write to a Wholesale&#13;
house in the city on stationery that&#13;
advertises "Jackson Soap" what do&#13;
you suppose they think?&#13;
MICHIGAN MOURNS.&#13;
EX-GOVERNOR HAZEN S. PtNGREE PASSED AWAY IN ENGLAND.&#13;
On His way Home from a Foreign Trip When Stricken with Disease.&#13;
With His Death Michigan Loses one of Her Best and Most Patriotic Citizens.&#13;
Notice to Taxpayers*&#13;
The village tax-roll is now in my&#13;
bands and all taxes must be paid n o t&#13;
later than August 15,1991.&#13;
t-28 J . A. CADWELL, Treasurer.&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
Notice is hereby given that after&#13;
4ane 20 1961, no fishing will be allowed&#13;
on Cordley Lake.&#13;
WILL PECK.&#13;
Teacher's Examination.&#13;
A special examination of applicants&#13;
of Second and Third grade certificated&#13;
will be held at Fowlerville, Thursday&#13;
and Friday, June 20 and 21,1901.&#13;
JAMES H. WALLACE,&#13;
County Commissioner of Schools.&#13;
With the death of Hon. Hazen S. Pinwrree, which occurred at the Grand&#13;
hotel, London, England, Tuesday, June 18, the people of Detroit and Michigan&#13;
lose their most picturesque politician and public man. Friends and foes&#13;
unite in pronouncing him one bt the great men of the country—a brave soldier,&#13;
a daring and successful reformer, a sagacious, vigorous public official&#13;
and a man of great pergonal integrity and patriotism. In spite of his imperfections,&#13;
peculiarities and faults and notwithstanding the obstacles thrown in&#13;
his way by political enemies and corporate interests, P'ngree accomplished in&#13;
ten years a great deal for municipal reform and more equal taxation.,&#13;
His loss will be more deeply felt in his home city, Detroit, where he has&#13;
lived since the war and has always identified himself on the side of municipal&#13;
reform. Four times he was elected mayor or until he was called to the highest&#13;
office in the state being elected governor for two terms by an overwhelm,&#13;
mar majority. Had he lived be would have been the next mayor of Detroit.&#13;
rtotlce.&#13;
— Pinckney,May27.190L&#13;
To the patrons of the Pettysville&#13;
postoffice in the county of Livingston&#13;
State of Michigan, notice is hereby&#13;
given that the post office a t Pettysville&#13;
has this day, May 17, been discontinued&#13;
by order of Postmaster&#13;
General. Said discontinuance to take&#13;
effect June 29 1901. Thereafter delivery&#13;
will DO opened at the post office&#13;
in Pinckney tor all mail addressed to&#13;
said office (Pettysville). All those&#13;
situated on R. F. D. roots No. 1, from&#13;
Pinckney can, by putting np suitable&#13;
boxes, have their mail delivered in&#13;
said boxes. Very Respy.,&#13;
t 26 Wm. S. SWABTHOUT.&#13;
Postmaster.&#13;
Notice! To&#13;
Farmers&#13;
of the&#13;
20th Century.&#13;
S.G. Kimeof Gratiot county says&#13;
that wheat will be an excellent crop&#13;
with them—but little damage by insect;&#13;
Rev. Hicks delivered the baccalaureate&#13;
address at the M. E. church Sunday&#13;
evening last to a crowded house.&#13;
The address was an excellent one. '*&#13;
Mrs. H.Colby who has been sick^&#13;
nearlv all winter was able to ride out&#13;
one day the past week. Her many&#13;
friends will be glad to know that she&#13;
is on the way to recovery.&#13;
J.J.Teeple's mare, Lady Huron,&#13;
gave birth to a fine bay horse colt the&#13;
past week. The colt was sired by S.&#13;
G. Teeple's Lee"s Pilot. The dam has&#13;
a record of 2:21¾ and John has every&#13;
reason to be proud of the colt.&#13;
The editor aDU family enjoyed a&#13;
fine mess of new potatoes Sunday&#13;
which were from the garden of J. W.&#13;
Placeway. They were as large as hen's&#13;
eggs. Mr. Placeway has the reputation&#13;
ol raising early garden stuff. #&#13;
The picnic given by Cora Devereaux&#13;
Friday June 14 was well attended and&#13;
a very enjoyable time was reported.&#13;
In spite of the CODI day the crowd began&#13;
to gather shortly after dinner- and&#13;
continued to come the rest of the day.&#13;
Rowing, fishing and games were the&#13;
order of the day.&#13;
J. D. Hawks of the Hawks Angus&#13;
combination is credited with saying&#13;
that bis company will surely build a&#13;
line from their territorial line through&#13;
Dexter, to Lansing and that plans&#13;
b a n d s ' that end end in view are now&#13;
being arranged. 11 they s ould do so,&#13;
they wouloV'feavd one of the most valuable&#13;
lines Hcpie country. It would&#13;
also be of great value to Dexter.—&#13;
Leader.&#13;
Masonic .uemoral services will be&#13;
held at the opera house on Sunday af-&#13;
Want Column.&#13;
Fer Sale.&#13;
House for sale. Inquire of H. W,&#13;
CROFOOT.&#13;
FOR SALE—Brown Leghorn eggs&#13;
from one oi the best laying flock of&#13;
hens in Lower Mich. 25c per setting&#13;
at residence or 50c by express.&#13;
F. W. MACKIKDER,&#13;
t-26 Anderson, Mich&#13;
W A N T E D :&#13;
Strawberries, raspberries and other&#13;
small fruit on subscription at this&#13;
office.&#13;
Ralwe Calves Without milk.&#13;
Thousands are doing it Cheaply and&#13;
successfully with "Blatchford's Calf&#13;
Meal" the perfect milk substitute.&#13;
For sale by Teeple &amp; Cadwell. t-26&#13;
^"**&#13;
N .&#13;
_2S22_&#13;
"Sometimes her n a r r o w kitchen w a l l s&#13;
Stretched a w a y into stately halls."&#13;
&lt;**&gt; "&#13;
This happened to Maud Muller, but out*&#13;
prices on&#13;
Empire Drill agency for 1901 has been secured by u&amp;&#13;
and we wish to call your attention t o a few of the new&#13;
features of this Drill, as well as sowing all kinds of grain it&#13;
will plant Sugar Beets four rows 21 inches apart, will plant&#13;
corn two rows 2% feet apart, Beans three rows 2S inches&#13;
apart, or if desired the rows may be made closer together Uemoon next at 4 o'clock. The order of&#13;
or farther apart by simply closing a shut-off slide on in- ^ &amp; A. M. and 0. E.S. will meet at&#13;
side of box. Come and examine the Drill and you will be&#13;
convinced that it is the best Drill on earth.&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
Wall Paper&#13;
Make it possible for it to happen&#13;
to everybody. Wall paper which&#13;
used to cost so much that it could\&#13;
only be hung in the parlor, or in&#13;
stately halls, is now so cheap that&#13;
the kitchen walls can be made&#13;
really attractive.&#13;
x&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
the masonic hall at 3:30 and march in&#13;
a body to the opera hou*e. The following&#13;
is the program:&#13;
Music Quartette&#13;
Iu vocation Kev. K. H. Crane&#13;
Solo Miss Lucy Mann !&#13;
Address Rev. H. W. Hicks h&#13;
Solo CarlSykcsj&#13;
Benediction Kev. C. W. Rice •&#13;
Come in and see our new&#13;
for 1901, Price* from 7 to S*5 cents&#13;
per double roll*&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
i.Ahii.lfcw^ni p*ikaifrfl&#13;
,,,-,,.,,,,.. :,^&#13;
• • • • ' • • * * m&#13;
• • - ' . ' ' ' ^ A&#13;
i&#13;
m&#13;
* • N«;1&#13;
:hi^&#13;
'*' kJMkA&#13;
fe..v ••&#13;
;;?.&gt; •&#13;
ft?,&#13;
I&#13;
ta&#13;
ftV&#13;
&gt;•*-¥•&#13;
TALMAGE'b SEEMON.&#13;
4'.&#13;
THS SUBti ANJE&gt; TIM^ VNSBEN&#13;
VkeM Are Posts o f 4&#13;
Bot B o w U t t t o • Portloo U&#13;
o f m » i " — O o b nvt» 14—W&#13;
dMvlae Poarox.&#13;
ffi. '&#13;
^Copyright, lata, fey Louis Kiopach, N. YA&#13;
Washington, Jsne 16.—In this disoouraft&#13;
Dr. T«JUaAf« raise* high expectations&#13;
of the day when that which&#13;
1« now only dimly seen will be fully revealed;&#13;
text. Job xxri, 14: "Lo, these&#13;
are parts est his ways. But how little&#13;
•SK portion ts heard of him? But the&#13;
thunder of bis power who can under-&#13;
*tandr&#13;
The least understood b-lag in the&#13;
-inrverseisOod. Blasphemous would he&#13;
any attempt by painting or sculpture&#13;
¢0 represent feim. Egyptian hieroglyph*&#13;
tried to suggest him by putting&#13;
the figure of an eye upon a sword, implying&#13;
that God sees and rules, but&#13;
JfOw imperfect the suggestion! When&#13;
sre apeak of htm, it is almost always&#13;
in language figurative. He is "Light"&#13;
or "Dayspring From on High," or he&#13;
is a *Hlgh Tower" or the "Fountain of&#13;
living Waters." His splendor is so&#13;
great that no man can see htm and&#13;
live. When the group of great theologians&#13;
assembled in Westminster abbey&#13;
for the purpose of making a system&#13;
oi reiigioas belief, they firstof&#13;
ail wanted an answer to the question,&#13;
"Who is God?" No one desired to undertake&#13;
the answering of that overmastering&#13;
question. They finally concluded&#13;
to give the task to the youngest&#13;
man in the assembly, who happened to&#13;
be Rer. George Gillespie. He consented&#13;
to undertake it on the condition&#13;
that they would first unite with&#13;
ttm fa prayer for divine direction. He&#13;
began tile prayer by saying, "O God,&#13;
thou art a spirit infinite, infinite, eternal&#13;
and unchangeable in thy being,&#13;
wisdom, power, holiness, justice, goodness&#13;
and truth." That first sentence&#13;
•of Gillespie's prayer was unanimously&#13;
;adopted by the assembly as the best&#13;
.definition of God. But, after all, it&#13;
w^as only a partial success, and after&#13;
. ererytiiing that language can do when&#13;
put to Che utmost strain and all we&#13;
can see of God in the natural world&#13;
and realize of God in the providential&#13;
world we are forced to cry out with&#13;
Jbb an my text: "Lo, these are parts&#13;
• dt the ways. But how little a portion&#13;
is heard of him? But the thunder of&#13;
lite power who can understand?"&#13;
God's War or Doing.&#13;
We tfif to satisfy ourselves with saying,&#13;
"It Is natural law that controls&#13;
things, grayitatkm is at work, centripetal&#13;
and centrifugal forces respond to&#13;
each other." But what is natural law?&#13;
It is only God's way of doing things.&#13;
AJ every point in the universe it is&#13;
&lt;3od's direct and continuous power that&#13;
controls and harmonises and sustains.&#13;
That power withdrawn one instant&#13;
would make the planetary system and&#13;
afi the worlds which astronomy reveals&#13;
one universal wreck, bereft hemispheres,&#13;
dismantled sunsets, dead constsrlaiionB,&#13;
debris of worlds. What&#13;
power it must be that keeps the internal&#13;
fires of our world imprisoned—&#13;
• only here and there spurting from a&#13;
' Gotopaxl, or a Stromboli, or from a&#13;
Vesuvius, putting Pompeii and Hercuteneum&#13;
into sepulcher, but for the&#13;
rmost part the internal fires chained in&#13;
their cages of rock, and century after&#13;
century unable to break the chain or&#13;
burst open the door! What power to&#13;
keep the component parts of the air in&#13;
right-proportion, so that all around the&#13;
world the nations may breathe in&#13;
Ihealtb, the frosts and the heats h inhered&#13;
from working universal demolition!&#13;
Power, as Isaiah says, "to take&#13;
up the isles as a very little thing,"&#13;
-Ceylon and Borneo and Hawalis as&#13;
though they were pebbles; power to&#13;
weigh the "mountains in scales" and&#13;
fjte "hills in balances"—Tener if e and&#13;
the Cordilleras. To move a rock we&#13;
'must have lever and screw and great&#13;
•machinery, but God moves the world&#13;
wMh nothing but a word; power to&#13;
-create worlds and power to destroy&#13;
them, as from observation again and&#13;
again they have been seen red with&#13;
flame, thon pale vi'.h ashes and then&#13;
scattered.&#13;
Working* of the Divine F a w n ,&#13;
We get some little idea of the divine&#13;
power when we see how it buries the&#13;
iproudest citi-*» and n:»::.&lt;n&amp;. Ancient&#13;
Memphis it has troand up i ntil many&#13;
of its ruins are no larger than your&#13;
thumb nail and you can hardly find&#13;
a souvenir large enough to rewind you&#13;
of your visit. The city of Tyre is&#13;
under the sea which washes the shore,&#13;
on which are only a few crumb/ing&#13;
• pillars left Sodom and Gormorrab are&#13;
covered by waters so deathful that not&#13;
a fish can live in them. Babylon tnd&#13;
Nineyah are so blotted out of existence&#13;
that not one uninjured sba*t of&#13;
vthetr ancient splendor remains. Nothing&#13;
but omnipotence could have put&#13;
them down and put them under. The&#13;
antediluvian world was able to send&#13;
to the postdiluvian world only one ship&#13;
with a very small passenger list. Omnipotence&#13;
first roiled the seas over&#13;
(the land, and then told them to* go&#13;
J back to their usual channels as rivers&#13;
&lt;aad lakes and oceans. At omnipotent&#13;
oocntnaad tit* waters oouudng upon&#13;
4kolr preyr^and at rat&amp;ij«4ent command&#13;
slinking back into their appropriate&#13;
places. By such reheated we try&#13;
to arouse our appreciation of what omnipotence&#13;
is, and our reverence is excited,&#13;
and our adoration is intensified,&#13;
but after all we find ourselves at the&#13;
foot of a mountain we cannot climb,&#13;
hovering over a depth we cannot fathom,&#13;
at the rim of a circumference&#13;
_ , cannot compass, and we feel like&#13;
first going down on our knees and then&#13;
ttfee falling fiat upon our faces as we&#13;
scclaim: "Lo, these are parts of his&#13;
ways. But how little a portion is&#13;
heard of him? But the thunder of his&#13;
power who can understand?"&#13;
The God of Abraham.&#13;
A tradition says that Abraham of&#13;
the Old Testament was when an infant&#13;
hidden In a cave because of the persecutions&#13;
of Nimrod. The first time the&#13;
child came out of the cavern it was&#13;
night, and he looked up at the star&#13;
and cried, "This is my God," but the&#13;
star disappeared, and Abraham said,&#13;
"No, that cannot be my God." After&#13;
awhile the moon rose, and Abraham&#13;
said, "That is my God," but it set, and&#13;
Abraham was again disappointed. After&#13;
awhile the sun rose, and he said,&#13;
"Why, truly, here is my God," but the&#13;
sun went down,.and Abraham was saddened.&#13;
Not until the Gqd of the Bible&#13;
appeared to Abraham was he satisfied,&#13;
and his faith was so great that he was&#13;
called "the Father of the Faithful."&#13;
All that the theologians know of God's&#13;
wisdom is insignificant compared with&#13;
the wisdom beyond human comprehension.&#13;
The .human racenever has had&#13;
and never will have enough brain or&#13;
heart to measure the wisdom of God.&#13;
I can think of only two authors who&#13;
have expressed the exact facts. The&#13;
one was Paul; who says, "Oh, the depth&#13;
of the riches, both of the wisdom and&#13;
knowledge of God, how unsearchable&#13;
are his judgments and his ways past&#13;
finding out." The other author was&#13;
the scientist who composed my text.&#13;
I think he wrote it during a thunderstorm,&#13;
for the chapter says much about&#13;
the clouds and describes the tremor&#13;
of the earth under the reverberations.&#13;
Witty writers sometimes depreciate the&#13;
thunder and say it is the lightning&#13;
that strikes, but I am sure God thinks&#13;
well of the thunder, or be would not&#13;
make so much of it, and all up and&#13;
down the Bible he uses the thunder&#13;
to give emphasis. It was the thunder&#13;
that shook Sinai when the law was&#13;
given. It was with thunder that the&#13;
Lord discomfited the PliilisCines at&#13;
Eben-ezer. Job pictures the warhorse&#13;
as having a neck clothed with thunder.&#13;
St. John, in an apocalyptic vision,&#13;
again and again heard the thunder.&#13;
The thunder, which is rfbw quite well&#13;
explained by the electricians, was the&#13;
overpowering mystery of the ancients,&#13;
and standing among those mysteries&#13;
Job exclaimed: "Lo, these are part3&#13;
of his ways. But how little a portion&#13;
is heard of him? But the thunder of&#13;
his power who can understand?&#13;
- The Omnipracnce of God.&#13;
We have all been painfully reminded&#13;
in our own experiences that we cannot&#13;
be in two places at the same time.&#13;
Madler, the astronomer, went on with&#13;
his explorations until ~he concluded&#13;
that the star Alcyone, one of the&#13;
Pleiades, was the center of the universe,&#13;
and it was a fixed world, and&#13;
all the other worlds revolved around&#13;
that world, and some think that that&#13;
world is heaven and God's throne is&#13;
there, and there reside the nations of&#13;
the blest. But he is no more there&#13;
than he is here. Indeed, Alcyone has&#13;
been found to be in motion, and it also&#13;
is revolving around some great center.&#13;
But no place has yet been found where&#13;
God is not present by sustaining&#13;
power. Omnipresence! Who fu.ly&#13;
appreciates it? Not I. Not you.&#13;
Sometimes we hear bim in a whisper.&#13;
Sometimes we hear him in the voice&#13;
of the storm that jars the Adriondacks.&#13;
But we cannot swim across this ocean.&#13;
The finite cannot measure the infinite,&#13;
We feel as Job did after finding God&#13;
in the gold mines and the silver mines&#13;
of Asia, saying, "There is a vein for&#13;
the silver and a place for the gold&#13;
where they fine it." And after exploring&#13;
the heavens as an astromoner&#13;
and finding God in distant worlds and&#13;
becoming acquainted with Orion and&#13;
Mazzaroth and Arcturus and noticing&#13;
the tides of the sea the inspired poet&#13;
expresses his incapacity to understand&#13;
such evidences of wisdom and power&#13;
and says: "Lo, these are parts of his&#13;
ways. But hew little a portion is&#13;
heard of hira? But the thunder of his&#13;
power who can understand?"&#13;
So everysystem of theology has attempted&#13;
to describe and define the divine&#13;
attribute of love. Easy enough&#13;
is it to define fatherly love, motherly&#13;
love, conjugal love, fraternal love, sisterly&#13;
love and love of country, but the&#13;
love of God defies all vocabulary. For&#13;
many hundreds of years poets have&#13;
tried to sing it and painters have tried&#13;
to skeich it and ministers of the gospel&#13;
to preach it and martyrs in the fire and&#13;
Christians on their deathbeds have extolled&#13;
it, and we' can tell what it is&#13;
like, but no one has yet fully told what&#13;
it is. Men speak of the love of God&#13;
SB though it were first felt between&#13;
the pointing of Bethlehem star and the&#13;
pounding of the crucifixion hammer.&#13;
But no! Long before that existed the&#13;
love of God.&#13;
Sooto«&gt; God Ftoos to Foeo.&#13;
Only glimpses of God have we in&#13;
this world, but what an hour it will&#13;
be when we first sea him, and we will&#13;
have no more fright than I feel when&#13;
I now see you. It will not be with&#13;
mortal eye that we will behold him,&#13;
but with the vision of a cleansed, forgiven&#13;
and perfected spirit. Of all the&#13;
qulntllllon ages of eternity to us the&#13;
most thrilling hour will be the first&#13;
hour when we meet him as he is.&#13;
This may account for something you&#13;
have all seen and may not have understood.&#13;
Have you not noticed how that&#13;
after death of the old Christian looks&#13;
young again or the features resume the&#13;
look of 20 or 30 years before? The&#13;
weariness is gone out of the face; there&#13;
is something strikingly restful and&#13;
placid; there is a pleased look where&#13;
before there was a disturbed look.&#13;
What has wrought the change? I&#13;
think the dying Christian saw God.&#13;
At the moment the soul left the body&#13;
what the soul saw left its impression&#13;
on the countenance. I think that is&#13;
what gave that old Christian face after&#13;
death the radiant and triumphant look.&#13;
The bestormed spirit has' reached the&#13;
harbor; the hard battle of life is ended&#13;
in victory. The body took that look&#13;
the moment heaven began, and the&#13;
curtain was completely lifted and the&#13;
glories of Jehovah's presence rushed&#13;
upon the soul. The departing sp'rlt&#13;
left on the old man's face a glad good- j&#13;
by, and that first look gave the pleased&#13;
curve to the dying lip and smootned&#13;
out the wrinkles and touched all the&#13;
lineaments with an indescribable radiance.&#13;
As no one else explains that improved&#13;
and gladdened post mortem&#13;
look, I try to explain it, saying: "He&#13;
saw God!" "She sa w-G^dT&#13;
1A BUILDING CEMENT.&#13;
A VERY IMPORTANT piflCOVRRY&#13;
BY THOMAS A. LDISON.&#13;
Urn a s p e c t e So See B i s C « m u t Drtte&#13;
Oot .yaarrtea Stoao M Hallatos Mstorlol—&#13;
IavoBttoa Will Fr»cUo**»7 V«&#13;
* # s y with&#13;
Keeping Flow e n Freeh.&#13;
Cut flowers, though universally employed,—&#13;
are- -seldom- Jtreaied_ as__they_&#13;
ought to be, so here are a few hints&#13;
for those who like to keep their blossoms&#13;
fresh as long as possible.&#13;
First of all, they should be put into&#13;
some large receptacle and sprinkled&#13;
freeiy with water all over. Only after&#13;
this preliminary operation it is wise to&#13;
transfer them to the several pots they&#13;
are to occupy. They ought to be taken&#13;
out every morning, sprinkled as on&#13;
the first day, the tip of the stem then&#13;
being cut off, and fresh water, flowing&#13;
from a tap, should be allowed to&#13;
run over the stalks, holding the flowers&#13;
head downward, says the Philadelphia&#13;
Press.&#13;
Finally, and herein lies the principal&#13;
secret of success, the water in the&#13;
vases may be "doctored" in this manner.&#13;
Mix thoroughly together a tab*espoonful&#13;
of finely shredded yeiiow&#13;
soap, enough chloride of sodium to&#13;
cover a florin, and half a pint of water.&#13;
Put in a portion of this mixture into&#13;
every receptacle and fill in the usual&#13;
way.&#13;
A pinch of borax in each one will&#13;
preserve all the coloring of the most&#13;
brilliant flowers, and by renewing the&#13;
supply of the above solution every two&#13;
or three days the flowers will last for&#13;
a couple of weeks or more. Palms and&#13;
all foliage plants must be carefully&#13;
but moderately watered, washed, put&#13;
outside daily for a bath of air and sunshine&#13;
and must not be stood in&#13;
draughty places.—&#13;
Electricity at Long Rouge.&#13;
The street cars in Oakland, Cal., are&#13;
now operated with electricity from the&#13;
Yuba river, 140 miles distant. The water&#13;
power, having been converted into&#13;
electricity, is carried on wires sixtenths&#13;
of an inch in diameter, made&#13;
of an alloy of copper and aluminum.&#13;
The electrical pressure is 40,000 volts,&#13;
and the loss. In transmission is said&#13;
to 5 per cent. This is by far the longest&#13;
electrical transmission system for&#13;
power purposes in existence, and if the&#13;
loss is as small as it is stated to be,&#13;
it is the most promising indication of&#13;
the possibilities of long-distance transmission&#13;
yet furnished. "Something&#13;
like six years ago," says the Railway&#13;
Engineering Review, "a test of electric&#13;
transmission oyer a line between&#13;
Frankfort and Lauffen, in Germany,&#13;
a distance of 110 mi es, was made for&#13;
experimental purposes, but not until&#13;
the test of the plant above referred to&#13;
has transmission for commercial purposes&#13;
over a line of such great length&#13;
been a fact."&#13;
Thomas A. Edison has discovered&#13;
how to jnake "Portland cement" at an&#13;
extremely small cost, says a recent&#13;
New York dispatch to the Chicago&#13;
Record-Herald. This statement, at first&#13;
thought, seems to be comparatively unimporant.&#13;
.Yet Edison knows the immense&#13;
value of his discovery. He expects&#13;
that his cement will drive out&#13;
quarried stone and brick as bulldtng&#13;
materials. He foresees as the result of&#13;
his discovery that it will coat very&#13;
little to build houses, and that therefore&#13;
rents will he very low. He &lt;also&#13;
foresees that these same houses will be&#13;
as nearly fireproof as concrete and&#13;
steel frames can makcthern.&#13;
With cement so cheap a house will&#13;
be "poured," not builded. And the&#13;
"pouring" of the house will occupy but&#13;
a few days. The house will be habitable&#13;
when the concrete solidifies. For&#13;
several years Mr. Edison has been&#13;
working on the recent problem and&#13;
the problem of making cheap and practical&#13;
storage batteries. Both inventions&#13;
have now been perfected. Insurance&#13;
Engineering, which will be published&#13;
tomorrow,will contain an interview&#13;
of its editor with Mr. Bdiaon.&#13;
The Inventor Bays cement, combined&#13;
with steel, will be the building material&#13;
of the future, and continues: "My&#13;
impression Is that the time will come,&#13;
when each contractor will have standard&#13;
forms of houseB, twenty or thirty&#13;
varieties. The forms will be made of&#13;
wood, and a contractor, using one of&#13;
the standard shapes; will simply go out&#13;
and 'pour' a house. There will probably&#13;
be hundreds of designs., The contractors&#13;
will put up their concrete&#13;
fixer and have their beams and forms&#13;
ready. They will pour the form for&#13;
the first story and so on. To do that&#13;
all they will require will be common&#13;
labor—a few men and one boss. That&#13;
is what 1 think will be done eventually.&#13;
And such a house can be made very&#13;
cheaply. It seems to me there will&#13;
not be much use for carpenters then.&#13;
There will be cabinet makers, to be&#13;
sure. Why, even the floors and stairs&#13;
w&gt;H be made of concrete." Mr. Edison&#13;
was asked if Portland cement would&#13;
be cheap enough for general use. "Yes,&#13;
I think so," he said. "When the price&#13;
of cement gets to be ¢1 a barrel or ¢5&#13;
a ton, and people know they can get&#13;
it for that there will be enormous&#13;
quantities of it used." |&#13;
The inventor said that one part of&#13;
cement, three parts of sand and five&#13;
parts of broken stone would be the&#13;
mixture for concrete, and that broken&#13;
stone was better than brick. In reply&#13;
to a question as to the thickness of&#13;
walls in the ordinary house he said:&#13;
"The bottom course ought to be of&#13;
Portland cement, twelve inches up to&#13;
the first story, and eight inches above&#13;
the first story. The roofs i/ill be of&#13;
cement also."&#13;
Five Tdtonts.&#13;
The last man to gd for a helpfng&#13;
hand for any new undertaking is the&#13;
man who has plenty of time on his&#13;
bands. It is the man and woman who&#13;
are doing most who are always willing&#13;
to do a little more.&#13;
The people who are tired of life are&#13;
not those who work, but those who&#13;
are too proud or too lazy to do so.&#13;
Many of the rich are morbidly restless,&#13;
while those who have to earn&#13;
their daily bread are comparatively&#13;
contented and ibappy. The Bible says&#13;
that "the sleep of a laboring man is&#13;
sweet, whether he eat little or much."&#13;
(Eccl. v. 12); and the busy worker has&#13;
health and blessing which the listless&#13;
idler never knows.—Selected.&#13;
South'* Granite Quarrle*.&#13;
"The granite quarries of the south&#13;
are not only numerous, but are rapidly&#13;
coming into competition with the quarries&#13;
of northern states," observed T*&#13;
H. Binder of Atlanta, at the Riggs in&#13;
Washington recently.. "A contract for&#13;
65,000 cubic feet of curbing from Georgia&#13;
has recently been put down here in&#13;
the District of Columbia several days&#13;
in advance of the stipulated time,&#13;
whereas the contracts from the northern&#13;
quarries are very often filled considerably&#13;
after the time limit has expired.&#13;
The granite of Georgia now&#13;
goes as far north as Philadelphia and&#13;
as far west as Chicago. The state contains&#13;
an inexhaustible supply. Stone&#13;
mountain, a short distance out of Atlanta,&#13;
is seven miles in circumference&#13;
aud three miles in diameter, rising 1,-&#13;
600 feet high and forming one of the&#13;
geological wonders of the world. It is&#13;
without a flaw and without seam3 of&#13;
any kind.&#13;
IndlTldeol KoBpeiulbirttr.&#13;
Francis E. Clark says: "Many revivals&#13;
can be traced, so far as human&#13;
agency goes, directly to the prayer of&#13;
some individual Christian; sometimes&#13;
to the prayer of a helpless invalid who&#13;
Modern T&lt;-an«portMlnn. Device*.&#13;
Two modern transportation devices&#13;
have been Invented by a British engineer,&#13;
who has constructed a trolley autimobile&#13;
line, similar to that exhibited&#13;
at the Paris exposition, at Ederswalde,&#13;
a small rky near the German capital,&#13;
In this system the automobile re:elves&#13;
its motive power from an overhead&#13;
wire, by means of a trolley, which is&#13;
connected with the automobile by a&#13;
movable cable. This shows the vehicle&#13;
to turn out at any place on the&#13;
road. The line has been favorably inspected&#13;
by experts, and the system is&#13;
expected to meet .with general favor&#13;
in Germany.&#13;
E c o n o m l n Retired for Aoe*&#13;
Professor John Bascom, professor ot&#13;
political economy at Williams College,&#13;
has been retired for age. He was&#13;
graduated from Williams with the&#13;
class of '4ft. He was president of the&#13;
could never attend a" prayer meeting, i University of Wisconsin before he&#13;
What God has done. God will do. tf we [ Join** _ _ . _ . . - the faculty of Williams in 1M17 VThm&#13;
are ready for Him to work through j " d *• **• author of several religious,] ***.******** Bttrt*°* *" divided into&#13;
us.' philosophic*), in* toonomie works*&#13;
ill* I I1||i»»fc« m&#13;
0ANOSB O*- ?H* &gt;MkfittIe™_l&#13;
. , in I III II | 1 l | '&#13;
ASMTIMS; Cttiss Are .by Ho Mo*»&gt; Jsw-&#13;
SMM* lo the Plato.•»%,&#13;
la the absence of a fodersi health&#13;
board it becomes the proper business&#13;
of ail municipal health oOabjUs. es*&#13;
peclally at the seaports to bo prepared&#13;
to resist the possible approaches, of the&#13;
bubonic plague. That the world is by&#13;
no means free from the menace of a&#13;
great epidemic o r this ^iaiasHleath1*&#13;
is the declaration of a man who speaks&#13;
with authority. Dr. L. F. Barker is a&#13;
pathologist who was- at one time a&#13;
member of the faculty of the) Johns&#13;
Hopkins university, and who now occupies&#13;
the chair1 of pathology at the&#13;
Rush Medical College, Chicago. Two&#13;
years ago he was sent to India and&#13;
China by the former institution to&#13;
study the plague conditions, and later&#13;
was appointed to investigate the plague&#13;
cases in San Francisco for the government.&#13;
Probably there is no American&#13;
who is better qualified to speak on&#13;
this subject than is Dr. Barker. Ip a&#13;
recent address before a medical society&#13;
Dr. Barker announced that American&#13;
cities are far from immune as to the&#13;
"sneaking pestilence," which is spread&#13;
chiefly through the agency ot rats.&#13;
In the great epidemic of the fourteenth&#13;
century, which cost 25,900,000 human&#13;
lives, it was a characteristic of the&#13;
plague that it developed by bounds. Before&#13;
there was time to take precautions&#13;
a vast proportion of a community&#13;
would be in the grasp of the disease,&#13;
while the remainder would be terrorstricken.&#13;
Hindu writings 80 years old&#13;
note the fact that a visitation of the&#13;
plague was always preceded by a great&#13;
mortality among rats. Dr. Barker&#13;
noted that in India he saw dead rats&#13;
everywhere, and the same phenomenon&#13;
has been observed In Japan. It Is believed&#13;
that If the rodents eoold be exterminated,&#13;
as the government of Japan&#13;
has proposed, the danger of an&#13;
epidemic of the plague would be much&#13;
reduced.&#13;
t&lt; . . • • &gt; • • • . - .&#13;
A Pike County Miracle.&#13;
Veipen, Ind., June 17.—Wm. 0. B.&#13;
Sullivan, a farmer of this place, and&#13;
who is a brother of ex-Representative&#13;
Sullivan of Pike and Dubois counties,&#13;
has had a remarkable experience recently.&#13;
Mr. Sullivan is 49 years of age, and&#13;
has been a citizen of Pike County for&#13;
30 years. For two years, he has suffered&#13;
much with kidney trouble and rheumatism.&#13;
His shoulders and side were&#13;
very sore and stiff, and his back was&#13;
so bad he could hardly straighten up&#13;
at all. He had palpitation of ihe&#13;
heart, and a smothering which was&#13;
very distressing. He used three boxes&#13;
of Oodd's Kidney Pills, and is as&#13;
strong and well as ever he was. He&#13;
pronounces his cure a miracle. Mr.&#13;
Sullivan's statement of his case is&#13;
startling.&#13;
"A month ago I was a cripple. Today&#13;
I can do a hard day's work every&#13;
day, and have not a single ache or&#13;
pain."&#13;
*Dodd'8 Kidney Pills have done some&#13;
wonderful cures in Indiana, but none&#13;
more miraculous than that in the case&#13;
of Mr. Sullivan.&#13;
A R T O P W A L K I N G .&#13;
„ , &lt;.&#13;
Common-Settle Footwear ItoJce* Good&#13;
Pedes trlan of American Girl.&#13;
The American girl is learning how&#13;
to walk. For many years she has been&#13;
a martyr to French high-heeled shoes,&#13;
the toothpick toe. and the wafer sole,&#13;
but now common sense footwear is the&#13;
vogue. It took a long period of discomfort,&#13;
if not actual suffering, to convince&#13;
woman that she could wear a&#13;
sensible shoe and not detract from her&#13;
personal charms, comments the Cincinnati&#13;
Commercial-Tribune. Now that&#13;
she has been convinced of the error of&#13;
her ways more interest is manifested&#13;
in the correct style of walking and the&#13;
proper manner of holding the skirt.&#13;
In correct walking there is the poetry&#13;
of motion, the delicacy of poise and the&#13;
scientific adjustment of the weight of&#13;
the body which the ancients knew so&#13;
well, but which&gt; the moderns, siurfc if&#13;
they do not absolutely ignore. The&#13;
girl who walks correctly i&amp; a joy to&#13;
herself and all who behold her. She&#13;
has some purpose in life. SheJs, nine&#13;
times out of. ten, neatly dressed,&#13;
bright-eyed and healthy. Watch her&#13;
and you will see that the boil of her&#13;
foot is the center upon which the&#13;
weight of the body swings; and that&#13;
upon the hesl and the toes, there is&#13;
an even balance of the strata, if such&#13;
it may be called, the heel not being&#13;
called upon to do more than the toes&#13;
or the toea more than the heel, while&#13;
the sole is the medium between the&#13;
two extremes. In correct walking the&#13;
foot is placed evenly upon the surface,&#13;
with the pressure first upon the heel,&#13;
then upon the ball of the foot, and&#13;
then upon the toes. From the ball of&#13;
the foot, and the toes the impetus and&#13;
elasticity of the stride originate.&#13;
CoatriTanee for Varying PI ten*&#13;
While the structure of the music of&#13;
stridulatlng organs of beetles iff* oxtremely&#13;
simple, they sometimes possess&#13;
contrivances for varying the&#13;
pitch. The general structure of such&#13;
an organ Is a hard surface covered&#13;
jrilth strlations, over which some other&#13;
member of the body furnished with a&#13;
rasping edge or area is rubbed.&#13;
ports *r*h floor and ooarser markings,&#13;
varlDUofii of ptteh oan bo produced. ,&#13;
"N V&#13;
I .&#13;
t , - . 1 .&#13;
%;"'&#13;
I.-I&#13;
Sfe 'iV'.hi&#13;
'*»&#13;
1¾¾ ^&#13;
&amp; * * ,&#13;
J»i'-i • j&#13;
.1^&#13;
: - - ^ : ^ ^ / :&#13;
w * M K *$8* m&#13;
•'•» ' ' t ••:«!&#13;
: k i f V ;**' A&#13;
r - • \l-&#13;
• \&#13;
' . N f v ^ ; ' A /;;#• : J&#13;
* ' • * • ,&#13;
,, lC/ •' : ..." " .-&#13;
&amp;:&#13;
W M M M M in i • — • — • — « •&#13;
Ric'c of Asr««, Cieft for Bf»!&#13;
The great hymns of tho world that&#13;
have touched the hearts of many thousands&#13;
have usualiy been the express!ca&#13;
of a vital individual experience. They&#13;
have not been written as mere piece3&#13;
of literary composition; they have&#13;
been the crystallizing of personal sorrow,&#13;
personal faith, or persona! realization.&#13;
They have been the summing up&#13;
of years of hope^and struggle, focused&#13;
in an instant of expression, as the&#13;
century plant stores up- vitality tor&#13;
decades to be evidenced at last in a&#13;
sudden flowering. The circumstances&#13;
that inspired some of our great devotional&#13;
hymns must deepen the interest&#13;
in both the song and the singer and&#13;
reveal that mighty kinship of human&#13;
sou^ls, that divine sympathy, that confers&#13;
deathless fame on a few simple&#13;
verses, soul-biographies living in song.&#13;
This greatest of hymns was written&#13;
in 1775 by Rev. Augustus Toplady, a&#13;
very learned English divine, who died&#13;
at the early age of thirty-eight. The&#13;
hymn has the rare, wondrous spiritual&#13;
ecstasy he revealed in hia daily life. In&#13;
his last illness he said: "I cannot tell&#13;
the comforts that I feel in my soul;&#13;
they are past expression. It will not&#13;
be long before God takes me; for no&#13;
mortal man tan live after the glorie3&#13;
which God has manifested to my soul."&#13;
The marble tab'et over his grave says:&#13;
He Wrote "Rock of Ages, Cleft for&#13;
Me."&#13;
The Swert By »nd By.&#13;
In 1SS7 this hymn, known as "The&#13;
Sweet By and By." was written at&#13;
Elkhorn, Wis., by S. Fillmore Bennett,&#13;
who was as-&#13;
9¾ s o c i a t e d&#13;
with J. P.&#13;
Webster in&#13;
arranging a&#13;
new collect&#13;
i o n of&#13;
hymns,Webs"&#13;
t~e r w a s&#13;
nervous,sensitive&#13;
a n d&#13;
easily d i ecuura&#13;
g e d&#13;
f » t * r « r U » f * . — -&#13;
A characteristic which has been potent&#13;
in the modernising ot Japan is&#13;
that of insatiable curiosity, an intense&#13;
desire to see and understand anything&#13;
new. While the present day Chinese&#13;
attitude is that of contempt for any&#13;
beings or institutions not evolved in&#13;
China, the Japanese are eager to know&#13;
of everything connected with our form&#13;
ot^civilteation and-to-adopt -st-tf-it-Jav&#13;
good. A perusal of Japanese history&#13;
shows that the people have ever progressed&#13;
by impulse*, by action and reaction,&#13;
and that in the end good Judgment&#13;
seems to become supreme.&#13;
Can B« Carred Raadtty.&#13;
H. J. N.~A material which can be&#13;
carved readily is prepared by treating&#13;
peeled white potatoes for thirty-six&#13;
hours with a solution of eight parts of&#13;
sulphuric acid in one hundred parts of&#13;
water. The mass is then dried between&#13;
blotting paper and pressed. Flpea&#13;
closely resembling meerschaum and&#13;
other articles, can be manufactured&#13;
from it. By the emp'oyment of great&#13;
pressure a close imitation of ivory'Ml*&#13;
Hard balls has been made of thi3 material.—&#13;
Golden Days.&#13;
t?ea**a Virat&#13;
The distinction of being the first post*&#13;
mistress in the island of Cuba belongs&#13;
to Senorita Ysabel Maria de Los. Bios,&#13;
who hold* a commission to handle the&#13;
mails at Gibera, She receives a salary&#13;
of $1,300 a year. As a clerk in this&#13;
office she displayed much executive&#13;
ability that her appointment to take&#13;
charge of it meets with the fullest approval&#13;
of the department -offleJals and&#13;
patrons of the office. Senorita De Los&#13;
Kios is the oldest of a family of thirteen&#13;
children, and is in her twentythird&#13;
year. She is a daughter of the&#13;
lata Judge Jose De Los Rioe, who was&#13;
postmaster at Gibera at the time of his&#13;
death, April 3 last. There is a possibility&#13;
that Senorita De Los Rios will&#13;
not remain in office long. She Is engaged&#13;
to marry Charles W. Shaw of&#13;
NPW York cHv, superintendent of carriers&#13;
in the Havana office.&#13;
; • . i&gt;&#13;
Don't ft** them teawoanee. BseesssiftisjtV&#13;
the new food drink eaSsd COADMH tt to 4sllriQoseDd&#13;
»om*bJae;,aad takes fa* ateo* gf&#13;
coffee. T^more(3«ts&gt;&lt;&gt;y«iJw»J^«MWSja&gt;&#13;
the more health yes mguitm* Ones** tttfr'&#13;
systems. Grs B-O te made of p«ie s*s*q*/les&gt;&#13;
whan p/operly prepared teatoa lute the ehojM&#13;
grade* of oogee, bay aorta aheut % aawiiiak. 3HI&#13;
grocers sell It. 15s and tSe.&#13;
— , ; . . • ' . Poor cooking has wrecked auaf a dkanestlfr&#13;
ship on the matrimonial aaa. .•&#13;
I do not heliere Plao'a Cvre for OamaamyUgm*&#13;
has an equal tor eongbm aad eoJde.—JpSBf JP.&#13;
BOYSB, Trinity Springs, lad., Pott, ft, QtJ.'&#13;
and, thus inspired, he wrote the famous&#13;
hymn.&#13;
11 old the Fort, for I Am Coming.&#13;
In October, 1S64, Allatoona Pass, a&#13;
defile in the Mountains of Georgia, was&#13;
guarded by General Corse with 1,500&#13;
men. It was a strong strategic point&#13;
and, moreover, a million and a half&#13;
of rations were stored there. Fresich,&#13;
the southern general, with-6,000 men,&#13;
attacked the garrison and drove the&#13;
defenders into a small fort on the crest&#13;
of the hill. The battle was fierce; the&#13;
northern soldiers fell in such numbers&#13;
that further fighting seemed folly. But&#13;
one of Corse's officers ciught sight of&#13;
a white signal flag fluttering in the&#13;
breeze on tho top of Kenesaw Mountain,&#13;
across the valley,' fifteen miles&#13;
away. The signal was answered, and&#13;
*hen came the inspiring message from&#13;
mountain to mountain: "Hold the&#13;
fort; I am coming.—W. T. Sherman."&#13;
Cheer after cheer went up, and though&#13;
hopelessly reduced in numbers they&#13;
did hold the fort for hours until the&#13;
advance guard of Sherman's army&#13;
came to their relief. Six years later,&#13;
P. P. Bliss, the evangelist, heard the&#13;
story in all its vivid detail from a&#13;
soldier friend, and then wrote the&#13;
words and music of this famous hymn.&#13;
From Greenland's l e y Mountain*. i&#13;
On'Whit Sunday, 1810, Dr. Shipley,&#13;
en English clergyman, was to preach&#13;
a missionary sermon. On the day preceding,&#13;
Dr. Shipley requested his sonin-&#13;
law, Bishop Reginald Heber, tc&#13;
write "something for them to sing in&#13;
the-morn-ing.-- H-eber retired-from the&#13;
table, around which a group of friend?&#13;
were assembled, and in a corner of tht&#13;
room wrote this hymn at one sitting. ,&#13;
A Comprebennlve Trip.&#13;
If you are going to California this&#13;
Summer and the Round-Trip Rates in&#13;
effect for the Fifth International Convention&#13;
of the Epworth League,&#13;
should decide you to do so, why not&#13;
go and return the most interesting&#13;
ways? The Southern Pacific Company&#13;
offer Three Routes—via St. Paul&#13;
and Minenapolis along the northern&#13;
border and Portland, Oregon; via the&#13;
famous Shasta Route, via Denver, Salt&#13;
Lake and Ogden, the great Ogden or&#13;
Overland" Route or via New Orleans,&#13;
through Houston, San Antonio and El&#13;
Paso, along the Mexican border, tho&#13;
Sunset Route. The tickets, which will&#13;
be on sale July Gth to 13th inclusive,&#13;
good for return until August 31st, can&#13;
be purchased to read going via any&#13;
of these routes and returning via&#13;
either of "the others. For particulars&#13;
address W. G. Ncimycr, General Western&#13;
Agent, S. P. Co., 23S Clark screet,&#13;
Chicago, 111.&#13;
Try Graln-O! Try Gntln-O!&#13;
Ask your Grocer today to show you a package&#13;
of GKAIN-O, the new food drink that takes&#13;
ti.** place of coffee. The children may drink it&#13;
without injury as well as the adult. All who&#13;
try U. like it. GKAIN-O has that rich seal&#13;
brown of Mocha or Java, but It Is made from&#13;
pure grains, and tno most delicate stomach receives&#13;
it without distress, a the price of coffee.&#13;
15c and S9 ccs. per package. Sold by all&#13;
grocers.&#13;
Nothing circulates m rapttfly a* a aeargt .&#13;
Turn the Rascals Otft&#13;
We arc speaking of the grip macrobea&#13;
The well and strong can realsi their po&gt;*&#13;
son, the sickly an&lt;J weak are their pwy.&#13;
Baxter's Mandrake Bitters are •£*&#13;
turn's remedy for expelling all poiatm&#13;
S rot a the system. At tfrvggiata, in liquid&#13;
or tablets at 25 cents per bottle or box.&#13;
IN 3 OR 4 YEARS&#13;
INDEPENDENCE ISSUREil&#13;
Pie hunters are usually not particular&#13;
about the pastry.&#13;
Ladies Can Wear Shoe*&#13;
One. size smaller after usin? Allen's&#13;
Foot-Ease, a powder. It makes tigrht&#13;
or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot,&#13;
sweating, uchiog feet, ingrowing nails,&#13;
corns and bunions. . ^Aildr*»frg.&#13;
shoe stores, 2'iC. Trial package FREE&#13;
by mail. Address Allen S. Olmsted,&#13;
Le Roy, N. Y.&#13;
What a miserable&#13;
slanderer is!&#13;
wretch &amp;_ vile__&#13;
l f A ACRE borne in Western&#13;
ada,tbe land of plenty.&#13;
Illustrated pamphlet* gvinf expertenueajaf&#13;
rmers who have Be*&#13;
come wealthy in i&#13;
in* wheat, report&#13;
delegates, etc.and&#13;
information as to reduced railway rates can&#13;
had on application to the Superintendent&#13;
Immigration, Department of Interior* Ottaf&#13;
Canada, or to J. Grieve, Safinaw, Mloh.,0^&#13;
V. Mclnnes. No. 2 Merrill Block, Detroit,.&#13;
P a i n , suffering', W i z i r d Oil c o u l d n o t&#13;
live t o g e t h e r , s o pain and suffering'&#13;
m o v e d out. Ask y o u r d r u g g i s t a b o u t i t&#13;
We s h o u l d be a s p o l i t e every d a y a s&#13;
o a Sunday.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Core&#13;
Is taken internally. Price, 75c.&#13;
O n e day,&#13;
when very&#13;
blue, h e&#13;
went i n t o&#13;
B e n netfs"&#13;
office, and when asked "What's the&#13;
matter, now?" answered "It is no&#13;
matter, it will all be right&#13;
by and by." The idea flashed into&#13;
Bennett's mind, a3 he then expressed&#13;
it, was " 'The Sweet By and By!' Why&#13;
wouldn't that make a good hymn?"&#13;
Turning to a table he at once wrote&#13;
the words; Webster jotted down the&#13;
musiq as if inspired. Half an hour&#13;
later two musical friends entered the&#13;
room and it was sung by the quartet.&#13;
Nearer, Mr Cod, t o The».&#13;
• Of the many hymns written- by Mrs.&#13;
Sarah Flower Adams, the only one&#13;
that has survived is this hymn, based&#13;
on the Bible story of Jacob's vision at&#13;
Bethel, the imagery of which narrative&#13;
it follows most faithfully. It first appeared&#13;
in a volume called "Hymns and&#13;
Anthems," published in 1841. The chief&#13;
criticism made against this hymn is&#13;
that it does not mention a Savior. .Hev.&#13;
A. T. Russel added a stanza covering&#13;
this lack, but the new lines ard rarely&#13;
used and they never became popular.&#13;
Jem*, Lover of My Sonl.&#13;
One day Charles Wesley was sitting&#13;
by an open window, looking over the&#13;
beautiful fields, when he saw a little&#13;
bird pursued by a hawk. The poor&#13;
thing, weak and frightened, in seeking&#13;
to escape from Its enemy, flew into the&#13;
room and found refuge in Wesley's&#13;
bosom. As the poet was then in great&#13;
trouble and needed the safety of a refuge,&#13;
the consolation of help from a&#13;
higher power than his own, the incident&#13;
seemed to him a divine message,&#13;
T h e merry-hearted m a n finds life o n e&#13;
lonjr sunshine.&#13;
A \^ife should l o v e h e r h u s b a n d if ho&#13;
i s w o r t h y of it.&#13;
Are You I'slujc Allen's F o o t - K u s e ?&#13;
It is the only cure for S w o l l e n ,&#13;
SmartiDjr, B u r n i n g , Sweating- F e e t ,&#13;
Corns and Bunions, A s k for Allen's&#13;
Foot-Ease, a p o w d e r to be s h a k e n i n t o&#13;
t h e shoes. At all D r u g g i s t s ;ind Slioe&#13;
Stores, 25c. Sample s e n t F R E E . Address&#13;
Allen S. Olmsted, L«j Roy, X. Y.&#13;
Fear n o t your d u t y , but, m e e t it&#13;
w i t h oonracre.&#13;
I Men are fleathly afraid of women; railroads&#13;
; are deathly afraid of legislatures. |&#13;
i — — . — i&#13;
j Mw. Window'* ."Soothtaar Syrup. i&#13;
' For children teethlnar, soften* th» (rums. redue«?# In&#13;
rtitmnifUion. allMVit pain. oure&lt; win 1 colic. &amp;&gt;c a bottlo .&#13;
THE THE PR0BIEM|&#13;
is solved for you when you fit your whet!&#13;
with G &amp; J Tins. Foil of life and speedeasy&#13;
fc&gt; repair when paoctured—durable and&#13;
always satisfactory. Just the kind to stand&#13;
hard service on country roads. Ask your&#13;
local agent or write us for catalogue.&#13;
Q &amp; J T I R E C O M P A N Y ,&#13;
_ lotflaaapoto, lad.&#13;
Fragrant S 0 Z 0 D 0 N T TOOTH POWDER 2 5 °&#13;
ANGORA GOAT PROFITS It is surprtelrjr to )e^rn what Die&#13;
prints urv made breeding the Angora&#13;
Goat. ]i}0 per cent annually certain.&#13;
Have you investigated f It not do eo at once. Th-* United States imports forty m 11 ion dollars.&#13;
troi th of poat products annually. Why not supp.y our own market? H is vooderfui what oppdrtunities&#13;
for smiijl inv( stments. The St. Louis anii Sin Francisco Ky. na* published some inter.&#13;
esting booklets about the Angora Goat, answering every ouestion about t . e m that you- want toknow.&#13;
It has ulso published an illustrated mnp showing Tb.CCO acres of tanning land in Ptdasfci&#13;
county. Missouri, that it is offerinp for only f 1.50 an acre. This hind is In the famous fr\iH bolt,&#13;
nnd is ideal for poat ranching. The altitude and climate d es it. I will send you these Angorw&#13;
Gont booklets and the map. with o h e r valuable information, onrecriiptof fOoenta. Addceat*&#13;
\V\VT. H . . I ( ) H \ S ) . \ , Land atid Kml?ratlun Ast.. Frisco Line, 333Marq««U«Kldfr., Chicago*.&#13;
Artificial Silk.&#13;
The manufacture of artificial silk, it&#13;
is reported, has become quite a thriving&#13;
industry in Germany, although ii&#13;
gecenaa there are only certain purposes&#13;
for which it can be used, but still these&#13;
are very numerous. The output of the&#13;
Elberfleld district alone, it is said&#13;
amounts to $125,000 monthly. Certain&#13;
disadvantages connected with the&#13;
product, among which is its highly inflammable&#13;
character, having acted as a&#13;
deterrent to its manufacture, but ar.&#13;
improvement in the process has recently&#13;
come into use in France which&#13;
avoids most of these disadvantages&#13;
According to* this method dry nitrocf&#13;
lluloso. india-rubber solution and e&#13;
salt of tin, preferably stannous chloride,&#13;
are mixed together in the proportions&#13;
of 100 pounds of the first to 1&#13;
pounds of the second and 5 pounds oi&#13;
the last To this a suitable solvent&#13;
like benzine, is added in such quantit&gt;&#13;
as will bring the mixture to the desired&#13;
consistency.&#13;
*/. DEATH begins in the bowels. It's the unclean&#13;
places that breed infectious epidemics,&#13;
and it's the unclean body—unclean inside—&#13;
that "catches" the disease. A&#13;
person whose stomach and bowels&#13;
are kept clean and whose liver is liveigainsl&#13;
i&#13;
Lemon Jnloe of narroniim.&#13;
Now that the sale of a bogus lemon&#13;
ade has been forbidden by law, ii&#13;
would be interesting to know what ac&#13;
tion would fellow an investigation o;&#13;
the compound used as lemon juice ir&#13;
many of the barrooms that pretend tc&#13;
be of the first rank and are entitlec&#13;
to a place in that category so far a*&#13;
their prices can put them there. Tht&#13;
mixture commonly used in drinks requiring&#13;
lemon juice possesses tmiy ont&#13;
quality of the real thing. It isTsour&#13;
but it suggests the fruit in no othei&#13;
particular and tastes of foreign in&#13;
gradients too strongly to deceive th(&#13;
most inexperienced.—New York Sun.&#13;
- / 7 — — — — - W W — f ^ w t v , J . w W M . . L W « ^ « * M * * J » J V 1 low fever, or any other of the dreadful&#13;
diseases that desolate our beautiful&#13;
land. Some of the cleanest people&#13;
outside are filthiest inside, and they&#13;
are the ones who not only "catch*'&#13;
the infections, but endanger the lives&#13;
of all their friends and relatives. There's only one certain way of keeping&#13;
clean inside so as to prevent disease and that is to take CASCARETS!&#13;
Perfect disinfectant and bowel strengthened. All diseases are&#13;
PREVENTED&#13;
j&#13;
25c&#13;
ALL DRUGGISTS. SOLD IN BULK.&#13;
CURE »11 b o w e l t r o n b l e * . app*ndlrtt!a, b i l -&#13;
lonaneaa, bad b r e a t b , b a d b l o o d , w i n d&#13;
o n t h o atomaeh* b l o a t e d b o w e t e , f o a l&#13;
—. v— m o a t b , h e a d a o b e , I n d l c e a t l o a , pUnplea,&#13;
p a i a a after r a t i o s , l t r e r t r o u b l e , a a l l o w e o m p l e x l o n&#13;
a n d dlxsioeeo. W b t i y o u r b o w e l a don*t m o r e r e r n -&#13;
l a r l y you a r e gettlntr alck. O o m U a a t l o n k i l l * m o r e&#13;
p e o p l e t b a n a l l o t h e r dfaeaaea t o g e t h e r . It la a&#13;
etarter for t h e r b r o u t e altraente a n d l o n g year* o f&#13;
euaTerlnff t h a t e o m e a f t e r w a r d a . No m a t t e r w h a t&#13;
a l i a y o n , s t a r t taking: CASOARKT8 t o - d a y , for y o o&#13;
w i l l never s e t w e l l a n d bo w e l l a l l t h o t i m e u u t t l&#13;
y o u ant ynnr b e w a l e right. T a k e o a r adTlrej atari&#13;
w i t h CASCARETS t o - d a y , u n d e r a n a b s o l u t e c w a r -&#13;
a n t e e t o cure o r m o n e y r e f u n d e d . «*&#13;
GUARANTEED T O C T / a U b f l m f W M 1 * ajro&#13;
tb» •&gt;«« has o r C A S C A H -&#13;
BTO w « aaM. V o w I t la&#13;
• v « r ata aalBton aosea a&#13;
seat** avoatai* t a a a u y&#13;
•laillar aiealelae la the w * * M . Tbts leaaaalaat p r o a T a r&#13;
r r c a t ntertt. aad onrkact t e a U i e a i a l . W « bava naMk aad&#13;
w i l l tall r a a C A K C T S aaealatalsr yaaraataoa to c a r e a *&#13;
»««acy refaadvO. Oa bay taaay, &lt; # • * • « aaaea» ctee t k e a i a&#13;
f a i r , haaeat trial* • • aar t1ni»rB dlroctlaaa* aad I f y a a a r e&#13;
aat mmtummtl, a f l « r • ! ! • &gt; • • » M t b a t . r v l a n ( M awuwriCv*&#13;
box a a * tbe *m»Cy baa ta urn by aiall. mr tba drafatat frm&#13;
«rb«ai yaa pareaaaed It, aad |«C yaai&#13;
b a i w ^ T a k t t a r adalea--ao l a t t e r t&#13;
day. WeaUB w i l l qatefcly faHam- aadJaaVwlU blaaa^a» e a y&#13;
y«« flratataried «a« n . e ^ ^ A a H ^ A R K T a . » i a a * r r « « b y « a i t&#13;
Uilrtmt ijTIBLJXU BCIEOT CO., NXW 10EM. "&#13;
I S O S C U R E Fv &gt;K&#13;
B a a t l C S c V l y ^ T i M ^ r&#13;
#ra^a»&gt; a i y » w | w / 4»tTW W*€ n a » ¥ w i a&lt;.aawwa&gt;a m i a a&#13;
«. nOOJaasewx.aatrMCv^, fea-t*a*M*, R.&#13;
if aaiCed Wttb I YTaaiaaaaia.aMaaa BaaWfaa^aaaak&#13;
aowTttn.ua" \ l a ^ W a p W a l ^ B | W IWaWaf&#13;
W . N . U . — D E T R O I T — M O . 2 5 - ^ 1 9 0 »&#13;
Vket assweriftf Aarytfrl»aa%tili&#13;
— Jtestiot Tkb rafetw&#13;
•'.-•'• •'•&gt;•' • * * &gt; $ &gt; •&#13;
• • • • • ' $ \&#13;
% Ait /¾&#13;
•V. • " i .- V . ' . I ' . • ' ' , * ! * v . / » '.•'•• "'••• '.&lt;J -1-V,&gt;"'/ » . - * - . • -,..'&#13;
V - :':i&lt;;&#13;
; , r -:;:'':,••;•.-•*.'. ^ . . : t y ^ ' * ; ,&#13;
X&#13;
! T ' ' •'• • : • • " - ' " • ' A , j&#13;
- • * ' : ! ' • • * » • •&#13;
• • &gt; • &gt; &gt; : •S^SvT^Sc^&#13;
' "' : V-'- • ' , , . , • - ' . . . ••••'' * * " ' • . . ; . ' . , . ' • ' : • • ! i .&#13;
1»&#13;
8b« fitwbn«s ftefraiicb.&#13;
r. L. ANDREWS 6 CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1901.&#13;
Detroit Bl-Ceatenary,&#13;
The following in an outline of&#13;
the program that will be given at&#13;
Detroit, July 24-25-26:&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JULY 24.&#13;
Morning:—Reception of distinguished&#13;
guests from abroad and at home.&#13;
Afternoon:—Literary and historical exercises,&#13;
in place to be selected hereafter.&#13;
6:00 P. M.—Reception at foot of Sheiby-st.&#13;
of Cadilac's impersonator accompanied&#13;
bv his escort, uniformed as in 1701.&#13;
8:30 P . M.—River pageant, illumination on&#13;
both American and Canadian banks,&#13;
French, English and United States&#13;
ships participating.&#13;
THURSDAY, JULY 25.&#13;
9:30 A. M. All Day—Parade of Nation,&#13;
s March of Military, Civic and Industrial&#13;
procession through the streets of the&#13;
city. Spectacular floats.&#13;
Evening:—Banquets by French Society&#13;
and reception by Sons of American Rev.&#13;
olution.&#13;
FRIDAY, JULY 26.&#13;
10 A. M.—Floral display and parade, under&#13;
the the auspices of a ladies' committee.&#13;
This will be a very beautiful and&#13;
unique display.&#13;
Afternoon:—Devoted to_ functions furnished&#13;
by American, German, French, Polish&#13;
and other societies and our Canadian&#13;
neighbors.&#13;
8 :30 P. M.—Grand historical and allegorical&#13;
pageant on electric car lines.&#13;
The program is left thus open&#13;
because of the many incidental&#13;
features which are to be supplied.&#13;
The division entitled, "Parade of&#13;
Nations," under A. M. Seymour,&#13;
Thursday, will include everything&#13;
in the history of the progress of&#13;
the country, from the fur-clad Indian&#13;
of 1701 to the fully equipped&#13;
and uniformed soldiers of today.&#13;
The musical features and the floral&#13;
parade are being prepared for&#13;
on a grand scale. The president of&#13;
the United States and cabinet,&#13;
French and English ambassadors,&#13;
governor from all states in the&#13;
northwest, also governor-general&#13;
and other governors and dignitaries&#13;
from Canada are expected.&#13;
t ^•eWfjtr&#13;
T. U- ?&#13;
4&#13;
W. C-&#13;
• Edited by the W. C T l',nf Plrcku«»y f&#13;
Happenings at the Diamond Medal Contest&#13;
Convention.&#13;
The capacity of the large auditorium&#13;
of the Presbyterian church&#13;
was taxed to its utmost Wednes«&#13;
day evening to accomodate the&#13;
audience which assembled to listen&#13;
to the diamond medal contest.&#13;
Six Httlo maids served to introduce&#13;
the program with a song&#13;
which was so heartily encored&#13;
that they were oblfged to respond.&#13;
There were six contestants, one&#13;
each from Butler, Kalamazoo, Adrian,&#13;
Coldwater, California and&#13;
Marshall. Each wore a grand&#13;
gold medal showing that he had&#13;
been a successful competitor in a&#13;
Silver, Gold and Grand Gold medal&#13;
contest. Thus you may know&#13;
that we were listening to talented&#13;
speakers. The diamond medal&#13;
ed its approval by prolonged applause.&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Xawr#nce, Jeffers sixty-one horse act, and many&#13;
A Good Couffb Medicine.&#13;
It speaks well for Chamberlain's&#13;
Cough Remedy when druggists use it&#13;
in their own families id preferance to&#13;
'any" other. ,4I have sold Chamberlain's&#13;
Cough Remedy for the past five&#13;
years with complete satisfaction to&#13;
myself and customers," says Druggist&#13;
J . Goldsmith, Var. Etten, N . Y. "I&#13;
have always used it in my own family&#13;
both tor ordinary coughs and colds&#13;
and for the cough following,la grippe,&#13;
and find it verv efficacious." For sale&#13;
by F . A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
The students at the V. of M.&#13;
next year will not have much&#13;
trouble to find reading matter as&#13;
it is already certaintbat there'h i m the Chautauqua salute. His&#13;
Mich, superintendent of medal&#13;
contest work is a workwoman of&#13;
which this state need not be&#13;
ashamed. She has been engaged&#13;
in temperence work for nearly 25&#13;
yenrs serving most acceptably in&#13;
whatever office she has filled. For&#13;
10 years she has been corresponding&#13;
secretary for her county and&#13;
district, discharging the duties of&#13;
this office most efficiently.&#13;
Mrs. Jeffers is a very busy woman.&#13;
She is President of a missionary&#13;
society. Edits a column&#13;
each week in a county paper.&#13;
Teaches a class in Sabbath school&#13;
is one of the stewards in her own&#13;
church and superintends 3 departments&#13;
in the the local union besides&#13;
being press reporter for her&#13;
district. Cheerfulness is one of&#13;
her strange characteristics and&#13;
she enjoys herself much better&#13;
than many people who have nothing&#13;
to do.&#13;
The Convention was honored&#13;
by the attendance of a large delegation&#13;
of students from Albion&#13;
college who came over to attend&#13;
the meeting Thursday evening&#13;
and h:ar the address of the national&#13;
president.&#13;
A pretty oration was tendered&#13;
by Dr. Lathrop of Jackson who&#13;
was present in the city, husband&#13;
of the lamented Mary T. Lathrop&#13;
who for many years led the hoses&#13;
of white ribboners of Michigan.&#13;
As be came forward to the platform&#13;
the delegates rose and gave&#13;
will be two college dailies, three&#13;
monthlies, one humorous publication,&#13;
and the weekly S. C. A.&#13;
Bulletin. Besides these the&#13;
chances are that one and possibly&#13;
two new college weeklies will be&#13;
started. It is understood that the&#13;
'Varsity News is to issue a weekly&#13;
edition, then a movement is on&#13;
foot to start a brand new weekly.&#13;
TO Cure a Cold in One Day&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.&#13;
All druggiits refund the money&#13;
it it fails to curs. E. W. Grove's signature&#13;
is on each box. 25c.&#13;
A "sun motor," which has been&#13;
constructed after years of expeiiment,&#13;
is said to be working successfully&#13;
on an ostrich farm near&#13;
Pasadena, Cal. The heat is generated&#13;
by the concentration of the&#13;
rays of the sun by means of about&#13;
1,800 mirrors mounted on the inside&#13;
of a framework shaped som entiling&#13;
like an umbrella. This is&#13;
arranged to follow the sun automatically,&#13;
and the concentrated&#13;
rays not on a small boiler, and&#13;
•nfficient power is generated to&#13;
drive a pump. /&#13;
remarks were brief, a testimony&#13;
to the worth of the Union.&#13;
A very important report was&#13;
that of the state treasurer, Mrs.&#13;
Stella B. Roben. The receipts of&#13;
the year were $4,572, a balance of&#13;
$600 over last year. The membership&#13;
is 7,965; there are 350&#13;
anious in the state; a g-un of 235&#13;
members.&#13;
Mrs. Alice M. Phillips for some&#13;
years ,chaplain at the soldiers&#13;
home at Grand Rapids, preached&#13;
to the GAR Sunday June 9 at the&#13;
M. E. church. Mrs. Phillips is a&#13;
woman of splended gifts and rich&#13;
expression. She is practially interested&#13;
in soldiers and sailors.&#13;
She is thinking of coming to Livingston&#13;
Co. and the people of&#13;
Pinckney may have the privilege&#13;
of meeting this interesting woman.&#13;
„ PRES.&#13;
Blngllng Bros. Excursions.&#13;
Arrangements have been completed&#13;
by which all who wish to&#13;
attend the performances of Riugling&#13;
Brcs. World's Greatest&#13;
Shows in Ann Aibor Saturday&#13;
June 29 can secure special excursion&#13;
rates on all lines of travel.&#13;
This will be the only point in this&#13;
vicinity where the great show will&#13;
exhibit during the present season&#13;
and those who fail to to see it will&#13;
miss the grandest amusement&#13;
event of the year. Since last season&#13;
Ringling Bros, famous exhibition&#13;
has been greatly enlarged&#13;
and is now beyond all question&#13;
the largest and best combined circus,&#13;
menagerie and hippodome iu&#13;
the united States. The performance&#13;
is given, by over 300 highsalaried&#13;
specialists, in three rings,&#13;
two stages, iu mid-air, and on a&#13;
huge quarter-mile hippodrome&#13;
track. The trained animal features,&#13;
which are alone worth many&#13;
times the price of admission to&#13;
to see, include Ringling Bros.&#13;
was awarded to James T. Hughs latest sensation, twenty elephants&#13;
of Marsball. The audience attest-f performing at one time, in one&#13;
ring; Lockhart's famous elephant&#13;
comedians; O'Brien's wonderfull&#13;
Do you think of entering college&#13;
next year? If so you should&#13;
decide soon. .Your future will be&#13;
determined very largely by your&#13;
decision in this matter. If the&#13;
next five years drift by it will then&#13;
be too late and you may regret&#13;
ever afterwards that you did not&#13;
make the start when you had the&#13;
opportunity to do so. The advantages&#13;
which*a college education&#13;
briugs to any man or woman are&#13;
too numerous to mention, yet to&#13;
every one possessed with the energy&#13;
and ability these advantages&#13;
are open. There never lias been&#13;
in the history of this country a&#13;
greater demand for well trained,&#13;
upright men and women than at&#13;
the present time.&#13;
If you have been thinking of&#13;
enteriug some college, make up&#13;
your mind to do so aud let nothing&#13;
interfere with your carrying&#13;
out this puvpose.&#13;
other great trained animal displays.&#13;
The grand free street parade&#13;
which takes place at 10&#13;
o'clock on the morning of the exhibition&#13;
is the most magnificent&#13;
display ever seen. Don't miss it.&#13;
Didn't Marry r'or Money.&#13;
The Boston man, who lately married&#13;
a sickly rich young woman, is&#13;
happy now, for he got I):. K i n / *&#13;
New Life Fills,which restored her to&#13;
perfect health. Infallible for J a u n -&#13;
dice. Biliousness, Malaria, ^ever and&#13;
Ague and all Liver and Stomach&#13;
trouble?. Gentle but effective. Only&#13;
25c at F. A. Sigler'a drug store,&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
S t a t e Oil I n s p e c t o r J u d s o n , in&#13;
b i s a n n u a l r e p o r t , r e c o m m e n d t h a t&#13;
t h a t t h e c o u p l i n g s o n t h e p i p e s&#13;
used in t r a u s f e r i u g gasoline a n d&#13;
k e r o s e n e from t h e t a u k cars t o t h e&#13;
s t o r a g e t a n k s be of different sizes,&#13;
so t h a t it w o u l d m a k e it i m p o s s i -&#13;
ble t o p u m p g a s o l i n e i n t o t a n k s&#13;
used for i l l u m i n a t i n g o i l s ; also&#13;
t h a t a law be p a s s e d p r o h i b i t i n g&#13;
t h e s a l e of g a s o l i n e a n d - i l l u m i -&#13;
n a t i n g oils from t h e s a m e t a n k&#13;
wagon j as m i s t a k e s a r e f r e q u e n t l y&#13;
m a d e by t h e d r i v e r s in d e l i v e r i n g&#13;
g a s o l i n e for k e r o s e n e . — C h e l s e a&#13;
S t a n d a r d .&#13;
Mr.-W.S. Whedon, Ca^hn r ot the&#13;
First national Bank of Wiot^rtM.&#13;
lov a, in a recent letter gives some experience&#13;
with a carpenter in his employ,&#13;
that will be ot vaiue to other&#13;
mechanics. He say*: " I had a carpenter&#13;
working for me who was&#13;
obliged to stop work several days on&#13;
account of being troubled with diarrhoea.&#13;
I mentioned to him that I had&#13;
been similarly troubled and that&#13;
Cbamberlan's Colic, Cholera, and Diarhoea&#13;
Remedy had cared me. He&#13;
bought a bottle of it from the druggist&#13;
here and informed me that one&#13;
dose cured hiru, and he is again at his&#13;
work." For sale by F. A. Sigler&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
Call at F. A. Sigler's drug 8tore and&#13;
get a free sample of Chamberlain's&#13;
Stomach and L;v»*r Tablets. They, art)&#13;
an elegant phytic. Tbey also iraprovn&#13;
the appetite, strengthen and regulate&#13;
the Liver and Bowels. They are easy&#13;
to take and pleasant in effect.&#13;
Farmers and all others would&#13;
do well to stick to their own town&#13;
upon which depends the value of&#13;
their real estate/ All your home&#13;
convenience, your post offiice,&#13;
church, store, shopkeeper and&#13;
doctor make you mutually dependent.&#13;
The catalog houses will&#13;
not help you pay your taxes or&#13;
bear any portion of the support of&#13;
of your local government. Think&#13;
of it&#13;
The Jul y Bulletin of Olivet&#13;
College will be full of interest to&#13;
the many friend of that institution&#13;
It will contain a resume of the&#13;
year's work, some account of commencement&#13;
exercises, and announmentsfor&#13;
the coming year. It&#13;
will be sent to all who will indicate&#13;
a desire to receive it&#13;
It R a i s e d Copper.&#13;
| The cadets of Annapolis sat in the&#13;
ride aisles of the chapel, leaving the&#13;
penter aisles for the officers and their&#13;
-families-.- say* Dr. Cyrus Townsend&#13;
Brady iu "Under Tops'ls and Tents."&#13;
When the offering was received, the&#13;
two boys charged with the duty of&#13;
passing the plates did not make the&#13;
^lightest effort to circulate them among&#13;
the cadets, for we never had any moniy.&#13;
They would walk rapidly down the&#13;
aisle and then come deliberately up the&#13;
middle, gathering thence what they&#13;
could. One Sunday the chaplain announced&#13;
that he would preach a missionary&#13;
sermon the next Sunday. It&#13;
did not have the ordinary effect in&#13;
emptying the church, for we were&#13;
obliged to go as usual.&#13;
During the week it occurred to the&#13;
bright niind-of- a senior: or_J}_rstj;class&#13;
man, who is now a prominent New&#13;
York financier, that it would be well&#13;
for the cadets to make an offering. So&#13;
he sent out to the bank on Saturday&#13;
morning and succeeded in smuggling in&#13;
over 300 copper cents, which he distributed&#13;
1 cent per boy to the Episcopal&#13;
battalion. "We stationed a strong,&#13;
long armed man on the outside seat of&#13;
the first pew iu each aisle.&#13;
The chaplain made a piteous appeal&#13;
for pennies even, and when the astonished&#13;
cadets who passed the plates&#13;
started on their perfunctory promenade&#13;
the strong, one armed men aforesaid&#13;
promptly relieved them of the metal&#13;
plates, and each one dropped In one&#13;
copper cent with an ominous crash&#13;
and then deliberately handed the plate&#13;
to the next boy, who did the same&#13;
thing. It rained copper cents for about&#13;
ten minutes. The chaplain was dreadfully&#13;
disconcerted, the officers fidgeted&#13;
and looked aghast. Some of them&#13;
laughed, and the cadets preserved--adeattty&#13;
solemnity. The affair was a&#13;
striking success.&#13;
A Pigeon an Valet to a Crow.&#13;
"Tom was the name given to a lordly&#13;
.young crow," says Florence M. Kingsley&#13;
in The Ladies' Home Journal.&#13;
"Beauty was a snow white pigeon of&#13;
about the crow's age, with whom he&#13;
was reared. Just iiow it came about&#13;
we never kuew. but we soon discovered&#13;
that Beauty regularly acted as maid of&#13;
all work to Tom. She fetched and carried&#13;
morsels of food at his imperious&#13;
'command, and one of her unvarying&#13;
duties was the preening of her master's&#13;
feathers. Tom was very much of&#13;
a dandy. His coal black plumage always&#13;
appeared perfectly dressed and&#13;
shining, but the arduous labor of his&#13;
toilet was performed for him twice&#13;
every day by the humble and affectionate&#13;
pigeon.&#13;
"Our tine gentleman would come in&#13;
from a roll in the dust or a dip in the&#13;
fountain and. seating himself upon a&#13;
certain railing, utter a short, sharp call&#13;
Instantly Beauty would descend to his&#13;
side and begin her task, fluttering anxiously&#13;
from side to side as she worked,&#13;
drawing each shining black feather&#13;
carefully out to its full length In her&#13;
pink bill, Tom meanwhile dozing luxuriously,&#13;
,with closed eyes, after the&#13;
manner of the complacent patron of a&#13;
skillful barber. If Beauty unfortunately&#13;
pulled a feather too hard, a squawk&#13;
and a sudden peck informed her of her&#13;
mistake."&#13;
"Well, you flee, nobody ever OOUCM&#13;
my name on the register when I wrote&#13;
it Turner.'" the latter explained, "but&#13;
since I commenced writing It 'Pbthologynrrb'&#13;
I set them all guessing. It it,&#13;
as 1 said before, English spelling.&#13;
T b t h ' l s the sound of t ' In •phthisis,*&#13;
'olo' Is th? sound of 'ur* In 'colonel/&#13;
*gn' there is the 'n' in 'gnat/ 'yrrh* la&#13;
tue sound of 'er* in 'myrrh/ Now, If&#13;
that doesn't spell 'Turner1 what does it&#13;
spell?"—London Standard.&#13;
Optimism.&#13;
When the optimist was dispossessed&#13;
and thrown, along with his household&#13;
Impedimenta, into the cold street, he&#13;
chuckled furiously.&#13;
"Why do you laugh, my friendV Inquired&#13;
a passerby.&#13;
"Because I have Just now been&#13;
emancipated from toil," replied the optimist.&#13;
"For years my life has been&#13;
one long struggle t o keep the wolf from&#13;
the door. But now that I have been&#13;
deprived of the door 1 no longer am&#13;
compelled to toil. Sweet, indeed, are&#13;
the uses of adversity!"&#13;
Then the optimist walked off, whistling&#13;
gayly, into the sunshine.—New&#13;
Kork Sun.&#13;
Mont Curious Thing.&#13;
Mrs. Qulzzer (who wants to know&#13;
everything)—Now, what do you " consider&#13;
to be the most curious thing you&#13;
ever saw, professor?&#13;
Professor Trotter—A woman, madam.&#13;
—Harltrin Life.&#13;
WANTED—Capable' relWble person In every&#13;
connty to represent large company of solid financial&#13;
reputation; $936 salary per yetr, payable&#13;
weekly; $3 per day absolutely sure and all expenses;&#13;
8ti.ai.fht, bona Ode, dennate salary, no&#13;
commission; ealary paid each Saturday and expense&#13;
money advanced each week. STANDARD&#13;
HOUSE, 334 Dearborn at. Chicago t •«&#13;
WANTED—Salesman and Collector&#13;
to represent well HSiablished business&#13;
of 50 years standing Small Honesty&#13;
Bond required, a liberal contract for&#13;
a pood man.&#13;
D.E. Whipplp,&#13;
303 South Main St.&#13;
_ Ann Axior, Mich,&#13;
g T A T E OF MICHIGAN, County of Llviagstoa&#13;
At a session of the Probate Court for said County,&#13;
held at the Probate Office in the Vtll%ge of&#13;
Howell, on Tuesday the C8th day of May, in&#13;
the year oue thousand nine hundred and one.&#13;
Present, Eugene A. Stowe Judge of Probate, in.&#13;
the Matter of the Estate of&#13;
JAMKS H. BABTON, Deceased.&#13;
On reading and rtliriK the petit Ion duty verified ot&#13;
Geo. »V. Teeple, praying that acertain instrument&#13;
now on file in this court, purporting to be the last&#13;
Will and Testament cf said deceased, may be ad&#13;
mitted to probate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Friday, tbe 21st day&#13;
of Junp next, at lb o'clock in the forenoon, at said&#13;
Probate Office, he asei^ned for the hearing of&#13;
said petition.&#13;
It is further ordered that a copy of this order be&#13;
published in the PINCKNKY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed and circulating in eaiu county, three&#13;
successive weeks previous to 'said day of henring,&#13;
KlHiKNK A. STOWE,&#13;
t-*5 J udge of Probate&#13;
WANTED—Capalle, reliable person in every&#13;
county io represent large company of solid financial&#13;
reputatiou. $j:« salary par year, payable&#13;
weekly: Si per day absolutely sure and all expeneee;&#13;
straight, l&gt;oua-li Is, definite salary, ho&#13;
commission; salary paid each Saturday and expense&#13;
money advanced each week. STANDARD&#13;
HOUSE, W4f&gt;ear!&gt;orn st. Chicago. t-29&#13;
Hla Spelling Syatem.&#13;
Dobbs met his friend Turner in the&#13;
tram. They were both going to Birmingham&#13;
and stopped ot the same hotel.&#13;
Turner registered his name "E. K.&#13;
Phtholognyrrh."&#13;
Dobbs, noticing it, exclaimed, "Here,&#13;
what are you using such a foreign, outlandish&#13;
name for?"&#13;
"I am not assuming any foreign&#13;
name." replied Turner.&#13;
"What kind of a name Is it, then?"&#13;
"That is my identical old name, and&#13;
it Is English too—pronounced 'Turi&#13;
u ner.&#13;
•'I can't see how you make, 'Turner*&#13;
out of those 13 letters; besides, what la&#13;
your object In spelling that way?"&#13;
asked Dobbs.&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
&gt; A.VO STEAMSHIP LINES*&#13;
Popular route for Ann Arbor, To«&#13;
iedo and points East, South, and for&#13;
Howell, Owosso, Alma, Mt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City and&#13;
points in Northwestern iiichiRan.&#13;
— W. H . BxSHBTT,&#13;
G. P. A. Toledo&#13;
PERE MARQUETTE&#13;
S6allxoa.&amp;, 7*a.. 3., X © 3 1 . /&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit and Eest,&#13;
10:36 n. m„ 3:04 p. m., 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and West,&#13;
9:45 a. m., 2:0S p. m. 6:20 p. JA.&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay City,&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p. m., 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10:36 arm. .&#13;
F*AKKBiY, _ H. F. MOELLEU,&#13;
Agent, South Lyon. &lt;j. p. A., Detroit.&#13;
tirand Trunk Railway Systea.&#13;
»:lna. us.&#13;
5:15 p. in.&#13;
9.44 a. m.jJackson, Detroit, and&#13;
6:45 p. m.jintermediai* stations&#13;
i mail and exp.&#13;
iJacaaon. Lenox, and&#13;
4:45 p. m. (Intermediate ataUoM&#13;
mixed.&#13;
7:55 a, m.&#13;
s&#13;
I&#13;
¥ '&#13;
The fctt a, m. aad 6:46 p, m. trains IMT* through&#13;
coach between Jackson and Detroit.&#13;
W. J. Bleak, Agent, Pinckney «.:&#13;
JIJliLiW'.'LtfiSrMa&#13;
' , : ' • - . ' . . " • • . . • „ • • • . . • • . ' &gt; • \ - - ' , ' . • •&gt; , # • • „ r « r ; : • . " • . * ;... ' , - , , . ' v . , - - • ' , . " • , • ' . • ' • . . • \ V ' • ! . . ' . . , ' ' " - . : " - ' * ' •&#13;
'ar.«t ,,&#13;
«m K . *&#13;
Safes Two From Death. *&#13;
"Oar little daughter bad an almost&#13;
fatal attack of whooping cough and&#13;
bronchitis" writes Mrs. W. K. Havi*&#13;
land, of Armonk, N. Y , "but when all&#13;
other remedies failed, we saved her&#13;
life with Dr. King's new Discovery.&#13;
Our niece, who had consumption in&#13;
an advanced stage, also used this wonderful&#13;
medicine and to day she is perfectly&#13;
well.'1 Desperate throat and&#13;
lung diseases yield to Dr. Kincr.s New&#13;
Discovery as to no other medicine on&#13;
earth. Infallible for Coughs and&#13;
Coids. 50c and $1.00 bottles guaranteed&#13;
by F. A. 8ig!er. Trial bcttles&#13;
free.&#13;
Going West This Summer.&#13;
Are you going west to visit relatives?&#13;
Are you going west to seek a&#13;
home?&#13;
Are you going west on business?&#13;
The P e r e Marquette direct&#13;
route via Ottawa Beach and Milwaukee&#13;
is a short line and makes&#13;
a quick trip and a pleasant one.&#13;
Connections at all points on the&#13;
system with through trains to Otawa&#13;
Beach. Boat leaves the&#13;
Beach daily at 11. :05 p. m., arr&#13;
i v i n g M i l w a u k e e at 6:30 a, m.&#13;
Direct connections to the west&#13;
and northwest. Tickets' sold&#13;
through to destination. Ask your&#13;
Agent. t-25&#13;
Special Excursions To Xinnesoto.&#13;
Commencing June 18 and continuing&#13;
until Sept. 10, the Ann&#13;
Arbor R. R. will sell excursion&#13;
tickets to St. Paul, Minneapolis&#13;
Duluth at very low rates for the&#13;
round trip. Call on agents for&#13;
particulars, or^write.&#13;
J. J. KlRBY,&#13;
G. P. A. ' Toledo, Ohio.&#13;
A Terrible Explosion.&#13;
"Of a gasoline stove burned a ifcty&#13;
here frightfully," writes N. E. Palmer,&#13;
of Kirkman, la. "The best doctors&#13;
couldn't heal the running sore&#13;
that followed, but Bucklen's Arnica&#13;
salve entirely cured her." In allible&#13;
for Cuts, Corns. Sores Bo.Is, Bruises,&#13;
Skin Diseases «nd Piles. 25c at P. A&#13;
Sigier's drug store, Pinckney.&#13;
Several people at least will be&#13;
kept busy at the Portland cement&#13;
works at Fenton when the commence&#13;
opperation, as it will require&#13;
60 ton of coal every day to&#13;
fire tbe boilers. The company&#13;
have purchased tne Owosso coal&#13;
mines so as to avoid the coal&#13;
trust.&#13;
ASDEBSON FABMEE'S OUJB.&#13;
The" Anderson Farmer*1 Club&#13;
met, last Saturday at the home of&#13;
Miss Lucy Hinchey and was well&#13;
attended. The program was&#13;
opened by the club singing America.&#13;
A paper written by Fred&#13;
Sprout was then read, which was&#13;
well composed and much appreciated.&#13;
Clara Ledwidge, Edna&#13;
Webb and Percy Hinchey each&#13;
gave a recitation. The question?&#13;
" W h a t i s the best mulching for]&#13;
strawberries, was then asked.&#13;
Many were in favor of marsh hay&#13;
while one instance was given&#13;
where oak leaves were used with&#13;
great success.&#13;
The Club then adjourned to&#13;
meet in July at Dell Hall's.&#13;
A Sprained A n k l e Q u i c k l y Cure*.&#13;
** w j± zv T E I&gt; "&#13;
Weak men, weak vvom^n, pale&#13;
men, jiale women, nervous men, nervous&#13;
women, debilitated men, debilitated&#13;
women, to take Knili'* Kcd Pills&#13;
for Wan People. They restore Health,&#13;
Strength and ^H-uty. Wake up,&#13;
brace up by takhitf them before tbe&#13;
hot, weather. They Hre the ^reat body&#13;
builder and developer,- Spring Tonic&#13;
and Hiocd medicine, 25c a box.&#13;
Knills White Liver Pills are the&#13;
great Liver Invigorator, Bowel Regulator.&#13;
25 dost&lt;s 25c.&#13;
" At one time I suffered from a severe&#13;
sprain of the, ankle,1' says Geo E.&#13;
Lary, editor of the Guide, Washington&#13;
Va. .*!After—usin*?- several well recommended&#13;
medicines without success&#13;
I tried Chamcerlain'e Pain Balm, and&#13;
am pleased to say that relief came as&#13;
soon as f began its use and a complete&#13;
cure speedily followed." Sold by F.&#13;
A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
Seven Years In Bed.&#13;
"Will wonder ever cease," inquire&#13;
the hiends of Mrs L. Pease, of Law&#13;
TeTTCff,- Kan. T h ey k i ew sh e h H d beerr&#13;
i unable to leave her bed in feven yeaas&#13;
on account of Kidney and liver trouble,&#13;
nervous prostration and generai&#13;
debility; but, "Three bottles of Electric&#13;
Bitters enabled me to walk," she&#13;
Knill's. Blue Kidney Pills Cure | m i , e s ' " a n d i n t l n e e months I felt&#13;
Backnche and Kidney troubles. 2 5 c i , i k e a n e w person." Women suffer&#13;
a box. * ;ingfrom Headache. Backache, Nervousness,&#13;
Sleeplessness, Melancholy,&#13;
Fainting and Dizzy Spells will rind it&#13;
a priceless biasing. Try it. Satisfaction&#13;
is guaranteed. Only 50 cants&#13;
Sold by F A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
Salary $900 YEARLY.&#13;
Mci tnc wc uipr of poo'l address to r» 'resent&#13;
n s, some to tiavol a • pointing Hgents others for&#13;
local work looking nfter our interests. %900&#13;
salary s.Tiiarunteed yeurty; extra co i miwionH ana&#13;
expenses, rap U advau&lt; ement, old established&#13;
bouse, rtrand cliauc for earnest man or woman&#13;
to secure pleasant, porn unent position, lih« rnl&#13;
income and future. New. brilliant lines. Write&#13;
at once, KTAt-'FOKO plt*,SK, t-33&#13;
« 3 Cliiircli *«,, N o w H a v e n , C o n n .&#13;
6 0 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
L ."W^ «*»**. « . . « , . • , «• ( S * * ! ^ ^ ! • -S»». &lt; H «•»#&lt; .".»S*^**W*« .&#13;
POSTAL A MORCV,&#13;
M O P R I I T O R I .&#13;
'ATENTS&#13;
The&#13;
Griswold&#13;
House&#13;
A&#13;
strictly&#13;
firstclaag,&#13;
modern,&#13;
up-to-date&#13;
Hotel, located&#13;
in tin* heart of&#13;
DETROIT. th*CitJ&#13;
Rates, $2, $2.50, $3 per Day.&#13;
CON. GRAND ftl*KR 4 OftttWOl* «T.&#13;
Tr.ADE M A R K S&#13;
D E S I G N S&#13;
COPYRIGHTS Ac.&#13;
Anyone sending a skctrh and description may&#13;
quickly nsoortain our opinion free whether an&#13;
invention Is probnbiy patentable. Coromunlca.&#13;
tlons strictlyoontlclential. Ilundbofjkon Patents&#13;
sent free. Oldest ji^enry for securinf? patents.&#13;
Patenu talion tbmuch Munn &amp; Co. recelre&#13;
special notUe, without charge, in the Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Lnrvest circulation&#13;
of any srientlflc lournai. Terms. 13 a&#13;
year: four months, fl. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN &amp; Co.3e,s'«d«»' New York&#13;
Branch Office. G25 F 8U Washington. D. C.&#13;
Pay your Subscription this mouth&#13;
Positive Quality!&#13;
THE MIXED PAINT MADE BY&#13;
Tbe Peninsular Lead &amp; Color Worb, Ud.&#13;
Is always of uniform excellence.&#13;
T h e certainty of reliable, uniform First&#13;
Quality is what the buyer desires and expects in&#13;
M&amp;ed Paint.&#13;
This certain quality means paint that is&#13;
strong and true in color—that will spread evenly&#13;
—that will preserve as well as ornament—that&#13;
will not blister or scale or easily rub off—that&#13;
constantly looks well—that is sore to wear well.&#13;
In all these requisites tljte Mixed Paint of The&#13;
Peninsular Lead &amp; Color Works (Ltd.) Detroit,&#13;
has never disappointed any purchaser. It is always&#13;
as good a paint as pure ingredients, skilled&#13;
experience and modem equipment can produce.&#13;
Why experiment wken you can buy sure&#13;
satisfaction?&#13;
SOLS* SV&#13;
Geo/ W. REASON ^ SON,&#13;
Pinckney Mich.&#13;
UNAD1LLA FARMER'S CLUB&#13;
The J u n e meeting of the above&#13;
club was held at the pleasant&#13;
home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Marshall&#13;
on Saturday last and was&#13;
well attended. I t was called to&#13;
order by President Glenn and&#13;
singing by the club.&#13;
Miss Georgia Westfall then&#13;
sang "In the heart of Old New&#13;
England" and Miss Kate Collins&#13;
gave a very hnmtirou3 recitation&#13;
which was a rich take-off on patent&#13;
medici ue advertisements.&#13;
This was followed by a paper&#13;
"Practical Culture" by Foster&#13;
C u a p o i m Practical culture&#13;
will learn a man to do his best no&#13;
matter what the price paid for the&#13;
work. Whatever we have intellectually,&#13;
morally or otherwis e.&#13;
We must earn of ourselves. Right&#13;
i n t e n t will lead to success—never&#13;
skip a duty because it is hard.&#13;
The paper was discussed by&#13;
Messrs. Heatly and Collins, Andrews&#13;
and others. "Mortgage the&#13;
Farm" was then suug by Messrs.&#13;
Pyper, Laverock and Mesdames&#13;
Stowe and Budd. This was followed&#13;
by a recitation by Miss Jennie&#13;
Harris, "The Dyiug Pastor,"&#13;
and an instrumental solb by Mrs.&#13;
Lulo Marshall.&#13;
The question box was taken up&#13;
by \V. B. Collins. Why can we&#13;
not raise spring wheat in Michi&#13;
gan? Mr Pyper—sowed two&#13;
bushels and harvested a peck.&#13;
Understood that seed had to be&#13;
secured from the west every year.&#13;
Mr. Hartsuff did not think the]&#13;
climate was adpsted to spring&#13;
wheat. Emory Glenn thought it&#13;
would grow on new ground, cool&#13;
and rich. F. L. Andrews sang a&#13;
solo which was followed by at&#13;
business session at which time it&#13;
was decided to hold a picnic some |&#13;
time in August. The club then |&#13;
adjourned to meet at the home of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Marshall of&#13;
Lyndon the third Saturday in&#13;
July.&#13;
HIGH FARMING.&#13;
ffhiags a Lire Lad of Blsrii^eaa* Ho&#13;
Brother to the. Ox, Con Do.&#13;
One of tne motrt restless creatures in&#13;
existence is an ambitious farm lad of&#13;
18 who has not yet decided what he&#13;
will do for a living. Jacob Biggie, in&#13;
Farm Journal, advises sucb lads that&#13;
it is very often the best way to settle&#13;
down at home and hew their way to&#13;
peace and plenty right on the old farm.&#13;
But Mr. Biggie very sensibly adds a&#13;
programme of some interesting and&#13;
profitable things a live boy can do to&#13;
begin with:&#13;
JFIrst—He can learn how to bud and&#13;
graft and always be ready to do sueb7&#13;
work for the neighbors: also to supply&#13;
scions of valuable kinds of fruits. In&#13;
time many a dollar can be made in this&#13;
way.&#13;
Second.—Be can learn all about injurious&#13;
insects and fungi that assail&#13;
the farmers' crops and how to apply&#13;
remedies to their devastation. Get the&#13;
best sprayer, learn bow to use it and&#13;
take contracts with the neighbors to&#13;
protect them at all seasons of the year.&#13;
There is money in it, and the neighbors&#13;
will be glad to be relieved of such responsibility.&#13;
Third.—Take a course in surveying&#13;
and learn to write simple legal documents&#13;
and in time find that you are a&#13;
very important mau in the neighborhood.&#13;
There will be plenty of business.&#13;
Fourth.—Learn about landscape gardening&#13;
and take contracts for laying&#13;
out lawns. Get up clubs for trees,&#13;
shrubs, seeds, fertilizers, newspapers&#13;
and magazines during the wiuter season.&#13;
*"""&#13;
Fifth. — Grow rare strawberry and&#13;
small fruit plants, fruit and shade&#13;
trees and other thinprs that no one else&#13;
-has-near by, se^ that the folks aroundwlll&#13;
know where to come for such&#13;
things.&#13;
Sixth. — Get a BabL'ock milk test&#13;
and be prepared to tell the neighbors&#13;
the individual standing of their cows&#13;
at so much a head. There is room in&#13;
every dairy neighborhood for a person&#13;
of this kind, and he will have plenty&#13;
to do.&#13;
Seventh.—A neighbor's plum trees do&#13;
not bear, he has yellows among his&#13;
peach trees, his apple orchard is blighted,&#13;
dying- from some unknown eause—&#13;
you can help him out of his troubles,&#13;
and he can afford to pay you for it.&#13;
"Harriet" suggests that the proper&#13;
training of colts ought to have been in&#13;
Mr. Biggie's list, and so it goes in.&#13;
We the unforagtied 4ro«V-*t&#13;
er a .award of 60 cenU&gt;u&gt; soy person&#13;
who purchases o! as, two 25e bous&#13;
of Baxter's Mandrake Bitten Tablets,&#13;
if it fails to core constipation, bilious*&#13;
nese, sick-headache, jaundiee, lost of&#13;
appetite, sour stem ache, dyspepsia&#13;
liver complaint, or any t&gt;t the diseases&#13;
for which it is recommended. P'fo&#13;
26 uttniH~tof either tablfts or liquid.&#13;
We will also refund the nnney on one&#13;
package of either if it fails to give&#13;
satisfaction,&#13;
F. A. Sigler,,&#13;
W j J O a r r o * .&#13;
She f inritug gispattb.&#13;
PUBLUaBXt KYBBT THUMDAY XOMJXA ST&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
Editor and Proprietor.&#13;
Subscription ?*£«»$} in Advaac*.&#13;
3nter«4 at the Poatofllce at Plackney, Michigan&#13;
as Mcond-clAM matte*.&#13;
Advertising rata* made known on application*&#13;
Business Cards, $4.00 per year.&#13;
I^eatn and marriage notices published free.&#13;
Announcements ol entertainments may be paid&#13;
tor, if desired, by presenting the omce with tickets&#13;
of admission. In case tickets are not brought&#13;
to the office, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
Ail matter in local notice column wUl be charted&#13;
at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof ,for each&#13;
insertion. Where no time is speciAed, all notices&#13;
will bbiaaerjted uatil ordered discontinued, and&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. *JT"AU changes&#13;
of advertisements iHJ«T reach this omce as early&#13;
as TPISDAT morning to Insure an insertion the&#13;
name week*&#13;
JO 8 f&gt;XSJV 7fJ* G /&#13;
In alllts branches, a specialty. We have all kinda&#13;
and the latest iityles or Type, etc., which enables&#13;
u* to ewcate all kind*-of worfc each as Books,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, btatementa, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., in&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
f* as good work can b* done.&#13;
-LL BILL9 PAT4BLV PitUT Of SVg8Y MOSTU.&#13;
'' • 'I'.}&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBESIDBNT.. . _ . ....^? ., c. L. Sigler&#13;
TanBTKKB K. Baker, R. a . Erwiu,&#13;
F. G. Jackson, Geo Reason Jr.&#13;
Chas. Lave, Mala^ay Roche.&#13;
v&gt;LKBIC.. • • ....MM ..MM. »«M«*-..... , v*,rl, R. Browu&#13;
TuEAsaaisa... ^,.,J. A. Cadwall&#13;
A»sBHsou ^ , . J » s . A.Greene&#13;
STaEKT CoxxcsatoNKrt J. Parker&#13;
HEALTHorricBB Dr.H. F. dlgler&#13;
ATTotuJKY »^«.....^M W. A. Carr&#13;
•"^flSHALL,••.••. •—— «M.»«M.I... S. Brogau&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
. PROTECTION FOR HAY.&#13;
A Cfeeap Cover That W i l l Soon Pay&#13;
For Itself.&#13;
On the farm where hay Is stacked&#13;
rather than stored In barn or mow&#13;
there are tons wasted and spoiled every&#13;
season. In feeding, though the&#13;
greatest care be taken, it will be impossible&#13;
not to open a stack in some&#13;
weather that will ruin the exposed&#13;
hay. A cheap and convenient cover&#13;
can be made that in one season will&#13;
more than pay for itself in the hay it&#13;
will preserve, says an Ohio Farmer&#13;
writer.&#13;
Cut two 1G foot 2 by 4's In two&#13;
M KTHOUIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
i l l Rev. H. W . Hicks, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:&amp;J, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meetlncThursday&#13;
evenings. Saoday school at close of inoro«&#13;
ing service. LKAI. SIOLM, Supt.&#13;
CONURKGAl'IONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. u. W. Rice pastor. Service every&#13;
?uatlay morning at 10:30 and every dunday&#13;
eveuiut; at 7:0C o'cljck. Prayer meetingThurs&#13;
'J-i.v eveainga. Sunday school at close of mornia^&#13;
bervi^e. Him Kiuie iloff, Supt,, MaDel&#13;
Sw&amp;rihout Sec.&#13;
ST. MARK'S 'JATHOUC CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Couamert'ord, t'aator. Service*&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:30 o'clock&#13;
high mast) with sermon at 9;:J0a. in. Catechism&#13;
it 3:oo p. in., vespersauaoeuedictiou at 7:iu p. in*&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
pieces each, of equal length, which w m ^ ' K i ^ 9: *• SocI?ty -^ lV* P&gt;».JV«» •'•*!&#13;
be" eight feet. With some rough lumber&#13;
board up a side by laying the studding&#13;
sis feet apart and cutting the&#13;
boards of that length. When you have&#13;
irn H4n4Av-ia-taa.J"r. ilAt;li4# xl-ui.&#13;
John Tuinney ami Si. T. Kelly,Couaty Delegates&#13;
You mav us well expect to run a&#13;
steam engine without water a* to flntj&#13;
an active energetic man with a torpid&#13;
liver and you may know that his liver&#13;
is torpid when he does, not relish his&#13;
food, or feels dull and languid after&#13;
e.iting, oiten has headache and sometimes&#13;
dizzinjjs. A few doses of&#13;
Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver&#13;
Tablets will restore his liver to its&#13;
normal function, renew his vitality,&#13;
improve his digestion and make him&#13;
feel like a new man. Price, 25 cents.&#13;
Samples free »t F. A. Siller's dru£&#13;
store, Pinckney.&#13;
HAYSTACK COVER.&#13;
] the two sides boarded, place %the two&#13;
ends of the sections together. This&#13;
will bo the apex of the cover. The 2&#13;
by 4's should have been left projecting&#13;
a few inches in order to bolt the two&#13;
sides together at the apex. This cover&#13;
will form a roof that will turn all&#13;
storm aud preserve the hay as well as&#13;
though stored in a barn. As the covers&#13;
are made in sections of six feet&#13;
each, only that much of a stack need&#13;
be cut down at a time. In order to&#13;
hold the covers firmly in place bore an&#13;
inch hole in the lower ends of the 2 by&#13;
4's and with a piece of smooth wire or&#13;
rope hang a heavy weight to it or stake&#13;
it down, to the ground.&#13;
Z^PWORTH LEAGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
Cievaning at 6:00 oclock in tue il. ki. Cuurcn, A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to evoryoue, eape»&#13;
cially young people. F. L. Andrewa, Pres.&#13;
CHRISTIAN ESJGAVOR SO HE TV: -H»st&#13;
ias»* every Saad-iy eveaLa^ at (V.i). Praji tjut&#13;
Miss L. M. Ooe; Secrat&lt;vr7, .Vltsj Hutle Car^.ia^r&#13;
'IIHE W. C. T. U. meets the Crst Frilay of axs\i&#13;
I month at d:3L p. in, at t ue home of Or. tl. F.&#13;
sigler. Everyone interested io. temperance is&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs. Leal Sijjler, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
ritta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
The C. T. A. and B. Society of this place,&#13;
every third Saturuay evening in the Fr.&#13;
thew Hall. John Oonohue, F resident.&#13;
o»eet&#13;
Mat-&#13;
KNIGHTS 0^- MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before full&#13;
o; the moon at their hall la the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordially invited.&#13;
CHAR. CAMPBELL, Sir knight Commands!&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.7^,^ A, A, M. Rejalsr&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
tue lull of the moon. H. r\ Sigler, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
AA.M. meeting, MRS. MARV RBAO, W. M.&#13;
0ROEK OF MODERN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
tirat Tauraday evening of e;icu Mouth in the&#13;
.tL.tmibee nail. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every Is&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachtnonth at i :30 p m. a&#13;
H.«). T. M. hall. Visiting siaters cordially in.&#13;
nted. JCLIA SIOLEU, Lady Com,&#13;
A farmer near Lansing having&#13;
about 40 acres of wheat would be&#13;
williug to take 830 for the entire&#13;
acerage—weavel.&#13;
The council of the village of&#13;
Da rand have ordered all gambling&#13;
places closed there.&#13;
Dundee will probably have a&#13;
beet sugar factory in the near future.&#13;
Stop t b e Coitffb a n d %vork« off i h e&#13;
Cold. ^&#13;
Lrxattre Bronrro-Quinine Tai&gt;leN cure&#13;
a cold in one day. Nor ore, no pay.&#13;
Price 25 cent3^&#13;
A Card.&#13;
1, the nmiiMsi^ned, do hereby apree&#13;
to refund the moi»t«y on a 50 cent, bot*&#13;
tie of Green's War ranted Syrup of&#13;
Tar if it fnti^s io our&lt;» your con ah or&#13;
coid. I us,. trautitni''e H 2o-cent bottle&#13;
to prov&lt;« s.i'.i&gt;fa&lt;Hory oi money refunded.&#13;
t23&#13;
Will H, Darro*.&#13;
1 KNIGHTS OF THK LOYAL GUARO&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every mouth in tne K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:30o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
C. L, Grimes, Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
Subscribe lor Dispatch.&#13;
*9h&amp; This signature is ori every box 1 the genuine&#13;
Laxative Bromo-Quioirte Tablet*&#13;
the remedy that cores a cokf l a « M day&#13;
M. F. SIGLER M. 0. C, L, StQLER M, D&#13;
^ DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Phyeiciaua and Surges us. All calls promptl&#13;
uttecded to day or uight. OiHoe on Mainstr&#13;
PiuoHuey, Mich.&#13;
DR. A, B. GREEN.&#13;
DBNTIST-Eyery Frldaj; and on Thursday&#13;
when having appointmonto. Omce over&#13;
Sicler's Drug Store.&#13;
VEvTERlNARY S U R Q E O N&#13;
Graduate of O.it.ino Veterinary College, also&#13;
the Veterinary Dentlatry OoUege&#13;
Toronto Canada,"&#13;
Will promptly attend to alt disease ot^the do&#13;
meeticated animal at a reasonable price.&#13;
Horses teeth examinedjFree.&#13;
OrriCEat ^\1LL. P1MCKNUV&#13;
•A&#13;
i&#13;
i !&#13;
:¾&#13;
• • ; . » . . ' . I i *--. : *&#13;
: * »&#13;
;..v&#13;
:'-\V&#13;
ft-&#13;
If&#13;
foe&#13;
tfv.&#13;
fk\ '&#13;
• • * • &lt; *&#13;
F?**&#13;
• • • "&#13;
F B A K E L. ANDBJSWS, Publisher.&#13;
PINCKNEY, - * - MICHIGAN.&#13;
I7£l£ht rates from Manila to Hong&#13;
Kong, adTstance of only 700 miles, are&#13;
as cjuch from San Prancicco to Hong&#13;
Kotg, a distance of 8,000,&#13;
The "abandoned" farms -af Massachusetts&#13;
are fast being taken up. Three&#13;
years ago there were 330 thus classed&#13;
in the state. A recent enumeration&#13;
shows there are now but 136.&#13;
In Brittany and the lower Pyrenees&#13;
fairs are held annually at which the&#13;
peasant girls assemble to sell their&#13;
hair. Parisian dealers are the chief&#13;
custmers, purchasing many thousand&#13;
pounds.&#13;
South Haven is Preparing to Compete&#13;
With St. Joseph&#13;
— — - — — — y&#13;
III MAIRiMMJAL_3U81 NESS.&#13;
Will Have the Proper Authority Open Xv&gt;&#13;
an Office at the Dock Where Marriage&#13;
License* can be Procured Upon Arrival&#13;
of Exenrsioaliitft From Chicago.&#13;
The Philippines touch closely upon&#13;
the gutta percha belt, yet the tree does&#13;
not grow there indigenuously, and it is&#13;
at least very problematical whether it&#13;
can be cultivated there. It will not&#13;
grow in Cochin, China, likewise near&#13;
the gutta percha belt, because the average&#13;
temperature is too low and the&#13;
changes too sudden.&#13;
The emperor of Morocco has a very&#13;
peculiar band. His private musicians&#13;
are 80 in number and they all play&#13;
clarionets*which/ were made by a London&#13;
firm. Curiously enough they are&#13;
all in one key. The emperor takes great&#13;
delight in listening to tho SO clariorets&#13;
being blown simultaneously, but he&#13;
can not convince his court that "music&#13;
hath charms."&#13;
Some curious botanical experiments&#13;
made at a zoological laboratory at Naples&#13;
are reported by Hans Winkler. A&#13;
flowerless aquatic plant," that grows&#13;
normally with its roots in the sand and&#13;
leaves in'water, was inverted, specimens&#13;
being placed with the leaves buried&#13;
in the sand and the roots in water&#13;
in strong light. The roots changed to&#13;
stems and loaves, the burled parts becoming&#13;
roots. ' ~&#13;
"Not if I were as rich as Croesus,"&#13;
recently objected an American who i3&#13;
supposed to be worth $4CU,000,OCO. Unhappily&#13;
for Croesus, "the bubble reputation"&#13;
may petrify as well as burst.&#13;
Archaeologists digging among the libraries&#13;
of Asia discovered the inventory&#13;
of Croesu3, and found that that&#13;
fraud of a millionaire was worth only&#13;
$9,000,000. America swarms with Croesuses&#13;
who could buy up the typical&#13;
rich man of tho olden time.&#13;
A great sensation has been caused in&#13;
Vienna by an order for the arrest of a&#13;
member of the Austrian Parliament,&#13;
named Franz Krempa, who is accused&#13;
of highway robbery in the district of&#13;
Tarnow. The prosecution claims that&#13;
Krempa, at the head of a band of ten&#13;
peasants, waylaid^a man named Itusinowsky,&#13;
a horse dealer, robbed him of a&#13;
"considerable amount of cash, and beat&#13;
him until he was insensible. Krempa&#13;
belonged to the Polish People's Party,&#13;
and is now missing.&#13;
Mrs Yates Arrested. *&#13;
The finding of the body of Jaspsr N.&#13;
Wright in tho woods near St. Louis&#13;
on the 9th was followed the neNt day&#13;
by the arrest of Mrs. Chas. Yates. The&#13;
theory of the prosecution is that&#13;
Wright was smothered by a carpet&#13;
found nearby. The defense will try to&#13;
prove that death V a s caused by heart&#13;
disease. ,&#13;
At the inquest held at S t Louis on&#13;
the 1 )th over the body of Mr. Wright,&#13;
who was found dead north of that city,&#13;
Mrs Yates testified that she had been&#13;
in the habit of going out in the woods&#13;
to pick flowers to put on the graves of&#13;
her children, and on going1 through a&#13;
thicket of brush she stepped on the&#13;
foot of the corpse, glanced at the body,&#13;
saw it was black in the face, then ran&#13;
and called her husband and a man by&#13;
the name of Vanderkirk, w h o was going&#13;
down the road. They went over&#13;
to where the body was and she says&#13;
she did not go a second time to the&#13;
body. She did not touch the body and&#13;
had not had any trouble with her husband&#13;
concern ing^tb is man.&#13;
Goes St. Joseph One Better.&#13;
In ovder to compete with St. Joseph&#13;
;is a Gretna Green for Chicago couples&#13;
South Haven has secured the appointment&#13;
of R, J. Madill, a deputy county&#13;
clerk, with his headquarters on the&#13;
steamboat dock at South Haven. This&#13;
innovation was due to the fact that&#13;
Paw Paw, the county seat of Van&#13;
Uuren county, is located 2"» miles inland&#13;
and couples who wanted to pet&#13;
married had to go to Paw Paw for&#13;
licenses. Under the~state system licenses&#13;
can be obtained within a few&#13;
minutes after leaving the boat. In&#13;
that respect South Haven now boasts&#13;
of an advantage over St. Joseph, as a&#13;
trip of a half mile to the court house&#13;
lor a license is required at the latter&#13;
place before the oeremony can be peri'orrued.&#13;
&gt;, Wheat* Failure.&#13;
. The monthly crop report issued by&#13;
Secretary of State Warner on the lOtu&#13;
states that fruit and garden truck&#13;
suffered somewhat from frost during&#13;
May, the damage usually occurring&#13;
whore crops were on low ground. The&#13;
cool, w e t weather was uot favorable&#13;
for tho setting of fruit, but was favornhln&#13;
fnr rnrl leaf in peaches. The&#13;
weather was very favorable for wheat&#13;
and had a tendency to check the work&#13;
of the Hessian lly. The weather in&#13;
April was favorable to the fly, and the&#13;
opinion of many farmers that great&#13;
damage was then don© and would benoticeable&#13;
as soon as we had a few&#13;
days of dry, warm weather was demonstrated&#13;
to be correct during the first&#13;
few days of June. Nearly every correspondent&#13;
in the southern counties&#13;
reports damage by tho fly. In somo&#13;
places wheat is beginning to fall to&#13;
the ground. The indications now are&#13;
that the crop will bo no better than&#13;
last year. Fields that escaped tho&#13;
lavages of the pest last fall are reported&#13;
to have been infested this&#13;
spring, so that failure of the crop will&#13;
probably be universal. The average&#13;
condition of wheat in the state is 72.&#13;
This estimate was made June 1, before&#13;
the damage had become so noticeable.&#13;
Had the esti mate been made a week&#13;
later it would have been lower. On&#13;
June 1 last year the condition was estimated&#13;
at 49. The per cent of wheat&#13;
that will be plowed up because winter&#13;
killed or otherwise destroyed is 14, and&#13;
it would be much greater were it not&#13;
for tho fact that many fields are* seeded&#13;
to timothy or clover. The damage by&#13;
Hessian ily is 31 for the state. May&#13;
weather was unfavorable to coro. May&#13;
weather w a s not favorable to fruit.&#13;
Hair Pullinc Jlatch at Orro**o.&#13;
Mrs. Matthew Shay and Mrs. Robert&#13;
Bowles fought a vicious battle ou&#13;
Owosso streets on the 10th in the&#13;
presence of a big crowd. The Shay&#13;
woman hit Mrs. Bowles over the head&#13;
with an umbrella, and the proprietor&#13;
of the store ordered them out. They&#13;
went at it hammer and tongs on the&#13;
sidewalk and both soon had bloody&#13;
noses and scratched faces, while Mrs.&#13;
Shay was shy some of her ha'r. No&#13;
one attempted to part them, but they&#13;
ran when the marshal put in his appearance.&#13;
No arrests. The women are&#13;
near neighbors. They have quarreled&#13;
before.&#13;
Acred I.uver Dinappolnted.&#13;
Jas. 11. Townsend, aged about 00,&#13;
Yhort and thick set, with a dark mustache&#13;
and dai*k hair, slightly tinged&#13;
a few&#13;
Every time that Russia "bluffs" England&#13;
and gains a diplomatic victory,&#13;
says a wise observer, a certain market- , w i t h g r a y &lt; w e n t t o S p a r t a _&#13;
able quantity of prestige is transferred | w e c l . s a g 0 a n d s t o p p e ( 1 a t t h e S a w v e i&#13;
residence. He represented a Pennsylvania&#13;
dry goods house. Soon the gossips&#13;
whispered it around that the aged&#13;
stranger was paying marked atteut ou&#13;
Her&#13;
matter&#13;
before Deputy Sheriff Smith, who&#13;
advised Townsend to leave towu. lie&#13;
accepted the advice.&#13;
from one nation to the other. He adds&#13;
that trade cannot flourish nor subject&#13;
races be governed without an ample&#13;
store of prestige to draw upon at will.&#13;
It is an interesting fact that the first to NenYe Sawver,a5od about"io!&#13;
but now obsolete meaning of prestige1&#13;
is illusion, imposture. Unfortunately,&#13;
the element of trickery in diplomacy,&#13;
whereby national prominence has been&#13;
gained throughout the history of foreign&#13;
governments, is by no means obsolete.&#13;
teacher'investigated and laid the&#13;
G. A. II. Convention at Flint.&#13;
Under a sweltering sua the first day&#13;
of the.state encampment of the G. A.&#13;
R. was opened at Flint on the 12th.&#13;
with fully 8,000 delegates and their&#13;
friends within the gates of the city.&#13;
Doctor Dussaud of Paris has invented&#13;
a cinematograph, by means of&#13;
which blind persons can experience the&#13;
illusion of moving objects as people j Early in the morning the streets were&#13;
with sight do an illuminated screen. ] a scene of activity as the veterans be-&#13;
The appartus consists of a machineJgan to prepare for the first day of the&#13;
that causes a series of reliefs, repre-Tbig event. Headed by the Flint fife&#13;
senting trees, birds or other objects, | and drum corps the veterans marched&#13;
to pass rapidly under the fingers. The i to Stone's opera house at 10:30 o'clock.&#13;
Kep. Doyle*« Death Accidental.&#13;
The investigation of the coroner's&#13;
jury into the death of Rep. Doyle, who&#13;
died of carbolic acid poisoning at Lansing&#13;
recently, developed an interesting&#13;
bit of testimony which has not hereto-*&#13;
fore been recorded. The verdict of the&#13;
jury was that death was due to ac?&gt;*&#13;
dental poisoning by carbolic acid with&#13;
ro criminal intent on the part of anyone.&#13;
It was brought out at the inquest&#13;
that the whisky Doyle partook&#13;
while at Mnss-M a riders' room, was furnished&#13;
by the hitter's landlady, Mrs.&#13;
F. H. Pi par, who swore that she let&#13;
Mi&lt;s Manders have the whisky at a&#13;
time when, the latter was ailing. During&#13;
the investigation it was learned&#13;
that Miss Minders had won the a flections&#13;
of at least three members of the&#13;
legislature, which would indicate that&#13;
statesmen had been her long suit. She&#13;
was released from custody.&#13;
Mrs. Tom Apple{ratc l&gt;e»&lt;l.&#13;
Maj. Geo. W. Buckingham and his&#13;
daughter Anna, of Flint, and Mrs. Tom&#13;
Applegate and Mrs. Wm. Humphrey,&#13;
of Adrian, were struck by a Fere Marquette&#13;
passenger train at Oak park,&#13;
Flint, while out driving on the morning&#13;
of the 14th. All were instantly&#13;
killed. Mrs. Applegate couducted the&#13;
Times and Expositor at Adrian, Mrs.&#13;
Humphrey was her sister and the&#13;
widow of-Gen. Wm. Humphrey. They&#13;
were at Flint attending the G. A. R.&#13;
encampment, aud were the guests of&#13;
Maj. Buckingham's famil}-.&#13;
- — - •&#13;
iCotnrnoil Five Indictments*.&#13;
The grand jury investigating the&#13;
water works scandal returned five true&#13;
bills at noon on the 14th. They were&#13;
for CTty Attorney Lant. K. Saisbury,&#13;
Thomas F. McGarry, attorney; Gerrit1&#13;
H. Albers, attorney; Stilson V. Mac-&#13;
Leod, former bank teller; II. A. Taylor&#13;
of New York, capitalist and promoter.&#13;
The first four indictments&#13;
were looked for, but Taylor's name on&#13;
the list wah something of a surprise.&#13;
. ^ - , ^ »&#13;
Are Enjoying a Jlixtni.&#13;
Perry never experienced sueh £&#13;
growth in its history as it has taken&#13;
on this yea^. Seven largo two-;-tory&#13;
brick store buildings have been erected&#13;
or are now in course of erection, besides&#13;
a very commodious village hall.&#13;
A SI0.000 school house will also be&#13;
built this summer to replace the one&#13;
burn&lt;jd on May 30. More factories are&#13;
desired. Traveling men report the&#13;
village one of the most promising&#13;
places in the state.&#13;
* * ^ - J I&#13;
mumtmmmtmmimtm mi\ iii •'-.••• '"'&lt;&lt;&lt;&#13;
Muskegon boot bis c l « have formed a&#13;
union and advanced the price of shinei&#13;
to 10 cents.&#13;
Mrs. Robert Charlton, living west of&#13;
Cass City, on the 10th gave birth to&#13;
two boys and&gt;a girl. Mother and&#13;
babes are doing well.&#13;
Quincy claims the banner as the&#13;
healthiest place in the state, and tho&#13;
doctors have taken to fishing to g a l a a—&#13;
sustenance.&#13;
The progressive element at North&#13;
Branch has at last gotten the better of&#13;
the old-foj?y crowd, and the village&#13;
w i l l have electric lights belore many&#13;
moons. i&#13;
The special election held at Norway&#13;
to settle the question of bonding the&#13;
city for 82.1,0:)0 for electric lights resulted&#13;
in a victory for those who favor&#13;
tho lights.&#13;
A special term of the Gladwin circuit&#13;
court will be called about Am?. 1&#13;
to try Wm. Arnell, Jr., charged with&#13;
the murder of his wife and child at&#13;
Ueaverton.&#13;
Farmers in tho vicinity of Munlth&#13;
are having many valuable sheep and&#13;
lambs killed by dogs. Thus far about&#13;
40 sheep and lambs have been killed&#13;
by canines.&#13;
The villnge fathers at Bnd Axe are&#13;
progressive. They have oi-dered 10&#13;
uew arc lights, and will have cement&#13;
walks laid at every street crossing in&#13;
the village.&#13;
Word was received on the 13th announcing&#13;
that Former Gov. Pingree&#13;
w a s seriously ilk. and that the startfor&#13;
the U. 8. would necessarily have to&#13;
be postponed.&#13;
A- heavy hail storm struck Gravd&#13;
Traverse county on the 12th and did&#13;
much dam-ige. Fruit was stripped&#13;
from the trees. Strawberries were cut&#13;
oil', and corn ruined.&#13;
The Pore Marquette railroad is making&#13;
fair progress with the building of&#13;
its new track at Northville. The grade&#13;
operations will take all summer and&#13;
cost nearly §0JO a day.&#13;
A Muir man is suing for a divorce,&#13;
because, he says, his wife doesh't wash&#13;
the dishes as promptly as she ought to.&#13;
Well, if he doesn't like her way of doi&#13;
n g i t , why not do it himself'.'&#13;
What is believed to be the first house&#13;
built wholly of Portland cement is to&#13;
be erected in Cold water very shortly.&#13;
The use of cement as a building material&#13;
is probably in its infancy.&#13;
Otsego merchants are firm believers&#13;
in the power of music to draw crowds;&#13;
and have subscribed liberally to a fund&#13;
t o p i y f o r two btnd concerts in the&#13;
village each week during the summer.&#13;
Ten young tramps, ranging in ages&#13;
from 13 to 17, were jailed at St. Joseph&#13;
on the 13th. They said they h;»d run&#13;
away from the homes of well-to-do&#13;
Chicago parents to tramp to the Pan-&#13;
American exposition.&#13;
The annual reunion of the Grand&#13;
River Valley Encampment Association&#13;
of Soldiers, Sailors, Marines, Sons of&#13;
Veterans and Women's Relief Corps&#13;
will be held at Grand Haven from&#13;
Julv 1 to 0, inclusive.&#13;
The Delta Coxwty Agricultural society&#13;
will hold the annual county fair&#13;
and race meeting on Sept. 10-12. Matinee&#13;
races will be held every two&#13;
weeks during the season, the first&#13;
moot to be heid June 27.&#13;
During a fierce electricil storm one&#13;
Gov/ Allen is Giving the Free&#13;
Trade Problem Consideration.&#13;
,.!:.••'&#13;
f.&#13;
REVENUES WILL BESUFFICIEMT&#13;
For the Iiland'a Maintenance Without th*&#13;
Caatom* Untie* on Trade Between the&#13;
li. 8. anil Porto Kloo Sayi Treaaora?&#13;
Hollander-Alien Yet Undecided.&#13;
Porto Ulcau Free Trade.&#13;
Siucc Gov. Allen returned t o Porto&#13;
Rico.he has given the free trade' problem&#13;
cymes', consideration. Treasurer&#13;
Hollander has presented him with a report&#13;
showing in detail the workings&#13;
oi his new revenue act. He shows that&#13;
when the law shall have gone into full&#13;
force July 1 the island revenues will&#13;
be sufficient for the island's maintenance&#13;
without tho customs duties on&#13;
trade between Porto Rico and the U. S.&#13;
The governor shows some hesitancy&#13;
in acting as he is undecided when i t&#13;
will be proper to call the legislature&#13;
in extraordinary session for t h e purpose&#13;
of declaring that the island has&#13;
in operation adequate system for collecting&#13;
revenues, as it has the power&#13;
to do under the Foraker organic act.&#13;
Then, to make free trade a reality, for&#13;
the act to remain, will be for the President&#13;
to proclaim.&#13;
Were it known now that free trade&#13;
would be declared on a given date, the&#13;
island sugar still unshipped would be&#13;
cornered by speculators to the detriment&#13;
of the planters. This Gov. Allen&#13;
wishes to avoid. It is safe to say that&#13;
the legislature will be called to meet&#13;
in extra sassion as soon after July 1 as&#13;
practicable. Porto R.cans have been&#13;
clamoring for free trade since the beginning,&#13;
and nothing, unless i t bo&#13;
American citizenship, would please&#13;
them more.&#13;
Pl:jm for Federal Milltla.&#13;
A.number of conferences have taken&#13;
pl;»ce in Washington, between Assistant&#13;
Secretary of War C.irey Sanger and&#13;
officers of the state militia organizations&#13;
of the east. Later on officers, of&#13;
the middle and western states are to&#13;
be invited to the capital to talk over a&#13;
plan, which will be put into execution&#13;
next fall for the bringing of the state&#13;
volunteer organisations into closer&#13;
touch with the federal government.&#13;
The details of the plan have not been&#13;
worked out, but its general features&#13;
can be told in a few words. In return&#13;
for larger appropriations from the federal&#13;
treasury, the state military organizations&#13;
are to bind themselves to respond&#13;
to a call of the President for&#13;
duty, anywhere in the American domain&#13;
for a period of from 30 to 90 days.&#13;
They would become what might be&#13;
called "federal militia," and instead of&#13;
being mere state organizations sworn&#13;
for duty within the boundaries of the&#13;
state, and subject only to the command&#13;
of the governor thereof, they would be&#13;
subject primarily to the command of&#13;
the President, and would be bound to&#13;
go where sent.&#13;
Philadelphia Robbed of 92.500.000.'&#13;
Spurning John Wnnamaker's offer of&#13;
S2,T)0 »,000 for the traction franchise&#13;
rights in the streets of Philadelphia.&#13;
reliefs are so graduated that the delicate&#13;
sense of touch possessed by the&#13;
blind translates their variations into&#13;
apparent movements of the objects&#13;
represented. Doctor Dussaud employs&#13;
the appartus mainly for educational&#13;
purposes. He has also devised a system&#13;
of electric vibrations for conveying&#13;
to the deaf an impression of musical&#13;
rhythm.&#13;
In the Interstate Park near Taylor's&#13;
Falls, Minnesota, nas been discovered&#13;
a singular group of "giants' kettles,"&#13;
or pot-holes, covering an area of two&#13;
or three acres and ranging in diameter&#13;
from less than a foot to 25 feet, and&#13;
In depth from one foot to 84 feet. They&#13;
have been bored in exceedingly hard&#13;
rock, and in many cases they are like&#13;
wells^tn shape, the ratio-of width V&#13;
depth varying from one to five.up to&#13;
one to Beven. 'Mr. Warren Upham ascribes&#13;
their origin t o ' t o n c n t s falling&#13;
through glacial "mouiins" at the time&#13;
when the northern territory of the&#13;
United States was .buried under ice. As&#13;
rith similar pot holcj elsewhere,&#13;
rounded boulders are occasionally&#13;
found at the bottom of the cavities.&#13;
where the first business session of the&#13;
encampment was held.&#13;
Phone War at Horton anil Hanover.&#13;
The villages of Hanover and Horton,&#13;
three miles apart, are enjoying a telephone&#13;
war, which is growing desperate&#13;
in its intensity. Each village is&#13;
endeavoring to establish rural telephone&#13;
lines, at the expense of the&#13;
farmers, of course, who derive their&#13;
benefit from the line by being able to&#13;
get market reports every morning&#13;
without going to town, and by getting&#13;
the news of their small world as soon&#13;
as the village people do.&#13;
Jaekson County Farmer* In Hard T.uelc.&#13;
Wheat throughout Jackson county is&#13;
greatly nilected with insects and-Some&#13;
of the farmers are plowing up part of&#13;
crop and plan ting spring crops.&#13;
Corn in many places has had to be replanted&#13;
on account of the recent cold&#13;
weather, causing much of the seed to&#13;
rot before coming up. What has survived&#13;
is now picking np fast and tho&#13;
crop promises to b e ' better than expected.&#13;
Grayling 1B to have a large new salt&#13;
block.&#13;
Allrean Yisltoil by a Cyclone.&#13;
A territi'! electrical storm, accompanied&#13;
by a £":iTe with rain, swept&#13;
over Allegan county from the west ou&#13;
the 14th. Reports from the surrounding&#13;
country show that considerable&#13;
damage was done to vegetation and&#13;
fruit. Many barns were struck by&#13;
lightning, and the reports say three&#13;
people were killed by lightning.&#13;
M I N O R M I C H I G A N MATTER^.&#13;
The berry yield in the vicinity of&#13;
Watcrvleit will be very light this season.&#13;
Ground has been broken at Boyne&#13;
Falls for the largest tannery in the&#13;
world.&#13;
The Orion Telephone company, with&#13;
§."i,000 capital, was recently organized&#13;
at Orion.&#13;
lay recently Mrs. Eher Vickory, o f Mayor Ashbridge, on the 13th signed&#13;
ilod'to tho collar for safety. ! ^ ^anchises covering grants for unbut&#13;
a bolt of lightning came down the&#13;
chimney and struck her just the wiine.&#13;
Her recovery is doubtful. •&#13;
Gov. Bliss on the 13th ordered that a&#13;
commission be issued to Judge Aaron&#13;
V. McAivay, of Manistee, as judge of&#13;
the Manistee-Mason-Lake-Osceola circuit,&#13;
to till the vacancy caused by the&#13;
death of Judge C. M. Beardsley.&#13;
The Valley Telephone Co., Saginaw,&#13;
has placed most of its new issue of&#13;
£."»0,000 stock in Tuscola, Huron and&#13;
Sanilac counties, where a complete&#13;
system of toll lines will be built independent&#13;
of the Bell-Moore system.&#13;
The investigation into the death of&#13;
iT,ep. Doyle at Lansing has been taken&#13;
up. Miss Manders is still held in custody,&#13;
but there are no new developments&#13;
and the probabilities are that&#13;
she will be released at the close of the&#13;
iuquett&#13;
derground, elevated and surface roads.'&#13;
These franchises, with two others, not&#13;
signed, were put through the councilmanic&#13;
bodies in pursuance to tho&#13;
Focht-Emory bills which were jammed&#13;
through the legislature and the&#13;
city council ' a few days ago. They&#13;
cover every street in the city available&#13;
for urban railways of any s o r t One&#13;
feature of the event is the barring out&#13;
of Al. Johnson, who w i s trying to g e t&#13;
into the city with the New Ybrk-Philadelphia&#13;
line, which was to give 3-cent&#13;
fares in Philadelphia. Johnson says&#13;
he will fight the mayor and council&#13;
in the courts.&#13;
Double Tragedy at Chicago.&#13;
Side by side, each with a bullet&#13;
wound in the temple, the dead bodies&#13;
of L Hartman and his wife were found&#13;
in their bed at the Great Norther&#13;
hotel, Chicago, on the 10th. The room&#13;
Sumner school catalogues for the IT. j showed no evidence of a struggle, both&#13;
of M. h,vve-beeu Issued. The literary I l'fdess forms were composed, the cov-&#13;
A vein of coal three feet thick has&#13;
l&gt;cen struck in Homer .township, near&#13;
Midland.&#13;
A teachers' institute will be held at&#13;
Jmlay City this summer from July IS&#13;
to August 17. &gt;•&#13;
The Orion Resort association at Lake&#13;
Orion has let the contract f o i m water&#13;
works system.&#13;
session jwms from June 20 to Aug. y.&#13;
The law summer session, June 24 to&#13;
Aug. 10. Six hours' credit is the most&#13;
that can be obtained during a summer&#13;
session.&#13;
•Worms are a4! work in the apple orchards&#13;
around Bloomingdale. Many&#13;
trees have been wholly destroyed, and&#13;
the trees look as though a fire had run&#13;
through the orchard. Farmers are at&#13;
a loss to know what to do to head off&#13;
the pest.&#13;
The following nWc wera appointed by&#13;
Gov. Bliss on the 13th as the barbers'&#13;
examining board: ' R. M. Fillmore,&#13;
Lansing; Jos. IF. Hooper, Ishpeming,&#13;
and Emory L Bufcby, Hastings, for t h e&#13;
terms of one, two and three years, r o&#13;
spectively.&#13;
The Paw Paw lake raaorta will undoubtedly&#13;
have the f^MUeat season&#13;
ever experienced. Score* of s e w cottages&#13;
have .been erected, t a d aaany hotels&#13;
and boarding housea^ iTa%Ahonaand&#13;
reporters will hn dniajaljajt n p n m l&#13;
the.lake in the height af t h » fesort&#13;
season. v&#13;
ering of the bed well tucked about&#13;
them, but the revolver clutched in the&#13;
right hand of the husband told tho&#13;
story of the double tragedy. Later i t&#13;
was learned that the de;id woman w a s&#13;
Rose Le Sebre, a variety actress. T h e&#13;
father of the dead man is said to be a&#13;
wealthy tobacco dealer in New York&#13;
city.&#13;
30 Bod ten Washed Anhore.&#13;
The steamer Kinshlu Maru arrived&#13;
at Victoria, B. C , on the 10th from the&#13;
orient, being thfe.first of the reorganized&#13;
Nippon Yusen Kaiaha service,&#13;
which now gives bi-monthly instead of&#13;
monthly steamers. * She brought news&#13;
that a Chinese passenger boat bound&#13;
from Chq San to Wing PI was upset&#13;
during a squall oa May 8, and out of&#13;
68 on board only nice were saved&#13;
Thirty bodies were washed ashore.&#13;
Three prostrations from heat wore&#13;
reported a t Lima, O., «n the 12th.&#13;
Sir Walter Besant, the novelist, died&#13;
at bia home in Harapstead, En-?., oa&#13;
the 0th.&#13;
*&#13;
AX.Uk m la«ai aim MtA-,&#13;
* * j M i ^ J * * '&#13;
, ^ ¾ ¾ 1 ^ .&#13;
' . . • . ; &gt; , •!• i, • '.-. - • •• •• . . 7 . ' • •'.'•• ' •&#13;
^^Mm&amp;&amp;»&#13;
*m&#13;
' • • ' « * • ' . . . ' . , •&#13;
' • # $&#13;
I ••&lt;':•&#13;
¥&#13;
in&#13;
2 ^ # A Character&#13;
1 C « Sketch&#13;
B y P h l l l f &gt; V e r r l l l M l g h e l a&#13;
ft&#13;
-^-&#13;
CHAPTER I—(Continued.)&#13;
Along the path at noon came a&#13;
ttunted man, a barrel-shaped miner,&#13;
^nar Bwufl nts tracK wrto a- cut-oxx&#13;
shovel used as a cane.&#13;
"Paper for Henley," he pufflngly remarked&#13;
as he opened the door of the&#13;
shed above the shaft "Paper 'dressed&#13;
to 'Franklin Henley,"" and tossing It&#13;
in by the side of the man who was eating&#13;
his lunch on a box, he plodded&#13;
ahead to return to the trail.&#13;
"Thank you, Billy," called the other;&#13;
"much obliged."&#13;
He finished a bone, gave his fingers&#13;
„ a wipe on the ragged trousers and slit&#13;
off the wrapper of the "down-east"&#13;
paper.&#13;
Sitting in the door, he read the news&#13;
of the far-away home, eagerly absorbing&#13;
every line. Of,a sudden he paused;&#13;
a gleam of something wild came flashing&#13;
In bis eyes and the muscles of hta&#13;
hands and arms abruptly stiffened.&#13;
"Married, by the Rev. Richard Watson,&#13;
Feb. 20. Miss Agnes Coles to&#13;
Frederick Law," was all that he read.&#13;
The type swung a dizzy waltz, with&#13;
the notice for their center—a thousand&#13;
animated demon spots they were,&#13;
dancing at his anguish.&#13;
He hurled the sheet, in a crunched -&#13;
up ball, along in the brush; he grasped Your father, he say so. He say you go&#13;
a pick and went where the paper lay&#13;
—all crisply swelling to open again—&#13;
and dug and gashed it to dirt-printed&#13;
shreds. .&#13;
"So that's the reason she hasn't been&#13;
writing!" he fiercely hissed. "That's&#13;
the game he's worked on the quiet&#13;
shift! Undermined me!—tapped the&#13;
vein!—robbed the pocket! Damn his&#13;
cowardly heart!—damn the mine! —&#13;
damn everything!" His voice was&#13;
choked,; he reeled to the . shed, he&#13;
sank—half flung—to the earthen floor,&#13;
to lie where the door, like a flabby&#13;
jaw, was vainly trying to close against&#13;
his body.&#13;
His fingers gouged in the sand like&#13;
hooks; his face was pressed to the&#13;
chill, hard cheek,of the soil. The wind&#13;
swept through, the hole of a window&#13;
its vent, beating the door, in weak,&#13;
squeaking blows against his back.&#13;
Th« day grew oldr~a~drizzling rain&#13;
descended; darkness obscured him as&#13;
he lay, half within, half without. The&#13;
night came down and found him motionless.&#13;
The creak; creak, creak of&#13;
the door wa3 mingled at midnight with&#13;
the distant howling of a lone coyote.&#13;
In the morning, when the Indian&#13;
girl was come to the cabin, a wildeyed&#13;
man, mumbling and groping, haggard,&#13;
unkempt, staggered out of the&#13;
sage brush Jto fall over on the floor of&#13;
the kitchen.&#13;
There on the boards she fashioned&#13;
the couch whereon he tossed and. roiled,&#13;
fought and mined for fourteen&#13;
nights and day's.&#13;
Feebly he opened his eyes at length.&#13;
It was 8usie above him, laving his&#13;
forehead; Susie preparing the food at&#13;
the stove; Susie who sang him the&#13;
lullaby of rest in Washoe music, soft&#13;
and persuasive.&#13;
Wistfully his eyes remained on her&#13;
round young face. He lay there helpless,&#13;
feeling like a man of thewless cot-&#13;
-tom—Day by day she coaxed his pulse&#13;
to ita strong, quick thump of action.&#13;
Night by night his energy crept In&#13;
through his system again. Yet what&#13;
was the use.&#13;
There came an hour when he tottered&#13;
to his feet, got the gush of spring&#13;
from the visiting breeze, and at length&#13;
returned to the mine—to dig in the&#13;
adamant, to work off the shadows of&#13;
hatred and vengeance.&#13;
He dug out a pocket of gold, nearly&#13;
pure, and laughed in scorn at its glittering&#13;
spread on the salver of dross&#13;
and porphyry. It lay where it fell- -a&#13;
pyramid of riches; and he striking&#13;
sparks from his steel and the rock in&#13;
the opposite end of the tunnel.&#13;
Susie remained—his shy little dot—&#13;
adoring the air that haloed him about,&#13;
thrilling unceasingly to hear lim&#13;
speak—lived in her womanly scheme&#13;
of an earthly heaven.&#13;
The blossoms now presented their&#13;
cheeks and lips in manifold petals,for&#13;
the sun's caress; the birds, widethroatt&#13;
by gushing melodies, expressed&#13;
throughout the day the joys 0.&#13;
twining a nest in the branches. The&#13;
Indian girl outspread her very fingers,&#13;
to feel the current of love and life&#13;
that sweetened the air. *&#13;
At times, as the spring bud bourgeoned&#13;
into summer, the glTl and Henley&#13;
roamed on the hills hand-in-hand,&#13;
seeking the grass blades that smoothed&#13;
the roots of the sage brush, hunting&#13;
out the flowers, mocking the mellow&#13;
lark—who sang of endless summer.&#13;
Now and again the man was fired by&#13;
hot desire to honeycomb the mighty&#13;
hills with drifts and shafts and tunnels.&#13;
Yet, how sweet to wander&#13;
"home" in the cool of the evening,&#13;
stepping to the cheerful notes of crickets&#13;
by the trail, to meet the day newborn&#13;
again In the beaming face of&#13;
Susie!&#13;
CHAPTER II.&#13;
Chloride Hill, the mining camp, was&#13;
nothing to Henley, nothing to Susie.&#13;
But out of Its streets there came one&#13;
day a tall, stalwart Indian, who stood&#13;
aloft in the kitchen door and gazed in&#13;
pleasure on the Indian girl.&#13;
"Mingo!" she cried in alarm.&#13;
"Yes, Mingo," he replied slowly and&#13;
clearly, grinning like a wolf. "Mingo,&#13;
big hunter."&#13;
She had backed away and stood there&#13;
trembling. "What do you want?" she&#13;
finally gasped, in the musical speech of&#13;
the Washoes. "Why do you come?"&#13;
"Mingo, the hunter, comes for you,"&#13;
said he. "Mingo wants his mahala,&#13;
his wife."&#13;
"What do you mean?" she cried&#13;
aghast.&#13;
"Mingo's mahala is afraid like the&#13;
chipmunk," he joyously announced.&#13;
"Mingo will make her like the pool of&#13;
the water. Mingo will take his wife;&#13;
he has given her father his rifle and&#13;
pony. She will go to the lodge of Mingo."&#13;
"Mingo is locoed" (crazed), she answered.&#13;
Here is my lord. I am&#13;
his mahala. This is Susie's wikiup."&#13;
"No," said he, growing dark with&#13;
frowning, "you my wife—my squaw.&#13;
with Mingo, go to Mingo's wigwam."&#13;
"But I can't go tp your wigwam. I&#13;
don't love you—don't ^you sabbee? 1&#13;
don't love you."&#13;
"Mingo, he loves you. That Is plenty.&#13;
I tell you come."&#13;
"Oh, you sneaking coyote! If my&#13;
husband were here you would run like&#13;
the coward. You would never come&#13;
to the white man's wikiup."&#13;
"He is not your husband, mahala.&#13;
Do you say to Mingo, the white chief&#13;
here is your hu3band?"&#13;
She faltered, staggered and groped .1&#13;
little backward.&#13;
"You say it not-," he quickly continued.&#13;
"It is lying. No, the mahala&#13;
is not the wife at his side. She has&#13;
broken the Indians' law; she has broken&#13;
the law of the white nan. Mahala&#13;
you belong to Mingo. 5 tell you come.'&#13;
He moved toward he.-? she recoile.l&#13;
in dread. Her searching hand cam:&#13;
down on the-table. fell on the handle&#13;
of a knife, and she ^grasped it suddenly.&#13;
"Stand far away," she cried, displaying&#13;
the blade, "you sneaking coyote:&#13;
You come when women are alone—you&#13;
the great hunter! Keep away! Go&#13;
Let in the light! Take your bad coyote&#13;
face to the sage brush, you coward!"&#13;
The savage blood of her nature .vivaflame.&#13;
The Washoe flinched not at&#13;
all,, neither did he come. He was cun&#13;
ning, more than brave. The dull,&#13;
banked fires were aglow in his eyes&#13;
his body was bent in a menacing atti&#13;
tude, his head thrown malignantly for&#13;
ward. Muttering threats of vengeance&#13;
he glided backward, and she slammed&#13;
and bolted the door. Then down or&#13;
the floor she sank, to lie there brfcath&#13;
ing like a wounded animal.&#13;
On the hill, in the sunshine, Henley&#13;
was gazing a?t the deep blue sky, thashowed&#13;
in a patch through a window&#13;
in the shed above the mine. Alon&#13;
the path, down below, a,t his back, tht&#13;
squat, little barrel-shaped miner VJL&#13;
bored wheezingly upward.&#13;
"Letter for Henley," he called at th&#13;
door, and threw in the missive and&#13;
trudged along the hill.&#13;
Not an answering sound did Henley&#13;
make. "A letter," he mused, not start&#13;
ing at all from hii resting position&#13;
"Comes r. trifle late. I reckon. Life&#13;
preserver to a corpse—so far as th&lt;&#13;
world beyond is at all concerned." H&#13;
gazed another hour at the sky, whilthe&#13;
light moved slowly athwart thearthen&#13;
floor and lay at length, a bril&#13;
liant finger, across the face of the up&#13;
turned envelope.&#13;
Turning, he saw the white and placi'&#13;
invitation. His eye3 began dissectinits&#13;
features. Presently the writing&#13;
round and straight, made him move b; ,,&#13;
stages involuntarily toward the light •&#13;
the world was whirring wildly in spaje&#13;
—he tottered in his walk.&#13;
Out he went, clutching his letter—out&#13;
to the light—out and away up the hill,&#13;
striding like an engine breasting the&#13;
breeze, fronting the steep ascent, panting&#13;
and straining to reach that upper&#13;
isolation.&#13;
"Frank, oh, Frank," cried Suslo&#13;
when he came. "Mlngcv tha Indian—'&#13;
Be brushed her by. He looked Lt&#13;
her blankly; bis ears failed to focus&#13;
the sounds of her voicer he merely&#13;
comprehended that something was uttered.&#13;
"No, no," he answered, "no, not now&#13;
—I'm dizsy—rattled."&#13;
She stood with eyes wide open and&#13;
startled—dumbly appealing. "But&#13;
Mingo," she said, "Mingo, the Indian,&#13;
he came to-day—and he—threatened—&#13;
threatened us."&#13;
"Mingo—Mingo! He's a coward—I'm&#13;
tired—never mind him, Susie."&#13;
He stretched forth his hand. She&#13;
leaped to place it on her neck, and&#13;
kissed it wildly. He stood there truly,&#13;
but himself was far away.&#13;
Pacing and pacing, he wore away the&#13;
hours in the cabin. All through the&#13;
night she watched his face With startled&#13;
eyes, pain, doubt and yearning in&#13;
her dumb, trusting look.&#13;
In the morning he bolted to the hill&#13;
again; and she, like a doe t&#13;
not anything but one who is master,&#13;
followed him timidly far behind—followed&#13;
till he threw himself down in&#13;
the sage brush. She sank where Ehe&#13;
was, to wait there in patience.&#13;
In the grass-broken sand he lay and&#13;
sat and lay again, thinking rapidly, in&#13;
"Hers," he whi-'i&gt;ered.&#13;
His jaw grew square and firmly sethis&#13;
eyeS grew hard and glinted lik&#13;
flint. Yet he took up the letter and&#13;
broke it open sullenly.&#13;
* * and my illness increased to&#13;
such an extent that the doctor said l&#13;
would have to go to the warm Ber&#13;
mudas. Every one about was quite&#13;
alarmed—they neglected you. my dearest&#13;
heart—and for many a week I lay&#13;
like a shadow on the pillow.&#13;
* * * I enclose a notice, the funniest&#13;
thing, that was printed in th*&#13;
Star.&#13;
"Married by the Rev. Richard Watson,&#13;
Feb. 20, Miss Agnes Coles to Frederick&#13;
Law."&#13;
Isn't it odd?—the oddest thing! Of&#13;
course it ought to be Kolles; but such&#13;
a laugh they have had on me, and on&#13;
Agnes too. But blest her heart, she&#13;
doesn't mind; she's got her Fred at&#13;
last, and they are very happy—&gt;—"&#13;
His tenses were swimming crasily,&#13;
coherently the same things over and&#13;
over. Under it all ran a current of&#13;
echoes: "Saved my life—she saved my&#13;
life—she saved my life."&#13;
At length his wandering attention&#13;
was caught by a motley procession&#13;
moving slowly along in the dustwreathed&#13;
road below. There were half&#13;
a dozen Washoe Indians, more perhaps,&#13;
approaching the town—men and&#13;
womer- They had two horses—jaded,&#13;
hopeless creatures—that three old men&#13;
were ridi»s. Near them, walking&#13;
barefooted, heavily laden, were three&#13;
or four squaws, with time-furrowed&#13;
visages. The loads were contained in&#13;
sacks and in conical baskets, heaped&#13;
on the should&amp;rs and supported by&#13;
heavy bands, which went across the&#13;
foreheads of these camel-females. Forward&#13;
the burdened ones bent, looking,&#13;
as if in submission and patience, on&#13;
the ground, leaning on sticks which&#13;
they used with either hand. It was&#13;
only a party returning from the&#13;
nountains with the gathered supply of&#13;
bitter acorns and berries from the red&#13;
uaiizanita. For fifty miles they h?d&#13;
traveled thus. Painfully the wretched&#13;
caravan crawled around the hill and&#13;
disappeared.&#13;
Henley watched them, strangely intent.&#13;
"Saved my life," he muttered&#13;
iloud. "Indian—same as those. Sav^d&#13;
me. Yes, she'll wrink'e—be old. Why&#13;
Jid I have to have the fever! Saved&#13;
my life. Wrinkled, fearfufold squaws."&#13;
Susie saw the squalid show. "Oh,"&#13;
:he cried in anguish to herself. "Oh,&#13;
the women—oh, the Washoe women!^&#13;
-Wercrtfaey young loirg agoTl^reThey&#13;
part of the Summer? Did they hear&#13;
he larks and crickets? Did they&#13;
love?" She threw herself forward&#13;
•vhere she sat till her face was buried&#13;
n her curving arm. "Oh, love!" she&#13;
jricd; "there is nothing in the world&#13;
or mo but love!"&#13;
The thoughts of Henley finally ?rysalized&#13;
in form and sequence. He knew&#13;
1e would leave her, knew he would&#13;
:ertalnly desert all things Western&#13;
md go to the far-away East. How to&#13;
lo it gently, what to provide for Iior&#13;
omfort, what he should say, how&#13;
ipply a balm with the caustic—these*&#13;
vere matters to be planned and&#13;
planned.&#13;
*&#13;
Early the following morning he wen;&#13;
:o his mine to gather the gold wher.2 it&#13;
ay beneath the pocket. There, alone,&#13;
.e labored hour after hour. The mine&#13;
vas s.*nply a hole in the ground, 50&#13;
:set in depth, with branching tunuels&#13;
!own below; and over the mouth a&#13;
vindlas3 stood, with a rope about :t.&#13;
upporting a bucket that rested on the&#13;
:ottom. Built againfJt one of the per&#13;
)endicular walls was a wooden ladder&#13;
or ingress to and egress from the&#13;
ower .1 eye Is.&#13;
In the afternoon, from the rocks,on&#13;
he hill, a crouching form cam?&#13;
tealthily down through the scrubby&#13;
vrush. It was Mingo, the Washoe Inian.&#13;
Noiselessly he crept to the shed&#13;
—after scanning the prospect far and&#13;
lear for any living thing—there to lie&#13;
full length on a plank at the .edge of&#13;
ihe shaft. His practiced ear was quick&#13;
0 ca.tch the dull sound of blows that&#13;
issued from the mine. Long he lay&#13;
without moving a muscle. He could&#13;
wait au hour; he cou'd wait a day.&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
QrUN.A WAR N*W3,&#13;
The impression prevails at St. Fe« Lord Kitchener reports to the fflfcff&#13;
-¾&#13;
tersbtir* Russia, that the mode of offlce. under date of Pretoria* Juno %&#13;
paying the Chinese indemnity wiU not as follows: Commandant Van Rent*&#13;
be settled for a long period, possibly hurg and his commando have surren-'&#13;
not uutil the present ministers at Pe» dered at Pietersbur*. One hundred&#13;
kin are replaced. It/ is thought that men have come in and others are £61-&#13;
all would welcome a change of post lowing.&#13;
and that new men would be readier to I A dispatch from The Hsffue, dated&#13;
settle tbe difficulties. While Russia i* the 11th, says that Mr. Kruger hat la*&#13;
- ' • ' • • • - ^&#13;
'••• • : » &gt; . . „ • &gt; / ' " . '&#13;
not pressing the guatanteed loan proposition&#13;
because the constitutional powers&#13;
eould not guarantee the loan wlthsued&#13;
a statement to the effect thai be&#13;
knows nothing of the peace negotla*&#13;
tions alleged to be proceeding with&#13;
ont legislative consent, which wOfeld the lioer leaders.. He says that If there&#13;
necessitate delay, the plan is not withdrawn.&#13;
Tbe British proposition is not&#13;
acceptable.&#13;
Trultoy L i n e F r o m Ohio Goal F i e l d s .&#13;
Transportation of coal by electric&#13;
lines is one of the possibilities of the&#13;
near future. The Everett-Moore syndicate&#13;
has decided to build a line con*&#13;
uecting Akron with Canton and Mas*&#13;
sillon. The right of way has almost&#13;
entirely been bought up and work on&#13;
construction will soon begin. The electric&#13;
line will penetrate the Massillon&#13;
coal fielda One of the objects which&#13;
the magnates have in mind is the supplying&#13;
of coal to the many power&#13;
houses of the electric lines which the&#13;
Everett-Moore syndicate controls. The&#13;
syndicate in the making of the power&#13;
are any negotiations on foot it it not&#13;
through any action of his.&#13;
Lord Cranborne, tbe under foreign&#13;
secretary, replying to a question in the&#13;
house of commons at London 00 the&#13;
11th, as to whether Germany meant to&#13;
maintain a large military fjroe at&#13;
Shanghai, said the government understood&#13;
Germany intended to keep a garrison&#13;
there. No explanation had been&#13;
given by Germany as to why she had&#13;
concluded to follow this policy.&#13;
CUBA AND PHILIPPINE NEWS.&#13;
The Cuban constitutional convention&#13;
on the 12th accepted the Piatt amendment&#13;
by 16 to 10. The resolution to&#13;
accept was carried without discussion.&#13;
A committee to draw up the electorial&#13;
to run its lines, consumes enough coal l a w w i l l n o w b e appointed, and Cuban&#13;
to make it an object to figure on cheap&#13;
means for the transportation of its fueL&#13;
A rate war between the Pomeroy and&#13;
Everett-Moore syndicates may be inaugurateckjis&#13;
soon as the respective&#13;
Nor walk lines of the two syndicates&#13;
are in operation.&#13;
Bljr Army Scanri al fn 'Frtico.&#13;
Gen. Shafter and Col. Maus, inspector-&#13;
general of the department of California,&#13;
and the federal grand jury are&#13;
investigating the many reports of&#13;
fraud committed in the commissary&#13;
branch of the army service in San&#13;
Francisco. That the reports seem to&#13;
be based on something more substantial&#13;
than idle rumors is evidenced by&#13;
the disclosures following the arrest of&#13;
Lewis Abraham &amp; Sons, dealers in&#13;
second-hand clothins*. For months&#13;
past various stores about the city have&#13;
been exhibiting signs "government&#13;
goods for sale here," and advertisements&#13;
have even crowded into the&#13;
daily newspapers. x\s late as June 12&#13;
the following advertisement appeared:&#13;
"Wanted—1,00) men to wear government&#13;
shoes, ¢1 a pair."&#13;
r&#13;
P r e s i d e n t W o n ' t Seek T h i r d T e r m .&#13;
President McKinley on the 11th put&#13;
an effectual quietus on the third term&#13;
talk»which .has gained some currency&#13;
in the newspapers through interviews&#13;
with certain well-known Republicans&#13;
favoring the reoomiuation of the President&#13;
for a third term. Shortly before&#13;
the cabinet meeting adjourned on&#13;
the above date Secretary Cortelyou&#13;
gave to the press a signed statement&#13;
by the President intended for the&#13;
American people announcing that he&#13;
was not a candidate for a third term&#13;
and would not accept a reuomination&#13;
if one were tendered.&#13;
Negro Masons Dtaqaalifled.&#13;
The grand lodge of Masons has rescinded&#13;
the resolution adopted two&#13;
independence may soon be a fact.&#13;
Gen. Sumner has received notification&#13;
from Cailles, insurgent leader in&#13;
Laguna province, that unless the general&#13;
agrees to the Filipinos' terms,&#13;
which includes the gran ting of amnesty&#13;
to the insurgents, Cullies will not suriations&#13;
are to be considered&#13;
at an end.&#13;
Emilio Zurbano, of Tabayas, province,&#13;
has proclaimed himself the successor&#13;
of Aguinaldo and ' 'governor of&#13;
Tabayas and the Philippines," according&#13;
to a copy of a Manila paper just&#13;
received at the war department in&#13;
Washington. Emtio is said to have alwaysbeen&#13;
a rather theatrical insurrectionist&#13;
and to have sworn to fight&#13;
the Americans down to the last bolo.&#13;
The Philippine commission returned&#13;
to M mila on the 9th from the province&#13;
of Nueva Ecija, Luzon, having organized&#13;
a provincial government at San&#13;
Isidro, capital of the province, with&#13;
Capt. Jacob F* Krcps, of the 2'M infantry&#13;
as treasurer, and Lieut. Dewitt&#13;
C Lyles, of the same regiment, as supervisor.&#13;
Jud^e Taft told the people&#13;
that, if no power' were given to levy&#13;
customs the expenses of the central&#13;
government would ba provided by additional&#13;
internal taxes. He pointed&#13;
out also that, if the decision of the authorities&#13;
at Washington should result&#13;
in free trade with the U. S., opene&#13;
up such a market, the increase in la&#13;
values would enable the people to respond&#13;
to the increased interna^ ta-xes.&#13;
The northern tour of the commission&#13;
has been postponed.&#13;
As a result of losseXsustaioed in the&#13;
Jacksonville fire oire New York fire insurance&#13;
company^which has been operating&#13;
since 1^31 retired on the 12th&#13;
from active^business.&#13;
The Illinois, Indiana &amp; Iowa railroadxm&#13;
the 10th let a contract for the&#13;
jcjgognjzing Negro Masonry. [ c^^truc^tion of a bridge across the St.&#13;
The action of the lodge at that time,&#13;
says a Tacoma, Wash., dispatch, w a /&#13;
severely criticised, and as a result/the&#13;
next session attempted to return to&#13;
the established principle; but/ibe resolution&#13;
was so dra;vn that sister lodges&#13;
refused to construe it as an honest expressing.&#13;
/&#13;
oc river between S^L~X6^pnnsud~lien»-&#13;
ton Harbor, the contract calling for a&#13;
mammoth structure superior to anything&#13;
in that part of the state.&#13;
-&#13;
BASE BALL.&#13;
BRIEF N E W ^ PARAGRAPHS.&#13;
Seven deaths from heat were reported&#13;
at Chicago on the 13th.&#13;
The Philippine commission has&#13;
passed an act creating 14 judicial circuits.&#13;
It is reported that there are more&#13;
firemen in the U. S. than there are&#13;
soldiers.&#13;
Several persons were prostrated&#13;
from the heat in Chicago on the 12th,&#13;
two of whom may die.&#13;
Robert Williams Buchanan, novelist&#13;
and poet, nged GO, died at his home in&#13;
London, Eng., on the 0th.&#13;
Omaha courts upho'd the Nebraska&#13;
law prohibiting factories from working&#13;
female employes for more than GO&#13;
hours per week.&#13;
A baby was killed and several people&#13;
were badly injured by a tornado&#13;
near Leslcr, la., on the lith. MuDy&#13;
buildings were destroyed.&#13;
Chicago capitalists are "behind a&#13;
movement for the consolidation of all i Lowerf c&lt;;-.i,H?si..4 n.&#13;
Below we publish the standin7 of&#13;
the American and National league clubs&#13;
up to and iucludin? the games playci&#13;
on Sunday, June 115:&#13;
AMEKtC.VN LSAGTTE.&#13;
Won. Lost. P e r ct.&#13;
Chicago 23 15&#13;
.6»»&#13;
Detroit 25&#13;
r$os:oa 21&#13;
WasH;riKtou 1W&#13;
Baltimore 17&#13;
Pailadelpaia ]«»&#13;
Cleveland 15&#13;
Milwaukee r»&#13;
U&#13;
17&#13;
l i&#13;
li&gt;&#13;
2n&#13;
.5*3,&#13;
.«7J&#13;
.481&#13;
.37»&#13;
N A TI u N AI. L, V A ii U B.&#13;
Won.&#13;
Ptttsb':r,7..* 27&#13;
New York 2t&#13;
St, Louis 2:1&#13;
Piiilailelphia 22&#13;
Cincinnati 2)&#13;
Brooklyu 2J&#13;
Boston 10&#13;
Caieu;,-o 17&#13;
Los*.&#13;
18&#13;
I'j&#13;
20&#13;
2J&#13;
20&#13;
.HI&#13;
21 &gt;&#13;
29&#13;
; r c t ,&#13;
.63»&#13;
.5flH&#13;
.&amp;r&gt;&#13;
.521&#13;
.SOU&#13;
.470&#13;
.114&#13;
.37J&#13;
T H E MARKETS.&#13;
MVK vronx.&#13;
V«tT V o r ' c - i \ i ? t l " SLivrj&#13;
B e s i u r a o V s . . . .*.*&gt; &lt;&gt;&gt; ?J m&#13;
L o « v i - {.'raJ'js. i 7 &gt; &gt;i i&gt;.»&#13;
C h l o s i s - n -&#13;
D e s t &gt;rnuL*i 5 4) &gt;.fi J"&gt;&#13;
H m r v Loce* T w o Hour* A D a y .&#13;
For two hours out of the twentyfour&#13;
Duke Henry must play the second&#13;
fiddle. Queen Wilhelmina once remarked&#13;
that her husband should be&#13;
her loyal and obedient subject two&#13;
hours of the day, when she should be&#13;
devoted to the affairs of state, but&#13;
for the remainder of tha time&#13;
would be his devoted and obadlant&#13;
wife.&#13;
the coal mining compmies of Indiana.&#13;
A capital of S13,000,OOJ wiil be involved.&#13;
Tbe U. S. government hasf formally&#13;
communicated to the foreign powers&#13;
the impossibility of joining in a joint&#13;
guarantee for the payment of the&#13;
Chinese indemnity.&#13;
August M. Unger and F. Way land&#13;
Brown, on trial at Chicago for conspiracy&#13;
to defraud insurance companies&#13;
through the death of Miss Marie&#13;
Defenbach, were on the 10th found&#13;
guilty and sentenced to the penitentiary&#13;
under theindeierminate act,&#13;
The battleship Oregon arrived at&#13;
San Francisco late on the 12th from&#13;
tbe Orient Preparations had been&#13;
made to make the homecoming of the&#13;
-vi- "famous vessel a memorable one, but&#13;
they were anticipated by tbe arrival of&#13;
the veasel 84 hours earlier than she&#13;
was expected.&#13;
.,1&#13;
D e t r o i t -&#13;
Best uraUos n 8) V&gt;&#13;
Lower grades .2 7o M :»&#13;
H H . T A I O - -&#13;
Best tftti-le* 4 91 &gt;.:, 2»&#13;
Lower g r a d e s . . J 65£4 U0&#13;
C l n e l m * t l - -&#13;
IJcst grades. 5 2 ^ 1 ^ ft'&#13;
Lower KruJes..2 2 J ^ . 1 5&gt;&#13;
rntabnr*—&#13;
Best nrad?s. h 7 ) 1 6 9 )&#13;
Lower « r a U e s . 3 &amp; ) i i U&#13;
2 o»&#13;
4 SO&#13;
3 90&#13;
3 0U&#13;
3 S»&#13;
ass&#13;
3 a*&gt;&#13;
4 0J&#13;
L a * n h 5&#13;
*.» 7 J&#13;
6 00&#13;
&amp; D)&#13;
4 5)&#13;
6 00&#13;
o 50&#13;
5 cn&#13;
485&#13;
5 9 0&#13;
5 75&#13;
5 9 0&#13;
6 10&#13;
Ho«?«.&#13;
* i 4'.&#13;
6 r»&#13;
5 7.»&#13;
s v:-&gt;&#13;
5 7J&#13;
6 2*»&#13;
5 6 .&#13;
son&#13;
b &amp;&#13;
6 05&#13;
5 ftl&#13;
G R A I N . ETC.&#13;
Wtaeat Cora&#13;
N o . 2 r e J No. 2 mix&#13;
N e w York&#13;
Chicago&#13;
•Detroit&#13;
Toledo&#13;
Cincinnati&#13;
P l t t o b a r j&#13;
IhtfftUo&#13;
77a77&#13;
70370¾&#13;
7227S&gt;i&#13;
7»371't&#13;
74JT4 4&#13;
74 $ 7 4 *&#13;
47^47¾&#13;
42 $ 4 2 *&#13;
4334S&#13;
43^43^&#13;
44344H&#13;
4&amp;34&amp;&#13;
44^44&#13;
Oat*&#13;
No. 2 w&amp;its&#13;
3 2 3 3 2 *&#13;
STtftCT*&#13;
atitt&#13;
•Detroit—Hay. No. 1 Timothy. 113 93 per toe.&#13;
Potatoes. 60o per bo. Live Poultry, sprta*&#13;
ehiekeaa, Mto per S&gt;; fowK »*o; turkey*, to; .&#13;
dock*. 10c Eg** atrictiy free*. ISS per doss*. .&#13;
Butter, best dairy, tto par »; e m e e i j , lie.&#13;
\&#13;
4':&#13;
•T*£&#13;
i"&#13;
•• • • . ' , - \&#13;
:#&amp;. vp**\&#13;
0-&#13;
Y f&#13;
! • ' •&#13;
r&#13;
*... ....&#13;
• 0 * .•-&#13;
&gt; "• • •••&gt;••'•• • • * • i ! , &gt; ; . . * . &gt;rS:.-^v.:*.! " ' . - . ' • &gt;&#13;
•v"r•'v • , ••» ••'IT.''" r • IJV v..* P.* *.'^; /if' u**.v ^ ^. w \ • ;«.. '•&lt;• T : ;*iV-&#13;
« ^ ,&lt;.j-v».".r&#13;
* v ' " h ' ; ^ : ' ' -•'••&gt;'•;••.'•' . v / . ' . v&#13;
:.#&gt;.&#13;
' # * •&#13;
^&#13;
^.,&gt;i,i^.vi'&#13;
PETTYSVILLE.&#13;
School closed Friday.&#13;
Iva Placeway visited her uncle&#13;
Geo. Wright last week.&#13;
J. W. Placeway is in Forest&#13;
Rill* Gratiot county this week.&#13;
Business is improving at Lakeland&#13;
a campers are coming by the&#13;
score.&#13;
Mrs. G. P. Lambertson entertained&#13;
her father from Greenville&#13;
last week.&#13;
v Mrs. 0. S. Gardner entertained&#13;
' Mrs. E. L. Schneider and family&#13;
of Ann Arbor.&#13;
P. W. Coniway and wife visited&#13;
relatsves near Fowlerville the&#13;
last of last week. *&#13;
Mrs. Charles Boroughs is sick&#13;
at the home of her parents Wm.&#13;
Peters and wife of this place.&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
PLAINFIEta&#13;
Joseph Wright died Tuesday&#13;
night. ,&#13;
Sam Mapes of Chelsea spent&#13;
Sunday with his people.&#13;
Wm. Lorgeueckers new barn is&#13;
complete! and is a fine one.&#13;
Fannie Hunt will close her&#13;
spring term here this week.&#13;
The acreage of beans in this&#13;
section will be very large this&#13;
year.&#13;
Some of our farmers are experimenting&#13;
with beardless barley on&#13;
a limited scale.&#13;
Several of our people attended&#13;
childreus day exercises at Iosco&#13;
Sunday morning.&#13;
Lottie Walker will close a successful&#13;
term of School in the&#13;
Mapes district Friday.&#13;
Mrs. F. W. Cleveland and W.&#13;
N. Lister who has ben visiting at&#13;
R. J. Gardner's drove through to&#13;
their home at Ypsilanti Friday.&#13;
A month ago a field of wheat&#13;
on the H. Mapes farm promised&#13;
iMrs. 0 . W. Haze is having a wa^on&#13;
shed rebuilt.&#13;
Paul Curlett of Dexter U visiting&#13;
friends and relatives here this week.&#13;
Mrs. M. Monks and daughter, Mrs.&#13;
Wm. Movan, were in Howell Monday.&#13;
Mr*. D#H Swan, of Detroit k the&#13;
wruest of Mrs Flora Grimes and other&#13;
relatives.&#13;
Mrs. S. Grimes is in Howell attending&#13;
commencment exercises and visit*&#13;
ing friends.&#13;
Miss Eva Smith ot Roots is the&#13;
gue*t of her friend Miss Hazel Vaughn&#13;
ot this place.&#13;
/ A n d r e w Murphyis home from i a good crop. Four weeks ago it&#13;
Jackson. was discovered to be all chess.&#13;
H. B. Gardner was in Ann Arbor&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
Clifford Tripp was home from&#13;
Iosco over Sunday.&#13;
Cyrus Gardner is home from&#13;
the U. of M. for vacation.&#13;
Mabel Tripp of Detroit is spending&#13;
a couple of weeks with her&#13;
mother here.&#13;
Lawrence Spears of Ann Arbor&#13;
visited his sister Mrs. Wm. Dqyle&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Mrs. Wm- Kennedy and Bon&#13;
Charley of Stockbridge visited at&#13;
James Doyle's the first of the&#13;
week.&#13;
ANDERSON&#13;
Win. Sprout and wife were in&#13;
Howell Monday.&#13;
Kemember the social at Sam'l&#13;
Placeway's Friday night.&#13;
Frank Hoff and Floyd Randall&#13;
oTXanstn^: spent Sunday here.&#13;
Dillivan Durkoe closed his&#13;
school in Unadilla Saturday last.&#13;
Mrs. Seth Perry and Edith&#13;
Wood visited Mrs- Hoff in Iosco&#13;
"Thursday:&#13;
I t will soon be beans.&#13;
Children's day was observed&#13;
here Sunday evening at the M. P.&#13;
ch urch which was tastefully arranged&#13;
for the occasion. The&#13;
choir rendered some fine selections&#13;
and the children did well indeed&#13;
and Eoy Mapes and Miss Eussel&#13;
of Steckbridge favored us with a&#13;
sony;. The church could not&#13;
hold the crowd.&#13;
STILL MORE LOCAL.&#13;
Mrs. W. A. Carr is visiting in Detroit.&#13;
Miller Beurman, of Howell was in&#13;
town Monday.&#13;
The sidewalk gang will finish their&#13;
^ork here this week.&#13;
Commuuion will he olserved at the&#13;
ConjTl church June 30.&#13;
R. H. Ei win is in Buffalo taking in&#13;
the scenes at the I'an-American.&#13;
Leah Thompson of Duran-i is visiting&#13;
schoolmates and relatives here.&#13;
Wm. Going cut the hay on the park&#13;
t h n week. Tiie price paid was $2.75.&#13;
Miss Kate Farnum of Detroit spent&#13;
Sunday and Monday with her mother&#13;
irerBT&#13;
Kittis Hoff of Lansing visited&#13;
her parents in tliis place the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
Mrs. E. J. Durkee and daughters&#13;
Nora and Ethel were in&#13;
Stockbridge Tuesday.&#13;
"UNADILLA.&#13;
Bessie Lane is spending this&#13;
week at home.&#13;
Born to Harrison Hadley and&#13;
wife Sunday June 16 a girl.&#13;
Elmer Barton is visiting relatives&#13;
iu Luther Lake County.&#13;
C. P. Sykes of Pinckney transacted&#13;
business in town Monday.&#13;
2Jel Hartsuff, wife and familyvisited&#13;
Z. A. Hartsuffs Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Cora Marshall and daughter&#13;
Inez spent Sunday in Chelsea.&#13;
F. L. Andiews and wife of&#13;
Pinckney visited at Wm. Pyper's&#13;
Saturday last.&#13;
Ed Joslin, wife and family and&#13;
Herbert Lane spent Sunday at&#13;
Watson Lane's.&#13;
Dillivan Durkee closed a successful!&#13;
term of school at this&#13;
place last Saturday.&#13;
Rev. Powers will preach in the&#13;
Presbyterian church next Sunday&#13;
June 23 at 2:30 p. m.&#13;
, Lyman Hadley visited his lather&#13;
at the home of Andrew Boyce's&#13;
of Waterloo last Saturday. Mr.&#13;
Hadley is very sick with but little&#13;
hopes of recovery.&#13;
The Unadilla Farmers' Club&#13;
that m^t at Fred Marshall's last&#13;
Saturday was largely attended and&#13;
a good time wasbth'e report The&#13;
next mwting will be at George E.&#13;
lUrihairs Saturday. « r t T '£*•&#13;
• •'/• K •&#13;
J. T. Eaman and wife of Detroit are&#13;
guests of old friends here and at Anderson.&#13;
Mrs. B. K. Pierce of Uhesaning is&#13;
the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
, ? . A. Sigler.&#13;
F. D. Johnson has about 70 acres of&#13;
beans planted on his farm just north&#13;
of the Ry. track.&#13;
Dr. and Mrs. H. F. Sigler attended&#13;
the McMahon-Haker wedding at&#13;
Dearborn, Tuesday .&#13;
E. J. Bricrgs was laid up with tonso&#13;
litis the first, of the week. H. D.&#13;
Grieve run the dray for him.&#13;
Mrs. Gen. E. ii. Lvons ot Davton&#13;
Ohio, the guest of Mrs. Gartrell of&#13;
Hamburg called at the Cong'l Parsonage&#13;
Saturday.&#13;
The citizens of Howell now travel&#13;
in darkness, as the Electric Light Co.&#13;
of that place have refused to turnish&#13;
any more light.&#13;
Promotional exercises at tbe High&#13;
School building this afternoon to&#13;
which all patrons of the district and&#13;
others are invited.&#13;
R. G. Webb placed on cur desk&#13;
Wednesday a full quart of strawberries&#13;
which contained only 32 berries,&#13;
one of which measured 6J by 7.&#13;
Strawberries are plenty on the&#13;
market this week and are selling for&#13;
5 and 6 cents per quart. No one&#13;
ougjit to want for short-cake at that&#13;
price.&#13;
A short write-up of the Anderson&#13;
Club meeting was banded us too late&#13;
for last week so we use it this. Please&#13;
remember that we go to press Wednesday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
The council held a special ireeting&#13;
Friday night accepting the bond* of&#13;
Mr. ivlinms aiul.-jnv.ai-ding him tbe&#13;
contract of building the Keason-Cad&#13;
well sidewalk—16 rods, ,&#13;
THE HOME MARKET IDEA.&#13;
F e e d i n g C r o p s o n t h e F a r m — F r o s e n&#13;
U ' l i e u t V u l u a n l e F o r S t o c k .&#13;
It l • • seemed to the Utah station&#13;
that A*. icrs who are engaged in the&#13;
prodL^jii of hay and grain might,&#13;
with advantage, add lamb feeding to&#13;
their work. This would afford a home&#13;
market for the products of the farm,&#13;
assist iu maintaining the fertility of&#13;
the soil and would give profitable em-&#13;
Mortimer Gilbert and niece of Jack-1 ployment during the winter months,&#13;
son were guests of M. Nash and family during the summer of 1809 a heavy&#13;
. , i frost injured a considerable quantity&#13;
the past week. Q{ f a l l w n e a t throughout the state. In&#13;
S. G. Kime and family of Brecken-' an experiment by the station frosted&#13;
ridge, Gratiot Co. visited among the&#13;
Clark families the past week.&#13;
It pays to advertise. The boiler advertised&#13;
last week was returned to&#13;
Mrs. Luram Saturday evening.&#13;
The Misses Annie and Florence Do-&#13;
Ian of Jackson are spending a short&#13;
vacation under the parental roof.&#13;
Mrs. Flora Snyder and daughter of&#13;
Horton visited her parents Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. A. B. Green a t t h i s p i ace the pas t '&#13;
week.&#13;
The children's day exercises at the&#13;
M. E. church Sundav morning were&#13;
largely attended and were very interesting.&#13;
RACE USED IN FEEDING SHEEP.&#13;
wheat was fed to one set of lambs,&#13;
good wheat, to another, ami the remaining&#13;
two sets received mill screenings.&#13;
No, 1 screenings is that which conies&#13;
from the elevator first, and this con-&#13;
Mrs. C. W. Rice and daughter are! tains clover seeds, alfalfa seeu* and&#13;
spending several weeks with her&#13;
mother and other relatives in southern&#13;
Ohio.&#13;
The hay on the race track will be sold&#13;
at auction to the highist bidder next&#13;
Saturday at 6 o'clock in the atternoon&#13;
J u n e 22. W. H. HARRIS, Sec&#13;
H. Swartbont and E.Campbell are&#13;
now having cement walk in front of i wheat set.&#13;
the seeds from weeds of various kinds,&#13;
while No. 2 screenings is made up&#13;
mostly of cracked, broken and shrunken&#13;
wheat.&#13;
The roughage used in the experiment&#13;
was the same in all of the sets—a good&#13;
quality of alfalfa hay. 0&#13;
The sets on both grades of screenings&#13;
made better gains than that on_iJpod&#13;
"wheat and one of them better and the&#13;
other almost as good as the frozen&#13;
their stores. If it could be put in&#13;
front of the Clark store and the lank&#13;
it would make a nice addition to the&#13;
looks of the buildings. The next good&#13;
move for the council to make would&#13;
be to remove'all hitching posts in&#13;
front of tbe stores and put them on&#13;
Taking into account both the rate and&#13;
the cost of the gains, the results of&#13;
this experiment indicate that it is&#13;
more profitable to feed screenings than&#13;
either good or frosted wheat.&#13;
The frozen wheat used in this experiment&#13;
was of medium grade, neither&#13;
the highest nor the lowest, and it&#13;
gave better returns in rate of gain than&#13;
the opposite side ot tbe street, next to • wheat of good milling quality. This&#13;
result ngrees with that obtainable at&#13;
the Canadian experiment station, where&#13;
it is often found necessary to dispose&#13;
of large quantities of frozen wheat.&#13;
From the standpoint of composition&#13;
taken as a whole, the better grade of&#13;
frozen wheat ranks little inferior for&#13;
stock feeding to that fully ripened,&#13;
The composition of both kinds of&#13;
screenings shows a high feeding value,&#13;
though the large percentage of crude&#13;
fiber indicates that they are less digestible&#13;
than any of the wheats.&#13;
the park. They are so in other villages,&#13;
why not here?&#13;
The Military company was organiz&#13;
ed last week and we notice the following&#13;
officers who are quite well known&#13;
here and insure the success? of the company:&#13;
President—II. P . Finley.&#13;
Vice President—Richard D.&#13;
Secretary—Neil Edgar.&#13;
—Treasurer—Will is-4xt-L-yetre •-&#13;
Koch e.&#13;
Miss Mame Brady closed a very sue&#13;
cessfull term of school in Districf No.&#13;
1 with appropriate exercises. Ice&#13;
cream and cake was served alter the&#13;
exercises,&#13;
F rec Rural Delivery.&#13;
On -frmr&#13;
[ am pleased to inform the patrons&#13;
along the routes that the r\ It. D. Nos.&#13;
1 and 2 are ordered by the postal department&#13;
to start from Pinckney July&#13;
1,1901. All who have no: already&#13;
done so, will be required to put up a&#13;
regulation box which must be uniform&#13;
on the route, a sample of which can&#13;
be seen at the post office. The boxes&#13;
shouUi be up as soon as Junp 28 so&#13;
the carriers can go over the line and&#13;
make a record of them.&#13;
W . S . SWARTHOUT, P . M.&#13;
Pinckney, June 19, 1901.&#13;
A S e n s i b l e Q u e r y .&#13;
Mr. Ashmead-Bartlett once told a&#13;
good story about his going to Irefand&#13;
for the first time. "As soon as I landed&#13;
in Ireland I attempted to look for&#13;
traces of some of my ancestors, who"&#13;
came from the extreme north of Ireland.&#13;
Meeting an intelligent looking&#13;
Irishman, i Informed him of u mission,&#13;
saying that my ancestors emigrated&#13;
from about fbat spot 10() years ago,&#13;
and I was there trying to look them up.&#13;
He answered: "Ye say your ancestors&#13;
emigrated from our town about 100&#13;
years ago? Thin why are ye looking&#13;
for them here?"—London Tit-Bits.&#13;
account of the numeroTis&#13;
seeds the first screenings contain, they&#13;
will give better results fed to sheep&#13;
than to cattle and pigs.&#13;
In Manitoba and other portions of&#13;
Canada, where there are frequently&#13;
large quantities of frozen wheat, it has&#13;
been tested, ground and soaked for 12&#13;
hours before use. One hundred pounds&#13;
of frozen wheat were found equal to&#13;
7f&gt;l pounds of skimmilk in increasing&#13;
the live weight of pigs. The pork was&#13;
considered excellent, much superior to&#13;
that of hogs fed on peas alone. The&#13;
quality of beef from steers fed on frozen&#13;
wheat was pronounced to be particularly&#13;
excellent by the butchers and&#13;
by the members of eight different&#13;
households who examined it critically&#13;
wheo served as roast beef.&#13;
Tbe various feeding trials indicate&#13;
frozen wheat to be practically equal&#13;
to a mixture of wheat, oats and barley&#13;
for hog feeding and to stand very high&#13;
as a concentrated food for fattening&#13;
cattle.&#13;
A T a s k .&#13;
To be honest, to be kind, to earn a&#13;
little and to spend less, to make, upon&#13;
the whole, a family happier by his&#13;
presence, to renounce where that shall&#13;
be necessary and not to be Imbluered,&#13;
to keep a few friends, but these without&#13;
capitulation; above all, on tbe same&#13;
grim conditions to keep friends with&#13;
himself—here is a task for all that a&#13;
man has of fortitude and delicacy.—&#13;
Robert Louis 8tevensou.&#13;
WHEN TO IRRIGATE.&#13;
E v e r y I r r i g a t o r S h o u l d F e e l A r o f t s d&#13;
a n d F i n d Out F o r H i m s e l f .&#13;
The question when to irrigate is&#13;
so closely related to the water supply&#13;
and its consumption that it merits&#13;
careful consideration. The time to Irrigate&#13;
depends largely on the crop, the&#13;
weather conditions and the soil. Over&#13;
I large part of Wyoming, where meadows&#13;
are Irrigated for the production&#13;
of hay, it is the common practice to&#13;
turn the water on the land just as&#13;
early in the spring as it can be run&#13;
through the ditches. Ordinarily the&#13;
water is placed on the meadows about&#13;
the middle of April and runs continuously&#13;
until about the middle at July,&#13;
being turned off only long enough before&#13;
mowing to allow the laud to dry&#13;
out so the water will not Interfere&#13;
with the work of haymaking. This&#13;
time varies in different places from&#13;
one day to two weeks before mowing&#13;
begins. One farmer has stated that&#13;
he turns the wnter off his meadows&#13;
the day before he begins to cut the&#13;
grass and depends upon the land drying&#13;
rapidly enough so the moisture will&#13;
not interfere with curing the hay, and&#13;
another -explained that he had obtained&#13;
a mowing machine which would cut&#13;
risht along under sis Inches of water.&#13;
Various reasons, are given for turning&#13;
the water on the meadows as early&#13;
as possible. A ranchman who raises&#13;
excellent crops of hay on the Laramie&#13;
plains states that the water draws the&#13;
frost out of the soil, softening the land&#13;
so the grass can make an early start&#13;
and produce larger growth than where&#13;
naturally held back by the cold weather.&#13;
Another ranchman near Laramie&#13;
says: "Where the soil is covered with&#13;
alkali, and practically all the land here&#13;
is alkali land, the white incrustations&#13;
of salts interfere with the growth of&#13;
grass and keep the land cold by reflecting&#13;
the sun's rays. If the water&#13;
can be run over the land enough te&#13;
wash off the alkali or dissolve it and&#13;
carry it Into the soil, the grass thickens&#13;
up and makes a good crop." Whatever&#13;
the reason, it is evident that the&#13;
ranchmen of Wyoming, as a rule, believe&#13;
In irrigating native hay land as&#13;
early and as long as possible, and all&#13;
use the most water when the largest&#13;
amounts can be obtained from our&#13;
streams, which Is during* May and&#13;
June.&#13;
The time to Irrigate cultivated crops&#13;
cannot be definitely stated. Absolutely&#13;
no working rule has been discovered.&#13;
Up to the present time farmeis&#13;
have generally applied water through&#13;
judgment born of long experience&#13;
rather than through an intelligent conception&#13;
of the needs of the plant. Often&#13;
the one who irrigates cannot explain&#13;
clearly how he knows his cr^p is&#13;
in need of water. To the uninitiated&#13;
t h e ei»op may- be api»vrently thriving&#13;
and the need of water seemingly remote&#13;
when the farmer turns on a&#13;
head of water and does not rest day or&#13;
night till all his land has been watered.&#13;
Evidence of his correct judgment&#13;
is forthcoming in the large yields&#13;
which fill his granaries and root cellars.&#13;
Some say that plants do not&#13;
need irrigating until they show signs&#13;
of wilting, but for most plants this&#13;
would be waiting too long. The crop&#13;
would never fully recover its strength&#13;
and vigor. This rule may be applied&#13;
to corn, however, which is ordinarily&#13;
said not to be suffering so long as the&#13;
wilted leaves straighten out at night&#13;
Some farmers will "Inform you that&#13;
they discover when water is needed by&#13;
the color of the plant, but this is not&#13;
an altogether safe guide, for color is&#13;
influenced by so many other conditions&#13;
that it cannot be relied upon as&#13;
an index to the need of water. More&#13;
intelligent fanners will probably explain&#13;
that they have examined their&#13;
soil and know from experience that&#13;
when it reaches a certain condition of&#13;
dryness their crops will soon suffer&#13;
unless water is supplied. Dr. Hllgard&#13;
of the California experiment station&#13;
states that this questioning of the soil&#13;
is the only accurate way to tell when&#13;
irrigating should be done.—B. C. Bufferm.&#13;
D e s t r o y i n g OrsUMk*p«ters.&#13;
By all odds the best method for destroying&#13;
grasshoppers after they become&#13;
half grown Is the use of the&#13;
"hopper dozer," or kerosene pan, which&#13;
is shown herewith. This is made of&#13;
stovepipe iron by turning up the sides&#13;
ami ends about four-inches so as to&#13;
make a long, Hat pan about four inches&#13;
Ui depth. This is then mounted on&#13;
runners varying in height according to"&#13;
requirements. On the frame back of&#13;
the pan is stretched a piece of cloth&#13;
to prevent the insects from jumping&#13;
over the pan. Wlun ready to begin&#13;
work, the pan is partially filled with&#13;
A HOPPER DOZER.&#13;
water, and some coal oil Is added. If&#13;
the ground is level, no crosspieces are&#13;
necessary, but,if the pan is to be used&#13;
on sloping ground it should be made&#13;
as indicated In the illustration to prevent&#13;
the oil and wnter from running&#13;
to one end. The height of the runners&#13;
will necessarily vary from two to&#13;
eight or ten inches, according to the&#13;
crop to be protected and the age of&#13;
the insects to be captured. The machine&#13;
may be of any length desired up&#13;
lo 10 or 18 feet. If small. It can be&#13;
ilrawn by hand, but when larger a&#13;
horse or two is desirable. When full,&#13;
the insects can be removed, a little&#13;
more oil added and the machine started&#13;
afresh. l a this way a number of&#13;
bushels of hoppers can be captured&#13;
and destroyed in a single day. The&#13;
cost of running this machine is trifling&#13;
and the remedy very effectual.—Nebraska&#13;
Fanner.&#13;
The Riches of Irrigation Water.&#13;
The experience of centuries in various&#13;
countries shows that irrigation water&#13;
Is often superior to rainwater iu&#13;
that it carries greater quantities of&#13;
plant food, Pond and stream waters&#13;
in humid regions are often rich In nitrates,&#13;
which are the most costly and&#13;
stimulating fertilizers. The surface&#13;
waters of the arid regions are also notably&#13;
rich in potash and other valuable&#13;
Ingredients. No doubt in many instances&#13;
Irrigation water, except that&#13;
which comes from wells, Is worth in&#13;
manurial content as much as It costs to&#13;
secure H, leaving Its more obvious benefits&#13;
a net gain to the irrigators.&#13;
« *&#13;
* *r' WMmxn.mnrv. «-*-«I,&gt;&gt;M •» wr^jmiHWiinw-c "•**&gt; rtwrmnm-: i ^ « i i d L ^ _&#13;
IVh^'^'rw.^^t'flaWrjBrw »"^.5'Uw»1«w&gt;W.«v'-, r,i&lt;wj^,r, '»?,*&lt;\*W,'«MWnBt W ( 'mi**</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="36756">
              <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="6929">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch June 20, 1901</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6930">
                <text>June 20, 1901 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="6931">
                <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="6932">
                <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="6933">
                <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="6934">
                <text>1901-06-20</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6935">
                <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="1001" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="929">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/b566c82eae3069b70f26fa86a47481cd.pdf</src>
        <authentication>8e9bb3ab467c20936cb2768286dd5daf</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="32315">
              <text>VOli. XIX. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON 00., MICH., THURSDAY, JUNE. 27. J90I: Norses&#13;
TWENTIETH CENTURY CLASS.&#13;
Received Their Diplomas Last&#13;
Wednesday Evening.&#13;
The exercises last Wednesday evening&#13;
which gave diplomas to three&#13;
more graduates oi the P. H. 8., were&#13;
in every way op to the high mark and&#13;
every one present enjoyed the entertainment.&#13;
A little change was made in the usual&#13;
order of tbings and an address&#13;
given by Prof. Barbour of tbe State&#13;
Normal of Ypsilanti which was an excellent&#13;
addition to to tbe exercises.&#13;
Prot. Barbour spoke tor only about&#13;
40 minutes but tbe audience, who had&#13;
been sitting there for nearly two&#13;
hours, would willing have listened to&#13;
bimM long again. Should he ever&#13;
visit this village in tbe future we bespeak&#13;
for him a crowded bouse.&#13;
The members ot tbe class did their&#13;
work finely aud tbe patrons of tbe&#13;
school bave every reason to be proud&#13;
ef the new graduates. -All entered&#13;
the school in '98, all coming in from&#13;
the country. Though at times it&#13;
seemed as if they mast give up, they&#13;
perserved and to day have their reward.&#13;
Music was furnished by Messrs. H.&#13;
Isham, F. Bowers and Miss Kate Ruen&#13;
which was highly appreciated.&#13;
Prot. Dnrfee in his presenation of&#13;
Diplomas, made several excellent&#13;
points which should be studied by the&#13;
eitizens of Pinckney especially those&#13;
who have children and young people&#13;
in the school. Too many d rop out before&#13;
finishing the work while those&#13;
from tbe farm stick through and bear&#13;
the honors. His remarks to tbe graduates&#13;
were also very appropriate and&#13;
they will do well to heed his advice.&#13;
Altogether, while tbe crowd was&#13;
not as large as heretofore, tbe entertainment&#13;
was just as good, evervone&#13;
present enjoyed it.&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
bEPARTMENT&#13;
LOCAL NEWS. I&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
STORE&#13;
HOWELL.&#13;
Mammocks&#13;
Croquet Sets&#13;
rron Express Wagons&#13;
Fire Works.&#13;
Be*t Glass Jelly Tumblers&#13;
full half-pint slae,&#13;
20c perdoz,&#13;
We give cash coupons with&#13;
every purchase. Beautifull gifts&#13;
given fr*e with $2 in trade. ,&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
Next to Post O f f i c e .&#13;
Mail orders&#13;
Carefully ailed.&#13;
Haying has commenced in many&#13;
places.&#13;
Irwin Monks is visiting relatives in&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Mann is having her&#13;
house repainted.&#13;
Geo. Reason put tar on the roof of&#13;
his store, Saturday.&#13;
Carrie Erwin entertained Georgia&#13;
Gardner one day last week.&#13;
Dr. R. F. Erwin of Alma spent last&#13;
Thursday with bis parents here.&#13;
Amos Winager and wife of Howell&#13;
visited their daughter Mrs. Geo.&#13;
Green.&#13;
S. D. Williams of Battle Creek was&#13;
the guest of Prof. Stephen Durfee the&#13;
past week.&#13;
Henry Sawyer and wife and Mrs.&#13;
Lucinda Peterson of Brighton visited&#13;
at H. G. Briggs Monday.&#13;
jdae Teeple and Norma Vaughn visisted&#13;
their music teaqher, Miss Wright&#13;
of Stockbridge Saturday.&#13;
Belle Kennedy of Ypsilanti is home&#13;
for vacation. She has been elected to&#13;
return to teach tbe same department&#13;
next year. *&#13;
The average small boy is full nf&#13;
pent up, celebration—the fourth will&#13;
soon be here.&#13;
Mrs, F. L. Andrews spent Thursday&#13;
and Friday last with her niece, Miss&#13;
Maude Cole, at Ypsilanti.&#13;
Tbe state encampment will open at&#13;
Muskegon, August 5, and continue&#13;
ten days. There will be no canteen&#13;
this year.&#13;
St. Mary's church will serve Ice&#13;
cream and cake at tbe opera bouse on&#13;
Saturday evening June 29. Everybody&#13;
invited.&#13;
Frank Erwin of Alma was tbe guest&#13;
of his parents here the past week.&#13;
Frank is tbe only veterinary in that&#13;
thriving villager&#13;
Next Monday routes one and two&#13;
RFD will start from this placer-Frank&#13;
Newman has route 1 which starts east&#13;
and Goodie Dinkle route 2, west.&#13;
~~0n Thursday Tap£7"-Frank BoTt7&#13;
teamster tor Mr. Minnis, drew a load&#13;
of sandout of the pit at McUluskey's&#13;
to the village which weighed 7,100.&#13;
The Lock wood hotel in Fowlerville&#13;
which was burned last winter will be&#13;
rebuilt this season as the contract has&#13;
been let—it will cost 113,000 or $14,-&#13;
000.&#13;
Word was reaeived here last week&#13;
that J. L. Roche's Green Wilson won&#13;
the first race he entered this season at&#13;
Rockport Ohio, on Wednesday. Time&#13;
2:184-2:184-2:19$.&#13;
The masonic memorial services at tbe&#13;
opera bouse Sunday afternoon were&#13;
very largely attended. People were&#13;
preaent from Howell, Unadilla, Gregory&#13;
and Plainfield. Rev. H. W. Hicks&#13;
delivered a very forceful address.&#13;
OBITUARY.&#13;
Charles Edward BulIU was born in&#13;
Columbia Co. New York. Aug. 20«&#13;
182S and died at his home in Unadilla&#13;
Livingston Co. Mich., June 23 1901 at&#13;
the age of 72 years 10 months and 3&#13;
days.&#13;
He came with bis parents to Michigan&#13;
when eight years old, settling&#13;
near Ann Arbor, where the family re*&#13;
mained two vears. At the end of&#13;
m&#13;
that time they removed to Unadilla&#13;
taking up the present homestead from&#13;
the territorial government in 1837.&#13;
Here the deceased lived and grew to&#13;
manhood an eye-witness to the develment&#13;
of his adopted home. He saw&#13;
the territory become a state. Towns&#13;
sprang up on every side and railroads&#13;
stretched t eir glistening iengtb&#13;
through tbe forest and the settlers&#13;
clearing w^tle he steadily followed&#13;
his chosen calling at the Unadilla&#13;
homestead.&#13;
He married Jane Carr in 1850, and&#13;
in 1851 they suffeied the loss of an&#13;
infant daughter. •&#13;
During the trying times of the&#13;
Civil War he struggled manfully to&#13;
provide for his family and keep tbe&#13;
home together. But even tbe most&#13;
obstinate obstacles will yield to persistent&#13;
effort and the deceased was&#13;
never found lacking in it. He was a&#13;
man of strongly marked characters&#13;
tics; of unflinching determination,and&#13;
never knew 6uch a word as fail. His&#13;
long residence in the township gave&#13;
hHn an extensive acquaintance and bis&#13;
sterling character secured the lasting&#13;
friendship of those who knew him,&#13;
He leaves a wife and six living&#13;
cbildren.—Four daughters, Sarah R.,&#13;
who married Albert Wilson; Carlia A.&#13;
wile of Milton Wasson; Mary E. now&#13;
Mrs. Arthur Montague; Lillian J.&#13;
wife of Frank Montague;—two sons&#13;
Chas. E. and Geo. 1).&#13;
The tuneral was held from his late&#13;
residence Tuesday afternoon, Rev.&#13;
Beatty officiating.&#13;
The&#13;
should&#13;
school board.&#13;
An Object Lesson.&#13;
list of Graduates this vear&#13;
be an object lesson to the&#13;
The three graduates&#13;
Notice! To&#13;
Parmers&#13;
of the&#13;
20th Century.&#13;
Empire Drill agency for 1901 has been secured by u&amp;&#13;
and we wish to call your attention to a few of the new&#13;
features of this Drill, as well as sowing all kinds of grain it&#13;
will plant Sugar Beets four rows 21 inches apart, will plant&#13;
corn two rows 2&gt;% feet apart, Beans three rows 28 inches&#13;
apart, or if desired the rows may be made closer together&#13;
or farther apart by simply closing a shut-off slide on inside&#13;
of box. Come and examine the Drill and you will be&#13;
convinced that it is the best Drill on earth.&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE i CIOWELL&#13;
were all out of the district brought in&#13;
by tbe school catalogues issued several&#13;
years ago. This tuition alone more&#13;
than paid tor tbe entire lot of catalogues&#13;
so it was a good investment.&#13;
The next class, will be composed of&#13;
rive members at least and only one of&#13;
them belongs to the district, alt&#13;
brought in by tbe advertising tbe&#13;
school has received.&#13;
This is tbe only school arouud that&#13;
,does not issu* a catalogue every year&#13;
besides doing considerable other aivertising.&#13;
Would it not be a good&#13;
plan to work for more foreiga scholars&#13;
as well as try and interest more&#13;
home pupils?&#13;
There were during the last year&#13;
sixteen foreign pupils whose toition&#13;
amounted to about $15 each and it&#13;
did not cost the district a dollar more&#13;
tban it would without them so there&#13;
was the gain. A goodly number of&#13;
catalogues well circulated—not boarded&#13;
up—will not only increase the attendance&#13;
upon the school but tend to&#13;
reduce the school tax.&#13;
Two or tbree loads of ladies went to&#13;
Howell Satarday last for a ride and&#13;
took dinner at the hotel. They bad a&#13;
fine time.&#13;
A good many of onr patrons will&#13;
receive their next issue of the DISPATCH&#13;
by RFD as the carriers start&#13;
Monday nexfc.&#13;
Alfred Dnrfee and Son of Colo.,&#13;
Will Dnrfee and Miss Blanche Hook&#13;
of Fowlerville were guests of Stephen&#13;
Durtee and family the past week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Morgan and&#13;
Sirs. N. S. Burgess will give an ice&#13;
cream social at their home on Friday&#13;
evening June 28. A cordial invitation&#13;
is extended.&#13;
Mrs. Bertha Mann returned home&#13;
from Detroit Tuesday, having received&#13;
a certificate from tbe school of&#13;
pharmacy, also one from the state.&#13;
Bertha has put in some hard weeks of&#13;
work and after a years practice under&#13;
a registered phamacist, which is required&#13;
of all who wish to follow this&#13;
branch of work, will give her a diploma&#13;
as registered pharmacist.&#13;
Gradnation Notes.&#13;
Prof. Barbour is teacher of English&#13;
in the State Normal. Certainly he&#13;
would seem to be "tbe right man in&#13;
the right place." He is a thoroughly&#13;
cultured, refined man and knows bow&#13;
to tell what be knows in an interastmg&#13;
manner.&#13;
The three graduates who received&#13;
their diplomas Wednesday, paid into&#13;
tbe treasury of the district |135. Tbe&#13;
only expense the district was to was&#13;
for their diplomas.&#13;
The house was not as crowded as&#13;
usual for every beat was not -fiHed-.-&#13;
Receipts at the door, |27.&#13;
Had the orchestra been on time as&#13;
well as their music was, the exercises&#13;
could have commenced a half hour&#13;
earlier.&#13;
Everyone eijoyed tbe change from&#13;
a $25 orchestra which has heretofore&#13;
been engaged to our own music and&#13;
th« extra money put in a good lecture&#13;
Want Column*&#13;
Strawberries, raspberries and other&#13;
small fruit on subscription at this&#13;
oflBce.&#13;
Notice to Taxpayers.&#13;
The village tax-roll is now in my&#13;
band3 and all taxes must be paid not.&#13;
later tban August 15,1901.&#13;
t-28 J. A. CADWELL, Treasurer.&#13;
Notice.&#13;
Pinckney, May 27.1901.&#13;
To the patrons of the Pettysville&#13;
postoffice in the county of Livingston&#13;
State of Michigan, notice is hereby&#13;
given that the post oflfrce at Pettysville&#13;
has this day, May 17, been discontinued&#13;
by order of Postmaster&#13;
General. Said discontinuance to take&#13;
effect June 29 1901. Thereafter delivery&#13;
will oe opened at the post office&#13;
in Pinckney tor all mail addressed to&#13;
said office (Pettysyille). All those&#13;
situated on R. F. D. routa No. 1, from&#13;
Pinckney can, by putting up suitable&#13;
bo*as, have their mail delivered in&#13;
said boxes. Very Respy.,&#13;
t 26 Wm. S. SWABTHOUT.&#13;
Postmaster.&#13;
FOR SALE—Brown Leghorn egg-e&#13;
from one ot tbe beet laying flook of&#13;
hens in Lower Mich. 25c per setting&#13;
at residence or 50c by express.&#13;
F. W. MACKINDBR,&#13;
t-26 Anderson, Mich&#13;
R t l a e C a l T M Wtthcut M i l k .&#13;
Thousands are doing it Cheaply and&#13;
successfully with "Blatcbford's Calf&#13;
Meal" tbe perfect milk substitute.&#13;
For sale by Teeple &amp; Cadwell. t-26&#13;
Potato Bugs&#13;
are the rage.&#13;
Paris Green&#13;
London Purple&#13;
will kill 'em.&#13;
Henry Fletcher^s visiting relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
*&#13;
Mont Nowlin was home the first of&#13;
the week.&#13;
Wm. Moran and wife were in Ann&#13;
Arbor Thursday last to attend the&#13;
graduating exercises at the University&#13;
of her brother. Will Monks, of the&#13;
Dentistry department.&#13;
Tbe Alumni banquet was held at&#13;
Hotel Sanford Thursday evening&#13;
which was enjoyed by over sixty. An&#13;
address was delivered before them by&#13;
Frank 0. Earaan of Ann Arbor which&#13;
was highly appreciated. At the close&#13;
oj the entertainment part, tbote who&#13;
desired, enjoyed a social party in the&#13;
ball room. The affair was declared a&#13;
fsnecess by all present&#13;
We&#13;
Keep it.&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
';5V:"v&#13;
Honse for sale. Inquire ef H. W.&#13;
CUOFOOT.&#13;
*&#13;
FOR §ALE-Top buggy ^OWmile&#13;
oiler—good condition. C. Wv'Ric*.&#13;
v WANTE.D ; . , ..,. *Mi&#13;
1 -i&#13;
v*&#13;
m&#13;
- V " ' - v , ; v , i&#13;
fey&#13;
,'&lt;V"'.&#13;
:.: ,.: • --:^• ^ : ^ - . : ^ v ) : ^ : ^ - . ^ 1 ^ ^ ? / ' vV^iiiShs^. ^ ^ &lt;••* .-^-- •*•• ':3I-A&gt;, ^.--^&gt;-,*::&lt;••••.• -y7/..,:••.•.-&gt;&gt;• v - v , •&#13;
^y-^w^'xmrtf^i:^-.*, vr'.^-'j- ^.-^. -v'--^ -v/.s,'•'•••i ; &lt;^\ .-•&amp;•••"• -' / ". • y.&gt;-^-v.";-: :*,.,..,...^ Vv. ,»r &gt;V••••-'•••• • i ..'-&#13;
»&gt;: '''.'V-&gt;«••,;-.•,• TV&#13;
^&#13;
?.i*&#13;
:'i^'»&#13;
my&#13;
as- lis&#13;
li&#13;
fe-&#13;
It--&#13;
fiT&#13;
Mr&#13;
E M&#13;
K* '&#13;
&amp;&#13;
• ' " ' V ; • ; • • : &gt;&#13;
1 '.+&#13;
v. •:-,&#13;
. • * • , • • * • • &gt;&#13;
: . ' • . , * . - .&#13;
-P.' •' ,:yj*&gt; '^&#13;
• &gt; • : .&#13;
' , • • • - - 1 • , . , - . . S i r ..;. • &lt; • * . » . . . . . - • .,,- . ' , , . 4.&#13;
. : &gt; , • '••• ,.-.. -,-:- , . - - . . ' * ; .: •&gt; :1 A :^-. v -&#13;
'•v.!V- . . . ' ' '&#13;
' v : , ••••&#13;
*m mimmm mmmm HI i H8uSnS Si n&#13;
B«l MM&#13;
# A Character&#13;
• Sketch&#13;
By P h i l i p V * r r l t l Mltfhela&#13;
CHAPTER IL—(ConUnued.)&#13;
"1*6 sua, went down, the" daylight&#13;
"waxred. Ezhaastlbn told the man ockpr&#13;
to cease and go to his cabin. Havtag&#13;
loaded the bucket he labored stow-&#13;
1/ tip lb* vertical cUmb on the ladder.&#13;
The Indian glided nearer to the edge.&#13;
He oouW hoar every step on the rungs&#13;
of the ladder, could ever detect the&#13;
«o«ad of the roughened hands grasping&#13;
the wood. Leaning far over, he&#13;
««aw the candle, fastened on the miner's&#13;
Jimt Nearer, nearer It slowly came,&#13;
Alekerlng, throwing goblin shadows&#13;
•againet the somber walls, contending&#13;
Xalnily against the encompassing&#13;
The shaft was now alive with hollow&#13;
cttaoes of the labors of the man. On&#13;
came the light. It was 10 feet iway—&#13;
It was five feet—two. The head and&#13;
the light emerged above the yawning&#13;
chasm.&#13;
With a movement swift, strong,&#13;
analce-like, Mingo thrust out his powerful&#13;
hand. It came across the min-&#13;
«r*s eyes and nose; then the head was&#13;
wrenched quickly, violently backward.&#13;
The hands, surprised, tried to cling,&#13;
bat failed. They loosened, waved wlldlr..&#13;
clutched at the air, and then,..with&#13;
the body and head, were overtoppled.&#13;
Headlong, twisting, turning, the man&#13;
was hurled to the swallowing abyss.&#13;
The tfght on the hat gave forth the&#13;
soand of a flame in the wind and was&#13;
Cone—plucked off by the rushing darkness*&#13;
A shriek issued forth from the&#13;
mouth of the tomb.&#13;
"Susie! little Susie!" was the cry.&#13;
Sounds of a striking—a bounding&#13;
back and forth, dully, against the&#13;
jagged sides—a crash at the bottom&#13;
—and silence deeper than stillness ensued.&#13;
The door swung open and Mingo, the&#13;
Washoe, glided forth and away in the&#13;
twilight, into the sage brush; and a&#13;
rabbft would have made a greater&#13;
rustle.&#13;
The stillness of midnight, a seeming&#13;
attribute of masses of shadows that&#13;
crouched from the waning moon, behind&#13;
the rocks, the brush and every&#13;
salient thing, was timidly broken. The&#13;
..creak in the hinges of the mine cabin&#13;
•*door sounded weirdly clear—a wail,&#13;
aa omen, thought the Indian girl. An&#13;
• awesome darkness filled the silent&#13;
shed. Susie, on her knees, went creeptog,&#13;
feeling with her hands for the&#13;
• tflge ©f the shaft There she clutched&#13;
the windlass post, and leaned her&#13;
breast against it.&#13;
"Frank," she cooed, in a low, sweet&#13;
tone that wavered with the effort made&#13;
to keep it cheerful, "Frank, my sunsfaiae—&#13;
Frank."&#13;
No sound save that a piece of rock,&#13;
somewhere down along the piekscarred&#13;
walls of the shaft, loosened and&#13;
fell, down and down, striking the sides&#13;
with diminishing sounds, till a ghostly&#13;
Across the floor of the cabin at last&#13;
she fell with the burden. The limplsh&#13;
arms went dangling at random about&#13;
her neck la a ghastly embrace that&#13;
thrilled her keenly with joy. Exhausted&#13;
she lay, fondling the hands and&#13;
face, trying to rub him back to life,&#13;
till the chili of long-dead clay was&#13;
come, and the face seemed carved in&#13;
stone. ^&#13;
Through the night, bending above&#13;
him. she poured out a fountain of her&#13;
love and grief alternately with all the&#13;
softness of her Indian cooings and&#13;
cadence of her mellowed English syllables.&#13;
Grey morning found her wooing&#13;
still the smile on the dead man's&#13;
lips, striving, yearning to warm the&#13;
cold, white features.&#13;
The small, broad miner, passing the&#13;
cabin when noon was high, delayed for&#13;
a second. "Letter for Henley," he&#13;
stolidly announced; but tossing it in,&#13;
beheld the girl, beheld the miner, and&#13;
fled the hill to spread the news of the&#13;
sight he had seen, and to fetch away&#13;
the coroner.&#13;
CHAPTER III.&#13;
In the sage brush wigwam the summer&#13;
waned to autumn with dreary&#13;
stillness. Grey already, -the strete&#13;
brush, relieved alone by the willow&#13;
fringe of the wandering creek, was&#13;
cheerless, dreary and oppressive to the&#13;
girl. She sat alone, while the chilling&#13;
wind was wantonly ripping the leaves&#13;
from the branches, her head drooped&#13;
low in hopeless despair. _&#13;
A shadow, thrown by the setting&#13;
sun, betrayed a presence. Dumbly she&#13;
raised her eyes to look.&#13;
"Ugh," said a tall, grunting Washoe&#13;
buck.&#13;
She turned away her head again.&#13;
"Mahala, do you wait for Mlugo?"&#13;
said the man. "Johnny Shag is bigger&#13;
chief. 'Mingo shall never come."&#13;
She looked in silence on the ashes of&#13;
the wood burned the day before.&#13;
"Mahala," he added, "one, two moons&#13;
Jonny Shag come to take you the trail&#13;
to my wigwam. Why not any lalk?&#13;
Too long, you sabbec? Mahala waits&#13;
for Mingo. Better look out Mahaia;&#13;
Jonny Shaj is warrior. To-diy you&#13;
better talk."&#13;
stream nursing her baby, cndUng Jt 1 closely, warming it ever in her throbbing&#13;
breast As the. twilight approached,&#13;
the air was the balm of the Indian&#13;
summer.&#13;
x Rising, she placed her baby In the&#13;
rustling grass; deftly she bent the&#13;
subtle willows down—masses of willow&#13;
—and throwing the grass, leaves and&#13;
twigs. jQ«er all* made t r o o l to_c&amp;tch&#13;
the frost Into this with her child she&#13;
crept, nestling it gently as before.&#13;
Night came down. Quite late the&#13;
babe awoke and feebly cried. She&#13;
smothered it and sang, in her sadsweet&#13;
voice, a lullaby:&#13;
I hear the crickets sing in the long&#13;
grasses;&#13;
Many camp-fires of the braves shine&#13;
in the sky—&#13;
They shine again in the little river;&#13;
The wind is small and gentle when it&#13;
plays in your hair.&#13;
Lie in my heart as the pebbles lie in&#13;
the little river;&#13;
As the crickets lie in the long grasses;&#13;
Shine in my heart as the camp-fires&#13;
shine in the sky;&#13;
Sleep, little Fawn, till the sun comes&#13;
over the mountain.&#13;
The little Fawn slept, but never to&#13;
wake till a greater sun should top the&#13;
mountains of darkness, misery and&#13;
despair. t&#13;
Singing and cooing, Susie weaved in&#13;
the darkness—unconscious of the flight&#13;
—with the birds, toward the summer&#13;
—of the new little soul. At-midnight,&#13;
bending forward to kiss the downy&#13;
eek, she was startled at'Its coldness.&#13;
Hurriedly feeling the wee soft hands,&#13;
the pulseless feet, the tiny body, she&#13;
sounded the utmost depths of agony.&#13;
She rushed from the shelter, the cold&#13;
little body in her arms. By the light&#13;
of the stars, the "fires of the braves,"&#13;
she saw the touch of the grim visitor.&#13;
Then on the air of night arose a painsong&#13;
out of a heart rudely brokea.&#13;
She sank unconscious to the earth.&#13;
Away off hillward a gaunt coyote&#13;
howled an answer back, dismal, long,&#13;
forlorn.&#13;
The sun gilded the path to the heavens,&#13;
and rose in purple mists of majesty;&#13;
the beam-fingers played in the&#13;
night-dark hair of the mother, and&#13;
touched with gold the hair of the child.&#13;
Dreaming the present far out of&#13;
vision, dreaming the past into present&#13;
again, the wan mother smiled and&#13;
nodded in her sleep. Awakening, she&#13;
shivered; a sigh that had rested was&#13;
also aroused. Yet peace and patience&#13;
W f ' W 5 • * • •&#13;
echo announced Its bottom rest. Then&#13;
&gt; deeper silence.&#13;
^ e a r one, are you there?" she called&#13;
again; but the sound of her voice, rebounding&#13;
on herself, made her fright-&#13;
•vened and awed.&#13;
d^ressing her heart against the post&#13;
"again, to still its audible thumping, she&#13;
eat a moment in dread. Suddenly,&#13;
then, strengthened by the thought that&#13;
he might be there, wounded, perhaps,&#13;
and needing her sadly, down in the&#13;
jgloom of the yawning mine, she&#13;
/groped her way to the ladder. Moau-&#13;
:ing of instinct, there in the darkness,&#13;
•she slowly descended, down and down&#13;
. in the mocking, echoing tomb.&#13;
In the utter blackness her hands&#13;
•discovered his faca, and Bhe cried&#13;
aloud, till the shaft was full of an-&#13;
. guish.&#13;
-A boneless mass, inert and fitted to&#13;
the jagged surface of the loaded buck-&#13;
- et of ore, into which he had fallen, she&#13;
found. His head hung limply athwart&#13;
the bucftefs edge; the eyes, which her&#13;
fingers sought, were closed.&#13;
' Beside him, kneeling, she sank, to&#13;
-moan and croon, combing the daru,&#13;
curling hair with her fingers, kissing&#13;
Jthe face—and seeing nothing. She&#13;
landed that a beat, slight and feebly&#13;
lived la his breast Calling his name,&#13;
^whe coaxed and wooed, and then, despairing,&#13;
stood up and prayed for&#13;
•help.&#13;
"God, if the Indians, too, have souls,"&#13;
v-ahe aaid, rtgive my aching soul to him&#13;
—let him live! Give me something,&#13;
»Great Eternal Spirit—something of&#13;
hoper*&#13;
With an esoteric summoning of a&#13;
&lt; marvelous strength, she lifted the&#13;
• drooping form; the arms and head fell&#13;
listlessly across her shoulders. Then&#13;
i to the ladder! And with all the pow-&#13;
•-er of arms and limbs, thewed by draperation&#13;
against the giant tasjf, Bhe&#13;
started toiling up and up, like one who&#13;
"One moon, let me think," she&#13;
wearily answered. "Let me wait ono&#13;
moon."&#13;
"One moon, yet. Jonny Shag will&#13;
wait. Many things come before the&#13;
moon again." He glided-uway, and&#13;
again her head sank wearily down.&#13;
Mingo, the Washoe, stealthily returning&#13;
to Chloride hill, kept cautious&#13;
ears and eyes awide, to learn the result&#13;
of the murder at the mine. Susie,&#13;
he rightly conjectured, would havo&#13;
guessed the truth. He avoidod the&#13;
wikiup, but remained in the town. Patience&#13;
with many an Indian is a virtue.&#13;
On a crisp, cool day, while Miiiso&#13;
talked with a group or bucks on~a corner,&#13;
Shag, on a pohy and armed with&#13;
a rifle, rode up behind. Raising his&#13;
gun, he deliberately shot Mingo&#13;
through the body, and escaped to the&#13;
hills.&#13;
The thoroughly astounded camp officials&#13;
promptly gave pursuit, but all&#13;
smoulders up a crushing weight, to&#13;
,gaia the air and freedom. Her palms&#13;
&lt;were burning, her knees shook and&#13;
rtrambled, her breath came in gasping&#13;
i long dutches painful to bear; the&#13;
* ^darkness awam thickly about—she was&#13;
«ttfliag, smothered, congested wTth~&#13;
.MooaVret she forced her way aloft.&#13;
in vain. Friends and relations of the&#13;
dead man assisting, the country wa3&#13;
scoured, skillfully, cunningly. Canyons,&#13;
valleys, the shoulders of the mountains,&#13;
were traversed and searched,&#13;
but nothing availed. Shag enjoyed e\-&#13;
ery advantage.&#13;
Three Indian trailers, mounted, came&#13;
at length to where the fugitive was&#13;
lying In ambush. One of these escaped&#13;
with his life and rode like a demon&#13;
to tell of the two, lying grisly and&#13;
stark, struck in the back by the bullets&#13;
of Shag, their faces now twisted&#13;
in the sun.&#13;
A stooping, stricken Washoe, the old&#13;
Red Wolf, whose boys they were that&#13;
had died in the sand, departed in silence,&#13;
alone, on the path of war. The&#13;
fued was his. In the night he found&#13;
the man he sought, found him asleep&#13;
—left him asleep—his knife standing&#13;
firm, erect, buried to the hilt In the&#13;
breast of Shag the warrior.&#13;
The year grew old; its daysr TTRe&#13;
the hours of waking of an old and&#13;
passing man, were dim and short, its&#13;
nights long sleeps, that made it none&#13;
the stronger.&#13;
And yet there came a day that was&#13;
like an echo of what had been before&#13;
the year began to age. Susie, w^u but&#13;
wistful of face, went from the hopeless&#13;
wigwam and hurried away up the&#13;
moaning creek. She went to a copse&#13;
of alder trees, entered and was lost to&#13;
view.&#13;
An hour later she slowly emerged&#13;
and in her arms she carried a child, a&#13;
little boy with fairest hair and the&#13;
bluest of eyes. She seated* herself in&#13;
the sunlight and shivered as she ncs&#13;
':'••••• Oar- Coentry'^rUxf. -\&#13;
The Hoa. Joel R. Poinsett, a native;&#13;
of South Carolina, and one of hart&#13;
most gifted »ons, during the Utter part&#13;
of the administration of John Quincy&#13;
Adams, it win be remembered, represented&#13;
the United States at the capital&#13;
of Mexico, which ,was then much distracted&#13;
by internal dissensions. While&#13;
Mr. Poinsett resided there, the city&#13;
was captured by one of the contending&#13;
factions, and he and his family in*&#13;
curred no small degree of personal&#13;
danger from the violence of the soldiers,&#13;
by whoa they were suspected&#13;
\ of affordlnf eonMtlmi&gt;B^ tn ™rtfrtn Qhnoxious&#13;
Individuals. In the height of&#13;
| the nullification controversy after hii&#13;
return, In an address delivered to the&#13;
people of Charleston, the following eloquent&#13;
passage occurs:&#13;
"Wherever I have been, I have been&#13;
proud of being a citizen of this great&#13;
republic, and, in the remotest corners&#13;
of the earth, have walked erect and&#13;
secure under that banner which our&#13;
opponents would tear down and trample&#13;
under foot I was in Mexico when&#13;
that city was taken by assault The&#13;
house of the American ambassador was&#13;
then, as It ought to be, the refuge of&#13;
the distressed and persecuted; it was&#13;
pointed out to the infuriated soldiers&#13;
as a place filled with their enemies.&#13;
They rushed to the attack. My only&#13;
defense was the flag of my country,&#13;
and it was flung out at the instant that&#13;
hundreds of muskets were leveled at&#13;
us.- Mr. Mason and myself placed&#13;
ourselves beneath its wavJng_foldV&#13;
We did not blench, for we felt strong&#13;
in the protecting arm of this mighty&#13;
republic. We told them that the flag&#13;
that waved over us was the banner of&#13;
that nation to whose example they&#13;
owed their liberty, and to whose protection&#13;
they were Indebted for their&#13;
safety. The scene changed as by enchantment,&#13;
and the men who were on&#13;
the point of attacking my house and&#13;
menacing the Inhabitants, cheered the&#13;
flag of this country, and placed sentinels&#13;
to protect it from outrage. Fellow-&#13;
citizens, in such a moment as .that,&#13;
would it have been any protection to&#13;
me and mine to have proclaimed myself&#13;
a Carolinian? Should I have been&#13;
here to tell you this tale, if I had hung&#13;
out .the Palmetto and the single star?&#13;
Be assured that to be respected abroad,&#13;
we must maintain our place in the&#13;
Union!"&#13;
***• s .11 •Hill II i&lt;¥ .111» • -*f*&#13;
were come in her heart&#13;
Kneeling, she yearningly extended&#13;
her hands to the shimmering sun. "O&#13;
God, 0 Great Eternal Spirit," she said,&#13;
"they told me of the Christ who died&#13;
—who died for sins—for souls in trouble!&#13;
But oh, my God, He never knew&#13;
of Indian souls—and so, Great Spirit,&#13;
let Susie die for all the sins—the love&#13;
—the happiness!"&#13;
Still wiLh her look to the mighty sun,&#13;
still with a murmur of passionate appeal&#13;
on her quivering Up3, she took&#13;
up her baby, pressed it iu ea?erne3s&#13;
close to her bosom, and jlided ahead,&#13;
to a pool of the stream, sobbing and&#13;
sobbing, and was curtained from sight&#13;
of the crystal waters; :&#13;
When the body of the slender young&#13;
Indian woman, clinging to a fair-haired&#13;
baby, was found, a few wives and&#13;
mothers said it was "pitiful," and&#13;
other persons said she was "only an&#13;
Injun."&#13;
(The End.)&#13;
• A H o c * Lathe.&#13;
A huge lathe has been built expressly&#13;
to turn out the groat granite columns&#13;
for the Cathedral of St. Jonn the&#13;
Divine, New York. These columns, as&#13;
finished, will be 50 feet long and six&#13;
feet in diameter. The lathe that Jturns&#13;
them weighs 135 tons. The eight cutters&#13;
of the lathe take each a threeinch&#13;
cut, reducing the column 24&#13;
inches at one cut The "blanks," or&#13;
uncut slabs of granite, come from&#13;
Vinalhaven, Me. Each of the 32&#13;
granite columns designed for the choir&#13;
will weigh two-thirds as much as the&#13;
Central Park obelisk (Cleopatra's&#13;
Needle). Six weeks are required to&#13;
dress and polish each stone, even with&#13;
these ponderous and improved appliances,&#13;
tied the infant and cooed it softly with&#13;
Indian words. She was faint and&#13;
weary, but strangely happy. Her baby&#13;
resembled its father, young as it was.&#13;
Her heart went leaping to it—embraced&#13;
It—owned it! Her pain, her suffering,&#13;
everything was forgotten.&#13;
All the afternoon she sat by tie&#13;
A Good Cook.&#13;
To be a good cook means the knowledgeof&#13;
all fruits, herb*,&#13;
spices, and of all that is healing and&#13;
sweet in the fields and groves, and&#13;
savory in meats. It means carefulness,&#13;
inventiveness, watchfulness, willingness&#13;
and readiness of appliance. It&#13;
means the economy of our greatgrandmothers&#13;
and the science of modern&#13;
chemists. It means much tasting&#13;
and no wasting. It means English&#13;
thoroughness, French art, and Arabian&#13;
hospitality. It means, in fine,&#13;
that you are to be perfectly and always&#13;
ladies (loafgivers), and are to&#13;
see that everybody has something&#13;
nice to eat—Ruskin.&#13;
"Take care of the forests," says a&#13;
Tenneseee paper, in announcing that&#13;
out of a single tree in Dyer county a&#13;
citizen had got four cords of firewood,&#13;
three gallons of honey and five racoons.&#13;
HU First FirecracKjr.&#13;
II.&#13;
III.&#13;
The looking glass reveals our defects&#13;
to ourselves, Tsut the wine glass reveals&#13;
them to others.&#13;
Over thirty-five thousand persons in&#13;
Illinois belong to associations interested-&#13;
in preeerriag *and fostering&#13;
birds of tho state.&#13;
4 large staff &lt;(f women is employed at&#13;
the &gt; Vatican for the sole purpose, of&#13;
keeping the pope's wardrobe in perfect&#13;
condition^ No spot or stain may disfigure&#13;
the garment* war* h / his,holiness,&#13;
and as a* alway* appears in&#13;
white, even a few hours* waar deprives&#13;
the robes of their freshness. It is considered&#13;
that no man's hand Is dainty&#13;
enough for their care, so la this one&#13;
respect womea are permittedr to serve&#13;
the pontiff. Only the most delicate&#13;
materials are used, moire «Uk being&#13;
the .summer fabric, and a specially&#13;
woven fine cloth the winter aae.&#13;
Imm Amdtnmm'a WMhlajftep .Faleee*&#13;
Lars Anderson, who waa formerly&#13;
attached to the United States legation&#13;
in Italy, has begun negotiations for&#13;
the erection of one of the most palatial'&#13;
residences la Washington. He baa&#13;
purchased from the Misses Patten a&#13;
building site on Massachusetta avenoe&#13;
between Florida avenue and Twentyfirst&#13;
street Mr. Anderson purposes to&#13;
erect a winter residence which will&#13;
cost in the neighborhood of $1,000,000.&#13;
Three years ago he married Miss Perkins&#13;
of Boston, heiress to several millions.&#13;
AnbroM McKays C M * .&#13;
Rockbridge, Mo., June 24th:—The&#13;
neighborhood and particularly the&#13;
members of Rockbridge Lodge, No.&#13;
435, A. F. &amp; A. M., are feeling very&#13;
much pleased over the recovery of Mr*&#13;
Ambrose McKay, a prominent citizen&#13;
and an honored member of the Masonic&#13;
Fratertrtty.&#13;
Mr. McKay had been suffering for&#13;
years with Diabetes and Rheumatism,&#13;
which recently threatened to end his&#13;
days. His limbs were so filled with&#13;
pain that he could not sleep. He was&#13;
very bad.&#13;
Just .then, someone suggested a new&#13;
remedy—Dodds Kidney Pills—which&#13;
has been much advertised recently, as&#13;
a euro for Bright's Disease, Diabetes,.&#13;
Dropsy, Rheumatism and Kidney&#13;
Trouble.&#13;
After Mr. McKay had used a few&#13;
doses he commenced to improve. His&#13;
pain all left him, and he is almost as&#13;
well as ever. He^says Dodd's Kidney&#13;
Pills are worth much more than they&#13;
cost. They are certainly getting a great&#13;
reputation in Missouri, and many very&#13;
startling cures are being reported.&#13;
.:A*~4 &lt;&#13;
" , * •&#13;
An Iowa mother punishes her little&#13;
son by making him wear his Sunday&#13;
clothes, while she rewards her young&#13;
daughter in the same manner.&#13;
What Do the Children Drink?&#13;
Don't give them tea or cofiee. Have you tried&#13;
the new food drink culled (JKAIN-O' It is delictus&#13;
and ncHirinhinsT, and takes the plac*&gt; of&#13;
coffee. The more G rain-O you trive the children&#13;
the more health you distribute throu?h their&#13;
systems. Gra n-O is made of pure grains, and&#13;
when p.'operly prepared tastes like the choice&#13;
grades of coffee, but costs about H as much. AU&#13;
grocers veil iu 15c and :5c.&#13;
Most people h a v e the church i n s t i n c t&#13;
in their b l o o d&#13;
L o n g Live the K i n g ! T h e K i n g i s&#13;
Wizard Oil; pain h i s e n e m i e s , w h o m h e&#13;
c o n q u e r s .&#13;
Lnzy m e n a r e l i k e theories. T h e y&#13;
seldom w o r k .&#13;
I am sure Piso's Cure for Consumption saved&#13;
my life three years a ro,—.das. THO s. BOBBINS,&#13;
Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y., FJD. 17. 1W0.&#13;
Why is it girls have such an appetite for&#13;
operas and ice cream ?&#13;
WH0l£SA![&#13;
SPORTING;P RICLS TO MS&#13;
ACOIPLCTEUNEflr&#13;
• ATNLETIC GOODSG&#13;
«n», Bicytlc Svftdrie*,&#13;
Grjphophoncs, Pithing&#13;
Tttklc, CUMTM, BM« Bail&#13;
Good* Golf.&#13;
W n v ' o r !"n.i£Catalogue P&#13;
IN 3 OR 4 YEARS&#13;
III INDEPENDENCE ASSURED rfi you take up your&#13;
home in Western Can*&#13;
ada.the land of plenty.&#13;
illustrated pamphlet*,&#13;
giving experiences of&#13;
farmers who have be*&#13;
eacne wpalt hy In grow*&#13;
far wheat, reports of&#13;
delegates, etc..and full&#13;
intormation as to reduced railway rates can be&#13;
had on application to the Superintendent of&#13;
Immigration, Department of Interior. Ottawa,&#13;
Canada, or to 4. Grieve. Saginaw, Mich., or M.&#13;
V. Mclnnes, No. 2 Merrill Block. Detroit, Mich.&#13;
FRAGRANT&#13;
£070P0NT&#13;
a ptrfMt HqiU dtoHfriM far AM&#13;
Teelh •»* Mouth&#13;
S020DONTTOOTB POWlfeg, Be y R l&#13;
LarpUQUTOtad POWDER, ?fe C l l i&#13;
A aQSteees.orbyMaa for the prioa.&#13;
HALLABUCKEUNewYortu&#13;
^A-PT, 7 »'wliUiAafc3 mm iltfiXJtl^.JlW'iiiWiimii&#13;
.;-&gt;;^:r&#13;
**',••' ^ ' ' ; 'i ;;'•:•• T?Wfi%-*t •:..;, ,, r&amp;+*rftr&#13;
• • v . . '• . , ^ - K , • " •&#13;
. y J V i V . , ^ . - . .. • •. . • , &gt; . ' ' • ' ' : ^ ;-;,..'•• • *&#13;
™"*-&lt;». ;,&lt;• ^ . ^ . / 1 .'» T « '&#13;
Nf*?'&#13;
;*" 1' -^:1 • / •&#13;
i ^ ' .&#13;
:&lt;V&#13;
n?.".'"^'w'&#13;
i M ^ T&#13;
&gt;fr- :&#13;
The great dixKJaaur, the restoratioc&#13;
oTw*ie1i%ad*een*h« * * * t . i f ttat geologfeal&#13;
department of Y»i# UoWtMlIji&#13;
tor more than a year, has been placed&#13;
in position in the Peabody museum at&#13;
Yale. It was discovered by Prof. J.&#13;
B. Hatcher In the summer of llftl while&#13;
exploring tor the lata Prof. 0 . C.&#13;
Marsh of Yale in Wyoming. The specimen&#13;
was in excellent condition, with&#13;
all ita parts intact and it waa also an&#13;
- entirely new variety. There la hut one.&#13;
other specimen in the world and it is&#13;
in Brussels, Its length is 29 feet 3&#13;
lnchea. The height of the head above&#13;
the base Is 13 feet 2 inches.&#13;
with boys. And really, there was at&#13;
least one boy—and on an average two&#13;
or three—in every house on Meredith's&#13;
side, except in the Crosspatch Man's&#13;
house.* Oh, dear me, no, there weren't&#13;
any boys there!&#13;
On tiie other side of the street you&#13;
had to skip the "middlest" house and&#13;
Miss Quilhot and Miss Eromathea's—&#13;
oh, yes, and the minister's house, of&#13;
which Miss Quilhot and Miss Eromathea&#13;
were old maids, and the minister&#13;
—oh, no, he wasn't an old maid, but&#13;
you couldn't expect him to have boys&#13;
in the house, for how could he ever&#13;
write his sermons?&#13;
A Juvenile Sketch&#13;
for&#13;
Independence De*y&#13;
&lt;&#13;
The Crosspatch Man was sick again,&#13;
and this time it must be pretty bad,&#13;
lor all the morning Meredith had been&#13;
watching the servants spread straw&#13;
before the house and muffle the big,&#13;
shiny doorbell.&#13;
"Poor man!"'mamma; said, pftljhglyT&#13;
"He is sick so often!"&#13;
"But he's a Crosspatch Man!" muttered&#13;
Meredith stiffly. Then he repented&#13;
and looked as shamefaced as a&#13;
very little boy with a very round, dimpled&#13;
face Could look. "I'm so sorry&#13;
he's ve-ry sick," he said slowly. "1&#13;
s'pose it hurts even Crosspatch Men."&#13;
Mamma did not notice. She was&#13;
having her little noon "gossip" with&#13;
papa, and they were still talking about&#13;
their Invalid neighbor.&#13;
"It isn't quite so bad as it scams,&#13;
you know," papa was saying. "He always&#13;
has the straw laid down and&#13;
things muffled when he has one of&#13;
his worse nervous attacks. It doesn't&#13;
mean all that it does in most cases.&#13;
He is terribly afflicted ,by noise at almost&#13;
any time.'&#13;
"Noise! I should think so!" That&#13;
was from Meredith, who pricked up&#13;
his ears at the word. Didn't he know&#13;
how the Crosspatch Man felt 'bout a&#13;
noise? Didn't he belong to the Rudd&#13;
Street Second? Wasn't ho captain?&#13;
And oh, my, the times he'd seen the&#13;
Crosspatch Man a-scowling and afuming&#13;
when they marched past his&#13;
window!&#13;
"But Fourth of July will be a terrible&#13;
day to him—poor man!" went on&#13;
mamma's gentle voice. That made&#13;
Meredith start a little. He had been&#13;
thinking about Fourth o' July, too.&#13;
(Did he think of much of anything&#13;
else nowadays?) He had been going&#13;
over in his mind all the glorious program&#13;
of the day. For the Rudd Street&#13;
Second was going to celebrate in a&#13;
worthy manner. They were going to&#13;
oven outdo themselves this year—and-&#13;
Another London church is to have&#13;
the novelty of an outdoor pulpit like&#13;
the one at S t Mary's Whitechapel. The&#13;
new one is being erected at Christ&#13;
church, Spitalfields, as a memorial to&#13;
the late Dr. Billing, a former rector,&#13;
and for many years bishop of Bedford.&#13;
Like the open-air pulpit used at Whitechapel,&#13;
the new one will look out from&#13;
the church wall upon the open space of&#13;
the disused churchyard, where an outdoor&#13;
congregation can gather without&#13;
any danger from street traffic.&#13;
hadn't they had the proud honor of&#13;
being the noisest street in the city for&#13;
two Fourth o* Julys a-running? Let&#13;
'em lust wait till they heard this&#13;
Fourth o' July!&#13;
It was three days off. That would&#13;
give the Crosspatch Man time to have&#13;
thft a t r a w tftkon u p a n d thfl hall UPSHEER&#13;
So it was, as I said, an unfortunate&#13;
street to ha7^ "nerves" on. And the&#13;
Crosspatch Man had so many!&#13;
The three days between soon went&#13;
away, and it was the night—tha very&#13;
night—before It! There were only a&#13;
few hours more', for,' of course, you&#13;
dldnt' have to wait till the sun rose on&#13;
Fourth of July.&#13;
Meredith had drilled the Rudd&#13;
Street Second for the last time and&#13;
dispersed his men. He was on his&#13;
way home to supper. Going by the&#13;
Crosspatch Man's house, he neard&#13;
voices distinctly issuing from an open&#13;
window. He couldn't help hearing. It&#13;
was so quiet in the street. Perhaps it&#13;
was the "lull before the storm."&#13;
"The sahib cannot bear :t," a gentle&#13;
soothing voice was saying, but Meredith&#13;
recognized the indignation mixed&#13;
with the pity in i t . "The sahib will&#13;
be again sick."&#13;
Then came Meredith's astonishment,&#13;
for the Crosspatch Man's voice was&#13;
answering, and it was quite calm and&#13;
gentle; and it said:&#13;
"Of course I shall be sick again,&#13;
Harill've made all my plans to perish.&#13;
But what can'you expect? The little&#13;
chaps must have their Fourth o' July.&#13;
I was a little chap, myself—once. Shut&#13;
tho window.Hari. There's a suspicion&#13;
of a draught."&#13;
Meredith stood still in sheer amazement,&#13;
and watched the turban-man&#13;
close the window. He was a little&#13;
chap himself once, the Crosspatch&#13;
Man was! And how kind his voice&#13;
had sounded, too. It made him sorry&#13;
for the crasspatch Man—sorrier than&#13;
he haTTevef been before: "&#13;
"He's a-dreadin' it like sixty. He's&#13;
'spectlnl—to perish," Meredith said&#13;
aloud. "It's goin* to make him sick,&#13;
of course—that's what he said to the&#13;
turban-man. An' he was a little chap&#13;
once, an' his voice was kind an' tired&#13;
out."&#13;
—TfieTi—Meredith went—ftome~&#13;
Try Grain-OS Try Gr*ln-Ot&#13;
Ask your Grocer today to show you a package&#13;
or GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes&#13;
U&lt;* place of coffee. The children may drink It&#13;
wlt.-out injury as well as the adult All who&#13;
try It, like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal&#13;
brown of Mocha or Java, but It is made from&#13;
pure grainR, and the most delicate stomach receives&#13;
it without distress. H the price of coffee.&#13;
15c and 25 cts. per package. Sold by all&#13;
grocers.&#13;
He who loves the society of good women is&#13;
worthy of emulation. — •&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Care&#13;
Is a constitutional core. Price. 75a&#13;
Bitter are the domestic sweets which are preserved&#13;
in family jars&#13;
Mrs, Window'* Soothing' Syrup.&#13;
For children teething, softens th9 (jums, reduces In&#13;
•flammation, allays pain, cured wind coltc. Koc abottle&#13;
The dice of God is always loaded.&#13;
FtTS Permanently Cured. TTo fit* or nerronroaw »ft«T ,&#13;
first day's u*e of Dr. Kline'* Ureat Nerve Ketttorer. i&#13;
Bend for F R E E S 2 . 0 0 ttial bottle and treatlne. '&#13;
Da. R. H. tLUNK. Ltd., wu Axtli S t . 1 AilartelpiUa, Pa,&#13;
I-ord R o b o r t * an n ( i n t e r .&#13;
Lord Roberts is a fearless rider and&#13;
usually well in at the death in a fox&#13;
ftyir,* hut hia eminence as.a hunting&#13;
When answering HUS. ptedid munJai trt.s paper&#13;
Turn the Rascals Out&#13;
man depends on his splendid eye for&#13;
country and his unrivaled knowledge&#13;
of horseflesh and not on mere daredeviltry.&#13;
Lord Roberts has had his&#13;
share of "croppers," but, thanks to his&#13;
light, steel-built frame, he has never&#13;
come to any serioas harm in the hunting&#13;
field.&#13;
We are speaking of the grip inicroiws&#13;
The well and strong c;in resist their poison,&#13;
the sickly and weak are their prey,&#13;
Baxter's Mandrake Bitters are nature's&#13;
remedy for expelling all poison&#13;
fro'Q the system. At druggists, in liquid&#13;
or tablets at 25 cents per bottle or box.&#13;
SOZODONT Tooth Powdtr 25c&#13;
Rheumat'tm,&#13;
«, Weak Ba '&#13;
urns, Sores an&#13;
$j)6Clal drngirtiit, a .&#13;
i r h c does not w»U it,!&#13;
as hie name, and for j&lt;&#13;
It Cures Through the Pores treo*unbdle ,Y woeu aw iTllH CaMin Saw * Address Dr. O. P. Biown. 9 8 B ' w a y , N e w b u n s h , » . X .&#13;
Nature's Priceless Remedy&#13;
DR.O. PHELPS BROWN'S&#13;
PRECIOUS&#13;
HERBAL&#13;
OINTMENT&#13;
W . N . U . — D E T R O I T — N O . 2 — l O O t&#13;
Whea Answering Advertisemeits KJadly.&#13;
Mention This Papec&#13;
MEREDITH STOOD IN&#13;
AMAZEMENT,&#13;
muffled, for his worst "times" never&#13;
lasted more than two or three days.&#13;
'Then he'll have to cotton up his&#13;
ears/' mused Meredith, philosophically,&#13;
watching the big foreign servant&#13;
that wore A turban go back and forth&#13;
past the'Crosspatch Man's window.&#13;
The house Meredith lived in and the&#13;
Crosspatch Man's house were quite&#13;
close together, so it was easy to watch&#13;
things.&#13;
Unfortunately for an invalid with&#13;
the terrible affliction called "nerves,"&#13;
Rudd Street waa ^a-regular went-of. -&#13;
boyaThey were boys everywhere on&#13;
i t 'Yon- ran against boys when you&#13;
went east, and boys ran against yon&#13;
when yon went west Boys sprang up&#13;
in the- most unexpected place*. The&#13;
hooaer seemed to he running over&#13;
^went—ftome—antr&#13;
perched himself up on the banister&#13;
post in the hail, to think. That was&#13;
where he always tBought things—big&#13;
things, you know. This was, oh my,&#13;
such r&gt;. big thing!&#13;
"I'm cap'n,' mused Meredith, knitting&#13;
his little fair brows. "I can say,&#13;
'Go, an' thou ghost," like the man in&#13;
the Bible; bu$ they'll be dreadful&#13;
disjointed, the Rudd Street Seconds&#13;
will be. Still—well, he sick an* he&#13;
had a kind spot in his voice, an' he&#13;
used to be a little chap too, so of&#13;
course he used to bang things an'&#13;
make noises. I don't think he sounded&#13;
much like a Crosspatch Man."&#13;
In a little while, after a little more&#13;
tough thinking, Meredith slipped&#13;
down and out of the door, up the&#13;
street. He got together the Rudd&#13;
Street Seconds and made a little&#13;
speech, as a captain may, to his men.&#13;
The next day the city and all America&#13;
celebrated J'ourth o' JulvP and&#13;
Rudd Street was famous again, but&#13;
this time for being the very quietest&#13;
street in all the city! There were just&#13;
as many boys in it, too, as^ever.&#13;
The Crosspatch Man's white, nervous&#13;
face smoothed and calmed as the&#13;
day wore on, and at last it actually&#13;
smiled in a gentle way, as if he was&#13;
thinking about something pleasant.&#13;
And the captain of the Rudd Street&#13;
Seconds and his brave men, drilling&#13;
and popping and banging in a distant&#13;
street, were happy, too.—-Annie Hamilton&#13;
Donnell.&#13;
WINTER Causes bilious head-ache, back-ache&#13;
and all kinds of body aches. Spring&#13;
is here and you want to get this bile&#13;
poisoiv ~©ut—ot-your- systesiv-^asily^&#13;
naturally and gently. CASCARETS&#13;
are just what you want; they never&#13;
grip or gripe, but will work gently&#13;
while you sleep. Some people think&#13;
the, more violent the griping the better&#13;
the cure. Be careful—take care of&#13;
your bowels—salts and pill poisons&#13;
leave them weak, and even less able to&#13;
keep up regular movements than before.&#13;
The only safe, gentle cleaner&#13;
for the bowels are sweet, fragrant&#13;
CASCARETS. They don't force&#13;
out the foecal matter with violence,&#13;
but act as a tonic on the whole 30 feet of bowel wall, strengthen the&#13;
muscles and restore healthy, natural action—buy them and try them.&#13;
You will find in an entirely natural way your bowels will be promptly&#13;
and permanently put in good order for the Spring and Summer work.&#13;
,&#13;
.1&#13;
ALL DRUGGISTS. SOLD IN BULKCURE&#13;
pains after *atl*&#13;
an* d i n ! *&#13;
-tmrtrr&#13;
all t o w e l triable*, awpendtettta, btl-&#13;
IttBiMM, bad breath, bad blood, wlml&#13;
on tbe stomach* bloated bowels* foul&#13;
vhsera dtmroeunb*l, el,n sdallclooswtt oeno.m pplilwe&#13;
bowels d - -&#13;
atefcr&#13;
-" 1her»&#13;
long years of&#13;
•a. ili.vae»rw twronu»bl.e I*sdailgleoswti ocno*ppimlepxlieosn* w h e n your donn more GUARANTEED i * W f i&#13;
regn*&#13;
spteaorpteler ftohra nth oa lcl hortohneirc dall iments ansTbrlac that&#13;
together. It Is.&#13;
•tsttlar&#13;
wsrt*iar et emt r.&#13;
M O M ,&#13;
fair, h&lt;&#13;
sr*at merCittA, —&lt;* —;»»eet teatt&#13;
iisteoreorejr&#13;
NO&#13;
ta ike world.&#13;
e save faith&#13;
_ ahesltttelr s w a a t e e e tj» c a r e e r&#13;
a y teear* t w a aOe eesee,stee thoai a&#13;
t r i a l , ae per • » • » ! • dlrM«lein. aaertryeei a r e&#13;
A . W i , n t a r a t k . M a M &gt; 4 M .&#13;
^•XKtewss: *&amp;**?&#13;
Jr «*a.ra o f I fair, heaeat t r i a l , ae per • ! » » ! • dlrMtieae. aaa i r y e a a r e&#13;
i / r W a m * set eatl—ed. after a e t S e a e e e e h o « t r e t a r a the aaa»K*&lt;b»&#13;
nil* yen* start a^fc-^f; GASCAstBTfi to*da, * * 2 L w " * * W s a a * the e apt y b e x t e m» hy aaaM. or the ^ o m l r t iWa i&#13;
Win nerer get well and to wall an tho umennui | beaeaT Tabo ear aartee-se aaatter what aBtmi•£•*»»»•&#13;
Tew 9** yomrtowels right. Take oer advW* start ^^•^^^i^^^JL^^^Ur^^LfSS^S^^&#13;
with CAaCArlBT* to-day, nnder am atoolole cnar- Ty^oaa^Ve^i ^S^Af^^^^^^^Jj^^g*^^^&#13;
l*a*su&#13;
\i&#13;
•', f'&#13;
tt&#13;
V:&#13;
'•.&amp; " I&#13;
•v-&#13;
TT&#13;
"%&#13;
.Af.-tiW ... *«* * v-jiNite*'-*'.-&#13;
rW^W^T^*^^^^T&gt;^^ T V ^ T ^ P * ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ " •• '0*"^&lt;»"''':w5lWniFy • " '™.!|W- 5 ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ 7 ^&#13;
&gt; • \ • • &gt; - * • 4 . - . '•••' / ' •' ' , , . .&gt;&#13;
. 'fti*^'**' - . ^ 7 - . ^ - . , ^,-^-^.^.,,. ..... •••;„•; i f ' v . - ' . .&#13;
• • » '&#13;
• ' • - V , , ^ •&gt;.. (,&gt;&#13;
. -K&#13;
/ '&#13;
v l * u4%iMW&amp;«&gt;&lt;M&gt;*f *&gt;xi. •* «**».'.&#13;
^ ^ ^ ^ S | i W f 7 * ! W , W W | f " ™ *&lt; ^f!^!&#13;
•- • &lt;&#13;
-V^,^':'*:;; •"':'-• ^ ^&#13;
# *&#13;
% * ' ' • &gt;*.;&#13;
• ^ : ' , ;&#13;
/^. 559! afJSsaSBSS ••»&#13;
*$:•:&#13;
W*'.i&#13;
&amp; v&#13;
K&#13;
r/&#13;
1&#13;
Ifct f mrttncij gispatrh.&#13;
f . L . ANDREWS d CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
THURSDAY, JUNE 27,1901.&#13;
Foorth of July.&#13;
(hie way fare between all stations&#13;
for tonnd trip. On sale&#13;
July 3 and 4 return limit 5. Also&#13;
sold to Chicago, Toledo, Milwau«&#13;
l e e and Manitowoc. Ask Agents.&#13;
S J ^ • • • l . H - •&#13;
A Goaa Couffb Medicine.&#13;
It sneaks well for Chamberlain's&#13;
Cough Remedy when druggists use it&#13;
m their twn families ia preferauce to&#13;
any other. *'I have sold Chamber-&#13;
Iain's Cough Remedy for the past five&#13;
years with complete satisfaction to&#13;
myself and customers," says Druggist&#13;
J. Goldsmith, Van Etten, N. Y. "I&#13;
have always used it in my own family&#13;
birth for ordinary coughs and colds&#13;
and for the con((b following la grippe,&#13;
and find it very efficacious." For sale&#13;
by F. A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
$ The general public is no doubt&#13;
much more interested in what it&#13;
I,&#13;
hopes to see than what is commemorated&#13;
by such scenes. It is,&#13;
however, interesting to recall, to&#13;
the minds cf those who propose&#13;
to view the grand celebration at&#13;
Detroit on the three days beginning&#13;
July ^ s o m e t h i n g of what&#13;
is meant by this celebration.&#13;
While primarily in comineration&#13;
of the landing of Cadilac, yet the&#13;
patroitic Women of Detroit propose,&#13;
t y storid urn and brooze&#13;
tablet, to do more than this.&#13;
They propose to put on Detroit's&#13;
pleasure spot, Belle Isle, (named&#13;
after GOT. Cass' daughter Belle)i&#13;
an approiate stone cross, bearing&#13;
a bronze tablet which shall recite&#13;
how in 1610 two black-robed&#13;
priests threw down the stone image&#13;
of the Manitou, the heathen&#13;
god of the Algonquins, and erected&#13;
on the site thereof the great&#13;
Cross of Christianity They propose&#13;
to mark, also, the site of the&#13;
fort where, for a long period of&#13;
time, the hardy band of pioneers&#13;
defended themselves and their&#13;
dear ones from the tomahawk and*&#13;
scalping knives, of the Indians.&#13;
Tbey propose, also, to mark the&#13;
. • $ • •&#13;
. • * • . '&#13;
&gt;.v.&#13;
£•"••&#13;
ii'&#13;
t-&#13;
:,-/&#13;
scene oTlheTbattle of Bloody Eun&#13;
and to commerate, by a bronze&#13;
tablet, in a suitable spot, the raising&#13;
of five flags over the fort and&#13;
town, and the pulling down of&#13;
four of them, leaving up at last,&#13;
\ the white starred and red and&#13;
\ white stripped banner that to-day&#13;
\ floats over the town. They also&#13;
\ propose to mark other historic&#13;
spots, for instance, the home of&#13;
Gen. Grant, the site of old Fort&#13;
Shelby, the start of the great fire&#13;
the establishment of the first&#13;
. court of justice and in all 15&#13;
places of historic interest about&#13;
the city. These ceremonies will&#13;
be interspersed between the parade,&#13;
receptions, feasts and other&#13;
features of the celebration during&#13;
the three days and from very interesting&#13;
portions of the celebration.&#13;
The low rate of fare granted&#13;
for this celebration offers the&#13;
best of opportuniDg for every body&#13;
to attend the greatest celebration&#13;
the state has ever known.&#13;
Stimulants—never in^reas the&#13;
natural capicity of the brain.&#13;
They can only abstract for the&#13;
purpose of work in hand, spme of&#13;
the energies which are sorely&#13;
needed to repair and restore a&#13;
brain which has has already been&#13;
taxed to the furthest limit which&#13;
is consisted with hetlth. To remove&#13;
the sense of fatigue caused&#13;
by over work by the consumption&#13;
of alcohol is to close one's ears to&#13;
the voice of nature. The weariness&#13;
of the brain is a protest&#13;
against further exeration until&#13;
recuperation has been obtained by&#13;
rest: and if the weary feeling is&#13;
deadened or destroyed by adventitious&#13;
means nature will exact&#13;
her penality.—Dr. Herschell&#13;
(London) in "Health and Troubles&#13;
of City Life."&#13;
Yates county, New York, has&#13;
voted the saloon out, all the nine&#13;
to'wns having voted no license.&#13;
Penn Yan, the largest town, reversed&#13;
a "yes" majority of 289 in&#13;
1997 to a "no" majority of 235 in&#13;
1901.&#13;
The Denver (Colo.) Prohibitionists&#13;
nominated a ticket, composed&#13;
entirely of women, for the&#13;
city offices to be filled at that election&#13;
on April 2. Their candidate&#13;
for mayor was Mrs. A. A. Hawley&#13;
president of the state Women's&#13;
Christian Tem*perance Union.&#13;
From the reriort of the Philippine&#13;
commission it looks much as&#13;
if the protection of the miserable&#13;
saloon traffic in Manilla was simply&#13;
a case of money preferred to&#13;
morality. There are nearly three&#13;
hundred such saloons, and the license&#13;
fees range from $1,600 to $3.&#13;
—Christian Work.&#13;
Dr. Clouston, of Edinburgh Asylum,&#13;
Scotlad, writes: *'I am safe&#13;
in saying that no man indulges&#13;
for ten years continuonslv, even&#13;
though he was never drunk in all&#13;
that time, without being psychologically&#13;
changed for the worse.&#13;
And if the hobit goes on after 40&#13;
All tioinrto the Circus,&#13;
Everybody is talking about&#13;
Kingling Bros, famous big circus,&#13;
rfhich is to exhibit in Ann Arbor&#13;
Saturday June 29. Several big&#13;
excursions will go from this vicinity&#13;
and the popularity of the&#13;
show will insure an enormous&#13;
crowd. People from this locality&#13;
should make an especial effort to&#13;
arrive in time to see the new free&#13;
street carnival which precedes the&#13;
exhibition every morning at 10&#13;
o'clock. The procession is divided&#13;
into thirty enormous section s&#13;
each of which is a complete parade,&#13;
and presents in its entirety&#13;
a bewilderingly magnificent twomile&#13;
carnival of pageantry, such&#13;
as the word has never seen. In&#13;
this gorgeous display are shown&#13;
over 100 beautiful dens and cages,&#13;
of wild animals, 500 horses, 30&#13;
elephants and nearly a thousand&#13;
people, and the costumes throughout&#13;
are of the finest silks, satins,&#13;
and cloth of gold. The performance&#13;
that follows is the most&#13;
magnificent arenic display ever&#13;
presented by any circus in Amer.&#13;
ica.&#13;
Didn't Marry For Honey.&#13;
The Boston man, who lately married&#13;
a sickJy ricb young woman, is&#13;
happy now, lor he got Us. King's&#13;
New Life Pills,wbich restored her to&#13;
perfect health. Infallible for Jaundice.&#13;
Biliousness, Malaria, ?ever and&#13;
Ague and all Liver and Stomach&#13;
troubles. Gentle but effective. Only&#13;
25c at F. A. Sigler's drugstore,&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
MONTHLY REPORT&#13;
« P M M N M M M I ( M i&#13;
Of the Pinckney Public Schools for the&#13;
month ending Juue 21, 1001.&#13;
&amp;V'&#13;
TO Care a Cold In One Day&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab&#13;
l«ts. All druggkts refund the money&#13;
i f it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature&#13;
is on each box. 25c.&#13;
The Jackson electric line to&#13;
Grrass Lake will be opened June&#13;
A Nebraska paper says that a musical&#13;
cigarete box is the latest thing&#13;
o a t Every time you open the&#13;
feoi and take a cigarette out it&#13;
plays "Newer, My God, to Thee."&#13;
The D|4PATCH Job Department&#13;
JttflMJike to print your envelopes.&#13;
years, the change is apt to be faster&#13;
and more decided. W e see it&#13;
iu our friends, and we know what&#13;
the end will be, but we cannot lay&#13;
hold of anything in particular.&#13;
Their future and works suffer, and&#13;
yet we dare not say they are&#13;
drunkards, for they are not. It&#13;
all depends ou the original inhere&#13;
ent strength of the brain how long&#13;
the downward course takes. Usually&#13;
some intercurrent disease or&#13;
tissue degeneration cuts off the&#13;
man before he has a chance of&#13;
getting old. 1 have seen such a&#13;
man simply pass into senile de-(&#13;
mentis, before he was an old man,&#13;
from mild, respectable alcoholic&#13;
excess, without any alcoholism or&#13;
preliminary outburst at all. And&#13;
I am sure I have seen strong&#13;
brains in our profession, at the&#13;
bar, and in the business break&#13;
down from chronic alcoholic excess,&#13;
without tbeir owners ever&#13;
having been once drunk."—&#13;
Health Monthly.&#13;
Call at F. A. Sigler's drug store and&#13;
get a tree sample of Chamberlain's&#13;
Stomach and Liver Tablets. They are&#13;
an elegant physic. They also improve&#13;
the appetite, strengthen and reguiate&#13;
the Liver and Bowejs. Tbey are easy&#13;
to take and pleasant in effect.&#13;
About this tilde of the year&#13;
overseers of highways warn out&#13;
the men of thejr respective district,&#13;
plow up the center of the&#13;
road, throw in roDts and sod from&#13;
the sides and call it "working on&#13;
the road." Sbovelors sit on the&#13;
fence and talk, and boys a dozen&#13;
years old drive a team and are&#13;
credited with a man's day's work.&#13;
ThiB country has been settled&#13;
about seventy years, and this sort&#13;
of a thing has gone on from yeai&#13;
to year and the roads are but little&#13;
better than at the beginning&#13;
and some of them worse. It&#13;
seems and is impossible to make&#13;
roads by the present system, A&#13;
road commissioner that will plow&#13;
up a road should be asked to immediately&#13;
resign his office and&#13;
someone appointed who is up to&#13;
date and knows his business.&#13;
The road bed should never be&#13;
broken up by a plow, but should&#13;
be gradually raised year by year&#13;
till it is higher than the ground&#13;
on either side. Svtematize the&#13;
work, require a full days labor,&#13;
and quit fooling and we can have&#13;
passable highways.—Ex. The&#13;
above way of doing things will&#13;
soon bring about the direct tax&#13;
law, then roads will be built or&#13;
they ought to be.&#13;
Mr. W. S. Whedon, Cashier of the&#13;
First national Bank of Winterest.&#13;
lova, in a recent letter gives some experience&#13;
witb a carpenter in his eraploy,&#13;
that will be ot value to other&#13;
mechanics. He says: "I bad a carpenter&#13;
working for me who was&#13;
obliged to stop work several days on&#13;
account of being troubledVith diarrhoea.&#13;
I mentioned to him that I had&#13;
been similarly troubled and that&#13;
Chamberlan'8 Colic, Cholera, and Diarhoea&#13;
Remedy bad cared me. He&#13;
bought a bottle of it from the draggist&#13;
here and informed me that one&#13;
dose care d him, and be is again at bis&#13;
work." For sale .by F. At Sigler&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
Cause of Thong-lit.&#13;
"You look tbougbtful tonight, SmKh,"&#13;
remarked Brown as he stretched himself&#13;
jon two chairs.&#13;
"Yes." said Smith. "I have Just got&#13;
a note from the landlady." .&#13;
"What does she say?"&#13;
"She says that 1 must pay my board&#13;
atonce, or her daughter will sue me for&#13;
breach of promise. I'm tbinklnf what&#13;
I'd better do."-Tlt.Blt*&#13;
An Onnee of P r e r e n t l o n.&#13;
"As you went out" whtspered the&#13;
observing boarder, "1 saw yon pick up&#13;
something from the floor, tear It In a&#13;
dozen pieces and throw It In the range.&#13;
Was It a love letter?"&#13;
"No." responded the proctloaljxwinler,&#13;
-It was a little booklet telling how&#13;
to prepare prunes in 99 different ways.&#13;
I was afraid Jt might fall Into the&#13;
fiands of the landlady ."-Philadelphia&#13;
Beeoftt.&#13;
HIGH SCHOOL DEPARTMENT.&#13;
WhiDte-^umber o* pupils ~~26T&#13;
Total days attendance 472.&#13;
Average attendance 24,&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 27.&#13;
Number of days taught 20.&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOB TAKDY,&#13;
Millie Gardner. Maude Richmond.&#13;
Mae Reason. Bernard Gleou.&#13;
Fannie Murphy.&#13;
STEPHEN DURFEE, Supt.&#13;
13&#13;
GKAMMAR DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Number of pupils&#13;
Total attendance&#13;
Aggregate tardiness&#13;
Daily attendance&#13;
Number days taught 20&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
Ellery Dnrfee. Ethel Durfee.&#13;
Rex Read Rnel Cad well \&#13;
Fred Read.&#13;
DURING TERM A N D YEAR:&#13;
Ethel Durfee Ellery Durfee.&#13;
C. L. GRIMES, Teacher.&#13;
INTERMEDIATE DEPARTMENT.&#13;
Whole numberof-days taught 20&#13;
Total number davs attendance 559&#13;
Average daily attendance 27.95&#13;
Whole number belonging 31&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 55&#13;
PUPIL NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
Lloyd Grimes. Orpha Heudee.&#13;
Magolla Smith. Lola Moran.&#13;
Clyde Darrow ' Mae Teeple&#13;
FOR THE TERM:&#13;
Lola Morau .&#13;
MRS. J. A. GREENE, Teacher.&#13;
PRIMARY DEPARTMENT.&#13;
.Whole number._of days taught 20&#13;
Total number of days attendance 622&#13;
Average daily attendance 31.05&#13;
Whole number belonging • 36&#13;
Aggregate tardiness 54&#13;
PUPILS NEITHER ABSENT NOR TARDY.&#13;
Bangs Richmond May Smith&#13;
Gladys Brown Josephine Culhane&#13;
Myron Dunning Theo Coute&#13;
FOR THE TERM:&#13;
Bangs Richmond.&#13;
JESSIE G R E E S , Teacher.&#13;
A GOOD M A R K E R .&#13;
k. Horse Marker W h i c h R u m Steadily-&#13;
and Takes Out All Hoof Marks.&#13;
For the marking of tomato ground a&#13;
Farm, Journal correspondent uses a&#13;
marker made as follows: The head&#13;
piece is of pine wood 3 inches thick, 8&#13;
feet 7 inches long and 0 inches wide.&#13;
"The three markers are of oak, 1¼&#13;
Inches thick, 7 inches wide and 2½ feet&#13;
long. They are beveled at the lower&#13;
end corners to show three inches on&#13;
the ground in width, plated with oneeighth&#13;
Inch iron four inches wide and&#13;
cornered to suit the wood.&#13;
These three pieces are bolted to the&#13;
head nt exactly four feet from the center&#13;
to the center of marker boards.—Aftthe&#13;
same time bore in the head holes to&#13;
suit the markers at 3 feet 3½ inches;&#13;
also put in a stout handle 1½ inches in&#13;
diameter and 2½ feet long, 15 inches&#13;
from each end of the head, to control&#13;
TOMATO MARKER.&#13;
the side drift. Let the shafts in at the&#13;
head so as to give marker boards an incline&#13;
bnck of 15 Inches out of the&#13;
square of the shafts.&#13;
The advantages of this marker are&#13;
that it does not cut the soil to Invite&#13;
washing. The middle marker takes out&#13;
all horse foot marks. The outside&#13;
marker runs in the last row made. The&#13;
back incline of "the markers makes It&#13;
run steady. Now we have the field&#13;
laid off and not a horse foot mark except&#13;
at the turning.&#13;
The orange came to Europe from Af«&#13;
rlca In the eleventh century. Sir Walter&#13;
Raleigh brought it to England in&#13;
the sixteenth century. It was first&#13;
planted in Australia In 17S8.&#13;
The Jaw of nn Otter.&#13;
You oun timl nn osample of nature's&#13;
•Hnptntion of tlir JJIW to use In the case&#13;
if cvrt.-iln chrnlvorn. like th&lt;-» ottrr—a&#13;
I iu wmst'l tlmr Icis Mnjiiln'd ;ii|iKitle&#13;
1 lUitS. 'I'll** j.'IWS Of SU» !l lll'ilStM JMC s o&#13;
liM'il in thi&gt; sockets ilet! ilistncntlo'ii is&#13;
impossible. In SOIIIH tust:in&lt;rs you enn-&#13;
W I'ViMi iffier tin' :i:ihii:iHs 'li»!id. sopurn&#13;
te the iiiw .ti\oni_LiiiL-LLi!iitLlTI'lilft_arramri'inent&#13;
is evldentl.v tlroiguwl to en&#13;
iil&gt;l&lt;» the benst to.hlto to tbt*&#13;
advantage without daugt*r that the&#13;
chewing apparatus will come loose.&#13;
gmtteit •*»&#13;
Ll«atJa« Vp tke^Dellsesup.&#13;
The Romans have the hideout haMt&#13;
of periodically lighting the Coliseum&#13;
during the tourist season with Bengal&#13;
tights and, what 1« more amazing stJH,&#13;
usually succeed in making a financial&#13;
sjiccess of it, although, no one was ever&#13;
known to go twice.&#13;
There is the additional abomination&#13;
In these days of a big brass band and&#13;
a chorus of 100 voices la an invocation&#13;
to the Flavian amphitheater. The ef-.&#13;
feet is tremendous, but somewhat stunning&#13;
to those who are accustomed to&#13;
their Coliseum empty and flooded'&#13;
with peaceful moonlight, where pictures&#13;
from the past rise with the clearness&#13;
of second sight, and no sound is&#13;
heard but one's own breathing or the&#13;
song of the nightingale. Contrast with&#13;
such a scene the red, blue and yellow,&#13;
Bengal lights, the smoke, the confusion,&#13;
the hundred shrieking ' throats&#13;
and the clang of the brazen instruments!&#13;
Imagination shrinks and curses&#13;
the Roman of today witb whom such&#13;
a thing is possible. But is it his f a u l t \&#13;
As I said before, It Is a great financial&#13;
success, and the Italians certainly do'&#13;
not patronize it. Query, Who does?—'&#13;
Rome Letter in Pall Mall Gazette. ,&#13;
H o w They Broke Up.&#13;
An amusing story is related in "Canadian&#13;
Savage Folk" of the manner inf&#13;
which an adjournment was taken by a&#13;
mass meeting. A missionary who had;&#13;
started a school among the Indians met;&#13;
with opposition, and the meeting had;&#13;
been called in support of the rival&#13;
scheme.&#13;
There were several speakers who denounced&#13;
the school in existence. We&#13;
replied vigorously, showing the efficiency&#13;
of the school and denouncing&#13;
in turn the methods adopted by the op-1&#13;
position. An Indian chief produced}&#13;
some specimens of work done at the'&#13;
school, and several speakers supported&#13;
the work as it was being done. The;&#13;
climax was reached when a gentleman&#13;
rose and said:&#13;
"I move the whole thing bust!"&#13;
TJhejchalrman put the motion.&#13;
"It is moved and seconded that the&#13;
whole thing bust!"&#13;
The audience sprang to their feet&#13;
and, waving hats, yelled "Busted!" and&#13;
made for the door. Thus ended the&#13;
first and last opposition in that matter.&#13;
WANTKD -Capable' relUhle peraon tn every&#13;
county to represent lar«e company of solid financial&#13;
reputation; $U3G salary p«r jretr, payable&#13;
weekly; 13 per day absolutely snre and all expenses;&#13;
sUaijkt, bona Ude, deflnate salary, no&#13;
commission; salary paid each Saturday and expense&#13;
money advanced eaoh week. STANUAKD&#13;
HOUSE, S34 Dearborn st. Chicago t'&amp;&#13;
WANTED—Salesman and Collector&#13;
to represent well established business&#13;
nf 50 years .standing Small Honestv&#13;
Hond required, a liberal contract for&#13;
a good man.&#13;
D.E. Whipple,&#13;
303 South Main St.&#13;
Ann A r or, Mich.&#13;
W A^TED-Capable, reliable person In every&#13;
county to represent large company of solid financial&#13;
reputation. 9W saUry per year, payable&#13;
weekly; $3 per day absolutely sure and all expenses;&#13;
straight, bona-fide, definate salary, no&#13;
commission; salary pnid wacb Saturday and expense&#13;
money advanced each week. STANDARD&#13;
HOUSE, 3H4 Dearborn at. Chicago. 1¾&#13;
Railroad Guide.&#13;
&gt; AND STEAMSHIP UNE8,&#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. BKNNKTT,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
R a l l t o a i , Taa. i , l © 5 i .&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit and Ees't,&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p. m., 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and West,&#13;
9:45 a. m., 2:08 p. m. 6:20 p. * .&#13;
For Saginaw and Bay City,&#13;
10:36 a, m., 3:04 p. m., 8:58 p. m.&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10:36 a. m,&#13;
FaABKBAY, H. F, MOBLLEIt,&#13;
Agent, South LTOO. O. P. A., Detroit.&#13;
ttrand Trnwfc Railway System.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
«.44 a.m.&#13;
6:4» p. m.&#13;
4:4b p. tn.&#13;
Jackaon.uetfoit.MclttiiSa.ai, Z&#13;
lntsrm«diat«sutlous6:]6n.n 7&#13;
. maU and rxp. F *&#13;
Jackson. Lsnox, and *&#13;
Intermediate stations 7:68 a. n.&#13;
asusn. I&#13;
as K16 a. m. and 8:45 p. • . trtias ha?« through&#13;
coach bstwssit Jaaksoa aad Datrott.&#13;
W. J.itota, Aftat, flaekaey&#13;
m&#13;
HalisSSa^ariliH ' - : ^ ^ • V ^ ^u/jM j/ y-i^i^li'Vil.'^ALlV. ^n^mntiMmM m ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ M a ^ ^ m t ^ ^ j ^ m&#13;
%-Jm^*"'-&#13;
K * &amp; * *&#13;
, ^ P ' ? ' 4&#13;
??'&#13;
" ^ T ^ r&#13;
••r, .¾' • * «&#13;
, - * . •&#13;
, * * ' 4&gt;&#13;
/if&#13;
, ,.&lt; ^ , ¾ . •v'.&lt;v .«- ,-4^ 'V V.**J.»./» : ,, •'•- &gt;kJ,'JT' U-V&gt;i ' t a«(&#13;
HWff&#13;
««•••&#13;
S A T * Two Prom D*ath.&#13;
**Oor HtNe daughter bad an almost&#13;
fatal attack of wboopin* cough and&#13;
broaobitif-," writes Mrs. W, K. Haviland,&#13;
of Armonk, N. Y., "but when all&#13;
other remedies failed, we safed her&#13;
•life'-with Dr. King's new Discovery.&#13;
"XJwrnrecBT wiro~tfB# consnmptioB tnan&#13;
advanced stage, also used this wonderful&#13;
medicine and to^ay she is perfectly&#13;
well." Desperate throat and&#13;
lung diseases yieJd to Dr. Kin*,8 Now&#13;
Discovery as to no other medicine on&#13;
earth.&#13;
CoJds. We and $1.00 bottles saaran&#13;
teed by Pr A. Sitter. Trial bottles&#13;
free.&#13;
•vtta* to s Taa.&#13;
Fox (to bear&gt;—Come over tomorrow,&#13;
and we'll play &amp; game of golf on the&#13;
links.&#13;
Bear-All right. I don't know what&#13;
the game is. but If there's any job you&#13;
can put up on the lynx I'm In with&#13;
you.—Boston Herald.&#13;
A Terrible Explosion.&#13;
"Of a gasoline stove burned a lady&#13;
here frightfully," writes N . E. Palmer,&#13;
of Kirkman, la. "The best doctors&#13;
couldn't heal the running sore&#13;
Infallible J o r Coughs •*«« that fotlowed, but Bucklen's Arnica&#13;
salve entirely cured her." In. allible&#13;
for Outs, Corns,, Sores Bo»ls, Bruises,&#13;
Skin Diseases snd Piles. 25c at F. A.&#13;
Sigler's drug store, Pinckney.&#13;
A glance into the future is afforded&#13;
by the newspaper of Burlington,&#13;
Vt, where every local&#13;
banking institution advertises&#13;
with as much spirit an4 enterprise&#13;
as a department store. The&#13;
Merchant's bank (one of the oldest&#13;
and most conservative in the&#13;
state) changes its "ads" every day&#13;
and besides telling what it can do&#13;
for people gives good advice&#13;
which lead* them to save money.&#13;
-The ^time is not distant when&#13;
every unfossiliferous financial institution&#13;
in the land will follow&#13;
this example.&#13;
6fc WANTED "&#13;
Weak men, weak women, j^ate&#13;
men, pale women, nervous raen&lt; nervous&#13;
women, debilitated men, debilitated&#13;
women, to take KniUYRed PilU&#13;
for Wan People. Tbey restore Health,&#13;
Strength and Bevuty. Wake up,&#13;
"brace up by taking them before tbe&#13;
bot weather. Tbey are the great body&#13;
builder and developer, Spring Tonic&#13;
aod Blood medicine, 25c a box.&#13;
Knills White Liver Pills are the&#13;
great Liver Invigorator, Bowel Regulate&#13;
r. 25 doses 251\&#13;
Knill'* Bine Kidney Pills core-&#13;
Backacbe and Kidney troubles,&#13;
a box.&#13;
25c&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
Salary $900 Y E A R L Y .&#13;
Mei m c wcoific of good address to ra "resent&#13;
a s, some to tiavel ai&lt; pointing agents, others for&#13;
local work looking after our interests. ¢ 9 0 0&#13;
salary guaranteed yearly; extra co . missions and&#13;
expenses, rap d advumemeut, old established&#13;
house. Grand chanc» for earnest man or woman&#13;
to secure pleasant, permanent position, liberal&#13;
income and future. New. brilliant lines. V\ rite&#13;
at once, § r A l T U K O P i t f ^ , t-38&#13;
« 3 C l i n r c t a &lt;it.9 N e w H a v e n , C o n n .&#13;
• W t ^ W ^ V S ) ! &gt;VS&lt;W'V&lt;l IS^&gt;*»'.&gt;S&gt;&gt;i&#13;
P O S T A L ^ M O R I V ,&#13;
PROPlTcTORa.&#13;
A&#13;
gtrkrtJj&#13;
claAa\&#13;
modern,&#13;
up-to-date&#13;
Hotel, located&#13;
in the heart of&#13;
DETROIT. •*• collates,&#13;
$2, $230, $3 per Day.&#13;
Con. SWANS N I W « 4 a m n e u a*.&#13;
&gt; O b e y i n g O r d e r a ,&#13;
General Harney was an officer of the&#13;
old school, a strict disciplinarian whe&#13;
took no excuses for hesitation in obeying&#13;
orders. When he was on his way&#13;
to Mexico, when the United States was&#13;
at. war with that country, he engaged&#13;
teams to transport the baggage and&#13;
placed in charge of them a Texan&#13;
named Carter. The streams were all&#13;
up, and Carter had much trouble, but&#13;
whenever he tried to modify the general's&#13;
requirements he was cut short&#13;
with the admonition, "All you've got to&#13;
do is to obey orders." *&#13;
Says Noah Smithwick in his recollections&#13;
called "The Evolution of a&#13;
State:"&#13;
They camped one night near the Nueees&#13;
rrrer, which Carter found to be Impassable.&#13;
He said nothing about it to&#13;
the general, and the next morning the&#13;
order was given to move ou. Carter&#13;
•tarted with the wagon train and halted&#13;
at the river, which was absolutely&#13;
Impassable. Harney came blustering&#13;
up.&#13;
"Didn't you know that river was&#13;
up?" he demanded.&#13;
"Yea, sir," meekly replied the wagon&#13;
master.&#13;
"Why didn't you tell me?"&#13;
"You didn't ask me, sir. You said my&#13;
butJneas was to obey orders.. You ordered&#13;
me to hitch up and move on, and&#13;
Idldit."&#13;
"You did quite right, air. Turn round&#13;
and drive back to camp."&#13;
If the general had been "done?* he&#13;
waa not going to thoW i t&#13;
Frlde of the Riding Academy.&#13;
Eoweil—There goes Withers on horseback.&#13;
He is a living Illustration of the&#13;
saying, "A merciful mail is merciful to&#13;
bis beast"&#13;
Snaffle—In what way?&#13;
Ro well—Don't you see? He lets his&#13;
weight rest on the horse only once In n&#13;
while. The most of the time he is in&#13;
the air, going up or coming down,—&#13;
Boston Transcript&#13;
Some men never amount to much because&#13;
they get into the habit of frequently&#13;
beginning life anew.—Chicago&#13;
News.&#13;
A Sprained Ankle Quickly Cured.&#13;
'• At one titutt I suffered tro«r» a severe&#13;
sprain of tb« ankle," says Geo E&#13;
uary, editor of the Guide, Washington&#13;
Va. "After using several well recommended&#13;
medicines without success&#13;
I tried Chamberlain's Pain Balm, and&#13;
am pleased to say that relief came as&#13;
soon as [ began its use and a complete&#13;
cure speedily followed." Sold by. F.&#13;
A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
«fc • Mt*t. /&#13;
A number of years ago Mr. Wlthee&#13;
Was presented with two fine bounds,&#13;
and, wishing to try their training and&#13;
their grit, he took them out to do a little&#13;
bear hunting.&#13;
The first morning Wlthee let the dogs&#13;
but for ,a run while he was getting the&#13;
breakfast expecting them to be back&#13;
In a short time. When breakfast was&#13;
»ver, the dogs had not returned, so,&#13;
taking his gun, Ux. WLthee started out&#13;
In the direction they had taken. After&#13;
traveling about a mile the faint barking&#13;
of dogs could be heard, and it was&#13;
then plain why the dogs had not relumed.&#13;
They, had scented game and&#13;
were in pursuit The sound of the&#13;
barking led him far UQ, the side of a&#13;
mountain, and soon he came in sight of&#13;
the dogs standing around the upturned&#13;
roots of a tree.&#13;
Mr. Wlthee crept up cautiously until&#13;
within about 15 feet of a cave that was&#13;
near by, and then a black, shaggy head&#13;
could be seen just above the roots.&#13;
Taking good aim, he fired his .44 caliber&#13;
and awaited results. After several&#13;
minutes he went up to the cave, and&#13;
what he saw there gave him a shock&#13;
from which he has never recovered.&#13;
Two bears lay dead, and two more&#13;
were so stunned that a few quick passes&#13;
with a knife settled them.&#13;
For the four bears Mr. Wlthee received&#13;
$20 bounty. $27.50 for their&#13;
hides and $42 for the bear oil. making&#13;
$89.50 for one day's hunt—Maine&#13;
Woods.&#13;
Seven Years In Bed*&#13;
"Will wonder ever cease," inquire&#13;
the friends of Mrs L. Pease, of Law&#13;
rence, Kan. They knew she had been&#13;
u-nable to leave her bed in seven.yeaas&#13;
on account of Kidney and liver trouble,&#13;
nervous prostration and srenerai&#13;
jleblli.tvj but, "Three bottles of Electric&#13;
Bitters enabled me lo walk," bbe&#13;
writes, " and in three months I felt&#13;
like a new person." Women suffering&#13;
from Headache, Backache, Neivousness,&#13;
Sleeplessness, Melancholy,&#13;
Fainting and Dizzy Spells will rind it&#13;
a priceless blessing. Trv it. Satisfaction&#13;
is guaranteed. Only 50 cants.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
Q n e e r I n d i a n B e l i e f s .&#13;
There is an odd fe;ttim&gt; in the theology&#13;
of the small Indian tribe of the&#13;
Bella,Coola. which Inhabit British Columbia&#13;
in about latitude o'2. They h&gt;&#13;
lievo that, there are live v orlds. one&#13;
above the other, ami the middle one Is&#13;
our own world, the earth. Above it&#13;
are two heavens, and under it are two&#13;
underworlds. In the upper heaven is&#13;
the supreme deity, who is a woman,&#13;
end she doesn't meddle much with the&#13;
affairs in the second world below her.&#13;
The zenith is the center of the lower&#13;
heaven, and here Is the house of the&#13;
gods, in which live the sun and the rest&#13;
of the deities.&#13;
Our own earth is believed to be an&#13;
island swimming in the ocean. The&#13;
first underworld from the earth is&#13;
inhabited by ghosts who can return&#13;
when they wish to heaven, from which&#13;
place they may be sent down to our&#13;
earth. If then they misbehave again,&#13;
they are cast into the lower of the underworlds,&#13;
and from this bourne no&#13;
ghostly traveler returns.-'&#13;
The Bella Coola are. sun worshipers,&#13;
for Senex, the sun, the master of the&#13;
house of gods, who also is called "the&#13;
father" and "the sacred one," Is the only&#13;
deity to whom the tribe pray. Each&#13;
family of the Bella Coola has its own&#13;
traditions and its own form of the current&#13;
traditions, so that in the mythology&#13;
of the tribe there are countless&#13;
contradictions. When any one not a&#13;
member of a clan tries to tell a tradition&#13;
which does not belong to his clan,&#13;
It is like a white man trying to tell&#13;
another's joke—he is considered asiipproprlatlug&#13;
the property right which&#13;
HOPS not belong to him.&#13;
5 0 YEAR8*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TRADE MARKS&#13;
DCSIQNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C .&#13;
.in 1« probably patentable. Communications&#13;
strictly conndeuttal. .Handbook on Patsbts&#13;
Anvone sending a sketch and description ma?&#13;
i&#13;
'Patent* taken tErbaahi Munn &amp;~i&#13;
qitettU notice* without charge. In toe Scientific Hmerkait&#13;
qutckly ascertain our opinion free whether an&#13;
invention la |&#13;
tlnns (&#13;
cent free. Oldest moy^for^seenrtngpatents.&#13;
receive&#13;
A handsomely Illustrated weekly. iMveetotr-&#13;
Terms, 18 a&#13;
A Stltrofckia*&#13;
fcsFSCWasbtoitU.&#13;
mm H P mmttm&#13;
Mil' J, I }&#13;
Hard Dacka to Kill,&#13;
The screaming Walloon Is a bard duck&#13;
to kill Its bide is very tough and is&#13;
thickly covered with feathers and&#13;
down. Besides the bird is a, great&#13;
diver, one of the kind that used to&#13;
"dive at the flash"/ when bunted with&#13;
the old arm that flashed, when fired. It&#13;
Is of very little value for table use, being&#13;
so tough. The only way to manage&#13;
it at all Is to skin it and parboil it in a&#13;
big pot wltly plenty of water. The ne-&#13;
I groes make caps of Walloon skins.&#13;
'They are great ducks for diving,"&#13;
says a well known Tred Avon river&#13;
progger.&#13;
"They can dive quicker, go down&#13;
deeper, remain under water longer and&#13;
come up farther away than uny other&#13;
duck that frequents our waters. I remember&#13;
once I succeeded in killing a&#13;
Walloon, and. being short of game for&#13;
the table* 1 determined to cook • my&#13;
bird. 1 got a negro to skin it. giving&#13;
him the hide for bis trouble. After being&#13;
cleaned we put it in a great pot full&#13;
of water and under it kindled a hot&#13;
fire. After a while I wanted to see how&#13;
the cooking of my duck progressed and&#13;
lifted the top off the boiling pot. but&#13;
there was so much steam escaping I&#13;
could not see into the pot and struck a&#13;
match over it. The blamed Walloon,&#13;
sir. dived at the flash of the match. It&#13;
disappeared'and has never been seen&#13;
since."—Baltimore SUD.&#13;
All For Love.&#13;
It was a runaway match. The young&#13;
couple had nothing to live on but love,&#13;
and they grew thin on It, for the butcher,&#13;
baker, etc., heartlessly refused to&#13;
barter any of the necessaries of life for&#13;
a bit of love, and the landlady wouldn't&#13;
accept even a large slice of it for rent.&#13;
At last they were reduced to s.uch extremities&#13;
that starvation stared them&#13;
in the face. When starvation does&#13;
this. it. so to say, "puts you out of&#13;
countenance*."&#13;
"Oh, CJeorge," wailed the young wife.&#13;
"wbiit shall we do? 1 am so hungry!"&#13;
"Alas. I know not. darling!" bo sighed&#13;
fondly l-.,;n s:t;!ly. toying with her&#13;
laxurHi af rrosses.&#13;
"Kr.t I know, George!" she suddenly&#13;
e::c!iiii:ied utter a pause. "Sell niv&#13;
h a i i ! "&#13;
"What!" he almost shouted, with a&#13;
horror stricken face. "Sacrifice, your&#13;
lovely golden locks! Uuth'essly cut off&#13;
the greatest ornament a woman can&#13;
possess? Never! Never! 1 will starve&#13;
first!"&#13;
"But, George," she assured him, "It&#13;
does not require cutting off. See!"&#13;
And she detached the glistening 3&#13;
guinea switch from her head and laid&#13;
it in his hand.&#13;
That night the young couple supped&#13;
luxuriously, but still he was not happy.&#13;
—Pearson's Weekly.&#13;
— ; f&#13;
A L e a s o n t o H a m o r i i U .&#13;
One cannot safely assume in these&#13;
days that there is any region in which,&#13;
such and such a journal is not read.&#13;
Recently a certain humorist needed a&#13;
rest and went and stopped in a cottage&#13;
in a remote village by the sea. His&#13;
sitting room opened on the kitchen,&#13;
where his landlady, a woman widely&#13;
esteemed as a person of great acumen&#13;
and a maker-of phrases, was wont to&#13;
receive the neighbors. He listened and&#13;
put both landlady and neighbors into&#13;
some auiusiug sketches which were&#13;
promptly published in a Loudon magazine.&#13;
A mouth or two went by. Then&#13;
one afternoon he came back to the cottage&#13;
to meet and cower before an indignant&#13;
matron, who told him, among&#13;
other,things,, that he had one hour in&#13;
which to pack his traps and quit the&#13;
village. She was not goinggto have an&#13;
eavesdropper In her bouse, and she&#13;
added a significant hint to the effect&#13;
that the people of the village were of&#13;
the same opinion and might be betrayed&#13;
Into an attempt to give a forcible&#13;
demonstration of their views.—London&#13;
A n E d a c a t l o n a l B f i a t a l c e .&#13;
Whether or not a college education is&#13;
advantageous depends entirely upon&#13;
the ability of. the recipient to absorb&#13;
and utilize 'such an education-. Unfortunately&#13;
such a view of the case is&#13;
seldom considered by parents and&#13;
guardians who are inclined, to send&#13;
their children to college simply be-&#13;
! cause it is considered the proper thing&#13;
You mav as well expect to run a j to do. Consequently we find throughsteam&#13;
en»ine without water as to find out the country thousands of young&#13;
.. " „ ^ ^- „ . _ „,:fL A tAmirt m e Q w l ] o have passed through cellege&#13;
an active energetic man witn a rorpm * » •&#13;
iiver and you may know that his liver^&#13;
is torpid when he does not relish his&#13;
afonotidn,g .o, ro ffeteenls hdausl lh eaandda chlae ngaunidd soamfteertimes&#13;
dizziness. A few doses of&#13;
Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver&#13;
Tablets will restore his liver to its&#13;
normal function, renew his vitality,&#13;
improve his digestion and make him&#13;
feel like a new man. Price, 25 cents.&#13;
Samples free at F. A. Sigler's drug&#13;
store, Pinckney.&#13;
acting as cheap clerks, bookkeepers or&#13;
even as car conductors and restaurant&#13;
waiters. Having learned no mechanical&#13;
trade for which they may be adapted&#13;
and being unfitted by nature for a&#13;
profession, they go through life discontented&#13;
with the'r lot and vaguely believing&#13;
that the world owes them better&#13;
treatment betause they ba-ve gone&#13;
through college.—Los Angeles Times.&#13;
and&#13;
M r . H a r e ' s F o u n t a i n o f T o n t n .&#13;
Mr. John Hare, the eminent English&#13;
actor-manager, said that the most delightful&#13;
compliment be ever., received&#13;
was from Mr. Gladstone.^ It was a&#13;
double ended compliment. Whichever&#13;
way you took It it was satisfactory.&#13;
Mr. Hare earned fame playing old&#13;
men's parts, his character as Mr. Gold-&#13;
.by in "A Pair of Spectacles" being a&#13;
good example. Added to this was a&#13;
horror of having his picture taken.&#13;
Mr. Gladstone had never seen a picture&#13;
of the actor, but he knew him well&#13;
behind the scenes as well as before the&#13;
footlights. The premier's favorite play&#13;
was "A Pair of Spectacles," and he always&#13;
went behind the scenes to chat&#13;
awhile with the actor. The really old&#13;
man and the made up old man would&#13;
sit there and talk in the most delightful&#13;
way for an hour after the show.&#13;
One day the Earl of Rosebery had&#13;
Mr. Gladstone to dinner, and he also&#13;
Invited his friend, John Hare. The&#13;
actor came in smooth shaved, looking&#13;
about o."». He was presented ro Mr.&#13;
Gladstone, and the prime minister&#13;
shook his hand most cordially and said:&#13;
"My dear sir. I am very, very glad to&#13;
meet you.. I know your father very.&#13;
very well. Splendid actor! Fine old&#13;
man!"&#13;
It took the whole evening for the earl&#13;
ami N!r. Hare to convince him that this&#13;
won was really the father,—Saturday&#13;
F venhig Tost.&#13;
atop tfc* C o a * * * * A we&gt;rk« e&gt;fff ilia&#13;
Ce&gt;HL&#13;
L.-Xtttive BromnQainina T*U«t.»t t»nr»&#13;
* cold in on« d«y.&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
No * ure, no pay&#13;
T h e A p p e a l t o t h e R e c o r d .&#13;
Little Tommy returned sore&#13;
trembling from the torture room.&#13;
"Doesn't your papa ever thrash&#13;
you?" he asked his chum, .who is the&#13;
son of a cabinet minister.&#13;
"I should say not!" replied the other&#13;
loftily. "Every time he threatens to&#13;
cane me 1 read him an extract from&#13;
his great peace at any price speech in&#13;
which he said: 'These barbariaus are&#13;
like wayward children, but have we on&#13;
that account the right to take away&#13;
their heaven sent privilege to do as&#13;
they please? Let us treat them as we&#13;
would our own wayward childrenplead&#13;
with them, beseech them, but&#13;
never coerce them with either gun or&#13;
rod.*"&#13;
"That's a good deal to remember," remarked&#13;
Tommy.&#13;
"Yes, but now he's got so used to it&#13;
that he drops the cane as soon as I&#13;
start."—London Answers.&#13;
We toe o n d f g l P l m B f t / I w r e f c f r&#13;
agree to rofonj£t|ii J j p e j •*'••• &amp;'&#13;
cent bottle o £ J ^ * ^ i i i r if i i does&#13;
not care an|fifi9||||/coldt whoopiM&#13;
congb,or ***** fftoble. We aleo&#13;
ttaarant***ta»^Etixir to core eon&#13;
sompt^fju wtem0ied according to di*&#13;
r e c t ^ w p a y b a c k . * f e H Jetton&#13;
i j i f t i j n lr 1 113 small dotes 4qr*&#13;
inf :|fti AyyiriU care the most severe&#13;
L-et|Vae&gt;tV st*p the 'most distressing&#13;
coagntS?&#13;
P. \ . Sigter„&#13;
W. B.Darrow&#13;
Hbe f indmej |l is patch,&#13;
FUBUSBBD i m v tHtnUOAT l o u m i BY&#13;
FBANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
Editor amd thrpprUtUr.&#13;
Subscription Price $1 fa Advance&#13;
Entered at (tie Poetoftce at Piacicney* Mienlfan&#13;
at eecoad-claia metier.&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
Business Cards, $4,00 per year.&#13;
X^eaih and marriage notices published tree.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may be paid&#13;
for, if desired, by presenting the oflce with tickets&#13;
of admission. In case tickets axe not brought&#13;
to tbe office, regular rates will be charged*&#13;
All matter in local notice column willba enara-&#13;
1 at 5 cents per Uae or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
Insertion. Where no time isipeciaed,alinotices&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
wUl be charged for accordingly. t^»Ail changes&#13;
of advertisements MUST reach this omce as early&#13;
as TUBSDAT morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
tame week.&#13;
JOS &amp;SM2IJV G /&#13;
In sintiUrancbes, a specialty. We bareaHklpda&#13;
and the latest styles of Type, etc., whioh enables&#13;
us to execute all kinds of worklsucb as Books,&#13;
Pamplets, Fosters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, e t c . In&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
fw as good work can bf done.&#13;
+ L.L i i l L U PAfABL* tfliUT Of I V S B r MONTH.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PRESIDENT.. ..-. ~~. .C. L, Sigler&#13;
TnusTJSSS K. Baker. R. H. JSrwio,&#13;
F. 6 . Jack»oa, Geo Keason Jr..&#13;
Chas. Love, Malacby Hocne.&#13;
E. B. Brown&#13;
X ttKASu n&gt;Bn* • •••••**•• • • • •*»••*•*«••••***••» A J • A» v&gt; Ad «• otX&#13;
AH8BB80U .«.. M*.JSB. A.Greene&#13;
STBSKT CoMaiasiONsa J. Parker&#13;
UKALTUorrxesa , . . . . D r . H . K.Sigler&#13;
ATTORNEY ~......~~ W. A. Carr&#13;
MARSHALL .£. Brogan&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
MSTHOD1ST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
Hev. H. W . Hicks, pastor. Services erery&#13;
Sunday morning at lo:i)o, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:00 o'clock. Prayer meetingTbar*.&#13;
day evenings, Sunday school at close of morn*&#13;
ing service. LEAL SXGLSS, Supt.&#13;
CO&gt;'CiKEGAl'IONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Kev. c. W. Kice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:80 and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'clock. Prayer meeting Tbura&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at close of mornintreervUe.&#13;
Alias Kittle Huff, 6apt,, Maoel&#13;
Swarthout Sec.&#13;
LIT. MARK'S'J ATHOL.IC CHURCH.&#13;
O Rev. M. J. Comuwrford, Pastor. -Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass st7;30 o'clock&#13;
lugli mass with sermon at 9:46 a. m. Catechism&#13;
at 8:00 p. in., vespersanabenediction at 7:Su u.m«&#13;
SOCIETIES:&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of this place, meets every&#13;
third Sunday iuttie Ft. Vlittnew dall.&#13;
John Tuoiney and H. T. Kelly,Couuty DjlegAtes&#13;
!M'WORTH Lb!AGUE. Meets every Sunday&#13;
Cievening at 6:00 oclock in the M. E. Cuurcb. A&#13;
cordial invitation ia extended to everyone, especially&#13;
young people. F. L. Andrews, Pres.&#13;
ENDEAVOR SOJlErY':-\ti*t&#13;
_ lday evaain&lt; at 6:i). Prejilsut&#13;
Mua L. M.Coi; S»jrjUr;rt Altai II utU CArp.iatir CHRISTIAN&#13;
iQi»3every Sunday eveain* rpHE W. C. T. U. meets the first Friiay of ei&#13;
1 month at S:$J home of Dr. 11.&#13;
each&#13;
p. in. at tne none or ur. a. F.&#13;
Sigler. Everyone interested in temperance is&#13;
coadially invited. Mrs. l*al Sigler, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
Etta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
Datey-ivas crigrmrny the eye of day&#13;
or day*8 eye.&#13;
A Card.&#13;
T, the undersigned, do herel&gt;y ai/ree&#13;
to refund th« money on a 50 c«nt hottie&#13;
of Green's Warranted Syrup of&#13;
Tar if it failes ro cure your cough or&#13;
cold. I also guarantee a 25-cent hottie&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money refunded.&#13;
t23&#13;
Will B. Darrow.&#13;
Subscribe lor Dispatch.&#13;
4&amp;A&#13;
aigaateta Is &lt;mwcrrter ttbe genuine' mesticatedanimalatareesonabsapejaa.&#13;
Laxative BraixH)uiiii*e Table*&#13;
The C. T. A. and B. society of this place,&#13;
every third Saturday evening in the Pr.&#13;
thew Hall. John Donohue, President.&#13;
n&gt;*et feat-&#13;
KNIGHTS OP MACCABEES.&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before fall&#13;
ol the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordi&amp;Uyinvited.&#13;
CHAS. OtMPBSLL, Sir Knight Commands!&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.76, ? A. A. M. Regular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or befora&#13;
the fall of the moon. * H, P. Sigler, W. M.&#13;
RDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
renin&#13;
Mas. 0 AA.M. meeting,&#13;
tbe Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
MARV. RKAD, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF MODERN WOODMEN Keet the&#13;
iiret Thursday evening of each Month in the&#13;
Aiaccnbee nail. C. L. (irimea V. C.&#13;
|- ADIES OF THE MACCABEUS. Meat every Is&#13;
d 1. hall. Visiting sisters&#13;
JULIA SIOLKK, Lady Com.&#13;
Li and 3rd Saturday of eachmonth&#13;
at 4:30 p in. a&#13;
K. •&gt;. T. M. cordially invited.&#13;
L 1 KNIGHTS OF TUB LOYAL GUARD&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every month in the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:&amp;)o'olock. All visiting&#13;
Gnards welcome.&#13;
C. L. Grimes. Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. a C, L, 3KU.ER M, 0&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER, "&#13;
Physicians and Surueouu. All calls prompt!&#13;
Attended to day or uight. 03)ce on Main str&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
DR. A. B.GREEN.&#13;
DENTIST-Erery Friday; and on Thnra.&#13;
day when having- appoiatmaats. Oflce ovar&#13;
Sigler's Drug Store.&#13;
" ^ 9&#13;
' *^Mfl&#13;
••.'f •'•*'••' vlfil|&#13;
''' rfftS^'rlB&#13;
^•, +/ *.-*: *$j ^';/,*.| vI I&#13;
ILUiLi'"'--'^ ' ***i($w "iff'1 'V*"*8n i&#13;
•''V ,,;",::':V '^&#13;
' ^'••••/'•^M&#13;
,-'", 'v*^..;'.^i||&#13;
. '% ^1:¾¾¾&#13;
^ ¾ ¾&#13;
' j-Vi'V'%v''--''^«*&#13;
";,',P- '"'"^if- ^ ¾&#13;
• : ' • ' • ' • • &gt; - • » u&#13;
V E T E R I N A R Y 9 U R O t O f 4 . I&#13;
Graduate of 0.it*rlo Veterfnary OofiaM, aia»*, -&#13;
the Veterinary Dentistry Collage ' &lt;::,-/,&#13;
••m&#13;
.-&gt;-••*•',?-1 *&#13;
_ai&#13;
-^1&#13;
dl&#13;
M&#13;
— - - ^&#13;
Toronto Danada.&#13;
Willi&#13;
Horses teeth examiMdlFrea.&#13;
orrvecat AILL. PINCICNUY&#13;
•l &lt; * J&#13;
.I'S'.'-'.'-v-&#13;
2!&lt;*J: :••:•'&#13;
Vl&gt;&#13;
• , &lt; * ' . » ' •&#13;
";••'''" .. v :•.*'.." .';•;' *;&lt;.•;*' '..-•• •.':;,";-.:&gt;'.y.',••. J-'1'.; v-V.K;KV V j i ^ ' ^ V ^ V ' , . . , . ..&gt;-,•.&gt; ,'•?'•' v':,.,; ' ,!.•'•• ' •• »••• ••'•• ^-••-.M* - ^ .--'v, «:.-. . .;'vw'i';-'^^ "••''''' .»;,&#13;
" ' • &lt; " &gt; , . . . -&#13;
ft&#13;
8V&#13;
-&lt; %'&#13;
*tt&#13;
SB&#13;
J * V A S I &gt; K K W S , P u b l i s h e r .&#13;
• ~"~^ MICHIGAN.&#13;
T h e undergraduate body of Koau-'&#13;
o k e College, Salem, Va., Includes four&#13;
Koreans—one of t h e m a son o f the&#13;
emperor—and five n a t i v e P o r t o Rleans.&#13;
A Korean recently w o n t h e&#13;
prize for E n g l i s h declamation.&#13;
T h e tree planted a t the N a v a l Traini&#13;
n g Station i n Newport a n dedicated&#13;
to t h e m e m o r y of Admiral Philip, w h o&#13;
c o m m a n d e d t h e T e x a s a t Santiago, will&#13;
typify t h e v i t a l i t y and g r o w t h of the&#13;
hero'ft fume, H i s - r e c o r d illustrated at&#13;
once t h e valor and h u m a n e n e s s t h a t&#13;
characterise the model officer. Ho did&#13;
The Preparations for the Funeral&#13;
in Detroit.&#13;
THE SOWS SAD HOMECOMING '\&#13;
Already the Matter of Kreotlng a Suitable&#13;
Memorial to the IUtutrloas Dead la&#13;
Detroit is Beta* Acttated-AU Feopto&#13;
Will Unite in Doin* Honor.&#13;
.Sunday noon H a z o n S. Flngree, Jr.,&#13;
sailed from S o u t h a m p t o n for N e w&#13;
York on the Red S t a r line s t e a m e r&#13;
Zeeland, wKh t h e r e m a i n s of the lamented&#13;
ex-governor. T h a t the funeral&#13;
will -be the largest, e v e r g i v e n n public&#13;
n o t fear a fighting e n e m y , nor fail to m a n in Michigan is evidenced by t h e&#13;
succor a dying foe. preparations which c o n t i n u e t o l&gt;o&#13;
T h e fifth of an extraordinary series&#13;
of weddings has just been celebrated&#13;
i n Paradise Valley, near Oroville, Cal.&#13;
T h e first was t h a t of J o h n Weer, a&#13;
Cornish widower w i t h four good looki&#13;
n g daughters. Some y e a r s ago he&#13;
wedded Mrs. Malarln, a F r e n c h w i d o w&#13;
w i t h four sons. T h e b o y s and girls&#13;
h a v e n o w been all m a t e d and t h e five&#13;
c o u p l e s live under the s a m e roof.&#13;
prepnr&#13;
made, and flic indications are that the&#13;
e v e n t s attending wHl be the most notable&#13;
of the kind t h a t e v e r took place&#13;
In the state. E v e r y b o d y MJOIHS e a g e r&#13;
to serve in any capacity in the work of&#13;
preparing for the funeral and for raising&#13;
the fund for the proposed H n g r e e&#13;
memorial, and it is likely that J u l y 5&#13;
and (&gt;, the days w h e n t h e remains will&#13;
lie in s t a t e and w h e n t h e funeral will&#13;
take place, will be regarded a s general&#13;
holidays. In m a n y w i n d o w s of store**&#13;
and in private d w e l l i n g s pictures of&#13;
T h e experiments are for, the purpose the iaite governor ure beginning to apof&#13;
Improving and perfecting bombs&#13;
t h a t are now m a d e for t h e purpose of&#13;
e x p o s i n g the position of an e n e m y at&#13;
night; and t o reveal t h e character of&#13;
d e f e n s e s to be attacked. T h e s e pro&#13;
pear, with mourning decoration.&#13;
| (iovernor Bliss h a s issued this general&#13;
order:&#13;
j " I t is recognized b y t h e people of the&#13;
c o m m o n w e a l t h of Michigan that In t h e&#13;
combustion.&#13;
Jecffies explode o n i m p a c t , liberating t Z a ^ ' ^ ^ Z ^ l ^ T ^&#13;
a flaming compound. One compound tinjruisheil citizen, a fearless ami tlreconsistirig&#13;
of sulphur, saltpetre, and I e s s advocate of the ris'hts of the peohydrocarbon,&#13;
is a blue light mixture, pie. a lu-ave soldier of t h e civil Avar and&#13;
T h e illumination l a s t s a s long a s t h e commander-in-chief of the military&#13;
saltpetre supplies o x y g e n to maintain forces of Michigan, and w a r governor&#13;
during the &amp;:mnish-Americnn w a r :&#13;
therefore, to do honor to his memory,&#13;
t h e military forces of t h e s t a t e will&#13;
parade in comirtiance w i t h the following&#13;
orders-&#13;
"The staff of the commander-inchief,&#13;
the colonels of the Second and&#13;
Third Infantries, the major commanding&#13;
First Independent battalion and&#13;
their adjutants will report to the adjutant-&#13;
general in Detroit, at the Russell&#13;
house, on the m o r n i n g of J u l y 0,&#13;
"13*717&#13;
•'Brig.-(ien. Charles L. B o y n t o n and&#13;
staff will report at Detroit. Mich., on&#13;
President J o h n H e n r y B a r r o w s of&#13;
Oberlln College, a n n o u n c e s that / o h n&#13;
D . Rockefeller h a s offered Oberlin&#13;
$200,000 o n condition t h a t the collegs&#13;
raise ¢300,000 during t h e present year.&#13;
A s $150,000 of this is already pledged,&#13;
there s e e m s to be no doubt that tho&#13;
college wil claim the gift before Janua&#13;
r y 1. During the t w o years of the&#13;
""presidency of Dr. Barrows, the endowm&#13;
e n t h a s been increased b y ¢700,000,&#13;
n o t counting the $500,000 expected&#13;
from t h e sources just mentioned.&#13;
In electing H e n r y P. D a v i s o n to the&#13;
presidency of t h e Liberty National&#13;
bank in N e w York last week the&#13;
wtrifikhnTderg nt that tngtiriiHnn p^fftri&#13;
i n control of their property a man&#13;
w h o is today the y o u n g e s t bank presid&#13;
e n t in the metropolis. Mr. Davison,&#13;
a t t h e a g e of thirty-three, ranks not&#13;
o n l y a s president of a national bank in&#13;
t h e financial center of t h e continent,&#13;
but also a s the secretary of the N e w&#13;
York clearing house, t h e organization&#13;
of the banking interests.&#13;
the morning of J u l y (». 1001. and Gen.&#13;
B o y n t o n will a s s u m e c o m m a n d of t h e&#13;
military and naval forces of the state&#13;
a s s i g n e d to take part In the obsequies.&#13;
"Col. Charles W. Harrah. commanding&#13;
First Infantry, M. X. (}.. and Commander&#13;
Hendrie. c o m m a n d i n g Michigan&#13;
naval 'brigade, will a s s e m b l e their&#13;
companies at Detroit, Mich.,- on the&#13;
morning of July (&gt;, 1!X)1. and report to&#13;
Brig.-Gen. Boynton. Transportation&#13;
and subsistence w h i l e In Detroit will&#13;
be furnished by t h e quartermastergeneral&#13;
in lien of all other pay a n d all&#13;
o w a n c e s .&#13;
"All companies of t h e Michigan National&#13;
Guard, not a s s i g n e d to duty by&#13;
this order, will a s s e m b l e and parade&#13;
w i t h proper insignia of mourning, at&#13;
their h o m e stations, J u l y (5, 1001.&#13;
• AsttherTovattprte*** tfe = ' j&#13;
i s MartborouKh. I t U J e e t t o d a d j o i n -&#13;
ing*ttal p l a n t o f tbho 0 r e * t N o r t h e r n&#13;
Cement c o m p a n y , 2 ¼ m i l e s s o a t h a n d&#13;
e a s t o f B a l d w i n , or t w o m i l e s b y r a i l&#13;
T h e company h a s p l a t t e d a v i l l a g e&#13;
w h i c h i s e s t i m a t e d t o bo l a r g o e n o u g h&#13;
for a population of 5,000 or 6,000 people.&#13;
W i t h t h e i r n e w i n d u s t r y , t h e&#13;
m a n u f a c t u r e of P o r t l a n d c e m e n t , t h e y&#13;
figure t h a t it w o u l d b e b e t t e r t o b e&#13;
I n d e p e n d e n t from a n y o t h e r t o w n . -&#13;
*fW" » * * * • ttmm&#13;
Shows arl Increase of 21 Per Cent&#13;
in Imports.&#13;
14? PER CENT IN COMMERCE.&#13;
The Total Amount Imported Into the Ial-&#13;
; p$^u^9t£&#13;
7,- '".': ivt.ftjwias**.**-,' /'..,v r&amp;:.*&#13;
W a t c h e s froffl" aeveral p o i n t s I f&#13;
V i r g i n ! * g i v e p a r t i c u l a r s of a terriffl*&#13;
cloud b u r s t w h i c h c e n s e d t h e l o e s o f&#13;
o v e r 200 l i v e s and t h e e n t i r e deetnkjti&#13;
o n of t h e &gt; &gt; w n of Key stones n u n d r e d s r&#13;
of p e o p l e are m i s s i n g ap4, t h e d e t t r u o t *&#13;
ion of property i s widespread. '''..'''•*•-'&#13;
T h e y nave already p l a t t e d 3.000 l a r g e&#13;
t o w n lots, w i t h w i d * streets. T h e y&#13;
o r i g i n a l l y e x p e c t e d t o Incorporate w i t h&#13;
the t o w n of B a l d w i n , b u t l a t e r develo&#13;
p m e n t s made it s e e m preferable t o&#13;
Incorporate t h e l ? o w n u n d e r a n ihdlTi&lt;£"&#13;
uai [name of i t s o w n . T h e railroad&#13;
company h a s signified a w i l l i n g n e s s t o&#13;
open a,depot in t h e village. T h e maxF&#13;
a g e m e n t of the c o m p a n y w i l l n o t a l l o w&#13;
liquor to be sold in t h e village. All&#13;
deeds and c o n t r a c t s for l o t s h a v e t h i s&#13;
clause forbidding t h e s a l e of liquor.&#13;
lujd* for 1 0 M&lt;mtb» of Xaat Year- WaT&#13;
• 2 0 , 1 4 3 . 1 5 » , AcalBSt 916,684.508 for&#13;
(ha Pceoedlnff Year.&#13;
R u s s i a has decided t h a t it w a n t s the&#13;
American bicycle, h a v i n g tired of the&#13;
more clumsy E n g l i s h and German ar- _ _ _&#13;
t i d e . Such are the c o m f o r t i n g reports ! T h B Governor'* Proclamation,&#13;
received by the managers of the Amer- TO the People of the State of Michigan:&#13;
ICfcii Bicycle company, w h i c h does T h e Hon. Hazen S. Pingree, former&#13;
(much of the exporting of American governor of Michigan, is dead, h a v i n g&#13;
machines. Russia finds m o r e popular departed this life i n London, E n g l a n d ,&#13;
u s e for t h e m a c h i n e at a moderate Tuesday, J u n e 18, loni. at the h o u r of&#13;
price than ft h a s found heretofore, and 11:35 p. m. His d e a t h removes from&#13;
t h e m a n y A m e r i c a n - m a d e machines our midst the second w a r g o v e r n o r of&#13;
t h a t travelers about Europe h a v e seen t h e state, a m a n descended from pah&#13;
a v e convinced them of the superiority triotic ancestry, a n d w h o had himself&#13;
of our machines over t h o s e of Euro- served his country in its hour of need&#13;
pean make. So there is a n unusual de- on t h e field of~b*H4e, ami iu southern&#13;
m a n d t h i s year, a fact w h i c h pleases prisons. His enercry a n d c e a s e l e s s act&#13;
h e American matter w h o finds t h e de- t i v i t y won for him a w o r l d - w i d e repum&#13;
a n d here falling off as compared with&#13;
t h a t w h i c h existed w h e n all Americ&#13;
w a s bicycle mad.&#13;
"Threatened m e n live long," s o m e -&#13;
t i m e s — w h e n , for instance, they chance&#13;
t o be criminals w h o s e counsel are anxi&#13;
o u s to make a record. A l m o s t ten&#13;
y e a r s a g o a man in the state of W a s h -&#13;
i n g t o n w a s convicted of murder in the&#13;
tation. He w a s e n d o w e d w i t h a determination&#13;
and t e n a c i t y of purpose&#13;
w h i c h characterized h i s entire career,&#13;
w h e t h e r as a soldier, a s h o e m a k e r a t&#13;
t h e bench, a successful business man,&#13;
t h e mayor of t h e m e t r o p o l i s of the&#13;
state, or as chief e x e c u t i v e of t h i s&#13;
g r e a t c o m m o n w e a l t h . Coupled w i t h&#13;
t h i s w a s a rugged h o n e s t y of purpose,&#13;
w h i c h w o n for him t h e confidence of&#13;
first degree and sentenced to be t h e people.&#13;
hanged. That sentence has been thrice D y i n g in a foreign laud, a w a y from&#13;
reaffirmed, but t h e man h a s not been h i s home, the s y m p a t h y of the e n t i r e&#13;
h a n g e d yet. T h e state supreme court people will be e x t e n d e d in p e n e r o ^ s&#13;
and t h e United States Supreme court measure t o his family, in w h o s e m i d s t&#13;
h a v e had t h e case before t h e m , in the he w a s a l w a y s a k i n d h u s b a n d a n d a n&#13;
form of exceptions and objections, duri&#13;
n g these ten years, and the condemned&#13;
man's attorney declares that&#13;
h e has* still "many cards to play."&#13;
S u c h attempts t o "cheat t h e g a l l o w s "&#13;
h a v e t h e evil effect of arousing against&#13;
a convict a s e n t i m e n t w h i c h is not&#13;
easily t o be distinguished from vindictiveness.&#13;
P e w persons k n o w that, the United&#13;
S t a t e s g o v e r n m e n t derives an income&#13;
from s o m e of the largest b a t h i n g est&#13;
a b l i s h m e n t s In America, if not in the&#13;
world. T h e hot springs of Arkansas,&#13;
w h i c h h a v e been a resort for invalids&#13;
for m a n y years, are owned by Uncle&#13;
S a m , and he extracts a p a y m e n t of $30&#13;
a t u b for the u s e of the medicated water.&#13;
A s there are 534 tubs, t h e spring&#13;
brings h i m an i n c o m e from that&#13;
source of $16,020 a year. T h e various&#13;
hot springs, which are said to number&#13;
seventy-three, issuinar from t h e w e s t&#13;
side and the base of Hot Springs mount&#13;
a i n , and which are n o w obscured from,&#13;
v i e w , h a v e been converged in m a n y ins&#13;
t a n c e s from several different issuer&#13;
into o n e outfet by development work&#13;
d o n e o n t h e reservation under t h e supervision&#13;
of the various superintend-&#13;
-eat*.&#13;
i n d u l g e n t father.&#13;
A s a mark of respect, it is h e r e b y&#13;
ordered t h a t the flaps o n t h e c a p i t o l&#13;
a n d other state b u i l d i n g s be displayed&#13;
a t half-mast until a f t e r t h e burial, t h a t&#13;
t h e capitol be appropriately draped.and&#13;
t h a t o n t h e day of t h e funeral, all t h e&#13;
s t a t e departments be closed. All officers&#13;
of t h e s t a t e a n d a l l c i t i z e n s w h o&#13;
can d o so, are requested to a t t e n d upon&#13;
t h e obsequies.&#13;
I n t e s t i m o n y whereof, I have hereu&#13;
n t o s e t my hand a n d cause'd t h e g r e a t&#13;
seal of t h e s t a t e to be affixed.&#13;
Done a t the city of L a n s i n g , t h i s&#13;
n i n e t e e n t h d t y of J u n e , A. D. ninet&#13;
e e n hundred and one. and of t h e indep&#13;
e n d e n c e of the U n i t e d S t a t e s of Amer*&#13;
tea, the one hundred a n d t w e n t y - s i x t h .&#13;
B y t h e Governor: A. T. BLISS.&#13;
F. M. W A R N E R , Secy, of State.&#13;
I n t e r l o c h e n w a s visited by a 955,000&#13;
fire o n t h e 16th,&#13;
T h e r e were 734 s t u d e n t s in t h e g r e a t&#13;
s e n i o r g r a d u a t i n g c l a s s of 1001 a t t h e&#13;
U. of M.&#13;
T h e village tax of L a k e Odessa raised&#13;
t h i s y e a r will be 9800 les« t h a n l a s t&#13;
year. A big celebration w i l l be h e l d 0 0&#13;
J u l y 4.&#13;
Desperate Harder at Iron Mountain.&#13;
Jack U o l d s w o r t h y murdered Mrs,&#13;
Mary D a n i e l s at t h e Chapin m i n e location,&#13;
near Iron M o u n t a i n , o n t h e 21st,&#13;
w i t h a d o u b l e - b l a d e d ax, s t r i k i n g her&#13;
on t h e head t w i c e , H e a t t a c k e d her&#13;
y o u n g son, who. a t t e m p t e d t o interfere.&#13;
Goldswortby, w h o a t t e m p t e d to commit&#13;
suicide by c u t t i n g h i s throat, w a s&#13;
arrested. T h e w o m a n died a t 2 o'clock.&#13;
The reason for t h e m a n ' s a n i m u s w a s&#13;
that t h e dead w o m a n had g a r n i s h e e d&#13;
his w a g e s for t h e p a y m e n t of a board&#13;
bill. T h e first h u s b a n d of Mrs, D a n i e l s&#13;
w a s k i l l e d in t h e Chapin m i n e , a n d b e r&#13;
second husband m e t d e a t h i n a saloon&#13;
row. G o l d s w o r t b y i s I n Jail a n d is w e l l&#13;
guarded by officers of t h e l a w .&#13;
• "&#13;
Another Caaoltne Explosion.&#13;
T h e careless use of g a s o l i n e i s a g a i n&#13;
responsible for a horrible a c c i d e n t in&#13;
Detroit on the 20th. T h e v i c t i m s w e r e&#13;
children, a girl a g e d 15 and a boy a g e d&#13;
C T h e children w e r e left a l o n e i n t h e&#13;
house and t h e d a u g h t e r t h o u g h t s h o&#13;
would like to e x p e r i m e n t in c o o k i n g .&#13;
She a t t e m p t e d to fill the g a s o l i n e t a n k&#13;
while the fire WHS b u r n i n g , a n d an explosion&#13;
followed w i t h t h e r e s u l t t h a t&#13;
both s h e und her l i t t l e b r o t h e r w e r e&#13;
horribly burned, t h e l a t t e r d y i n g of&#13;
his injuries a f e w h o u r s later. I t is&#13;
tt th^jrhH-wHl recover. ~&#13;
• - — m - — '&#13;
Encampment Date Changed.&#13;
The state military board m e t at Lansing&#13;
o n the 20th. and o u t of regard to&#13;
the w i s h e s of Gov. B l i s s c h a n g e d t h e&#13;
date of the state m i l i t a r y e n c a m p m e n t&#13;
from A u g u s t 3 to A u g u s t 5. I t h a d&#13;
been t h e intention of t h e board to have&#13;
tUe soldiers g o i n t o c a m p at M a n i s t e e&#13;
on Saturday and break .camp o n e w e e k&#13;
from t h e f o l l o w i n g M o n d a y , b u t t h e&#13;
governor w a s opposed t o h a v i n g t w o&#13;
S u n d a y s in camp, and i t w a s therefore&#13;
decided to have the c a m p b e g i n on&#13;
Monday. I t will close A u g u s t 14.&#13;
Wild Game In Alpena County.&#13;
Edward B r o w n , o n e of the b e s t&#13;
k n o w n trappers t h a t o p e r a t e in t h i s&#13;
country, arrived a t A l p e n a on the 17th&#13;
w i t h t h e product of t h e s p r i n g season.&#13;
He had three bears, 19 w o l v e s , t h r e e&#13;
wildcats, and m a n y mink, m u s k r a t&#13;
and coons. His b o u n t i e s for fur b r o u g h t&#13;
him 9400. His l a r g e s t bear w e i g h e d&#13;
450 pounds nnd w o u l d e a s i l y w e i g h&#13;
COO in the fall. B r o w n ' s wolf catch is&#13;
the largest ever made by o n e man in&#13;
Alpena county in one season.&#13;
M I N O R M I C H I G A N M A T T E R S .&#13;
Oar Trsdo With the rkUlpplnej.&#13;
A n i n c r e a s e of 31 per c e n t i n im?&#13;
p o r t s and 149 p e r c e n t in P h i l i p p i n e&#13;
c o m m e r c e is s h o w n in a c o m p a r a t i v e&#13;
S t a t e m e n t made p u b l i c on t h e 17th b y&#13;
t h e d i v i s i o n of i n s u l a r affairs, w a r department,'&#13;
s e t t i n g forth the trade ret&#13;
u r n s for t h e first 10 m o n t h s of 1900.&#13;
as compared w i t h t h e same period&#13;
f o r , t h e p r e c e d i u g year. T h e t o t a l&#13;
value of m e r c h a n d i s e imported injto&#13;
t h e P h i l i p p i n e s f r o m J a n u a r y t o N o -&#13;
v e m b e r of 1900 w a s 920,143,153, a g a i n s t&#13;
910.044,568 for t h e s a m e period of 1890.&#13;
T h e v a l u e of t h e e x p o r t s from t h e&#13;
P h i l i p p i n e s d u r i n g t h e 1900 period i s&#13;
s e t d o w n a t 919 373,830, a g a i n s t 913,-&#13;
975,605 in 1890. T h e g r e a t e r p a r t of&#13;
t h e i m p o r t s c a m e from Europe a n d Asia&#13;
t i c c o u n t r i e s , a l t h o u g h t h i s t r a d e&#13;
w i t h t h e U. S. s h o w e d a n increase of&#13;
9531,367, or 43 per c e n t E x p o r t s t o&#13;
t h e U. &amp; , h o w e v e r , s h o w e d a f a l l i n g&#13;
off of 9975,027.&#13;
t ••'• — • •• ' •" • • ! • • — rn.-m.-m m •&#13;
Young Bride Suicided.&#13;
B e c a u s e t h e m a n s h e married tried t o&#13;
force her t o live a vicious life, Mrs.&#13;
E d i t h S m i t h , a bride of 13 d a y s , • c o m -&#13;
m i t t e d suicide i n E v a n s t o n , 111., b y&#13;
s h o o t i n g herself t h r o u g h t h e h e a r t o n&#13;
t h e 16th. Mrs. S m i t h , w h o w a s 18&#13;
y e a r s old, and w h o s e maiden n a m e&#13;
w a s Moore, w a s married o n J u n e 4 t o&#13;
Ami S m i t h , of Chicago. A w e e k l a t e r&#13;
s h e d e s e r t e d her h u s b a n d a n d r e t u r n e d&#13;
to E v a n s t o n . S m a r t i n g under t h e&#13;
s h a m e a n d d i s g r a c e s h e said s h e h a d&#13;
experienced, s h e locked herself in h e r&#13;
room and w a s f o u n d l y i n g dead on t h e&#13;
bed w i t h t h e revolver gripped in her&#13;
hand.&#13;
Heavy Storm.&#13;
H l ^ d m r j ; fti)&lt;i vicinity wore visited&#13;
Saturday by one of the fiercest s t o r m s&#13;
k n o w n ••'nee the United S t a t e s w e a t h -&#13;
er b u r t w has been established. W i t ' n n&#13;
48 minutes' l.ON i n c h e s of w a t e r fell&#13;
and during that t i m e the lightning and&#13;
thunder w a s a l m o s t continuous. T h e&#13;
w i n d iiccomiNuiying the storm w a s not&#13;
hlarh e x c e p t in a contracted imth a f e w 1 ' 1 . ,1 , 1 , , , , — 1 . — . I ,&#13;
1' • -&#13;
C U B A A N D f H l i l P P I N E N B W 9 ,&#13;
T h e island of P a n s y ia b e i n g r a v a g e d&#13;
by rinderpest a n i s o g r e a t ii» t h e b a v o o&#13;
caused b y t h e d i s e a s e t h a t t h e n a t i v e s&#13;
are h a u l i n g carta t o Uottcv CoL Bofive&#13;
offleera&#13;
"V*- \&#13;
hundred feet widt*. w h i c h it s w e p t like&#13;
a tornado from M c K e e s Hocks, through&#13;
A l l e g h e n y , a portion cf the e a s t end,&#13;
Plttsbvrg, on to Wllmerdinjr and Turtle&#13;
Creek. &lt; J resit dninnge w a s done nnd&#13;
three d e a t h s resulted in Pittsburg.&#13;
L a n s i n g has s o m e c a s e s of smallpox.&#13;
O w o s s o will probnhlv h a v e n. street&#13;
fair in August.&#13;
The berry yield in t h e v i c i n i t y of&#13;
Watervleit will be very l i g h t t h i s season.&#13;
Sunday, J u n e 1G, w a s a "dry" day&#13;
at H o u g h t o n , for t h e first t i m e i n more&#13;
than 10 years.&#13;
CMergue e x p e c t s t h e steel w o r k s of&#13;
the Sault to rival t h e g r e a t trust mills,&#13;
when he g e t s them going.&#13;
T h e fund for the P i n g r e e memorial,&#13;
to be erected in Detroit, g r o w s and it&#13;
is hoped will reach $100,000.&#13;
Striking m a c h i n i s t s at t h e F. &amp; P.&#13;
M. shops, a t Muskegon, to t h e n u m -&#13;
ber of 14, have g o n e back to work.&#13;
John Manchester, a resident of Otterburn.&#13;
Flint township, is charged w i t h&#13;
attempted assault on h i s little 8-yearold&#13;
step-daughter.&#13;
A disastrous fire in t h e P e t e r s L u m -&#13;
ber &amp; Shingle Co., B e n t o n Harbor, Saturday&#13;
e v e n i n g destroyed property valu&#13;
e d at $123.000.&#13;
Five n e w o u t b r e a k s of s m a l l p o x&#13;
w e r e reported to t h e s t a t e board of&#13;
h e a l t h o n t h e 17 th, a n d o n e o u t b r e a k&#13;
w a s reported ended.&#13;
A severe electrical Btornrpassed over&#13;
A l l e g a n c o u n t y o n t h e n i g h t of t h e&#13;
lGth, a n d considerable d a m a g e w a s&#13;
done i n m a n y places.&#13;
Miss Laura Bnrdick, of Stnrgis. h a s&#13;
started for H o n o l u l u w h e r e s h e will t*»&#13;
married to H. M. S t e v e n s , a civil engineer&#13;
in the H a w a i i a n islands.&#13;
Rural free delivery service ordered&#13;
established a t K e n t City, K e n t county,&#13;
M!ch. A route w a s also ordered established&#13;
at Marshall, Calhoun c o u n t y .&#13;
Th&lt;? prosecuting attorney a n d police&#13;
officers of Port H u r o n h a v e c o m&#13;
menced a crusade for nr&#13;
scrvance of the liquor l a w of t h e state.&#13;
The s t r i k i n g m a c h i n i s t s a t t h e F. A&#13;
P. M. s h o p s in S a g i n a w r e t u r n e d to&#13;
o b t a i n a b l e s s t o t h e t e r m s of settle*&#13;
Mnddenly Called.&#13;
Adelbert S. H a y . son of Secretary&#13;
H a y . a n d formerly consul to Pretoria,&#13;
fell from tile w i n d o w of a hotel iu N e w&#13;
H a v e n . O-oun.. Saturday night and w a s&#13;
found dead at '2:'A(&gt; a. in. by a ]&gt;asserby.&#13;
There w a s considerable e x c i t e m e n t&#13;
aluutt the hotel and a large body of&#13;
s t u d e n t s and g r a d u a t e s w h o w e r e&#13;
there for the conmionconieht e x e r c i s e s&#13;
soon gathered. A n u m b e r of H a y ' s&#13;
former c l a s s m a t e s aV'TMeTTiosTTTvely"&#13;
identified the y o u n g man. It is believed&#13;
that H a y Ijecnme ill and, o n going to&#13;
a w i n d o w for air. w a s o v e r c o m e by&#13;
dfoxiness and fell t o the ground.&#13;
Won't Mafrry Him.&#13;
According to a Londirm dispatch,&#13;
a m o n g rhe paid ."..nnouncements-in the&#13;
MonMiij* Posit of i*un&lt;ion, appeared t i n s&#13;
notice:&#13;
"The marriage b e t w e e n Miss V i v i a n&#13;
Snrtoris and Mr. Archibald Balfour will&#13;
nor t a k e place."&#13;
London society i s mystified. Miss&#13;
Sartxris, w h o is a g r a n d d a u g h t e r of&#13;
(ien. U. S. »Jrant. is w e l l k n o w n In&#13;
London, and Mr. Balfour is a couein&#13;
of A r t h u r Balfour, the s t a t e s m a n .&#13;
i a n o s r n&gt;« offleera, *n«V&#13;
surrendered at Li pa, B a n t a n g a a prov-v&#13;
ince.&#13;
A c c o r d i n g to Gen. E m i l i o N u n e z ,&#13;
civil governor of t h e province o f $»&gt;-•&#13;
• a n a , the Cubans arc w e l l - p l e a s e d w i t h&#13;
t h e e x i s t i n g s t a t e of affairs. H e s a y s&#13;
t h a t t h e a c c e p t a n c e oi t h e P i a t t a m e n d '&#13;
m e n t has g r e a t l y improved t h e s i t u a -&#13;
tion.&#13;
Civil g o v e r n m e n t w i l l b e e s t a b l i s h e d&#13;
in t h e P h i l i p p i n e i s l a n d s o n J u l y 4.&#13;
J u d g e Wra. IJ. T a f t w i l l b e d e s i g n a t e d&#13;
a s civil governor. H e w i l l r e m a i n a t&#13;
t h e head of t h e P h i l i p p i n e c o m m i s s i o n&#13;
w h i c h is to be c o n t i n u e d . T h e order&#13;
c r e a t i n g h i m civil g o v e r n o r w i l l b e issued&#13;
by t h e P r e s i d e n t t h r o u g h t h e secr&#13;
e t a r y of war.&#13;
T h e r e c e n t b a t t l e w i t h t h e insurg&#13;
e n t s a t Lipa, i n w h i c h L i e u t e n a n t&#13;
Springer w a s k i l l e d and Capt. W i l h e l m&#13;
a n d L i e u t e n a n t L e e w e r e m o r t a l l y&#13;
w o u n d e d , w a s b e g u n by t h e Americans.&#13;
T h e disproportionate n u m b e r of&#13;
officers h i t is said t o be c h a r g e a b l e t o&#13;
the* fact t h a t t h e r e w e r e several deserters&#13;
from t h e A m e r i c a n a r m y w i t h t h e&#13;
rebels.&#13;
A m e r i c a n e x p e r t s nre p r e p a r i n g to&#13;
report to t h e P r e s i d e n t a plan f o r t h e&#13;
p e r m a n e n t military or n a v a l or milit&#13;
a r y and naval occupation of t h e i s l a n d&#13;
of Cuba. Lutcr on, it is a l l e g e d , t h e&#13;
practical effects of the P i a t t l a w w i l l&#13;
be made clear to t h e Cubans. I t i s expected&#13;
at W a s h i n g t o n t h a t t h e C u b a n s&#13;
w i l l not accept t h e a p p a r e n t l y h a r s h&#13;
c o n d i t i o n s w i t h happy minds. T h e r e&#13;
are t w o v i e w s in t h e c a b i n e t HS t o t h e&#13;
e x t e n t of the p e r m a n e n t m i l i t a r y a n d&#13;
"naval occupation of Cuban p o r t s a n d&#13;
harbors. Secretary Rtyoi and his group1&#13;
favors the e x t r e m e v i e w of t a k i n g "the&#13;
five principal harbors and t h e p r e s e n t&#13;
fortifications.&#13;
T h e P h i l i p p i n e mail on t h e 17th&#13;
b r o u g h t t o the w a r d e p a r t m e n t a t&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n the records in 11 c a s e s&#13;
w h e r e i n F i l i p i n o s w e r e tried by milltary&#13;
c o m m i s s i o n s on c h a r g e s i n c l u d i n g&#13;
murder, rape, k i d n a p i n g , a s s a u l t a n d&#13;
battery, b u r g l a r y and v i o l a t i o n s of t h e&#13;
r u l e s of war. T h e leaders s e l e c t t h e i r&#13;
victim, capture a n d carry h i m a w a y in&#13;
the n i g h t t o a secret rendezvous o n a&#13;
s a n d y beach w h e r e a g r a v e h a s b e e n&#13;
prepared Here, in t h e presence of t h e&#13;
assembled band, h e l p l e s s men a n d&#13;
w o m e n from t i m e t o t i m e h a v e b e e n&#13;
s t a b b e d to d e a t h and tossed i n t o t h e&#13;
graves. T e n m e m b e r s of t h e b a n d , inc&#13;
l u d i n g t w o of t h e chiefs, w e r e tried&#13;
before a military commission and e i g h t&#13;
of t h e m s e n t e n c e d to be hanged.&#13;
" T h e czarina or itussia on t h e 18th&#13;
g a v e birth to a d a u g h t e r . T h e praye&#13;
r s of prince and p e a s a n t f a i l e d t o&#13;
bring a mule heir t o the royal h o u s e .&#13;
A 8wB©pJnsr Injunction.&#13;
A M i l w a u k e e C o u r t lias issued nn inj&#13;
u n c t i o n relative to the machinist&#13;
strike in that Hty w h i c h prevents t h e&#13;
strikers from in a n y w a y interfering&#13;
w i t h t h e w o r k m e n e m p l o y e d at the Vliter&#13;
w o r k s ; from g a t h e r i n g about t h o&#13;
w o r k s , from l a s t i n g pickets, from c o m -&#13;
bining for the purpose of p r e v e n t i n g&#13;
t r a d e s m e n selling to w o r k m e n , w h o&#13;
h a v e refused to quit, and from doing&#13;
a n y t h i n g that, will in a n y w a y operate&#13;
to result in d a m a g e to the Vilter Co.&#13;
Twelve Dead, Many Injured.&#13;
T w e l v e people w e r e k i l l e d and a&#13;
n u m b e r w e r e injured a s t h e r e s u l t o f a&#13;
fire f o l l o w i n g an e x p l o s i o n a m o n g a&#13;
q u a n t i t y of fireworks i u t h e s t o r e of&#13;
A. A. R i t t e n b u r g , a t Paterson, N. JM&#13;
o n t h e 21st. S e v e r a l persons are missi&#13;
n g and are t h o u g h t to have perished&#13;
T h e s t o r e w a s on t h e g r o u n d door of a&#13;
t e n e m e n t building. T h e cause of t h e&#13;
e x p l o s i o n i s n o t k n o w n . T h e p r o p e r t y&#13;
l o s s w i l l n o t e x c e e d $33,000.&#13;
Dead Tramp Had 9 4 5 a&#13;
Beside an old m a n , dressed l i k e a&#13;
t r a m p , w h o w a s k i l k e d b y a f r e i g h t&#13;
train on t h e N e w York Central n e a r&#13;
A d a m s Center, N. Y . , o n t h e 18 th w a s&#13;
w a s found a bed t i c k i n g sack containi&#13;
n g 9450 in g o l d . I n a purse w a s a b o u t&#13;
50, also iu gold. All t h e ooins&#13;
B A S E B A L L .&#13;
t 1 . . — • —&#13;
Below w e p u b l i s h t h e s t a n d i n g of&#13;
.the American, and N a t i o n a l l e a g u e c l u b s •&#13;
up t o and i n c l u d i n g the g a m e s p l a y e d&#13;
on Saturday, J u n e 22: '&#13;
AMERICAN LEAGUS.&#13;
Won. Lost Pero'..&#13;
Boston 28 17 . « 2&#13;
Chicago 31 80 • .6.«&#13;
Detroit.... 27 23 .540&#13;
Was&amp;insrton &gt;&gt;&gt; 19 ,53;&#13;
Baltimore 22 80 .52»&#13;
Philadelphia 21 26 .447&#13;
Cleveland 17 2» .S70&#13;
Milwaukee 17 SI ,3J4&#13;
NATIONAL. L.3AOUB.&#13;
Won. Los\ Perot.&#13;
Pittsburg 30 2J .000&#13;
NswYork... 2» 19 .587&#13;
Boston 23 21 .688&#13;
S t Louis 27 24 MP&#13;
Brooklyn 24 24 .500&#13;
Philadelphia..... 24 25 .480&#13;
Cincinnati 21 21 .407&#13;
Chicago 19 83 .*65&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
U V B STOCK.&#13;
S e w Y o r k -&#13;
Best grades...&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
C h i c a g o —&#13;
Best grades...&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
D e t r o i t -&#13;
Best grades...&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
naffnlo—&#13;
Best grades...&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
C i n c i n n a t i -&#13;
Best grades...&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
Plttubnrff—&#13;
Beat grades...&#13;
Lower grades.&#13;
Cattle Sheep Lambs Hogs&#13;
..$4 60@5 90&#13;
.. 3 00@3 9O&#13;
.. 5 50(3« 30&#13;
.. 4 50® 5 40&#13;
., 3 80@3 25&#13;
.. 2 75®3 75&#13;
.. 4 S0#5 25&#13;
.. 3 65@&gt;4 00&#13;
.. 5 Z&gt;®5 00&#13;
.. 40034 75&#13;
.. 5 4005 80&#13;
.. 3 50@6 00&#13;
84 00&#13;
300&#13;
4 40&#13;
400&#13;
425&#13;
325&#13;
435&#13;
380&#13;
3 60&#13;
800&#13;
S8S&#13;
840&#13;
86 80&#13;
575&#13;
525&#13;
4 5*&#13;
650&#13;
550&#13;
675&#13;
600&#13;
575&#13;
550&#13;
475&#13;
460&#13;
16 46&#13;
6 10&#13;
620&#13;
5 80&#13;
695&#13;
5 5)&#13;
6 2^&#13;
670&#13;
610&#13;
690&#13;
61%&#13;
660&#13;
-ww- of old d a t e s and h a d a p p a r e n t l y b e e n&#13;
hoarded. T h e b o d y w a s badly m u t i -&#13;
lated, t h e f e a t u r e s b e i n g c o m p l e t e l y&#13;
destroyed.&#13;
T h e Chicago tor r a n t g i r U a r e t a l k i n g&#13;
o f f o r m i n g a labor u n i o n .&#13;
GRAIN. KTC.&#13;
Wheat Corn Oats&#13;
No. red No. 2 mix No. 8 whitft&#13;
74^4¼ 47»47H&#13;
67¾^½ 434243¾&#13;
71&amp;711* 43043¼ 31©31&#13;
68fr&lt;» 4~36T4«3 ¾ 2swar&#13;
736)73½ 451346½&#13;
7 2 6 7 2 ½ . 44944½ 31(881&#13;
•Detroit-Hay. Nor^ Ttmothy, 818 76 per&#13;
ton. Potatoes, 55c per bu. Live Poultry,&#13;
8pring chickens. 10C per lb; fowls, 8 ½ ^&#13;
turkeys. 9c; ducks. 10c. Eggs, strictly&#13;
^ w Y o r k&#13;
riilcngro&#13;
• D e t r o i t&#13;
T o l e d o&#13;
'.£&#13;
C i n c i n n a t i&#13;
P l t t n b u r g&#13;
Buffalo—&#13;
1T6MJK12C per&#13;
15c per lb; creamer}*, 18c.&#13;
8''*•••' /&#13;
( ' • * '&#13;
tf ' , .iV-'^v&#13;
* t'h- '.»&gt;&#13;
• Ji!-&#13;
".'&gt;;-.' 1 ^ - . .r. '•&gt;»&#13;
.- * v -• &gt; " V ' ' ' V ' t - . 1 • - - : 1 ^ i'.i'-, \ v - i . V •'-•• V ^ V ' ,-ji-r ' V 1 ^ / 1 . / ; * r * . . •' . ; • • • • * • ^Vik'V •«£ v i &lt; . „ ;. ,•• s! ' .. - . * . ' • ' -. ".• i»* V&#13;
: . " - &lt; ^ - - - ^ - . ^ . - 1 ^ •• &gt;\. - ' £ i : $ r - " ; , '*•-&lt;• .^.-•'••V - - V &gt; c . - - : ; 5 * . .^.V/i*5'1''"•^'•f-''-.1*-;'1'.&#13;
&gt;&gt;•'. -r • :*r ?&gt;'' &gt;» V&gt; * . ^ - .^'1:.: *•• 2 • * &gt; ? $ :-..¾ .v:tf8*H, .,.*&#13;
."&gt;&#13;
ATW *# '•.V-'l • '•^f c „•-•. 3 .&#13;
.,v-:&#13;
• : * *&#13;
.^.-.&#13;
/.-*&#13;
•"*+; i f&#13;
*!,^ft&gt; £&gt;«s?*C 3C«55»-i3i«^35^S«»»* Ml1^.1!,1.1!,'1!,!,1^^,1!,! flUlffl'M^' •hi &gt; ,i ••"•J""'.'^11,1. JJipiiUJillL&#13;
- :,V».V':' . . - . , , c&#13;
ssg ¥ » ?T55J5555535 Sr TflA^^VJlArt- * o * &lt;r#M« W •*•"&#13;
I ; • '&#13;
i-./»."&#13;
, Made a Valiant&#13;
niAt%# ffi%#" -M lffat&gt;&#13;
The 17th ratt. betag th« anolrerMry&#13;
of tbe bejfii&gt;»ing of the aifgv of Tien&#13;
TsiD, the ladies decorated «b« graves&#13;
of the soldiers of all nationalities.&#13;
C«jrt «t&#13;
spent freely on both sides. The Democrats&#13;
were confident but Plngree won&#13;
by about CO90 majority, the largest&#13;
vote ever given a candidate for mayor&#13;
up to that time. Pingree's third term&#13;
was much taken up with fighting over&#13;
street railway franchises.- It was&#13;
- during tais term that the,potato patpp angfi BWer colony The death* In&#13;
Ds*»# Cewaarn , Cn»»tautls&gt;&#13;
i«b»o» said rui^lawu&#13;
"Good tobacco la grown all ova*&#13;
. , . , , , . , _ *-».f u Luzon/' said Ca^t, W. B. Daaaa of&#13;
Replying to questions In the Brttish ^ ^ F e N j^ w h o j ^ l a t e l y , ^ ^&#13;
;s^'^-&#13;
A GOOD CITIZEN GONE&#13;
Active* Pierce and Uncomprom-&#13;
His Political Battles&#13;
Were Fought to a Finish.&#13;
: Hon. Hazen S. Pingree, ex-governor&#13;
of-Miohigan, died in London. England,&#13;
at 11:33 p. ,m., the 18th of June, from&#13;
anrtllness brought on by the hardships&#13;
of travel in South Africa* and shattered&#13;
health arising from the severe&#13;
strain of his political life.&#13;
That he was a remarkable man his&#13;
career in Detroit and as governor of&#13;
Michigan gives the most brilliant&#13;
proof. He was a descendant of fine&#13;
old Puritan stock and_ first saw the&#13;
light In the rugged*ttle town of Denmark.&#13;
Me., in 1840. At the age of 14&#13;
he left the rocky farm of his birthplace&#13;
and went to Saco, Me., where for&#13;
six years he worked in a cotton mill.&#13;
From there he went to Hopkinton,&#13;
Mass., where he became a cutter in a&#13;
shoe factory. In August, lao2, Imbued&#13;
with the patriotic ardor which was a&#13;
characteristic of his ancestry, he enlisted&#13;
In Co. F, First Massachusetts&#13;
Heavy Artillery, his term of service&#13;
expiring he promptly re-enlisted, ana&#13;
with his regiment, took part in the&#13;
second battle of Bull Run, the bames&#13;
of Fredericksburg Road, Harris Farm.&#13;
Gold Harbor, Spottsylvanla Court&#13;
House, North Anne and South Anne.&#13;
He was captured May 25. x«rx~by- asquad&#13;
or Mosoys men and sent to&#13;
Andereonvllle, where be was confined&#13;
for several months. He .was then&#13;
sent to Salisbury prison, N. C, and to&#13;
MHIen, Oa., where he was exchanged&#13;
in November, 1SG4, rejoining his regi-&#13;
He won his first election* by bringing&#13;
about a change of 7.000 votes over the&#13;
returns on the previous Democratic&#13;
candidate for mayor.&#13;
Mayor of Detroit..&#13;
When he took the office ae mayor of&#13;
the city he broaght to bear in the&#13;
ottice of chief executive the same levelheaded&#13;
business methods that had&#13;
brought him success in the commercial&#13;
world. The city's streets were in. a&#13;
deplorable condition. Contractors had&#13;
the city by the throat. He immediately&#13;
began a campaign for better&#13;
paved streets; urged a rapid transit&#13;
system of street railways; a municipal&#13;
lighting plant; a separation of grade&#13;
crossings, and higher taxation of acreage&#13;
property. He ignored the professional&#13;
politician, and let loose an avalanche,&#13;
of ideas regarding municipal&#13;
government. In the second month of&#13;
his term he proposed testing electricity&#13;
as the motive power for street railways.&#13;
At the end of six months hewas&#13;
severely criticised by the Repub*&#13;
lican party leaders at a Michigan club&#13;
meeting for his appointments, and&#13;
there was arrayed against bim many&#13;
of the leaders of bis own party. He&#13;
oven pursued his business methods regardless&#13;
of political favor, to the exbonse&#13;
of commons on the 17tbf Mr.&#13;
Brodriek, the war secretary, aa4d there&#13;
were 40,239 persona in the "concentration&#13;
camp*" of the Transvaal mmi Orplan&#13;
evolved. The plan proved sue&#13;
cesafn! and was followed In many other&#13;
large eftlea, and earned for the&#13;
mayor the name of "potato" Fmgvee.&#13;
r«artfc Term.&#13;
In 1885 gamuel GoMwater was pitted&#13;
against Pingree by tae Democrats,&#13;
but Goidwfftef* candfd*ey was regarded&#13;
largely as a joke*, and Plngrea&#13;
had over 10.000 majority.&#13;
C s t r n w r of Mcft*sam„&#13;
The career of Mr. Pingree as governor&#13;
has perhaps no equal! m the history&#13;
of any state. As governor, Mr.&#13;
these esurps for the month of Hay&#13;
numbered M men and women and 319&#13;
ehildrrn. The announcement of the&#13;
Mortality waa received/ with groans&#13;
from the Irish members and cries of&#13;
n&#13;
Lord Kitchener has cabled! from Pre*&#13;
tori*, voder date of June 10, aa follows?&#13;
"Near Welmejnemat, 20 miles- south of&#13;
Middftebovg; 850 Victorian mounted&#13;
rifles from Geo, Beaaton's column were&#13;
surprised in camp at Steenkoolsprnit&#13;
mustered out as a commanding officer&#13;
of a company in the Thirty-fourth infantry,&#13;
.and who waa promoted from&#13;
second lieutenant to first lieutenant of&#13;
Rough Ridere-on theneld of battle fry&#13;
Col. Roosevelt, in a recent conversation.&#13;
"The beat tobacco, however, I*&#13;
grown in the Cacaygan valley, a broad/&#13;
and fertile stretch of country toward&#13;
the northern portion of the island. The&#13;
jGaeaygaA river overflows tta banks annually,&#13;
much like the River Nile, and&#13;
leaves a rich sediment all the way&#13;
from six inches to one foot in depth.&#13;
When the river subsides all the farmera&#13;
have to do Sa to plow ap the deby&#13;
a superior force of Boer* on the posit and plant their seed, . The coun- a , . _&#13;
Pingree became- conspicuous nationally mfr The enemV crept up tc* within * * to-ntlli anaraely settled, not soma&#13;
by reason of the excellent equipment ^ ^ r a B | r e a n d vonre^ a deadly fire &lt;*** w i U undoubtedly be opesjed up by&#13;
^ *v„ - ^ * . ™ . ^ . . , - ^ 4^ *K- ^ . ^ ^ ^ killing 2 officers, aod 16 the eonstruction of a railroad.&#13;
men- and wounding 4- officers and 38&#13;
men,of whom 28 were slightly wounded.&#13;
Only 2 officers and 50 men escaped to&#13;
Gen. Beaaton's camp. The remainder&#13;
were taken- prisoners and released.&#13;
tent of vetoing overtime pay~f&lt;&#13;
cipal employes. Before the close of&#13;
his first year in office, he was antagonistic&#13;
to the common council, and had&#13;
started a score of ideas, some of which&#13;
were abandoned as quickly as started,&#13;
upon their proving impracticable. He/&#13;
was always ready to confess frankiy&#13;
any error, but mistakes never caused'&#13;
any cessation of his efforts" to Improve&#13;
municipal conditions.&#13;
Street Car S t r i k e .&#13;
During the first few months of his&#13;
oiiice-bolding Pingree showed very little&#13;
of the corporatlon-fightin.T traits&#13;
which later became his leading characteristic,&#13;
biit when the big street railway&#13;
strike took place, his astute secretary,&#13;
A. I. McLeod, saw an oppor*&#13;
tunity for making » political coup.&#13;
Mayor Pingree refused to ask the&#13;
governor of the state for troops to&#13;
quel! disturbances, insisting that the&#13;
police were sufficiently powerful to&#13;
keep the peace. The mayor called upon&#13;
both sides to settle the difficulty by&#13;
arbitration, and this was done.&#13;
of the state troops be raised! for the&#13;
Spaai8h-AmerieaA war, and the rapidity&#13;
with'which he sent troop* to the&#13;
front. In this- he waB most energetic.&#13;
When Gen. Russell A. Alger was berated&#13;
by the yellow journals of the&#13;
east as secretary of war, Gov. Pingree&#13;
was the first to- uphold him and criticise&#13;
his detractors'.&#13;
In the fall of 1«08 Mr. Pingree was&#13;
re-elected governor by a plurality of&#13;
00,000. In '90 he secured the passage&#13;
of a street railway municipal ownership&#13;
bill by the legislature, and later&#13;
endeavored to have the city buy the&#13;
street railways for 117.500,000, and&#13;
though business sentiment was almost&#13;
unanimously -against the plan, he carried&#13;
it once through the common council,&#13;
and was only stopped untimately&#13;
by a refusal on the part of Owner Wil&#13;
son to extend the option on the property.&#13;
As governor Mr. Pingree secured the&#13;
passage of the law creating the state&#13;
tax commission, which has equalized&#13;
taxation throughout the state to a&#13;
great degree. He also after his ad&#13;
valorem taxation law was&#13;
unconstitutional, secured an amendment&#13;
to the constitution of the state&#13;
whereby the present ad valorem bill&#13;
was made valid. He likewise secured&#13;
the repeal of all special railroad charters&#13;
in the state.&#13;
The military board scandal is the&#13;
^Qniy-"Sp0^ of his political career that&#13;
Now&#13;
the tobacco has to* be shipped down the&#13;
Caoaggan rtoer to» a town St tt* month&#13;
named Aparri. I have traveled nearly&#13;
all over the world and come itt contact&#13;
with about every kind of people, but&#13;
Two pompoms were captured by: the nowhere have I found people who din&#13;
enemy.&#13;
T H E N E W S C O N D E N S E D&#13;
Senator Depew Is still talking a third&#13;
term, for McKinley.&#13;
Porto Rico's Assembly will take up&#13;
•the question of free trade July 4.&#13;
—A tornado near Naper, Neb., killed" or&#13;
fatally injured nearly a dozen persons.&#13;
Lapeer's new fotir inch water mains iajents the Philippines'offer the best&#13;
have been given a fire test with dlsap- opportunities I know of anywhere,&#13;
pointing results. | ^ ^ ^ f o r m e d ^ ^ r e t w o&#13;
A disease similar to the grip has ap^ y e a r s a g 0 n a v e doubled their capital&#13;
peared among horses in New York a n * a n n u a l l y . T ^ united States lamf laws&#13;
ought tb be extended to the Philiplike&amp;&#13;
work as heartily aa do the Cabana.-&#13;
They are pretty nearly in the&#13;
lowest scale. The Filipinos am a far&#13;
better class and if the Cubans' are itt&#13;
for self government I am sure the&#13;
Filipinos are. The latter are more docile&#13;
and industrious, and while they&#13;
are sometimes treacherous, they are to&#13;
betrusted farmorethanthe-Cubans.&#13;
For men with small capital and* small&#13;
is rapidly killing them.&#13;
AgonciUo, the European representa- pines. It would result in air iinmedeclared&#13;
t I v e o f A f f T 3 i n a k * ° ' ^ 8 *&lt;** P a r I s a n d : diate and extensive development and&#13;
EX-GOV. H A Z E N S. PINGREE.&#13;
ment in front of Petersburg. He took&#13;
[part in the expedition to Weldon Ualliroad,&#13;
and In the baitles of Boyuton&#13;
Road, Petersburg, Sailor's Creeu, ! ynrmville nnii Appomattox Court&#13;
: House, and was mustered out after&#13;
: the close of the war in August, lSiti.&#13;
Came t o D e t r o i t .&#13;
"T" After this, service in the war Mr. : Pingree came to Detroit, being then 'J3&#13;
years of age, and began work In the&#13;
shoe factory of II. P. Baldwin &amp; Co.,&#13;
and in December, 18&lt;Jt&gt;. established the&#13;
shoemaking firm of Pingree &amp; Smitu,&#13;
Iwlth a capital of but $1,300, with&#13;
Charles II. Smith as his partner.&#13;
Starting with eight employes during&#13;
;the first year, the firm, carried forward&#13;
by Mr. Pingree's native energy and&#13;
Yankee shrewdness, grew into an institution&#13;
that employs 800 persons and&#13;
has an annual output of $1,000,000. He&#13;
became one of Detroit's foremost business&#13;
men, and was known as an enterprising&#13;
manufacturer.&#13;
He was married in 1872 to Miss&#13;
Frances A. Gilbert, of Mt. Clemens,&#13;
and had three children, of whom Hazen&#13;
S. Tingree, and Miss Hazel Pingree&#13;
survive. Miss Gertrude Pingree.&#13;
his eldest daughter, died in 1804, and&#13;
her demise was one of the saddest&#13;
blows experienced by Mr. Pingree.&#13;
Mr. Pingree was a 32d degree Mason,&#13;
a Shriner nnd a member of Detroit&#13;
post, G. A. R. He attended the&#13;
Woodward Avenue- Baptist church.&#13;
I In 1887 there was a political landslide&#13;
in municipal politics, the Democratic&#13;
candidate carrying the city by a&#13;
large majority, and in the fall of 1880&#13;
a large number of Republicans met&#13;
upon invitation of James F. Joy to&#13;
consider the nomination for mayor&#13;
and endeavor to make such a selection&#13;
as would regain the city to the Republicans.&#13;
No Republican desired to&#13;
run. Col. Henry M. Duttleld positively&#13;
refused to run. Mr. Pingree's name&#13;
was suggested, but he protested.&#13;
••No, no," he said, "I was never in&#13;
the city hall except to pay my taxes.&#13;
I will double my subscription for the&#13;
campaign, but let me out."&#13;
But a committee was appointed, and&#13;
finally a reluctant consent was gained&#13;
from Mr. Pingree to undertake the&#13;
campaign. That was the beginning&#13;
of a popular political career on the&#13;
ex-governor that&#13;
lis fame broadcast over the world.&#13;
W a a Rnntly R e - e l e c t e * M a y o r .&#13;
In 1801, when the time arrived for&#13;
another mayoralty election. Pingree'*&#13;
political prestige had not as yet&#13;
reached the point which later made&#13;
him so powerful, and there was some&#13;
fear in the Republican camp that lie&#13;
would be defeated. However, the&#13;
Democrats got into a factional fight,&#13;
ami John Miner and W. G. Thompson&#13;
were both nominated, with the result&#13;
that Pingree was re-elected, receiving&#13;
more votes than both of his opponents.&#13;
In nls second term Mayor Pingree&#13;
took hold of many of his most successfill&#13;
plans for city improvement. He&#13;
declared for a comprehensive park&#13;
system, and though his scheme to turn&#13;
much of the down-town district of the&#13;
city into a playground was sat upon&#13;
as being too expensive, his agitation&#13;
brought'about the estanlishment of a&#13;
number of Detroit's present beautiful&#13;
The grooved rails&#13;
has even a dark look and-that comes&#13;
from these whom he stood by through&#13;
it all, thope whom he considered his&#13;
friends and less culpable than others.&#13;
The banquet given by him in the&#13;
state capitol when carloads of viands&#13;
and wine, and decorations were used,&#13;
marked the end of his political career.&#13;
That he wrought well for the interests&#13;
of the people of his home city and&#13;
the state in many ways evidences on&#13;
every hand attest. That he made some&#13;
mistakes there can be no denial. That&#13;
he wa.s an honest, fearless and productive&#13;
politician all admit. He was well&#13;
fitted for the strenuous political life he&#13;
led by the Inheritance of good blood&#13;
and a strong physique, by the very&#13;
climate of the state in which he was&#13;
bom, and by his own rugged personality.&#13;
His worth as a man and a citizen&#13;
will not be fully developed till the&#13;
results of his work bear fruit.&#13;
is returning to his own country.&#13;
The state supreme court sitting at&#13;
Jackson. Tenn., on the 20tb decided&#13;
that a woman cannot practice law in&#13;
Tennessee.&#13;
The Grinnell. Ia„ Congregational&#13;
church has decided to drop the name&#13;
of Prof. Gejo7~D. Herfoir Ifrom its&#13;
church rolls.&#13;
The plague is becoming violent In&#13;
Hong Kong. Cp to the end of May&#13;
from the beginning of the year 495&#13;
Chinese have diled.&#13;
The business of national banks, according&#13;
to the last report of Comptrnllpr&#13;
Dnwps. lma iiwrensed nearly&#13;
make the islands blossom with prosperity.'&#13;
Capt. Dame was formerly a member&#13;
of the territorial legislature in New&#13;
Mexico.&#13;
iseouis^ g l G H T I N C&#13;
Ifaeabebea In Nor'hern I.nzon Are- Blacto&#13;
of &lt;3noil Staff.&#13;
Persons in search of adventure still&#13;
find it in the Philippines, judging by&#13;
the contents of the "Mail Items" of the&#13;
Army and Navy Journal. The kind of&#13;
fighting stuff the Macabebes are made&#13;
$100,000,000 in ten-weeks. I of was shown in a recent engagement.&#13;
According to a speci.l from Wash- J-ate in March Troops A and G, Fourth&#13;
ington, Boer sympathizers are making Cavalry, and the Macabebe Scouts went&#13;
prepnrations for a visit by Kruger to after General Lacuna, in the Balac&#13;
this country in the autumn. i Mountains, in North Central Luzon.&#13;
The monsoon rains in India have not ! With Lacuna were the renegades B'abreathlng&#13;
places.&#13;
fboert wstereene t tchaer st rwacitkhs tahse wsaams el apida voenm etuhte I States has been mapped by the experts&#13;
rest of the street; new sewers were&#13;
built, and the old sand and plank foundations&#13;
of pavements were replaced&#13;
with those laid on concrete, and a city&#13;
lighting plant was established during&#13;
liis second term. Cheaper gas wus&#13;
also obtained through his efforts.&#13;
In order to introduce the grooved&#13;
rails into Detroit, he took the common&#13;
council to Buffalo in a special car at&#13;
his own expense. At bis request the&#13;
council engaged two special cars and&#13;
made a junket trip to Chicago, New&#13;
York. Boston, Philadelphia and other&#13;
eastern cities to inspect lighting&#13;
plants, but incidentally looked Into ail&#13;
lines of municipal work in order to&#13;
gain ideas.&#13;
Aside from the knowledge to be obtained&#13;
the trip was a strategic move&#13;
to gain the good-will of the aldermen&#13;
toward the city ownership plan. When&#13;
the legislature met the next year there&#13;
was a fierce fight at Lansing, the electric&#13;
lighting trust fighting the bill to&#13;
cnnble the city to establish a plant,&#13;
and there were charges of boodle In&#13;
connection with the measure, which,&#13;
however, went through, and was&#13;
signed by Gov. Rich.&#13;
T h i r d T e r m .&#13;
- In 1 SOS pingree was nominated for a&#13;
third term by the Republicans, and i*ie&#13;
Democrats nominated Marshall H.&#13;
Godfrey. The campaign was one of&#13;
the hottest that ever took place in Detroit&#13;
the Pingree men charging that&#13;
those In favor of a new street railway&#13;
chlse furniabettthe funds for.the&#13;
Godfrey campaign, ami money was&#13;
GLOBULES.&#13;
The shipping trade along the C^ntrai&#13;
American coast is to a large extent&#13;
in German hands.&#13;
Three hundred Mediterranean lemon's&#13;
yield only 10 ounces of critrlc acid,&#13;
against 27 ounces of the California&#13;
fruit.&#13;
Of 555. Japanese university students&#13;
who were questioned as to their religious&#13;
beliefs no fewer thaa. 472 called&#13;
themselves atheists.&#13;
According to the returns of this&#13;
year's census the total population of&#13;
England and Wales is 32,5525,7166, an&#13;
inerease over 1891 of 3,523;19L&#13;
Manila's populaion is found to be&#13;
244,732, which gives It a place next below&#13;
that of Newark, N. J., or 17th&#13;
from the top of the list of cities of the&#13;
United States.&#13;
Nearly 900,000 square miles, or about&#13;
30 per cent of the area of the United&#13;
extended beyond the Bombay presideiK'v&#13;
and unless they become more&#13;
general the outlook is gloomy.&#13;
Fire, which originated in the establishment&#13;
of J. B. Sickles Saddlery company,&#13;
SL Louis, consumed property and&#13;
8lock valued at nearly 3200,000.&#13;
Edward Biddle has been convicted of&#13;
murder in the first degree at Pittsburg,&#13;
Pa., for the killing of Thomas D. Kahgan&#13;
and Nelson, and the prospects of&#13;
squaring accounts with those two&#13;
traitors gave a peculiar zest to the&#13;
'cavalrymen's pursuit. Seven miles before&#13;
they got to close quarters they&#13;
had to dismount and creep up the steep&#13;
hills, dragging their supplies along,&#13;
until th*y finally came to a ravine&#13;
surrounded by steep hills, which' enabled&#13;
the enemy to pour a withering fire&#13;
of the United States Geological Survey&#13;
during the last 20 years.&#13;
The average age of man has been&#13;
increased seven and a half years in the&#13;
last century, and at that rate the average&#13;
length of human life will be&#13;
about 11* years in 10 centuries.&#13;
Officers who lose arms or legs in the&#13;
service of the British army will in&#13;
future be supplied with artificial limbs&#13;
at the cost of the government No provision,&#13;
it seems, is made for the private.&#13;
It is said that at present the new&#13;
steamship Celtic cannot be loaded to&#13;
her utmost capacity, as she would in&#13;
that event probably ground on the&#13;
bar of New York harbor, where the&#13;
depth at low water Is about 32 feet&#13;
Mrs. Orington Williams of Madison,&#13;
Me., has a bottle of preserved strawberries&#13;
which she put up 25 years ago.&#13;
The berries look to be in as good&#13;
condition as when put up. They were&#13;
picked In the fall, the 3d day of October.&#13;
It was a very warm fall and the&#13;
strawberry plant produced a second&#13;
crop.&#13;
At Tullinerbach, in Austria, recently,&#13;
in the presence of some 200 spectators,&#13;
mostly engineers, M. Kress exhibited&#13;
his airship. He expects to&#13;
travel at from SO to 80 miles an hour,&#13;
and to carry a load of from 600 to&#13;
1400 kilogrammes, according to the&#13;
weed.—Utica Globe.&#13;
ney, the Mt Washington grocer. I&#13;
The Bismarck statue, facing the Column&#13;
of Victory, in front of. the reichstag&#13;
building, Berlin, Germany, was&#13;
unveiled at midday on the 16th. !&#13;
A cyclone passed over the extreme&#13;
southeast corner of Beadle county, S.&#13;
D., on the 15th, injuring 10 persons&#13;
and destroying much property.&#13;
Three person^were killed and several&#13;
injured by lightning during a severe&#13;
electrical storm which passed over Indiana&#13;
on the nicrht of the 20th.&#13;
The Engineering and Mining Journal&#13;
estimates the gold output in the "United&#13;
States last year at *118.4RT».rUK! for the&#13;
United State* and $235,(^4.034'for the&#13;
world at large.&#13;
Pending the settlement of the CTiinese&#13;
indemnity question-'has arisen as&#13;
to who shall paj" for the maintenance&#13;
of legation guards after the several&#13;
countries have withdrawn their main -&#13;
forces. i K o y , W e ^0 n*rrw» on*.&#13;
Germany desires to increase her J One evening recently the girl resicmim&#13;
of indemnity agabns* China front] dents of Emerson halt the swell dor-&#13;
£12.00ftO0Oto £14.000.0110 lHK-attse the i mitQ connected with Beioit collsge,&#13;
first figure itoes not include expenses,&#13;
borne by Germany in Cuiua from May&#13;
to July.&#13;
from three sides at our men, wixnoox&#13;
the latter being able to get any position&#13;
where they could successfully&#13;
stand off the enemy. Our men stood*&#13;
their ground for about four hours, and&#13;
then the enemy withdrew. Casualties&#13;
on our side: Three killed, eleven&#13;
wounded and two missing. Only- two&#13;
of the Fourth Cavalry were among the&#13;
wounded, the rest being Macabebes.&#13;
During the conflict the renegade Nelson&#13;
was heard distinctly calling:&#13;
"Troop A men. come on; come on&#13;
here." One of the Macabebes, who&#13;
had the bridge of his nose shot away&#13;
and the eyeball hanging on his cheek,&#13;
coolly tore out the eye and continued&#13;
the fight When taken into the hospital"&#13;
he insisted upon having his rifle&#13;
and belt brought to him, as he did not&#13;
care to lose them.&#13;
The trouble long anticipated* has at&#13;
last taken place and the strained relations&#13;
between the union and nonunion&#13;
miners at Matewanv W. Ya^. has&#13;
resulted in bloodshed Two naen will&#13;
probably die.&#13;
Thousands of people, men, wossen.&#13;
children, camping on the border of the&#13;
Kiowa-Comanche-Apache reservation&#13;
in Oklahoma, awaiting the opening of&#13;
that land t o settlement, are in destitute&#13;
circumstances.&#13;
The miners* strike In rt»e Matnwnn.&#13;
»Va.. coal fields ts growing criticnl. and&#13;
a resort to firearms has been the result.&#13;
The whole flekl t» excited and&#13;
serious trouble Is feared. Already two&#13;
or three coptllets have occurred between&#13;
the striking miners and the&#13;
guards, which have been placed In the&#13;
works by the operators.&#13;
Dauiel Smith, who resides near Orvllle.&#13;
Bridgeport tovfnshlp, Saginaw&#13;
county, is undoubtedly the oldest living&#13;
resident of Michigan. He WHS born&#13;
aboard the old ship Mascoloma, In&#13;
Portland harbor. Maine, January -21.&#13;
1701, and continently he is In his&#13;
11 Uh year. He served In the Mexican&#13;
and Semluole wars.&#13;
entertained their sister students at a&#13;
function in which garments of masculine&#13;
type- dominated. The grand march&#13;
that preceded and closed the festivities&#13;
was ted by "George Washington"&#13;
fn stunning knfekerboekers and frock&#13;
coat Among those who followed the&#13;
intricate figures of the march were golf&#13;
lads in natty trousers and hf&gt;-e. bluebloused&#13;
sailer lads, waifs of the street&#13;
dad in gunnysacks. preachers in&#13;
grave ministerial garb, cowboys with&#13;
red sweaters and huge sombreros, summer&#13;
chappies in white ducks, gentlemen&#13;
in evening attire, and just plain,&#13;
every-day college students. Men who&#13;
had loaned garments for the occasion&#13;
were naturally anxious to attend and&#13;
the window casements of Emerson hall&#13;
were occupied by a large part of the&#13;
male population of the college at various&#13;
times during the evening. All&#13;
were drenched with water from upper&#13;
windows.&#13;
From1*** O T H I * with K#»*»&gt;»etl«»n«. Q&#13;
George Foster Peabody of Brooklyn&#13;
has promised a 13.000 organ to Trinity&#13;
Episcopal church, Columbus, Ga.. if&#13;
the church will pay off its debt of&#13;
15,000 In three years.'&#13;
'!v&#13;
^ :;&#13;
'^i&#13;
•&amp;:M&#13;
•'*.'*? '' v,.', '.,»&#13;
,..:\:'4&gt;I"'"Y -&#13;
T%y m tmti*m\&#13;
* . ' • • £ ; • ' . &gt; #&#13;
•"• .'i ' Wil&#13;
&lt;n&#13;
#J it&#13;
m&#13;
I&#13;
-¾&#13;
. . . ' • ! , ' I ,&#13;
• '• - i&#13;
•'•tV Al&#13;
i****:^ ^^^itovA^A.jfe»^..ik,&#13;
iiaieMslairik^Mi ;^A.iCu'&lt;4ii • l. ' A • j V J , , - ^ . m^^^mtttttim^am^^mmmmamtm&#13;
3ti!Sj«igStiKd^^&#13;
'•• ! • " : • ' • - ' ' : • • • • , " , ' • • ' • ' ; ; • ; ! - ' " . ' , ' . " ' : &gt; ; • • : ¾ ^ . V ' : ; ' ; V ' v - ^ - " ^ . ; : ' ' ' ; ' . ' " ••'',' ' ••••'•'•'•&#13;
..•v,,y^v^:c-- .••J1-.-)' w r-.-^vKvv'--.-'. •••.'£'-V •••••:?#;••'V''-^ --11^ :-wvv'•• ; • • * ^ t o v &amp;&#13;
v . •:,- &gt; , - ' • ; . " , . . - : - . : ^ - - , - . - . - , - - - - , , - , / • ; - ; . - . ? • . • ! • . / - • . . ; . ; . - • " , • / . • • - . . . - * . - • , • ••'•&#13;
1 Tr™ - '.'•-* • ™ -. ' - ."WWU f»^l!Pf : ^ 1 ^ ^ 1 ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ^ ^ . ^ ^ - P ' ^ W S&#13;
&gt; - &lt; ' , ' r V . i - * - . , ' v - - . - . - : - , 1 , , i &gt; i . • •-• , . f i , ' - - - . - , &gt; . &gt; - . ' . • • ^ : - - - ^ - ' • -.' , - . « . , - . , - . . ---- , - - - ., '• • ; - . &gt;&#13;
.'•••••? • • • • • - • • • • / , - : y - - . , : ^ : - : - / , : - - ^ ^ - - - - ^ - - , , : " / . , : - , / / - - - - / ^ , : - . ^ - , - - - / ^ . : . , . : ^ ^ ^ 1 - - . - ^ - ^ - - - / . - . - ^ / - v " - . \ ' ' •&#13;
* - ' . &gt; . . v - . _'-• , ' - . „ ' ' .'.•&lt;!•' , ; , - ' - . ' ' ' * / • ' ., ' ' , ' " . * ' . . - , ' ' / • ' &lt;, • ' ' • ' ' ' • ' V , . ' . - " • * - ; &lt; , : &lt; : •" i'&#13;
f v t , :&#13;
'. •, I -, - . -&#13;
-«n:\;&#13;
fe'&#13;
nrt-^rr—-•&#13;
^--&#13;
¥-•&#13;
w.~&#13;
UNADILLAand&#13;
were ID&#13;
Chelsea last Saturday.&#13;
Tom and Kate Gibney were in&#13;
Chelsea on Saturday last.&#13;
Mrs. Lon Clark of Stockbridge&#13;
visited relatives here last week.&#13;
Pearl Hartsnff visited relatives&#13;
in Lyndon the latter part of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mark Watson of Bancroft was&#13;
the guest at A. C. Watson's last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Watson Lane and daughter&#13;
Bessie visited friends in Fowlerville&#13;
last week.&#13;
A number from this place attended&#13;
the ball game at Stock&#13;
bridge Saturday.&#13;
Norma Barton of Stockbridge&#13;
is the guest of her cousin Avis&#13;
Barton this week.&#13;
Rev. Palmer and wife of Fairfield&#13;
are visiting friends and rel&#13;
atives at this place.&#13;
Quarterly meeting will be held&#13;
in the M. E. church next Sunday&#13;
_ June 30 at 2:3(Lp. m.&#13;
Wm. Liveimore spent the latter&#13;
part of last week and the first of&#13;
this with his daughter Mrs. Fred&#13;
Douglas of Ionia.&#13;
Csadilla and Stockbridge will&#13;
play ball at this place next Satur-&#13;
~day June 29 Everyone come&#13;
and see a good game.&#13;
Mrs. Florence Holmes and&#13;
daughter of West Stockbridge are&#13;
8 pending a few weeks with her&#13;
parents S. G. Palmer and wife.&#13;
Carrie Jones who has been&#13;
spending several months in this&#13;
vicinity left for her home at Bay&#13;
City Tuesday.&#13;
Clifton Spaulding, wife and two&#13;
children of Terry were guests of&#13;
W. H. Place way and wife the&#13;
|*first of the week.&#13;
SOUTH MARION.&#13;
Haying has commenced in this&#13;
vicinity,&#13;
Myrtle Dye 4s visiting Maud&#13;
Pacey for a few days.&#13;
Wm. Blair and wife transacted&#13;
business in How all last Saturday.&#13;
CreBsa Abbott took the teachers&#13;
examination at Fowlerville last&#13;
week.&#13;
Edna Abbott arrived home last&#13;
Sunday from a weeks visit in Detroit&#13;
Mrs. Irving Hart and daughter&#13;
visited her parents Sunday and&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Ice cream social at Norman&#13;
Burgess's Friday evening. All&#13;
are invited. *&#13;
Arthur Glenn is home from St.&#13;
Louis Mich., to spend his summer&#13;
vacation.&#13;
Mrs. Charlie Dye and children&#13;
visited her mother, Mrs. Anna&#13;
Gilkes last Sunday.&#13;
Misses Lulo Abbott and Elenor&#13;
Brogan are picking strawberries&#13;
for Mr. Heed this season.&#13;
Mrs. Norman Burgess and&#13;
grand daughter Cera Love visited&#13;
friends in Fowlerville last week.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Bland Sr., Mrs. Fred&#13;
Burgressard daughters Beulah&#13;
and Florence visited at John&#13;
Bruffs last Wednesday.&#13;
A.u. Watson and wife are having&#13;
a Marshall hot air furnace put&#13;
in their house. Mi. Solomon of&#13;
Marshall is doing the work.&#13;
E. C. Bullis an old and respected&#13;
resident of Unadilla township&#13;
died at his lipme last Sunday June&#13;
23. He leaves a wife, four&#13;
daughters and two sons and many&#13;
friends to mourn their loss.&#13;
GREGORY.&#13;
Born to Jas. Durat and wife&#13;
June 25 a son.&#13;
Born to Harry Stoner apd wife&#13;
June 12 a son.&#13;
Mrs. Lena Singleton is very&#13;
sick with pneumonia.&#13;
M. E. Kuhn and family spent&#13;
Sunday in Plainfield.&#13;
Harry Moore and wife of Howell&#13;
spent Sunday at John Birnie's.&#13;
Olive Brearley spent the latter&#13;
part of the week with Nora Durkee&#13;
in Anderson.&#13;
E. A. Kuhn and J. Burden are&#13;
in Howell this week attending the&#13;
meeting of the board of supervisors.&#13;
Persis Daniels came home from&#13;
the normal last Saturday to spend&#13;
the summer vacation with her&#13;
parents at this place.&#13;
CAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Clella Fish closed a successful&#13;
years school in this place last Friday.&#13;
The Farmers Club will meet&#13;
with J. M. Kice and wife Saturday&#13;
29.&#13;
Bert Hicks had a horse so badly&#13;
injured on barb wire recently&#13;
that he was obliged to kill it.&#13;
A. D. Hatch and grand-daughter&#13;
Hazel of Okemos spent Sunday&#13;
with M rs. J. C. Hall and family.&#13;
Myrta Hall visited here from&#13;
Thursday till Saturday. She left&#13;
Williamston for Bay View Monday.&#13;
Mayme Fish leaves Friday for&#13;
Chicago where she will take a&#13;
ooone in * training school for&#13;
nurse*.&#13;
Hamburg sua rntnam farmers CI lib.&#13;
The Putnam and Hamburg Farmers&#13;
Club will meet at the home&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Kice Saturday&#13;
June 29. The following is&#13;
the program:&#13;
Music, Club&#13;
Solo, Florence Andrews&#13;
Rending, Mrs. E. \V, Kennedy&#13;
Inst. Solo, Grace Naah&#13;
Reading, Miss VanFleet&#13;
»-• {^inm7&#13;
Reading, Mrs. Fred Sigler&#13;
Paper,&#13;
Solo,&#13;
Recitation,&#13;
Inst. Soloy-&#13;
Paper,&#13;
Solo,&#13;
Reading,&#13;
Singing,&#13;
Geo. W. Teeple&#13;
Mrs. Olive Strain&#13;
Iva Placeway&#13;
Grace Lake&#13;
Mrs. F. V. Andrews&#13;
Jennie Haze&#13;
Mrs. J. D. VanFleet&#13;
Club.&#13;
Through information received from&#13;
various sections of tbe state I learn&#13;
that letters and postal cards are&#13;
beinsr sent out from Ann Arbor and&#13;
elsewhere making promises of assistance,&#13;
for a stipulated amount,&#13;
\a securing money due to individuals&#13;
and estates, in case.-i of donble payments&#13;
ot taxes occasioned in most&#13;
cases through redemption by the owners&#13;
after the purchase of state tax certificates..&#13;
It is tne present policy of&#13;
this department to ascertain as to all&#13;
amounts tbat are beid by tbe state&#13;
and due to individuals and estates and&#13;
to remit sucb amonnts with interest,&#13;
where interest is due as rapid as possible.&#13;
In the meantime will you ask&#13;
your reader not to make any payments&#13;
or promises of payment to individual s&#13;
to secure amounts due them. Ask&#13;
tbem to send sneb letters or postal&#13;
cards or any information wbicb they&#13;
may possess relative to amounts due&#13;
tbem to me and their claim will be&#13;
promptly adjusted in full. Inasmuch&#13;
as borne of these unsettled matters&#13;
have been on tbe books of this department&#13;
for forty years or more it will&#13;
require time and labor to properly adjust&#13;
them, but work in this direction&#13;
is now in progress and will be hurried&#13;
forward until completed. A kindly&#13;
compliance with this request will be&#13;
a lavor to many of your readers as&#13;
well as to myself.&#13;
PSRBT F . POWBBSJ,&#13;
Auditor General.&#13;
Bert Young ot Detroit visited in&#13;
town tbe first of tbe week.&#13;
Miss Mary Love is spending a few&#13;
days with friends in Howell.&#13;
Communion will be observed at tbe&#13;
Con if I church nest Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Travis aud children, of St.&#13;
John, ar« at their cottage at Portage,&#13;
for tbe summer.&#13;
W.J, Ridge, wife and daughter, of&#13;
Hamburg, were guests of J . W.&#13;
Black and wite Sunday.&#13;
Jas. H. Wallace and wife were&#13;
over from Fowlerville Wednesday, tbe&#13;
guests of H. D. Grieve and wife.&#13;
Miss Eva Elvira Lyon of Josephine (&#13;
Ave. Detroit who has been visiting&#13;
her friend Miss Lucy Wbittlesev&#13;
Mann, returned to her home on Monday&#13;
last&#13;
The boys who have been getting&#13;
spending money by shooting sparrows&#13;
will have to earn it some other way,&#13;
as Gov. Bliss has signed tbe bill taking&#13;
off the bounty on sparrows.&#13;
Word was received bere Wednesday&#13;
tbat Miss Kate Farnum formerly of&#13;
this place and Mr. Fitzpatrick of Detroit&#13;
were married Ibat morning at,&#13;
Detroit. Here is to their happiness.&#13;
Gus Smith of this place has invented&#13;
a new tbill coupling which is easily&#13;
detatcbable and noiseless. We understand&#13;
tbat the right to use tbem in&#13;
their factory was purchased by one&#13;
company in Ohio for $300. We hope&#13;
Gus may reap a harvest for bis ingenious&#13;
invention.&#13;
Promotional exercises were held in&#13;
auditorum of tbe school building&#13;
Thursday afternoon and consisted of&#13;
music,:recitation^re^ay» eTrr~ Arhnve&#13;
number were present and enjoyed the&#13;
entertainment. This closed the school&#13;
work for tbe school year, and tbe bell&#13;
will not call tbem again until September.&#13;
Thursday evening last we inspected&#13;
tbo gao plant in C. P« Syke's home&#13;
AN OFFICIAL MIX UP.&#13;
THE 8TORY OF AN APPOINTMENT&#13;
TO A JUDGESHIP.&#13;
and found tbat Mr. S. has as fine a&#13;
plant as we ever saw. It was arcangeb&#13;
by himself, tbe corbnrater being&#13;
one of his own design. Without exception&#13;
ityis the best light in the village&#13;
and when fully complete will&#13;
furnish not only light but beat for&#13;
cooking. When the plant was put in&#13;
operation six or seven weeks ago two&#13;
qaarts of gaso'ine was put in and it&#13;
has not had to be filled since.&#13;
Free Rnral Delivery.&#13;
. Justice of N«vr Mexico** Bwyreme&#13;
Court Flrat Got a Surprise *m4 Aft*&#13;
erward the Offlee.&#13;
Late in the year 1900 It was decided&#13;
by the powers In Washington that Mr.&#13;
Daniel H. McMillan, ex-state senator&#13;
of New York and for many years general&#13;
counsel in the city of Buffalo for&#13;
the Vunderbllt system of railroads, was&#13;
to be appointed associate justice of the&#13;
supreme court of New Mexico.&#13;
This appointment had been urged not&#13;
only by those who knew Mr. MeMHlan&#13;
in the state of New York, but by lawyers&#13;
of Santa Fe and of other cities in&#13;
New Mexico who knew of him and desired&#13;
to see him obtain the place.&#13;
» Toward the close of 1900, with Governor&#13;
Otero of the territory. Mr. Mc-&#13;
Millan was on a Lake Shore train&#13;
speeding toward Washington. When&#13;
the train stopped at Painesville, 0.,&#13;
newsboys boarded it, and one of them&#13;
called out: "All about the new supreme&#13;
court Judge of New Mexico. t Silas&#13;
Alexander appointed." The governor&#13;
of the territory and Mr. McMillan looked&#13;
at each other, and they bought a&#13;
paper, and in&gt; that paper they read in&#13;
glaring headlines that Silas Alexander&#13;
of Santa Fe had received the appointment&#13;
to the vacant judgeship.&#13;
Mr. McMillan the morning of his arrival&#13;
in the capital went at once to the&#13;
office of the secretary of war.&#13;
"How did it happen I was not appointed?"&#13;
he asked.&#13;
"Why," said Mr. Root "you are appointed!"&#13;
"Why," said Mr. McMillan, *'you are&#13;
mistaken." And he drew from his&#13;
pocket the Cleveland newspaper of the&#13;
day before. Secretary Root turned all&#13;
colors. "This is a mistake," he said;&#13;
"an absurd, strange mistake, for I have&#13;
it from the president's own lips, corroborated&#13;
by Mr7 Griggs, attorney general,&#13;
that your name was sent yesterday&#13;
to the senate for action and that j&#13;
the recommendation was duly signed i&#13;
by President McKiniey." i&#13;
Then the men went to the state, war j&#13;
and navy building and found Attorney&#13;
General Griggs.&#13;
"But you have been given the apa&#13;
m"eMenger came in reeyonee u« «*r&#13;
quested the attendance of the clerk In&#13;
confidential relations with him. whose&#13;
duty it la to fill In upon appointment&#13;
blanks the names of those who are designed&#13;
for appointments by the executive.&#13;
The clerk appeared. "Mr. Blank," i&#13;
said tbe attorney general "find out at&#13;
once whose uame was sent yesterday&#13;
to the senate with the recommendation&#13;
by the president that he be, appointed&#13;
associate justice of tbe supreme court&#13;
of New Mexico,"&#13;
"I will look," said the clerk. He toon&#13;
returned with a memorandum slip in&#13;
his band.&#13;
"Mr. Alexander," he said—"the man&#13;
from Buffalo."&#13;
Then a glimmering -of the truth&#13;
dawned upon the group* "Are you&#13;
sure," said Attorney General Griggs,&#13;
"that the name was not McMillan?"&#13;
"Certainly," was the reply. "The&#13;
name was Silas Alexander."&#13;
The situation was remarkable, and&#13;
time was important.&#13;
The president of the United States&#13;
had inadvertently, by the error of a&#13;
subordinate, been made to set aside the&#13;
man whom he had intended to name.&#13;
There came a pause. Mr. Griggs&#13;
broke the silence.&#13;
"Well, gentlemen," he said, 'the fat&#13;
is In the fire, but we must get it out&#13;
My subordinate has made this mistake,&#13;
and I must do my best to get it recti-&#13;
[ am pleased to inform the patrons&#13;
along the routes tbat the F. R. D. Nos.&#13;
1 and 2 are ordnred by the postal department&#13;
to start from Pinckney July&#13;
1,1901. All who have not already&#13;
done so, will be required to put up a&#13;
regulation box which must be uniform&#13;
on the route, a sample of which can&#13;
be seen at tbe post office. The boxes&#13;
should be upas soon as'June 28 so&#13;
the carriers can go over the line and&#13;
make a record of them.&#13;
W.S. SwARTHorr, P. M.&#13;
Pinckney, June 19, 1901.&#13;
STILL MORE LOCAL.&#13;
Frank Shields ot rJowell was in&#13;
town Tuesday.&#13;
How It is Done.&#13;
The first object in life with tbe A*&#13;
raerican people is to "get rich;" the&#13;
second bow to gain good health. Th,e&#13;
first can be obtained by energy, honesty&#13;
and saving; the second, (good&#13;
health) by using Green's August&#13;
Flower. Should you be a despondent&#13;
sufferer from any of the effects of Dys&#13;
pepsia, Liver complaint, Appsndicitis,&#13;
Indigestion, etc., sucb as Sick Headache,&#13;
Palpitation ot .the Heart, Sour&#13;
Stomach, Habitual Costiveness, Dizziness&#13;
of tbe the head, Nervous Prostration,&#13;
Low Spirits, etc., you need&#13;
not suffer another day. Two doses of&#13;
tbe well known August Flower will&#13;
relieve you at once. Go to F. A. Sjgler's&#13;
and get a sample bottle free.&#13;
Regular size, ?5c. Get Greon's Prize&#13;
Almanac;&#13;
Stale Candy.&#13;
S+ale candy can generally be worked&#13;
over by rebolling it. In tbe case of acid&#13;
candies, sucb as lemon drops, the candy&#13;
is boiled, tbe acid is withdrawn by the&#13;
use of lime or chalk, and the sirup may&#13;
then be used in tbe manufacture of that&#13;
or any other species of candy. &lt;&#13;
; - t a a p o T t a * t l i * 014 ^«mestea«.&#13;
Farmer Wbiffletree—Since yew got&#13;
back tram college yew donrt seem to&#13;
take no Interest In tbe old farm.&#13;
* Bon —No Interent dad! Haven't 1&#13;
•pent nearly two wetka laying out golf&#13;
ItofaWnai*&#13;
pointmeiit," said Mr. Grlggy. —&#13;
"Then what does this newspaper report&#13;
mean?" was tbe reply.&#13;
The attorney general was dumfounded.&#13;
"1 cannot conceive what it means,"&#13;
hp ftflirt. lie taDDed his bell, and when&#13;
led, and perhaps the fault Is partly&#13;
mine, for I told him to fill In tbe name&#13;
of the Buffalo man,' and he, probably,&#13;
seeing the name Alexander and identifying&#13;
it with the congressman of the&#13;
same name prominently known In&#13;
Washington as coming from Buffalo,&#13;
thought that he was to be the appointee."&#13;
And so the three men went to the&#13;
president and explained matters, and&#13;
as a consequence a messenger, preceded&#13;
by a telephone message, sped rapidly&#13;
toward the capltol with instructions&#13;
to seek Immediately the leader of the&#13;
senate and prevent any action on the&#13;
mistaken nomination and to make the&#13;
statement to that leader tbat it was&#13;
withdrawn.&#13;
The messenger arrived just as the&#13;
senate was about to take action, and if&#13;
the telephone had been relied upon the&#13;
nomination of Silas Alexander would&#13;
have been confirmed by the United&#13;
States senate, and the will of the presldent&#13;
of tbe republic would have been&#13;
defeated.—Saturday Kvening Post&#13;
Tbe world owes every man a living,&#13;
but doesn't furnish a collector.—Denver&#13;
Times.&#13;
Commencing duly 19 This Store will &lt;Uose&#13;
Friday afternoons at 12:30 until Sept. 1st.&#13;
THE&#13;
RED MARK S A L E&#13;
That Great Mercantile&#13;
Clearing Event Which&#13;
Occurs Esvery S u m -&#13;
mer at The Busy Bee&#13;
Hive&#13;
Will Begin July 1st,&#13;
This will be a S A L E&#13;
Worthy of Your A t t e n -&#13;
tion.&#13;
THE L. H. FIELD COMPANY.&#13;
* ' • * *&#13;
Jackson, Mich.</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="36757">
              <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="6936">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch June 27, 1901</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6937">
                <text>June 27, 1901 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="6938">
                <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="6939">
                <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="6940">
                <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="6941">
                <text>1901-06-27</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6942">
                <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="1002" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="930">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/e5e1f3499f05815c83e9f0e2c2a47620.pdf</src>
        <authentication>1cebede9703676c3d8ea87e2a887c578</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="32316">
              <text>VOL. XIX. PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, JULY. 4 , 1901. No. 27. ;. .if.'&#13;
;v t*&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
It is Justice Crofoot now.&#13;
Merchants dead? No, just sleeping&#13;
these bot days.&#13;
..-....Clyde P*iden H home from Detroit&#13;
for a vacation.&#13;
Several people are enjoying a days&#13;
eating at Pottage to day.&#13;
Dr. H. F. Sigler boasts the best&#13;
jleld of wheat in..&#13;
Biff- Boom—BiDtf— Bang, The&#13;
small boy is enjoying life to-day,&#13;
Miss Ethel Dorfee is entertaining&#13;
frwBd Mary May Cooper of Fowler-&#13;
•ille.&#13;
Miss Moilie Kelly spent the last&#13;
of last week with ber people on the&#13;
farm. —&#13;
Edward A. Bowman,&#13;
D E P A R T M E N T&#13;
STORE • • • • •&#13;
HOWELL. - MICHIGAN&#13;
Hammocks&#13;
Croquet Sets&#13;
Iron Express Wagons&#13;
F i r e Works.&#13;
Best Glass J e l l y T u m b l e r s&#13;
• fttll h a l f - p i n t s i z e ,&#13;
2 0 c p e r d o *&#13;
We give cash coupons with&#13;
evory purchase. Beautifull gifts&#13;
given fr»e with $2 in trade.&#13;
B o w m a n ' s&#13;
Next to Po*t O f f i c e .&#13;
Mail orders&#13;
Carefully filled.&#13;
The State fair association have oSrer )&#13;
50 men working os their new build&#13;
ings at Pontiac.&#13;
Rev. and Mrs. Horace Parmer, of&#13;
Fairfield were guests at J . A. Cadwell's&#13;
the past week.&#13;
The total valuation of Livingston&#13;
county property as equalized by the&#13;
board ot supervisors, is $12,500,000.&#13;
.). vV. Place way has some young&#13;
homing pigeons that has been training&#13;
ttrtsnffunannBTT Joe is quite proud of&#13;
them.&#13;
The state barber board, in session at&#13;
Lansing last week decided that every&#13;
customer in a shop is entitled to a&#13;
clean towel.&#13;
Miss Leah Thompson, who has been&#13;
visiting here for a few weeks petum-&#13;
«d to her hom« in Durand Wednesday&#13;
Miss Orpha Hendee returned with&#13;
her and will visit a few days.&#13;
Mrs. A. S; Chapman, ot Gilrnan, 111.,&#13;
with her children, Paul anoV Dorothy,&#13;
is making a-visit of a month with ber&#13;
father-in-law, F. M. Chapman, who&#13;
has been staying rvith Fred Stowe on&#13;
hU farm near UnadU|a since last Nov.&#13;
One of the busiest men in the state&#13;
is vvalter S. Lusk of Chilton. Mr.&#13;
Lusk is agent, of the Ann Arbor railways&#13;
a gan tfor the A m erican__Express&#13;
Co., manages a large elevator, conducts&#13;
a general store and is postmaster&#13;
Be is an enthusiastic angler and puts&#13;
in an hour or so jvery day fishing.&#13;
An unusual sight for Howell was seen&#13;
Tuesday raornng. A strout looking&#13;
man, possibly an Italian, went up one&#13;
stile of Grand River slrem. and duwn&#13;
Born to Mr. an1 Mrs Herb Schoenbals,&#13;
June 28, a son.&#13;
Murrj Walker of Detroit visited&#13;
friends in town the first of tLe week.&#13;
Eva and Loyd Grimes are spending&#13;
their vacation with relatives in Lansing.&#13;
K. Culbane and daughter, Lucy,&#13;
is spending a week at Whitmore&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Miss Florence Andrews is spending&#13;
a couple of weeks with relatives in&#13;
Owosso.&#13;
Will Campbell, of Monda, 111,, is a&#13;
guest of his father E. P., and other&#13;
relatives here.&#13;
Miss Merna Draper of Jackson was&#13;
the guest of her friend Lucy Swarthout&#13;
the past week.&#13;
Mr. Hicks and daughter Eunice, of&#13;
near Jackson, attended the funeral of&#13;
Miss Lizzie Campbell last week.&#13;
J. J. Teeple started for the U. P.&#13;
Thursday Morning, where he will&#13;
visit his sons at Sault St. Marie, Marquette&#13;
and Manistique.&#13;
Chas. Crowe formerly station agent&#13;
at Chilson was arrested lor embezzlement,&#13;
last week, and was bound over&#13;
to circuit court of Livingston county.&#13;
The Grand Trunk Ry. will sell&#13;
'trcketsrto Detroit-July 6 lorsiugle fare&#13;
for round trip on account of the fueral&#13;
of Ex-Governor Pingree. Ticke;&#13;
good to return July 8.&#13;
Musical Recital.&#13;
A recital by tbe music class taught&#13;
by Miss Emma Wright, was held at&#13;
July 4,1901.&#13;
School meeting Monday evening.&#13;
next.&#13;
J. L. Roche won the race at Jack*&#13;
son Tuesday.&#13;
Miss Carrie Erwin is visiting her&#13;
brother Frank in Alma.&#13;
The Evening News aud Journal are&#13;
both issued as "penny" papers now.&#13;
Malachi Roche, Matt Brady, S. G.&#13;
Teeple and Gus Smith, attended the&#13;
races at Jackson Tuesday.&#13;
Sam Wallace has moved his family&#13;
to a village near Ashley where he has&#13;
secured a position in a mill.&#13;
Mike Ryan of Dexter died suddenly&#13;
Tuesday. Mr. Ryan had his goods&#13;
packed to move to Chicago.&#13;
Mrs. Mary Brown who has hftfln&#13;
Want Column,&#13;
if«tice.&#13;
J. W. Monks has opened a dental&#13;
office over F. A. Sigler's drug store,&#13;
A. B. Green will meet bis patients&#13;
there Friday.&#13;
F«r tele.&#13;
House for sale. Inquire of H. W.&#13;
CBOFOOT.&#13;
FOR S A L E - T o p buggy 1,000 mile&#13;
oiler—good condition. C W . R I C B .&#13;
-¾¾1&#13;
• • w&#13;
' ••'-'• '•• . , i&#13;
W A N T E D ;&#13;
Strawberries, raspberries and other&#13;
small fruit on subscription a t this&#13;
office.&#13;
here the past two weeks returned to&#13;
her home at Honeoye Falls, N. Y.,&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Notice to Taxpayers.&#13;
The village tax-roll is now in my&#13;
hands and all taxes must be paid not&#13;
later than Augnst 15,1901.&#13;
t-28 J. A. CADWEL^, Treasurer.&#13;
W h e n in n e e d of&#13;
Boys' Clothing&#13;
lean show you a good line in sizes From 8&#13;
:¾¾&#13;
to 15 years* f r o m&#13;
C o m e&#13;
and get&#13;
y o u r&#13;
P h o t o s ,&#13;
rgflfik&#13;
the other picking up cigar stubs and&#13;
any other bits of tobacco that he could&#13;
find. The alleys, too, were not missed&#13;
The man was loaded down with Hltby&#13;
looking packages.— Howell Republican.&#13;
These are the foundation for&#13;
the cooling beverage, beer, that is&#13;
finding ready sale now-a-days; for&#13;
those fragrant cigarettes that the&#13;
yoirth is so fond of puffing.&#13;
Lost is Pound.&#13;
Dej. 19, last Fr. Ryan's&#13;
A* m&#13;
A s c h e a p as&#13;
Good W o r k&#13;
C a n be done*&#13;
Huntington,&#13;
Prnckney, Mich.&#13;
Horse and&#13;
carriage was stolen from hj* barn in&#13;
Dexter, and last Saturday be received&#13;
a letter from » „ man darned Shehau,&#13;
living about eicrht miles north of Detroit,&#13;
stating that a. horse that had&#13;
strayed to his farm last December was&#13;
to be sold the first of next month and&#13;
asking that he send someone down and&#13;
to identify it. if it was his. J a s .&#13;
Tourney went down and at once recognized&#13;
the horse. The first intimation&#13;
that the horse belonged to Fr. Ryan&#13;
was given by a friend of his whe saw&#13;
and recognized it. The horse strayed&#13;
onto the premises Dec. 24, looking as&#13;
thongh it had been driven hard and&#13;
was half starved. U was advertised&#13;
in tbe usual way but brought no responce&#13;
and was about to be sold according&#13;
to law when recovered by the&#13;
owner. No. trace of the harness or&#13;
carriage was discovered.&#13;
the hom»i of Mrs. Geo. Teeple, Tuesday&#13;
afternoon, which was listened to&#13;
by a number of the mothers and&#13;
friends ot the pupils. Fifteen numbers&#13;
were given, and the difficult&#13;
music from Medelssohn, Padererwski,&#13;
Clementi, and others, which was executed&#13;
by the class show the thorough&#13;
training given them-by their instructor.&#13;
Cream sherbet and cake was served&#13;
by the hostess and all pronounced&#13;
it a verv enjoyable afternoon.&#13;
S2.00 A SUIT TO S4.75&#13;
Notice! To&#13;
Farmers&#13;
of the&#13;
20th Century.&#13;
Empire Drill agency for 1901 has been secured by us&gt;&#13;
and we wish to call your attention to a few of the new&#13;
fieatures of this Drill, as well as sowing all kinds of grain it&#13;
will plant Sugar Beets four rows 21 inches apart, will plant&#13;
corn two rows 3% feet apart, Beans threa rows 28 inches&#13;
apart, or if desired the rows may be made closer together&#13;
or farther apart by simply closing a shut-off slide on inside&#13;
of box. Come and examine the Drill and you will be&#13;
convinced that it is the best Drill on earth.&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
OBlrtJARY.&#13;
Mi«s Elizabeth E. Campbell was&#13;
born in Rush Monroe Co. N. Y. in&#13;
1831 and died at ber booiM in Pincknev&#13;
Thursday morning June 27,&#13;
1901.&#13;
When she was 32 years old her parents&#13;
movftd to Michigan and settled at&#13;
Romeo. In 1863 they moved to Pinckn^&#13;
y and tor 38 years she has lived in&#13;
this community.&#13;
Som« years ago her parents died&#13;
and in 1894 her brother Anson passed&#13;
away. With him Miss Elizabeth and&#13;
Miss Harriet had lived—the latter&#13;
being called home in 1896. One lister&#13;
Mrs. Brown and one brother Erie&#13;
Campbell, survive her.&#13;
For about a year her health had&#13;
l.een failing. In the midst of affliction&#13;
she was cheerful, patient and interested&#13;
in all that was transpiring.&#13;
She was a devoted member of the&#13;
Cong'l Church of Pinckney. In pa*t&#13;
years she was a valued teacher in the&#13;
Sabbath School and was deeply interested&#13;
in all branches of church work,&#13;
ng the._mjinths of illness tbe&#13;
promises of God's Word and her faith&#13;
in prayer sustained ber. Tenderly&#13;
and thoughttully she wa* cared for by&#13;
loving relatives and friends. Suddenly&#13;
but quietly she passed into the betworld,&#13;
tier labors and sufferings in&#13;
this life are over—her jjys and activities&#13;
in the home prepared for-Christ's&#13;
lovei ones, have begun.&#13;
The funeral services were held from&#13;
the home corner ot Mill and Unadilla&#13;
streets Saturday afternoon,- June 29,&#13;
Rev. C. W. Rice offiating.&#13;
You will find the goods of the best makes&#13;
and the prices the lowest.&#13;
W. W. BARNARD.&#13;
Potato Bugs&#13;
are the rage.&#13;
Paris Green&#13;
- y&#13;
- f l ''I&#13;
London Purple&#13;
* *&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CAOWELL&#13;
Card of Utaiks.&#13;
We wish to thank tbe many kind&#13;
friends who assisted and sympathised&#13;
with trs during tbe late in new and&#13;
death of our bejoved, annt. May&#13;
kindness ever be shown you.&#13;
EUGINK CAMPBELL and FAMILY.&#13;
Wc&#13;
Keep it.&#13;
ne&#13;
will kill 'em.&#13;
•.-..:2&amp;M&#13;
F. A. SIGLER. «&#13;
&gt; • * • • &gt; • • 1 • * ' - *&#13;
- ^ - ^ , ^ ^ : , : . / ^ . ¾ .V.- • ; • , , ? , . • '• • V ,&#13;
*'^#^f.£JPr^ "-;!.'&#13;
»v i i i i i i &gt;.&#13;
? y •$:••"&#13;
&lt; % ' * ' • • ' . '&#13;
w-' •&#13;
*7"..'&#13;
ft&#13;
: |&#13;
S I&#13;
£*•'&#13;
&amp;v &lt; -&#13;
p:&#13;
'v-&#13;
:.." '..S&#13;
5 ^ » •&#13;
TALJUGif S SEJIMON.&#13;
• ^•v*&gt;&gt;r'--;-'/-,...,Kl ••.••• T.v:-''-*^'''•' • ' — t ' V ^ V ^ &gt; , , -, ..-•,• ••.•'• ^.v. •.: •«,"'•',"&gt; A.fe: \.'-,*;:.f .", ••'.•.••. ;'--i&#13;
•:.••••-•••.••• r;/'"^^.^,1 :^:--;.": •;-•.;.'.••..&lt;•.*• v.v *:-' • t v. -• .-..../.,^:^-1 .,-.-::-:^,-..-..^.^-^.^^,/:.^-./^&#13;
\X"z':-;ti*J*f&#13;
1:, .Vv :Mr;-&gt;£•• 'v^£''';"'\y':':* '••'••; -•&#13;
.- * • * . . . , . * ••'• . ' • V .' &gt; • ' '••• . ' • v * . \&#13;
' 1* ' ' • V i I ". . • - • • » " .&#13;
5 ac &lt; * K §***•! i&gt; I'lriiiinx a&#13;
1 y&#13;
" S f i V B /^NORY A N D S I N N O T "&#13;
— E P H . IV: 2 6 .&#13;
Bin |&gt;f AIcoholl»ro—TU« spirit of&#13;
OMnbllag-— Aid for tli* Utibeli«vw—&#13;
jtn ltan«tlon Over Fraud—Mercj for&#13;
4h« E r . l u j One.&#13;
(pbnyright, 1901, by Louis Klopsch, N. Y.)&#13;
Washington, June SO.—A delicate&#13;
a^rd difficult duty is by Dr. Talmage In&#13;
t£iis discourse urged upon all, and especially&#13;
upon those given to quick&#13;
tamper; text, Epheeians Iv, 26, "Be ye&#13;
angry and sin not"&#13;
Equipose of temper, kindness, patfenoe,&#13;
forbearance, are extolled by&#13;
vuost of the radiant pens of Inspiration,&#13;
but my text contains that which at first&#13;
tight Is startling. A certain kind of&#13;
anger Is approved—aye, we are commanded&#13;
to indulge In It. The most of&#13;
«s have no need to cultivate high temper,&#13;
and how often we say things and do&#13;
things under affronted impuse which&#13;
we .are sorry for when perhap3 it is&#13;
too late to make effective apology!&#13;
tWny, then, should the apostle Paul dip&#13;
bis pen In the Ink horn and trace upon&#13;
parchment, afterward to be printed&#13;
upon paper for all ages, the injunction,&#13;
"Be ye angry and sin not?"&#13;
My text commends a wholesome indignation.&#13;
It discriminates between&#13;
the offense and the offender, the sin&#13;
and the sinner, the crime and the&#13;
criminal —&#13;
To Illustrate: Alcoholism has ruined&#13;
more fortunes, blasted more homes, detroyed&#13;
more souls, than any evil that I&#13;
itnk of. It pours a river of poison and&#13;
Ire through the nations. Millions have&#13;
died because of it, and millions are dying&#13;
now, and others will die. Intern-'&#13;
perance is an old flln: The great Cyrus,&#13;
writing to the Lacedemonians of himself,&#13;
boasted of many of his qualities,&#13;
among others, that he could drink and&#13;
.bear more wine than his distinguished&#13;
brother. Louis X and Alexander the&#13;
Great, died drusk. The parliament of&#13;
.Edinburgh In 1661 is cal1ed in history rtthe drunken parliament." Hugh Miller,&#13;
the first stone mason and afterward&#13;
a world renowned geologist,&#13;
writes of the drinking habits of his&#13;
«Jay, saying: ^When the foundation&#13;
jpas laid, they drajik. When the walls&#13;
Vyere leveled for laying the joists, th*y&#13;
&lt;drank. When the building3 ware finished,&#13;
they drank. When an aporentice&#13;
joined, they drank." In the eighteenth&#13;
Century the giver of an entertainment&#13;
boasted that none of the guests went&#13;
a^way sober. Noah, the first ship captain,&#13;
was wrecked—not in the ark, for&#13;
that was safely landed—but he was&#13;
. wrecked with strong drink. Every man&#13;
••or woman rightly constructed will&#13;
txinsh with indignation at the national&#13;
and. international and hemispheric and&#13;
planetary curse. It is good to bs&#13;
aroused against It. You come out of&#13;
that condition a better man or a better&#13;
woman. Be ye angry at tint abomination,&#13;
and the more anser the more ex-&#13;
: altation to character. But that aroused&#13;
feeling becomes sinful when it extends&#13;
to the victim of this gr-at evl. D nnkenness&#13;
you are to hate with a vivid&#13;
hatred; but the drunkard you are to&#13;
#Ity, to help to extricate.&#13;
f Pr&lt;xtrat»&lt;! b* A»&lt;nhoil«m.&#13;
V Just take into consideration that&#13;
there are men and women who once&#13;
vrpiTR as upright as yourself who have&#13;
cardl*#^B#clicking chips or the turning&#13;
wfce:&lt;l or the bids of the Stock Exchange,&#13;
where people soil what they&#13;
never owned and fall because they&#13;
cannot get paid for it. A prominent&#13;
banker tells me that he thinks 60,000&#13;
people financially prostrated by the&#13;
recent Insanities in Wall street. Hare&#13;
and there a case Is reported, but the&#13;
vast majority suffer In silence. The&#13;
children are brought home from school&#13;
the wardrobe be denied replenishment,&#13;
the table will have scant supply, wild&#13;
generosity will be turned into grim&#13;
want Forty years from now will be&#13;
felt the disaster of last month's black&#13;
Thursday,&#13;
Can you hear the story of the unprincipled&#13;
manipulators of stocks and of&#13;
the devices of the gambling saloon to&#13;
entrap the verdant and unsuspicious&#13;
without having your pulses tingle, and&#13;
your heart thump, and your entire nature&#13;
shocked with the villainy? If so,&#13;
you are not much of a man or much of&#13;
a woman. You ought to be angry, for&#13;
there Is no sin in such vehement dislike.&#13;
You ought to be so angry that you&#13;
could not repress your feelings in the&#13;
presence of young men who are just&#13;
forming their life theories. In every&#13;
possible way you ought to denounce&#13;
such stupendous robbery. Let it be&#13;
known that the only successful game&#13;
in which a man plays for money is&#13;
the one which a man loses all and&#13;
stops.&#13;
Indlcrn«t'o-i OVPV Fmod.&#13;
There is another sin that we are oftentimes&#13;
called to be angry with, and&#13;
thatIsfraud.Wealllikehonesty,and&#13;
when it is sacriflecd we are vehement&#13;
in denunciation. We hope that the detectives&#13;
will soon come upon the track&#13;
of the absconding bank official, of the&#13;
burglar who blew up the safe, of the&#13;
clerk who skillfully chauged the figures&#13;
in the account beok, of the falsifier who&#13;
secured the loan on valueless property,&#13;
of the agent who because of his percentage&#13;
wrongfully admits a man to&#13;
the benefit of a life insurance policy&#13;
when his heart U ready to stop and&#13;
who comes from an ancestry characteristically&#13;
short lived.&#13;
One act of fraud told of In big headlines&#13;
in the morning papers rightfully&#13;
arouses the nation's wrath. It is th?&#13;
interest of every good man and good&#13;
woman who reads of the crime to have&#13;
it exposed_ana- punished. Let it go&#13;
unscathed, and you put a premium on&#13;
fraud, you depress public morals, you&#13;
induce those who are on the fence between&#13;
right and wrong to get down on&#13;
the wrong side, and you put the busbeen&#13;
prostrated by alcoholism. Perhaps&#13;
It came of a physician's presc;ip-.&#13;
tlon for the relief of pain, a recurrence&#13;
d the pain calling for a continnanco&#13;
&lt;jt the remedy; perhaps the grandfather&#13;
was an inebriate and the temp:atflon&#13;
to Inebriety, leaping over a generation,&#13;
has swooped on this unfortunate;&#13;
psrhaps it was undrr an a"&gt;&#13;
'tempt to drown trouble that the benumbing&#13;
and narcotic liquid was&#13;
'sought after; perhaps it was a gradual&#13;
chaining of the man with the beverage&#13;
which was thought to be a servant,&#13;
when one day it announced itself&#13;
master. Be humble now, and admit&#13;
that there is a strong probability that&#13;
under the same circumstances you&#13;
irself might have been captured,&#13;
is two appropriate emotions for you&#13;
. 44 allow are indignation at the intoxi-&#13;
H|Sjit which enthralled and sympathy&#13;
*tor the victim. Try to get the sufferer&#13;
rout of his present environment; recommend&#13;
any hygienic relief that you&#13;
4cnow of and, above all, implore the ditto*&#13;
rescue for the struggle In which&#13;
so many of the noblest and grandest&#13;
have been worsted. Do not give yourself&#13;
up to too many philippics about&#13;
wihat the man ought to have been and&#13;
• ought to have done. While your cheek&#13;
^flushes, with wrath at the foe that has&#13;
•brought ruin, let your eye be moisten-&#13;
"6d with tears of pity for the sufferer.&#13;
tin that way you will have fulfilled the&#13;
injunction of the text, "Be ye angry&#13;
tand sin not."&#13;
Th« Kplrlt of Gambling.&#13;
- In Spain a don lost in 24 hours what&#13;
equals $12,000,000. Twenty years ago&#13;
it was estimated that the average gam-&#13;
Ibllag exenange 01 money througnouT&#13;
&lt;jhristcndom exceeded $123,100,000,000&#13;
•a year. But statistics 20 years ago&#13;
would be tame compared with the prestfnt&#13;
statistics if we could find any* one&#13;
iSble enough at figures to tabulate&#13;
^tfomr^E to all th» same spirit of gam-&#13;
«ttni, Whether the instruments are&#13;
ne?s of the world on a down grade. The&#13;
constabulary and penitentiary must do&#13;
their work. But while the merciless&#13;
and the godless cry: "Good for him! I&#13;
am glad he is within prison doors!"&#13;
be it your work to find out if the man&#13;
is worth saving and what were the&#13;
causes of his moral overthrow. Perhaps&#13;
he started in business life under&#13;
a tricky firm, who gave him wrong notions&#13;
of business integrity; perhaps&#13;
there was a, combination of circumstances&#13;
almost unparalleled for temptation;&#13;
perhaps there were alleviations;&#13;
perhaps he was born wrong and&#13;
never got-over it; perhaps he did not&#13;
realize what he was doing, and if you&#13;
are a merciful man you will think o'&#13;
other perhaps which, though tiny&#13;
may not excuse, will extenuate. Perhaps&#13;
he has already repented and is&#13;
washed in the blood of the Lamb and&#13;
is as sure of heaven as you are. What&#13;
an opportunity von hava nr&gt;w tnr ^hoy.&#13;
ing my text. You were angry at the&#13;
misdemeanor, but you are hopeful for&#13;
the recovery of the recalc'trant.&#13;
Blessed all prison reformers! Blessed&#13;
are those governors and pres'dsnts who&#13;
are glad when they have a chance to&#13;
pardon! Blessed the forgiving, father&#13;
who welcomes home the prodiga1.&#13;
Blessed the dying thief whom the Lord&#13;
took with him to glory, saying, "Thif&#13;
day shalt thou be with me in para&#13;
dise!"&#13;
H«lp for the Cnb-Ilerer.&#13;
Have a lightning in your eye and a&#13;
flush in your cheek and a frown on&#13;
your brow for a daslardy "that would&#13;
blot out the sun and moon and stars of&#13;
Christianity and leave all things in an&#13;
arctic night, the cold equal to the&#13;
darkness. You do well to be angry, but&#13;
how about those who have been flunsr&#13;
of scepticism, and that is more ml&#13;
lions than you will ever know of until&#13;
the Judgment day reveals everything&#13;
Ah, here comes your opportunity fo&#13;
gentleness, kindness, and sympathy.&#13;
The probability is that If you&#13;
had been plied with tha game in&#13;
fluence as this unbeliever ther&#13;
would not be a Bible In all yoar&#13;
house from cellar to attic. Perall&#13;
your house from cellar to attic. Perhaps&#13;
he was In some important transaction&#13;
swindled by a member of the&#13;
church whose taking of the sacrament&#13;
was a sacrilege. Perhaps he read agnostic&#13;
books and heard agnostic lectures&#13;
and mirgled in agnostic circles until&#13;
he has been befogged and ne?ds your&#13;
Christian help more than any one that&#13;
you know of. Do not get into any labored&#13;
argument about the truth of Christlanity.&#13;
He may beat you at that. He&#13;
has a whole artillery of weapons ready&#13;
to open fire.&#13;
Remember that no one was ever reformed&#13;
for this H'e or saved for the lire&#13;
to come by an argument, buOn humblest&#13;
and gentleat way, your'voice subdued,&#13;
ask Mm a few questions. Ask&#13;
him if he had a Christian parentage,&#13;
and if he says yes ask him whether&#13;
the old folks died happy. Ask him if he&#13;
has ever heard of any one going out&#13;
of this life in raptures of Infidelity&#13;
and agnosticism. Ask htm If It Is net&#13;
a somewhat remarkable fact that the&#13;
Bible, after BO many y a s, sticks together&#13;
and that .there are more&#13;
copies of It in existence than&#13;
. ever before, A&amp;k him if he&#13;
knows of any batter civilisation&#13;
than Christian civilization and whether&#13;
he thinks the teachings of Confucius&#13;
or Christ are preferable. Ask him if he&#13;
minks it would be a fair thing in the&#13;
Creator of all things to put In this&#13;
world the human race and give them&#13;
no direct communication for their&#13;
guidance and, If they did wrong, tell&#13;
them of no way of recovery, I think if a&#13;
famous Infidel of our time, instead of&#13;
being taken away instantaneously, had&#13;
died In his bed after weeks and months&#13;
of illness he would have revoked his&#13;
teachings and left for his beloved family&#13;
consolations which they could not&#13;
find In obsequies at which not one&#13;
word of Holy Scripture was read, or at&#13;
Fresh Pond crematory, where no Christian&#13;
benediction w^s pronounced I&#13;
do not pcsltively say that in a prolonged&#13;
illness there would have been&#13;
a retraction, but I think there would.&#13;
The Work of AM I m U n t .&#13;
A man thoroughly mad can say&#13;
enough in two minutes to damage him '&#13;
for 20 years. It took only five minutes&#13;
for the earthquake to destroy Caracas.&#13;
One unfortunate sentence uttered in i&#13;
affront in a speech in the United States&#13;
senate shut forever the 4dor of the&#13;
White House against one of the most&#13;
brilliant men of the last century. You&#13;
can never trust a horse that has once&#13;
run away, and you do not feel like&#13;
trusting a man who has just once lost i&#13;
his equilibrium. You need to drive&#13;
your temper as a man drives a fractious&#13;
span amid the explos'ons of a&#13;
Fourth of July morning or the pyro-.&#13;
technics of the Fourth of July night, |&#13;
with curbed bit, taut rein, commanding&#13;
vcice—mastering yourself and master- ;&#13;
ing what you drive. If you are natur- •&#13;
a ly high tempered, do not unnecessary&#13;
ily go among irritations and provocations.&#13;
Do not build a blast furnace&#13;
next to a gunpowder mill; Then, also,&#13;
such demonstrations of ungovernabil- ;ty belittle one^ Men take out their&#13;
lead pencils and In estimating such a&#13;
one take 50 per cent off. About the&#13;
most hideous spectacle on earth is an&#13;
angry man or woman burning not with&#13;
^nger commanded in my text, but w^h&#13;
A bulletin sent out by tat Missouri&#13;
State Board of Agriculture says:&#13;
By far the most rational and satisfactory,&#13;
and the cheapest method of&#13;
curing scab la by dipping the sheep in&#13;
iome liquid which Will kill the parasites.&#13;
The dipping proce s is as follows:&#13;
(1) Select a dip containing sulphur.&#13;
Jf a prepared dip. is used which does&#13;
not contain sulphur? It is alwayr safer&#13;
to add about 16½ pounds of sifted&#13;
lowers of sulp*hur to every 100 gallons&#13;
Df water, especially if, after dipping,&#13;
the sheep have to be returned to the&#13;
?ld pastures.&#13;
(2) Shear all the sheep at the one&#13;
time, and Immediately after shearing&#13;
lonflne them to one-half the farm for&#13;
two to four weeks. Many persons prefer&#13;
to dip Immediately after shearing.&#13;
(3) At-the end of this time dip evary&#13;
sheep (and every goat also, If there&#13;
are any on the farm).&#13;
(4) Ten days later dip the entire&#13;
flock a second time.&#13;
(6) After the second dipping, place&#13;
the flock on the portion of the farm&#13;
from which they have been excluded&#13;
during the previous four or five weeks.&#13;
(6) Use the dip at a temperature Qi&#13;
100 degrees to 110 degrees J&gt;\&#13;
(7) Keep each sheep in the dip for&#13;
two minutes by the watch—do tfot&#13;
guess at the time—and duck Its head&#13;
at least once.&#13;
i l8j Be careful in dipping rams, as&#13;
they are more likely to ue overcome In&#13;
the dip than are the ewes.&#13;
n9) Injury may, however, result to&#13;
"pregnanT ewes, which must, on this account,&#13;
be carefuLy handleu Some&#13;
farmers arrange a stage with sides, to&#13;
hold the pregnant ewes, which Is lowered&#13;
carefully into the vat, and raised&#13;
after the proper time.&#13;
(10) In case a patent, or proprietary,&#13;
dip, especially an arsenical dip, Is&#13;
used, the directions given on the package&#13;
should be carried out to the letter.&#13;
• • •&#13;
Whatever dip Is selected, the farmer&#13;
should not forget that there are two&#13;
ways to use that dip. One way is to&#13;
prepare and use it In accordance with&#13;
the directions given; the other way 13&#13;
to attempt to economize time, labor, o.-&#13;
money by using the dip in weaker proportion&#13;
than advised, byimrrying th.3&#13;
sheep through the swim, or by latef&#13;
placing the dipped sheep under unfavorable,&#13;
conditions. If the former method&#13;
is adopted With any of the established&#13;
dips, the treatment ought to ba&#13;
followed with favorable resulis; If th.-s&#13;
latter method is adopted, the farmer&#13;
elaborate C U u ^ ^ p / lk» 4 » i b w » / » Cofes*&#13;
The ceremony of the Grand Medicine&#13;
la an eaborate tttfcal, covert.g&#13;
levcrai dajs, 'the endless number cf&#13;
gods and spirits be.ng called upon to&#13;
minister to the tick man and to&#13;
lengthen his life. The several decrees&#13;
of. the Grand Medicine teach the us3 of&#13;
Incantations, of medicines and PQIBOM,&#13;
and the requirements necessary to constitute&#13;
a brave. "When a young man&#13;
seeks admission to the Grand Medicine&#13;
lodge he first fasts until he sees in&#13;
his dream some animal (the sink, braver,&#13;
otter and fisher being most common^,&#13;
which he hunts and kills. The&#13;
akin is then ornamented with beads&#13;
or porcupine quills, and the spirit of&#13;
the animal becomes tie friend and&#13;
companion of the man." The medicine&#13;
men have on'y a limited knowledge&#13;
of herbs, but they are expert in dressing&#13;
wounds, and the art of extracting&#13;
barbed arrows from the flesh can be&#13;
learned from them. In olden'timesyes,&#13;
to within the memory of the Ojlbways—&#13;
the medicine man at the funeral&#13;
ceremony thu3 addressed the departed:&#13;
"Dear friend, you will not leel&#13;
lonely while pursuing your journey toward&#13;
the setting sun. I have killed fcr&#13;
you a Sioux (hated enemy of the Oj bways)&#13;
and I have scalped him. He&#13;
will accompany you and provide fjr&#13;
you, hunting your food If you need it.&#13;
The scalp I have taken, use it for&#13;
your moccasins."—Open Court.&#13;
»m:&gt; •':•*'*&#13;
y ; ; . • • • , - • •- . •&#13;
'•'..' 'V.V&#13;
the sin represented. After such a display&#13;
of gall, irrascibllity, virulence, hl3&#13;
influence with many is forever gone.&#13;
The world is full of polit clans, do.tois,&#13;
lawyers, merchants, mechanics, ministers,&#13;
housewives, who have by such&#13;
expl03ions been blown to pieces.&#13;
I say to all young men hoping to&#13;
achieve financial, moral or religious&#13;
success—control your tempers. Do not&#13;
let critl-ism or r'efeat rebuff ycu. V rdl,&#13;
the great musician, applied to becoma&#13;
a student in the Conservatory of Music&#13;
at Milan and he was rejected by the director,&#13;
who said that he could make&#13;
nothing of the newcomer, as he showed&#13;
no disposition for music. But the criticism&#13;
did not exasperate or defeat him.&#13;
The most of those who have largely&#13;
succeeded fn all departments were&#13;
characterized by Belf controli In battle&#13;
•hey would calmly look at the bomb&#13;
thrown at theirf'eet.wDnderlng whether&#13;
It would pyplndft Tn ftOTniworHa] Hfg&#13;
when panics smote the city, these men&#13;
were placid,, while others were yelling&#13;
themselves hoarse "at the Stock Exchange.&#13;
While others nearly swooned&#13;
because a certain stock had gone 100&#13;
points down they calmTy waited until&#13;
t would get 100 points up. While the&#13;
apposing attorney in the courtroom&#13;
frothed at the mouth with rage because&#13;
of something said on the other side, he&#13;
of the equipoise put a glass of water to&#13;
his lips in refreshment and proceeded&#13;
with the remark, "As I was saying&#13;
when the gentleman interrupted me.'*&#13;
«elf control T What a glorious thing!&#13;
We want it In the doctor feeling the&#13;
rulse of one drsp-rately 111, we wait&#13;
it In the engineer when the headlight&#13;
of another train comes round the&#13;
curve on the same track. We want It&#13;
in Christian men and women in times&#13;
when so much fn church and state&#13;
seem going to demolition—self control&#13;
What are you going to be good for, O&#13;
man or woman in a world like this,&#13;
ever and anon your dander up, and so&#13;
often In the sulks? We admit taat you&#13;
have many things to stir your b'ood&#13;
and fill you with wholesome Indignation,&#13;
but going to such extremes you&#13;
offend my text, which says you must&#13;
discriminate and not lose your selfcontrol,&#13;
"Be ye angry and sin not"&#13;
himself must assume the responsibility&#13;
of failure, no matter whieh dip he de«&#13;
cides 10 use. Every farmer should,&#13;
therefore, remember that when he has&#13;
decided upon the d.p he is to use, h-s&#13;
work has only begun; to use the dip&#13;
properly is fully as important as to&#13;
use a dip at all.&#13;
Sulphur is one of the oldest known&#13;
remedies for scab, its use dating bacic&#13;
to Columella in the early part of the&#13;
Christian era. As a scab eradicator,&#13;
it must be placed among the best substances&#13;
at our disposal. It is one «f&#13;
the constituents of certain proprietary&#13;
dips, but its use to t^e farmer is test&#13;
known »n the tobacco-and-sulphur dip&#13;
and in the lim&lt;* and-sulphur dip. These&#13;
home-made mixtures are the two dips&#13;
which have ph«ed the moat important&#13;
roles In the eradication of scab from&#13;
certain English co.oiiies, and their&#13;
use, especially the u*:e as well as the&#13;
abuse of lime and sulphur, is quite extensive&#13;
In this country.&#13;
Better Than "Chr'stlftn Science;"&#13;
Jetmore, Kans., Ju+y 1st—-Mrs, Anna.&#13;
Jones Freeman, daughter of Mr. Q. O.&#13;
Jones of Burdett, and one of the most&#13;
popular ladles in Hodgeman County&#13;
has been a martyr to headache for&#13;
years. It has made her life a continual&#13;
misery to her. She suffered pains in&#13;
the small of the back, ar.d had every&#13;
symptom of Kidney and Urinary Trouble.&#13;
Today she is as well as any lady in&#13;
the state.&#13;
This remarkable change was dose entirely&#13;
to a remedy recently introduced&#13;
here. It is called Dodd's Kidney Pills,&#13;
and many peop.c- claim It to be an infallible&#13;
cure for Kidney Diseases,&#13;
Rheumatism and Heart Trouble.&#13;
Mrs. Freeman heard of Dodd's Kid-_&#13;
ney Pills, and almost with the first&#13;
dose, she grew better. In a week, her&#13;
headaches and other pains had g-ue*&#13;
and she had left behind her all her&#13;
illness and days of misery.&#13;
A medicine that can do for any one&#13;
what Dodd's Kidney Pills have done&#13;
for this lady, l3__v_ery_suxe soon-to-be&#13;
universal y used, and already the demand&#13;
for these pills has increased&#13;
wonderfully in Pawnee and Hodgeman&#13;
Counties, where the particulars of&#13;
Mrs. Freeman's case and its cure are&#13;
kaown.&#13;
An outdoor I ill pit.&#13;
Another London church is to have&#13;
the novelty of an outdoor pulpit like&#13;
the one at St. Mary's Whitechapel. The&#13;
new one is being erected at Christ&#13;
church, Spltalfields, as a memorial to&#13;
ther late Dr. Billing, a former rector,&#13;
and for many years bishop of Bedford.&#13;
Like the open-air pulpit used at Whitechapel,&#13;
the new one will look out from&#13;
the *hurch wall upon the open space of&#13;
the disused churchyard, where an outdoor&#13;
congregation can gather without&#13;
any danger from street traffic.&#13;
Former Lid? of White H o m e .&#13;
Miss Letltla Semple, daughter of&#13;
President Tyler, and so a former mistress&#13;
of the white house, Is living in&#13;
Washington and was present at the&#13;
reception given to Mrs. Daniel Manning&#13;
and the Daughters of the Amerlcan&#13;
Revolution. She jwas spoken of&#13;
as "the little lady in black, with a&#13;
quaker bonnet," for few knew her. She&#13;
has for years been an Inmate of the&#13;
Louise home, established by Banker&#13;
Corcoran In memory of his wife and&#13;
daughter and endowed for the benefit&#13;
of gentlewomen of southern birth who&#13;
are in reduced circumstances.&#13;
Pr«»*ervwtlv»» Not Needed.&#13;
At the Vermont State Dairy convention&#13;
held recently Maj. Henry E. Alvord,&#13;
chief of the Dairy division of the&#13;
department of agriculture, stated that&#13;
the experiment of shipping butter 1.0&#13;
fbreign markets had begot the confidence&#13;
of foreign merchants, by showing&#13;
them that Americans could furnish an&#13;
excellent quality of butter and place&#13;
it on their markets in as good condition&#13;
as other countries. Partly as the&#13;
result of the department's work, there&#13;
was more demand for American butter&#13;
and cheese abroad than our merchants&#13;
could supply. He did not believe In&#13;
the use of preservatives In butter.&#13;
Great Britain was the best market to&#13;
cultivate, and no preservative was&#13;
needed to send butter there. Sweden&#13;
and Denmark boasted that they could&#13;
send butter there without preservatives.&#13;
Even butter color was not needed&#13;
for the best butter market in all&#13;
England—Manchester. In order to.&#13;
compete successfully with Sweden,&#13;
Denmark and Canada, what was needed;&#13;
on dairy exports was the official stamp,&#13;
of approval by this government, guar*&#13;
anteelng the purity. If butter is of excellent&#13;
quality, it would sell abroad&#13;
Tn any kind of package, but tastes and&#13;
preferences should " be studied. The&#13;
English market holds to the old hundred-&#13;
weight 6f 112 lb., and wants packages&#13;
of 112 lb., 66 lb. and 28 lb, If ~&#13;
man had good clean, pure mUk, he&#13;
would not, recommend pasteurization.&#13;
it was a premium on slovenly dairying,&#13;
and cooked milk was not as digestible&#13;
as raw&#13;
Are YOD Ditnjr Allen's Foot-Kase?&#13;
I t is tbe o n l v cure for Swollen^&#13;
Sua i r t i p g . — B u r n i n g , — S w e a t i n g — F e e t ,&#13;
Corns and B u n i o n s . Ask for A l l e n ' s&#13;
F o o t - E a s e , a p o w d e r to be s h a k e n i n t o&#13;
t h e shoes. A t all Drujrsfists nnd 8 l o e&#13;
Stores, 25c. S a m p l e s e n t F R E E . A&lt;1-&#13;
d r e s s Allen S. Olmsted, L«j Roy, N. Y.&#13;
Utile is too s h o r t to be w a s t e d i n&#13;
h a t r e d and putty worries.&#13;
Some people i m a g i n e s a l v a t i o n is o n&#13;
sale on bargain c o u n t e r s .&#13;
litl&#13;
What breed pays beat? Juat that&#13;
breed which best meets your ideas and&#13;
you take the best care of.&#13;
. T i m e proves all t h i n g s . It h a s s p e n&#13;
Wizard Oil cure p a i n for o v e r f o r t y&#13;
years. Muny people k n o w this.&#13;
T h e r e are more or l e s s m i s s - g i v i n g s&#13;
a b o u t a girl's aff« c ions.&#13;
SQZ0D0HT for the TEETH 25c&#13;
NSIONJ^S%?.^S%&#13;
\li)y Pr°^PffM.tc» Claims.&#13;
&gt; BsamHier U78. FenslOB Bttrera.&#13;
_*• Prtnclpiu .&#13;
•r»ln cMl war. 15 iidjudJCftttas claim*. »*W »luo*&#13;
Turn the Rascals Out&#13;
VV e are speaking of the grip nuvrooes&#13;
The well and strong c*n re*ibt their poison,&#13;
the sickly and weak are theirprey*&#13;
Baxter's Mandrake Bitters, sure nature's&#13;
remedy for expelling ajl poison&#13;
fro'othe system. At drujrgiaLe&gt; la liquid&#13;
or tablets at 25 cents per bottle or box.&#13;
IN 3 OR 4 YEARS&#13;
IN INDEPENDENCE ASSURED It j * » take up your&#13;
hove t» Western Canads****&#13;
toad of plenty.&#13;
IUbeueased pampbletiik&#13;
Bkriu* MperlenoM of&#13;
formers who have be*&#13;
eejao wealthy in glow*&#13;
tarn wheat, report* of&#13;
. ArTegfi tea, etc .and lull&#13;
iuiormation at to reduttd railway rate* oaa be&#13;
hod on application to tbe Superlntenrieat of&#13;
Immigration, Department of Interior. Ottawa*&#13;
Canada, or to J. Grieve, Saginaw, Mich »or M.&#13;
V. Mclnr.cs. No. 2 Merrill Block, Detroit. Mich,&#13;
Labor wins in the poultry housenot&#13;
luck. The poultry house ia not a&#13;
lottery.&#13;
:. (-. Vl&lt; F. F O I .11 I h ",N&#13;
: * • • * '&#13;
/&#13;
i&#13;
« « M 4 w . . ,n)ittfcA..i. Y.,t. , U W .&gt;Ji.:^&gt;»WiifcMri«iV''V. J ' M i ^ i A t ^ w a.;.»... ; ^^jx'i^kii; ,.*^».&#13;
&lt;mm*x .... ,..^^^.,-^a&#13;
: : : : ^ %&#13;
• • • • , . &gt; ' y •. L»: &lt;&gt;,'•&#13;
• ' * . ' ,' ^ " j r • &gt; • • •&lt;&lt;: ' v i&#13;
' • • .K • ' • • - * " • / ' " i '. f ' • . • ' ' : ' • ' . • • • ( . . : • ' , , l • ' " '&#13;
••••*•••".* .. • • * i- ' . V •.--• »' -.t-jn V •*&amp;*» *: " . ' • • - . - " t • •&#13;
BqpmSfSZSSS+mSBSS&amp;SEmZimiiii • - i f P w i S S e= s«s * 6 - ¥&#13;
\ - * -&#13;
.&gt;• I'. ofDameLSCus&#13;
f&lt;m-V.. ... V&#13;
A Story ^&#13;
the Ea.6t...&#13;
By&#13;
SYLVANUS&#13;
COBB* JR.&#13;
Oopyrifbted VBl by Bobert Bonner's Sons.&#13;
W&#13;
iMTKuBocnoN.&#13;
' Boram. King: of Damascus, then at&#13;
Its glory as the senith city of the&#13;
east, bemoaned the coming of old age&#13;
without .prospective heir to the throne.&#13;
In his younger days h* had loved&#13;
Helen, his.Queen, but tearing that she&#13;
Hraa disloyal to him had her cast into&#13;
the black, swift flowing Phorpar. At&#13;
the time the story opens Ulin, the&#13;
daughter of Aboul Caasem, the king's&#13;
nrime minister, three times dreams&#13;
that she has become the wife of the&#13;
king and that a son being born to&#13;
them is heir to the throne. Cassem&#13;
telte the story to the king. The latter&#13;
having long admired the many charms&#13;
of Ulin, seeks an interview with her&#13;
and on the aixth day following they&#13;
are to be married. He thereupon&#13;
abolishes his harem. Within the week&#13;
Albia, the pretty slave mald-in-watingJai&#13;
Ulin, lells the story of the trag.c&#13;
fate at Helen. The story makes a deep&#13;
impression and preys upon the mind of&#13;
Hbe lbride-to-be. But her father urge3&#13;
&amp;ertan and she now deems it a sac:el&#13;
•duty tto become the queen. On the&#13;
morning set for the wedding Ulin a&#13;
joapther dies. According to the laws of&#13;
Damascus she must go into mourning&#13;
retirement for thirty days. Hsram&#13;
agrees with her father that she shall&#13;
pass the period of mourning in a secluded&#13;
palace in the beautiful Valley of&#13;
Lycanius. This valley is the sole possession&#13;
of the king and can only be&#13;
reached^by onec passage through a&#13;
mighty mountain; capable of admitting&#13;
but one person at a time. , Thither&#13;
Ulin goes with Albia, where they afe&#13;
placed under the protection of the&#13;
attendants by the king and Uln's&#13;
father. Six days after their entering&#13;
Horam returns unexpectedly. Ulin&#13;
acting on the suggestion of Albia,&#13;
treats him kindly.&#13;
OIIAl'TEIt I.&#13;
Julian the Scouge.&#13;
She asked if her father had come.&#13;
"iso, my sweet laay," returned Horam.&#13;
"He was busy. It may app.ar&#13;
unseemly for me to come hither aloae;&#13;
but my great love and my deep so icitude&#13;
for your welfare, must be my excuse.&#13;
1 nope you have found it pieas^&#13;
ant here."&#13;
The maiden said she could not have&#13;
asked for a more pleasant place of&#13;
abode.&#13;
The king was charmed by her smiling&#13;
speech—so different from what siie&#13;
had ever before given him—and he&#13;
fondly believed that she was deUghtei&#13;
with his presence.&#13;
Ulin, fearing that the least sign of&#13;
coldness or reserve might excite the&#13;
jealousy of the grey-headed-monarch,&#13;
and bring down upon her some terrible&#13;
evil, exerted all her powers of p.easantness,&#13;
and wore the smile upon her&#13;
face while a pang was in her bosom.&#13;
But Horam's visit was destined tJ&#13;
be cut short. While he was, for the&#13;
sixth time making excuses for his&#13;
visit the door of the apartment was&#13;
unceremoniously opened and a black&#13;
entered—not one of those who had&#13;
been on guard in the valley but a&#13;
stranger to VIin. covered with sweit&#13;
and dust, as though he had been riding&#13;
hard and fast.&#13;
"Ha!" cried the king, starting to his&#13;
feet. ''How now, Sadak? What is the&#13;
meaning of this?"&#13;
"Pardon, sire. I knew not that you&#13;
were thus engaged. They only toid&#13;
me that you were here and I stopped&#13;
to inquire no further."&#13;
"Not that—not that Sadak. Why&#13;
have you come from Damascus in such&#13;
,hot haste?"&#13;
"I came to inform you sire that Julian&#13;
the Scourge of Damascus is approaching&#13;
our city!"&#13;
"Death and devastation!" cried Horam&#13;
starting back with alarm. "How&#13;
know you this?"&#13;
"We heard from him by way of a&#13;
merchant who was in a caravan that&#13;
he had robbed."&#13;
"What caravan?"&#13;
"The caravan from Tadmoor, with&#13;
the riches which were on their way&#13;
from Bassona.**&#13;
"Those riches were mine," said Horam.&#13;
• "Aye, aire; and Julian took them—&#13;
took all that belonged to you, but&#13;
spared the poorer merchants. But&#13;
that is not the worst He sends word&#13;
that he will lay Damascus in ashes.&#13;
Aboul Caaaem hade me hasten hither&#13;
and give yam warning."&#13;
The king was fairly beside himself&#13;
with fear and rage. The name of Julian&#13;
was a terror to him, and at the&#13;
sound thereof he trembled exceedingly.&#13;
And he seemed to fear more than the&#13;
mere physical prowess of the Scours*.&#13;
There was a mystic Quality in his Jaar&#13;
—a nameless dread of the avenger.&#13;
"Where is the demon now?" he asked,&#13;
after he had gased awhile in si ence&#13;
upon the messenger.&#13;
"He is not far from the city, sire.&#13;
Somewhere to the eastward, we think.&#13;
Tour Journey beck, if you make haste,&#13;
will be safe."&#13;
^ 1 wiltireturt^crfed thr monarchr&#13;
•mitin* his fiats together; "and I will&#13;
»ui**** uw u*i «,4u«y uuu Bw&lt;*ciJ utiA terrible&#13;
8courge from off the face of the&#13;
earth!"&#13;
He bade Sadak go and make ready&#13;
for the start, and then he turned to&#13;
Ulin.&#13;
"You will be safe here, sweet one;&#13;
and it will not be long before our happiness&#13;
shall be complete."&#13;
His words of parting were few, far&#13;
he was much excited, and his vo.ca&#13;
trembled as he spoke. He turned back&#13;
once after he had reached the door,&#13;
as though he would say something,&#13;
but finally went away without giving&#13;
the intended speech. From a window&#13;
Ulin watched the royal cavalcade until&#13;
It had disappeared within the narrow&#13;
pass, and when the last man had gone&#13;
from her sight she turned to her companion.&#13;
"Albia, what is it about this terrible&#13;
robber—this Scourge of Damascus? I&#13;
have heard something about him. I&#13;
heard my father once speak of him;&#13;
but my little knowledge of the world&#13;
did not lead me to be inquisitive. Do&#13;
you know anything about him?"&#13;
"I have heard a great deal of him,&#13;
my lady. He has been a terror to Damascus&#13;
for a great many years.&#13;
"How many years, Albia? I was&#13;
thinking that my father, said he had&#13;
not been long known in this section."&#13;
"I may he mistaken," said A.bla,&#13;
trying to recollect herself. "I know&#13;
that he is a terribie Scourge, and that&#13;
men fear him; but I do not know how&#13;
many years he has been so. It may&#13;
not be so many as I thought."&#13;
"But who is he? Where did he come&#13;
from?"&#13;
"Ah, there is a mystery, my dear&#13;
mistress. Nobody knows where he&#13;
came from; but it is said that he is&#13;
one whose family has suffered some&#13;
great calamity at the hands of Horam.&#13;
He is alona in the world, so far as relatives&#13;
are concerned, and Horam hath&#13;
done it; and so he comes to seek vengeance.&#13;
He has a large body of bold&#13;
men under him, and twice has he met&#13;
and overcome the forces which the&#13;
king had sent out to capture him. He&#13;
does not rob as common robbers do.&#13;
_He never troubles the poor, or thosa&#13;
of the middle class; but the ruler3 and&#13;
princes of Damascus he causes to suffer."&#13;
"Did you ever see him, Albia?"&#13;
"Mercy! no. I would not see him.far&#13;
the world. He must be terribe to&#13;
look upon. I have heard one of your&#13;
father's officers say that he could&#13;
strike a b:ow with his fist to fell an ox.&#13;
and that before the lightning of his&#13;
eye brave men shrank in terror. O,&#13;
I should be afraid to see him."&#13;
"It seems to me that I shouM like&#13;
to see such a man," said Ulin, in a&#13;
musing tone. "I have never seen such&#13;
men. The man whose arm can strike&#13;
down an ox, and whose eye flashes&#13;
forth such power, could not harm a&#13;
helpless maiden."&#13;
"Upon my life, you have a curious&#13;
taste," Albia returned.&#13;
"Because," added Ulin, with a smile,&#13;
"I never had my taste cultivated.&#13;
Still, in all seriousness, it does seem&#13;
to me that 1 should lo4v. e to lean upon&#13;
a strong, bold man. If I were to love&#13;
a man with my whole heart, I should&#13;
like him to be so strong and so powerful&#13;
and so brave, that his very presence&#13;
would be protection to me. Is&#13;
that very strange?"&#13;
"It is so strange," replied the slave,&#13;
significantly, "that I fancy,the king&#13;
would feel new cause for jealousy if he&#13;
should hear you say so."&#13;
"When I am the king's wife I shall&#13;
be true to him, and I shall honor and&#13;
respect him. I will love him if I can.&#13;
But, Albia, there is no need of saying&#13;
more. We will have our dinner, and&#13;
then we will walk out into the garden."&#13;
Suddenly a messenger appears asking&#13;
for assistance from the guard.&#13;
With 50 stalwart guards he hurries toward&#13;
the gates.&#13;
"What can it be?" cried the princess,&#13;
in alarm.&#13;
But Albia could not imagine. She&#13;
could only beg of her mistress to take&#13;
courage, and hope for no evil.&#13;
Ere long, however, another messenger&#13;
came to the palace, who made his&#13;
way to the room where the princes3&#13;
was sitting. He trembled with excitement.&#13;
"How now, Aswad?" demanded Ulin.&#13;
"What is the meaning of all this disturbance?"&#13;
"Alas, my lady, an enemy is at our&#13;
gates. The terrible Scourge of Damascus&#13;
demands entrance into the valley."&#13;
"What does he seek?"&#13;
"I dare not tell you?"&#13;
"What seeks he?" cried the princess,&#13;
authoritatively. ''If there is danger,&#13;
I would know what it is."&#13;
"There msynsot be danger~for you,&#13;
lady. We may beat the robber off.&#13;
We will do so If we can."&#13;
"But the king told me that a handful&#13;
of determined men could hold that&#13;
pass against a thousand."&#13;
—"But these are not ordinary men.&#13;
This Julian is a very demon, and I&#13;
•verily beU eve that,he hsth more than&#13;
human power. Still we will do the&#13;
1 beat that we can."&#13;
i ''You have not told me what he&#13;
' seeks. Answer me that question—answer&#13;
It without further hesitation."&#13;
"He seeks the maiden whom the&#13;
king is to take for a wife,"&#13;
"Seeks me?" uttered the princess,&#13;
with a start.&#13;
"Yes, my lady. Such is his avowal."&#13;
"la mere?'* name, jtood Aswad, -pro--&#13;
tect me. Let not that dreadful robber&#13;
gain access to the valley."&#13;
"Hurry, hurry!" cried Albia, "Away&#13;
to your companions, and bid theja&#13;
strain every nerve. If they suffer the&#13;
Scourge of Damascus to gain pa sage&#13;
hither they know what the wrath of&#13;
the king must be."&#13;
"Poweis of heaven!" cried Ulin with&#13;
clasped hands and quivering frame&#13;
"the demon must not find us.'&#13;
"You are not so anxious to sse him&#13;
as you were" remarked Alb.a. "I&#13;
thought your whim was a strange&#13;
one."&#13;
"Speak not qf that" said Ulin quickly&#13;
and severely. "I meant not that I&#13;
wou.d have -him come to seek me. O&#13;
Albia, what can he want?"&#13;
"Indeed, my mistress, I dare not&#13;
think. But let us lcok in another direction.&#13;
If he does not find us, we care&#13;
not why he comes. Ha! See! Hire&#13;
comes Aswad again. He looks frightened."&#13;
Aswad entered the chamber with&#13;
trembling step and seamed afraid to&#13;
speak; but the demand of the princess&#13;
opened his lips.&#13;
"Lady, I fear that the robber will&#13;
prevail against us. He is accompanied&#13;
by fierce, furious men, who fight 1 ke&#13;
lions.and his own Bword is irresistible.&#13;
His body is covered with scales of finest&#13;
steel and the blows of our men fall&#13;
harmless upon him."&#13;
"But the dreadful man has not yet&#13;
broken through?" said Ulin eagerly.&#13;
"No, lady. Our brave meu fight as&#13;
well as they can."&#13;
"Has the robber entered the pass?"&#13;
"Not far."&#13;
"Then you may hold him at bay yet.&#13;
O, Aswad, if you would be blessed forevermore&#13;
let not the Scourge gain ths&#13;
valley!'&#13;
"We will do our best, lady; but you&#13;
must be prepared for the worst. If we&#13;
are finally overcome you must hide&#13;
yourse.f."&#13;
"Where? Where can we hide?"asked&#13;
Albia. I&#13;
"In the palace or somewhere in the j&#13;
gardens; or upon the mountains."&#13;
"There is no hiding place which a '&#13;
keen eye would not detect. I have&#13;
looked in every direction. So, Aswad,&#13;
save us by your stout arms."&#13;
"I fear the demons will prevail,"&#13;
said Ulin, in a tone of breathless suspense.&#13;
"I dare not hope otherwise," returned&#13;
Albia. • ' " .&#13;
"If they do come, we must find&#13;
some place in which to hide."&#13;
"Alas, my dear mistress, there is no&#13;
such place. If we go up among the&#13;
rocks, we not on y run the risk of baing&#13;
easily found, but we run the&#13;
greater risk of starving."&#13;
"I would rather starve than fall into&#13;
the dread Julian's hands," said Ulin.&#13;
"It would be a terrible death to&#13;
starve, upon those bleak rocks!" returned&#13;
Albia, with a shudder. "But I&#13;
will share your fate, my mistress, let&#13;
it be what it may."&#13;
"And would not death by starvation&#13;
be preferable to the fate which m st&#13;
meet us if that monster captures us?&#13;
m."W ass = = r ?&#13;
Kxtended tour, leisurely itinerary&#13;
with long stops an the Park. Private&#13;
coaches for exclusive use on the drive.&#13;
Pullman sleeping and dining ears.&#13;
Established limit to number going.&#13;
Escort of the American Tourist Association,&#13;
Reau Campbell. General Manager,&#13;
1428 Marquette Building, Chicago.&#13;
Colorado and Alaska tours also.&#13;
Tkktts liflwei att EsfMNs Bwywfcm,&#13;
. TTftiO leaves Chicago via Chicago,&#13;
Milwaukee ft St Paul R'y, Tuesday,&#13;
July 9,10.00 p. m.&#13;
Our affections are something that&#13;
should be well placed.&#13;
Ladle* Con Wear Shoes&#13;
One size smaller after u»in&lt;r Allen's&#13;
Foot-Ease, a powder. It makes tighi&#13;
or new shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot.&#13;
sweating* aching feet, ingrowing nails,&#13;
corns and bnnions. All drufffrirts and&#13;
shoe stores, 25c Trial package FREE&#13;
by mail. Address Allen S. Olmsted,&#13;
LeBov, N. Y.&#13;
• ^Sl^SjBJfl^lS^ S, V H&#13;
' ' , ' • &gt; • • • ' ' • • " , ; , ; 'fr&#13;
§ ptrfwt HyM tatHrbt tarl*&#13;
Teeth •*- Moril&#13;
TOwStoSOZODOrtTUQWP, Uf&#13;
SOZODONTTOOTH POWDER, 2fe&#13;
Large LIQUID asd POWDER, U s&#13;
At all Stores, or by Man for me sries&gt;&#13;
HALLABUCKCUNewYortu 2r&#13;
w&#13;
| » P l C f S F ; |&#13;
Lots of busy people never seem to&#13;
accomplish anything.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Core&#13;
Is taken internally. Price, 75c.&#13;
onH hoewr bparnoudd b ay «brairrld I sw oofr ka. blister brought out&#13;
M n Wln*low*a Soothing* Syrup.&#13;
For children teeth loir, toft«n* the tram*, redacts In&#13;
flAnuwalon, siuy» pain, cures wind colic. 86c tbottle&#13;
it Imf atyh ew cioshns tthitautt iiot nh ardeanl'lyt. .d oes follow {he flag&#13;
Pi BO'S Cure for Consumption is an infallible&#13;
medicine for coughs and colds. —N. W. SAMUEL.&#13;
Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17,1000.&#13;
SPORTING&#13;
fflllH&#13;
ACOIPLniLINfOfi&#13;
• AinLETIC GOflOV!;&#13;
GMM, Bkyclt )M«4f&lt;«v&#13;
GMpfcopboM*. rbkiefl&#13;
Tirtk, " "•&#13;
GoodfcGoft&#13;
Uriel I&#13;
.ill&#13;
X&#13;
A N U f a e SI Tiirtiii* •*&amp;*. O.&#13;
Ph*lr* Browe'e Greet Reawdy fee&#13;
Fib, Epfteptv and all If enroot Dteeuee. AeVbUS&#13;
O. nuOM BSOWB, MBMecvey. I I B » « * } » I I X * ^&#13;
if afflicted with&#13;
t o w e»«*. us&gt;&gt;&#13;
caIrtr iraegqeu oirre as aw mheaenlb oafr ropwus. h to propel a baby&#13;
W . l N I . U ; - - D I £ T R O I T - - N ^ 2 7 ^ « » b l N&#13;
Vsea Answering Advoitiseneits H*4I»&#13;
Mention Tfais rape*,&#13;
U, Albia, 1 cannot think of it!" '&#13;
Before the slave could repr\ they&#13;
saw Aswad again coming toward them;&#13;
but he did not enter the palace. He&#13;
struck off into a path that kd to the&#13;
westward, and fled with all his might.&#13;
Directly afterwards a score of th2&#13;
guards came rushing from the pass,&#13;
and when they had gained the open&#13;
space, they threw down their sworis&#13;
and sank upon their knees.&#13;
"What means that?" cried Ulin.&#13;
"Are they killed?"&#13;
'•'No." answered Albia. ~They are&#13;
overcome, and have surrendered. See!&#13;
there come the victors!"&#13;
•"Let us flee!" exclaimed the princess,&#13;
starting to her feet "O, we must&#13;
find some place of refuge!**&#13;
Albia was more thoughtful. She&#13;
saw very plainly that flight would be&#13;
useless.&#13;
"My dear mistress," she said, taking&#13;
Ulin's hand. "We must hope for the&#13;
best. If we leave the palace, we shall&#13;
be overtaken at once; for the way to&#13;
the mountains lies only through the&#13;
park of fountains. If we flee to the&#13;
garden in the rear, we shall be surely&#13;
found, and it may be worse for us in&#13;
the end. If this dreadful Julian has&#13;
the least spark of humanity in his&#13;
bosom, he will respect you more In&#13;
your own chamber than he would if he&#13;
found you hiding in the garden."&#13;
"Spirits of mercy defend us!" ejaculated&#13;
the princess, clasping her hands&#13;
upon her bosom, and sinking back in&#13;
her seat. "O, Albia, A'bia, the presence&#13;
of the king would now be a blessing!"&#13;
The faithful slave crept close to her&#13;
mistress, and tried to speak words of&#13;
Complete External and&#13;
Internal Treatment ©ticura THE SET Consisting of CDTICURA SOAP to cleanse the&#13;
skin of crusts and scales, and soften the thickened&#13;
cuticle, CUTICURA OINTMENT to instantly&#13;
allay itching, irritation, and inflammation, and&#13;
soothe and heal, and CUTICURA RESOLVENT&#13;
to cool and cleanse the Mood, and expel humour&#13;
comfort; but her own fears were too"&#13;
deep and intense to permit comforting&#13;
power to her words. She could&#13;
not be calm in view of the coming of&#13;
that dreadful man, at the sound of&#13;
whose name even the monarchs trembled.&#13;
—&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
germs. A SINGLE SET is often sufficient to cure&#13;
the most torturing, disfiguring skin, scalp, and&#13;
blood humours, rashes, itchings,and irritations,&#13;
Tilth loss of hair, when the best physicians*&#13;
and all other remedies fail.&#13;
MILLIONS USE CUTICURA SOAP Assisted by CTJTICURA OINTMENT, for preserving, purifying,&#13;
and beautifying the skin, for cleansing the scalp of&#13;
crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling&#13;
hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough,&#13;
and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchings, and chafing^&#13;
and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery.&#13;
Millions of Women use CTJTICURA SOAP in the form Of&#13;
baths for annoying irritations, inflammations, and excoriations,&#13;
for too free or offensive perspiration, in the form&#13;
of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative,&#13;
antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves&#13;
to women and mothers. No amount of persuasion can&#13;
Induce those who have once used these great skin purifiers&#13;
and beautifiers to use aoy others. CTJTICURA. SOAP combines&#13;
delicate emollient properties derived from CUTICUBA,&#13;
the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients&#13;
and the most refreshing of flower odours. No other&#13;
medicated soap is to be compared with it for preserving^,&#13;
purifying, and beautifying the skin, scalp, hair and hands.&#13;
No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive,&#13;
is to be compared with it for all the purposes of the*&#13;
toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines in Oral SOAP&#13;
at ONE PRICE, the best skin and complexion soap, and&#13;
the BEST toilet and baby soap in the world.&#13;
Oomplert* External and Internal Treatment for Every Humour., n—i f li Am I I I N I CtcoanktUe,t taBnfd o ifo fCteinm tchcea Ata tSekOeAnPe,d t otn ctlteealne;s eC tthmec «ukalAa oOf oeimeeativ Tme i l l l H ? I I I i r l , M ? J i a y *U*y ***»*. latammatton, sad lnljslkiii, and eaetLte» \ ^U" l l V l U f l astnodo dw. iAl; S*noi wCV T8TCCTV RUAo fBtnxos onurriseexiTen, tt too eeowoTe uta?e&lt; 4aeoaemt iet otWi e&#13;
imm H,&#13;
%&#13;
*1&#13;
U&#13;
• *&#13;
r§&#13;
, . ^ ^ , , - - , - •»».. * &gt;j-^/&lt;«^^*'''-iii«§T^»»™j(rw&lt;&gt;tv&lt;i»M*-s&lt;»-&gt;'v''.(Aiv •-*•"*•*'*»,•S^tiT&#13;
- i f ' • ' " , ' * / ' • - &gt; ' ; ' - ' ^ ' i "&#13;
* : . ^ - ? £ : . : »•• .« 'V-/&#13;
;*» ••"wif w%»!i W l i l f l p i i&#13;
• ' &gt;:Vi,,&gt;. . . ^ , ^ , , , J ; , * , ,.v."&lt;;. &gt; . . . * ' ' • • " " ' ' " ' : • • / • • - - ; ;• ' . . ' ' ' ' - ; . ' • ' • ' • • . ' • • • " * - ' - • • ' , • , ' • - ' . - , • ' . • • • . , • ,&#13;
,;A ,* . * . ; ; VV&lt;/ : ^ - - ^ . &gt; ; , ^ , , ^ v , , , , - • ^ . . . . , ; • . ; , . , . , , r , ;• ^ , , . , . ; •&#13;
. • &gt; • • . , , . • . • '.' ' •&lt;. . \ ' • • • : . • • . . . ' • ' ••••&gt; - • ' ' • • • • L . \ &lt; / " • • * ' ' '. ; , &gt; ' • " » . . . . * •&lt; • . &gt; • &gt; ' • • . • ' • « • " ' • • • , :&#13;
. . . . ^ , , , . . ^ - , . - , 0 - . , , ^ , . . , ^ : &gt; . . , ^ . - , , . - , . - ^ . ..-.,...,-,...:-..^ , • , . . . . , - . , . , - &gt; , * , . - , , - . , , ^ - • ; / ;&#13;
• • • • . . , : • •-.- v' • •• ' v y . • • . - * ? . ..• • , . &gt; * - . . •• • „ . • * .:•- y * • '&#13;
\&#13;
:^-4-:.,.:^&#13;
'.'-.!;&lt;.r.:, ,., y i , ^ - y M , . ; : /&#13;
•WirfJT*-&#13;
• F .&#13;
A;&#13;
&lt; • &amp; / • •&#13;
$ - "&#13;
M'&#13;
# &lt; : •&#13;
&amp;&#13;
$*•'&#13;
:-1/&#13;
* - .&#13;
Sfet £mrfenry fisspatdt.&#13;
i1. L. ANDREWS d CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
JMUB8DAI*.JULY4.19Qi.&#13;
J W. a T. U-&#13;
• Edited by the W, C. T H.of Pluekoey.&#13;
—r-n-&#13;
Fourth of July.&#13;
One way fare between all stations&#13;
for l o u n d trip. On sale&#13;
J u l y 8 and 4, return limit 5. Also&#13;
sold to Chicago, Toledo, Milwau.&#13;
kee and Manitowoc. Ask Agents.&#13;
Heartburn.&#13;
When tbeqiaoity of food takan is&#13;
too large or thn quality too rich heart?&#13;
burn U likely to follow, and especially&#13;
so if the digestion has been weakened&#13;
by constipation. Eat slowly and not&#13;
too tree'v of easily digested food.&#13;
Masticate the food thorouKbly. bet&#13;
six hours elapse between meals and&#13;
when you feel a fullness and weight&#13;
in the region of the stomach after eating,&#13;
indicating that you have eaten&#13;
too much, take one of Chamoerlaiu's&#13;
Stomach and Liver Tablets and tb»&#13;
heartburn may be avoided. For sile&#13;
by P. A. Siffler, Pinckney.&#13;
— P r o f c - V a n Dyke,rx&gt;f-the-Sew-&#13;
York experiment station, gives&#13;
the following prescription for a&#13;
fertilizer for house plants: Buy&#13;
at t h e drug store oue and a half&#13;
pounds nitrate of soda, half&#13;
pound of phosphate of soda, aud&#13;
one pound sulphate of potash.&#13;
Mix and pulverize t h e material&#13;
thoroughly. When required for&#13;
use, p u t a rounding tablespoonful&#13;
of this mixture in a gallon of hot&#13;
soft water. To fertilize the plants&#13;
put a teacupful of the Water on a&#13;
six-inch pot, and more-in proportion&#13;
on larger pots. D o not use&#13;
oftener than ouce in two weeks,&#13;
and do not let the fertilizar touch&#13;
the foliage.— Vick's Magazine.&#13;
TO Cure a Cold in Oue Day&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.&#13;
All drugffkt? refund the monejr&#13;
it it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature&#13;
is on each box. 25c.&#13;
F o r some years a decided inclination-&#13;
has been apparent all over&#13;
the country to give u p the use of&#13;
whiskey and other strong alcohols,&#13;
using as a s u b s t i t u t e beer&#13;
and other compounds. This is&#13;
evidently founded on the idea that&#13;
beer is not harmful, and contains&#13;
a large amount of nutriment; also&#13;
On the first of next J a n u a r y it&#13;
is said that the Michigan Central&#13;
will put on a suburban service between&#13;
Detroit and Jackson and&#13;
would make rates to compete with&#13;
the electric lines. They wil1 put&#13;
on just as many trains as the traffic&#13;
will warrant and will make&#13;
stops at every little place along&#13;
the line. This with the two electric&#13;
lines that aie to run parallel&#13;
with the Central will be able to&#13;
oarry all passengers, and no doubt&#13;
t h e ones who travel will choose&#13;
the most comfortable way. I t&#13;
seems a far better plan if the electric&#13;
, roads could run through&#13;
that p a r t of the country where&#13;
tbey would receive no opposition&#13;
from steam roads.&#13;
The Be»l Remedy for Stomach and&#13;
B o w e l Trouble*.&#13;
"[have been in the drug business&#13;
for 20 years and have sold most all of&#13;
the proprietary medicines of any note.&#13;
Among the entire list 1 have never&#13;
toand anything to equal Chamber&#13;
Iain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea&#13;
Remedy for ail Stomach and bowel&#13;
troubles," says 0. W. Wakefield, of&#13;
Columbus, 6a. 'This remedy cured&#13;
two severe case* ot Cholera morbus in&#13;
my family aud I have reccommended&#13;
ciual quality which will neutralize&#13;
the alcohol it conceals.&#13;
These theories are without confirmation&#13;
in the observations of&#13;
physicians. The use of beer is&#13;
found to produce a species of degeneration&#13;
of all the organs; profound&#13;
and deceptive fatty deposits&#13;
diminished circulation, condition&#13;
of congestion and perversion of&#13;
functional activities, local inflammations&#13;
of*both the liver and kidn&#13;
eys are "constantly presen t.&#13;
"Intellectually, a stupor, amounting&#13;
to almost a paralysis,&#13;
arrests the reason, changing all&#13;
the higher* faculties into a mere&#13;
animalism, sensual, selfish, sluggish,&#13;
varied only with paroxysms&#13;
of anger that are senseless and&#13;
brutal.&#13;
" I n appearance the beer-drinker&#13;
may be the picture of health,&#13;
but in reality he is most incapable&#13;
of resisting disease. A slight&#13;
injur-yv-R Sfcvere_jcold or_a shock to&#13;
the body or miud will commonly&#13;
provoke acute disease, ending fatally.&#13;
Compaied with/' inebrates&#13;
who use different kinds of alcohol&#13;
he is more incurable and more&#13;
generally diseased. The constant&#13;
use of beer every day gives the&#13;
system no recuperation, but steadily&#13;
lowers the vital forces. I t is&#13;
our observation that beer-drinking&#13;
in this country produces the&#13;
very lowest kind of inebriety,&#13;
closely allied to criminal insanity.&#13;
Tlie most dangerous ruffians in&#13;
our large cities are beer-drinkers.&#13;
Recourse to beer as a substitute&#13;
for other forms of alcohol merely&#13;
increases the danger and fatality."&#13;
—Scientific American.&#13;
Con rent ion Echoes.&#13;
" T he schools rf America have&#13;
just reason to be congratulated&#13;
for the good work the ladies of&#13;
the W C T U did in their interest&#13;
by having t h a t b r a n c h regarding&#13;
the effect of alcohol upon the&#13;
system, taught in every school&#13;
throughout t h e " Union—Supt.&#13;
Lohr.&#13;
T n e name of Calvin P. Titus&#13;
was on one of the total abstinence&#13;
pledge cards on the back of which&#13;
E d w a r d Brown, an old trapper&#13;
of Alpena county says t h a t there&#13;
are more deer in the woods than&#13;
he ever saw before; attributes it to&#13;
the destruction of wolves and&#13;
prophesies the cut over will soon&#13;
schools if a pupil make a grammatical&#13;
error the teacher is particular&#13;
to correct him b u t pays no&#13;
attention to his physical errors&#13;
which should receive as much care&#13;
a s t h e mental training- N a t u r - be overrun with d**r.&#13;
ally we do things physically correct&#13;
but habitually we assume improper&#13;
physical positions which&#13;
physical cul ture seeks to correct.&#13;
Physical training is as much a&#13;
necessity for an elocutionist as&#13;
mental training. Miss Coffin of&#13;
. . . .&#13;
G r a n d Rapids gave an exhibition&#13;
of posing and c l u b swinging.&#13;
that bilters-may h a m some medU Mtsa Newiiomb read a poeni_auxL&#13;
Miss Coffiin acted it out. T h e&#13;
exhibition was interesting and&#13;
called fourth repeated applause.&#13;
An important feature of the&#13;
state gathering is the presiden ts&#13;
address which is always eagerly&#13;
anticipated. Mrs. Benjamin is an&#13;
easy talker and her blending of&#13;
wit and wisdom is so altogether&#13;
agreeable she never lacks attentive&#13;
listeners. The following is an&#13;
extract:&#13;
brooding sky audlaestllng Iiomer with its&#13;
song of birds and hum of insects, with its&#13;
wealth of foliage and tree, fragrance of&#13;
early blossoms—could we h^ve been given&#13;
a more auspicious time, or * oluce, or circumstance&#13;
for this twentieth century gathering&#13;
of our beloved Michigan clans.&#13;
It may not be in the thought of all, the&#13;
Ifours since we rtrst met. the memorv of&#13;
our promoted friend and counselor, Mary&#13;
T. Lathrop, baa been almost constantly in&#13;
mind. Only a few miles away she drew her&#13;
earliest breath, and in this very city, thon&#13;
but a village, she spent her school days of&#13;
that girlhood, in which there was more of&#13;
promise than even the clearest eye then divined.&#13;
When she went out ot the Marshall&#13;
schooitiouse, and in the citv of t)etroit&#13;
entered the schooln om as teacher not&#13;
one in all the wbrld forsaw the wonderful&#13;
future jusi in the near distance, wtien&#13;
children of older growth almost literally&#13;
knelt at her feet to learn, and eveu those&#13;
who went to scoff (at a women preacher)&#13;
remained to praise and prorit, and happily&#13;
some to practice the great truths that fell&#13;
from her divinely touched lips. Today&#13;
when we speak of preacher and poet :uid&#13;
reformer, we think of Mary T. Lathrop.&#13;
When vou want a modern, uprtodate&#13;
physic try Chamberlain's •Stomach&#13;
and Liver Tablets. Tuny aro easy to&#13;
take and pleasant in effect. Price, 25c&#13;
Sample? free at. F. A. Sigler's drug&#13;
store.&#13;
Hereafter-no mouey order will&#13;
be paid at any postoffice in the&#13;
the United States except the office&#13;
on which it is drawn, the order&#13;
making them payable at a n y&#13;
office having been, rescinded.&#13;
This order took effect J u n e 1.&#13;
A G o o d Coiitfir JMedJeinc.&#13;
Many thousands have heen. restored&#13;
to health and happiness by the use ol&#13;
UhainherlainV Cough Remedy: II afflicted&#13;
with any throat or I n n g t n uule&#13;
give it a trial for it is certain to prove&#13;
beneficial. Couuhs that, liavo resisted&#13;
all other treatment lor years, have&#13;
yielded to this remedy and perfect&#13;
Atieutle Hint*&#13;
In our style ot climate, with its soddeen&#13;
changes of temperature,—rair,&#13;
wind and sunsnine often intermingled&#13;
in a single day,—jt is no wonder that&#13;
our children, friends and relatives are&#13;
so frequently taken from us by neglected&#13;
colds, half the deaths resulting&#13;
directly from this cause, A bottle of&#13;
HoacheaV German Syomp JiJapL JLhaat&#13;
your home for immediate use will prevent&#13;
serious sickness, a large doctor's&#13;
bill, and perhaps death, by the use of&#13;
three or four doses. For curing Consumption,&#13;
Hemorrhages, Pneumonia,&#13;
Severe Coughs, Croup, or any disease&#13;
ot the Throat or Lungs, its success is&#13;
simply wonderful, as your druggist&#13;
will tell you. Get a sample bottle&#13;
free from F. A. Sigler. Regular size&#13;
75c. Get Green's Prize Almanac.&#13;
One Christian Scientist has re-&#13;
This almost perfect day in June with its 3 ,, , » , . •, • i • „&#13;
* * ^|-CQverea the loss of his logacal-taculties.&#13;
H e has renounced t h e&#13;
science because he has noted that&#13;
in the Woodruff-Eddy trial at&#13;
Boston, Mrs. E d d y has been excused&#13;
from attendance because&#13;
she is too feeble to stand the&#13;
strain and tho clerk of the Kirst&#13;
Christian church could not lead a&#13;
document submitted to him because&#13;
his eye-sight is failing.&#13;
"Physician heal thyself," still has&#13;
its pertinency.—Ex.&#13;
A Poor Millionaire.&#13;
Lately starved in London bee \use&#13;
he could not digest his food. Early&#13;
use of Dr. King's New Lite Pills&#13;
would have saved him. They strength&#13;
en the Stomach, aid digestion, pro&#13;
mote assimilation, improve appetite.&#13;
Price 25c. Money back if not satisfied.&#13;
Sold by ?. A. Sigler druggist.&#13;
During last May an infant child of&#13;
our neighbor was sulfating from cholera&#13;
infantum. The doctors had given&#13;
up all hopes ot recoverv. I took a&#13;
bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera&#13;
and Diarrhoea Remedy to the house,&#13;
telling them I felt sure it would do&#13;
good.if used according to directions.&#13;
"In two days time the child lnd fully&#13;
recovered. Tlie child is now vigorous&#13;
and healthy. I have reccommended&#13;
this remedy frequently and have&#13;
never known it to farh^-Mrs. t'urtts&#13;
Baker, Bookwalter, Ohio. Sold by F.&#13;
A. Sigler, Pinokuev.&#13;
APPLE BORERS,&#13;
Three Remedies All Old, but Hot Tot&#13;
Improve* Upon.&#13;
Now, borers are difficult things to&#13;
fight under all circumstances, and no&#13;
course of treatment Is known which&#13;
will entirely eradicate them. Nevertheless&#13;
every one that is killed is just&#13;
so much gained for the general good.&#13;
There are three practices that have&#13;
been found useful, though no one of&#13;
them, or all of them combined, will rid&#13;
an orchard of an insect that breeds In&#13;
so many host trees. They are the same&#13;
old remedies recommended many yean&#13;
ago and which have not since been improved&#13;
upon.&#13;
They consist In protecting by meant&#13;
of a wash, binding the trunk with paper&#13;
and digging out the young larvae.&#13;
- -Whitewash or-^wfaltewaefa and glueapplied&#13;
to the trunk and large limbs is&#13;
said to have a very beneficial effect&#13;
It should be applied early in June and&#13;
kept on in good condition through most&#13;
of July. Soft sonp is also used for this&#13;
purpose.&#13;
Second. — Binding paper about the&#13;
trunk and larger limbs. For this purpose&#13;
news paper is best used next th#&gt;.&#13;
treeanorbiindlng paper outside.&#13;
Third,—Searching for the young larvoe&#13;
during August aud September. At&#13;
this time the young have not gone into&#13;
the sap wood, but live in cavities just&#13;
under the bark, the excrement being&#13;
pushed through small holes. When any&#13;
Tusptctotre—waste ts seen protruding&#13;
from the bark, it is well to investigate&#13;
with a stiff pin and if a. cavity is&#13;
found to extract the occur mnt before&#13;
iie goes so deeply into the wood as to_-&#13;
be beyond our reach. A little time&#13;
spent each fall in this way will be well&#13;
repaid by increased vigor of our orchards.&#13;
How She Rnlen Htm.&#13;
"Skinphllnt's wife certainly has remarkable&#13;
success In managing him. I&#13;
wonder how she does it."&#13;
"When he undertakes to deny her&#13;
inythlug she really wants, she threatens&#13;
to sue him for divorce."&#13;
"Does he care so much for her,&#13;
then?"&#13;
- "Oh.-no. it's not that, but tie-figures'&#13;
that it is cheaper to let her have her&#13;
«wn way than it would be to either&#13;
defend the suit or pay alimony."—Chicago&#13;
Post.&#13;
A Question of Salutations.&#13;
"What is your favorite salutation?**&#13;
Ihe asked the dilatory youth.&#13;
"Eh! Why. I don't know. What'g&#13;
yours?"&#13;
The fair girl yawned wearily.&#13;
"It would have been good night," sh©&#13;
laid. "But In about two minutes it will&#13;
&gt;e good morning."&#13;
"Goodby," said the dilatory youth.-,&#13;
Cleveland Plain Dealer.&#13;
This young man of Co. E . 14th&#13;
infantry planted the American&#13;
flag upon the walls of Pekin that&#13;
awful Aug. day. As a reward&#13;
Pres. McKinley appointed him&#13;
cadet at W e s t Point. H e has&#13;
gone through his initation a true&#13;
christian loved and honored esand&#13;
sold'hundreds of bottles of it to I peciaily by his comrades in arms.&#13;
health ' een restored. Cases that&#13;
was t h e following inscription,^seemed hopeless, that the climate of&#13;
«TV.;0 „««*,,. •««« ~* n~ T? n i l . r i../: u..&#13;
my customers to their entire satisfaction.&#13;
It affords a quick and sure&#13;
cure in a pleasant form." For sale by&#13;
F . A. Sigjer, Pinckuey.&#13;
W h a t to do with one's summer&#13;
vacation is a perennial question.&#13;
Most people have neither the&#13;
money nor t h e wish to go to an&#13;
expensive, overcrowded seaside or&#13;
mountain resort, and yet every&#13;
man needs a few days devoted to&#13;
pleasure and a complete fest at&#13;
least once a year. T h e Cosmopolitan&#13;
for J u l y gives a solution of&#13;
t h e problem iu a well written, illustrated&#13;
article, "A Houseboat—&#13;
T h e Modern Palace." Untioubt&#13;
ediv a house-boat offers a ch eap&#13;
and comfortable vacation, and the&#13;
ranks of its devotees are constantly&#13;
swelling.&#13;
A high compliment was paid&#13;
the convention, Thursday evening&#13;
being the time for the regular&#13;
prayer meeting all t h e churches&#13;
in the city united with the convention&#13;
in a pnayer service before&#13;
the evening program. T h e church&#13;
was filled and a bright earnest&#13;
epiritual meeting was the result.&#13;
" W e were organized in 1874&#13;
with only 50 members and now&#13;
we have a membership of 300,000&#13;
in the United States besides the&#13;
Loyal Temperance Legion with a&#13;
membership of 250,000. The&#13;
lad ies should nev&gt;r get discouraged&#13;
for victory will resnTt in time.&#13;
—Anna Goidon.&#13;
Mrs. Newcomb S u p t . of physical&#13;
culture said " I n t h e puplic&#13;
famous health resorts failed to benefit&#13;
have been permently cured by its use.&#13;
For sale by F. A. Sigler, Pinckney.&#13;
The Cosmopolitan Sheep.&#13;
The Merino as an intensely cosmopolitan&#13;
sheep stands without a peer.&#13;
He thrives on the rich alluvial bottom&#13;
lands, presenting a rotundity of form&#13;
that would do credit to some of the&#13;
smaller mutton breeds, and yields annually&#13;
a heavy fleece of admirable&#13;
•wool. We find this same hardy, contented&#13;
breed in flocks of 2,000 grazing&#13;
upon the plains and mountain heights,&#13;
industriously nipping the tender herbage,&#13;
without a sign of constitutional&#13;
defect in the whole flock. It is these&#13;
peculiar traits of character that so eminently&#13;
fit the Merino for transient&#13;
sheep husbandry. This breed large'y&#13;
predominates in the semlarid regions&#13;
and is found to be perfectly suited to&#13;
conditions prevailing there. The ewes&#13;
cross well with the Downs and long&#13;
wools, and lambs from those crosses&#13;
are quite popular with the butcher and&#13;
feeder.&#13;
Wow They Are Married.&#13;
A bashful young man went three&#13;
times to ask a beautiful young lady ii&#13;
he might be the partner of her joys and&#13;
sorrows and other household furniture,&#13;
but each time his heart failed him, and&#13;
he took the question away unpopped.&#13;
She saw the anguish of his soul and&#13;
had compassion on him. So the next&#13;
time he came she asked him if be had&#13;
thought to bring a screwdriver with&#13;
him.&#13;
He blushed and wanted to know&#13;
what for.&#13;
And she, in the fullness of her heart,&#13;
said she did not know but that he&#13;
would want to screw up his courage&#13;
before he left.&#13;
He took the hint and the girl.—Pearion's&#13;
Weekly.&#13;
She Didn't Wear a Mask.&#13;
But her beautv was completely hidden&#13;
by sores, blotches and pimples till&#13;
she Used Buklen's Arnica Salve. Then&#13;
tbey vanished as will all eruptions,&#13;
Fever Sores, Boils, Ulcers, Carbuncle*&#13;
and felons from its use. Infallible&#13;
for Cuts, Corn?, Burns, Scalds and.&#13;
Piles. Cure guaranteed. 25c at F.&#13;
A. Siglers.&#13;
WANTKD—Capable' reltahlo person in every&#13;
county to represent larze company of anlid rtaauclal&#13;
reputation; $^-5 *; i ian--p#r y* t r payable&#13;
weekly; $4 per day absolutely sure ami all expenses;&#13;
staai^ht, bona tide, deflnafe salary, no&#13;
coiiuiiieijlon^aalary paj.1 each .Saturday aad expense&#13;
rubnev advanced each week. STANDARD&#13;
HOUSE, 834 Dearlxrn at. Chicago t'40&#13;
WAITED—Capable, reliable pcraon in every&#13;
county to represent large company of ail Id financial&#13;
reputation. $J3r&gt; sal try per year, payable&#13;
weekly; M per day absolutely sure and at! expenaes;&#13;
straight, boaa-rHe, derinate salary, no&#13;
commission: salary paM *&gt;aeh Saturday atwk expense&#13;
money advanced ea.li week. STAltf&amp;ARD&#13;
HOUSK, :«4 Dearborn st. Chirajjo. t-29&#13;
It's a pity a balky horse does not&#13;
realize that It Is easier to pall than to&#13;
take the whipping that goes with a&#13;
balk.-Atchlsou Globe.&#13;
P:&#13;
After all, what is pulling a man's leg&#13;
but trying to make a good tning stretch&#13;
as far as postlbte? - PWUdelpnl*&#13;
Times. , **. ^&#13;
No Apparent Cause For Offense.&#13;
It was the third day out on an ocean&#13;
liner, and some of the passengers were&#13;
Just getting acquainted. A lady who&#13;
had made the trip many times lay comfortably&#13;
in her steamer *chair, when&#13;
the pretty and stylishly clad daughter&#13;
of a newly rich family stopped near&#13;
her, and they drifted into conversation.&#13;
Presently the lady bowed to n pale&#13;
faced man who walked by.&#13;
"Who was that?" inquired Hie girl.&#13;
"That was Signor Slnmbnngskl. tlie&#13;
famous pianist," replied tin- !;ul.v. who&#13;
tlu'M went nrt lo spw.k of the pro' :ible&#13;
pi i-fonners IIr !lie Inevitable conceit nt&#13;
the Journey's end.&#13;
"'"!.. •?::•" then* ;j;&gt;y t:r^ie!'iners&#13;
Railroad Guide&#13;
%M&amp;8&gt;§)&#13;
&gt; AND STEAMSHIP USES* 'J&#13;
Popular route lor Ann Arbor, T i&#13;
ledo and points Ea*t, South, and t ••&#13;
Howell, Owoeso, Alma, Mt Pleasa:.&#13;
Cadillac, Manistee, Traverse City a: t&#13;
points in Northwestern i:u;hi?a"n.&#13;
W. H. BENNETT,&#13;
G. P . A. Toleon&#13;
V l , l : : : ; : i i&#13;
; &gt; : i : y , K i 7 "&#13;
\ r'&#13;
rail I lie .imly&#13;
b- ; i r i ] ' : " «•;!•',. !&#13;
Interrovrarivily;&#13;
Tlie girl giised at her l1iqulri:&gt;jj|y. MV&gt;'hat Ji);0--sav asked.-New* York&#13;
Mrtilnnd Ksoress.&#13;
PERE MAROUETTr&#13;
2*aLl?9a.a., Ta,xx. 1 , 1 9 3 1 .&#13;
Trains leave South Lyon as follows:&#13;
For Detroit and Kest.&#13;
10:36 a. m., 3:04 p. m . , 8:58 p .&#13;
For Grand Rapids, North and West,&#13;
9:4o a. m., 2:0S p. m. 6:20 y&#13;
For Saginaw and Bav City,&#13;
10:36 a. m„ 3:04 p. tn., 8:58 p -,&#13;
For Toledo, and South, 10:36 a. ,;&#13;
FRANK Bit, H. F. MOELLEU,&#13;
Agent, South Lyon. n. p. A.., oet r ,&#13;
a r t n d T r a s k Railway System&#13;
f 9.44 e. m.i.T»ciciK&gt;or Detroit, and &amp;:l«a".&#13;
&gt; 6:45 p. m.jint«rm*4iiao»rtatt*tui&#13;
£ ! ronil and #xp.&#13;
e , .. | J«c««uo. Leoox, and&#13;
t» &lt;:4&amp;p. m.ltaMrmedJaJeftUtloM&#13;
I . mtxsd.&#13;
5:t5p.&#13;
7 »5 a.&#13;
Th«9:16a.ia.aad6:«5p.aLtrala»iurt t&#13;
coach between Jacksoa and Detroit&#13;
W. J.lUtfc, Agent, Ptac&#13;
T&#13;
*&#13;
7&#13;
/&#13;
wm .*- :. ^±1 ^mmm&#13;
ppppipwr Pim;!ipPi«iWHj ^mT WW- !PP!P^F IS?&#13;
, /&#13;
V&#13;
J . ' *•' •'&#13;
• • • j.&gt; H J&#13;
/r- V . •• '' &lt;-&#13;
..v- ,.•.-•&#13;
' ':•'*,*• •** -&#13;
ft •&gt;&#13;
• - . - . « • * . . -&#13;
••r:K&#13;
• y -&#13;
;#'tf&#13;
1 ;*;.&#13;
'••it - ' • ' : «&#13;
' C&#13;
V '.I&#13;
*•'&#13;
, ) .&#13;
. ; • * • .&#13;
• ^ P&#13;
*'.*(&lt;&#13;
V^&#13;
« U P W&#13;
~v&#13;
.-*.-;&#13;
/ • • &gt; • ».. .-^&#13;
WMtonUnUroed Yellow.&#13;
Great consternation was f«lt by tJie&#13;
•-riends of M. A. Hogarty of Lexington&#13;
Ky. when they saw he was taming&#13;
yellow. His skin slowly changed&#13;
.•olor, also his eyes, and he suffered&#13;
•erribly. His malady was Yellow&#13;
Jaundice. He was treated by the&#13;
best doctors, but without benefit.&#13;
Then he was advised to try Electric&#13;
Bitters, the wonderful Stomach and&#13;
Liver remedy, anil he writes: "After&#13;
taking t v o bottles I was wholly cured."&#13;
A trial prove* its matchless&#13;
merit for all Stomach, Liver and Kidney&#13;
trouble. «Only 50c. Sold by P.&#13;
A Sigler druggist.&#13;
T^E CIRCUS HABIT.&#13;
INDIANS HAVE THE WILDEST CRAZE&#13;
FOR THE TENTED 8HOVVS.&#13;
A f t e r t h e R e 4 Men t h e IVesrroee W i l l&#13;
Go t o t h e Greatent L e n g t h s t o S e e&#13;
t h e P e r f o r m a n c e , a n d T h i r d P l a c e&#13;
I s B e t a 1&gt;r C h i n a m e n .&#13;
"You may talk about your city circus&#13;
goers," said the old circus man, "but&#13;
the Indian, the wild, untutored red man&#13;
of the plains, has got them all beaten&#13;
(to death. There's no circus goer in the&#13;
•world like the North American aborigine.&#13;
He will travel farther, endure&#13;
'more' privations and skimp himself&#13;
'harder to get the price of admission&#13;
than any .other human being in the&#13;
world. What's more, I believe he real-&#13;
On* T h i n e a n d&#13;
WeDman's Fife and Stanley wheats&#13;
are recommended by the upper penln-^fover **•&#13;
anlar station of Michigan as strong&#13;
growers and heavy yielders.&#13;
Western experiments with the Golden&#13;
vine field pea indicate that the early&#13;
blooming period is the best time for&#13;
harvesting, so as to secure the greatest&#13;
amount of dry matter and food ingredients.&#13;
Pound for pound, the Utah station&#13;
finds pea vine hay more valuable than&#13;
Uicern hay.&#13;
Flax grown In Sitka attained a height&#13;
of more than three feet, matured seed&#13;
and produced excellent liber.&#13;
—At-the upper-statloa-of-Mlchlgananese&#13;
millet was^grown last year which&#13;
attained an average length of G feet 8&#13;
Inches, and a great many plants were&#13;
seven feet high. The yield of the plot&#13;
was at the rate of 13 tons of green fodder&#13;
per acre.&#13;
A great enlargement of the flax acreage&#13;
seems assured in Washington, Ida'&#13;
fco, the tiakotas and Minnesota.&#13;
Another. ^ e n J°ys t h e c l r c u s b e t t e r t b a n the ue- horse, the Mexicans jelvH^ at every&#13;
Stanlev e^0' though he doesn't make any fuss &amp;ct a n d the neirroea lauehed at the&#13;
'The negro, as every circus man&#13;
knows, will sell the family cook stove&#13;
to get money to see the elephant, but&#13;
|the Indian will barter off his papoose,&#13;
his squaw or even his most cherished&#13;
possession; his horse, to get a ticket.&#13;
lAfter the negro comes the Chinaman.&#13;
(The Mexicans, too, are not slow in responding&#13;
to the toot of the calliope. The&#13;
[laziest' greaser on the Texas border,&#13;
jWho never paid a debt in his life, bobs&#13;
up promptly on circus day with his 50&#13;
cents, though nobody knows where he&#13;
got it. But the Indian Is the greatest&#13;
circus flend of all.&#13;
h th~e&#13;
" ' ' . |i Mi i i i — i n ; ii • ffi.iii&#13;
9.000 Chinese and fully 2,uuu Japs attended.&#13;
The remaining few of the&#13;
spectators were Americans. The Chinaman&#13;
Is as undemonstrative as the&#13;
Indian. Be expresses bis appreciation&#13;
of the performance by attending time&#13;
after time.&#13;
"Probably the strangost mixture of&#13;
people* that ever attended a circus was&#13;
found beneath the tent of our show one \&#13;
day at Tucson. A. T.. when Indians,&#13;
Mexicans, greasers, Jap*, negroes. Chinamen&#13;
and a few American cowboys&#13;
fairly packed tbe big canvas arena and&#13;
sat promiscuously mixed over the blue&#13;
seats. Though tbe Chinamen and Indians&#13;
are undemonstrative, the 'cow&#13;
punchers, Mexicans and negroes made&#13;
as much noise that day as was ever&#13;
made at a frontier massacre. Tbe cowboys&#13;
yelped like a pack of coyotes&#13;
when Mme. Noble rode the bucking&#13;
T T mm* • S P W&#13;
smuM&#13;
act, and the negroes laughed at the&#13;
clowns till the earth shook. That night&#13;
the cowboys and greasers turned the&#13;
town Into a shooting gallery, emptying&#13;
their revolvers at the stars and manifesting&#13;
their sorrow at tbe departure of&#13;
the circus by licking up all the refreshments&#13;
In the town.—Cleveland Plain&#13;
A NORTHERN FRU1THOU8E.&#13;
A BaUdlng For Home Storase of&#13;
Fruit, Especially Apples.&#13;
Every year there is more interest in&#13;
home fruit storage, especially for apples.&#13;
An account given by Country&#13;
Gentleman of an»unusually good fruithouse&#13;
successfully operated at Abbottsford,&#13;
Quebec, will doubtless be of interest&#13;
to fruit growers in many parts&#13;
of the country.&#13;
This is a frame building, 30 by 20 feet&#13;
outside. It is built with eight foot posts&#13;
5Mt0NQ*niPoa&#13;
It Dazzles the World.&#13;
No Discovery in medicine has ever&#13;
created one quarter of the excitment&#13;
that has been caused by Dr, King's&#13;
New Discovery icr Consumption. It's&#13;
sevii-fst tests, have been on hopeless&#13;
victims of consumption, Pneumonia,&#13;
west our circus Is known&#13;
among the Indians as 'the heap big&#13;
brothers' show.' It is the only circus&#13;
that attracts the red man. and he waits&#13;
for Its yearly appearance as confidently&#13;
as he awaits the return of spring. In&#13;
Missoula,' Mon.. one of our regular&#13;
stands, fully one-half of the audience Is&#13;
made up of Indians. They come from&#13;
as'far as 200 miles on horseback and&#13;
even on foot, starting on their long&#13;
journey days before the circus date and&#13;
arriving promptly on the morning of&#13;
the day of exhibition.&#13;
"On circus day it is a case of every&#13;
man for himself with the Indians. The&#13;
lord of the tepee brings enough trinkets&#13;
in the shape of moccasins and bows&#13;
and arrows to peddle around town and&#13;
NEWEST CELERY CULTURE.&#13;
E a s y a n d R a p i d M a r k i n g a n d ^ r r i -&#13;
aratinff—Blanching W i t h B o a r d * .&#13;
For marking tne ground, making&#13;
holes In which to sot the plants and applying&#13;
water I have a homemade machine&#13;
which rapidly does* the work. I&#13;
can best describe it by saying it is a&#13;
two wheeled cart carrying a small war&#13;
ter tank. It is 2½ feet wide. The&#13;
wheels, made of wood and having&#13;
bands of hoop iron, are two feet in&#13;
diameter, and the rims :r.v three inches&#13;
wide. Pegs made .of very hard wood&#13;
-and sharpcaed «t the-&lt;n;ds -ave placed&#13;
. , - , m , . . . ... , In this way gets money for his own ad-&#13;
Hemorrhage, Pleurisy and tironcbitis, j m l s s I o n t i c k ( ? t H J s g ( ] u a w b r l n g g . w l l .&#13;
thousands of whom it has restored to&lt; low baskets and has to hustle for her&#13;
per ect health. For Roughs, Colds,&#13;
Asthma, Croup, Hay Fever, Hoarseness&#13;
and Whooping Cough it is the&#13;
quickest, surest cure in the world. It&#13;
is soid by F. A. Sigler who guarantees&#13;
satisfaction o,- refunds money. Large&#13;
bottles 50; and $1.00. Trial bjttles&#13;
free.&#13;
L o o k i n g F o r W o r k .&#13;
"Yes. ma'am." said the ragged fat&#13;
man. "I'm lookln fur work. Yer ain't&#13;
got no odd jobs of serubbin or washin&#13;
ter be did. have yerV"&#13;
"Why, you surely don't do scrubbing&#13;
or work of that sort?" said the housekeeper.&#13;
"Sure7 not. I'm look in fur work fur&#13;
me wife."—Philadelphia Record.&#13;
" W -JL.- IV T E I&gt; "&#13;
Weak men, weak women, pale&#13;
men, pale wom6n, nervous men, nervous&#13;
women, debilitated men, debilitated&#13;
vapmen, to take Knilt'a Red Pills&#13;
for Wan People. They restore .Health,&#13;
Strength and Bevuty. Wake up,&#13;
brace up by taking them before the&#13;
hot weather, They are the great body&#13;
builder and developer, Spring Tonic&#13;
and Blood medicine, 25c a box.&#13;
Knitls White Liver Pills ai*e the&#13;
great Liver Invigorator, Bowel Regulate&#13;
r. 25 dosos 25o.&#13;
Knill's Blue Kidney Pills cure}&#13;
Backache and Kidney troubles. 25c i&#13;
a box.&#13;
own ticket. They generally come in&#13;
couples astride of a pony, and if the&#13;
market is overcrowded with Indian relics&#13;
they will sell the nag.&#13;
'"When-, the show trains arrive in&#13;
these western towns early in the mom&#13;
In^g 200 and 300 tents have already been&#13;
pitched by the Indians, some of which&#13;
have arrived the night before. Their&#13;
little colony is almost as interesting as&#13;
the circus Itself. It is a veritable bazaar&#13;
of relics and papoose exhibitions.&#13;
While the old squaws are getting&#13;
breakfast the children are playing&#13;
games and the chiefs are taking their&#13;
knickknacks to the market. Tl&gt;ey are&#13;
the first ones after the doors of the big&#13;
tents are opened to land on the blue&#13;
-pranks;—They- fill a good part of the&#13;
arena, and they never move during the&#13;
entire performance. Applause is unknown&#13;
to them. They make as little&#13;
show of enthusiasm as their brothers&#13;
in wood in front of the white man's cigar&#13;
stores. If th* trick elephant were&#13;
to climb the center pole, they would BO&#13;
doubt enjoy the performance, but they&#13;
would make no more show of surprise&#13;
than if they were molded from day. If&#13;
the performing mule were to waif- ©at&#13;
on the hippodrome track and make a&#13;
concert announcement in tbe Indian&#13;
tongue, they would only grunt.&#13;
"After the show is over the'chiefs&#13;
proceed to fill their skins with the&#13;
white man's firewater, and the squnws&#13;
with the papooses wait on the lumber&#13;
jviles till the gray streaks bi'gin to&#13;
sprout over the hills, when the unsteady&#13;
train wind*but of town over the&#13;
trail.&#13;
"Along the Pacific coast the'Chinamen&#13;
are among, tiif !:r:n friends of the&#13;
circus people. . Like rhe Indians, they&#13;
n:e •gjatl jKjtrons of this jmrticular&#13;
skiMv !:i-{?a;&gt; [kr.ri.-isro .it Ic.si ."iu.dOO&#13;
MARKING AND IRBIGATIKO MACHINE.&#13;
around the wheels six inches apart.&#13;
The wheels, with the weight of the&#13;
tank filled with water on them, drive&#13;
the pegs In the soil as"the wheels revolve&#13;
and make the holes for the&#13;
plants in much the same way that&#13;
holes are made by hand with a dibble.&#13;
Two pieces of hose attached to the&#13;
tank lead the water down behind the&#13;
vheels and over the line of hotos&#13;
which they have made. The ends* ef&#13;
.the-hose-ai'-e-placed-in^tln cops with the&#13;
bottoms perforated with&#13;
These prevent the water from washing&#13;
or displacing the aott around the holes.&#13;
A marker hi Attached to the machine,&#13;
so that It marks or gauges the next&#13;
row, In the same way as the. markers&#13;
oa the. garden seed drills. A line is&#13;
# a w n on one side of the field to run&#13;
the machine by the first time across.&#13;
Handles are placed at the front and&#13;
rear of the machine, so that two persons&#13;
can draw and push it. When the&#13;
ground is thus prepared by the ma-&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
Salary $900 Y E A R L Y .&#13;
Met tut wemeeof good address to ra'resent&#13;
» « , some to travel M;&gt; pointing agents, others lor&#13;
Vocal work looking after our interests. SOCK)&#13;
salary guaranteed year);; extra co missions and&#13;
expenses, rap d advancement, old established&#13;
bouse. Grand chanc** for earnest man or worn an&#13;
to «ecore pleasant, permanent position, liberal&#13;
income ana futnre. New, brilliant lines. \\ rite&#13;
at once, S T A F F O R D PUfcSH, t-38&#13;
)13 C l i a r c h »»1,, N o w H a v e n , C o n n .&#13;
« W M " ^ » » « , * ^ V « i « V » i « w . ' V M l w V&#13;
POSTAL A MORKV, ntopfticTona.&#13;
i Griswold&#13;
House DETROIT.&#13;
A&#13;
•triotly&#13;
flret-&#13;
CIAM,&#13;
moderm,&#13;
up-to-dat*&#13;
Hotel, locatli&#13;
lnth«Wrt«f&#13;
the City&#13;
r i l l '&#13;
1 V&#13;
} . ; : : &lt;&#13;
t l : - •&#13;
• ' • "&#13;
1 '&#13;
-&#13;
:;'.:.:;•!; &lt;nw r1.!!&#13;
i' ." t N ^ : : . . (•;]:::&#13;
•:::tl«r:"t* hw:*-&#13;
::&lt;."•;:;!&lt;:::&gt;&#13;
• : : " ' ; ' : ' S r;\ vv&#13;
\ '; *' • [ *• r r' '!' * v&#13;
, . • . . . , . ' s , !&#13;
«&#13;
»'i:vi:s out' season.&#13;
c :;: coiiHifs drawn&#13;
s. :\r\ IIM'.V s;it ill&#13;
I'lft •!;;:r.:s worth&#13;
:: :::: .v imrtirs. fht»&#13;
&gt;*::: :•! i;&lt;V:vd mwns&#13;
;! ::• .Mstly s"!!&gt; rut&#13;
• !••(• v s . ht:t :is a&#13;
". •&lt;'...' t :i A t o l i e&#13;
, .,1 - , . . . , , ; . , ( , t t v&#13;
60 YEAHS*&#13;
r EXPERIENCE&#13;
THE BLAXCHIXG BOARDS.&#13;
chine, the plants are placed in the&#13;
holes and the soil pressed around them&#13;
very rapidly. More than one-half the&#13;
work of transplanting is saved in this&#13;
way.&#13;
The second figure shows the method&#13;
of blanching wittt boards. There are&#13;
two rows of celery in a 12 inch space,&#13;
alternating with an IS inch space&#13;
— »»«'•«» is mulched.—Oldo F.-irmer.&#13;
— FKUITHOUS&amp;&#13;
and double boarded with inch hemlock&#13;
laid in two thicknesses, with tar paper&#13;
between. The whole Is roofed with&#13;
cedar shingles.&#13;
There is a cellar or basement under&#13;
the whole house. The cellar wall is of&#13;
stone and mortar. 0 feet high and 2&#13;
feet thick. At the lower end it rises three&#13;
feet above tluv surface of the ground,&#13;
at the upper end about-a foot. The cellar&#13;
is tile drained, has a,good cemented&#13;
bottom, is lighted by three wiudows,&#13;
with double sash for winter, and is&#13;
ventilated by two 4 inch tiles, which&#13;
are closed in very cold weather. The&#13;
floor over the cellar Is 2½ inches thick,&#13;
inch lining with tar paper and 1½&#13;
inch plank. Tbe floor above-the packing&#13;
room is of two layers of inch&#13;
boards, with tar paper between.&#13;
The packing and sorting room above&#13;
the cellar is lighted by four windows.&#13;
The upper sash drops six inches for&#13;
ventilation. There are wo deors.&#13;
The loft or upper atory Is approached&#13;
by stairway at end of packing room.&#13;
The only approach to the cellar is near&#13;
the center of the building, by a lift&#13;
which consists of a section of the&#13;
floor cut 4 feet by 4 feet 2 inches and&#13;
supported by four five-eighth inch iron&#13;
rods, one at each corner of the platform.&#13;
These pass through and up to the ends&#13;
of two stout cross arms made of white&#13;
ash G feet 0 inches above the platform,&#13;
and on the top and the center of the&#13;
cross arms is attached a nine inch pulley.&#13;
This platform, or open cage, runs in&#13;
grooves of the frame of the shoot,&#13;
wkjch consists of four upright scantategb&#13;
5 by 2 inches, one at each corner,&#13;
Ann&#13;
•oors and to the bottom of the frame&#13;
In the cellar.&#13;
The platform, being a section of the&#13;
floor for loading and unloading, is held&#13;
in position by a brake and lever attachment&#13;
on top of the drum in the loft and&#13;
is operated from the floor of the»packing&#13;
room by a l'V4 Inch endless rope,&#13;
which passes twice around the drum in&#13;
the loft and down through either side&#13;
of the platform to the bottom of the&#13;
shoot over two small'pulleys to kt*tp it&#13;
taut. The lowering and raising are,facilitated&#13;
by a 200 pound couuterweight&#13;
attached to the shaft by a rope and&#13;
pulley.&#13;
The cellar will store 200 barrels of&#13;
apples. Last winter apples in barrels&#13;
in the cellar suffered no damage,&#13;
though the thermometer went down to&#13;
27 degrees beftw zero for a short time.&#13;
No heat was given, and no artificial&#13;
remsrerstkju was reomreu.&#13;
We tbe ondenrinfld itaftfc^ty &lt;&gt;••&#13;
er ft . ewa&lt;-d »f 50 cento to Any p&lt;fWMt&#13;
who pmcfai8*8 of as, two 25c boief&#13;
of Baiter's Mandrake Bitten TabUta,&#13;
if it fails to cure constipation, biliotot*&#13;
ness, siek-beadacbe, jaundice, lost of&#13;
appetite, soar stotnaehe, dyapepeift&#13;
li gar comp 'aini, or a j j i oj _tha i u M W t&#13;
for which it is recommended. J*iXp*&#13;
25 c«m* tor either tablets qr liquid*&#13;
We will also refund the nnney on one&#13;
package of either if it fails to give&#13;
satisfaction,&#13;
P. A. Sigler,»&#13;
W. B. Darrow&#13;
i&#13;
£he findweti 3}i*p«Ub.&#13;
POBLWHBD s r a n r T H U M O A Y v o a a i v a B Y&#13;
FRANK L. ANDREWS&#13;
Editor and t*r&lt;^&gt;rUtor.&#13;
Subscription Price $1 ID Advance&#13;
Watered at tbe Poatoflice at Piackoay, Micbif an&#13;
a* aecond-claaa mattar.&#13;
AdT«rtislag rates made known oa application.&#13;
Basinets Cards, f 4.00 per year.&#13;
Peath and marriage notices pablieaed free.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may oe paid&#13;
tor, if desired, by pr nentingthe office with tickets&#13;
of admission. In case tickets are not brought&#13;
to tne office, regular rates will be caarged.&#13;
All matter in local notice column will be c h a r t -&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, for each&#13;
Insertion. Where no time is specified, ail notices&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, and&#13;
wiU be charged for accordingly. ^F"Allchangee&#13;
of advertisements MUtiT reach this office as early&#13;
as TUESDAT morning t o insure an insertion the&#13;
same week..&#13;
JO 8 P&amp;I.Y 2IJV G /&#13;
in ail Its branches, a specialty, WsaaysaUhinds&#13;
and the latest styles of Type, etc., which enables&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, sach as Hooks,&#13;
Pamplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill Heads, Note&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc., in&#13;
superior styles, upon the •hortest notice. Prices as&#13;
Q-V aa good work can br aoue.&#13;
-LL, BILLS PAYABL/ tflOAt OP B V B B r M02ITB.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY.&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBSSIDKNT.. .~~ ~~ C. L. Sig-Ier&#13;
TacsTJSBS R. Baker, R. H. Erwiu,&#13;
P. 6 . Jackson, Geo Reason Jr.&#13;
Cbas. Love, Malacby Roche.&#13;
COCKS: K. E. Brown&#13;
TttXABUBKB. ~~ ~. ~...J. A. Cadwell&#13;
AHSKSSOB ~..Jas. A.Greene&#13;
STRKBT COMMISSIONKB J. Parker&#13;
HKALTHOrncjsa Dr.H. K. Sigler&#13;
ATTORNKY•.!,•«»&lt; «»!•&lt;•.„««« mw W* &amp;, \sm\T&#13;
MARSHALL,«»- ~....—..... ...S. Brogsa&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
Ker. H. W . Hicks, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at lU:3o, and every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0O o'clock. Prayer meeting Thnrsday&#13;
evenings. Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
service. L X A I . S I O L I B , Supt.&#13;
CONUrtEGAl'IONAL CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. U. W. Rice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:%) aud every Sunday&#13;
evening at 7:0C o'cijek. Prayer meeting Thurs&#13;
day evenings. Sunday school at d o s e of morning&#13;
service. Alias Kittie Huff, Supt,, Maoel&#13;
Swartbout Sec.&#13;
ST. MARY'S C ATHOMC CHURCH.&#13;
Rev. M. J. Commerford, Pastor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at7:30o'clock;&#13;
bigh mass with sermon.at 9::)1)1 m. Catechism&#13;
at a :00 p. ui., vespers sna benediction at 7:6U p . m .&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
John ruouaey and M. T. Kelly, Coauty Oslagatss&#13;
EPWORTH LEAGUE. MeeU every Sunday&#13;
evening at 5:00 oclock in tbe M. E. Cburch. A&#13;
cordial infiutioo is extended to everyone, especially&#13;
y o u m people. F. L. Aodrewa, Pres.&#13;
CHRISTIAN ENDEAVOR SO JIE TV:-\C^t&#13;
10¾^ everv Sunday eveain,' at rt: J J Pcai Ijifc&#13;
Miss L. M. Cos; -SecMtary, Miss :iutLe Ctrpnater&#13;
. ^&#13;
I^HE W. C. T. U. meets tbe first Friday of each&#13;
month at 2:31 p. m. at tne home of Dr. H. F.&#13;
sigler. Everyone interested in temperaoc* i?&#13;
coadially invited. Mra. 'jeal Siller, rres; bin.&#13;
Etta Durfee, Secretary.&#13;
The C.T. A. and B. Society of this place, n*^et&#13;
every third Saturaay evening in the Fr. featthewHall.&#13;
John Donohue, President.&#13;
about&#13;
T R A D E Mr,RRl&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COf&gt;VRIQHTS A C .&#13;
lutes, |2,1X5«, $3 per M*&#13;
' —s&gt;. teawe wHwe 4 eeiewsta y f&#13;
Anyone sending a sketch and description may&#13;
sjwckly ascertain nnr opinton free whether an&#13;
Hwentton is probably patentable. Communica.&#13;
ttens strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents&#13;
%*^tmv«^«MM***w*wvN*v*^&#13;
sent free. Oldest ssency forseeortnirpatenta.&#13;
•stPeaitsei nntos txtack*e,n wtihthroouugt hc hMannt©nn, inA tChoe. recelTff Scientific flmerkau A handsonrtly llrostrated weekly, fjanrest cir.&#13;
ealatlon of any setentUle Journal Terms, | 9 a&#13;
BSIBJS'tHSfT* J^b y a i wr^w"S&#13;
ft—ft Slot, hk ¥ 9U Waahl—ton, D. C.&#13;
' &gt;r,&#13;
.['ii' «*!ijipl,v diii'sn't know,&#13;
!•!• i!su;ii i-ouihinution In&#13;
•I*' who don't kno\v."^(.,histep&#13;
tile Coasrfc and work* off the&#13;
C o l d .&#13;
Li satire Bromo-Qainine Tablets cure&#13;
a cold in one day. No &lt; are, no&#13;
Price 25 cents.&#13;
p»y.&#13;
To* DISPATCH Job Depart men&#13;
would like to print your enra!op«s.&#13;
F r t d e of t h e Riding; A c a d e m y .&#13;
Rowell—There govs Withers on horseback.&#13;
He is a living illustration of the&#13;
savin?, "A merciful man is merciful to&#13;
bis lieast"&#13;
Snaffle—In what way?&#13;
Rowell—Don't you see? He lets his&#13;
weight rest on the horse only once In i'&#13;
while. The most of the time he is-iu&#13;
the air, poinj; up or coming down.—&#13;
Boston Transcript.&#13;
A Card.&#13;
I, tbe undersigned, do hereby a?ree&#13;
to refund th« money on a 50 cent, bottle&#13;
of Green's Warranted Syrup of&#13;
Tar if it failes ro enre yonr couprh or&#13;
cola*. I also guarantee a 25«cent bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or raoaey refunded.&#13;
t23&#13;
Will D. Darrow.&#13;
Subscribe lor Dispatch.&#13;
4&amp;A&#13;
This eifnjUare U o« every box Ytherennlne&#13;
Laxative BrooKhQtiiQtde Tmhits&#13;
tto isjsmsjttw I t e l&#13;
KNIGHTS OP MACCABEES.&#13;
Meec every Friday evening on or before full&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordial I v invited.&#13;
CHAS. U4KPBBU., Sir Knight Commander&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No. 7% «" A; A. M. Kegalar&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the fall of the moon. H. P. iigler, W. M.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
tbe Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
dA.M. meeting, Mas. MAKY RKAO, W. M.&#13;
RDER OF MODERN WOODMEN' Meet the&#13;
first Tnarsdar evening of each Month In the&#13;
.viaccabee ball. C. L. Orimes V. C.&#13;
• _ LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meet every Is&#13;
and drd Saturday of eachmonth at 2:30 p m. at&#13;
K. o . X. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially i n .&#13;
vited. JULIA SIOLKU, Lady Com.&#13;
s y&#13;
•V-.'^r.--?&#13;
rtrw&#13;
*k KNIGHTS O P T U B 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 vleilint&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
C. L. Grimee, Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. D- C, L, SIQLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physiclaus and Surgeons. Ail calls prompt I&#13;
attended to day or night. Office on Hainstr&#13;
Hackney, Mich.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN. •..&#13;
DE.STIST-Every Friday; andou Thareday&#13;
when having appointments. Ottice over&#13;
Sigler's Drug Store.&#13;
- '•*'•••M&#13;
•'fc::&#13;
.,!&#13;
frt'&#13;
t&#13;
: * !&#13;
.CJ&gt;&#13;
V E T E R I N A R Y S U R Q E O N .&#13;
Graduate of Ontario VeCertaanr College, also&#13;
. the Veterinary Dentistry College&#13;
Toronto Canes*.&#13;
Will promptly attend to all diseases ot&gt;he &lt;U&#13;
meetieated attwift' aft a reasonable prMa.&#13;
Bocesa teeth eiatinenlFTea. ornccat AILU PINCKNU\&#13;
- x ^ -&#13;
**$!&lt;&#13;
-fr m 'i-i 'l&#13;
__.y_ „&#13;
'vf&#13;
&lt;%x*m#*^&#13;
~ v * j ^ T \ ^ T ^ ^ r r : ^ r A ^ " ^ F H '%1,M*'&#13;
, ..-^+.^^2-&#13;
'V;r' '.4;&#13;
v f&#13;
','V' ' - &amp; •,F.".&#13;
. ( ( : . 1 . -&#13;
..* :¾¾&#13;
A '&#13;
: « • » . .&#13;
F R A N K L. AMDBBWS, Publisher.&#13;
PINCKNEY, • " - . MICHIGAN.&#13;
Alvarez's "The Carnival at Madrid"&#13;
brought *28*Q&lt;Kl at the La Gandara sa.e&#13;
l a Naples.&#13;
Happenings of a Week in Our&#13;
Great State.&#13;
SELECTED AND STEWED DOWN.&#13;
The next Democratic state convention&#13;
in Virginia will perhaps beat the&#13;
state's record In the matter of memberahip,&#13;
as It will be composed of&#13;
about 1,440 delegates.&#13;
In the "Mountain of the Monks," on&#13;
rt&amp;e Faneml of the Lata Kx-Goveruor—Mr&#13;
Crape's Third Ciae* Car*—The Webeeb&#13;
State Taxes Paid—Homer BUM Confeeee*.&#13;
Other MlohUraa News.&#13;
The BUM Marder.&#13;
The body of Charles Bliss, the Gertbe&#13;
coast of Macedonia, there are 20 mtm farmer who disappeared from his&#13;
monasteries. The place is sacred to home three weeks ago was found Sunthe&#13;
male sex, and no womanjs^allow- day near hts home in Washington&#13;
ed to cross its borders.&#13;
i\ ;. Sands Point, L. I., on a bluff overlooking&#13;
the sound ths largest cointry&#13;
house in America. It is to be modeled&#13;
after Kilkenny castle in Ireland.&#13;
There seems to be no question that the&#13;
old man- was murdered. Acting upon&#13;
Howard Ckm d intends to bu'ld at ' ^ l 8 t h e o J 2 t h e 1&lt;&gt;C* " ^ " ^ ^ ' f ! ?&#13;
Homer Bliss, a son, aged 28 years old,&#13;
under arrest. He Is now locked up In&#13;
jail at Mt. Clemens, pending the result&#13;
of the inquest. Old man Bliss disappeared&#13;
from home on Sunday. June 1).&#13;
The first known of his disappearance&#13;
was when his wife and son made inquiry&#13;
of the Detroit police concerning&#13;
him. They said there had been a little&#13;
family quarrel on Sunday, and that&#13;
he left the house In a rage. They did&#13;
not think anything about It until they&#13;
found In a desk a Lote, presumably&#13;
written by the missing man. but not&#13;
signed. In which it was stated that the&#13;
writer had gone to Detroit to drowu&#13;
himself in the Detroit river. The people&#13;
The influx of settlers to the Kaa»is&#13;
wheat belt in the last *thre9 yea s&#13;
has caused land to raise 20 per cent, in&#13;
price, and land which in 1892 sold for&#13;
$500 a quarter section cannot now be&#13;
had at $3,000. In and around Wichita&#13;
wheat belt farms sell for $4,000 e^ch&#13;
and even higher.&#13;
The trucking Industry in North&#13;
Carolina is assuming immense proportions.&#13;
The official figures show t h i t&#13;
last year 66,495 packages of vegetables,&#13;
4,544,050 pounds, forty-eight car3, 12,-&#13;
504 crates of cantaloupes; twenty-three&#13;
cars, 4,153 crate3 of dewberries; fiftyfive&#13;
cars, 22,840 crate3 of beans, and&#13;
349,989 crates, 17,499,450 pounds cf&#13;
strawberries were shipped from Wilmington&#13;
section alone.&#13;
The appraisers of so much of the real&#13;
and personal estate of the late Benjamin&#13;
Harrison as lies in Marion county,&#13;
Ind., have reported to the court that&#13;
its total value is $354,525. the real estate&#13;
being valued at $184,500. The most&#13;
valuable piece of property is his old&#13;
"homestead In Indianapolis," "which is&#13;
apprised at $4O,JO0. General Harrison&#13;
also owned at the time of his death&#13;
Berkeley Lodge, his summer home in&#13;
the Adirondacks, and property in&#13;
Washington, D. C , and North Bend, O.&#13;
In consequence of the increased demand&#13;
for horse flesh as an article cf&#13;
food, the Hygt«n1c~S3c1ety of F a n s h -s&#13;
urged upon the municipal council the&#13;
necessity of providing a larger slaughter&#13;
house than that at present exist ng&#13;
where animals that have outrun f i e r&#13;
usefulness as carriers and haulers may&#13;
be killed and cut up for the butchers.&#13;
Only about twenty horses can be ki l:d&#13;
and disposed of dally at the present&#13;
slaughter house, and it is estimated&#13;
that a place with a kiring capac ty of&#13;
not lets than 30,000 a year is necessary&#13;
to keep up with the demands of&#13;
the Parisians for ths meat.&#13;
A New YorK dairyinau-^takes the&#13;
suggestion that farmers who are supplying&#13;
city markets should name their&#13;
places, and so establish a sort of trademark&#13;
for their products. "Lookout&#13;
Farm," for instance, would stick In the&#13;
memory of customers, and if the name&#13;
were stamped on super or articles only,&#13;
it would not be long before the Lookout&#13;
Farm butter, cheese and eggs woa.d&#13;
command the be3t prices. The dairyman&#13;
adds that those who are looking&#13;
for country places will give more&#13;
for those that have an established&#13;
name and reputation. In short, it&#13;
would pay the farmer to advertise judiciously,&#13;
as it pays any other business&#13;
man.&#13;
iu this village and vicinity are stlrreil&#13;
as never before. Everybody Is expressing&#13;
his opinion now that Bliss' body&#13;
has been found, and Instead of Innuendoes&#13;
open charges of foul play are being&#13;
freely made.&#13;
Homer Biiss confessed that he killed&#13;
his father, Charles Bliss, but claims&#13;
the shooting was accidental. He said&#13;
that on the Sunday the old man left&#13;
home, he found him in -ae woods near&#13;
the house 1 the act of trving to shoot&#13;
himself. He grappled with the old man&#13;
for the possession of the gun, and in&#13;
the struggle both barrels were discharged,&#13;
and his father fell dead. He&#13;
became seared- and buried the bodv&#13;
under a brush heap, together w » ^ kae&#13;
pun. Alter the officers, who came to&#13;
the ho: .e to investigate the rumors of&#13;
foul play, t a d left the vicinity, Homer&#13;
says he dug up the body and wheeled&#13;
it to where It was found last Sunday.&#13;
Then he fixed the gun to make it appear&#13;
that his father had committed&#13;
suicide.&#13;
TL-iiJi..&#13;
«&#13;
Cook \K»nte fSO. &lt;&#13;
- fiamuel F. Cook, journal clerk of the&#13;
•bouse, asks the Supreme Court for a&#13;
mandamus to compel Aud.-Gen. Powers&#13;
to countersign his order for ISO&#13;
mileage representing 800 miles from&#13;
Rock River, Alger county, to Lansing&#13;
and return. Cook claims Rock River&#13;
ns bis home, always voting there. Powers&#13;
refused to countersign the certln«&#13;
cate, claiming t h a t Cox* /was in t a n * state" fo see wbal o t n t f ebUntteg ave&#13;
sing at the time the legislature tot*&#13;
veued, and therefore was not entitled&#13;
to the mileage. Chief Clerk Miller, of&#13;
the house, who appointed Cook, and&#13;
who is his attorney in this ease, claims&#13;
that as the legislature declared Cook&#13;
entitled to the mileage, that question&#13;
of fact is determined for all time, and&#13;
cannot be reviewed, oven by the Judiciary,&#13;
aud much less by the auditor*&#13;
general.&#13;
She Meant to K i l l Him.&#13;
Because, he jilted her and married&#13;
another girl. Miss Jessie Jones shot at&#13;
uud wouuded George Brooks. She&#13;
says she is sorry she didn't do greater&#13;
damage to him. She and Brooks had&#13;
been engaged for some time and the&#13;
wedding nad been set for next Wednesday.&#13;
Brooks, who lives in the country&#13;
a b o u n w o miles outrcarnF-ttrtheclty&#13;
and secured u license to marry&#13;
Miss Lillle Slater, and the marriage&#13;
was performed shortly afterwards.&#13;
Hearing this Miss Jones went to the&#13;
Slater home, called Brooks out and&#13;
shot at him three times, the final shot&#13;
striking the left wrist and coming out&#13;
at the shoulder. The Slater, Brooks&#13;
and Jones families live in one settlen'.&#13;
ent. Xo complaint has been made&#13;
agaUisTthe girl and none Is likely to&#13;
be made.&#13;
&lt;***** mm m i l ' ''pi1*1 m*&#13;
Lightning s m u k j i n numerous Michigan&#13;
towns Tuesday. While consider-t&#13;
able damage to property !• reported*&#13;
there was no loss of life.&#13;
The eighth annual meeting of&#13;
sheriffs, chiefs of police and prosecuting&#13;
attorneys of Michigan will be held&#13;
in Muskegon, July 17 and 18.&#13;
The Kent county board of supervisors&#13;
will send six' men about the&#13;
MMWilt&#13;
doing in t h e matter of assessments.&#13;
A scheme is being promoted to build&#13;
an electric railway from Saplnaw to&#13;
Grand Rapids, a distance of 120 miles.&#13;
It 1» ibiid that the right of way has&#13;
been secured.&#13;
D. 8. Kthcridge, a Qulocjr farmer,&#13;
ir.ade and sold in one month 450½&#13;
pounds of butter, the product of 14 Jersey&#13;
cows, 7 of which were heifers, not&#13;
yet 2 years of-age.&#13;
A Smash Up on the Wabash KiJl*&#13;
Sixteen People.&#13;
WILD SCENE IN A BAD WRECK.&#13;
An Kye Wttneet Ueeerlbet the Soef» # • '&#13;
K*yatf&gt;n« -The Deejtrootloa of r j i « e i | r&#13;
Said to Be Wocee th*n H*w&gt;rtc&lt;l~Otaev&#13;
Mewe Notes, &lt;&#13;
The stream along wbich the Virgin!*&#13;
floods have been reported to be most&#13;
disastrous, Is the Elkhorn. This stream&#13;
joins the Tug liver, in whicli hlgJi water&#13;
has prevailed, at the town of Welch,&#13;
The oleomargarine dealers of Detroit' The Tug mining location, known a s the&#13;
Shocking Matricide.&#13;
A sho^King case of matricide occurred&#13;
Sunday night, when Mrs. Meggson,&#13;
living one mile north of the"&#13;
Wayne county house, was assaulted by&#13;
her son an injured to such an extent&#13;
that she died Monday evening. Her&#13;
slayer, whose name is Rolla Spears,&#13;
has had Insane spells for three years,&#13;
and it was during one of these that he&#13;
attacked the woman with a jackknife.&#13;
Alter gashing her face in a brutal&#13;
manner, he picked her with the knife&#13;
until her body was a mass of cuts and&#13;
bruises. Sne was not found untn mornlng,&#13;
when her almost liieless body was&#13;
removed to the hospital at Eloise,&#13;
where she tiled Monday evening.&#13;
Young B p e a n was found la the woods&#13;
and resumed u&gt; the asylum.&#13;
Great BafU of LOR*.&#13;
A raft containing abou 8.300,000 feet&#13;
will reach Bay Olty this week. Another&#13;
raft is about ready to leave Georgian&#13;
Bay. A raft containing 0.500,000&#13;
feet of choice white pine logs left Marquette&#13;
Saturday for the Central Lumber&#13;
Co., being the first Installment of&#13;
14,000.000 feet of logs purchased hi the&#13;
spring of the Cleveland Saw Mill ic&#13;
Lumber Co. Another raft is belli?&#13;
made up. The mills of Ross Bros., at&#13;
Beavcrton. are running day aud night&#13;
and will have all the timber that can&#13;
be worked up this season. A raft containing&#13;
000,000 feet of long timber was&#13;
made npjU Black River. Lake Huron.&#13;
It goes to Sarnla amT~is consigned to&#13;
the Cleveland Saw Mill &lt;fc Lumber Co.&#13;
There is one more raft to make up and&#13;
that will wind up long timber rafting&#13;
at Blaek Uiver.&#13;
A (;runt Crop.&#13;
After making a careful canvass of&#13;
the northwest territory and preparing&#13;
conservative estimates upon thg-fmFditions&#13;
found throughout the grain&#13;
belt, the trallic officials cf the St. Paul,&#13;
1 he Northwestern, the Northern Pailtic.&#13;
the Great Northern ami the Burlington&#13;
systems, are agreed that the&#13;
wheat crop of this region for 11)01 will&#13;
break all previous records.&#13;
MINOR MICHIGAN MATTERS.&#13;
Alma is, to have a new bank.&#13;
Galesburg Is to have rural free delivery.&#13;
Lade Odessa Is to have fair grounds&#13;
ti11ed up.&#13;
Fowler has an incorporated creamery&#13;
company.&#13;
Five thousand iish hooks are sold&#13;
While his mother lay dead at her&#13;
home in Columbus, 0., Col. A. B C.it&#13;
de'ivered a Memorial address \o 2,000&#13;
people at Delaware. He was ch ssn&#13;
orator of the day some time ago, but&#13;
after he had written a speech hi3&#13;
mother was taken seriously ill. On the&#13;
evening before Decoration day Mrs.&#13;
Colt called her son to her bedside and&#13;
requested that he read the speech to&#13;
her. After the colonel had -finished his&#13;
mother said in a faint whisper: "That&#13;
is a good speech, my son. Now, promise&#13;
me thaf no matter now ill I am y t u&#13;
will not disappoint your Delaware&#13;
audience." The colonel gave his word&#13;
as requested, and though his mother&#13;
died before morning he delivered the&#13;
address according to the program.&#13;
la&#13;
e&#13;
Mrs. Laura Schwichtenberg, a&#13;
wealthy widow of New York, has decided&#13;
to devote her life to the new&#13;
leper colony on the island of Cebu, one&#13;
of the Philippine group. Some time&#13;
ago she received, at her own urgent&#13;
request, an appointment as govern*&#13;
ment inspector of hospitals in the&#13;
Philippines, at which time she v sited&#13;
the leper colony, declaring that her&#13;
commission took that in, as the*xrhole&#13;
colony was a hospital. She waa greatly&#13;
impressed with the lack of s a n i f r y&#13;
conditions prevailing, with the hopetecs&#13;
condition of the 30,000 lepers congregated&#13;
there, and especially with&#13;
the large number of aad children. "I&#13;
Mtchlornn Crop*.&#13;
The weekly crop report Issued Tuesday&#13;
says that the weather conditions&#13;
of the past seven days have been generally&#13;
favorable In most counties, the&#13;
warmer temperature having a decided&#13;
effect on the growth of crops and the&#13;
germination of late seeding. Corn&#13;
has also made marked improvement in&#13;
all sections, having greatly Improved&#13;
In color and made considerable growth.&#13;
Oats are heading In the southern counties,&#13;
but are rather short. Rye Is&#13;
promising, but reports regarding&#13;
wheat continue to be discouraging.&#13;
It Is still crinkling considerably ami&#13;
showing the continued ravages of&#13;
the Hessian fly. Beans and late potato&#13;
planting are about finished. Early potatoes&#13;
are in fine condition. The Kiigar&#13;
beet crop.hvruaking good growth, and&#13;
Is generally promising.&#13;
county seat of Emmett.&#13;
Free rural mall delivery will be established&#13;
in Soath Haven.&#13;
W i f e Mnrder Cfc—eol.&#13;
The little settlement of Pc .bmsviUc,&#13;
six miles from Wayne, is excited over . 4 . .,&#13;
the mysterious death of Mrs. Georfal ^ j M P * 1 1 * «"&gt;««»&gt;'&#13;
Cooper. It is alleged she fell down&#13;
stairs, fracturing her sicuil. Tho first&#13;
time her death became known wac&#13;
Sunday morning, when Mr. Cooper&#13;
callod in a neighbor named Sherwood&#13;
and told him that his wire had fallen&#13;
down cellar, m e y went together and&#13;
carried her to a bed. A doctor was Immediately&#13;
called, although life was already&#13;
extinct. A large share of the&#13;
population refuse to believe in the accident&#13;
theory, and hint strongly at&#13;
foul play. It is s.id that the Coopers'&#13;
domestic life was unhappy. One of the&#13;
dead woman's brothers has stated that&#13;
he does not believe she was accidentally&#13;
killed.&#13;
are. to stop the sale. This action will&#13;
be taken as the direct result of the&#13;
oleomargarine law passed at the last&#13;
session of the legislature.&#13;
The Lima, 0., jury, in the case of&#13;
Clem merman, charged with manslaughter&#13;
in the killing of Jo_n Carroll,&#13;
a Saginaw telegraph operator, returned&#13;
a verdict of guilty.&#13;
Nellie Foster, a pretty 20-year-old&#13;
milliner who was out of work, grew&#13;
despondent and tried to drown herself&#13;
In Muskegon Lake. She was pulled out,&#13;
but her condition is serious.&#13;
Two libel suits for $20,000 each have&#13;
been started against the Grand Rapids&#13;
Democrat by the Old Natloual bank&#13;
and Cashier H. J. Hollister. The suit*&#13;
grew out of the water scandal.&#13;
Fruit in the vicinity of Law ton has&#13;
been injured to a great extent recently.&#13;
Some peach orchards will bear no fruit&#13;
at all, while but very few will produce&#13;
more than half the usual crop. •&#13;
Dan Smith, who lives near Orville.&#13;
Is the oldest man In the state. He was&#13;
born January 21, 1791, at Portland.&#13;
Me. He goes to Saginaw regularly and!&#13;
draws a pension for military services.&#13;
Joe Atkinson's stock of fireworks at&#13;
Fremont exploded, blowing out the&#13;
store front, burning the face,of Frank&#13;
Bisbee and leaving him perfectly bald.&#13;
The explosion was caused by a small&#13;
boy with a eigarette.&#13;
William Barr, a prominent resident&#13;
of Yieksburg, who died Sunday, was&#13;
the lirst white boy to attend school In&#13;
Kalamazoo county. H e took a prominent&#13;
part in the early development of&#13;
this part of the state.&#13;
A &lt;&gt;0-mile gale did $1,000 damage la&#13;
Marquette. The old rolling mill fur-,&#13;
nace at S.uith Marquette was blown&#13;
down. Circt. MTchaljohn, a gypsy, was&#13;
ki 1 led. Six horses belonging to the&#13;
"band were also killed.&#13;
Work on the Swift salt plant at Delray&#13;
has commenced In earnest. Two&#13;
wells will be bored and.work on the&#13;
plant will commence at once. The output&#13;
will be ."&gt;0 carloads a day, and will&#13;
be shipped to the Swift plants.&#13;
Three bodies, supposed to have belonged&#13;
to the crew of the Baltimore,&#13;
are held at East Tawas awaiting-Identification.&#13;
They are embalmed, and will&#13;
be held a few days longer. Any particulars&#13;
can bo obtained of the marine reporter.&#13;
The Germans of Albion are looking&#13;
village of Tug, is five miles bek&gt;w\&#13;
Welch, so that at that place the toB&#13;
effects of the flood in both streams&#13;
must have been felt. ' ^ ,&#13;
The flood district is in the southwest- Jt\&#13;
0111 corner of Virginia. It is the "Pocahontas&#13;
coal field." The flood area is&#13;
large, apparently embracing a district&#13;
40 miles long aud 15 or 20 miles wide&#13;
The great loss evidently Is to property.&#13;
No such number of lives were lost&#13;
as the frightened natives first reported*&#13;
The original estimates of 200 fatalities&#13;
must now be reduced by over half. It&#13;
will be days before all the small back&#13;
county settlements arc heard from and&#13;
the exact facts known.&#13;
— . e s t information as to the storm at&#13;
Pocahontas coal field places the damage&#13;
to property at $300,000. Loss of&#13;
life about 00. No loss of passengers or&#13;
trains, ^ n eye witness^©* the flood&#13;
which devastated Keystone was a&#13;
guest of u.e National Hotel, one of the&#13;
few buildings that escaped destruction,&#13;
says tue town was built along one&#13;
narrow street tuat followed the stream&#13;
fully a mile, because of t.mited space&#13;
tue houses on one side stood on plies&#13;
or walls over the Elkhorn, and on the&#13;
ether, against the mountains.&#13;
At Shawnee several persons are said&#13;
to have b .en drowned. The greater^&#13;
part of the town was destroyed. r&#13;
A messenger who traveled the whole&#13;
length of the flood district reports that&#13;
the destruction to property is wo se&#13;
than apprehended, but that loss of life&#13;
will not ue so great. Estimates here&#13;
are still 200 aeaths, or-less, -&#13;
Fifty bodies have been found, It Is&#13;
claimed. The list of missing and reported&#13;
dead is 240. Thousands of people&#13;
are homeless.&#13;
Information from the Tug river district&#13;
Is. to the effect that the damage&#13;
to the coal operations in that rerion is&#13;
not great, but that the lumber interests&#13;
have suffered cons.derab»y. Over&#13;
a hundred miles of track belonging fo~&#13;
the various coal operations are practically&#13;
a total loss.&#13;
xiie damage besrins at Coaldale. but&#13;
Keystone and Burke are the greatest&#13;
sufferers. The two towns are practically&#13;
one and form tne largest place&#13;
in the coal fields. Many non-resident&#13;
miners were in Kevstone on Saturday&#13;
morning and numbers of mem whose&#13;
names will never be learned perished.&#13;
Another destructive storm visited&#13;
the flood-swept district .Wednesday&#13;
night and while no loss of life is yet&#13;
reported from this second visitation,&#13;
yet the damage to property has been&#13;
-fwward with great expectations to the \ great. Tlie work' don«&gt; hy thg 1argft_&#13;
state encampment of the society&#13;
known as the Deutscher Landwehr IHitersteutzung&#13;
Vereln, which will be held&#13;
July 4, 0 and 0. There are fourteen&#13;
Petoskey is s p i a a r o s to become the I companies in the state.&#13;
Bert Hartwick, of Colonia, started to&#13;
show annther man how to manipulate&#13;
an acetylene gas plant. He started in&#13;
wrong,--however, as—he—entered the-&#13;
Crapo's Third-Cleat Cam.&#13;
Third-class cars on steam roads, already&#13;
common enough abroad, may be&#13;
run in America, if the ideas of 8. T.&#13;
Crapo, general manager of the Pere&#13;
Marquette, are carried out. Mr. Crapo&#13;
believes that .0 run three classes of&#13;
cars would enable the railroads to&#13;
compete more successfully with the&#13;
electric railways, and he Is enthusiastic&#13;
on the subject.&#13;
Teset on The Witbeeh.&#13;
The Wabash Railroad Company&#13;
Monday paid state taxes aggregating&#13;
— . . $38,946 on its last year's business, acdid&#13;
not see a single happy-faced c h i d ^cording to Railroad Commissioner Ost&#13;
h e n , " she says. "The scenes still&#13;
haunt me. I long to return and take a&#13;
little sunshine into their Uvea;.» »&#13;
born's computation. The Wabash is&#13;
the first of the big roads to pa-' taxes&#13;
this year. , r&#13;
The Port Huron Light ft Power Co.&#13;
has incorporated. Capital $150,00&amp;.&#13;
A crazy hobo set the good people of&#13;
Buroda wild. They feared a murder.&#13;
The Flint Lumber Ou. has increased&#13;
its capital stock from #10,000 to $15,-&#13;
01)0.&#13;
Subscription books for the Pingroo&#13;
memorial are being distributed in Detroit.&#13;
The locomotive firemen on the South&#13;
Haven &amp; Eastern railway are on&#13;
strike.&#13;
The Michigan National Guard will&#13;
be in camp In Manistee August 5tli to&#13;
14th.&#13;
Miss May Lawton. U. of M., 1901,&#13;
will go to the Philippine islands as a&#13;
teacher.&#13;
Tho Soo line steamer Hennepin was&#13;
damaged $25,000 by fire In Buffalo&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
Alfred William Balch, of Saginaw,&#13;
has been appointed an assistant surgeon&#13;
in the navy.&#13;
Former Secretary of State Justus S.&#13;
Stearns is to make Grand Rapids his&#13;
home after September 1.&#13;
A Muskegon firm gets the contract&#13;
for the addition to the Mt. Pleasant&#13;
normal school for $17t000.&#13;
One hundred and five applicants&#13;
for teachers' positions in Huron county&#13;
wrote the examinations.&#13;
Thirty bollermakers in Bay City are&#13;
on a strike for a nine-hour day and&#13;
12½ per cent increase in wages.&#13;
A gold mining, company, of which&#13;
Gov. Bliss is president, Is reported to&#13;
have made a rich strike In Colorado.&#13;
Huron county has 38 liquor sellers,&#13;
yielding her the nent sum of $l«,0O0.&#13;
Only six have refused to pay tht*ypaT7~&#13;
The Increase in real property over&#13;
last year in Adrian was but $3,150, and&#13;
in personal $8,424, making a total of&#13;
$11,378.&#13;
Mark Hlrschburg, a Moreen 1 tailor,&#13;
mourns the death of a Russian uncle,&#13;
a nobleman, who leaves to his nephew&#13;
$¢7.1.000.&#13;
room with a lighted lantern. An explosion&#13;
followed, burning Hartwick and&#13;
nearly wrecking the building.&#13;
Two of the largest timbers ever&#13;
shipped have arrived in Grand Haven&#13;
from Washington. They are yellow fir.&#13;
40 by 40 Inches and 50 feet long,&#13;
weighing 12 tons each and costing $2,-&#13;
000. They are to be used as anchor&#13;
posts on a large steel dredge.&#13;
The bodies of Beatrice and James&#13;
Bailey, the two children who were poisoned&#13;
a few weeks ago, supposedly by&#13;
their mother, Mrs. Sarah Quimby, of&#13;
Ithaca, have been exhumed. Since her&#13;
confession the mother has made statements&#13;
Incriminating her husband.&#13;
Land Commissioner Wlldey, who has&#13;
recently made an inspection of tho&#13;
survey of the St. Clair Flats, says that&#13;
the work will soon be completed. It&#13;
has cost the state ibout $27,000, but&#13;
the commissioner says that the state&#13;
will reallxe at least $200,000 from the&#13;
sale of the lots.&#13;
Albeit Snyder was fovnd at an early&#13;
hour on the streets of New Haven, suffering&#13;
from a number of bad cuts&#13;
about the legs. He at first told different&#13;
and conflicting stories ns to how&#13;
he came m that condition, but at last&#13;
it leaked out that he became scared&#13;
and ran into a mowing machine.&#13;
Allegan has a unique club called the&#13;
T. U. W. What the letters stand for&#13;
is the club's secret. No one has been&#13;
able to guess correctly, although many&#13;
appropriate names have been suggest&#13;
ed. The club Is composed of 13 maiden&#13;
ladles and they meet on the 13th of&#13;
each month for social sessions only.&#13;
What has been known for yearn .is&#13;
the "Carter snake," has shown Itself&#13;
o n . t h e Carter farm by a lake of the&#13;
same name near Hastings, when it dls&#13;
covered itself to a company of chll&#13;
dren, no one of whom was a professional&#13;
snake liar. The children by&#13;
whom it was seen think It was fully&#13;
25 feet long, but the Hastings Journal,&#13;
thinks the young people were excited&#13;
and H ^bopi off seven feet&#13;
force of men, repairing the damage of&#13;
last Saturday's flood, has been destroyed&#13;
in many places. A number of the&#13;
largest heaps of drifi were set on flrA,&#13;
Tuesday night by some unknown7&#13;
friend to the public health. Iu this&#13;
pile of debris it is estimated there&#13;
were at least 25 bodies. The heap is&#13;
now a pile of smoldering ashes. - . -&#13;
Slxteen Killed.&#13;
Sixteen persons were killed and&#13;
about 50 injured In a wreck of train&#13;
No. 3, the west-bound Wabash limited,&#13;
•nine miles" west of Peru, Ind., Tuesday.&#13;
The dead are all unknown Italian&#13;
emigrants en route to Colorado. Many&#13;
of the Injured undoubtedly will die.&#13;
Two sections of train No. 3, one coming&#13;
from Detroit aud the other from&#13;
Toledo, were consolidated In Peru into&#13;
a train of 11 cars, making up the flyer&#13;
for its journey to St. Louis. Having&#13;
left Peru one hour late the train wa?&#13;
speeding westward at a high rate,&#13;
when the engine plunged through a&#13;
trestle which had been undermined by&#13;
rains. The embankment on both sides&#13;
of the little stream dropped at a sharp&#13;
degree a distance of 40 feet. It was&#13;
In the emigrant and day coaches that&#13;
most of the deaths and injuries m:*!&#13;
curred. In an official report of the&#13;
wreck made to President Ramsey it&#13;
is stated that 13 Italians were killed, 3&#13;
probably fatally and 11 seriously&#13;
hurt and 31 slightly bruised and cut.&#13;
A Rich Waeber.&#13;
Mrs. Alfred Schermerhorn, of the&#13;
New York "Four Hundred," social&#13;
leader, member of the Meadow club&#13;
and philanthropist, is in want at aristocratic&#13;
Southampton and has opened&#13;
a hand laundry to keep herself from&#13;
starving. Southampton is next to&#13;
Newport socially, and the Meadow is&#13;
its foremost club. She Is forced to the&#13;
experiment of living on twenty cents&#13;
a day, while her son lives in luxury*&#13;
keeps five servants and has carriage&#13;
and horses. In spite of her poverty&#13;
she claims to own property worth&#13;
$210,000, which she deeded to her son,&#13;
and which he refusea to rotom to&#13;
and so this woman, wbo hitherto has&#13;
been able to satisfy every whim, is re- ^&#13;
ducod to taking In washing.&#13;
Michael Davitt will arrive In Chicavi,.*.&#13;
^ &gt;. » ,...., * ° August 15, to begin propaganda&#13;
which believes i m p ^ y , U M 4 M M » * * ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
f t t o receive the Irish patriot aad •&amp;-&#13;
S * * 4 n him. / "&#13;
\&#13;
•-'fy.'t,; &gt;.Vi'&#13;
' ' • &lt; » :&#13;
; f ,&#13;
ft . • ! " •&#13;
sa ss 3=&#13;
STEAMER WilCCltED.&#13;
m m i» ,T&#13;
The steamer Lnsfta^la fpom tilver- Tho Bepuoticdn statr conresiieV&#13;
pool, June 18, for Montreal, fearing 500 at Columous on Tuesday reiominated&#13;
passengers on board, was wrecked Governor George K. Nash by acclama-&#13;
Tuesday night off Cape Ballard^ on tion. For HouLeaant-sovernor, Cart N.&#13;
the coast of Newfoundland, about 60 Nippert, of Hamiltoi, was nominated,&#13;
miles south of St. Johns. The Lusi- . 1 no platform reatrirms that a d o p t s&#13;
tanla was bound round Cape Race for Jg" t h f Philadelphia national c o w t f r&#13;
Montreal, with a large cargo and a ^ v ^ ^ V i $ ! i £ ? i n SSS^k ft«&#13;
shin loud of nflKsciffPM She mistook l a r S e r n a y y» legislation looking to tho *&#13;
snip loaa or passengers, sne «»istooK restoration of w~e .merchant marine,"&#13;
her course in a dense fog and a s h o r e . went d c a M t r u c t l o a o f t h e N l c i r a g u a ' n ly emigtrja^njtMs n nwnegrwe * .pwalniiac-astrr*icwkoen£ . ckna;; uenonnces ranching, contannr a t t e ^ p t f i n o de i v e a n *' C w Z e n o f They stampeded and fought for the hi9 r i g h t t 0 v o t e u n d e r t h e c o n B t i t u .&#13;
boats, but were overcome by the of- tion," demands taat representation in&#13;
fleers and erew&gt; who secured control ; congress be based on actual voting&#13;
after great trouble and a prolonged | population, with reduction for every&#13;
struggle with the rougher element ; state in which suffrage is abridged,&#13;
among the passengers, who used commends tue feueral bupreme&#13;
knives, The women and children were Court's Porto Rican dedBions, the&#13;
first landed and the men followed. Spanish war anu tae administration of&#13;
The crew stood by the ship. There is j Mc*w*nley, asserts tnat Porto Rico is&#13;
a report that one boat was upset and &lt; flourishing, that "tho wicked lnsurrec-&#13;
20 persons drowned. The women and i turn in the Philippines" has been sunchildren&#13;
rescued were almost naked. Pressed, commends -ov. Nash, Sena-&#13;
Drenched with spray, they were pulled t 0 r Foraker and Senator xianna, adup&#13;
the cliffs by the coast people. Som* v i s e * revision of the state tax laws "in&#13;
of the boats were demolished in the »«ch nw&gt;ner as shall require all claas,&#13;
surf while attempting to land and «J ,°f P^perty to bear their Just share&#13;
their half-drowned occupants held on o f R a t i o n , and says:&#13;
- . , - 1 - • - • ' * • - • ' • - - . - ' -&#13;
the rocks, suffering with cold, until&#13;
rescued.&#13;
T h e F i g g Eiilaode.&#13;
We recognize me right of both capital&#13;
and labor to combine when such&#13;
combinations are wisely administered&#13;
for ~%i g e n e r a l good, h u t romhinatlnna&#13;
FORKIGX NOTES.&#13;
NATHAN&#13;
OFTME&#13;
General Washington wanted a man.&#13;
It was in September, 1776, at the City&#13;
of New York, a few days after thy&#13;
battle of Long Island. The swift and&#13;
deep East River flowed between the&#13;
The officers were conversinp in a&#13;
group. No one had as yet spoken the.&#13;
decisive word. Colonel Knowlton appealed&#13;
to a French sergeant, an old&#13;
soldier _.pf former wars, and asked Wm&#13;
to volunteer. '&#13;
"No, no," said he. "I am ready to&#13;
fight the British at any place and time,&#13;
but I do not feel willing to go among&#13;
them to be hung up like a dog."&#13;
Captain Hale joined the group of&#13;
officers. He said to Colonol Knowlton:&#13;
"T V7J11 nnrinrtnkfl i t " ^&#13;
to New* York in one of his boats, and&#13;
with him the fatal proofs that he was&#13;
a spy. -&#13;
September 21st was the day on which&#13;
he reached New York—the day of the&#13;
great fire which laid one-third of the&#13;
little city in ashes. From the time of&#13;
hi3 departure from General Washington's&#13;
camp to t'aat of his return to&#13;
Now York was about fourteen days.&#13;
He was taken to General Howe's headquarters&#13;
at the Beekman mansion, on&#13;
the East river, near the corner of the&#13;
-present—Fifty-first—street and—First&#13;
two hostile armies, and General Wash-&#13;
Ington had as yet no system established&#13;
tor getting Information of the enemy's&#13;
movements and intentions. He&#13;
, never needed such information so much&#13;
4&amp; at that crisis.&#13;
What would General Howe do next?&#13;
_U ha-crosa at Hell Gate, the American&#13;
army, too small in numbers, and defeated&#13;
the week before.might be caught&#13;
on Manhattan island a3 in a trap, and&#13;
the Issue of the contest might be made&#13;
to depend upon a single battle; for In&#13;
such circumstances defeat would involve&#13;
the capture of the whole army.&#13;
And yet General Washington was com-&#13;
—petted to confess:&#13;
"We cannot learn, nor have we been&#13;
able to possess, the least information&#13;
of late."&#13;
Therefore he wanted a man. He&#13;
wanted an intelligent man, cool-headed,&#13;
skillful, brave, to cross the East&#13;
River to Long Island, enter the enemy's&#13;
camp and get information as to&#13;
his strength and intentions. He went&#13;
to Colonel Knowlton, commandig a re-&#13;
{markably efficient regiment from Connecticut,&#13;
and requested him to ascertain&#13;
if this man so sorely needed could&#13;
be found In his command. Colonel&#13;
XKnowUon called his officers together,&#13;
stated the wishes of General Washington,&#13;
and, without urging the enterprise&#13;
upon any individual, left the matter&#13;
to their reflections.&#13;
Captain Nathan Hale, a brilliant&#13;
youth of 21, recently graduated from&#13;
Tale college, was one of those who&#13;
reflected upon the subject He soon&#13;
reached a conclusion. He was of (he&#13;
very flower of the young men of New&#13;
England, and one of the best of the&#13;
younger soldiers of the patriot army.&#13;
He had been educated tor the ministry,&#13;
and his motive in adopting for a&#13;
time the profession of arms was purely&#13;
patriotic. This we know from the&#13;
familiar records of his life at the time&#13;
m whsa the oa» to arms was first heard&#13;
In addition to ma other gifts and&#13;
graces, he was handsome, vigorous and&#13;
athletic, all in au extraordinary degree,&#13;
If he h&amp;a live^ in our u&amp;y he&#13;
might have pulled, the stroke oar at&#13;
New T^ndos or pitched for the college&#13;
alas.&#13;
Some of his best friends remonstrated.&#13;
One of them, afterwards the&#13;
famous Gen. William.Hull, then a captain&#13;
in Washington's army, has recorded&#13;
Hale's reply to hi3 own attempt&#13;
to dissuade him.&#13;
"I think," said Hale, "I owe to my&#13;
country the accomplishment of an object&#13;
so Important. I am fully sensible&#13;
of the consequences of discovery and&#13;
capture in such a situation. But for a&#13;
year I have been attached to the army,&#13;
and have not rendered any material&#13;
service, while receiving a compensatlon&#13;
for which I make no return.—Iwish&#13;
to be useful, and every kind of&#13;
service necessary for the public good&#13;
becomes honorable by being necessary."&#13;
He spoke, as General Hull remembered,&#13;
with earnestness and decision,&#13;
as one who had considered the matter&#13;
well, and bad made up his mind.&#13;
Having received his instructions, he&#13;
traveled fifty miles along the Sound as&#13;
far as Norwalk, in Connecticut. One&#13;
who saw him there made a very wiss&#13;
remark upon him, to the effect that he&#13;
was "too good looking" to go as a spy.&#13;
He could not deceive. "Some scrubby&#13;
fellow ought to have gone." At Norwalk&#13;
he^assumed the disguise of a&#13;
Dutch schoolmaster, putting on a suit&#13;
of plain brown clothes and a round,&#13;
broad-brimmed hat He had no difficulty&#13;
in crossing the Sound, since he&#13;
bore an order from General Washington&#13;
which placed at his disposal all&#13;
the vessels belonging to Congress. For&#13;
several days everything appears to&#13;
have gone well with him, and there is&#13;
reason to believe that he passed&#13;
through the entire British army without&#13;
detection or even exciting suspicion.&#13;
Finding the British had crossed to&#13;
New York, he followed them. He made&#13;
his way back to Long Island, and nearly&#13;
reached the point opposite Norwalk&#13;
where he hand originally landed. Rendered,&#13;
perhaps, too bold by success, he&#13;
went into a well-known and popular&#13;
tavern, entered into conversation with&#13;
the guests and made himself very&#13;
agreeable. The tradition is that he&#13;
made himself too agreeable. A man&#13;
present, suspecting or knowing that&#13;
he was not the character he had assumed,&#13;
quietly left the room, communicated&#13;
his suspicions to the captain of&#13;
a British ship anchored near, who dispatched&#13;
a boat's crew to capture and&#13;
bring on board the agreeable stranger&#13;
M&lt;« trust r h a r a r t f t r w n « ImratvHatflly vs&gt;.&#13;
vealed. drawings of some of the British&#13;
works, with notes in Latin, wero&#13;
found hidden in the soles of his shoes.&#13;
Nor did ho attempt to deceive !)le capors,&#13;
and tae ifinglleh :aptaia, iamenting,&#13;
as he saga, that " s o fine a fellow&#13;
had fallen into his power,'* seat him&#13;
avenue. It is a strange coincidence&#13;
*hat the house to which he was brought&#13;
to be tried as a spy was the very one&#13;
from which Major Andre departed&#13;
when he went to West Point. Tradition&#13;
says that Captain Hale was examined&#13;
in a greenhuuse which then&#13;
stood in the garden of the Beekman&#13;
mansion.&#13;
Short was his trial, for he avowed at&#13;
once his true character. The British&#13;
general signed an order to his provostmarshal&#13;
directing him to receive into&#13;
his custody the prisoner convicted as&#13;
a spy, and' to see him hanged by tha&#13;
neck "tomorrow morning at daybreak."&#13;
Terrible things are reported of the&#13;
manner in which this noble prisoner,&#13;
this admirable gentleman and hero,&#13;
was treated by his jailer and executioner.&#13;
There are savages in every&#13;
large, army, and it is possible that this&#13;
provost-marshal was one of them. It&#13;
is said that he refused him writing&#13;
materials, and afterward, when Captain&#13;
Hale had been furnished them by&#13;
others, destroyed before his face his&#13;
last letters to his mother and to the&#13;
young lady to whom he was engaged to&#13;
be married. As those letters were&#13;
never received, this statement may be&#13;
true. The other alleged horrors of the&#13;
execution it is safe to disregard, because&#13;
we know it was conducted in the&#13;
usual form and in the presence of&#13;
many spectators and a considerable&#13;
body of troops. One fact shines out&#13;
from the distracting confusion of that&#13;
morning, which will be cherished to&#13;
the latest posterity as a precious ingot&#13;
of the moral treasures of the American&#13;
people. When asked if he had&#13;
anything to say, Captain Hale replied:&#13;
"\ only regTet that I have but one&#13;
life to lose for my country."&#13;
The scene of his execution was probably&#13;
an^ old graveyard in Chambers&#13;
street, which was then called Barrack&#13;
street. General Howe formally notified&#13;
General Washington of his execution.&#13;
In recent years, through the industry&#13;
of investigators, the pathos and&#13;
sublimity of these events have been in&#13;
part revealed.&#13;
TT-I « ^,. , which create monopolies to control&#13;
A\hen Gov. Bliss reached Lansing he prices or *.aait production are an evil&#13;
saw the published report that Warden which must be met bv effective legis-&#13;
Freemun, of the Marquette prison, had latioa, vigorously enforced."&#13;
ordered the flag, which had been halfmasted&#13;
over that institution as a mark&#13;
of respect to the late Gov. Piugree.&#13;
raised to full mast The governor&#13;
promptly sent the following telegram&#13;
to the warden:&#13;
"Is it true that you are not flying&#13;
flag at half-mastr-in accordance with&#13;
my proclamation? Answer."&#13;
Thursday morning the following reply&#13;
was received:&#13;
"Flag has been and is flying in accordance&#13;
with your proclamation.&#13;
Have written you to-day."&#13;
A BuMted Bank.&#13;
The Seventh National Bank of New&#13;
York closed its doors Thursday. Th^&#13;
bank was custodhm of the funds of&#13;
the New York postot!ice.v When the account&#13;
was opened the bank put up&#13;
$250,000 in government bopds as security.&#13;
Tlie bank has on deposit $207.-&#13;
OU) of postal funds. It is said that&#13;
the bank's heavy debt balance was the&#13;
result, of the news of the bank's em&#13;
barrassment on Tuesday being telegraphed&#13;
throughout the country. Interier&#13;
institutions having moneys deposited&#13;
with the Seventh drew on the&#13;
bank, and these drafts, all comTiignrr&#13;
;it the same time, were too much for&#13;
the institution.&#13;
T H E NEWS C O N D E N S E D&#13;
Kru.ser denies cabling an order for&#13;
a wreath for Adelbert Hay.&#13;
Port LImon, Costa Rica, is reported&#13;
again partially destroyed by fire.&#13;
Gov.-Gen. Leonard Wood Unreportedvery&#13;
111 In Havana from grip and malarial&#13;
fever.&#13;
Renewed labor riots in the iron&#13;
-works and cloth factories of St. Petersburg&#13;
have been suppressed by the military&#13;
authorit.es.&#13;
In spite of the usual denials, tb,e&#13;
visit of Emperor William of Germany&#13;
to Rucsia, this summer, is not regarded&#13;
as beyonu the probabilities.&#13;
A meeting of Free Thinkers in Madrid&#13;
met ..or . j e purpose of protesting&#13;
against the holdiag of the juuuee procession.&#13;
Violent anti-clerical speeches&#13;
v/ere maue.&#13;
Prince Chun, brother of the emperor&#13;
of Ciiina, who has been selected to go&#13;
to Berlin a Jul apologize for the murder&#13;
of Baron von Kctteler. will sail for&#13;
Europe July 20.&#13;
The, rasr.alty 15s^s made public by&#13;
the British war allice continue to show&#13;
father severe fighting In various parrs&#13;
of SOUJII Ai'iha that are not reported&#13;
iu the ordinary dispatches.&#13;
One of the chief grounds of comA&#13;
German tirm lias secured the con- plaiur concerning (jrcat Biitalu'a war-'&#13;
traet for electric lighting Pokiu.&#13;
The city council of Newcastle, Pa.,&#13;
have rejected Andrew Carnegie's offer&#13;
to donate money for a free library.&#13;
Society women in- Washington are&#13;
ir.aking pets of white n?ice, and&#13;
"fancy breeders" are reaping a harvest.&#13;
Por.'.r* old Nevada, mining claims left&#13;
Mis. McKinley by her father are prov-&#13;
•'-&gt;"— -, .w|'»&lt; !N!,(o&gt;-! l1)1&lt;'' ^ ^ S a M t h ° y a i e WOl'tU ! r cdiul 'iiagre^rm: is".tAo mEeurri coapne aasg rAicmueltruicrae n icso rao-s&#13;
- l^eiu MaeArthur has ordered 1.500 meree."&#13;
Filipino prisoners of war released in Uneasiness prevails in British shiprhc&#13;
Philippines on promise of peaceful ) pHg circles on account of tin figures&#13;
'"-"*" which show a very consiueraoie inshlps&#13;
in tho Mediterranean is that tin*&#13;
fleet is largely provided with black&#13;
powder and obsolete shells.&#13;
Owing to his increasing feebleness.&#13;
Dr. Lapponi, his physician, has forbidden&#13;
the pope to follow his usual custom&#13;
of passing the hot weather in a&#13;
pavilion in the Vatican garden.&#13;
The Vienna Neue Freie Presse, comr.&#13;
unting upon the fact that Austri.t&#13;
h:is bemm to import American grain.&#13;
behavior&#13;
"Battle medals" to be given participants&#13;
In the Santiago naval campaign&#13;
are to bear the head of Rear-Admiral&#13;
Sampson.&#13;
The government will buy no more&#13;
horses for use in the i'h!lipplnes. owing&#13;
to the cessation of active hostilities iu&#13;
-tin* island*. - _&#13;
The state democratic executive committee&#13;
of Pennsylvania has decided to&#13;
hold the state convention at Harrisburg&#13;
on Aug. 15.&#13;
W. C. Mendenhall, geologist, is leading&#13;
a United States exploration party&#13;
of six in the deepest wilds of Alaska&#13;
for the government.&#13;
(Jen. CorbiOr-fctetv^ Weston, Senator&#13;
Dietrich and Congressman Kahn have&#13;
sailed for Manila from San Francisco&#13;
on an investigating tour.&#13;
Good- judges of the situation assert&#13;
that the great railway "deals" now In&#13;
process of consummation will be completed&#13;
before the crops of 1901 are&#13;
moving.&#13;
Several persons have been burned In&#13;
the tiro which was started Tuesday&#13;
night by lightning striking a tank belonging&#13;
to the Standard Oil Co., at Preble,&#13;
Ind.&#13;
The executive committee of the National&#13;
Hospital for Consumptives, lo-&#13;
:ated at Denver, Col., has received $30,-&#13;
000 to be applied to the building now&#13;
in course of erection.&#13;
A picnic by the El Paso Order of the&#13;
Knights of Labor at Las Cruces, N.&#13;
M., ended In a riot, and as a result&#13;
several were badly hurt and one man&#13;
killed. Three are In jail at Las Cruces.&#13;
Aid. Goodman, of New York, wants&#13;
to send at least 5,000 of the unemployed&#13;
men and women of New York&#13;
city to the fields of Kansas and other&#13;
crease in me number and tonnage of&#13;
foreign vessels entered and cleared at&#13;
British ports last year, as compared&#13;
with 1SUI&gt; and 1S0S.&#13;
A few years ago a bronze statue of, . . . „ » . 1 * . * .&#13;
the young hero was unveiled in the w e l e r n 8 t a t e 8 t 0 h e I p h a r v e s t t n e&#13;
New York City Hall Park. It Is ?rcat- erops.&#13;
, A . ^ . ^ . . , _. I Representatives of the Japanese govly&#13;
to be regretted that our knowledga' eraaJint are in Chicago for the purof&#13;
this noble martyr is so slight; but pose of examining the American&#13;
we know enough to be sure that he horse and ~ie methods of its breeding,&#13;
merits the veneratioa of his country-, with the view of its extensive introluction&#13;
into Japan.&#13;
Adolbort Hay, kilted In New Haven,&#13;
men.&#13;
I ^ t - a ^ x / f . Coim., will be buried in Cleveland.&#13;
e / ' ^ Col. Hay has received thousands of&#13;
messages of condolence, including dispatches&#13;
from King Edward V1I„ President&#13;
Loubet, Earl Roberts, Earl Rosslyn&#13;
Lord Puuncefotc and Sir Henry&#13;
Irving.&#13;
BASE BALL.&#13;
Below we pnbiis!i the si.andi.n7 of&#13;
the American and National league clubs&#13;
up to and inelu lin? the garner played&#13;
an Friday, June 28:&#13;
AM.iit[CAN LBVGCSc&#13;
VVio. Lost. Perov&#13;
CVcvo j 3&gt; 20 .ffM&#13;
fioston.. 3) 19 .612&#13;
Baltimore 20 20 ,5d&gt;&#13;
Washington 2&gt; at .513&#13;
Detroit _ 2» 35 .537&#13;
Pailadelpbta si 31 .401&#13;
Milwaukee... 19 31 J K&#13;
Cleveland..., 18 aj .3&gt;J&#13;
NATIONAL L lAUCE.&#13;
WOT. Lost. Por ci.&#13;
Pittsbur? 31 - 2J .SSI&#13;
New Vork 3d Si ,bt&gt;3&#13;
Pnilndelphia 3J S3 M*&#13;
Brooklyn 29 85 .537&#13;
St. Louis '&amp;) 28 .336&#13;
Boston 35 •»» ^ n&#13;
Cincinnati... 22 30 .433&#13;
Cnicu/o 19 3^ .328&#13;
T H E M A R K E T S .&#13;
LIVE STOCK.&#13;
XeTr Y o r k -&#13;
Cattle Sheep LamM Hogs&#13;
Best grades It fi»V?3&gt;5 00 $4 00 *6 ~i) $8 4T&gt;&#13;
Lower grades... 3 00®3 90 3 00 5 75 6 1!&gt;&#13;
ChlCRIKO—&#13;
Best grades 5 50^6 30 4 40 5 25 6 20&#13;
Lower grades... 4 504^5 40 4 00 4 50 5 80&#13;
Drtrott—&#13;
Best grades 3 805J5 25 4 25 6 50 5 95&#13;
Lower grades... -' 75®3 75 3 25 &amp; 50 5 53&#13;
Unflnlo—&#13;
Best grades 4 90®6 ?5 4 35 6 75 6 5f&gt;&#13;
Lower grades... 3 65#4 00 3 80 6 00 6 70&#13;
C i n c i n n a t i -&#13;
Best grades 5 2&gt;&lt;£5 60 3 60 5 75 6 10&#13;
Lower grades... 4 00^4 75 3 00 5 50 5 8*&#13;
Plttai&gt;nrtr— Best grades 5 40CT5 80 3 85 4 73 6 15&#13;
Lower grades... 3 50®5 00 3 40 4 50 5 50&#13;
GRAIN, ETC.&#13;
Wheat Corn Oats&#13;
No. red No. 2 mix No. 2 wh't*&#13;
New York 74??T4U 47(847½ 33033¼&#13;
Chicago 67fe«7V.t Wi*2~M 26&amp;2SH&#13;
•Detroit 7ift71^ 430 3½ 31^31&#13;
Toledo WOW 4W43 385SS?—&#13;
&lt; fnclnnntl C^tf* 43^3¾ 29^30U&#13;
PlttHltnrur 73JI73H 45*1*45»-, 32(^32&#13;
Unffnlo— 7.^72^ 44^44½ tl#31&#13;
•Detroit—Hay. No. 1 Timothy, H2 75 per&#13;
ton. Potatoes. 55c per bu. Live Poul ry,&#13;
Spring chickens. 10c per lb; fowls. 8Hc;&#13;
turkeys. 9c; ducks. 10^. Eggs, stricter&#13;
fresh. ISc per &lt;*osen. Butter, best dalr**&#13;
15c per lb; creamery, l»c.&#13;
K&#13;
..;,.,.-. .,,,mm*f'r;'fl&#13;
• ' ' • • ' &gt; : &gt; : ^ %&#13;
•'•'• ; &gt; / r w&#13;
/&gt;&#13;
^''•:tt&#13;
n t&#13;
7*1&#13;
»V&#13;
&lt; *&#13;
; v-**&#13;
*wv f &lt;»«*M, viHfy.l - ^ v * * * * - * * "&#13;
:;::^r'&gt;^': .,iw«.aiV(,f',!-.:;..-^'.v.::".."-.,-,.••:. •*.-•• .••-.. — ;." :- -. «•;' •- : •:•:: -.-:• '" . .- ••-^--^. \.&#13;
\v ./. :.-...&#13;
• : « . i W i^'hi-^^i'?^^] - ! ' , ) • • • • • ' . . ' • &gt; ' &amp; * : ; ; ? ' • ' : &gt; ' . ' : • . : , ' / ' ; ' - ;&#13;
•j&gt; \ . • • • ••&#13;
. - . . . •', - • • ' ' • ' ^ •• V.&#13;
/ • i&#13;
• * * . ' ;&#13;
BWff1. "/•- ife'-:- HS.V. .&#13;
BKVIH.1'''"' m'V&#13;
«5^'&#13;
:* 7; - . . t~ - ••- - . ' --&#13;
• . * * * * - 4 -&#13;
• * T ^&#13;
WEST MARION.&#13;
Mrs. Henry Soilth was in How-&#13;
»*,'i&gt;H';..:&#13;
m&#13;
&amp; . . • -&#13;
:;&#13;
MI--&#13;
.^-&#13;
• • ' . • • : * -&#13;
"6&#13;
'v '&#13;
©11 last Wednesday.&#13;
One Day last week lighting&#13;
killed fifteen sheep for George&#13;
Miller.&#13;
The jLadie's Aid Society of&#13;
this place will meet with Mrs.&#13;
Henry Smith July.&#13;
A number from this place attended&#13;
flower day • at the couuty&#13;
farm Sunday afternoon.&#13;
Bev. Clay and wife of Indiana&#13;
who have been visiting his wife's&#13;
parents, Rev. Henitiger returned&#13;
home Thursday.&#13;
A little nephew of Geo. Miller&#13;
while visiting him had the misfortune&#13;
to fall iuto the cistern but&#13;
Mr. Miller was near and was soon&#13;
to the childs rescue.&#13;
A number from this vicinity; The Anderson Farmers' Club&#13;
went to North Lake the Fourth. i meets at the home of Dell 'Hall&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mis. Herbert, f t l K ^ w i *e Saturday afteruoou Julv&#13;
Schoenbals Thursday last a seven&#13;
pound boy.&#13;
The -social a t Mi's. NormanHnxe&#13;
ge8s' last Friday night was a com.&#13;
plete success.&#13;
Mabel Docking of Pinckney&#13;
and Mrs. Ella Docking called at&#13;
N. Pacey's last Sun day.&#13;
Mrs. Horace Williston and Alts.&#13;
Wm. White called on Mrs. D.&#13;
Carr last Saturday afternoon&#13;
Myrtle Dey returned to her&#13;
homf in Handy last Saturday&#13;
18. See program next week.&#13;
STILL MORE LOCAL.&#13;
Dm Lie a n d wile,&#13;
her sum*&#13;
i&gt;or» to Good}&#13;
Junt&gt; 80. a son.&#13;
Kate b r o w n is home for&#13;
mer vacation from Chicago.&#13;
G e r t r u d e and W a l t e r i J a n n with a&#13;
couple at' friends from Detroit, spent&#13;
the past week in c a m p at Portage.&#13;
A TEST OF COURAGE. iu •now tde white feather meant in&#13;
that hostile country Insubordination&#13;
and treachery, Involving Fairow'a&#13;
mysterious death. It was a moment to&#13;
try a soul—and to fry it. The lieutenant&#13;
whispered to his trusted sergeant:&#13;
"1 am going to take a desperate chance.&#13;
It W*» Up to L i e u t e n a n t F a r r o w I am going to shoot myself through&#13;
Oace~fo~^uTflIaTe~^rifIIr-T3«W&#13;
lint t h e Wont P o i n t e r l - e t l H L Wltn&#13;
a n d ISaoaped t u e O r d e a l .&#13;
TORTURES WHICH INDIAN SCOUTS&#13;
BORE WITH SMILING FAJJES.&#13;
Show will I.)H in Jaokson. The G f a n d&#13;
T r u n k wi11 sell tickets to Jauk^on and&#13;
r e t u r n , ir-oludin^ admission to to the&#13;
lifter a w e e k s ' v i s i t w i t h h e r c o u s i n ! s h o * \ t"»" ^1-43. T n e regular t r a i n&#13;
-.&lt; i p * ' v v ' " u e u&lt;eId u n t i l 5:30 to allow a m p l e&#13;
iviaiiue r a c e y . t i m e t 0 a t t e n J t b e b h o w&#13;
M a e B r o g a n c l o s e d a s u c c e s s f u l&#13;
The Indian scouts t h a t joined forces&#13;
with tbe United States army^in 1878&#13;
to make prisoners of the Sheep E a t e r s&#13;
In western I d a h o were skeptical at&#13;
first of Lieutenant F a r r o w ' s abilities&#13;
to lead them Into battle. They bad&#13;
never seen his courage tested qnd&#13;
WedncMiav, J u l v 20, Buffalo Bi'll's ' plainly Intimated by word and action&#13;
• " ' that they bad n o ^ n t e n t i o n of obeying&#13;
his orders unless lie should prove himself&#13;
braver t h a n a n y chtef, subchief or&#13;
buck in the command.&#13;
FlrsJ they gave themselves up to all&#13;
kinds of physical torture as a lesson&#13;
to him. They slashed their bodies&#13;
A l i l l l e c o i l d of Henry C a r p e n r e r&#13;
ca.-hier ot Uexter Savings Hank&#13;
G R E G O R Y .&#13;
Dr. Wright was in Mason last&#13;
Friday.&#13;
Frank Williams lost a horse&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mrs. Hattie Holmes of Lansing&#13;
is visiting in this vicinity.&#13;
Abel Harp's sister of Toledo&#13;
visited/him the past week.&#13;
Lottie Walker of Plainfield visited&#13;
at M. E. Kuhii's last week.&#13;
Mr. Crawford of Byron visited&#13;
at F. A. Daniels's Saturday and&#13;
Suuday.&#13;
Chas. McGee and family visited&#13;
in Jackson the latter part of&#13;
last week.&#13;
The two Misses Kogers of Mancelotia&#13;
visited Persis Daniels the&#13;
latter part of the past week.&#13;
. , with knives without shov/lng pain,&#13;
t e r m of s c h o o l i n t h e M a i i o n ca.-hier ot Uexter Savings Hank WH^J They slit tlio skin on their chests, ran&#13;
C e u t e r D i s t r i c t l a s t F r i d a y , S h e ' b o i n w , t h t w 0 l i l u n ) l , s o n i l p l w l t b a i , d ! skewers thereuiukn- and jerked* ofr&#13;
o v n o „ i 0 f n i(&gt;onu i v o r n fu,*o fall i a f l d L w 0 a : ^ r B t 0 P s o u l e , t f o o t ' D r * ' cutaneous and fleshly strips while suiile&#13;
x p e t t s to t e a c n t n e i e t n i s r a n . ^ . , , , . , . p r o v e d ibe offending n u m b e r s i l n g happily in bis face. Thoy split&#13;
Cre3Sa A b b o t t c l o s e d a 8UCCess-1 a t e ^ ^ v - '**&amp;••- j their ours, pierced their noses, lacer&#13;
ful t e r m of s c h o o l i n t h e W r i g h t ' s \ T r v t h l . ^'~{tl ", v ~ t F o a l n i e l t i a t f ;1 &gt; e i r cl**k*' ""tcheretl their arms&#13;
&amp; ( »'&gt; tin, .sample oi l e a s t l^oam ieit ^ ^ l e g s Their stuuts were so far&#13;
. D i s t r i c t l a s t r n u a y ai^erU' o n ia; \ u u r door tod*y and be convinced , beyond anything Farrow could inflict&#13;
She teaches in theYouoglove District&#13;
this fall.&#13;
i i: mtfkes perfect bread. Y o u r , u p o n W n , g e K t h a t t h e poor young lieus&#13;
u p p l y , tenant thought he "saw bis finish."&#13;
i Suddenly, while rivulets of cold perj&#13;
l n .t i i&#13;
grocer ;iAvays bas a tie^h&#13;
[ E v e r y p^ckaue w a r r a n t e d .&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Harry Heatly spent last Sunday&#13;
spiration trickled down" bis spine, t b e&#13;
stand beside yom* hors%, and j u s t an&#13;
Instaut before I shoot you fire your&#13;
rifle, yell 'Si-wash!' mount a n d m a k e&#13;
off through tbe woods as fast as you&#13;
can ride. Don't forget to fire before I&#13;
do. else I shall be a dead man."&#13;
Sitting upon a jagged rock, he explained&#13;
to tbe Indians what he w a s&#13;
about to do. and with great deliberation&#13;
and some fine theatricals be cocked&#13;
tbe pistol and placed the muzzle&#13;
against his temple. Tbe Indians were&#13;
wrought up to a high pitch. They had&#13;
never seen a man'shoot birnselfth rough&#13;
tbe bead and live. Surely here w a s&#13;
the bravest of all brave leaders. They&#13;
would follow him through bell,&#13;
Tbe s e r g e a n t unnoticed, fired his rifle,&#13;
his "Sl-w*vsb!" woke tbe echoes of&#13;
Shoshone and Bitter Root, and the clatter&#13;
of his horse's hoofs rang down tin?—&#13;
Clear Water as far as Fort Lapwai.&#13;
" S l - w a s b T The Indians knew w h a t&#13;
t h a t ery meant. In less time than it&#13;
takes to tell it Farrow was aloue. H i s&#13;
forces had scattered to the four winds.&#13;
In the course of a few hours all were&#13;
dnited again, but the courage t e s t w a s&#13;
not renewed.&#13;
Twenty-two years after this exciting&#13;
Incident, on a certain evening in 1900,&#13;
r-riraTCBt I'mce i n m e - » o r . o . | West Pointer recollected t h a t in his j F a r r o w occupied a box in the Madison&#13;
Fori-ati-rrlucc, the capital, is—by schoolboy days he was an adept at \ Square Garden when Buffalo Bill's&#13;
in Ami Arbor,&#13;
consent of all who have had upportunl-&#13;
+ t y of-•mtttparing it with other cities—&#13;
T h e&#13;
driving a pin into t h e thick of his&#13;
"vastus ex tern us" without feeling pain&#13;
and t h e joyful inspiration to t h u s illuminate&#13;
his courage seized him.&#13;
IS&#13;
~ ."J - v "-'—-• wig is every uouscnouier s ruumsu injcivei IU Kutt?, uifu ins u r u n f r p iin arena for a (lash around t h e&#13;
E d i t h C o o p e r of Mt. P l e a s a n t , ' »hoot,and slab, sided pigs and starveling t h e front of the thigh w a s exposed to | • i;l ! t the c h a r g e was Interr&#13;
• • ! • , „ l l Q r c - fQY. ( i r i a r a/11. vl'i d 0 « s l*1'1*01""1 a 1 1 the sanitary ortiees the wondering gaze, of the Indians short. When Joseph reachc(&#13;
\ i s i u u a n e r s i s i e i I U I S . u v . o i ^ e | f o r &gt; t h o t ( n v a o f port-au-Priuce save In gathered close around. Then dramat- near the Madison a v e n r - &lt;&#13;
Myra Bird came home from&#13;
Ypsilanti Saturday to spend a&#13;
week with her aunt Betty Marshall.&#13;
Myra has a fine position in&#13;
Chicago for the summer&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
P. Kelly is no better at this&#13;
writing.&#13;
Arthur Bates of Gregory was&#13;
home over Sunday.&#13;
Mabel Monks is Entertaining »&#13;
friend from Cauada.&#13;
R. Harris is working for Wm.&#13;
Gardner during haying.&#13;
Kitt Grieve and Carrie Erwin&#13;
visited friends here Saturday.&#13;
" Wellington Whife and E. John&#13;
son were in Howell one day last&#13;
week. v&#13;
F. Murry and sister of Dexter&#13;
called on friends b e e the first of&#13;
the. week.&#13;
Mabel Tripp and Marguerite&#13;
Linn of Detroit are visiting friends&#13;
and relatives here.&#13;
The hot weather the past few&#13;
days has brought several campers&#13;
to P. Kennedys pleasant camping&#13;
grounds.&#13;
T. C. Cooper is home from&#13;
Stockbridge where he has been&#13;
working in the basket factory at&#13;
that place.&#13;
Julia A Brady closed a very&#13;
successfull term of school in District&#13;
No. 3. Last Friday and Saturday&#13;
the teacher and pupils gave&#13;
a picnic at Van Winkles grove. A&#13;
large crowd was present and a&#13;
good time was had by all.&#13;
SOUTH MARION.&#13;
Haying is in full flower this&#13;
week.&#13;
The strawberry crop is drawing&#13;
to a close.&#13;
Eleauor Brogan visited Anna&#13;
Klein Suuday.&#13;
A. A. Abbott is visiting his son&#13;
I. J. for a few days. \&#13;
Arthur Glenn calledj)n friends&#13;
in Chelsea last week.&#13;
Dell Carr and family visited his,&#13;
jr and mother last Sunday.&#13;
Wild West was In full blast. Chief&#13;
Joseph, the celebrated c o m m a n d e r of&#13;
V i n a B a r t o n w a s s i c k w i t h t h e i IIU&gt; m n m ' s l l1 K U V m l u e ^VU11U- -»-u" ttIlu t u t ? j u y u u inspiration io m u s mu- j t he Nez Perces. whom Farrow had capx&#13;
I town was laid out by the French, ami minate his courage seized him. j tured 2*? years previously and whom&#13;
c h i c k e n p o x Inst w e e k . J the streets are wide. It is only their The necessary pin was in the lapel u 0 had not seen in the interim, led a&#13;
G e r t r u d e W e b b of S t o c k b i i v l c I ^ " e a t w i t l t l 1 t U a t m u k e s t l , 0 U 1 P*»*&amp;- of his fatigue jacket. Itnthlessly he w n c j , whooping, yelling, screeching&#13;
f o i , &lt; L ° b l ° ' f o r t l j i e roadway before his dwell- silt t h e front of his breeches leg from , n r v 0 f painted Indians out into tbe&#13;
s p e n t b u n t l a y a t h o m e . I m ? is every householder's rubbish pocket to knee, then bis drawers till arena for a dash around t h e circle.&#13;
rupted—cut&#13;
reached t h e curve&#13;
-_- - — end of t h e&#13;
G o o d w i n . j the rainy season, when a heavier storm ically exhibiting t h e pin, an affajr of amphitheater, be pulled his horse sharp-&#13;
' t h a n usual comes to flush the open an i n c h ' a n d a sixteenth, he reached ly to the right, cutting across, t h e first&#13;
A l e x I y p e r a n d w i l e a n d \\ u i | ¢ , . ^ 8 . \u consequence the populace for a flat stone and drove the harmless m 0 0 f warriors in tmjst-da-ugeroutj fash-&#13;
B a r n u m a n d wife s p e n t S u u d a y a-'J live iu an atmosphere of combined | bit of wire down to the head In tbe i01L i„ a m a ( j g a i ] 0 p ho poked his&#13;
C a v a n a u ' d i l a k e . j cesspool and ash pit, which by a l l t h e , unresisting muscle. His handsome charger's head into an arena box,&#13;
° laws of hygiene should produce chronic i face was as unclouded as when lie I ^traif^litened up in ins stirrups, held&#13;
J o s i e C o l l i n s of B i l l O i k fir en t ! plague. ', helped to haze bis tirst plebe. I out his hand and cried: "Howl Flow!&#13;
S u u d a y w i t h h e r m o t h e r . . . i d . ! ' T h e freo and independent negro leadri j . The red men nodded approvingly, How!" The old fellow had caught&#13;
Q, . , * , . , i the life that most nearly approaches grunted, looked wise and sat d o w n on! S j; 4,t 0 f Farrow, and nothing could&#13;
{ S h e p h e r d or t i l t s p l a c e , h i s i ( l o a l T h ( i y ] i a v o ,; 1)1.ovtn.L) j n t\l0 | their haunches. They had seen some- pivvent him from riding up to salute&#13;
country that "only whit* men. black thing new, but wanted something more U j s captor of 1878. It was a dr;&#13;
women and asses work," and there i s ' convincing. F a r r o w realized this and I incident .—New York Press.&#13;
w a s in the seventh heaven of despair&#13;
Mrs. Ii. W. Allen and son Avthur—&#13;
of North—Lake visited at-&#13;
Wm. Pyper's Saturday.&#13;
Fannie Laverock from Owo»so&#13;
High School is spending her vacation&#13;
with her perents here.&#13;
Mrs. Chapman and family of&#13;
Chicago are the guests of her&#13;
father-in-law Foster Chapman and&#13;
other relatives at this p1a«e.&#13;
Iramatic&#13;
as he smilingly pulled out the pin and&#13;
held It aloft for insDeeti.on.&#13;
A N D E R S O N&#13;
Nearly everyone hasbetjOn nay-&#13;
G o m m e n c i n S c J u l y 19 'If Pita S t o w wSLf c l o s e&#13;
IS&#13;
on&#13;
J.&#13;
TUg. .&#13;
Mrs. E.'J. Durkee was in Chelsea&#13;
Wednesday.&#13;
Floyd Durkee of near Mnniih&#13;
Sunday ed at home.&#13;
. Will Roche diove oyer to Pleasant&#13;
Lake last week.&#13;
Lev. Miller and wife called at&#13;
Frank JV-nies one day last weol-..&#13;
frank D. Eaman of Det'oii&#13;
vivd'.'n^ old fi iends in Auocr&#13;
nnd vicinity.&#13;
E. M. Jeffrey's and Mrs. E.&#13;
DurVee's houses have been receiving&#13;
a coat of paint.&#13;
Mrs. Clarence Powell and child.&#13;
ren id visitii-;.; 1 r-r b.-ofhers and&#13;
sisters in this place.&#13;
Ralph Cobb and wife of Stockbvidtre&#13;
wore guests at Mis. E. J.&#13;
DuTsoe's ov r Sunday.&#13;
Chas. Kci!o.q;e: of Detroit at tended&#13;
the funeial of his uncle C. E.&#13;
Bullis Sr. last Tuesday.&#13;
Margaret Greiner who hns been&#13;
attending sphool at Mt. C1 emeu&amp;&#13;
returned home last- week.&#13;
E. M. Jeffrey's is having Lis va&#13;
cation from the ele alov this week.&#13;
Mike Roche is cnrir.g for it.&#13;
C. E. Bullis Sr. who was placed&#13;
in the vault was rem ved to the&#13;
truth in it. Tbe hlacu man lies arounu&#13;
all day sleeping in the sun. His utmost&#13;
effort is to play dice or watch a cockfight,&#13;
but sleep is his favorite occupation,&#13;
and he can do that better than&#13;
anything else. In the country districts&#13;
the old plantations have long&#13;
since slipped hack, into the luxuriant overgrowth of the forest, in tow01 p P i d a y a f t e r n o o n s af 1 2 : 3 0 unit il S e p t . 1st*&#13;
any trading done Is by the women and i ; ... _ '&#13;
by foreigners. Undisturbed by the&#13;
white nijin, io Avboni lie is insolent, the&#13;
town bred negro is pacific enough. T b e&#13;
oniy exciiion ih-inanded of him is to&#13;
avoid the attentions of the police.—&#13;
Chambers' Journal.&#13;
Hosiery at Red Mark&#13;
riii&gt;* Hosiery do j ifnu-nt «t »11 timen is&#13;
not&lt;'d f-r lii»ving the :&gt;"s t ?!iid !»u&gt;st sroi^ftic-&#13;
-•,K&gt;ry \ ivu'is,&#13;
' . i&#13;
Iin lire ' IT i&#13;
^ i t e i i ' 3 t i n " t» n n d t h e W a i t e r .&#13;
^Uuele Min^!&gt; was in town a day or&#13;
two ago. it had been a long time since&#13;
the old man had been to Savannah, and&#13;
he rambled over the streets all the&#13;
morning, impressed with the wonderful&#13;
things be saw.&#13;
Xaturaify toward the midday he began&#13;
to feel a little tired and very hungry,&#13;
so as he passed in front of one of&#13;
the eating houses for colored people, of&#13;
Which there are several in the neighborhood&#13;
of the Plant system depot, the&#13;
succulent, piles of edibles in the windows&#13;
offered too great a temptation to&#13;
be resisted. lie entered the r e s t a u r a n t&#13;
and sat down to a table.&#13;
"All right, sab," said the "affable&#13;
waiter, o m i n g up. "WotTI it be?"&#13;
"I want," said Uncle Mingo unctuously,&#13;
"f.ome i»' dat fried fish, een de&#13;
winder an a piece o* dat pie."&#13;
"Yes. sab. Wot else?"&#13;
"I want some o' dat fried chicken,&#13;
too, an some o' dem doughnuts."&#13;
"Yes, sab. Wot else?"&#13;
"I want tome o' dat bam and some&#13;
town bread."&#13;
"Yes. sab. Wot else?"&#13;
"An I want a cup o' tea."&#13;
"Cup o' tea. Yes, sab. Wot kind o'&#13;
tea?"&#13;
"Wot kin o' tea I w a n t ? " replied t h e&#13;
old man, with a severe look. "Wot kin&#13;
you 'spec* I w a n t ? I w a n t sto' tea, sto'&#13;
tea. You t'ink I conic on de train all de&#13;
way from Possum Holler for to drink&#13;
sac-cafe*V'~Savannah \&gt;w«.&#13;
hi Ot!&#13;
l u r i n g&#13;
to J l y e you s o m e o.Ti,&#13;
ii l r. t ccv m;iy not look"&#13;
m o r e desiri'i I en p ]n-e t hsrir &lt;; &gt;nie o d i e r&#13;
linuseb may advei [i«,e, but we would really&#13;
like io have von see (lie specially good&#13;
lied M^rk tr.ides. b&#13;
Ladies' Hosiery&#13;
". P.l-uk Hose, with Wiile K»elHig!diy im;&lt;erf&lt;xn). Red M.'irk. 10(..&#13;
•".» l-ii.ek H o s e , with d e u M e In el ;md &gt;oe a- d d o u b l e s d e ; , \l&gt;y,\ Miil\&#13;
K k Ilo^e, iloilble I.eels .-ill \ ':*"•&gt;. Wed Ml k. 0.-.&#13;
lilu k [lose, M:»e &gt; v n i , Pod Mark. •••* &lt; p:i'r -'&gt;e&#13;
12c.&#13;
i •&#13;
;N&#13;
]-u-&#13;
1 "ic P h ' (&#13;
&gt;J'.e U i b i e d l o ; ; lilaek !Io-'*. re*-''!.;' r-i-i.ie&#13;
'2"&gt;e W h i ' i Koru ;&gt;nd H n, f W1 .!!'' I ' "i l » . » e . u e&#13;
:&gt;.H P l a i n r.ittck. U i in Ko.-t and H a l f W ' l i l - V&#13;
.'&gt;o. L..c( l . i b k s . O - i v v \\\&#13;
oOe Phiir. JihM-k I.Nle I P&#13;
d M:lJ!v. VX&#13;
i :-i••«'.;. :r-c&#13;
•&lt;.f l U e . iled Murk, :?0e.&#13;
c k . :dl i.i'W )i •!:&lt;•:•'&gt;. lied Mui'k, -•" .&#13;
e iiid II?If White Fcr.. Uii\ M ik,&lt;?oc.&#13;
Fancy Hose&#13;
o t e l'.i;:(v I! i s e .&#13;
&gt;|:-::k. -1-1^&#13;
; P e ¥•*• cy H e .&#13;
7-"e 1': M V l i t ^e,&#13;
c h e d e vi n . t n c hi(jik ( i' " ( J F a n e k Kcd&#13;
in ri'W i'r •C.Vu h i e II.de rmd -..-11 Is euibrohhifd,r oeJ Ud Mark,&#13;
^ 1 . ^ F.&#13;
g*l.."u V&#13;
:"V 1 r&lt;*&lt; :.;•(! 111 T V I : T P I f : , e . r ; ; ( ] M a r k . O S c .&#13;
I / &lt;-e i ff'-ets in b l u e s , redf*.&#13;
Kcd M;&gt;ik $ 1 . 2 5 . ildren's Hose&#13;
lfk; Hoys' Iliavy P.leycte IP i. IVd M«tk, l i e .&#13;
"2i.v 1't'v.s' I ! &lt; / w li "evele IP M, not BQ&lt; ic than hrdf desren Io n customer&#13;
ll^c'Misses' Fii.r P.:I brd I'rre. donb'e kiKO, Ped Marked, two p;dr f( r&#13;
2"»e Misses' i'e'ka i»ot i b s e , bine, r r d a r d hi ck, P&lt; d Mm::, 2]c.&#13;
2oc Misses' Half \Y!&gt;ite Foot, double knee. Red Mark, 2:Jc.&#13;
pnrpitfi, rose&#13;
Roil Mark,&#13;
:oc.&#13;
Men's Hose&#13;
Socki,&#13;
" / I ' l l )&#13;
OMMtSSiONERN Nr&gt;TTrK.-**^t«» of V I P ' , 1&#13;
i"iii fountv of l.ivlnff£tf»n,SS.—t'robat" Court&#13;
for Haiti cou.itv. KeUtte r»f&#13;
JAMKS H. BARTON, Pprp&amp;'ert.&#13;
j The underBi^"*11 ha. iti^ l*cn anpolntpl. hv t]-&lt;»&#13;
' Jn'hroof Prnlmteof &lt;&lt;ni(i countv, c immi*pion*»r*&#13;
^ OT» HretriB In th» matter of said est:«if»». and \sfxoprout&#13;
comotery l i e s d r y mom- niorihHfmni th#» ii-td^vofjiine A. P .'ooi. hav-&#13;
Jujr been at'owe&lt;1 liy saMJiKlge of Prr&gt;hato to all&#13;
persons holfling claims agafnst *»W «»&lt;&gt;tat«» tn&#13;
Feet,&#13;
i n g .&#13;
Will Koclit* Ijegan work for&#13;
Harry gtng^ton aud 'DilHvan&#13;
Durkee for Fred Howlett Toesday.&#13;
-Bob Hoff rode to Lansing last&#13;
Wednesday on his wheel in 6 hrs.&#13;
Pretty ^ood Rob for this warm&#13;
wea ther.&#13;
50 dcz. MfiVM I'inck end Tan Sccki. Red&#13;
Marked, '1 p:dr f(,r "Joe.&#13;
00 doz. Men's l'.)c: P&gt;hrk and Tan&#13;
Re«! M:uk. 2 pair for 2-V.&#13;
40dez. Men'= 1"" F:o c y S ; h ; , R e « l Mark,"&#13;
}&gt;li;e *:id Pdiick, :&gt; p«.ir jor !?"&gt;p.&#13;
o(&gt; lioz. Men's 7c woik S« eksf Re^ y \|arkt 5&#13;
pair f. &gt;r 2"&gt;c.&#13;
Men's 2.*e HUck S(K;ks, with Whiu?&#13;
RedMark, 2:'c.&#13;
Men'R 2oe. p;.iin Pdack, Brown nnd Black&#13;
witli half \Vijin»'Foot, Med M.rk, 22c&#13;
Men's 2.'o FHieies. Bines, Il.ds, L-,ce&#13;
I isles, Silk Embroidered, R^l Mark.&#13;
2 l c . •&#13;
which to pTPsoiil^lfcir r?laitt*» to us f&gt;r rx.".r.ii-&lt; . . , , , , . ,&#13;
naitonand a-ijnstm^t. JIl*» V ^ l'»ncie». Black Lace L.nles Bjue Lr.^e U*\,*t RedMn-k, 44c.&#13;
~SUOceTTBerehy alven that wTwHl h».-»t o, i ^ t of Sample left from our AnnnnI H.wery Kale in Men's, Ladle*' and Children'*,&#13;
tbetweiityiir* day of SepHm^r A. 1».. 1.),«:, pv,rv na.r RP,1 M.rlrprl &gt;&#13;
and on the twentyiirst day of Decern in:, A. 1).&#13;
1W\, at ton o'clock a. in. of each day, at the&#13;
Hnckney Sxchan({e Bank In th* villag* of&#13;
lMncknry In natd coijily, to receire and exandue&#13;
Rtich cltiims.&#13;
Pa ted: Ho veil, Mich , June !it, A. i&gt;. 1002.&#13;
f&#13;
every pair Red Marked.&#13;
'•srrmKPr*&#13;
j&#13;
, * • * . &gt; *&#13;
h.fants' IP siery, Black, Blue, Red, IVdc and WMie (dole T . &gt; e a d . Red Marked 2¾.&#13;
Infants* Lnce Lisle Hose in Red awl Black, Red Mark, 2 pair for "oc '&#13;
Infants' Plain Rwl Hose, Red Mark, 3 pair for 25c.&#13;
THfTll; MlbllSPaNr&#13;
Jackson, Mich.&#13;
a ^&#13;
jjv^or.^fc'^rr-'-it??&#13;
~JL&amp;. -Jr'iy*&#13;
m&#13;
*••- - —"*-» i d A ^ . 1_ K^Atlf, • *&amp;£* *;• »*i| ^ 1 ^ ^ 2&#13;
IT ^% ~mv*m wmwitu*MfKmt3mmmrrnr*. l/v^.</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="36758">
              <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="6943">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch July 04, 1901</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6944">
                <text>July 04, 1901 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="6945">
                <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="6946">
                <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="6947">
                <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="6948">
                <text>1901-07-04</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6949">
                <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="1003" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="931">
        <src>https://archives.howelllibrary.org/files/original/0d583a3d4eb49414b0f75d9edf1aa3e9.pdf</src>
        <authentication>d9129202d7bf237504cdf380dd8d53ab</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="32317">
              <text>VOL. XIX. PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, JULY. 11, 1901. N o. 28,&#13;
LOCAL N E W S .&#13;
Ice Cream at tbe town ball Saturday&#13;
night.&#13;
Norma Curlett, of Dexter, visited"&#13;
Allie Hoff tbe past week.&#13;
It is stated that the value of t b e&#13;
silver dollar of 1895 is $12 00.&#13;
Mrs. G. Crabbe and family of Grand&#13;
Bapids are spending tie week at T.&#13;
Bead's.&#13;
Mr3. W. J. Black and children were&#13;
•isitinsr in Plainfield tbe last of last&#13;
week.&#13;
E. L. Markey, wile and son, of Battle&#13;
Creek called on relatives in town&#13;
Tuesday.&#13;
Mrs. Weltba Vail of Blisstield is vis&#13;
itmg her parents, A, B. Green and&#13;
"wife "oTTti"is"pta"ce. r&#13;
This year saw the fewest number of&#13;
people at Portage the fourth than for&#13;
several years back.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Collins of Webster&#13;
are the proud possessors of twins,&#13;
a boy and girl, born June 26.&#13;
Several from beie took in the excursion&#13;
to Detroit Saturday to the&#13;
funeral of Hon. Hazen S. Plngree.&#13;
Will Doyle was in Howell last Fri-I JobnMier.of Farraiugton, visited&#13;
day. his parents here this week.&#13;
Miss Villa Martin was is Howell&#13;
Monday.&#13;
C. L. Grimes was in Fowlerville and&#13;
Howell Monday.&#13;
Valentine Wiegand of tfettysvtfte I o w * ' * v i s i t i t t * to mQthe^ Mt** J*&#13;
is among the sick.-*'&#13;
Peter Coniway, wife and son Ruel,&#13;
were in Howell Friday.&#13;
Mrs. Will Dunning ana son Myron&#13;
visited friends in Detroit the past&#13;
week.&#13;
M rs. K. H. Crane spent part of tbe&#13;
past week with her parents in Hartland.&#13;
Postmaster Swarthout was in De&#13;
troit tbe last of last week and h'rst of&#13;
this. _ _ _ _ __ __ _ __&#13;
The Misses Ella and Cora Devereaux&#13;
visited Howell friends last Saturday&#13;
and Sunday.&#13;
Eugene Campbell and family enjoyed&#13;
a trip to Detroit, and Port Huron&#13;
by boat, the past we«k'.&#13;
Geo. Sykes of Detroit is spending a&#13;
few days with his people and other&#13;
relatives at this place.&#13;
Mrs. C. B. Eaman and daughter of&#13;
Several from this place took in tbe&#13;
Wild West show at Jackson, Wednesday.&#13;
Mrs. Maggie Melvin, 'of Sheldon,&#13;
Dr. Bert Green, wife and daughter j Garden City Kansas are the guests of&#13;
of Stockbridcre spent part of last week&#13;
in camp at Portage with the Green&#13;
families.&#13;
Mondays Tribune contained a (rood&#13;
halftone of Hon G. W. Teeple, also&#13;
a write-up of bis banking business&#13;
here.&#13;
Mrs. Robt. Culhana and daughters&#13;
Flora and Josie returned the fourth&#13;
from Port Huron where they had&#13;
been visiting Mrs, C's sister.&#13;
Miss Pacia Hinchey who has been&#13;
attending the 11th crade of High&#13;
School at this place the past year, was&#13;
her mother, Mrs. E. W. Martin.&#13;
Tbe Anderson Farmer's Club will&#13;
meet at the home of Dell Halt Saturday&#13;
July 13. All are invited to attend.&#13;
A KFD route from Webberville&#13;
now comes within 2$ miles of Plainfield,&#13;
tuts supplying many who for-&#13;
Oierly received mail there.&#13;
M. Kearjaey.&#13;
Freeraont Kennedy and two sons, of&#13;
Nebraska, are visiting bis mother and&#13;
other relatives here for a few weeks.&#13;
Miss Eva Smith, who has been visiting&#13;
frienis here for a few weeks, returned&#13;
to her home at Roots, Wednesday,&#13;
accompanied by Miss Hazel&#13;
Vaughn.&#13;
The Cong'l church and society will&#13;
serve ice cream at the home of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. W. A. Carr, Saturday even-&#13;
4*ftrMy 20th, to which-4tll are cordially&#13;
invited. SECT.&#13;
Patrick McGinnes of Dexter was&#13;
thrown from his reaper Tuesday morning&#13;
and his shoulder was badly broken.&#13;
He was drivioi? over rough&#13;
ground and th3 wheel stric«&lt;ing a&#13;
stone threw him off on the down hill&#13;
side, Dr. Sigler attended him.&#13;
W. A. Foot, manager of the Boland&#13;
lines, says it is hard work to secure a&#13;
sufficient number of men to push the&#13;
work of road building. Tbe company&#13;
pay8 §1.75 per day for men S3 50 for&#13;
man and team, and yet they are unable&#13;
to get as many as tbey desire.&#13;
Owing to this scarcity.&#13;
"Jim" O'Donnell, editor of the Jackson&#13;
Citizen and one of the best k-nown&#13;
politicians in Michigan, sat down on&#13;
a set bear trap in a Jask^on hardware&#13;
Clyde Peden is visiting in Howell&#13;
and Holly.&#13;
Whortleberries are nearly ready&#13;
for tbe shippers.&#13;
Raspberries are near'y a failure in&#13;
this section, owing to the hot winds.&#13;
Want Column.&#13;
NOTICE.&#13;
J. W. Monks Doctor of Dental Surgery.&#13;
Office over Sisrler's drug store.&#13;
FOR SALE—Top buggy 1,000 mile&#13;
oiler-rgood condition. C. W. RICE.&#13;
W A N T E D :&#13;
Strawberries, raspberries and other&#13;
small fruit on subscription at this&#13;
office.&#13;
Notice t &gt; Taxpayers.&#13;
Tbe village tax-roll is now in my&#13;
hands and all taxes must be paid not&#13;
later than August 15,1901.&#13;
t-28 J. A. CADWELL, Treasurer.&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
Flouring Mills.&#13;
We have given the mill a complete&#13;
overhauling and can now say oar&#13;
flour is not only as good, bnt we&#13;
warrant every sack to be better&#13;
than any made in this section of&#13;
the state. For best satisfaction get&#13;
• CREAM LOAF " FLOUR.&#13;
I want to buy wheat and corn;&#13;
and have now plenty of bran and&#13;
middlings for sale.&#13;
F. M. PETERS, Prop!&#13;
W h e n in n e e d o f&#13;
Mrs. Orla Jackson's Sunday school&#13;
class of tbe Cong'l church, will serve&#13;
ice croam at tbe Town Hall Saturday&#13;
evening July 13. Everyhody invited.&#13;
F. L. Andrews and wife spent three&#13;
one of tbe sucsessful ones to receive a ' days the past week in Dehoit visiting&#13;
third grade certificate a t tbe teachers [friends and attending tbe July meetstore&#13;
the other day, and since then he&#13;
has taken his meals off the clock shelf,&#13;
and sleeping on bis "front side." Jim&#13;
says it's no laughing matter, and we&#13;
should say it wasn't.—Ex.&#13;
There was just enough' pulling at&#13;
the school meeting Monday evening&#13;
to make it lively. The terms of trustees&#13;
W. A. Carr and T. Read ran out&#13;
= ^ - ^^ — j • ! this year and F. A. Sig!er was eleeted&#13;
* - J O ' B p r t S c h o e n h a i ' s ba,-n&gt; w i t b the con-j to take tbe place of Mr. Read while&#13;
L Q W a r Q A . B O W i n a n , j tents including over 30 tons of bay,; M „ &lt;fcrr was re-elected. It was voted&#13;
ijusteast of Howell, was struck ty j , 0 r &amp; l s e §1,400 by tax this year which&#13;
-rbrbtniner j uly 4- and-bumnpdto the I j s ^aoOTees'IB^WTaltyel^ThTTealoT&#13;
Kr o u n d - ; for this is that there have not to be&#13;
Poles are being set and *vir*sstrung! any repairs this year.&#13;
Boys' Clothing&#13;
I c a n s h o w y o u a good l i n e in s i z e s f r o m 8&#13;
t o 1 5 y e a r s - P r i c e s From&#13;
$2.00 A S U I T ™- $ 4 . 7 5&#13;
examination in June. ling of the Eastern Michigan Press&#13;
(Club.&#13;
teFARTMENT&#13;
STORE . . . . .&#13;
HOWELL - MICHIGAN&#13;
Hammocks&#13;
Croquet Sets&#13;
Iron Express Wagons&#13;
Fire Works.&#13;
Best Glass Jelly Tumblers&#13;
full half-pint size,&#13;
2 0 c per doz&#13;
and a new building is nearing completion,&#13;
which will soon give Howell&#13;
citizens some light. Everything is to&#13;
be in readiness by Sept.. 1.&#13;
Manny Hoofineprer of Parkers Corners&#13;
who has been suffering several&#13;
weeks from inflamation of tbe knee&#13;
joint as a result of a wound was able&#13;
to ride to town yesterday.&#13;
Jay Red field, of Iosco, has, in all&#13;
We give cash coupons with j probability, the largest bee hive in&#13;
every purchase. Beautifull gifts • this county at least. He kept finding&#13;
honey bees in the chamber of his residence&#13;
and an examination revealed&#13;
given fr«e with $2 in trade.&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
Next to P o t t O f f i c e .&#13;
Mail orders&#13;
Carefully filled.&#13;
the fact that a swarm of bees had entered&#13;
through a targe knot hole in the&#13;
siding and filled more or less of the&#13;
space between tbe studding.&#13;
Prof. J. E. Kirtland, formerly of&#13;
Howell, Michigan, and a graduate of&#13;
tbe University of Michigan will go to&#13;
Manila to teach, in t :e employ of the&#13;
goverment. For the past three yeirs&#13;
Prof Kirtland has bad charge of the&#13;
Salmon Bay high school in the city of&#13;
Ballard, a suburb of Seattle, Wash*&#13;
ington. Mrs. Kirtland will accompany&#13;
her husband and they will ?ail on the&#13;
transport Thomas from SanFrancisco&#13;
July 23.&#13;
You w i l l find the goods of the best makes&#13;
and the prices the lowest.&#13;
W. W. BARNARD.&#13;
WE&#13;
always carry the finest and most complete&#13;
line of Hardware in Livingston&#13;
county.&#13;
ARE&#13;
you in need of anything in our line?&#13;
If so we invite vou to call and get our&#13;
prices as&#13;
THE PEOPLE&#13;
who trade with us are always satisfied.&#13;
Our prices are right and we deal square.&#13;
Respectfully Yours,&#13;
TEEPLE &amp; CADWELL&#13;
Children Want a Share.&#13;
Duripg the next year a bitter will&#13;
contest is to be fought out in the circuit&#13;
court of this county. William D.&#13;
Smith of the township of Dexter 'died&#13;
J nee 9, 1901 leaving a will bearing&#13;
date June 1, 1897. By tbe terms on&#13;
this will he left all his property to&#13;
Martha French, to whom he refers in&#13;
the will as "my friend for many years/&#13;
Mrs. French was also made executrix&#13;
' the will.&#13;
Rol&gt;ert A. Smith of Jackson and bis&#13;
sisters, Grace Peterson, Margaret Peterson,&#13;
Alice Hewitt and Maude J.&#13;
Smith, sold heirs-at-iaw of the deceased,&#13;
are contesting the prolate of&#13;
the paper purrorting to be his will.&#13;
They charge nndue influence and&#13;
fraud and declare that William D.&#13;
Smith was incompetent at tbe time ot&#13;
tbe execution of this instrument now&#13;
being offered for probate. Tbey set&#13;
up that bis mini was poisoned against&#13;
bin sole heirs and tbe natural objects&#13;
of his l.ounty%&#13;
They have bled their objections in&#13;
tbe probate court of this county and&#13;
have retained Cavanangh &amp; Wedemeyer&#13;
to represent their interests.&#13;
The estate is variously estimated at&#13;
from $1600 to $30,000 and will he&#13;
bitterly fought for,—A. A. Charier.&#13;
Potato Bugs&#13;
are the rage.&#13;
Paris Green&#13;
London Purple&#13;
will kill 'em.&#13;
We&#13;
Keep it. "i't \&#13;
F. A. SIGLER.&#13;
DragHftet.&#13;
TALMAeFS- S M M O N ^ ^ g ^ i STATUES HISTOKY.&#13;
^vV^iv;.!-'-,;yf ^ / . ^ : ^ v .7.. :^,^:^77-7&#13;
*Vrf*&#13;
'tftfW1&gt; &lt; -v- r"V&#13;
v. * '&#13;
V S'*'&#13;
:&amp;7*F'&#13;
-*-vi;v; '•••&gt;;&#13;
S T O W&#13;
, * ^'''''Vjp^f^fllf&#13;
#1$ ; . . * : : •&#13;
; • &amp;&#13;
••v"V'&#13;
•M. 7,^^7¾&#13;
....-1.-&#13;
- - . - - - * — - - - ^ -&#13;
•i')t.'"'JW . i?S»#Si mmmm&#13;
i w «««- ;U*jiJEt.&lt;&#13;
C H R I S T I A N E N D E A V O R L A S T&#13;
S U N D A Y ' S S U B J E C T .&#13;
mid tfce C»r« Conaa, Saith tho&#13;
fjord. That th» H o w m m Shu 11 Over"&#13;
-ftgkr-tirg *tf»pcrM—Ann*, U,&#13;
^Vorc* of tho Ulble.&#13;
defensa of Shak.speare's t a g d.es or&#13;
Gladstone's tracts or Macaulay's "H »•&#13;
tory cf England?" You know that&#13;
there are a thousand men who would&#13;
die ID the defense of this book wtnre&#13;
there is not more than one man who&#13;
would die in tho dfense of any othar&#13;
W^pyrlffbt, 1C01, Louia Klopsch, N. Y.)&#13;
Vashlagtoji, July 7.—Although Dr. fnage was hindered from attending&#13;
great annual meeting of the Chris-&#13;
Endeavor society a t Cincinnati,&#13;
sermons show him to bo in symwlth&#13;
the great movement;&#13;
Amos is., 13, "Behold the days&#13;
saith the Lord, that the plownian&#13;
shall overtake the reaper."&#13;
Unable because of other important&#13;
dirties to accept the Invitation to take&#13;
in the great convention of Chrls-&#13;
Endeavorers at Cincinnati, began&#13;
week, I preach a sermon of congratulation&#13;
for all the members of that&#13;
magnificent association, whether now rhered in vast assemblage or busy&#13;
their places of usefulness, transatlantic&#13;
and cisatlantic, and as it is&#13;
j^fMr harvest time in the fields and&#13;
cfofclca are fiaching in the gatherings&#13;
i a great crop, I find mighty sugges-&#13;
4kfseness in my text.&#13;
ft is a picture of a tropical clime,&#13;
tsfth a season so prosperous that the&#13;
flMT^t rpnf:hr\a clear over to the&#13;
Ranting time, anil the swarthy hupt&amp;&#13;
ndman, busy cutting the grain, almost&#13;
feels the breath of the horse3&#13;
^D his shoulders, the horses hitched to t&gt; plow, preparing for a new crop,&#13;
ehold the d;iys come, saith the Lord,&#13;
t ^ a t the plowman shall overtake the&#13;
-^baper.** When is that? That is now.&#13;
"^hat is this day, when hardly have&#13;
;jfon done reaping one harvest of religious&#13;
result than the plowman is&#13;
getting ready for another.&#13;
In phraseology charged with all&#13;
?6nom and abuse and caricature I&#13;
J&amp;tow that infidel3 and agno.stics hava&#13;
'declared " that Christianity hr^a collapsed;&#13;
that the Bible is. an obsolete&#13;
»k; that the Christian church is on&#13;
le retreat. I eha'l answer that wholeilc&#13;
charge today.&#13;
-Growth of Mirlfttlnnlty.&#13;
Illinois will, defeat him/ That end.d&#13;
ai4i prospect of his nomination." I "&#13;
The Christian religion is mlghtlei INTERESTING PACTS C O N C E R N -&#13;
*&#13;
, { * ;&#13;
T /r.&#13;
today than it ever wa«. Do yo»i thins&#13;
that such a scene could be enacted now&#13;
as was enacted in the da71 of Hobes&#13;
pierre, when a shameless woman was&#13;
elevated to the dignity of a goddess&#13;
INQ T H E PENN MONUMENT.&#13;
thedral where incense was burned to&#13;
her and people bowed down before her&#13;
as a divine being, she taking the place&#13;
-bookr Yeu-tyy to insult-my common , nmi P»VHPJ ip ft golden chair to a ca&#13;
sense by telling me the Bible is fading&#13;
out from the world. It is the most&#13;
popular book of the centuries.&#13;
How do I know it? I know it Just as&#13;
I know in regard to other books. How&#13;
many volumes of that history are&#13;
published?,.Well, you say 5 000. How&#13;
many copies of another book are published?&#13;
A hundred thousand. Which&#13;
is the more popular? Why the one that&#13;
has the hundred thousand circulation.&#13;
And if this book ha* more copies&#13;
abroad in the world, if there a r e five&#13;
times as many Bibles abroad as any&#13;
other book among civilised nations,&#13;
does not that show you that the most&#13;
popular book en earth today is the&#13;
word of God?&#13;
"Oh," say people, "the church Is a&#13;
collection or hypocrites, and it is losing&#13;
its power, and it is fiding out .from&#13;
the world." Is it? A bishop ot the&#13;
Methodiit church told me that that denomination&#13;
averages two new churches&#13;
every day. la other words, th2y&#13;
build 7S0 churchy in that d:nom'.nation&#13;
in a year, and there are at lea3t&#13;
1,500 new Christian churches buTt in&#13;
America cv?ry year. DOP3 that look&#13;
as though the Christian church wsre&#13;
fading out, as though it were a defunct&#13;
institution? What stands n ar.st to&#13;
the hearti of the American p-ople today?&#13;
I do not care in what vil'.aga or&#13;
what city or what neighborhood you&#13;
go. What is it? Is it the po3^offl?e?&#13;
Is it the hote1? T3 it the lecturing&#13;
hall? Ah, you know it is not! You&#13;
know that that which stands near st&#13;
to tho hearts of the American p^opl?&#13;
is the Christian church.&#13;
Hetol Shoes Rcp».r«d~~Stata» W*« Dlown&#13;
Down—TtM Memorial Quo* In » Junk-&#13;
•hop-—Mow ou the Ut-a^lt*! Oio*u la&#13;
- ruimu»i|»ma. — ———n&#13;
Hot** o » m * ,pt*iym0^r&#13;
We . cal* &lt; the attention of &lt;mr&#13;
readers to the advertisement of Notrw&#13;
Dame University, one of the great educational&#13;
institutions of the West,&#13;
which appears in another column of,.&#13;
this paper. Those of our readers who&#13;
may have occasion to look up a college&#13;
for their sons during the coining year&#13;
eepoud with t h e&#13;
president, who will send them a cata*&#13;
An interesting history attaches to logue free of charge, as well as all par*&#13;
of the Bible and'bod, whileln the cor- the statue of Wihlam Penn, founder ticulars regarding terms, courses ot&#13;
ridor of that cathedral were enacted of Pennsylvania, which stiil souid.* studies, etc.&#13;
such scenes of drunkenness and de- where it was placed l a t h e grounds | There is a thorough preparatory&#13;
bauchery as had never before been wit- °f the old hospital a t Eighth and Pine school in connection with t h e univernossed?&#13;
Do you think such a thing streets. The minutes of the Pennsyl- sity, in which studenU of all grades&#13;
could possibly occur in Christendom v a n l a hospital tell the story of its will have every opportunity of prepartoday?&#13;
No. The poiice of Washing- coming, a gift of John Penn. In No- ing themselves for higher studies. Tho&#13;
ton, or of Wew York, or of Faris would vember, 1802, John Penn, through his Commercial Course, intended for&#13;
swoop upon it. 1 know infidelity attorney, offered a portrait of William young men preparing for business, may&#13;
makes a good deal of talk in our day,. P e a n to the managers of the hospital, be finished in one or two years ac*&#13;
One Infidel can make great excitement, r e s u l t i n g to know where it would be cording to the ability of the student&#13;
but I can tell you on what principle it Placed. A reply was duly sent to John St. Edward's Hall, for boys under U i r -&#13;
is. It Is on the principle that if a man P e n n - D U t the picture was never pre- teen, is an unique department of tho&#13;
Jumps overboard from an ocean liner 8 e n t e d . On Sept 24, 1804, the minutes institution. The higher courses a r e&#13;
he makes more excitement than all the re&lt;=ord "A statue in lead of William thorough in every tespect, and stu-&#13;
500 who stay on board. But the fact P e n n J s arri™&lt;i *n the ship Pigon from dents will find e v e r ^ opportunity of&#13;
that he jumps overboard does not otop London," No letter accompanied the perfecting themselves in any line of&#13;
the ship. Does that wreck the 500 pas- s t*tue which was a c c e p t s in lieu of work tney may choose to select Thorscngers?&#13;
fct makes great excitement t h e Portrait which John Penn had at oughness in class work, exactness in&#13;
w h e n a man jumps from the lecturing . ^ Purposed giving to the hospital, the care of students, and devotion to&#13;
platform or from the pulpit into inii- ln ****** language beginning with the the best interests of all, are the distindelity.&#13;
but does that keep the Bible or ^ m i l i a r greeting "Esteemed friend" guishing characteristics of Notre&#13;
the church from carrying millions of \™* *°«chcd l n friendly "thees" and Dame University,&#13;
passengers to the shores of eternal j t u ™ s ' " ^.e president, Joslah Hsw«,-' Fifty-seven years of active work in&#13;
safety? w.ote to Penn, thanking him for his the cause of education have made this&#13;
gift and telling him immediately after institution famous all over the coun-&#13;
_.. ^ . ^ „ , , , ; its arrival "some young men of our try.&#13;
What do they agree on? Herschcl ! c l t y w h o a r e f r i e u d a t o&#13;
Parfcctlon of C1irNtl:ml:y.&#13;
writes a whole chapter on the errors of your family" r e q u e £ t e d t h e l i b w £ y o f r a i s , n g g ; a t .&#13;
astronomy. La Place declares that tho ultously for this purpose a pedestal of&#13;
moon was not put in the right place. I t h e w h U c m a r b ] e o f P o n n s y l v a n i a &gt; . . t o&#13;
In t h o Hour of l&gt;l«f»o&lt;».&#13;
Ycu rray talk about the chur:h b?:ng&#13;
a collection cf hypocrites, but wh2ii&#13;
the diphtheria sweeps ycur children&#13;
pfT whem do you [end for? Tho postmaster,&#13;
the atto:ncy-gcnr ral, the hotelkeeper,&#13;
alderman? Xo. Yc. J ssnd fcr&#13;
a.minister of this Bible rdlgi:m.. And&#13;
if you have not a room in your hous?&#13;
But now let us see whether tho book i for the ob-c:iu:es,what build'ng do you&#13;
Sa a lx«3t year's almanac. Let 113 see ; soicit? Do you say. •Tiiv* m1 the fln-&#13;
He says if it had been put four tiniss&#13;
farther from the earth than it is now&#13;
there would be more harmony in the&#13;
universe, but Llonville comes up just&#13;
in time to prove th_t the moon was&#13;
put in the right place. How many colors&#13;
woven into the light? Seven, Bays&#13;
Isaac Newton. Thrae, says David&#13;
Brewster. How high is the aurora borcalis?&#13;
Two and a half miles, says&#13;
Lias. Ninety miles, say other scientists.&#13;
. How far is the sun from the&#13;
be fixed at the green souih front of&#13;
the hospital, with suitable inscriptions&#13;
to record the birth of William Penn,&#13;
the memorable era when he founded&#13;
the Province of Pennsylvania and the&#13;
time of his death." Penn is represented&#13;
in colonial costume. He holds in his&#13;
hand a scroll engraved with a "charter&#13;
Df privileges to Pennsylvania, MDCC,"&#13;
etc. The statue stands on a slab of&#13;
marble marked: "Presented by John&#13;
Penn, A. D. 1804." This surmounts tho&#13;
A C C O M P L I S H E D&#13;
Mayers of&#13;
MURDERERS.&#13;
Are Not&#13;
earth? Seventy-six million miles, says 13ede-tal, which is engraved as fallows:&#13;
Lacalle. Eighty-two million miles, [n tront t h e w e n-known coat-of-arms&#13;
Whether the church of God is a Bull&#13;
ljUnt rptqaat muskets, canteens and&#13;
est room in the hotel?" Do you s y ,&#13;
'Give me that th?at?r?'* Do you *ay,&#13;
ftaversacks strewing all the way. Tho&#13;
^FCat English historian Sharon Turlier,&#13;
a man of vast learning and great&#13;
itecuracy, not a clergyman, but an attorney&#13;
as well as a historian, gives&#13;
uiis overwhelming statistic in regard&#13;
to Christianity and in regard to the&#13;
number of Christians in the different&#13;
&lt;a&gt;nturk3: In the flr.it century, 500,003&#13;
•unriL'tians; in the second century,&#13;
4&lt;X&gt;0,000 Christians; In the third century,&#13;
5,000,000 Christians; in tho fourth&#13;
century 10,000,000 Christians; in the&#13;
llflh century 15 000,000 Christians; in&#13;
i&amp;e sixth century 20,030,000 Christians;&#13;
In t h e seventh century 24.000,000&#13;
fjftnFijanft; in the eighth century. 30,-&#13;
wri~: ...&#13;
(¢0,090 Christians; in the ninth cen-&#13;
Jjiry 40.000 000 Christians; in the tenth&#13;
abntury §0,000,000 Christians; In the&#13;
eleventh century 70,000,000 Christians;&#13;
A the twelfth century 80,000,000 Chris-&#13;
Bans; in the thirteenth century 75,-&#13;
¢0,000 Christians; in the fourteenth&#13;
Wntury 80,000,000 Christians; in the&#13;
teenth century 100,000,000 Chrisins;&#13;
in the sixteenth century, 125,-&#13;
&gt;,000 Christians; in the seventeenth&#13;
century 155,000,000 Christians; in the&#13;
eighteenth century 200,000.000 Chris-&#13;
Hans—a decadence, as you observe, in&#13;
-only one century, and more than made&#13;
f-jp in the following-centuries, while itis*&#13;
the usual computation that there&#13;
«f«re a t the close of the nineteenth&#13;
ottitury 470,000,000 Christians, making&#13;
&lt;2g to believe that before this century&#13;
U closed the millenlum will have&#13;
started its boom and lifted its hosanna.&#13;
Poor Christianity! What a pity it&#13;
i»as no friends! How lonesome it must&#13;
be! Who will take it out of the poorhouse?&#13;
Poor Christianity! Four hun-&#13;
Sned millions in one century. In a&#13;
^w weeks of this year 2,500,000 copies&#13;
*3f the New Testament distributed.&#13;
Vfhy, the earth Is like an old castle&#13;
w/th 20 gates and a park of artillery&#13;
ready to thunder down every gate.&#13;
See how heathendom is being surrounded&#13;
and honeycombed and attacked&#13;
by this all conquering gospel.&#13;
Ha. the beginning of the nineteenth&#13;
ca&amp;ntary 150 missionaries; at the close&#13;
6t that century 84,000 mlsionaries and&#13;
native helpers and evangelists. At&#13;
the beginning of the nineteenth cent&#13;
u r y there were only 50,090 converts.&#13;
N&amp;w there are over 1,000,000 converts&#13;
- from heathendom.&#13;
The Fere* of t h e Bible.&#13;
• 'Suppose the congress of the United&#13;
States should pa^s a law that there&#13;
afcould te no more Bibles printed in&#13;
~gseerk?a and no Bibles read, if there&#13;
€0,000,0f&gt;0 grown people in the&#13;
litcd States, there would be 60,000,-&#13;
people in an army to put down&#13;
a law and defend their right to&#13;
rfca* the l*ible. But suppose the conof&#13;
the United States should&#13;
ce a law against the reading or the&#13;
&gt;llcatlon of any other book, how&#13;
if people would go out in such a&#13;
"Give me that public build'ng wb.3re I&#13;
can lay my dead for a little whl'lo w^&#13;
say a prayer over it?" No. You sav.&#13;
"Give us the house cf God." And if&#13;
there is a song to bo sung at the obsequies,&#13;
what do you want? Wl'at doe?&#13;
anybody want? Th^ "Marseilta ss&#13;
Hymn?" "God Save the Qmen?" Our&#13;
own grand national air? No. They&#13;
want the hymn with which they sang&#13;
their old Christian morh T into h3r&#13;
laLl sleep, or they want suns* the Sabbath&#13;
school hymn which the'r lltt'e&#13;
•girl sang the last Sabbath afternoon&#13;
she was out before she got that awful&#13;
sickness which broke your heart. I&#13;
appeal to your common gense. You&#13;
know the most endearing instlutiton&#13;
on earth, the most popular institution&#13;
on earth today Is the church of the&#13;
Lord Jesus Christ. A man is a fool&#13;
that does net recognize It.&#13;
The infidels say: "There is great&#13;
liberty now for infidels; freedom o '&#13;
platform. Infidelity shows its power&#13;
from the fact that ft fs evervwh-re tolerated,&#13;
and it. can say what it wll ."&#13;
Why, my frier.ds, infidelity is not half&#13;
so blatant in our day n.-i It. was in tho&#13;
days of our fathers. Do you know 'hat&#13;
in the days of our fathers there were&#13;
pronounced InfideTs in public au'hority,&#13;
and they could get. a-iy political&#13;
position? Let a man today declare&#13;
himself antagonistic- to the ChrUt'an&#13;
religion and what city wa \t&lt;\ h'm fo"&#13;
mayor; what state v.-ant a h'm for governor;&#13;
what nation wants hira &lt;or&#13;
president or for king? L*t a man&#13;
openly proclaim himsrif th-&gt; en'-my o?&#13;
our g'orious Christianity, and he cartnot&#13;
get a majority of vote? In any&#13;
ctate, in any city, in any r-onntry, in&#13;
any ward of America.&#13;
What f'lrrUtf &gt;nUy P O M .&#13;
*A distinguished Infidel years a&lt;?o&#13;
riding in a rail car in Illinois s a d&#13;
"What has Chri tianiry ever done?"&#13;
An old Christian woman said: "It&#13;
has done one good thing anyhow. It&#13;
has kept an infidel from bMng governor&#13;
of Illinois." As I stood in the&#13;
side room of the opera house of Peoria,&#13;
Ills., a prominent gentleman of that&#13;
city said, "I can tell you the secret of&#13;
that tremendous bitterness against&#13;
Christianity." Said I, "What is i t ? "&#13;
"Wny," said he, "in this very house&#13;
there was a great convention to nominate&#13;
a governor, and there were three&#13;
or four candidates. At the same time&#13;
there was in a church in thi3 city a&#13;
Sabbath school convention, and it&#13;
happened that one of the men who wag&#13;
in the Sabbath school convention was&#13;
also a member of the political convention.&#13;
In the political convant'on&#13;
the name highest on t h e roll at that&#13;
time and about to be nominated was&#13;
the name of the great champion infidel.&#13;
There was an adjournment between&#13;
ballots, and in the afternoon,&#13;
when the nominations were b«Ing&#13;
made, a plain fanner got up and said:&#13;
'Mr. Chairman, that nomination must&#13;
says Humboldt. Ninety million miles,&#13;
says Henderson. One hundred and four&#13;
million mile3, Eays Mayer. Only a little&#13;
deference of 28,000.000 mjles! All&#13;
spilt up among themselves—not agreeing&#13;
on anything.&#13;
, Here these intidel scientists have impancled&#13;
themselves as a jury to decide&#13;
with Penn's rounde's. Over it is engraved&#13;
"William Penn. Born 1()44.&#13;
Died 1718." On the east side we read:&#13;
Pennsylvania Granted by Charles II.&#13;
to William Penn, 1861." On the north:&#13;
'The Proprietary Arrived^ 1682, Made&#13;
1 Just and Amicable Arrangement&#13;
with the Natives for the piirchase_of_&#13;
rheir Lands and Went Back to England&#13;
1684." The west side reads: " I t &gt;&#13;
thls trial between Infidelity, the plaintiff,&#13;
and Christianity, the defendant,&#13;
and after being'out for centuries they turned to Pennsylvania 1699 and Fincome&#13;
in to render their verdict. Gen- ally Withdrew to H49 Parental Estate&#13;
tlemen of the jury, have you agreed on 1701." The history of the substitution&#13;
a verdict? NO, no. Then go back for of statue for picture was not explained&#13;
another 500 years and deliberate and until 1846, when a letter of Benjamin&#13;
agree on something. There is not a Franklin, written in 1755, threw light&#13;
poor miserable wretch in the city pris- on the transaction, says the Philadelon&#13;
tomorrow that could be condemned phla Record. In this opistle Franklin&#13;
by a jury that did not agree on the describes a visit to his friend Lord&#13;
verdict, and yet you e;;pect us to give Despencer, and seeing the statue of&#13;
up our glorious Christianity to please William Penn holding the scroll,&#13;
these men who cannot agree on'any- Franklin admired it so much h e then&#13;
thing. Ah, my friends, the church of wished a copy made to stand in the&#13;
Jesus Christ instead of falling back is state house grounds in Philadelphia, Vigny and Senancour. The other Alon&#13;
the advance. I nm pertain it \n nn The letter, with copy_of the scroll de- ybr jf l n mMr^or^r'*»nron1Hpri fry Mr, irv-&#13;
There Fel'otv AXeu&#13;
AU Illiterate.&#13;
Lacenaire, tue Manned of the gutter,&#13;
who adorned t a e lomantic ep^c^i, practiced&#13;
a poetry of sjrts, professed 8&#13;
philosophy of all sorts, studied for fch€&#13;
bar and wrote for the newspapers,&#13;
Troppmann, gifted witn a superior Intelligence,&#13;
shared that pa3-iju for sensational&#13;
note.s wmch m tne Uciys taat&#13;
pas3 does not necessarily sti^matiza&#13;
its victims as members of the criminal&#13;
conspiracy. liarre has an exceptionally&#13;
uistinguiohed caieer at the Lycce&#13;
it Angers; ius co-mate in s.udy and&#13;
in sih, Lebiez, was a most promising&#13;
student, the very banner of his school.&#13;
The lively intelligence of the Abbe&#13;
Auriol seemed to justify his unc.e in&#13;
sducating him far a sciioolmas.er and&#13;
nlh superficial abilities sjrved ta pass&#13;
him i n o the priedtnood. Tue Abbe&#13;
fcJoudes was a i..aa of extraord.nary&#13;
parts, 'the Abue Bruneau was/endowed&#13;
With—eaeetfent capacity find—a&#13;
thorough education.. Campl had t h e&#13;
right by birth and educ^t.o^ to olt at&#13;
the tabJe of respectable pt&gt;6piep which&#13;
seems an equivalent for/the prlvl.ese&#13;
of keeping a gis. Praazini had traveled&#13;
far, had an amazing tacility for languages,&#13;
was declared to be equally proficient&#13;
in Eng.ish, French, Italian,&#13;
Greek, Turkish/Arabic, Russian and&#13;
Hindostani. Jrado was more redoubtable,&#13;
intellectually and criminally,&#13;
than either" Campi or Pranzlni. The&#13;
murderer of the affair at Sidi-Mabrouk&#13;
was a/quarter-Latin man of letters, a&#13;
ready quoter of Sophocles, Talne, De&#13;
the advance. I see the glittering of&#13;
the swords; I hear the tramping of tho&#13;
troops; I hear the thundering parkn of&#13;
artillery. O God, I thank thee that I&#13;
have been permitted to see this day of&#13;
thy triumph, this day of the confusion&#13;
of thine enemies! O Lord God, take&#13;
ihy sword from thy thigh and ride&#13;
forth to the victory!&#13;
Not A*h«m«d of t h e Blbl*.&#13;
Young man, do not be ashamed to&#13;
be a friend of the Bible. Do not put&#13;
your thumb in your vest, as yonns&#13;
men sometimes do, and swagger about&#13;
talking of the glorious light of nature&#13;
and of there bsing no need of the&#13;
Ulble. They have the light of nature&#13;
in India and China and in all the dark&#13;
scription, is new among the archives of l n g w a s a talented engineer, fond of&#13;
the Pennsylvania hospital. Lord D&gt;?- music and a clever talker. A.bert Pel,&#13;
spencer's successor trok no interest in ^ repulsive physically as he was re-&#13;
William Penn. The statue was sent to pulsive mentally, was fond of music&#13;
a junk shop to be sold for old metal. a m i fo n d 0f chemistry. Vaillant was a&#13;
Here John Penn found it aud pur- student of Darwin. Buchner and Herch"&#13;
s?d It for presentation to the Penn- D e rt Spencer. Emile Henri was intellisylvania&#13;
hospital. We may now see gent enough to secure an exhibithe&#13;
s r t u e facing Pine street, on the tion from the Ecole Jean Bapt'.ste Say&#13;
hospftal green. Penn still holds the and to take his degree as bache:or of&#13;
charter, in perpetual remembrance of science at 16.—From Irving's Studies&#13;
that famous treaty, "never sworn t o&#13;
and never broken." It is curious to&#13;
know that in course of time one of the&#13;
statue's shoes wore out! In 1S"0, during&#13;
a severe sto:~an, the statue of Penn&#13;
ble .,11. It W2s found that the support&#13;
of one foot vr?s eo^roded and the&#13;
metal had decayed away. A new sole&#13;
of French Criminals&#13;
p.aces of the earth. Did you ever hear | a n d h l g n n e e , w e r e B T i p pI l e ( 1 to Penn,&#13;
that the light of nature gave t h e m j ? n d h i s s t atue was then securely recomfort&#13;
for t'.:eir trouble? They h a v e ; p I a c e d o n t h o pedestal, where it now&#13;
lancets to cut and juggernauts t o ! stands today&#13;
crush, but no comfort. Ah, my&#13;
friends, you had better stop your skepticism.&#13;
Suppose you are put in a crisis&#13;
Mke that of Colonel Ethan Allen. 1&#13;
saw the account and at one time mentioned&#13;
it in an address.&#13;
Physical tannic for Girl*..&#13;
College girls are going daft on physical&#13;
culture. They are adopting all&#13;
sorts of masculine sports, but they&#13;
may as well give up all hopes of gaining&#13;
proficiency in baseball and cricket,&#13;
for the simple reason that they can't&#13;
throw. A physician, who has o.'ten been&#13;
amused at the efforts of the Bryn&#13;
Mawr girls, was talking about this the&#13;
other day. "It is a physical impossibility&#13;
for a girl to throw-strongly&#13;
and accurately, as a boy throws," he&#13;
This question was asked of a large said. "A girl throws with a- rigid arm,&#13;
number of persona: What punishments a n a it is out of the question for her&#13;
A descendant or rewards have you ever had that did to acquire a free movement, such as&#13;
of Ethan Allen, who is an infidel, said you good or- harm? The majority i 8 possible with a boy, because her colit&#13;
never occurred. Soon after I re- claimed to be benefited by punishment,&#13;
celved a letter from a professor in one The boys thought the effects of a good&#13;
of our colleges, who is also a descend- Plain talk were salutary, and none had&#13;
ant of Ethan Allen and is a Christian, a complaint to make against a good&#13;
He wrote me that the incident is ac-, "dr.-nsing down." Many were grateful&#13;
curate; that my statement was au- for having had punishment in due&#13;
thentic and true. The wife of Colonel season. There is a time in many a&#13;
Ethan Allen wa3 a very consecrated DOV's Ufe when he thinks he is lord&#13;
woman. The mother instructed tho of everything, and it would seem that&#13;
daughter in the truths of Christianity. a S00*1 shipping is often the best way&#13;
The daughter sickened and was about t 0 c u r e t n i a defect. - Tenderness is exto&#13;
die, and she said to her father; cellent for most children, but there arc&#13;
"Father, shall I take your instruc- certain natures on whom it is wasted,&#13;
tion or shall I take mother's instruc- because they fimply abuse it. Contion?&#13;
I am going to die now; I must s^w* ( l o e s n o t s e e m t 0 b e v c r y F ° w&#13;
lar bone U larger and sets lower than.&#13;
a boy's,—Philadelphia Record.&#13;
Reward' ot One r&gt; nnj.&#13;
"Honesty is its own reward," is the&#13;
new shape in which tne proverb presents&#13;
itself to Harry Ilea* a mason living&#13;
at 67 Lower Thorn street, Reading,&#13;
Recently picking up a purse in th*&#13;
street containing £220 in notes anJ&#13;
gold, he was going to take it to th«&#13;
police station, when work was over,&#13;
but about half an hour afterwards wa*&#13;
adressed by a man understood to be »&#13;
commercial traveler from London, wlw&#13;
- - - - . . , . . . , . . . .. , a 1 proved himself to be the owner, -llw&#13;
have this matter decided." That man, e r f u l f n &lt;*«&lt;lren b e f o r e t h f a fe °,f 9- | handed over the purse, the man gavt&#13;
who had been Icud in his infidelity, Preaching, or^advice unsought for. does M m a m i n &gt; a n d w a 8 ftp a w a y tefur|&#13;
said to bis dying daughter, "My dear, n o t S S M n t o d o raucb ^°°^ w h i I c s u " *&#13;
you had better take your mother's re- gestion does. As to the influence of&#13;
liglon." My advice is the same to companions, it was greatest between&#13;
you, O young man! You know how t h e a ? e s ^f 1 0 t 0 1S- T h l a ^ftuence is&#13;
next to that of home.—Everybody's&#13;
Magasine,&#13;
religion comforted her. You know&#13;
what she said to you when she was&#13;
dying. You had better take your&#13;
mother's religion.&#13;
the other could realize that ho hul&#13;
been rewarded for his find with—oa&lt;&#13;
penny.&#13;
S0ZOD0HT for th. TEETH 25c&#13;
Misfortune often brings out one's&#13;
good point that ought to have prevented&#13;
it.&#13;
"And she actually fell in love with&#13;
the first baseman. Why?" "I really&#13;
couldn't say. He certainly didnt scsra&#13;
a good catch."&#13;
F'iSO/'S GLTat F O R ^ ;&#13;
MSJWWt AL^bTHUKi&#13;
hi time. 80X hv rtruCTrtntm&#13;
CON?iJMPTi O'N IT&#13;
&lt; • ' • •&#13;
•wjs? :T^i --^&#13;
r »i• ' ,• -;u s .^-^--- V&#13;
&lt;m# 'i'- wV-fc&#13;
'*:». iJk VliW&#13;
' J - ^&#13;
"-nww"—-•&#13;
fc K&gt; *'i.&#13;
:. :--&gt;.-.:\V;:;i;- ¢- **-: F :f* "A«- \ -r-;' '-.- :•• &gt;f-x';/ ^ /•••-*/ • ' • • &lt;•/-:-/:/^ •":*};:•&gt; *.-~MC~:' •• -:/r/.-:-^r-^i^v-&#13;
&gt;-&#13;
,j„, :,:&#13;
9S55B ^ 1 - '^11' i &lt; — T H * - -'-.•;•*- mmmmm&#13;
rp-.&#13;
\4&#13;
eScovirge&#13;
ofP&amp;uncv&amp;.sc\is&#13;
* *&#13;
A Story ef&#13;
t h e Ee*st • • •&#13;
L&#13;
By&#13;
SYLVANUS&#13;
COBB, JR.&#13;
Copyrighted 18^1 by Robert Bonner** Boss.&#13;
CHAPTER II.&#13;
The Terrible Julian.&#13;
In fear and tiemb.ing sat Ulin,&#13;
awaiting the coming of the teirlole&#13;
robber. Half an hour passed, and she&#13;
had not been troubled; but during that&#13;
time she had witnessed transaction)&#13;
which were not calculated to allay her&#13;
fear*. She had seen over fifty of iha&#13;
king's guards bound and led away, aad&#13;
she saw that a number of the ro'jLe.s&#13;
had been placed on guard at the ent&#13;
r a n t ' ^ i b * rocky. passage. They&#13;
were wild, savage look.ng men, appeaxtas&#13;
to her fear-wrought vis on,&#13;
like t i e evil spirits she had heard har&#13;
old black nurse tell ab.ut.&#13;
At .length the sound of feat was&#13;
heard near at hand, and very shcrtly&#13;
the door of the apartment was opened,&#13;
and a black slave entered, it was a&#13;
woman, and ono cf those whom the&#13;
king had left.&#13;
**«Good lady," she said, trembling as&#13;
s h e spoke, "the hour of doom has&#13;
come. I am a slave to a new raas.er,&#13;
a n d that master has sent me t o tell&#13;
jrou that he wishes to see you."&#13;
"Who ia he?" asked Ulin.&#13;
"I don't know, but I .think :hc is Ju-&#13;
31an, the Scourge. His look ia lerribla..&#13;
Upon his brow sits thcthundercl ud,&#13;
and in his eye flashes the forked lightn&#13;
i n g ! "&#13;
"Will he come up here?"&#13;
"He said/So."&#13;
"I h a v e / n o power to iinovent him.&#13;
Tell him7 1 am weak and -Uefenceks3,&#13;
and a t / t i s mercy."&#13;
ThX slave bowed and withdrew, and&#13;
in^tf little while some o n e e . s e came. A&#13;
heavy footfall sounded without, and&#13;
/the door was slowly and caraful.y&#13;
opened.&#13;
But, who i3 this? What spirit has&#13;
thus appeared in the palace! A man&#13;
had entered ±he_ chamber a.ono. He&#13;
was youthful—not more than "three 67&#13;
four-and-twenty—with- kindly look,&#13;
and cf noble bearing. He \va3 not&#13;
larger of frame than common men;&#13;
but the perfect symmetry of form, the&#13;
exact correspondence cf all the parU;&#13;
the delicate rounding of the graceful&#13;
outline,—and the—filling up of—appoints&#13;
where sources of strength cou'.d&#13;
be deposited, gave token of a power&#13;
which might lead the careless obsjrv^r&#13;
to pro ounce him a giant.&#13;
He gazed upon the beautiful miiden&#13;
for some moments w-thout speaking,&#13;
seeming to drink in a .new inspiration&#13;
from ber loveliness, as the student of&#13;
nature does when sonic new and unexpected&#13;
scene of grandeur bursti upon&#13;
his vision.&#13;
"Fair lady," he said in softest tone3,&#13;
"permit me to hope thai this intrusion&#13;
may be pardoned. I would not £ i v j&#13;
you pain, and if yon li;-.ve been alarmed,&#13;
be assured that ynu have caus?&#13;
~tor~rt-no—more.—Tull UJU how I—mayserve&#13;
you."&#13;
He approached her a s he spoke, and&#13;
she, Without hardly realizing what s'le&#13;
did, 'arose and gave him her hand. H&#13;
he had gazed upon her with admiration,&#13;
her own feelings had not besn entirely&#13;
different. Her woman's instinct&#13;
told t c r thnt here was a man&#13;
whom she could tru:t; and her woman's&#13;
heart beat with an emotion entnrely&#13;
new and strange.&#13;
"Noble sir," s h e said, meeting h: s&#13;
gaze with the strength of perfect&#13;
trustfulness, "Heaven ha3 sent 3'ou to&#13;
.save me Irom t h e dread man who has&#13;
made his way to this place. If you&#13;
have the power to do it, you will lead&#13;
me to bless you fo:eve:more;"&#13;
"Of what m a n do you spsak?" asksd&#13;
t h e stranger, still hoMing her hands.&#13;
"I speak of him who is known as the&#13;
Scourge of Damascus—of the terrible&#13;
Julian."&#13;
The man was silent for a few moments,&#13;
but ho did not withdraw his&#13;
gaze from the maiden's face.&#13;
"Sweet lady," he at length sa'd,&#13;
«peaking very lowly and tenderly, "I&#13;
a m informed that the king of Damascus&#13;
has sent you hither to keep you&#13;
safely until he can mak3 you hU srtfe."&#13;
"&gt;He hath done so, sir."&#13;
"And yet it_seems that he did not&#13;
provide so wisely, after all. Would&#13;
you wish to be carried to the king?**&#13;
"No, no, sir—not tp the king, I&#13;
would be carried to my father."&#13;
There could be no mistaking the&#13;
character of the emotions'under which&#13;
the princess spoke. With all the king's&#13;
power her hope was not in him. The&#13;
stranger marked the changes of her&#13;
countenance; and, while a warmer&#13;
light shone in bis handsome eyes, he&#13;
resumed—&#13;
•'I cannot say when you shall be retarnod&#13;
to your father; but I can give&#13;
you my solemn assurance that I can&#13;
protoct you. I will protect you from&#13;
the hands of those whom you have&#13;
cause to fear; and, at the same time,&#13;
I will regard you as a sacred trust, to&#13;
be respected and purely cherished.&#13;
And now, lady, have I your confidence?"&#13;
, H e Jet go her hands, held until BOW.&#13;
and when he had taken a seat not far&#13;
from her, he continued:&#13;
"Lady Ulin, you have spoken of Julian,&#13;
and I see that you fear him, D.d&#13;
you ever see him?"&#13;
Ulin shuddered as she answered irt&#13;
the negative.&#13;
"Did you ever hear his story?"&#13;
"No, sir. Albia has told me something,&#13;
but not much."&#13;
"I can tell you the whole, if you&#13;
would Hear it."&#13;
"I should like to hear it, fair sir."&#13;
"Believe me, lady, when you have&#13;
heard what I shall tell you, you w}tl&#13;
not regard Julian with EO much of abhorrence.&#13;
But of one thing I give y o j&#13;
warning: In telling the story of Julian&#13;
I must speak harsh words against&#13;
your affianced husband."&#13;
"My—affianced—husbind ?" repeated&#13;
Ulin, with a troubled pause between&#13;
her words.&#13;
"r mean Horam, King of Damascus,"&#13;
said the stranger, regarding the&#13;
beautiful maiden as though he read&#13;
her every thought.&#13;
"I am not keeper over the character&#13;
of*Horam. The truth, sp ken in a true&#13;
cause, will qot offend me."&#13;
"Then, lady, let me first assure yon&#13;
that Julian Is not the monster your&#13;
fears have painted. He has never done&#13;
wrong to any, save the powerful ot&#13;
Damascus. Go to the forests and&#13;
mountains of Lebanon, and you shall&#13;
find a thousand poor peasants whoss&#13;
families he has befriended. He has&#13;
taken gold and jewels, and precious&#13;
stuf s of silk and linen, from the scores&#13;
of Horam; but he hath not made h.msclf&#13;
rich therefrom.. He and h 3 followers&#13;
have lived, and beyond this the&#13;
booty has been bestowed upon the poc»&#13;
and needy. Julian hath also waylaid&#13;
and broken up caravans; and turned&#13;
back many expeditions which the king&#13;
had sent out. He "may be Just what&#13;
hath been said—he may bs tho Sconrje&#13;
of Damascus, but he has no wish to&#13;
trouble honest men. His aim has bsea,&#13;
vengeance upon t^e king."&#13;
"And why should he seek such vengeance&#13;
upon the king?" asked Ulin.&#13;
"1 will tell you, lady. But for the&#13;
shall not be disturbed. Ton may otoap&#13;
as safely tonight as ever you slept&#13;
ipon your mother's bosom, and so&#13;
shall you be'safe while I am near you.&#13;
You will see Julian in the morning?"&#13;
"You will come with him?"&#13;
"If you wish it, lady."&#13;
"I do wish it, for I feel that I am&#13;
acquainted with you; and, furthermore,&#13;
i have said that i would trust f eruii&amp;tlie Great Tonic Cures&#13;
you."&#13;
9!Sff^T?? BEAUTIFUL LADIES&#13;
GIVE VALUABLE ADVICE&#13;
TO SUFFERING SISTERS.&#13;
1 ' --:---1-&#13;
."' ' ;-• '•'•'':• ''•'•"• ' foi&#13;
king of Damascus Julian might be now&#13;
one ot the most free and happy mon&#13;
living; but as it Is, he is a stranger a: d&#13;
i an outcast upon the face of the earth.&#13;
He is a wanderer, without a horns, and&#13;
with only such friends as are bound&#13;
to him in his adventurous and dangerous&#13;
course. Once many years ago—he&#13;
had parents and the prospect of life&#13;
was bright before him; but in an unhappy&#13;
hour the gloom and the darkness&#13;
came. Horam, in wicked, jealous&#13;
wrat&gt;\ swept away all that was bright&#13;
and promising from the path of Jul.an&#13;
and shut out the star of "hope forever.&#13;
O. swpet lady. I dare not pa n your ear&#13;
with all that Horam did. Were I to&#13;
tell you all, you would regard the&#13;
king as such a monster that your&#13;
heart would close against h:m, and&#13;
your very coul would shrink at tha&#13;
sound of his name. A3 true as the&#13;
heavens are above us, so true is it that&#13;
the.heart of Julian 1« not evil. When&#13;
he locks back upon the utter desolation&#13;
of his young Jife, and realizes that&#13;
the king cf Damascus mal.gnantiy&#13;
and cruelly brought the curse upoi&#13;
him can you wonder that his soul is&#13;
fraught with vengeance?"&#13;
"I never beard this story bet ore,"&#13;
said Ulin, her .voice trembling with&#13;
deep emotion. "If It is true, as you&#13;
have told mo, I eannot t l a m s Julian&#13;
so much."&#13;
"And yet yon fear him, lady?"&#13;
"I cannot help'it. He hath com?&#13;
hither in battle array, and made war&#13;
against me."&#13;
"Nay, nay, sweet lady. You do much&#13;
mistake his intent. I can tell you why&#13;
he came hither. He heard from a messenger&#13;
whom he met upoa the pla as of&#13;
Marthal, that a fair damsel was shut&#13;
up here—a maiden whom the king intended&#13;
to marry. It might have pleased&#13;
him to deprive Horam of a wife;&#13;
but it pleased him more to release a&#13;
gentle lady from such enslavement. He&#13;
knows what the king of Dama CU3 has,&#13;
ere this, done unto his wives. He&#13;
has heard that the dark waters of the&#13;
Pharpor are but a short span from the&#13;
royal bed. And hence he came to&#13;
sat free one whom he feared might&#13;
meet a worse fate than the encountering&#13;
of the Scourge of Damascus. Did&#13;
he commit a grievous sin in this,&#13;
lady?"&#13;
"Indeed, sir, I know not what to&#13;
say." •&#13;
"Will you not see Juliain? Do not&#13;
shudder. I assure you that he wiH be&#13;
most gentle in his bearing. Hut I&#13;
know he would like to speak with you&#13;
-—he would hear from your own lips&#13;
that you do not think him a moaster;&#13;
and he would also know your pleasure.'&#13;
— ^ b * n wiILn£_come? *&#13;
"Let it be tomorrow morning* lady.&#13;
It it near evening now, and your rest&#13;
• "T+ • h a l l K* - - »»&#13;
And thus speaking the visitor arose,&#13;
and moved towards th 3 door. He turned,&#13;
with his hand upon the latch, and&#13;
added:&#13;
"I trust that your dreams may be&#13;
gweet and pleasant If dark phantoms&#13;
come to your pillow they shall not be&#13;
of Julian. There is another whom you&#13;
have more cause to dread—one who, ia&#13;
hard and hoary age would feast upon&#13;
the charms of your loveliness. Pardon&#13;
me, fcr I go with a blessing&#13;
breathed upon thee."&#13;
Til a moment more the man was&#13;
gone, and the door was closed behind&#13;
him. Uftn gazed vacantly upon the&#13;
spot where he had stood, until she&#13;
felt a hand upon her shoulder. She&#13;
started, and looked up; and it wa3 only&#13;
Albia.&#13;
"My dear mistress, is not this a&#13;
strange adventure?"&#13;
"Very strange," replied the princess,&#13;
casting her eyes to the floor, and then&#13;
slowly raising them to that vacant&#13;
spot.&#13;
"What do you think of the strange&#13;
man?" the slave girl pursued, sitting&#13;
down by her lady's 3lde.&#13;
"What do you think of him?" said&#13;
Ulin.&#13;
"I ihink he is very handsome. He&#13;
is the most noble looking man I ever&#13;
saw."&#13;
Ulin showed by her look that she&#13;
was grateful for this am-wer. It pleased&#13;
her, though she may not have&#13;
•known it.&#13;
"Such a man could not ba a bad&#13;
man," she said. "Dsceptioa canno;&#13;
dwell in such a face."&#13;
"I should think not," returned Albia,&#13;
to whom the remarks had been put in&#13;
the form of questions.&#13;
"And what do you think of the story&#13;
he told concerning tho robber JuLan?"&#13;
"I think he told us the truth, my&#13;
lady. A s - h e went on with Jthe jtale,&#13;
I remembered that I had heard it just&#13;
so before. He told us the truth."&#13;
"Then the king must be a hard, bad&#13;
man, Albia?"&#13;
"I muU net answer you lady. The&#13;
king 4s to be your husband, and it *s&#13;
not well that ycu should^urge 111¾&#13;
Catarrhal Dyspepsia __fll&#13;
Summer.&#13;
l i n i . i u L . n , . | H i . i i m n n m m i i n i n » u u i »&#13;
For Ills Peculiar to Wome^&#13;
Feruna is aa I.?yalg*tfc.&#13;
Remedy, _ _ _&#13;
imiMMlTTTTTTT TTTTTTTTTTTfl TTTTTTTTTTITTTTTTTTMFLORENCE&#13;
ALLAN.&#13;
Miss Florence Allan,75 Walton Place..&#13;
Chicago, III., writes: "As a tonic for *&#13;
worn out system Peruna stand3 a t t h e&#13;
head in my estimation. Its effects arc&#13;
truly wonderful In rejuvenating t h e&#13;
entire system. I keep it on hand all&#13;
time and never have that 'tired feeli&#13;
as a few doses always makes me&#13;
like a different woman."—Florence&#13;
Ian.&#13;
Dr. S. D. ffartmsn, President ot The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, OM&amp;&#13;
a prominent authority on women's catarrhal disease* will take charge ot 4gs&#13;
many cases of female catarrh as make application to him during the suauap*&#13;
•uonths. Advlci free. Address Dr. &amp; B. Hartman, Columbus, Ohio.&#13;
KATHLEEN GRAHAM. •&#13;
Miss Kathleen Graham, 1459 Florida&#13;
Ave., N. W. Wash., D. C , writes: "At&#13;
the solicitation of a friend I was advised&#13;
to use Peruna and after the use&#13;
of one bottle for dyspepsia I felt almost&#13;
entirely cured. I take pleasure in recommending&#13;
your remedy to anyone&#13;
who needs an invigorating tonic."—&#13;
Kathleen Graham.&#13;
speak against him."&#13;
"Indeed, girl, I asked you to do no&#13;
such thing. I did not mean that you&#13;
should speak against the king."&#13;
"Then you should have asked me no&#13;
question touching his character. I&#13;
would rather talk of this man who&#13;
has just left us. I, who am only a&#13;
poor slave, could love such a man.1*&#13;
Ulin lifted her band to her heart,&#13;
and pressed it there as though somj&#13;
new feeling had crept in to worry her,&#13;
and, as she sat thus, one of her bla.,p&#13;
slaves came in to see if she woui&lt;l iiiv&#13;
her supper.&#13;
"Not now, Calyp^o.^Vsa'Ul thK ;.&gt;rin»&#13;
cess, starting up. "You may bv M&#13;
me some grapes, and a few dates, 'iii.&#13;
first, tell me what these st'.ange h.ou&#13;
are doing. How many of them are&#13;
there here?"&#13;
"Not more than a score of them are&#13;
in t^e palace, my mistress, but th^re&#13;
are thousands of them outside of ths&#13;
valley."&#13;
Ulin had no disposition to argU3 th.?&#13;
point; so she asked what the robbers&#13;
were doing.&#13;
"Albia," said the princess, after tha&#13;
bl^ck slave had gone, "I do not believe&#13;
that Julian is such a terrible looking&#13;
man, after all. What do you think?"&#13;
"I think," replied Albia, "that people&#13;
have described him who never saw&#13;
him, and that their fear-fraught imaginations&#13;
drew the picture."&#13;
"So I tMnk," returned Ulin. She&#13;
gazed a few moments upon that oid&#13;
vacant spot, and then added: "I shall&#13;
see him on the morrow, and I must say&#13;
that the thought is not frightful. I&#13;
feel assured that he means me no&#13;
(harm."&#13;
"Vet," ventured Albia, "it is a enriou3&#13;
whim which should lead him to&#13;
seek to release you from the hands of&#13;
the king. But I don't know as we can&#13;
wonder at it. Perhaps he thought you&#13;
were some friendless girl who did not&#13;
know--"&#13;
The princess motioned for her companion&#13;
to stop.&#13;
"We will not talk of the king, Albia:&#13;
and, touching this Julian, we&#13;
shall know more when we see him."&#13;
(To be continued.)&#13;
EPWORTH LEAGUE CONVENTION,&#13;
San Francisco, Cal.f 18-21, 1901.&#13;
When planning your trip do not forget&#13;
that the Chicago, Milwaukee'&amp; St.&#13;
Paul railway is the most popular, best&#13;
equipped and safest railroad in the&#13;
Northwest. On all of its through lines&#13;
Df travel this railway runs the most&#13;
perfectly equipped trains of sleeping&#13;
parlor, dining, free reclining _chair_cars&#13;
and coaches. It is the only line with&#13;
electric reading lights in each berth&#13;
in the sleeping cars run between Chicago,&#13;
St. Paul and Minneapolis, and between&#13;
Chicago and Omaha.&#13;
All regular travelers know and appreciate~&#13;
tTTe" merits ~oT7~the Chicagor&#13;
Milwaukee &amp; St. Paul Railway, In purchasing&#13;
your tickets see that they read&#13;
via this line, and you are assured the&#13;
very best of «ervice.&#13;
For rates, descriptive literature, etc.,&#13;
Inquire of your local ticket agent, or&#13;
address F. A. Miller, General Passenger&#13;
Agent, Old Colony Bldg., Chicago.&#13;
HI.&#13;
A Uer«;»'or&lt;l Si o r / .&#13;
A story of Lord Charles Bercsford's&#13;
er.rly exploits in Parliament crors up&#13;
u^ain. An old county member, sadly&#13;
troubled by gout, made a practice c!&#13;
retiring to one of the benches under&#13;
the reporters'—gallery, behind—tiLLspeaker's'chair.&#13;
HLs habit was to take :&#13;
off his boots, which he placed under i&#13;
the bench, lie down at full length, and :&#13;
doze securely under the shade of the ;&#13;
gallery till his rest was disturbed bj j&#13;
the call for a division, when he would ;&#13;
slip on his boots. Lord Charles Beres- j&#13;
ford observed the place where thi j&#13;
honorable member had put his boots I&#13;
and when he was sound asleep tool-: |&#13;
away one, which he hid. When th&lt;?&#13;
division came the victim was compelled&#13;
to leave his seculsion and walk&#13;
into the lobby with only one boot on&#13;
amid the roars of good-humored laughter.&#13;
The lady's slipper, known arso a s&#13;
the whippoorwill's shoe and the mofc-&#13;
| casln flower, grows in deep, shadjr&#13;
woods, often in company with moseefe, .-&#13;
ferns and triUIums. It is such a .rtdfcty&#13;
flower that few people who see ffc&#13;
can resist the temptation to pick &amp;.&#13;
and it is, therefore, becoming evcop&#13;
day more difficult-to find. It has macr^y&#13;
attractions "for the bee*, for It not oir|r&#13;
! provides him with plenty of food, biSt&#13;
also furnishes him with a splendid ba»-&#13;
! quet hall. Just over the front entrancej&#13;
yon will see two rows of dark spots.&#13;
' They are a sign that the hungry b#p&#13;
! can-read, and_they mean: "TMg w q y&#13;
to t h e dining room." He "pushes open&#13;
the elastic sides of the doorway to&#13;
which the dots lead, and enters th%&#13;
I beautiful golden chamber, and when fce&#13;
! has feasted he pays for his dinner 03a&#13;
his way out by carrying on his ba£k&#13;
some of the lady slipper's golden poJlen&#13;
dust that she wants taken to one&#13;
cf her neighbors. The yellow lady^i&#13;
slipper blooms about the beginnfag&#13;
of June, a little later than her elder&#13;
sister, tho pink moccasin flower.&#13;
SOZODQNT Tooth Powder 2 ¾&#13;
Nature's Priceless Remedv RheuT.at:srn,&#13;
DR. 0. PHELPS BROWNS ! gia. Weak Back, Spni&#13;
PREVIOUS&#13;
HERBAL&#13;
OINTMENT&#13;
"BirrncrSores and att 53^&#13;
If he &lt;]o«'&gt;i not sell it, in&#13;
v.-.- Iiis liaim*. and for y*#»&#13;
trouble, wo wUl Cr**&#13;
S o n d V o . i a T r i a l I I » »&#13;
When in doubt u&gt;e Wizard Oil for&#13;
pain; both suffering and dou t will&#13;
vanish. Your doctor and druggist&#13;
know it.&#13;
L a b o r e r 1&lt;»0 Years Old.&#13;
•Barney Morris, famous laborer, whe&#13;
Is employed in Prospect park. B 00k-1 hJU, o n&#13;
lyn, has just been celebrating his ons&#13;
hundred and ninth birthday and is tc&#13;
be found attending to his duties s&gt;ix&#13;
days a week the year round. He was&#13;
born in County Cavan, Ireland, June&#13;
TO, 1792. and came to this country seventy-&#13;
three years ago.&#13;
Hall'* C a t a r r h Cure&#13;
b a constitutional cure. Price, TSe.&#13;
It Cures Through the Po;es __&#13;
I .Ukln-«.*I&gt;T.O.F.Bi-&gt;wu.98B'^JVS-,Now"Jur«fc,J£x.&#13;
j Turn the Rascals Out&#13;
W c are speaking of the grip microbes.&#13;
, The well and strong can resist their p&amp;~&#13;
I son. the sickly and weak arc their prey.&#13;
U-ixter's Mandrake Bitters are ns&gt;-&#13;
! turn's remedy for expelling* all poisdp 1 froin the system. At drugrists, in liqrtfil&#13;
, or tablets at 2.'&gt; cents per bottle or bojc&#13;
' IN 3 OR 4 YEARS&#13;
I N INDEPENDENCE ASSOREF If you tr.kc up roar&#13;
horae in Westero Ca»&#13;
aU.v.th^ Jam! of pient?&#13;
Illustrated pamphl*^.&#13;
giving experiences &amp;&#13;
farmers who hnve obeoroe&#13;
wealthy In tf«5fing&#13;
wheat, reporuTftr&#13;
delegates, etcuud fiHI&#13;
imormation as to reduced railway rates ean to&#13;
application to the Superintendent W&#13;
ImmipratioD, Department, of Interior. Ottawa.&#13;
Canada, or to J.Urleve, Sasinaw, Mich., or ML&#13;
V. Mclcnes. &gt;"xS Merrill Bloc!;, Detroit. MWb-&#13;
EDUCATIONAL.&#13;
Mstlor P o e t i W a n t e d .&#13;
An English literary writer says that&#13;
"the time is fully ripe for the advent&#13;
of a sailor poet and the marine engineer&#13;
poet. "Whether they write in&#13;
terras of rhyme or no I care not. A&#13;
virgin field awaits them, a noble inheritance,&#13;
maturing for ages. They&#13;
can, if they come, utterly refute the&#13;
false and foolish prattle of the arm*&#13;
chair philosophers and prove triumphantly&#13;
that so far from the romance&#13;
and poetry of the sea being dead, it&#13;
bas hardly yet been given any adequate&#13;
expression whatever."&#13;
rLlfe i* but a temnorary harbor on the shore&#13;
of the iKumdless ocean of eteia ty.&#13;
Some of our anticipation* nrc never in auv&#13;
possible position to be realized.&#13;
riT5r*fma»«&gt;t!yOum!. Xofitsorn&lt;*rruiMT&gt;emhft*t&#13;
tint day's tn-o of l&gt;r. Kline'* ureal Nerve kestorvr.&#13;
fiend for F R E E # ¢ . 0 0 trial bottle and trvaxine.&#13;
IM. B. H. &amp;u«K. Ltu., wu Area St., } liila&lt;telx&gt;JUa. Pa. '&#13;
THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAHEr&#13;
NOTRB DAMBt INDIANA,&#13;
Staffers should be above climatic influence: it&#13;
ts easy for them to change the air.&#13;
"Then what is your reason for marrying her &gt;" ! Classic*, Letters, Economic* aad lUilmw.&#13;
"IhavenorMwa. I m in love." J-urmSSi, Art, Science, Pbtxmae*T^&#13;
I ClvH, rbchenical and Electrical ~ '&#13;
Mm WlnMoWa Soothtn* Syrup. Architecture.&#13;
Tor cbiWrea teethtna. soften* the snJms. reduce* m&#13;
datamation, allays pain, cures wind colic, 3&amp;c abottla&#13;
A man who HSKS&#13;
bountiful supply of the same.&#13;
Piio'a Cure U the best medicine we ever used&#13;
for ad affections of the throat and luntrs.—W*.&#13;
O. ErnsLSY, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10,1W00.&#13;
SOUM people arc never more serious than&#13;
when they try to act funny.&#13;
Tborottffh Preparatory and C01&#13;
Crurtes. Ecclesiastical studeuta at special:&#13;
Rooms Free. Junior or Senior Year, CoD«&#13;
Courses. Rooms to Rent, moderate chai&#13;
~Edward*s Hall, for boy's under is.&#13;
_ The 5S b Year will open September iOU». !«•*,&#13;
Ca.alqffues Free. Aovires* ^&#13;
RtV. A. MORRiSStY.CS. CM&#13;
W . N . U . ^ - D K T R O I T — N O . 2 8 — IQOi&#13;
Vsea Assweritt Advciiseneots Kistfiy&#13;
Heitloa This Tapec&#13;
I&#13;
' v;'&#13;
*1&#13;
y&#13;
• • &amp; '&#13;
•*-»&#13;
.'.&amp;&#13;
w*~^^^m in,i.HUM mm*^*^^^mmmm*mmmmm ^t^/W^'.s.^.hte^*,;.;,:; ?7 iWt%w:&#13;
^ ' ^ W ^ *&#13;
T-fc&lt;&#13;
•'.S.'*u&#13;
ii;^';|^^?;,^ •*'.; V.,-..,&#13;
4**-&#13;
11^&#13;
- ' V &lt;*.&gt;!&#13;
'. 1&#13;
Site f tnckufg fi?patch.&#13;
r. L. ANDREWS &amp; CO. PROPRIETORS.&#13;
. „ . - . - — . . . . , . . » . _ . •&#13;
*. — . — i i . .&#13;
THURSDAY, JULY 11, 1901.&#13;
v-v T h e richest milk is that which&#13;
comes near the close of milking.&#13;
A test disclosed that the first half,&#13;
pint of milk as a milking contained&#13;
only 1.07 per cent of cream, wnilst&#13;
the last half-pint contained 10.36.&#13;
I f e u r l b a r u .&#13;
When the qoaaity of food rakan is&#13;
too large or the quality too rich heartbum&#13;
id likely to follow, and especially&#13;
so if tbe digestion has been weakened&#13;
by constipation. Eat slowly and not&#13;
too tree'r of easily digested food.&#13;
Masticate tbe food thoroughly. Let&#13;
six hours elapse between meals and&#13;
when you feel a fullness and weight&#13;
in the region of the stomach-after eating,&#13;
indicating that you have naten&#13;
too much, take one of ChamoerlaitiV&#13;
*&#13;
W. C- j&#13;
Edited by the W, C. T P,nf Pinckney&#13;
*&#13;
sufficient that a substance be decomposed&#13;
or oxidized in the tissuse.&#13;
Under these con ditions&#13;
many harmful substances would&#13;
be censidewjd foods. Eithei is docomposed&#13;
iu part; chloroform is&#13;
partially destroyed. B u t do we&#13;
consider these substances foods?&#13;
Certainly not. Other things than&#13;
.decomposition are necessary to&#13;
nutrition. I t is necessary that&#13;
the decomposition be made in a&#13;
way that will n o t i n j u i e the vitality&#13;
of the cells. A part of the alcohol&#13;
that is destroyed in the&#13;
body uudergoes this decomposition&#13;
in a way that is injurious.&#13;
Observe that whereas true foods,&#13;
uch as sugar and fat, are de&#13;
I t will take more votes to elect&#13;
the next president than were required&#13;
at the last election of Mc-&#13;
Kinley. Under the reappointment&#13;
act which goes into opper-&#13;
• , . ation on March 4 J 903, the mem-&#13;
I **-order-to--«©-*-food, it 4S-*ot ^ersfctprof the house of represeh-&#13;
|de- &lt;.„*: •» •* , . - - -&#13;
Stomach and Liver Tablets and th*&#13;
heartburn may be avoided For s e T" "i "T", a i U 1 ^ *** ^&#13;
by F. A. Siller, Pinckney 8 t r 0 y e . C . ^ """*' w i f c h o n t&#13;
_ L provoking too hverly a combus-&#13;
I h e P e r e Marqnete railroad tion, alcohol is burned too rapid&#13;
company report that they have let ly, provoking a vertitable explos&#13;
contracts for 500 box cars, 100 ion. Suppose that a locomotive&#13;
has to run a certain number of&#13;
tatives and the electoral college is&#13;
increased to the extent of 29.&#13;
There were 447 members in the&#13;
electoral college which chose president&#13;
McKiuley. There will be&#13;
476 in the body to choose nis successor&#13;
in 1904, and this number&#13;
will be further increased if any&#13;
of the territories should be admitted&#13;
to statehood in the interval.&#13;
The states of the North&#13;
Atlantic seaboard gain nine votes&#13;
in the electoral college by the&#13;
new allotment (three of which go&#13;
to New York), the ten ex slave&#13;
states gain ten, aud the middle&#13;
west and the far west also gain&#13;
ten.&#13;
How It Is lloue.&#13;
The first object in life with the Aruerican&#13;
people is to "set rich;" tbe&#13;
second how to gain good health. The&#13;
first can i&gt;e obtained by energy, honesty&#13;
and swviny; the. second (good&#13;
VF\.l ovw. . er. SO hl. o.u.-l«d-&gt; you be a despondent&#13;
sufferer from any of the efleots'of l)y«-&#13;
papsia, Liver complaint, Appendicitis,&#13;
indigestion, etc , such as Sick Headache,&#13;
Palpitation of the heart, tJour&#13;
Stomach, Habitual Costivepess, Uizziness&#13;
ot the head, Nervous Hrostra&#13;
tion, Low Spirits, etc , you not sufier&#13;
another day. Two doses of the well&#13;
known Augus' Flower will relieve&#13;
you at onee. Go to F. A. Siller's&#13;
and get « sample bottle five, regular&#13;
size, 75c, Get Green's Prize Almanac.&#13;
coal cars, 5 parlor and cafe cars, 8&#13;
freight engines, 1 passenger engine&#13;
a n d one switcher at a total&#13;
cost of §636,000.&#13;
T O C u r e u C o l a i n O n e Dn&gt;&#13;
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets.&#13;
All druggists IVfund the money&#13;
U it fails to curs. £. VV. Grove's MV&#13;
nature is on each box. 25c.&#13;
kilometers; iu order to do this, it&#13;
must be given fuel. This is the s " ~&#13;
( c o u n t burns slowly and methodi- o u t&#13;
%&#13;
t h e country -young t r e e , as&#13;
When vou want a modern, up-todate&#13;
physic try Chamberla.n's Stomach&#13;
and Liver Tablets. Th*v are easy to&#13;
lake.an..d„.DJ.aasant in.effect. Price, 25c.&#13;
Sample^ free at F. A. Sigler's drug&#13;
store.&#13;
Next spring the secretary of agriculture&#13;
will distribute t h r o u g h -&#13;
The electoral commission at&#13;
-Havana appointed by the Cuba.,&#13;
c o n stitutionaJ convention to frame&#13;
laws for the conduct of Cubau&#13;
elections has made its r e p o r t It&#13;
provides for universal suffrage&#13;
and the use of the Australian Bal-&#13;
Jpi: T h e scheme new r m ^ fr&gt; t u e&#13;
cally. If in the place of coal we&#13;
throw nnptha on the fire, the combustion&#13;
of this may furnish as&#13;
much heat as the coal, but it is&#13;
b u r n e d instantaneously, in the&#13;
form of an explosion. The heat&#13;
thus produced is not utilized in&#13;
the machine. "What naptha is for&#13;
the locomotive, alcohol is to our&#13;
bodies; it is an explosive but not&#13;
a food,—-Dr. Bienfait, of Liege.&#13;
There are more people killed,so&#13;
far as I know English statistics—&#13;
~. 7~ ~~~, ,°~ ~~ ' v " " | m o r e men poisoned bv alcohol,&#13;
convention tor endorsement.&#13;
T h e B e » t R r M c d y f o r S t o m a t l i unci&#13;
B o i v e l T r o u b l e * .&#13;
"[have been in the drug business&#13;
for 20 years and have sold mc.st all of&#13;
the proprietary medicine* of any not*'&#13;
Among the entire list I have nerer&#13;
found anything to equal Chamber&#13;
Iain's Colic, Cholera and J&gt;iarrboe;i&#13;
Remedy for all Stomach and bowel&#13;
troubles," ?ays O. W. Wakefield, ot&#13;
Columbus, Ga. 'This remedy cured&#13;
two severe case* of Cholera morbus&#13;
than are poisoned by all other&#13;
I&gt;bison put together.—lames Edmunds,&#13;
M. 1).&#13;
Out of respect for the wishes of&#13;
Gov. Bliss,, the state military&#13;
braid has decided to have 1he&#13;
state encam]'met hold over only&#13;
one Sunday. I t had been the intention&#13;
of the board to have the&#13;
soldiers go into camp at Manistee&#13;
.,..-. x m/irnii« ;n I o n Sflturdav and break up camp&#13;
: W ^ 4 « m l y - a u 4 - M « M ^ - « w « w H ^ ^ ihe Mlowing Monand&#13;
sold hundreds of bo!ties of it to j day, but th* governor was opposed&#13;
my customers to their entire sat- ' " ' ' ~&#13;
isfaction,&#13;
well as garden seeds. Accord&#13;
ing to the program for distribution&#13;
a given number of seedlings will&#13;
be allotted to each member of the&#13;
house of representatives, who will&#13;
be asked to furnish a list of constituents&#13;
to whom he would like&#13;
to have them sent. The agricultural&#13;
department will chHhe-rest.&#13;
The seedlings will be grown in the&#13;
propagating houses, and forwarded&#13;
to their destination with specific&#13;
instructions as to how tiiey&#13;
should be planted and cared for.&#13;
t . . i i . : - -&#13;
A n O r n a m e n t a l D e e r .&#13;
One of the first things to attract the&#13;
attention of Baby Clarence was grandma's&#13;
hatrack, made of a pair of deer&#13;
boms. One afternoon when be was 3&#13;
fears old his papa took him to Captain&#13;
G.'s park. When relating the incidents&#13;
of the trip to his mamma on their return,&#13;
he exclaimed, "And, oh, mamma,&#13;
[ saw a deer, and he had a hatrack on&#13;
his head!"—Current Literature.&#13;
A Poor Millionaire.&#13;
Lately starved in London because&#13;
lie could not dig^t his food. Eariy&#13;
use ot Dr. Kii.g's New Lite Pills&#13;
would have saved him. They strdnyth&#13;
en tbe Stomach, a id digestion, pro&#13;
mote assimilation, improve appetite-&#13;
At &amp; efssiuu of tbe Probate Court for Said County,&#13;
held at the Probate Oittce in the VUl%ge ot&#13;
Howeli, ou Wednesday toe 3rd duj of July, io&#13;
the year one tt^m and uiue hundred uud one.&#13;
Present, L'tifetie A. ftowo Judge of Probate, in&#13;
the AJatter of the .Estate of&#13;
ELIZABETH E. CAM TBELL, Deceased.&#13;
On reading ana tilliiK thepetitloa duly verified ot&#13;
Eugene Campbell, prayluy that a certain Instrument&#13;
now on tiJe iu ttilt* cuurt, purporting to be&#13;
the last WiJJ and Testament oi said deceased, may&#13;
be admitted to probate.&#13;
Thereupon it is ordered that Tuesday the *&gt;'th day&#13;
of August next, ut lu o'clock iu the forenoon, at&#13;
eaid Probate Otlice, lie assigned lor the ueuring&#13;
of said petition. &lt;&#13;
It is further ordered that a,copy of this order be&#13;
pnblishod in ihc I'ISCKSHY DISPATCH, a newspaper&#13;
printed j(nd circulatiug iu suiii oouaty, three&#13;
succetsive weeks previous to said uay of m-nring.&#13;
KLOKM; A. STUWK,&#13;
t-31 J tidgeot Probate&#13;
Price 25..«. Money back if not satistied.&#13;
-Suld by ?. A. $\gh*Y druggis t.&#13;
Thf- Millionaire Hgnace.&#13;
The New York R e m l d has.&#13;
STATE of MICHIGAN. The Tuirty-nf'th Judicial&#13;
Circuit, in Chancery.&#13;
!&gt;uit pfUdiuir iu tlie Circuit Court tor tbe&#13;
County of Livingston, iu Chancery, at Howell&#13;
Alk'ht«an. on tbe &lt;Jtb djsy of July, 100].&#13;
UEUTUA BAKBOIK MAX.Y, Complainant,&#13;
vs.&#13;
KvaEKt: rt". MANN, Defendent.&#13;
hi this cause it appearing that tlrs defendant&#13;
Eugene W, Maun is nut_a resident ot the state of&#13;
Tfflchi^iiu^Bt is in 'he Philippine Islands and&#13;
rf ,ffA , . , , - I t 0 having two Sundays in camn&#13;
It affords a quick and sure \Rlu] if „.n e .1 , ' ' &lt;-fu"P,&#13;
easantform-- Pn, «... u, \, V f ^ ! ' ^ r e decided to&#13;
have the camp begm on Monday&#13;
August 5. It will close August U&#13;
cure in a pleasant form." For salu bv&#13;
F. A.Sigler, Pinokney f .„&gt;*„»,.. o. xi win close August U.&#13;
Bottled sunshine certainly is a j The board practically decided that&#13;
step in advance, and it is a fact, j no pprmits to sell liquor in camp&#13;
E x p e r i m e n t s iif the Smithsonian j will be granted to anyone. In&#13;
institute at Washington prove! previous years it has been the&#13;
that through the precious mineral ; custom to establish a sort of a canradium,&#13;
light without heat is a , teen by permitting some individpossibility.&#13;
Prof. Langley, of the j u a l to ship in a carload of liquor&#13;
Smithsonian, is authority for the | to be sold from the car under restatement&#13;
that two little phials jstrictions.&#13;
each a b o u t the size of your little \&#13;
finger, when they contain this r e - , . M a n y t u o u s a n ( j 8 h a v e \„?n restored&#13;
111 this way secretary AVilson expects&#13;
to start several million new&#13;
trees growing throught this country&#13;
every year, iu order to make&#13;
up for the reckless cutting down&#13;
of the natural forests. To facilitate&#13;
matters, the division of forestry&#13;
of the agricultural department&#13;
has made a survey of the&#13;
country, and has ascertained the&#13;
particular trees which thrive bes^f&#13;
and are most useful in each locality.&#13;
grveuulistem_bracing_allthe.mil. tu" ^ , ) l M 8 iu '** «T"ipi&#13;
TH«n&gt;au.es (3,S2STo number) iu the - ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
u . ft. As a summerary of the information&#13;
obtained, the Herald&#13;
gives&#13;
1&#13;
the following; "One two&#13;
- ) 1 " ^ h m i d m ^ ^ p e , c e n t o f tn,&gt; ^ ^ ^ t ^ t T . ™ T&#13;
^ T p E e p o p n T a n o n of the L, S.-^-OT l ^ ^ T ^ ^ 1 ' " "J c » W u " ' Z •/&#13;
1 X~ one person out of 20 OOH , ,„ ?tk lor " x wwk«! »-"&lt;"c«,i«,,.&#13;
S t o p tlu* Couffh &gt;in(I w o r k -&#13;
C o l d .&#13;
L r x a t i r e B r o m o - Q u i n i H e . T a b&#13;
a cold in o n e da v. \ o &lt; n i v ,&#13;
P r i c e 25 c e n t s .&#13;
off t h e&#13;
lets cure&#13;
no. pay.&#13;
to health and l;aPj inP.,s by the «se of&#13;
Chamberlain's Couirb Remedy. If af-l&#13;
m a r k a b l e mineral will give suffi&#13;
went light by which to read a&#13;
rParyins.t ed page if held close to^ 1 ^ T^ " ^1 ^" 1: ^^ ^t l n ^o a t ^or7 lu^n I f a f - ? trrU i,jf t&#13;
Jive it a trial tor i t , , 'certain to prove&#13;
i b'nehc.H!. Cnn„bs Miat. h a v 0 ^ , ^&#13;
another treatment for &gt; e arst have&#13;
The Urange Frrsli Air IVork.&#13;
This work consists of sending&#13;
out poor children from deserving&#13;
families into country homes for&#13;
two or three week's vacation,&#13;
which otherwise they could not&#13;
have. Our committee has been&#13;
engaged in this work for tLe past&#13;
six years, and in that time has&#13;
sent out 941 children, working&#13;
yielded (o this renu dy a » d perfect&#13;
health een lesfnred. Cases that&#13;
A T e x n * G n t e .&#13;
A correspondent of Iowa Homestead ,,,.,.&#13;
sketches a Texas sate which he says is I , . , i t . ., ,• . ,&#13;
a good gate and when huv.S rhjht *™^ hopeless, tliat the climate of&#13;
'famous health resorts failed to henefit&#13;
have leen peimenfly cured by its use.&#13;
For tale by F. A. .Sipler, Pinckney.&#13;
girls, etc., to such homes among&#13;
respectable farmers as are offe:ed&#13;
them. The committee here provide&#13;
the children and furnish transportation&#13;
to and from the homes,&#13;
there being no expense to the&#13;
farmers, save the keeping of the&#13;
children, which many of them&#13;
gladly proffer. I t is hoped that&#13;
some of your many readers will&#13;
avail themselves of this opportunity&#13;
to extend a helping hand tc&#13;
this beautiful charity, which commends&#13;
itself to everyone, aud will&#13;
open their homes to two or more&#13;
20,000—controls&#13;
aboirt one fitli of the nations&#13;
wealth. That is, 3,828 millionaire&#13;
o u t o f a pou pul a tion a little in excess&#13;
ot 70,000,000 own 616,000,-&#13;
000,000 of the ¢81,000,000,000 at&#13;
which our entire property is valued.&#13;
We have an aristocracy of&#13;
wealth' that has quite suddenly&#13;
sprung into existance. I n the&#13;
first quarter of the century just&#13;
closed, there were not more than&#13;
half a dozen millionaires iu the&#13;
land, and o n l y - - J o h n Jacob Astor&#13;
in New York and Stephen&#13;
Girai'd in Philadelphia—had sufficient&#13;
wealth to m a k a them particularly&#13;
conspicuous. I t is found&#13;
that eighty-seven per cent of the&#13;
millionaires have built their own&#13;
fortunes, many from the very bottom,&#13;
and a large number on foundations&#13;
laid by fathers and grandfathers.&#13;
The millionaires have&#13;
come from all the great industries&#13;
nineteen per cent from manufacturing,&#13;
sixteen per cent from real&#13;
estate, thirteen per cent inherited,&#13;
twelve per cent railways and&#13;
steamships, ten per cent banking,&#13;
six per cent farms and cattle, and&#13;
from all other industries five per&#13;
cent."'&#13;
. ,*.v .Time vi JIICUI^HU, there&#13;
/ore on motion of Louis VI. Howelett, solicitor for&#13;
the Uunplaiuaiit, it isOHDEKED that the defendauteuter&#13;
his appe&amp;reucc in suid cause ou ur before&#13;
live months )rom the date of thid order, und&#13;
that within twenty days the complainant cause&#13;
1)28-&#13;
n.Avtn n. n.utuKH to„&#13;
.fiow . M I Circuit Court Com.&#13;
Ndicuor for Complainant.&#13;
WANTED—CapaWle' reliable person in every&#13;
county to represent Jarye company of solid llnaucial&#13;
reputation; $W(&gt; saliwv pt&lt;r ye'tr, payable&#13;
weekly; jf.1 per day absolutely sure and all expense.*;&#13;
stjaijjht, bona llde, dfiinate salary, no&#13;
commission: salary paid earn Saturday and expense&#13;
money advanced each uvek. S T A X O A I U )&#13;
HOUSE. ;);u IVarDt-ni st. Chicago t--J9&#13;
M . ^ H M M M M M M H M « « M a M M H . M f l ^ M A n M H M i M H a i i n B n a M I&#13;
WATfEf)—Capa!)lo, reliable person in every&#13;
county to represent lar^-« company of solid rtuaacial&#13;
repulfltion, S3:jri salary pt'r year, piyabie&#13;
weekly; ?3perduy absolurely rtmv atid all expenses:&#13;
straight, bona-tide, deiiu.ite salary, no&#13;
comniis.-iou; salary luid «.nr!i Saturilay aud exl&gt;&#13;
ense money a.ivaiiced eai-h week. STANDARD&#13;
HOUSE, ;W4 Dearhorn .st. Chic«)jo. t-29&#13;
Railroad Guide&#13;
•&lt;&#13;
A : : I&#13;
' • f ' l i i ;&#13;
I V -I&#13;
i f&#13;
A EAXPT GATE.&#13;
works easily. It is a good pnte for a&#13;
pasture when you want to put through&#13;
ft good many head of stock at once, or&#13;
ieet, but can be made any width. At A o f *"e&#13;
fjnay be seen one of tbe binges which ( above.&#13;
holds tbe gate to tbe center bole.&#13;
|15 Day Exrnrsjwn to Frankfort and&#13;
j Traverse City.&#13;
Thursday J u l y 25 the Annual open tneir Homes to two or more&#13;
midsummer Excursion to Frank- of these children, and will kindly&#13;
fort, Crystal Lake and Traverse communicate with Dr. James A.&#13;
City * ill be given by the Ann Ar- Post, secretary, J14 B a t e s street,&#13;
bop B . E . Train leaves Lakeland D e t r o i t ' M l c h '&#13;
' " rty* She Didn't Wear a Sfask.&#13;
But her beauty was completely bidden&#13;
by sores, blotches and pimplM.s till&#13;
she used Buklen's Arnica Salve. Then&#13;
they vanished as will all eruplion.s,&#13;
Fever 8o»'e,«. Boil*. TTICTS, &lt;,*ael un&lt;• lo-&#13;
Jntaliible&#13;
^&#13;
Scalds and&#13;
Piles. Cure guaranteed. 25c at F.&#13;
A. Sigler's. -I&#13;
t i ( ^ f ' ;• : ,•:;(•:• IT t i&#13;
M.-s. .'::::•: rv.'Ti-V.'r'.!, f"i- !-:y part.&#13;
I l / ' v c i.'.) tlr.ic to ( "i;or IUTO r.^.y d'sf".::-&#13;
s|{;?2 J1.!;^)?! c!i:!(]r -n's q u a r r e l s . I&#13;
hop:1 I n:u nhovi' s\it.-!i [h'.v.gri.&#13;
" I ' m &lt;lell;rhti'(J t'? !:t«;ir tliat. I'll send&#13;
H a r o l d o v e r on a s t r e t c h e r ill o n hour&#13;
o r s o . " — H a r p e r ' s B a z a r .&#13;
&gt; AA'O STEAMSHIP UNE9,&#13;
Popular route tor Ann Arbor, Toledo&#13;
and points Em% South, and ior&#13;
Howell, Owosso, Alma, Alt Pleasant&#13;
Cadillac, Man»si.ee, Traverse Citv a&amp;d&#13;
points in Northwestern ilicbwTn.&#13;
W. H. BEXXETT,&#13;
G. P . A. Toledo&#13;
ti-hanVi uy WKitii to suit. I " -"«x3 »m y August 3 inclusive ^UKJKD S Arnica :&#13;
of ^ U F J F ! ^ ^ Z - s i t friends in northern M i c h i , " j ! ^ ' ^ ™ -&#13;
ff^^th gate closes it. i %tt°r t o »I»nd your vacation at one ^ J " " " , , S 08H"&#13;
^ ^ . ^ ^ " ^ . W ^ t h . At A4 of the ppooppullaarr rreesioorrtfs. .na1med^ i°&lt; C u ^ G o r n v J ^ t-30&#13;
M a n y J n s t L i k e I t .&#13;
"Those new neighbors humiliated me&#13;
dreadfully today."&#13;
"How?"&#13;
"Why, they sent over to borrow our&#13;
Bible; said they bad forgotten theirs&#13;
when they moved. And I'm aimost&#13;
sorry I let 'em take it."&#13;
"But why?"&#13;
"Because it doesn't look as if it ever&#13;
had vbcen used."—Cleveland Plain Deal&#13;
o r&#13;
E /MARQUETTE&#13;
3E5ailr3a,a., 3*«,«.. 1 , 1 9 3 1 .&#13;
Trains leavp South Lyon as follows:&#13;
F o r Detroit nnd Kest,&#13;
10:3(5 a. iu., 3:0-1 p. m.,' S;o8 p. iu.&#13;
For G r a n d Rapids, Xorth a»d West,&#13;
$):4-3 a. m., 2.0S p . w. 6:20 p. JX.&#13;
For Suginau mid Bay City,&#13;
10:3(3 a. m., 3:0-1 p. tu., S:")S p . m .&#13;
For Toledo and South, 10:3() n. tn,&#13;
FR^NK B&gt;Y, II. F. MOELLEis,&#13;
Agent, South Lvrwi. i*. P. A., Detroit.&#13;
The DrspxTCH Job Depirtmen&#13;
would like to print your envelopes. oo*«B-beiwe«j J«Pk»oir«n&lt;t Defroli; * ^&#13;
/T&#13;
for Hid county. E M K 8 * " " F r o b t l i C o « «&#13;
iu* been .Mowed by « K « «r o ' mU h *V '&#13;
"£&#13;
\ •. *&#13;
-n&#13;
...;;. ^ &gt;&#13;
V T" *; + v&#13;
* &gt; . • .&#13;
w,.&#13;
•s:j&amp;'*'&#13;
.^%&#13;
• -- v&#13;
;;-; ;,-^v -f&lt;':: '.';*^,-&#13;
^ • ' ••'V,M&#13;
;rw- .&#13;
7'-&#13;
: &gt;&#13;
s as&#13;
Watte Man taraed fellow.&#13;
Grew, consternation was l«U by tbe&#13;
friend* of M. A. Hbgarty of Lexington&#13;
Ky, when they saw be was taming&#13;
yellow. His skin slowly changed&#13;
ooior, also bis eyes, and be suffered&#13;
terribly/ His malady was Yellow&#13;
J an nd toe. He was treated by the&#13;
beat doctors, but without Deneflt.&#13;
Then &gt;e was advised to try Electric&#13;
Bittp'-i.tbe wonderful Stotoacb and&#13;
hive -'emedy, and be writes: "After&#13;
Ukin ' t r o bottles I was wholly cured."&#13;
A trial proves its matchless&#13;
tawi for all Stomach, Liver and Kidney&#13;
' oubUs. poly 50e. Sold by F.&#13;
A S^ler druggist.&#13;
V e n g e a n c e .&#13;
Wrirned Traveler —I nave often&#13;
thou 'jt of that young Mr. Tease and&#13;
now he used to torment Miss Auburn&#13;
about her bair. Bid she ever get even&#13;
with Wm?&#13;
Old Friend—Long ago. She married&#13;
nlm,—Illustrated Bits. ^&#13;
La lies and waiting maids among the&#13;
and' at Greeks and Romans wore plain&#13;
hoops of gold or silver in\ their ears,&#13;
and as time progressed these became&#13;
more elaborate, precious gems being&#13;
set in them.&#13;
THE ANN ARBOR'S PROJECT&#13;
Vast Improvements to be, made at Frankfort&#13;
on the Uke.&#13;
SUPERB&#13;
r Z TMNIJI^Q^FRUIT, V&#13;
Profitable, but / tnuenal Praetlee*&#13;
Done Afttrr the "Jane Dr*p."&#13;
This operation la much recommend*&#13;
ed. is favored by many of the growers,&#13;
but as a matter of fact la not generally&#13;
practiced, though It Is done more in&#13;
some sections than in others.&#13;
A peach tree under normal conditions&#13;
Mil assimilate a certain quantity of&#13;
All the Available Forest Lands Along the U k e Acquired for a Cwlonyfof Son.&#13;
mer Cottages. Biff Improvements at Crystal U k e ,&#13;
T h e A n n A r b o r , B y r o a d made&#13;
public last week t h e details of a&#13;
gigantic project, which will make&#13;
Toledo t h e gathering ground of&#13;
thousands of tonrists, from all&#13;
parts of America, and advance the&#13;
city of Frankfort, Michigan, to a&#13;
position of national prominence as&#13;
a health a n d pleasure resort.&#13;
Summarized, the undertaking&#13;
includes the erection of a superb&#13;
hotel representing an investment&#13;
of over $100,000; the establishment venience, aTTd-crmrfoTtrof^fcbe-^ot&#13;
of immence baths, and t h e exploit&#13;
atiou of the wonderful waters a t&#13;
Fraukfort, on a scale that will rival&#13;
M&amp;. Clemens.&#13;
T h e betel so far as t h e outward&#13;
It Dazzles the World. I construction is concerned, is prac-&#13;
No Discovery in medicine .has ejeritically compleTeT^alid^wllen it is&#13;
creared. one quarter of the excitment&#13;
tbat has been taused l&gt;y Dr, King's&#13;
New Discovery icr Consumption. It's&#13;
aevi test tests have been on hopeless&#13;
victims ot Consumption, fneumonia,&#13;
Hemorrhage, Pleurisy and Bronchi lis,&#13;
thousands of wbom it has restored to&#13;
per ect health. For Coughs, Colds,&#13;
Asthma, Croup, Hay Fever\ Hoarseness&#13;
and Whooping Cougb it is the&#13;
quickest, surest cure in the world. It&#13;
is soid by F. A^Siirler who guarantees&#13;
8*ti&gt;faction -o."-rotundsmoney. Large&#13;
- • ties 50.; and $1.00. Trial bottles&#13;
One T h i n s a n d A n o t h e r .&#13;
"rom water measurements made at&#13;
;ieatlands, Wy.w it appears that the&#13;
atoat nmnnnt pf irrigation occurs In&#13;
ue for all crops except potatoes and&#13;
.alfa. which receive the most watery&#13;
: .luly, and that whether a farmer&#13;
eds the most water in June or July&#13;
pends on the kind of crop of which 1 has the largest area.&#13;
Sugar b.eets are said to reach their&#13;
ghest degree of perfection commerally&#13;
under Irrigation.&#13;
Cold curing of cheese (GO degrees and&#13;
1 i!low) is found decidedly the best by&#13;
• le of the stations.&#13;
Partridge Wyandottes are a new va-&#13;
: ety of .the popular Wyandotte, a cross&#13;
• f Golden Wyandotte and Partridge&#13;
» ochin.&#13;
A mixture of wood ashes and kerosene&#13;
is one of the protections agalatt&#13;
striped cucumber beetles. ,&#13;
opened next year, will unquestionably&#13;
be the handsomes structure&#13;
of its sort in northern Michigan.&#13;
Those who have visited Frankfort&#13;
and have seen the plans, are all&#13;
making comparisons with the finest&#13;
hotels in the state, greatly to&#13;
the disadvantage of the latter.&#13;
The building occupies an ideal location.&#13;
I t is situated on what has&#13;
long been known as t h e "Island,"&#13;
only, a few hund red feet away from&#13;
the&#13;
ence and awesome admiration.&#13;
N a t u r e s handiwork will be left&#13;
undisturbed as far as possible, but&#13;
to the exquisite beauty of t h e&#13;
place, will be added all tne substantial&#13;
accomodations which are&#13;
absolutly essential to the complete&#13;
enjoyment of a s u m m e r outing.&#13;
T h e property will be intersected&#13;
at certain intervals by community&#13;
streets, aud perfect sanitary provisions&#13;
made for the health, contagers.&#13;
I t will be an ideal community,&#13;
modeled somewhat after&#13;
the plan of middl e bass, ^ o land&#13;
will be sold, b u t every member&#13;
will have a common interest and a&#13;
. . • -, , - ., only a question between picking the&#13;
voice in tuo conduct of community f r u l t off l n J u n e a n d t h r o w i n g I t o n t n e&#13;
affairs. I t is not sought to attract ground-^nd-piektog-it-offa_liiLteJaiex&#13;
wealth or large expenditure, b u t a n d putting it in a basket.&#13;
' If the fruit is thinned to from four to&#13;
food material duting^be-trmritir^ieveloping&#13;
a crop of fruit.&#13;
Peach trees are Inclined to overbear&#13;
—that is, set—more fruit than they can&#13;
properly mature with the amount of&#13;
food material it is possible for them to&#13;
assimilate. Hence it is that the fruit&#13;
all remains small, not reaching the size&#13;
that will bring satisfactory prices in&#13;
the markets.&#13;
Thinning the fruit will reduce the&#13;
•train upon tbe tree. There will be, so&#13;
to speak, a smaller number of mouths&#13;
to feed, and the remaining fruit will be&#13;
correspondingly larger.&#13;
As the severest strata upon the tree Is&#13;
occasioned by the development of the&#13;
teed the thinning should be done before&#13;
the seed begins to harden. This will&#13;
be while the fruit is still quite small.&#13;
It will be safe to begin as soon as the&#13;
"June drop" is passed:&#13;
The objection that many hold to&#13;
thinning is the expense of the operation.&#13;
But unless there are severe&#13;
storms very little of the fruit which remains&#13;
on the tree after the "June drop"&#13;
will fall off. It then follows that it is&#13;
mmmm&#13;
'••'*&#13;
to provide for home people a summer's&#13;
rest aud recreation at a&#13;
modest nnd reasonable outlay.&#13;
six inches apart, It will be better than&#13;
if it is closer. It is a common experience&#13;
that trees so thinned will ""actually&#13;
sandy shores of -old Lake&#13;
Michigan, commanding a suberb&#13;
view, and swept by the&#13;
, - , , , A. , ,i • produce a greater bulk of fruit than unfeolely&#13;
on the s t r e n g t h , of per- ; t n i n n e d t r c e S i a i l d t ! u , f r u i t f r o m g u c h&#13;
sonal testimony offered by people | trees is practically all first grade. Even&#13;
who have taken the waters, F r a n k I « the„ b u l k of, f r u i t , i s s o n i ^ l i a t l e s s&#13;
. . . -i' *L * * than from unthmned trees the amount&#13;
fort has enjoyed a limited fame j o f h i f f h g l .a d e f r u i t i s s-afficient to comfor&#13;
years through t h e efficacy of j mend the operation.&#13;
its mineral springs, and the Ann . . T 1 f ^uit may be thinned considers&#13;
t -&#13;
r n . •• n bly by keeping the tops properly prun-&#13;
A r b o r Co. proposes to take full ^ D u t much o f i t m u s t b e d o n e b y&#13;
a d v a n t a g e s of their opportunity. I ^and. In this way the Imperfect fruit&#13;
The^e i s n o d o u b t " w h a t e v e r t h a t | ^ n b e&#13;
c ! F ? T ^ ^ 7 ^ 7 ^ ^&#13;
which is-hkely to-develop into the best&#13;
the springs possess powers equally specimens. This mc od will greatly&#13;
cooling las potent as those at Mt. Clemens lessen the work -ef grading the fruit&#13;
j wheo It is marketed.&#13;
i As a rule growers experience consid-&#13;
, erable difficulty in getting their men to&#13;
(thin their fruit sufficiently, but it is important&#13;
that the matter be followed up&#13;
•* W J± :v T E D "&#13;
Weak men, weak women, pale&#13;
men, pale women, ner.ou* men, nervous&#13;
women, debilitated nien, debilitated&#13;
women, to take KnilL's Red Pills&#13;
for Wan People. They restore Health,&#13;
Strength and LieAuty. Wake up,&#13;
brace up by taking them before tbe&#13;
hot vveatiier. They are tbe great body&#13;
builder and developer, Spring Tonic&#13;
and Blood medicine, 25c a box.&#13;
KnilJs While Liver Pills are the&#13;
great Liver Invigorat'or, Bowel Regulator.&#13;
25 do**'* 25c.&#13;
Knill's Bln« Kidney Pilis cure&#13;
Backache and Kidney troubles. 25c&#13;
a box.&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
Salary S900 Y E A R L Y .&#13;
Mei tne wcmci of jjoo.l address to ia »resent&#13;
n e, some to tidvel a&gt; pointing ngents. other* for&#13;
local work looking after otir interests. 19041&#13;
salary guaranteed yearly; exCraco roissioon and&#13;
expenses. r»p d aHvaiK-oinent, old established&#13;
houB*. Grand chance for earueet man or woman&#13;
to •ecure pl^asa'it, perrcanent position, liberal&#13;
income ana future. New. brilliant lines. Write&#13;
at once, S T A F F O R D PttfcSJ*, t-:tt&#13;
» 3 C h u r c U Nt,, &gt; c w H a v e n , C o n n .&#13;
miw^'Vtivi.^is^wiw.'1&#13;
POSTAL A MORIV,&#13;
rnopiiitt'Oiit.&#13;
A&#13;
strictly&#13;
flrtt-&#13;
CIHM,&#13;
modem,&#13;
up-Mr-dat*&#13;
H©t*r, located&#13;
in the heart of&#13;
DETROIT. **(**.&#13;
Rttes, $2, $2.50, ^ per Day.&#13;
• • • I A M W M M M V M W S ' V V ' H ' ^v«*M*l«*WWH^&#13;
j closely.—H. P. Gould, Maryland.&#13;
HESSIAN FLY.&#13;
breezes on each side.&#13;
T h e ho tel will contain two hunand&#13;
twenty-five guest rooms, and&#13;
the architect has done his work so&#13;
well that it is no exaggeration to&#13;
say that there will not be a poor&#13;
room iu the building. T h e interior&#13;
furnishingswill be of most generous&#13;
and elaborate character, and&#13;
no improvement or comfort that&#13;
could possibly be suggested&#13;
will be omitted. B r o a d&#13;
verandas and balconies will practially&#13;
circle the house, and tine&#13;
billard rooms and bowling alleys&#13;
will be provided for the amusement&#13;
ot t h e yruests.&#13;
[ No D a m a g e W h e r e a M e d l n m G r a d e&#13;
F e r t i l i z e r W a i A p p l i e d .&#13;
It appears from tbe letter of a wbeat&#13;
grower to The Ohio Farmer that manr&#13;
fanners, of that state, expecting the fly&#13;
last fall, deferred seeding until late, but&#13;
the fly anticipated the wheat grower&#13;
also, for it aid thorough work on all&#13;
wheat sown in this farmer's section up&#13;
to Sept. 24. but after the 2Sth none of&#13;
its work can be found. These dates&#13;
a n d tbat tact will be heralded to I have reference to the time of sowing&#13;
all c o m e r s of the country. On and not when eggs were laid&#13;
Where a medium grade of prepared&#13;
this one proposition alone—pub-I fertilizer was applied (200 pounds per&#13;
licity—the Ann Arbor Co. will 11?cre) u o appreciable damage was suf-&#13;
• T ., j * i 11 . • ., fered by the wheat plant last fall. Its&#13;
spend thousands of dollars in the e f f e c t w a g t 0 s t i m u l a t e t l i e sUooting of&#13;
next three years. The big baths I a new plant from the root below the&#13;
will be erected and in operation | lai"vn?- w h i c h w e r e severally several&#13;
, A, '' .. . , . in number, and a spring examination of&#13;
by the time of the opening next t h e c o i n i ) i e t e stool showed the insects&#13;
in a small, dead branch which was&#13;
really the main plant at the beginning.&#13;
On some drill widths where no fertilizer&#13;
was applied the wheat died entirely.&#13;
It lived long enough, however,&#13;
to nurture the larva? it contained to maturity.&#13;
These, in many places where&#13;
the dead plant heaved out and become&#13;
disintegrated by decay, lay about upon&#13;
who will be loth to see their cher-&#13;
The property acquired by the j ished haunts turned over to trav-&#13;
Eailroad Company, for the erec- I elers from other states,&#13;
tion of summer cottages, consists! Th* Ann Arbor Co. will award&#13;
of a.magnincieut stretch of rug-1 to the person s u g g e s t i n g a name&#13;
jj.d cliffs raouuting straight u p | for the*uew hotel, which shall be&#13;
from the sandy shores of the lake accepted and adopted by Geu'l&#13;
to a height that varies from 150 to Manager H . W. Ashley, the sum&#13;
300 feet. T h e summit of these j of ¢50. Communications on this&#13;
cliffs is a forest of primeval wild- subject should be addressed to T.&#13;
ness and beauty; and the view&#13;
year.&#13;
I t is hoped and expected the&#13;
the cottagers along L a k e Michigan&#13;
and Crystal! L a k e will be monopolized&#13;
by Toledo, Northwestern f&#13;
Ohio and Michigan people. Both&#13;
places have long been favorite&#13;
/-»,-,+;»,» ~~^„„A„ * i~„~i *..'*. the surface of the ground, every one a&#13;
o u t i n g grounds for local tourists t h l n R o f l l f e . Tbe tirst, adults, according&#13;
to this man's observation, issued&#13;
forth May 4 to soon g:o to work depositing&#13;
eggs upon the leaves of the wheat&#13;
to supply larva&gt; for each joint above&#13;
ground, which sap the life of the plant&#13;
and cause crinkled straws and empty&#13;
chaff next harvest time, tinless Professor&#13;
Webster's parasite comes to the res-'&#13;
cue.&#13;
Professor Webster's parasite is a fungous&#13;
or parasitic infection similar to&#13;
that wbich is destructive to chinch&#13;
hucrs.&#13;
We t b « ' ' « n i i m U r i u $ ^ %&#13;
agree to rafoad tbe monty od * 60&#13;
cent bottle of Down's Elixir if i t doH&#13;
not care any congh, cold, whooping&#13;
coo«rh, or throat trouble. We *!«»&#13;
guarantee Down's Elixir to cure coif&#13;
sumption, when need according te dV&#13;
reckons, or money back. A fall doee&#13;
-m going *^h«d and amall dose* ^ay*&#13;
ine the day will care tbe most severe&#13;
cold, and st"p tbe most distressing&#13;
coagb.&#13;
P. \ . Kigler,,&#13;
W. B. Darrosr&#13;
ii ii&#13;
She finrbney §i5patch.&#13;
POBU0KV&gt; BVSXT TBTUMDAY MOUICI« BT&#13;
FRANK L. A N D R E W S&#13;
Editor and *&gt;ropH*ior.&#13;
8ubacrlp&gt;ttoa Price $1 i n Adfaac*.&#13;
1nt«iea at the.Poatofllce at Piacfcaey, Michigan&#13;
aa aeoood-claaa matter.&#13;
Adrertiaing rates made known oa application.&#13;
Boalneai Carda, $4.00 per year.&#13;
l^eatb and marriage notieea pablianed tt%%.&#13;
Anaouncemenuul entertainmenta may be paid&#13;
tor, if desired, by pr^aentlng tbe office with, tick*&#13;
eta of admlaflion. In caae tickets are not brought&#13;
tneoittce, regular rates will be charged.&#13;
All matter in local n o t R r c o l u m ^ w i U b e c h a r a -&#13;
ed at 5 cents per line or fraction thereof, tor each&#13;
insertion, w h e r e no time is specified, all notices&#13;
F. Ale?Janus, care of advertising&#13;
looking over the lake, a spectacle! d e p a i t m e n t . A u n Arbor Railthftt&#13;
strises the beholder ^'nto sil-l road, Toledo.&#13;
BO YEARS*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
TftAoc M A R K S&#13;
OCSIONt&#13;
Co#vmoHTS Ac.&#13;
qiiAJonkvloyn «e »s&lt;e^nrduiJnng oau srk oetpcihn iaonnd fdreeeee rwthpetttohne rm aany t•inornesnMttrntnc tlty*c pornnfbldnebnlyU pola. teHnatanbdlbeo. okC ooinn rPoantnelnoats- •ont free. Oldest anagreennc y for seeannrnatenta. Patents taken throaah Sftmn A&#13;
tpteUd notice, without ehanre, ln the reoelTe&#13;
Scientific HtnerkatL A hnndsomely Ulaittrated weekly. Lanrest circulation&#13;
of any aetanttSe Ipornai. Terms. SS a&#13;
.year: t onr months, »L Sow by all newsdeuata. M «^TwSHPInirinir&#13;
la&lt;t May an infant child of&#13;
«&gt;ur neitfhhor was siiffeiintr from cholera&#13;
mlHntU4ii. The doctors had sriven&#13;
up all hopes ot recovery. I took a&#13;
l&gt;ottle oiUha-nberininVColic, Cholera&#13;
and Diarrhoea Kemedy to the house,&#13;
telling rhom I felt sore it would do&#13;
wood if used according to direction*,&#13;
ln two days time the child had fullv&#13;
recovered. Tbe child is no^ viarnrous&#13;
nnd healthy. I have reccommended&#13;
this remedy frequently and have&#13;
never known it. to tail—Mr*. Cnrti*&#13;
Baker, IJookwaltelr. Ohio. So4d by P.&#13;
A. Siller, Piockney.&#13;
A Card.&#13;
I, the undersigned, do hereby a*ree&#13;
to refund the money on a 50 cent, bot&#13;
tie of Green's Warranted Syrup of&#13;
Tar if it failes ro cure your cou^h or&#13;
cold. ] a&lt;so guarantee a 25-cent bottle&#13;
to prove satisfactory or money refunded.&#13;
t23&#13;
Will D. Darrow.&#13;
Subscribe for Dispatch.&#13;
€&amp;£ This ajfnatnte ia on wory box 1 the genuine&#13;
Laxative Bromo-Quinu* Tabi«u&#13;
the remedy the! cauesi a&#13;
will be inserted oatil ordered alsconUaaedi and&#13;
will be charged for accoraingly. ar-AUcnangse&#13;
of adrertisements MUST reach this office as early&#13;
aa TCBSSAY morning to insure an insertion the&#13;
same week.&#13;
JOS MIXlIAGt&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We h*Te»11 kinds&#13;
and the latest styles or Type, eta., which enables&#13;
u» to execute all kinds of work.aach as Books,&#13;
PaiapTetBTPoiters, Piograuimes. BHi Heads, Wets&#13;
Heads, Statements, Cards, Auctloo Bills, etc., i n&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices as&#13;
O-M as good work can b»' aoae.&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY,&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PBBSIDXMT..•.'.- ~~ ....C. L,Sigler&#13;
TiiCBTCBB K Baker. K. H. £rwin,&#13;
F. *&gt;. Jackson, Geo KeasonJr.&#13;
Cbas. Love, Malacby Kocae.&#13;
E. a, Browo&#13;
TBIABUBKB J. A. Cadwrell&#13;
AMSBMOB « ..— .Jas. A.Greene&#13;
STBXBT CoMitissioNBa J. Parker&#13;
HBALTH OFTICBB Dr. a. K. 5&gt;i«ler&#13;
ATTOBJIICT «.. ....-...«M~ MM W. A. Carr&#13;
MABSUAIX&gt;H&gt;.M. ~~. ».~~. ---3. Brogaa&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH.&#13;
Kev. H. W . Hicka, pastor. Services every&#13;
Sunday morning at I0:&amp;o, aad every Sandey&#13;
eveuing at 7:W&gt; o'clock. Prayer meeting Thursday&#13;
evesia^s. Sunday school at close of morning&#13;
servise. LKAJ. SIGLEB, Supt.&#13;
IONU«KGATIONAL CHURCH.&#13;
\J Bey, O. W. Rice pastor. Service every&#13;
Sunday morning at 10:30 aad every Sundsy&#13;
evening at 7:oc o'clock. Prayer meeting Thars&#13;
d^v evenings. Saaddy school at close oi m o m -&#13;
i n i service. Alisa Kittie Hoff, Supt,, AiaOel&#13;
Swarvhout Sec.&#13;
^ T . MARK'S'J ATHCH.IC CHURCH.&#13;
© kev. M. J. Oouiuiertord, Piwtor. Services&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at 7:30 o'clock&#13;
bigUmasB wUbsermoQ at 9:40*. m. Catechism&#13;
at 3;0e p. m., vespers ana benediction at 7 :&lt;u p . m .&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. O. H. Socletv of this place, meet* every&#13;
third Si(a&lt;t&amp;y iatne Fr. \1 ittaew Hall.&#13;
John luomey and M. T. Kelly,Couuty Delegates&#13;
tJPWORTH LEAGUE. MeeU every Sunday&#13;
^evening at 6:00 oclock in the ML K. Caurch. A&#13;
cordial invitation is extended to everyone, especially&#13;
youug people. F. L. Audrews, Pres.&#13;
CHRHTIAK ENDEAVOR SOC?IErV:-Meet&#13;
La^ every Sunday evening st (1:¾). Preai-leat&#13;
Miss L. AI, Ooe; ^ecritarf, Sl:a Ilutie C*rp.inter&#13;
r p H E W . C.T. U. meets the firtt PrMay of each&#13;
I month at 2:3C p. m. at tne home of Or. ii. F.&#13;
Sigler. Kveryone&#13;
cosxtially invited. Mrs&#13;
t t t a Dsrfee, Secretary&#13;
interested in temperance i s&#13;
Leal Siller, Pres; Mrs.&#13;
The C. T. A. snd B. aocva&lt;.y of this place, n»»et&#13;
every third Sataraay evening in the Pr. .Matthew&#13;
Hall. John Donohue, President.&#13;
KNIGHTS OP MACCABEES. '&#13;
Meet every Friday evening on or before foil&#13;
of the moon at their ball in the Swarthout bldg.&#13;
Visiting brothers are cordiallv invited.&#13;
CUAS. LUBPBELL, Sir Knight Commander&#13;
LiviDgston Lodge, No. 79, F A ' A . i!. Regular&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
the Cull of the moon. H. P. Sigler, W, M.&#13;
ORDER OF EASTERN STAR meets each month&#13;
evenii * "&#13;
&amp;A.M. meeting, Mas&#13;
RDER OF MODERN WOO Oil EN' Meet the&#13;
liret Thursday evening of each Month in the&#13;
.Viuccabee nail. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEUS. Meet every i s&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of eachinonth at 4:30 p m . i t&#13;
K. &lt;). X. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially invited,&#13;
J U L U SiGtEU, Lady Com.&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular P.&#13;
MARY RXAD, W. M.&#13;
S. KNIGHTS o r THE LOYAL GO ABO&#13;
meet every second Wednesday&#13;
evening of every mouth in the K. O.&#13;
T. M. Hall at 7:*) o'clock. All visiting&#13;
Guards welcome.&#13;
C. L. Grimes. Capt. Gen.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIGLER M. D- C, I , SIQLER M, D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Physicians and Surgeons. Ail calls prompt I&#13;
attended to day or uight. Ounce o n M a l n s t r&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
DR. A. B. GREEN.&#13;
DENTIST-Eyery Fridaj; an« 9 Thareday&#13;
when having appointments. Cfflf over&#13;
Sigler's Drug Store.&#13;
J. F. MiiJtm*&#13;
V E T E R I N A R Y S U R Q E O N&#13;
Graduate of Out irio Veterinary Ooite&lt;s, also&#13;
• the Veterinary Dentistry College&#13;
Toronto Canada.&#13;
Will promptly attmd to all dtseaesj o t ^ h e do&#13;
mestioated animal at a reasonable price.&#13;
Horses teeth ezJuninedlFree. o r n c c a t A\lLL, PINCKNU&gt;&#13;
m&#13;
— • •••••'-I&#13;
- &gt; r - - " - ^&#13;
&gt;' -"'v'it«".v(,»;J&#13;
.:. M'i-A&#13;
•m&#13;
: ; • * •&#13;
'•-.'ft.'-&#13;
'if } * - *&#13;
••V&#13;
:&amp;m$t*fr'&#13;
. I . " V - . » - Y ; J ; - • •••&gt;• ,•• : , ; ' - - . &gt; . . ' v 1 j • • • * &gt; ' ! •&#13;
•. . 1*..» ' *n • • j . . • * * - . . , ....11i - -~ ~ L . ;-fv/.&#13;
^ ;*f.W;&#13;
*A&#13;
. . V *. ' i i •&#13;
i*l&lt;&#13;
.:^:^^^^;'i'';^^:r^'^&lt;c. • • • $ •&#13;
i*v; ''***'- ,#; . ' . . . • * ' *&#13;
» 3&#13;
•'-f\,.:&#13;
,.-,,^,&#13;
y j i ,&gt; # ;&#13;
•V -*&gt;.i-+\VJ-&#13;
. ' • . * * • ' ' :&#13;
4-:&#13;
niii^iii HJE! iMM^filfrfftyif1 r»;&#13;
FRANK L. ANbisuwe, Publisher.&#13;
PINCKNEY- - *"~~* MICHIGAN.&#13;
Dttd W M ^ I Ueo.Tr C S B O M C S ,&#13;
Tkero is n g W l deal of criticism of&#13;
the state t a x commission, some of j&#13;
which soema to bo well founded. Tho&#13;
expenses of the field men who have&#13;
been out In the shite looking up valua&#13;
tlons of property have been so heavy&#13;
us to excite suspicion, and tho accounts&#13;
Great quantities of firecrackers are 1 ° J xl\Q .commissioners and-the expenses&#13;
* « w - * e 4 n « r ^ ^ - 4 a - i h l a . . ^ i n t o - m £ ^ S C E M L A U H L G R A V E . £ ^ S ^ T j t X , ^ L X * * "&#13;
from China, the merchants considering -&#13;
Body of the Ex-Governcr Pingroo&#13;
Laid in tho Tomb.&#13;
that there will be a big Fourth of July&#13;
demand for them.&#13;
General Miles, has long advocated a&#13;
standing army which should consist of&#13;
one man for every thousand of our.total&#13;
population, and that is substantially&#13;
the size of the present establishment.&#13;
The police force of our largest&#13;
cities consists of one officer to a popa-&#13;
IIow the Distinguished Dead vras Uonorod&#13;
By ThoatMindii of the People Who U&amp;ew&#13;
a n d f*ovod I l i a — Solemn Service ut&#13;
Can Sot.&#13;
r:.o Last R i t c a .&#13;
Tho fruorui of ex-Governor Hazon V&gt;.&#13;
l*inj;ree on Naturuay marked the close&#13;
of a career that will be felt in Miehigau&#13;
lation of about four hundred and sixty. l o l . h)U„ y i ,a i .s t 0 ,.Uilie&gt; T l u , B e r w c e s&#13;
«_. .l t t;,ul m UUi w o r o simple and hupies-&#13;
Hartford/has adopted the automobile KiVe,'tko march to the burial pUice with&#13;
patrol wagon, and the chief of police tne c.vic and military organizations,&#13;
finds that It has proved successful in numbering tliousaiuts, was grand and&#13;
every way, resulting in a saving of imposing. The streets for miles were&#13;
time and money. An electric wagon- -*-"d with people to witness the last&#13;
ette was used pending the delivery of ^iUl «*uectaclo terminating the userul&#13;
an electric patrol wagon, and the chief w o r k °* j 1 ^ - 1 ^ 1 1 1 0 Jltis6eu- 'fb « h;"u&#13;
ssaavyss tthnaatt iitt ddiidd ttnhee wwoorrkR oof rfroouur rhnoorrsseeirs--*taJau -l k* cwtthleuis, 0 a ts h ot h oS l c. ootrttbehg eR irUeal chMeads othiue&#13;
at the nominal expense of 18 cents a. w c r e tt8ScniWetl to periorm the last&#13;
day for power. r ite S i&#13;
'• A prayer more solemn, a ritual more&#13;
The Maoris, the aboriginal inhabi- grand has seldom been offered over the&#13;
tants of New Zealand, have actually slave of the world's great. The people&#13;
increased in number during the last whose warrior was cold in death asdecade,&#13;
and great wonderment is ex-, sembled in dUnitied ranks, and, staged&#13;
pressed in European publications over ! o u tho hills des overlooking the wlailthe&#13;
fact that a "subject race'' should ! u * .vallo'V l t M K X ) l™vl» har«* " ^&#13;
survive and grow. Here is opportunity , h e m u I t I t m 1 o l l s the munificent cerefor&#13;
somebody to suggest that the fate l M o l l y w n s performed in nature's great&#13;
of such a race depends a good deal cathedral.&#13;
All nature* was at peace in the greenest&#13;
of valleys, and a stained and softened&#13;
11-jrht was thrown upon the farthest&#13;
banks weaving Itself among the&#13;
sjiant trees. The people were assembled&#13;
in great semi-circles on the hills,&#13;
while benc:ith was tho stately pomp of&#13;
military' and the funeral pnee of&#13;
mourners' feet. As the body was deposited&#13;
upon its black bier and the uniformed&#13;
Masons and civilian mourners&#13;
had drawn up on either s'de. the clrar&#13;
ami solemn tones of the Masonic rites&#13;
were carried beyond to the listeners,&#13;
every word drunk in us b;vlm to the&#13;
wounded hearts.&#13;
Tl)vfi lTfo~dFoiv-trTied" vrrtces of the fu--&#13;
rcral choir sv-ent over the evenin'i&#13;
reove. rls'n'J fuller and nru'e fell mitU&#13;
the h e n v e s s«&gt;o&lt;noii to have joined in&#13;
the magnificent chanf.&#13;
&gt;n eYT^et nvM-f» inmr'^^ive is not&#13;
rn:-ily concciyetl, irni a ti 'e of the do^irvt&#13;
emotion m o v l over the anrdtl-&#13;
• ^liootrr, T'i nil i"tenfe s'hMicf. lir^lcen&#13;
board of state auditors. The allowances&#13;
of the board of aurtltora for the tax&#13;
commission for .Tunc were $7.14(1.00,&#13;
making the cost of tho commission tt&#13;
heavy burden. The salurtes and pay&#13;
rolls of the office aggregated $4,975.30;&#13;
railroad faro, ' $H07.11; telephoning;,&#13;
$12.4«.); telegraphing, $11.28: assistants,&#13;
$18.05; livery hire. $5(10.05: hotel expenses,&#13;
$9110.02. Some of the Held has&#13;
been so badly done that it will have to&#13;
be done over at heavy expense. The&#13;
men were instructed to obtain from the&#13;
supervisors certain information to be&#13;
i .used in, dotwinuVlug the-actual valuc-nf-(--IElie- tdike filuirii..&amp;UalUlfi.ml3as MS$:&#13;
upon the nation to which it is "subject."&#13;
A man in North Carolina was selling&#13;
standing timber—walnut troes.&#13;
The man who was buying came to one&#13;
very handsome tree. He told the owner&#13;
he would pay as much as $30 for&#13;
that tree. The owner did not sell, but&#13;
sent for experts. Ho got $1,500 for the&#13;
tree (curled walnut) as it stood. The&#13;
man who cut it down realized $3,000&#13;
for it on the cars. It was shipped to&#13;
New York and veneered one-sixth to&#13;
half an inch The sales were-watched.&#13;
The tree brought $60,000.&#13;
Queen Margaret of Ita'y has commissioned&#13;
the architect Succoni, to&#13;
construct a memorial on the spot&#13;
where King Humbert was assassinated.&#13;
It will take the form pf a votive&#13;
chapel, in front a cross in marble&#13;
will be erected, and each side of the&#13;
entrance will be flanke:! by a marble&#13;
statue, one representing Sorrow, and&#13;
the other Dsath. The first slone of&#13;
the edifice will be laid on July 29, t h :&#13;
anniversary of the death of King&#13;
Humbert. Succoni is the designer of&#13;
the monument to Victor Emmanuel,&#13;
now in course of construction on the&#13;
hill of the capitoU&#13;
oMly bv the sobbing or tiip novoaved.&#13;
th*1 .casket \\*as lmmp hehind the ch'.P&#13;
•v;il!s of" the so'vVhi*'1 :md tin*&#13;
brazen ..loots closed vpon the dead&#13;
grim&#13;
Mrs. Elizabeth Burr Hamilton, said&#13;
to be the last member of the seventh&#13;
generation of the Bun- family, who&#13;
died at Bridgeport, Conn., last week.&#13;
at the age of ninety, WAS—the—fifth&#13;
cousin of Aaron Burr, third vice-presiident&#13;
of the United States, who killed&#13;
Alexander Hamilton, the lawyer and&#13;
statesman, in a duel in 1804. Her death&#13;
recalls the fact that, though the families&#13;
of Burr and Hamilton were the&#13;
most bitter enemies at the begininng&#13;
of. the last century, love found a way&#13;
thirty-twp years after the famous duel&#13;
to bring the families together again by&#13;
the marriage of Elizabeth Burr and&#13;
Alexander Hamilton in 1836.&#13;
T h e G r n u t l RnufdM D r i n e r v .&#13;
The trial of CJerrit .11. Albers. indicted&#13;
by the grand jury for alleged bribery&#13;
of Grand Hnpi Is oflicials !n connection&#13;
with the water deal, was booked t&gt;&#13;
start Monday but the superior court&#13;
dismissed the jury for a month and&#13;
tints postponed the trial. In the circuit&#13;
court arguments to quash indictments&#13;
against Salsbury. MacLeod, McGnrry&#13;
nnd Taylor wore postponed to July 1-&#13;
by agreement between&#13;
-and attorneys—f-op—thathe&#13;
counties for the benefit of the state&#13;
board of equalization which meets in&#13;
August. A necessary part of this Information&#13;
is the values of property In&#13;
1S!)G when tho last board of equalization&#13;
met as well as in the present year.&#13;
In some cases the Hold men have failed&#13;
i t r rakt* the variations required and&#13;
their work is therefore worthless to the&#13;
slate.&#13;
T h e r o m m l s a i o n c r Exnlntnrt.&#13;
State Tax Commissioner Freeman,&#13;
In an interview with tho Detroit Free&#13;
Pre*s, denied some of tho rumors&#13;
which had been In circulation regarding&#13;
the commission; and the work of&#13;
its field agents. Mr. Freeman admitted&#13;
that he had lurd reason t o i t t -&#13;
vestigate the charges of some of the&#13;
board's agents now ascertaining land&#13;
values in different parts of the state,&#13;
but said that he could'not find that&#13;
anything was wrong with the expense&#13;
accounts, and they were all sworn to.&#13;
He says there is a disposition to charge&#13;
state employes the limit when they are&#13;
out in the state, and he believes that&#13;
while the expense accounts are high,&#13;
thev are correct.&#13;
"This work must be finished by August&#13;
next and obviously requires the&#13;
hiring of at least the twenty-five men.&#13;
The duty must be done and the expense&#13;
met for the legislature has commanded&#13;
it, and there is no alternative."&#13;
Tho Grand Ea^ds"•&amp; Indiana RiiiK &lt;.&gt;Uto* &lt;*rt pi C5****u&#13;
way Co. r*#u*e*.t3 i*di*f **wft«iger ( .i*«,WtyjofT Tl^ T ^ i» B«r ^ ¾&#13;
ritt**feftvOrttentt'Vy OonwHiwfoaor O*, fftwdeijttytt w c r * 0*«*** «f a\\ oo;&#13;
born. Tho attorney-general will sue. tfcfttt or* en rotito for thebhomee and&#13;
Stephen O. McDonald; ot Tawa* ^hft^^rato^litclns; cot* U^&lt;f*er*&#13;
township, 1« under arrest charged with available pla*c Apartments bfty«lj*g»&#13;
pntttn« poteen in a well on the farm of pi-epared at the university of Tied Tii«&#13;
Oliver Yax. Hc'raya he can provo an for Prince Chun and tv»t suite of forty, y ailbl. who will remain there f«*r throa.dayiv&#13;
Charles Carlson, a trackman for the Jefore leaving for Germany ^^gjjf ,&#13;
Mmrirnnnn-Trniitinn .uw? T.&lt;ght»nff f^' formal apology for the cairderQfjftr-^&#13;
had his right lea cut off just below the o" von Ketteler. Mr. uenny- wao.&#13;
knee while attempting to board a&#13;
street car.&#13;
The grain elevators of James Godsludk.&#13;
located at the G. T. W. and G.&#13;
It. Hi I. tracks, Vluk^hnr&amp; .horned Sunday.&#13;
Loss $3fc00G-, partially covered by&#13;
insurance.&#13;
I)v. Howard Wing has been bound&#13;
over for trial on a charge of seduction&#13;
preferred by Pearl Vasbinder. / H e was&#13;
captured In Illinois. He leUt Almont&#13;
last January,&#13;
31i&lt;*IiT£:iil Halflcii."&#13;
road Company has paid taxes amounting&#13;
to $(I.5!X).JVT, to the state treasurer.&#13;
The Copper Rnngo Hallway Company&#13;
has paid $2,11T.01.&#13;
Tl'.e Oddfellows of llollevue held a&#13;
great celebration Saturday. Fifty candidates&#13;
took degrees. Lodges were&#13;
{ present from Bottle Creek, Charlotte.&#13;
Olivet nnd Marshall.&#13;
Sheriff Hammond reports that the&#13;
"Mason county jail received .*&gt;0t) prisoners&#13;
during the past year, of which only&#13;
12 were women. The cost of maintaining&#13;
the jail was $3,320.&#13;
John I). Gowell, of Hesperia, put his&#13;
7-yoar-old son on to a new hay rake&#13;
to haul him home. The horses ran&#13;
-ii-way, tlwovving the child ' against- a&#13;
po&gt;*,t and nearly killing him.&#13;
The plant of the Quiucy Canning&#13;
Co., which is insolvent, has been sold,&#13;
uvder an order of the court, to Litchfield&#13;
parties, who will remodel it, and&#13;
make a first-class e"eamery of it.&#13;
Harry Smith, of Saginaw, whose&#13;
bride of a week killed herself at Chicago&#13;
because it was alleged he -wanted&#13;
her to lead a life of shame, has been&#13;
sent to the workhouse for So days.&#13;
The Kpworth League of the fourth&#13;
district, comprising the counties of&#13;
Kent. Montcalm, Allegan and Ottawa,&#13;
will hold a mammoth picnic at Ottawa&#13;
F.cach and Maontawa park ou Aug. 1,&#13;
About ten men employed by the Sag&lt;&#13;
Inaw City Gas Co. are ou strike for&#13;
shortcii~Ti(mrs.~Tliey have- beetrwoTk&#13;
when the foreign troops ,arrlved, wa*&#13;
appointed by the China Mere^M***'&#13;
Company to protect their projierty.&#13;
says the greater part of the company's&#13;
property consisted of rice, which was&#13;
afterward distributed under 0rd&gt;r*&#13;
from the British and American"gttueru!&#13;
s to assist these in need. I t is pointed&#13;
out that the company etoretH three&#13;
boxc^ of valuables with the cbatfered&#13;
bank before the; troubles begat* and did&#13;
not withdraw these until October and&#13;
that consequently it is quite lmptob-&#13;
»4&gt;Ui anj' jew«d» wer«4eft-to b*4&#13;
Moreover, the palace wa&amp; thoroughly&#13;
gone through by local looter3 before&#13;
the nllLed forces arrived. It would be&#13;
legally Impossible to hold any portion&#13;
of the relieving force responsible for&#13;
anything but the rice and coal.&#13;
Marquis Tseng says that the empress&#13;
"dowager-.-fearing a trap to capturd her,&#13;
declines to return to Pe*kln and has notified&#13;
the grand council that the-future&#13;
capital will be Kai-Fcug-Fu in tho&#13;
province of IIo-Nan.&#13;
P h i l i p p i n e Civil G o v e r n m e n t .&#13;
With the administration of the oath&#13;
of office to Win. II. Taft as civil governor&#13;
of the Philippines by Chief Justice&#13;
Arellano, .civiL-government was-uvaugiM'ated&#13;
in the islands. The cere*&#13;
mony was held on a tenr/jrary tribune&#13;
on tho Plaza Placio.&#13;
A feature of the inaugural address&#13;
of Gov. Taft was the announcement&#13;
that on September 1. 1001, the commission&#13;
would be increased by the appointment&#13;
of three native members.&#13;
Dr. Ward'o Detavera, Denlto Legurda&#13;
and Jose Ltwurlaga. The closing event&#13;
of the celebrations of the Fourth of&#13;
July was a reception in hon.ir of Gen.&#13;
MacArthur at the residence of the civil&#13;
governor. Mesdames Taft and Chaffee,&#13;
assisted in receiving the guests.&#13;
V&#13;
y&#13;
Comptroller Dawes has published a j i n 7 / j ( . n hours per day for $1.50. Thi&#13;
list of national banks organized since&#13;
March 14, 1SMIO. arranged bv states,&#13;
those l\&gt;r Michigan are: First National&#13;
of Manistique. capital $2") 000;&#13;
First National of Durand. capital $25,-&#13;
oo&lt;): First National of Yale, capital&#13;
$:-15,000; Commercial National of St.&#13;
the prosecutor&#13;
• 1P1VHS&lt;». Although&#13;
Albers is the only one who has&#13;
not resorted to technicalities to delay&#13;
•he trial and therefore will be the first&#13;
to be ready to face a Jury, it is believed&#13;
some of the others will 1M4 tried first.&#13;
It is said that tho Tirosecutor's oihee&#13;
has come into possession of some imnortant&#13;
evidence bearing upon the indictment&#13;
cases s'nee the irrnnd jury&#13;
Took a recess, hut Fee ni' + nve of the&#13;
now evidence will not \w divulged by&#13;
those who are understood to have it&#13;
under their hats.&#13;
America still has some things to&#13;
Itarn from older countries, particularly&#13;
in the way of economy. New York&#13;
City pays about five hundred thousand&#13;
dollars a year for the disposition of its&#13;
garbage, while many English cities, by&#13;
burning their waste matter in special&#13;
furnaces, not only destroy it in the&#13;
most effective way, but make a profit&#13;
from i t Being dried out, it becomes&#13;
fuel, and the heat which it generates&#13;
is used to furnish steam for pumping&#13;
water, operating city electric lighting&#13;
llnditpn'N rtmint?.&#13;
R C. Madden, formerly of Detroit,&#13;
and now third assistant postmastergeneral,&#13;
was raked over the c. ah; by&#13;
delegate* at the National Social and&#13;
Political Conference in Detroit for hU&#13;
restrictions of the privileges of the&#13;
second-class mail matter. Not more&#13;
than fifty delegates were present, but&#13;
those fifty were thinking all sorts of&#13;
things about him and hisx&gt;rder, and&#13;
as many as could made their thoughts&#13;
public.&#13;
Mr. Madden recently issued an order&#13;
that any paper offering premiums&#13;
Joseph, capital $50,000; First National&#13;
of Petoskey. capital $80,000; Millers'&#13;
National of Ishpemiag 'capital $100,-&#13;
00(•: First National of Morenci, capital&#13;
$25,000; National Bank of Ionia, capital&#13;
$50,000. Total capital of th;&gt; eight,&#13;
?oS0,000.&#13;
Halloon 1st Met Instant Death.&#13;
Frank Tezelow, a Grand Rapids balloonist,&#13;
met instant death at Muskegon&#13;
on the evening of the Fourth. The&#13;
young man was to be &amp;hot out of a cannon&#13;
and make a parachute drop. When&#13;
the balloon had reached a height of&#13;
1.000 feet the rope fastenings of&#13;
the cannon canpht, firp, Wtinn? it fall&#13;
to the .earth. ,- The cannon with its&#13;
human burden was but a moment in&#13;
making the descent, plunging into&#13;
Muskegon lake before the g;ize of&#13;
thousands of spectators. The cannon&#13;
struck a sawlog and was badly battered,&#13;
and the remains of the balloonist&#13;
were fearfully mangled.&#13;
j Throe Killed by Lightning.&#13;
! . \V. K. Sullivan, asrud'pj, of Detroit.&#13;
j was instantly killed at Bois Blanc islj&#13;
*nd by lightning on the afternoon of&#13;
the Fourth, and five other persons were&#13;
seriously injured. There were abput&#13;
4.500 people on the island at the time&#13;
of the accident. Two farmers named&#13;
Era Rich and d i e t Cronk, living near&#13;
Vprmontville, were killed in the same&#13;
manner and about the same time.&#13;
company will try and fill their places, j&#13;
'The main river log drive on the Me-!&#13;
nominee lias started, and as the water&#13;
Is high this year, it is expected that .&#13;
the drive will be fast. All of the tributary&#13;
stream drives have boon com*&#13;
pletnd. [&#13;
Albert L. Johnson, of Cleveland, O.,&#13;
brother of Mayor Thomas L. Johnson,&#13;
aUeiLTucsday_night_.:t Fort Hamiltjn,&#13;
a Brooklyn suburb. ~&#13;
Train No. 11 on the Great Northern&#13;
Hail way was held up by three masked&#13;
men at Wagner Station, Mont., and the&#13;
express safe robbed of $83,000.&#13;
BASE BALL.&#13;
M I N O R M I C H I G A N M A T T E R S .&#13;
plants, and grinding up such portions to increase Its circulation shall bo do&#13;
of the refuse as are capable of conver- barred from second-class'privileges, as&#13;
sion into cement, tiles and paving* shall any paper which shall print as&#13;
blocks. This plan is in use in seventy many copies for free distribution as&#13;
or eighty of the smaller cities of Eng* f o r regular subscribers. This, it was&#13;
and, and a million-dollar plant is in declared yesterday is Indirect, accord- j&#13;
process of erection in London. ance with the wishes of the great ex&#13;
There is sometimes a wide interval&#13;
between the conception of a mechanical&#13;
contrivance and its practical accomplishment.&#13;
Tho flying machine,&#13;
fresh experiments with which are constantly&#13;
reported, is an example of delay&#13;
in invention. A few years after&#13;
the landing of the Pilgrims, Dr. John&#13;
Wilkins, who afterward married a sister&#13;
of Oliver Cromwell, published a&#13;
work In which he said it was possible&#13;
to make a "flying chariot, in wnich a&#13;
man may sit, and give such motion&#13;
unto it as shall convey him through&#13;
the air. And this, perhaps, might be&#13;
made large enough to carry divers men&#13;
at the same time, together with food&#13;
for their viaticum, and commodities&#13;
for traffic." The suggestion of a trade&#13;
side to air travel points to the remote&#13;
possibility of a flying-machine combination&#13;
which will control the "airline"&#13;
of the future. At present there is&#13;
press companies.&#13;
s H o r r l l i l y M n t t x l e d .&#13;
George Marlborough, a blacksmith&#13;
living in Greenfield township, was run&#13;
over Sunday night by car No. 20 of the&#13;
Northwestern road, in front of his&#13;
home. His body was carried nboni&#13;
four rods before the car could bo&#13;
brought to a stop and was frightfully&#13;
mangled. Motorman Tllch says that the&#13;
first he saw of Marlborough, lie was&#13;
lying face upward across the track in&#13;
the moonlight. He put on the air brake&#13;
at once, but could not stop la time. All j&#13;
those who were with Marlborough during&#13;
tho evening state .that, while he&#13;
The Sisters of St. Joseph will build a&#13;
fine hospital In West Hancock.&#13;
A fairly good crop of hay 1« reported&#13;
from various sections of the state.&#13;
j The equalized valuation of (Jenesoe&#13;
f cjunty has been fixed at $24,080,301.&#13;
An attempt is being made to form a&#13;
j combine of all the cheese factories iii&#13;
j Michigan.&#13;
Otto Bennett, aged 11 years. Kalamazoo,&#13;
was drowned in the river Monday&#13;
while bathing.&#13;
Samuel Meiza was run down by&#13;
loaded ore ears in the Quinnesec mine&#13;
anil instantly killed.&#13;
Celery growers state that for quality&#13;
and quantity this season, the crop exceeds&#13;
.all previous ones.&#13;
Two inmates of the Industrial Home,&#13;
olga Gogalna and Mabel Carleton, both&#13;
of Detroit, have escaped.&#13;
Philin Hennlng. living north of Claytori,&#13;
was struck on the head by n hay&#13;
fork and severely injured.&#13;
The common council has ordered&#13;
gates at all the street croswlngs of the&#13;
Michigan Central in Albion.&#13;
had taken a class or two of beer. h&lt; (%&gt;1. James Crozler, of Menominee.&#13;
was not Intoxicated. He had no reason | formerly commandant at the Soldiers'&#13;
to wish to commit suic'hje. Marlborough&#13;
was ;»5 years o r a g £ , and made&#13;
his home with his father.&#13;
1¾ .}•&gt; .&#13;
The hay crop in Huron county will&#13;
be wuall on account of the drouth.&#13;
The Weary Willies are looking for a&#13;
no reason to be a l a r m e d The bu.tnesa ™&gt;l r&lt;*°rtj and apparently haye pitchopportunities&#13;
of the region overhead «* u * &gt; n I r o n Mountain as the ideal&#13;
are ttill open to all. spot." The city is overrun with them.&#13;
home, is seriously ill nt Alma.,&#13;
Pert Deer, charged wTth criminal assault&#13;
upon a youusr girl in ltolltn, has&#13;
been bound over and Is In jail.&#13;
It Is expected that electric cam will&#13;
be running over the new line between&#13;
Holland nnd Zeeland tn a few days.&#13;
Frank M. Deane, edltor-of t h e Hartford&#13;
Alliance, wan drowned Tuesday&#13;
night at Beachwood, Paw Taw lake.&#13;
The July term of the circuit court&#13;
opened In Charlotte Mondav^Otily one&#13;
j criminal case is ready for trial and the&#13;
defendant !.rs announced he. will plead&#13;
guiity. There are four divorce cases on&#13;
the list.&#13;
Gen. Alger, at Carlsbad, says the&#13;
beef controversy bad nothing to do&#13;
with his retirement from the cabinet.&#13;
He added: "My book., to be published&#13;
in September, will show the whole marter&#13;
up.''&#13;
Game Warden Morse reports that&#13;
during June hN department investigated&#13;
10S complaints. There were 04&#13;
arrests and SO convictions, with 1&#13;
acquittal and 7 dismissals, 0 cases being&#13;
still pending.&#13;
There are two drug stores located in&#13;
Hesperia. and the president of the village&#13;
has made complaint and the&#13;
druggists have been held for trial on a&#13;
charge of selling liquors without filinu&#13;
a .druggist's bond.&#13;
The residence of Bert Wheaton. at&#13;
Kingsley, was destroyed by fire Monday&#13;
and an infant 1 year old cremated.&#13;
Tho mother and father and other children&#13;
were absent. The child was left&#13;
lying on a'oouchl which was In a lower&#13;
room, that burned before help arrived.&#13;
Although the railroads of the state&#13;
| have until August 1. for tho payment of&#13;
their specific taxes, quite a number&#13;
have already paid. Tho following railroads&#13;
paid their taxes Monday: Chicago&#13;
&amp; Northwestern, $$0,000; Mineral&#13;
Kange, $11,024; Hancock &amp; Calumet,&#13;
$K.NS1; Manistee «fc Northeastern, $8.-&#13;
01S; Manistique &amp; Northwestern, $2,-&#13;
o:u.&#13;
Clarence Paxton, formerly of Detroit,&#13;
was arrested In Coloma, charged&#13;
with making threats against the lives&#13;
of several people at Paw Paw lake and&#13;
fo/ carrying weapons with which to&#13;
carry out his declared Intentions.&#13;
Mental weakness, aggravated by alcohol&#13;
and jealousy of the landlady at i&#13;
lake resort, are responsible for the&#13;
young man's downfall.&#13;
After making a" careful canvass of&#13;
the northwest territory and preparing&#13;
conservative estimates upon the conditions&#13;
found throughout the gram&#13;
holt, the traffic officials of the St. Paul,&#13;
the Northwestern, the Northern Pacific,&#13;
the Great Northern and the Burlington&#13;
systems, are agreed that tho&#13;
wheat crop of this region for 1001 will&#13;
break all previous records.&#13;
The earnings of Michigan railroads&#13;
during tho month of May were $tt,S57.-&#13;
130.35, as compared with $3,303.525 35&#13;
for the corresponding mouth Inst year,&#13;
the increase for the month being $253,-&#13;
528.38. For the five months end'ng&#13;
May 31 the total earnings were $10V&#13;
050.22S.33, nn increase of $004,370.02&#13;
for the period, as compared with the&#13;
corresponding period of lOOO.&#13;
George Davenport, ex-aldermnn and&#13;
ex-state senator, was killed by lightning&#13;
on his farm, a mile and n half&#13;
north of Saginaw, Tuesday morning.&#13;
H e arose during the storm to close the&#13;
bam doors, and was found dead in the&#13;
morning near the building.- He wai&#13;
—Below we publish tht? standing of&#13;
the American anii National leacrttecluba&#13;
UD to an i inchi lin r thj gamej played&#13;
Washington.&#13;
P lilaitelp.iia&#13;
Clui-'lanl ...&#13;
i'.iiladj.phiii&#13;
" u n i .&#13;
AM-i.tlU V?f LSAGUI&#13;
\V&gt;-t&#13;
. 3"&#13;
N.vrn&#13;
THE&#13;
40&#13;
30&#13;
24&#13;
. 22&#13;
JNAL L CAliUR.&#13;
Won.&#13;
37&#13;
27&#13;
21&#13;
20&#13;
24&#13;
20&#13;
25&#13;
2S&#13;
8i&#13;
37&#13;
41&#13;
Lewi&#13;
25 a&gt;&#13;
25&#13;
29&#13;
3)&#13;
23&#13;
31&#13;
45&#13;
MARKETS.&#13;
Pore1;.&#13;
019&#13;
6&gt;&gt;&#13;
.HO&#13;
.b3T&#13;
.5*0&#13;
.414&#13;
.303&#13;
31?&#13;
Per cv&#13;
.W7&#13;
.&amp;ir&#13;
M\&#13;
.532&#13;
.Ml&#13;
.SOS)&#13;
.44 J&#13;
HIS&#13;
Detroit: About average supply of c a t -&#13;
tle. Light receipts of hogs and sheep.&#13;
Prices ranee, b t s t R eers, $,"&gt;.&amp;&gt;; iltoht to&#13;
Rjod, $4..4.7o; fat cows, $3.10t?H S h e e p -&#13;
Very Us in supply. Prices: Host. $2.85 to&#13;
$3.7o; common, $2 to $2.73. Hoss— Prices&#13;
ranprc irorri *(i to iG.Oi per cwt. Light&#13;
sales.&#13;
Chicago. Cattle—-NomlnaMy s t e a d y ;&#13;
good to prime steers, $5.25^6.40; poor to&#13;
medium, "&gt;4.1iV-5.15; stockers and feeders&#13;
weak, J2.5Jfa4.ti&gt;; cows, $2.50#1.50; heifers,&#13;
52.5WFiy.O0. H u K s - M i x t d and butchers, $5.70&#13;
fatj.071^; gnod to cnoiee heavy. $:-..^50)5.12½;&#13;
r&gt;URh heavy, $3.70®5.£0; light. $5.70@6.00,&#13;
Bu'.k of sales, 5.58@6 Sheep—Good&#13;
to choice wethers. —$3.40(g)l.u0-;- fa!.r&#13;
to cho.ee mixed, S3.00H3.6 ; west r n&#13;
sheep. *3.30f?4.lO; yearlings, $3.&lt;3@4.25; n a -&#13;
tive lambs, $3.001«5.00; w e s t e r n lambs, $3.25&#13;
¢5.00.&#13;
Buffalo: A bunch of good 1,363-pound&#13;
steers sold a t $5.60, with some light Btock&#13;
heifers a t $3,255*3.50. and good fat bulls a t&#13;
$4.CKXfi&gt;4.25. Hogs—Goad to choice, $6.15^&#13;
6 20' fair, lipht to fal.ly good weight, $6.16&#13;
fjtf.20; mixed packers' grades, $6.17@8.2&gt;;&#13;
medium heavy hogs. 210 to 230 lbs.. $5.15^&#13;
6.20; choice heavy. 250 lbs. up, $6.10@6.15.&#13;
Sheep—Offerings igrht; wethers, $3.V6®i,W;&#13;
choice to e x t r a mixed, $3.50@3.70; fair to&#13;
good, do, $3.oo«ft3.40; culls and common,&#13;
$2 0Wt2.85; yearlings, fair to best. $3.85®4.10;&#13;
heavy export sheep, 4.15®4.25.&#13;
Cincinnati: Heavy steers, choice to&#13;
extra. $5,403)5.75; nominal fair to good,&#13;
$4.60fa5.35; oxen, $2ft4.50; b u t c h e r s , choice&#13;
to extra. $4.75ff5.25; fair to good, $1.25®&#13;
4.65; heifers, rood to choice. $4.2frg&gt;4.75;&#13;
common to fair, $2.50*i&gt;4; cows, choice to&#13;
extra, $3.50ft4.25; common to fair, $2.25^&#13;
3.40. Hog?—Packers and b u t c h e r s . $5.10@&#13;
G.15; mixed packers, $3.90ft6.10; s t a g s and&#13;
heavy fat sows. $495.75; light shippers,&#13;
55.90Cfi6.10: pig«, no lbs and less, $5.25^.90.&#13;
Sheep—Extra, $3.55@3.65; good to choice.&#13;
$3(r&lt;^.5J; common to fair. $2®2.75. Lambs-—&#13;
E x t r a , $5.75; good to choice, $&amp;W5.65; comm&#13;
o n - t o fair, $3^)4.75; culls. $2.75.&#13;
New York: Steers. $4.S5J?5.85; Ktockers,&#13;
$4.20; bulls, $2.7'^.lOt rows. $2@4.25; cables&#13;
steady. Sheep, $2.;'&lt;,-&lt;3.50; lambs, $5®&#13;
G; cu'.'s. $3.50. Hogs—Market easier; QUOt.'&#13;
Utonn. $8.20®6.4O.&#13;
P i t t s b u r g : Cattle, heavy and prime,&#13;
$5.«5&lt;&amp;*.75; good. $5.35^5.55; common to&#13;
fair, $4&lt;ft4.60; common to good cows, $250&#13;
50. Hng«i-HeRVies. $l.06@€.10; roughs,&#13;
$4 25^4.50. Sheep, $3.40450.65 for good, $3.71&#13;
&lt;&amp;3.75 for mixed, a n d $1.50S».80 for common.&#13;
%g&#13;
Gil AIX, ETC.&#13;
The Detroit quotations for No. 1 white&#13;
wheat are 69¼^ whh (BVfrc for No. 2 red;&#13;
com, 45^c for mixed and 46c for yellow;&#13;
oats, No. 2 white, 32c; No. 3, SlVfcc,&#13;
The Chicago market is firmer for&#13;
wheat. No. 2, 65c; corn, No. 2, 44%c; oats,&#13;
No. 2, 27½^.&#13;
New York market gives 7J%c to 74Hc&#13;
ns the quotations for July and December;&#13;
vveerryv pnmroimiiiinneennti haeerr^e, wwnaa* Rt«ft vyeennt*rs* onlhdl c o^ppnu- t^^¾u-0. . topr.r icJeulsy /«fo rO cwt0©h*e-a*t* rWan%gce _fr om&#13;
nrfd lind lived in Saginaw ail bin life.&#13;
He leaves a widow and two daugh&#13;
tors.&#13;
47Hc; otus, S4*335c.&#13;
Buffalo^ prices *iand at TOfte for wheat.&#13;
tfftc for corn; oats, 38c.&#13;
* « 1&#13;
Mammoth Trusti&#13;
A BATTLE ROYAL IS NOW ON.&#13;
tfot a tttrlke For Wace* but for UnlonUca&#13;
- W h i c h will Bow to The Inevitable?—&#13;
The BoMt of t h e Ainalffomated Auo&gt;&#13;
elation — RaMla will Retaliate.&#13;
JJPair of Postmen.&#13;
BY K * T E M. CL^-MtY.&#13;
(Copyright, ltfJl. by Daily Story Pub. Co.)&#13;
It was a shock for Kennedy. Ho&#13;
had almost completed sorting o u t t h e&#13;
letters t o be delivered along his beat&#13;
when h e came on t h a t one addressed&#13;
to Nora Dillon. He—reiognizcd—tbechirography&#13;
instantly. H e had Eeeu&#13;
it many times. T h e letter had been&#13;
written by Bertram Ryder. Ryder was&#13;
not only a fellow-postman, but his&#13;
warmest a n d most intimate tfriend.&#13;
Why, ho had not known that Ryder&#13;
was even acquainted with Nora—the&#13;
girl whom he had come to love with&#13;
a passion quite incommensurate with&#13;
hi3 pay. and his prospects.&#13;
Not that this latter fact, would matter&#13;
if thc*y really loved each other.&#13;
So far Kennedy had not dared to put&#13;
his affection to the test of a declaration.&#13;
But he had bsen screwing his&#13;
courage up to that point for weeks,&#13;
and—although he was far from bein^&#13;
a conceited fello -*—he had felt that&#13;
he was being encouraged by the pretty&#13;
daughter of the prosperous contractor&#13;
on Elm avenue.&#13;
IE only she would come to the door&#13;
for the mail today! He would watch&#13;
he;—would notice her acceptance of&#13;
the envelope addressed by Ryder. Tho&#13;
thought spurred him to activity. H J&#13;
hastened thiough with his work as&#13;
rapidly as possible, and went trudging&#13;
"A Letter for You."&#13;
off on his afternoon delivery, his well*&#13;
packed bag slung over his shoulder.&#13;
sThe glare of early summer lay hot&#13;
and yellow on the city streets. Crowd?&#13;
of well-dressed people were coming&#13;
and going. The laughter of children&#13;
mingled with the silver dripping of&#13;
a fountain in a little green square.&#13;
But Jim Kennedy could only think of&#13;
•one opening door, whi&lt;Jh framed a&#13;
straight, yo'^ng, girlish form in a gay&#13;
little go»vn. That was one of the&#13;
things which had first attracted him&#13;
to Nora Dillon—the fact that her pretty,&#13;
bright garments, pink and hellotrope,&#13;
and axure seemed somehow to&#13;
suit well her swift, sunny smile and&#13;
laughing b.u» eyes?&#13;
Kennedy's bag was considerably&#13;
lighter her the time he turned into&#13;
Elm street. Kia heart was beating&#13;
hard when he reached -theeomfoitaole&#13;
home of the Dulons. Ho rang the bell,&#13;
and stood waiting, the letter 'in his&#13;
hand. Ho could hear the light, familiar&#13;
step he had learned to know and&#13;
listen for coming along the hail w.thin,&#13;
and suddenly the door had swung&#13;
back, and she was standing there, fair&#13;
nml rinlinnt in hrr crisp white gown,&#13;
her slim, erect young figure cleany cut&#13;
as a cameo against the soft green&#13;
gloom of the interior.&#13;
"Good afternoon, Miss Nora!" He&#13;
snatched off his cap, and stood looking&#13;
down upon her. "A letter for you&#13;
this time."&#13;
"For me?" she laughed, and held&#13;
out her hand. "I don't get many lett&#13;
e r . "&#13;
Jim did not offer to go at once. Instead&#13;
he stood in the same attitude.&#13;
his keen grey eyes striving to read her&#13;
thoughts—her every motion. He was&#13;
conscious of a sharp tightening in his&#13;
throat at sight of the blusn that wavered&#13;
instantly over her soft cheeks at.&#13;
sight of the superscription.&#13;
"Oh," she said in a low voice—her&#13;
tone surprised but comprehensive.&#13;
"Oh." she put the missive hastily in&#13;
her pocket. He fancied some embarassment&#13;
lingered in her blue eyes—ordinarily&#13;
frank as a child's as she—&#13;
glanced up at him.&#13;
"You look dreadfully warm!" she&#13;
••xclaimed. "It is a hot day, isn't it?&#13;
Won't you wait a moment until I&#13;
bring you a glass of lemonade? Mamma&#13;
and I were just drinking some."&#13;
She vanished before he could refuse,&#13;
and was quickly back, a goblet v containing&#13;
an ice-tinkling beverage in her&#13;
hand.&#13;
"Thank you," he said, and drank it&#13;
as well as,he could for that dreadful&#13;
constriction in his throat. Then he had&#13;
returned the glass, bowed, and was&#13;
gone. Ah, with what a heavy heart,&#13;
with what leaden footsteps was tha&#13;
rest of his route covered that radiant&#13;
summer day!&#13;
How cou.d he know that a disappointed&#13;
little face with puckerid&#13;
jiows, was gazing after him with eyes&#13;
grown suddenly misty and mystified,&#13;
lie had not acted like himself at all!&#13;
What was the matter with him? She&#13;
had thought—she had fancied—&#13;
There was no mail for the Dillon&#13;
household the nest uay—nor still the&#13;
next. So Jim had no excuse for stopping.&#13;
But on the evening of the second&#13;
day he found himself driven to Elm&#13;
street. At least he could look at the&#13;
house which held her. He might even&#13;
muster up courage to ask her to go&#13;
to the contemplated ptcnlc at Garfield&#13;
Park with him. He had been made&#13;
welcome in their home. More than&#13;
once Mrs. Dil'^n had permitted her&#13;
daughter to go out with him. He nad&#13;
every right to invite her. Just because&#13;
Bertram Ryder had written her a letter,&#13;
and that «ho had colored confusedly&#13;
at sight of it. was no reason&#13;
why she would consider his attentions&#13;
welcome.&#13;
A soft, warm, dark, rainy right it&#13;
was. Kennedy, about to cross over totKo&#13;
1;; ted home of the Dillons, suddenly&#13;
stopped—dre»r back into tho shadow&#13;
of a tree. FOT the door opposite had&#13;
opened, and two people were distinctly&#13;
revealed in tpo lighted vestibule.&#13;
*«*P#fiis*p* _&#13;
He recognized Nora. And thai man&#13;
witn spare form, and slightly stooping&#13;
f-boulders—of course that was Bertram&#13;
Ryder. { \&#13;
Ki could hear the dear voice of the T h e S h e e t S t e e j Workers and The&#13;
girl speaking with cordiality.&#13;
"Don't you worry, Bert!" she was&#13;
faying. MYou can trust me to arrange&#13;
affairs so that no one will suspect.&#13;
What's that? I'm an angel? Oh, no,&#13;
I'm not'* There was a Tipple of&#13;
laughter. "Good-bye. Till" Tuesday,&#13;
then!"&#13;
Jim Kennedy turned on his heel,&#13;
and went home, sick at heart It was&#13;
the little maid of all work.who opened&#13;
the door to Jim when next&#13;
day duty forced him to ring . T h e C r M l t 8 t r t k e .&#13;
the door bell of the Dillon A g a r e g u l t o f t f l e r e f u g a l o f t h e T e p&#13;
domicile. And on t h e d a y following ** rcsentatives of t h e American K*eel&#13;
found himself waiting there rebellious 8 , C o American Steel&#13;
and miserable, with another letter from i r r t n „ ,^ ...^,1.11.-.. ,^~nnn^ n4 •!,.»&#13;
Bertram Ryder in his hand. This time, " ° ° » ^&lt;[ * l b * f ^ « ^ r f Z ° t,„„&#13;
althouRh it was Nora who eagerly g l e u t United States Steel Corporation,&#13;
t ^ S S f t J : ^ L i S t* J J i « ^»«Vt t 0 s i - n t n e workers' new scale at Satopened&#13;
the 4^*aA-M-m-itMate ^ r t ^ cort*ren&lt;* \*r¥M«)wm^ -&#13;
ing for h i m t o speak h e only lifted c u h | l . H w o r e g e u t o u t f r o m t h e n a t i o m i l&#13;
his cap formally, handed her the let- headquarters of the Amalgamated Aster,&#13;
and turned away without a word. B(t(i\at\on 0f iron. Steel &amp; Tin Workers&#13;
And as he strode angrily off, hi3 Sunday and Monday declaring a strike&#13;
smouldering jealousy was fanned to a t a u the plants of the two combines.&#13;
fresh flame by the sight of Bertram The great strike is now on, but it will&#13;
himseli coming jauntily up the street, be several days before its actual extent&#13;
It was evident that he had received is known. At the o'dt&amp;cJLliuwever, qver&#13;
leave of atsence, for he was in his best .&amp;"&gt;.0U0 men will be involved. It will ha&#13;
civilian attire, and looked particularly «fki' the 1st of August, perhaps, when&#13;
sanguine and joyous. t h e / ' o m l ) l u ' m a k e » » serious attempt&#13;
"Hallo, old fedow!" he cried, and u \ ^ n «1&gt; Jj {M&lt; tlmt the real battie&#13;
would have stopped Kennedy, but that ™" b J f " * "° ^ 1 •. ,. . , , ^ *?* ^£1 individual jt erk, ed, ,f ree gf ro_m itl he *f,n.5e„n„-di - reached at tha t time. I h e company ( . . m n o t ^ ^ ^ a t l l o n i S e r&#13;
ly hand laid on his arm, and strode oa. t h a ; 1 t m i t ( m ACC^mt o f l l u , p r e H e l U&#13;
Ryder looked after him in dismay, but t l o o d s o f o r t l G r S t I n fjH.t% t l l , . u r ~ e n t orthe&#13;
next instant h e h a d caught sight t-iev^ n o w o n t a o j ^ k s can scarcely&#13;
of Nora. He, sprang up the steps. v,ait through July. Thus the nssoiia-&#13;
"There wa3 no need to send that tlon has almost a month to prepare for&#13;
last letter, but I was afraid they the coming struggle. It is the b^ast of&#13;
would not let me off. The old man was the Amalgamated association ollicials&#13;
very kind though, when I explained that by that time they will control&#13;
the situation. Heavens, Nora, what's *o per cent of the capacity of the comthe&#13;
matter? You're white as a ghost." l m i o d Plants.&#13;
Nora's reply was distinctly feminine.&#13;
She sank down, a n d burst into tears.&#13;
By t h e time h e h a d succeeded in&#13;
wresting from the girl t h e story of her&#13;
sorrow, he began to divine t h e reason&#13;
of J i m Kennedy's sudden coolness to^&#13;
wards himself.&#13;
mmmmm 53^H»j3f.,&#13;
. ' T h e Soeial Coxtf«*e*#«.&#13;
$ h o National Sociaj o ^ . P(?Utf«r$}f&#13;
Conference that held eesaiens kg * w&#13;
troit passed resolutions eulogizing tb»&#13;
late ex-Governor Plngree. expressing&#13;
sympathy with Tom L. Johnson in th#&#13;
loss of h!3 brother, and adopted this&#13;
platform:&#13;
. i. Direct legislation and proportional&#13;
representation. &gt;&#13;
2. Direct nominations and the popular&#13;
recall.&#13;
—3- Kqunl suffrage on the same condltions&#13;
to all, regardless of sex or&#13;
color.&#13;
4. Honest elections, free from partisan&#13;
manipulation or control.&#13;
5. /Direct taxation through projrressive,&#13;
laud value, income and inheritance&#13;
taxes.&#13;
6. Public ownership of telejrrarhs,&#13;
telephones, railroads, and all other&#13;
public utilities.&#13;
7. T h e eijrht-hour d a y .&#13;
8. The sole control by the penile,&#13;
through their government, of their&#13;
medium of exchange.&#13;
option in taxation. ~" ~&#13;
10. Postal savings banks, state insurance&#13;
and workmen's compensation&#13;
for industrial accidents.&#13;
11. Opposition to militnrism and&#13;
conquest, and advocacy of international&#13;
arbitration.&#13;
12. We domaiul for others the same&#13;
rMUiT ••find liberties we ask for our-&#13;
Gradually the plans of President T.&#13;
J. Shaffer of, the'Ama'gamated association&#13;
are being uncovered. Since the&#13;
trouble in the W. Deweer Wood mills&#13;
*'. McKeesport a few months ago, the&#13;
Amalgamated association lias been actively&#13;
engaged in breaking up'the present&#13;
atTangenient of the combine-in op-&#13;
"I'll fix that," he assured her. "Just craving part of their plants with nonas&#13;
soon as this little affair is ever—&#13;
kef ore we even leave—town, 1-11—As&#13;
that!"&#13;
He was as good as his word. Thai&#13;
very evening he hunted up Jim Kennedy&#13;
sitting moody and dejected in&#13;
his lodging house.&#13;
"Look here, Jim," he said, "things&#13;
have got into a snarl, and i m here to vnited States Stoel Corporation. i iu&#13;
untwin them. I was married this af- S ( ..,l n iV)t. t l l l , Anli&gt;vk..AU Tin Plate Co.&#13;
ternoon—"&#13;
union men a n d t h e others with unio'i&#13;
men. Mr. •Shaft'ci' says t h a t if this i&gt;&#13;
not cheeked tTfeTTTe oT the AirntljKilttTi--&#13;
ted associntion is. threatened for t h e&#13;
combine will always work their uni.Jii&#13;
jiiills last, a n d t h e union men will be&#13;
sr.MVrcrs by this discriminaticu.&#13;
'ilms is arrayed against the unfon&#13;
organizath.n t h e t w o branches of tiu^&#13;
A G r e a t Steal.&#13;
Six bncs of gold, each containing $"&gt;.-&#13;
000 in ?2(&gt; gold pieces, h a v e disappearin1,&#13;
from t h e San Francisco mint, anil&#13;
no trace of t h e thief h a s been discovered,&#13;
although Supt. Leach and his&#13;
force, assisted by Director of t h e Mint&#13;
Roberts and bis staff of experts, have&#13;
been at work on t h e mystery since&#13;
J u n o -2l&gt;.&#13;
The annual count of the coin.&#13;
amounting to S'WMiO.OUO, began Friday.-&#13;
Saturday six bags were found to&#13;
be nii.-sing from the cashier's vault.&#13;
As the cashier's books tallied with&#13;
those of'the other departments the officials&#13;
were forced to the conclusion&#13;
that somebody acquainted with the inside&#13;
affairs of the mint had taken the&#13;
money.. Director of the Mint Roberts&#13;
says:&#13;
"There appears to be no escape from&#13;
the conclusion that s &gt;me one or more&#13;
persons employed in the mint has been&#13;
faithless to their trust."&#13;
Tiiso a pail u( [hi' ^renter ci»rp ration,&#13;
lias been signed. It is said, however,&#13;
that in ease the struggle continues&#13;
Amalgamated ollicials have the power&#13;
to call cut these tinplate workers as a&#13;
means of defense against the parent&#13;
corporation, which they hold responsible&#13;
tor all disagreements.&#13;
The strike now threatened in the bar&#13;
mills, following so closely upon that&#13;
of the sheet mills, has therefore a most&#13;
serious aspect and may spread to enormous&#13;
proportions. Indeed, in some circles,&#13;
it is predicted, that the giganti;-&#13;
struggle that lias been talked of sinee&#13;
tiie organisation of Ihe United States&#13;
picious. By the way, Nora is feelins sieel Corporation was formed is on the&#13;
pretty badly on account of your man- eve of breaking.our, and that it is comuer&#13;
to her lately. Suppose you go ur. ing much, sooner than many believed&#13;
to the house and explain—eh?" i was probable.&#13;
Jim grabbed his friend's hand, and | Hie situation the greater corporation&#13;
wrung it energetically. &gt; i s l»VK'od *» Kaetlcully frees the ind^&#13;
"I will-right off. Congratulations, J'"'1; o n t , / ' l a ^ s / J ™ ^ m i ^ t y m tae&#13;
Bert! Good luck to you-and my best &gt;; l t t ^ H e i g h t is not for wages, but&#13;
. x. * »» n i ... I t o r organization. Either t a c Amalgawishes&#13;
t o Mrs. Ryder! I wau^ . , s s o o i a t k n l i m w t h ; n v t o t l u , w i l l&#13;
Then a beaming-faced young man o f , h o s w n t o e t . o n i l ) i u o o l . c l s o t h l l&#13;
hurriedly furbished up his toilet, anu ,^.^. ,-ombine will have to give up&#13;
i its non-union mills.&#13;
Army I]\sicnKe!t.&#13;
The., quartermaster's division of the&#13;
ofliee of the aud'trr of the war departm.&#13;
ent cl's(-d i s record of work dole*&#13;
during the tiscal year, which ended last&#13;
Saturday \\-itii a showing greater in&#13;
vrlume l&gt;y almost "0 per cent than that&#13;
of any previous year in the historv of&#13;
the treasury. This division e^i""»cs.&#13;
'.ucuned," echoed Jim. He started&#13;
to his feet as though stung. "Married!"&#13;
"Yes, to Cicely Barstow, as nice n&#13;
girl as ever drew breath. We've been&#13;
as good as engaged for a year&gt; nut het&#13;
father objected to the wedding as she&#13;
has some money in her own right h*&#13;
wanted to hold on to. My cousin&#13;
Nora Dillon, has helped us out by giving&#13;
Cicely my letters which went under&#13;
cover to Nora—at least the fewlast&#13;
ones I had to send that way, a*&#13;
the old people were becoming EUSre-&#13;
computes and tabulates all the. accounts&#13;
and expenditures of all quartermasters,&#13;
commissary and engineer oCticors&#13;
iif the army.&#13;
The grand total of expenditures thus&#13;
aud'ted is $l2t&gt;.ni51.:i7S. or over 2:5½&#13;
per cent c f the entire cist of the government.&#13;
Ir is divided as follows:&#13;
Quartermaster's dlsbitr&gt;=onieu*s. $7o,-&#13;
(KK&gt;.noi&gt;: commissaries. $20.()00,(iflO; engineers.&#13;
!?ls.iHvO.OO(). The total number&#13;
of accounts' settled was H5.4S1. involving&#13;
the examination in detail of 2.-&#13;
:ilP.UU0 vouchers. '&#13;
j UuHsin'.i Revenue.&#13;
, When Secretary Gage's action in im-&#13;
! posing countervailing duties on Itus-&#13;
1 sian sugar exported to the United&#13;
; States was followed by so dispvopofi&#13;
tionate reprisal as the imposition &lt; f 'M&#13;
! per cent increased duties on the most&#13;
j important American importations&#13;
! there, the importers of American too's&#13;
i and machinery sei'-med s.uuned. They&#13;
! were disposed to support Uussia on the&#13;
! legal aspects, but some of them re-ex-&#13;
I amined the matter and concluded that&#13;
| the ltussiari sugar regulations amount&#13;
I to practical compulsion to manufacture&#13;
j for export. The actual effects of the&#13;
j discriminating duties have not been as&#13;
• disastrous as expected. The de&lt;'rease&#13;
: In Asiatic imports is chiefly due to the&#13;
! abolition of the open port at Yladivos-&#13;
* t«vk.&#13;
DiMbdiinrnUlo UUKIUCNM.&#13;
At the special meeting of the supreme&#13;
lodge,. Knights of Pythias, m&#13;
Chicago, it is understood a report will&#13;
be mnlie exposing persons alleged to&#13;
have been implicated in a deal by&#13;
which a former Illinois insurance commissioner&#13;
received from a manager of&#13;
the Knights of Pythias endowment&#13;
rank $:5..100 for a "clearance card"'ami&#13;
a letter of recommendation for the&#13;
rank.&#13;
The story is that the SvJ.oOO bought&#13;
a report showing that an investigation&#13;
had been made and that the en&#13;
uowment rank's affairs had been found&#13;
satisfactor,.'. Later the Illinois ami&#13;
Connection, insurance authorities began&#13;
an invt'stiiratbm of the rank. This&#13;
is not ye: finished.&#13;
Sbnfter netlrcs.&#13;
On Sunday two important events occurred&#13;
at the government army post in&#13;
San Francisco, the retirement of Maj.-&#13;
Geu. W. U. Shatter and the mustering&#13;
Philippine Trnilc.&#13;
A marked increase in the trade of&#13;
the Philippine islands during the calendar&#13;
year of lhOO over the commerce&#13;
of the previous year, is set out in a&#13;
statement made by the division of insular&#13;
affairs of 'the war department.&#13;
The value of imported merchandise,&#13;
gold ami silver, for 1000, is se* down&#13;
at $27.7iir&gt;,100. This, according to the&#13;
war department's statement, was the&#13;
greatest importation for any single&#13;
year In the history of the archipelago.&#13;
In l^OJ) the imports amounted to $20.-&#13;
440.074 in value, thus showing an increase&#13;
of nearly 30 per tear In favor&#13;
of*1000.&#13;
FOREIGX XOTES.&#13;
i tint' of four volunteer regiments. Gen.&#13;
"Married!" echoed Jim. i Shatter went on the retired list at&#13;
mado his way to Elm street at a pa,&lt; n0ou. when he formally transferred the&#13;
which would undoubtedly have wor&#13;
him first prize in a sprinting contest!&#13;
i&#13;
Wt»*&lt;r« Slavery 1» Treferret!.&#13;
According to correspondence issue;&#13;
by the London foreign office. i)S pei&#13;
cent of the slaves of Zanzibar am&#13;
Pemba prefer to remain slaves. Fiwe.&#13;
slaves applied for freedom in 19j;&#13;
than in 1899, because the British cam&#13;
rm.ssioners over, mo.t of thi s ave&#13;
know they arc not likely t.&gt; gain mac'.&#13;
command of the department of California&#13;
to Muj.-Gen. S. B. M. Young.&#13;
In the afternoon the Forty-fourth, Forty&#13;
ninth. Forty-eighth and Thirtyeighth&#13;
volunteer Regiments were mustered&#13;
out. Tho mustering out of the&#13;
four regiments required the services of&#13;
eight paymasters. More than a million&#13;
dollars was paid out.&#13;
Porto Rico Fret* Tr:i«le.&#13;
In a joint session lasting three hours,&#13;
the Porto Hican assemblv nn.vnimousprcscnt&#13;
advantage, seeing th it th::s: ly passed a free trade resolution. The&#13;
who wero thrown at their own r » assembly hall was crowded with peotources&#13;
have a difficult time to mak*&#13;
a living. Tho mrst?rs hr„v;&gt; bee;&#13;
kinder since the slave legislation w:&gt;&#13;
enacted and seek to make t^.eir sow ICY&#13;
nrore attractive&#13;
pie aud cheers greeted the announce&#13;
ment that Gov. Allen had signed the&#13;
resolution. The action of the assembly&#13;
Is considered to he ~th*—mest important&#13;
taken bv it since the inauguration&#13;
of G^v. Allen.&#13;
Disastrous hurricanes o» the const of&#13;
New South Wales have paralyzed shipping.&#13;
Two vessels have been wrecked&#13;
and ten persons drowned.&#13;
The budget presented by the Newfoundland&#13;
minister of finance shows a&#13;
surnlus for the fiscal year ending June.&#13;
1S00. of $7S.ooo and for the War eliding&#13;
.Tune. 1000, of $2.-.8.000. ' \ /&#13;
A South African war medal has been&#13;
awarded A. M. Klenn. :uv American&#13;
cltixen, in recognition of services rendered&#13;
by him as driver of the engine&#13;
connected with the water supnly of&#13;
Ladvsmith during' the siege of that&#13;
town.&#13;
According to Vatican circles one of&#13;
the principal snv jects o£ the recent conferences&#13;
between Cardinal Gibbons.&#13;
Archbishop Chappelle and Cardinal&#13;
Pnmpolla was how to devise means for&#13;
count tract ing the Spanish sympathies&#13;
of'tho priests in Cuba and the Philippines,&#13;
• ' • ' • '&#13;
:fe&#13;
HP--.''.• . * • ' • ' '&#13;
",'.•&#13;
. ' -&#13;
.&#13;
r ' - • - • ' ' ' : * *&#13;
• '• \ : '";... : ' * , J&#13;
.'•'' ' : ' '•'•• ''*l&#13;
'•'- . -•y-i-.ir.'-'-.f-?.- V'1&#13;
'.'s •' '^'".^ :V . ' ' i ' ^ ' ' ^&#13;
' .',.*;--', ' '' '.;'' •w• • • 1• • *-i !c, --y' '-'i t-^&#13;
. ~ ' . ' W ••.••..• H&#13;
.-v^:"---r:--'"V'^&#13;
' • • '•' . ' • ' , • •*•, •. V - J&#13;
•&gt; . -J,- • -;• • J&#13;
'.,. , '••, i a&#13;
• , A .-.^--, '-m&#13;
• ' ' . . ' J • - " * ' - : v ' y : '&#13;
- :. ^Ml&#13;
- : ;••; i'.";&gt;.."i&#13;
••• ; ' ' : ^ 1 ^ 1&#13;
.' • l "".'-- \&gt;Sj&#13;
-. ftrrA&#13;
• ' &lt; * ; .&#13;
M&#13;
I3&#13;
*v 1&#13;
•I&#13;
•'••A."&#13;
S . '&#13;
vurtr&#13;
• * r v i&gt; •&#13;
'J &gt; A f;V-&#13;
,:*.&lt;&#13;
" ^ ' . r - ^ ¢ - - - » - • • - - v .&#13;
^ fe vv""&#13;
f,v.&#13;
' - V .V.'.l&#13;
' • • • - «&#13;
&gt; &gt; ; • • • * .&#13;
. • * . . - . \\M?f *s!&#13;
J&gt;-&#13;
-c&#13;
ft''&#13;
V*.&#13;
v * j-r.tr-. • •',;.• /&#13;
'&gt;.',j'*^f*s***&lt;W.-' •&#13;
&amp; . A&#13;
.-.*,.&#13;
Ttl'rf!&#13;
••••/• - : . &gt; - . - p ' -&#13;
&gt; '• •&#13;
* • • •&#13;
*P?T ANDERSON&#13;
mw -.&#13;
Mr. Gloss went to Detroit on&#13;
Tuesday. _ ;&#13;
Mrs. MoQavett moved into the&#13;
Kensch house last week.&#13;
Wm. Singleton of Stockbridge&#13;
spent Sunday in Anderson&#13;
sys.&#13;
W.&#13;
w*'--.&#13;
% .&#13;
Minnie Hoff went to Lansing&#13;
last week to work for Frank Hoff.&#13;
' Mrs. L. E. Howlett of Howell&#13;
spent last week with her parents&#13;
this place.&#13;
Chas. Hoffahd family entertained&#13;
friends from Howell and Lansing&#13;
on tbe-4th.&#13;
Belle Fuster of Detroit spent&#13;
the last of the week with her sister&#13;
Mrs. Seth Perry.&#13;
'••."•*« OF. D. Eaman returned to his&#13;
',; i^tiie, in Detroit after spending a&#13;
week with "Anderson friends.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Phelps of Stockspent&#13;
the 4th with their&#13;
Slaughter Mrs. Eugene Smith.&#13;
E. M. Jeffrey and family return&#13;
ed front Lansing on Suuday where&#13;
they have^been spending the past&#13;
week.&#13;
m» z /.. &lt;&#13;
CAST PUTNAM. A KFD route frdm Webberville&#13;
now comes through the south&#13;
W. H. Placeway was in Betroit part of Iosco supplying mauy who&#13;
Monday. formerly came here for mail.&#13;
Mrs. Jas. Pearson is visiting&#13;
AXD'EttSON FARMER'S CLUB.&#13;
The Club will be held at Dell&#13;
HalFa. -&#13;
Program:&#13;
Recitation, Percy Hiu«hey&#13;
.-Bulo,_ _ _'~ _ Villa Mart hi&#13;
Duet, - -Glenn STMlllie Gardner&#13;
Recitation, Aubrey Gilchrist&#13;
Solo, Ethel l^urkee&#13;
— Question Box.&#13;
her daughters in Green Oak.&#13;
Lucy and Florence Cook spent&#13;
Sunday with their grandmother.&#13;
Sarah Pearson is in attendance&#13;
at the C. E. convention in Cincinnati&#13;
this week.&#13;
Lola Placeway of Ames, Iowa js&#13;
visiting her parents Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
W. H. Placeway.&#13;
The young people oTthis vicihttjf^&#13;
pent a few days iu camp at&#13;
Base Lake this week.&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Wood and daughter&#13;
Mattie of North Lake spent Tuesday&#13;
with Mrs. G. \V. Brown,&#13;
Messrs Carl and Albert Ebe'.ing&#13;
Fred Schmidt and Miss Charlotte&#13;
Ebeline; of Detroit are visiting at&#13;
the home of E. G. Fish.&#13;
Mrs. Bert Hause and children&#13;
who have spent the past month&#13;
with Mrs. G. W. Biown returned&#13;
to her home in Hamburg this&#13;
week.&#13;
The people of this vicinity enjo'yeO&#13;
i.:emselves at a picnic at&#13;
Swarthout's grove the 4th. The&#13;
main feature of the day was the&#13;
parade during which the band discoursed&#13;
the liveliest music. The&#13;
regular 4th of July contests were&#13;
entered into with much zeal, and&#13;
the prizes were fairly won.&#13;
Alarge barn about three miles&#13;
north of here belonging to Everett&#13;
Parker, was struck by lightning&#13;
during the storm, the 4th&#13;
and burned with all the contents.&#13;
R, G. Chipman has the scarlet&#13;
fever.&#13;
O. J. Dutton of Lansing was&#13;
home a few days this week.&#13;
.-E. L. &amp; S. G. Topping are givinj^&#13;
neTr^dli8¥s^~cTftTi&gt;t~paln~£&#13;
Several attended Buffalo Bill's&#13;
show at Jackson and Lansing this&#13;
week;&#13;
STILL MORE LOCAL.&#13;
at&#13;
HAYSTACK MOTH.&#13;
bout Common In Clover—Neat mmd&#13;
Tidy Premises Dlaeouraff* I t .&#13;
Pyralis costalte, a species of caterpillar&#13;
occasionally found la large numbers&#13;
Iu haystacks, more commonly attacks&#13;
tlover, and therefore the parent is frequently&#13;
called the clover hay moth.&#13;
The parent ts a beautiful little reddish&#13;
brown or purplish uaoth with yellow&#13;
markings on both wings, which are&#13;
fringed wltn^ tlienBani^TJotoT,-imd-on&#13;
this account the moth Is sometimes&#13;
tailed the "gold fringe."&#13;
Great damage may be done when the&#13;
caterpillars are present in numbers in&#13;
a hay stack or mow, as they may spoil&#13;
the lower layers, and occasionally the&#13;
damage is so great as to render the hay&#13;
cnua u'ettroytng materia* pcirauuv* «o&#13;
the Insect Ventilation under stacks&#13;
keeps the hay drier and is of value because&#13;
the Insects thrive best In t h e&#13;
presence of some moisture. Salt In the&#13;
'A. h a s been recommended&#13;
and certainly will do no harm.&#13;
WEST PUTNAM.&#13;
'•S?'.&#13;
h;&#13;
ft.&#13;
£&#13;
*/,&#13;
Thos. Cooper was in Jackson&#13;
Friday. * ."&#13;
Cyrus Gardner was im Howell&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
Andrew Hackett of Detroit visited&#13;
at D. M. Monks' last week.&#13;
Cecil Sigler of Pinckney visited&#13;
his friend Lee Barton last week.&#13;
Miss Belle Birnie of Olivet is&#13;
visiting her siscer, Mrs. J. Dunbar.&#13;
Lewis Pergo and wife of Detroit&#13;
visited at G. W. Bates last&#13;
week.&#13;
J. Ort and wife of Pinckney are&#13;
spending a few days at the home&#13;
of 8. E- Barton.&#13;
Fannie Monks and Nellie Gardner&#13;
visited friends in Dexter the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Chas. VanWinkle of Howell is&#13;
spending a few weeks with his&#13;
uncle C. V. VanWinkle.&#13;
Mrs. A. S. Chapman and children&#13;
of Gilmau, 111.-, visited at S. E.&#13;
Barton's Wednesday last.&#13;
GREGORY.&#13;
Mrs. Whitedis on the sick list.&#13;
John Rockwell spent Sunday&#13;
with Dan Denton.&#13;
—&lt;T L Smith wan in Dtroit Fri&#13;
is here&#13;
PARSHALLVILLE.&#13;
Wm. Brock of Howell&#13;
looking after his haying.&#13;
Marion Tabor is spending a few&#13;
days here visiting among friends.&#13;
Mrs. Chester VanCamp has a&#13;
brothei visiting here from South&#13;
Lyons.&#13;
S The 4th was very quiet here,&#13;
several families from here picniced&#13;
at Long Lake.&#13;
Little Jay Morgan who has&#13;
has been quite sick with scarlet&#13;
fever is getting better.&#13;
Fred Read of Sanilac who recently&#13;
married Effy Cole is here&#13;
preparing to move to Sanilac.&#13;
B. F. Andrews au&lt;J wife have&#13;
returned from Owosso where they&#13;
have been visiting for a few days.&#13;
VValte*r VanCamp of Feu ton is&#13;
he/e at work saving his hay crop.&#13;
Thinks he will come back on the&#13;
farm this fall ,&#13;
A little girl came to the hone&#13;
day and Saturday.&#13;
Abel Harp has been visiting a&#13;
few d a y s i n I n d i a n a .&#13;
C h r i s t i a n D e n t o n i s a t t e n d i n g&#13;
t h e s u m m e r n o r m a l a t Y p s i l a n t i .&#13;
M a g g i e Stiles w a s called t o&#13;
P l e a s a n t L a k e t o see a sick sister.&#13;
L a n d l o r d D u B o i s a n d little&#13;
d a u g h t e r s s p e n t F r i d a y i n J a c k -&#13;
son.&#13;
C. N . B u l l i s and wife s p e n t t h e&#13;
l a t t e r p a r t of t h e week v i s i t i n g in&#13;
Chelsea.&#13;
A l b e r t P i e r c e a n d family of&#13;
WTTTTamston visited r e l a t i v e s h e r e&#13;
S a t u r d a y a n d S u n d a y .&#13;
M^s. C h a p m a n a n d t w o c h i l d r e n&#13;
of C h i c a g o a r e s p e n d i n g a fow&#13;
d a y s with Mrs. F . W o r d e n .&#13;
San? G a u k r o g e r a n d family&#13;
moved t o J a c k s o n last Monday.&#13;
S a m e x p e c t s to work a t h i s t r a d e ,&#13;
c a r p e n t e r .&#13;
N e t t i e D a n i e l s from California&#13;
r e t u r n e d home last F r i d a y t o&#13;
s p e n d t h e s u m m e r vacation w i t h&#13;
h e r sister J e n n i e .&#13;
C. E . B u i l i s e n t e r t a i n e d t h e&#13;
c h i l d r e n t h e 4 t h n i g h t w i t h firew&#13;
o r k s a n d candy. I t i s a q u e s t i o t f&#13;
w h i c h m a d e t h e m o s t noise c h i l d -&#13;
ren o r fireworks.&#13;
Mrs- Bridget Egan is visiting&#13;
Thos. EganV at Petlysvill).&#13;
M r s . C . M. Placeway of Howell is a&#13;
guest of her daughter, Mrs. T h o s .&#13;
Fagan.&#13;
Perhaps some people do not know U&#13;
but there is a tine'Tor hitcHingTiorses&#13;
to shatle trees on the streets of Pinckney.&#13;
We print this for the benetit of&#13;
those who do not know and it may&#13;
save them trouble and expense.&#13;
• Tutor -Who Maintained His Dignity.&#13;
Dr. Chalmers always had a high;&#13;
sense of persons dignity. When a \&#13;
young man, he was engaged as tutor in j&#13;
a private family. His young lady pupils&#13;
resented his strictness, and* the j&#13;
mother foolishly took sides with her&#13;
daughters. In petty spite when company&#13;
was invited to the house young |&#13;
Chalmers \v± s shut out from the table, i&#13;
and dinner was sent to ITfs"room: — !&#13;
He made no protest against the&#13;
treatment, but when it was attempted&#13;
again he told the servant he had ordered&#13;
a dinner at a neighboring town and •&#13;
should need nothing. When this had&#13;
been done a few times, an explosion&#13;
THE ONION THRIPS. * '&#13;
"Wait* Blast" I s Its W o r k - W a a l *&#13;
Oil Soap the Remedy.&#13;
-The onion thrips (Thrips tabaci) has&#13;
been found to extend from the Atlantic&#13;
to the Pacific oceans. The effect of thli&#13;
insect upon the onion Is known a s the&#13;
"white blast," from the fact that the&#13;
tops are prematurely whitened and become&#13;
wrinkled and shriveled. The&#13;
rasping of th» leaves lg done by Much&#13;
Blender mouth parts and the insect 1»&#13;
so small t^at the Injury has more the&#13;
appearance of a fungus or bacterial disease&#13;
than of insect work.&#13;
Recent investigations have shown&#13;
that the itfSect passes the winter&#13;
months in matted grass, among old&#13;
weeds and other rubbish as well a s "&#13;
among cull onions and refuse that have&#13;
been left over in the fields in the fall.&#13;
Onion growers are famHiar with the&#13;
fact that the depredations of this insect&#13;
appear earliest and are the most&#13;
emphasized along the margins of fields&#13;
or plots or in spots over the fields. The&#13;
reason for this is that the insect winters&#13;
over in these places. I t makea4ta&#13;
s^aKSs?&#13;
^ i&#13;
PLAIN Ft ELD.&#13;
Many of the young people around&#13;
here spent the glorious 4th&#13;
at North Lake.&#13;
H. Fick and family of Gregory&#13;
attended church services here&#13;
Sunday morning.&#13;
We did not exactly celebrate&#13;
but a goodly display of fireworks&#13;
could be seen round about during&#13;
the the evening.&#13;
Geo. Younglove and wife of&#13;
Marion and L. G. Younglove of&#13;
Detroit visited at L. C. Gardner's&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
, The foreign missionery society&#13;
of the M. P. church will hold a&#13;
meeting at home of Mrs. Embler&#13;
Thursday afternoon..&#13;
GOLD FRINGE MOTH AND CATERPILLAR.&#13;
[Pyrali8 costalis—1, 2, larva; S, cocoon; 4,&#13;
pupai-SHK motht 7, iarwwttfitB ITe web.]&#13;
worthless. Moths from caterpillars&#13;
passing thc&gt; wiuter appear in June or&#13;
July, possiMy earlier.&#13;
It Is probable that the Insect may&#13;
either be carried to the stacks with the&#13;
clover or the moths may lay eggs oa&#13;
called— {fag hay-af tt&gt;1' K l g c ^n S - Giving this ac-&#13;
Chalmers to account for insulting his bount of the insect. Country Gentlemanfamily.&#13;
Chalmers replied that he had ' recommends the following preventive&#13;
been insulted by banishment from the measures:&#13;
table. The young teacher conquered Clean up and burn all the rubbish&#13;
and ever after held his place as one of about mows and places where hay is&#13;
the family at all social gatherings. —•---^-^ KofWa the new crop is cut.&#13;
way from the grassy margins or from&#13;
the grassy banks of ditches to the rows&#13;
of onions adjoining. . It winters over in&#13;
the piles of culled onions and refuse In&#13;
the fields and begins Its work there,&#13;
spreading from thence outward.&#13;
Wherever the grass and Aveeds along&#13;
ditches can be rooted up and destroyed&#13;
it prevents the harboring of this pest.&#13;
Wherever the old, dry grasses and&#13;
weeds along the margins of onion plantations&#13;
can be burned the effect will be&#13;
to destroy myriads of the pest and to&#13;
prevent their breeding the next season.&#13;
With frequent drenching rains there is&#13;
not much likelihood of a severe outbreak,&#13;
but in case of drougbt-tbe-insect&#13;
is likely to work more or less serious&#13;
Injury in extensive onion fields.&#13;
A epray of one pound of whale oil&#13;
soap dissolved in eight gallons of water&#13;
will destroy the pest, and the use of&#13;
this mixture is recommended on the&#13;
first appearance of the insects in the&#13;
fields. At time of first appearance 5t&#13;
will probably only be necessary to treat&#13;
very small areas along the margins of&#13;
fields or the small. Isolated spots previously&#13;
mentioned in order to permanently&#13;
check their Increase.&#13;
» Commencing July 19 This Store will close&#13;
" Friday afternoons at 12:30 until Sept. 1st.&#13;
The Red Mark a Great Distributor.&#13;
As a distributor of merchandise and a mover of surplus stock, we at the Hive know of nothing to&#13;
equa1 the Bed Mark Sale. It is vitalized with bargain energy aud is active, forceful and beneficial iu its&#13;
work. The first week in July has been a sales record breaker, and July bids fare to largely outdo any&#13;
previous July selling we have known. The community lias come to know that this store's advertising&#13;
statements do not have to be taken "with a grain of salt," and when we advertise Red Mark price reductions&#13;
we do not have to resort to extravagant promises to interest the people who want truly worthy merchandise&#13;
at real houest price rediKjHons in order to interest buyers.&#13;
SHIRT WAIST SUITS FOR LADIES.&#13;
Here is a splendid idea: A handsome, cool, summer suit'&#13;
made from good quality Percales in pretty -and neat designs.&#13;
•he waist a regular shirt waist made in the most correct style,&#13;
and the skirt of the same material cut in the up-to-date fashion.&#13;
Here is certflinly the most practical summer attire that&#13;
las yet come on the market. Price for entire dress $L4S and&#13;
a variety that is pleasing to choose from.&#13;
THAT SHEET SALE.&#13;
You can neglect it, but if you'er a true economist you&#13;
won't. You can wait until the opportunity is past, but you&#13;
won't—if you're wise. This is an argument that strikes with&#13;
power. You buy uready to use" well made, high grade material&#13;
Sheets and Pillow Cases in this sale at actually less than&#13;
material value. Here is the storv in a nutshell:—&#13;
Regular cost Special&#13;
of Cloth. Red Mark.&#13;
Cashes&#13;
Frilling and Hems fched&#13;
Ruffling.&#13;
We have a niceJine of&#13;
these very wortny goods to&#13;
show you; also we would like&#13;
to tell you about Cashes Embroidered&#13;
Initials and Names&#13;
for marking clothing, linen,&#13;
etc, Ask for circulal of&#13;
names and initials.&#13;
Sheets, size 54x90 in. (F,\s;?rIe) 59c&#13;
Sheets, size 63x90 in. (F&#13;
b°eV4 ) 55c&#13;
Sheets, size 72x90 in. ( ¾ ) 60c&#13;
Sheets, size 81x90 in (FK£tdized) 70c&#13;
Sheets, size SI x 93¾ in. [Lxi?] 75c&#13;
80c&#13;
85c&#13;
33c&#13;
35c&#13;
Sheets, size 81x99 in. [ 1 ¾ ¾ ]&#13;
Sheets, size 90x99 in L?&amp;.%ddf*]&#13;
Pillow Cases, 45x36 in&#13;
Pillow Cases, 45x38 in.&#13;
Per&#13;
pair&#13;
Per&#13;
pair&#13;
3P'c&#13;
44c&#13;
49c&#13;
5 7 ^ c&#13;
59c&#13;
62j^c&#13;
68c&#13;
25c&#13;
27c&#13;
* Belts&#13;
The Kurkhardt Shaped&#13;
Belt is by far the most practical&#13;
and prettiest fitting belt&#13;
made. We have been a little&#13;
low on them for a week or&#13;
so, bat f&gt; shipment arrived&#13;
on Saturday which gave us a&#13;
firstrnte assortment. Prices&#13;
'50c 7")c and up.&#13;
Men's Underwear&#13;
At 50 Cents.&#13;
We want every man&#13;
who isn't afraid to come into&#13;
a dry goods store to see the&#13;
srirts and drawers we are selling&#13;
at f&gt;0c. Positively we do&#13;
not know of better valne nnwear&#13;
in United States.&#13;
C. E. Mapes aud wife are spendof&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cadney j ing a couple of weeks on the John&#13;
and as they have 3 boyg tho little Mapes farm near Stockbridge se-&#13;
Why We Sell&#13;
Toilet Articles.&#13;
The reason we seM Toilet&#13;
Articles may to an extent be&#13;
that it's handy for ladies or&#13;
men to buy them while shoping&#13;
in the store, but the main&#13;
reason is that we sell thera at&#13;
such low prices. For instance:&#13;
Menneu's Talcum 17c&#13;
Cuticura Soap 21c&#13;
Pear's Soap.., 10c&#13;
Wool Soap. 3c&#13;
Packer's lar Soap.., 17ft&#13;
Rest Bradley Witch Hazel 10c&#13;
William's Shaving Soap, . ,5c&#13;
girl it quite exoeptable. caring the hay crop there.&#13;
THE L H. FIELD COMPANY.&#13;
Jackaon, Mich.&#13;
if</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="36759">
              <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="6950">
                <text>Pinckney Dispatch July 11, 1901</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6951">
                <text>July 11, 1901 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="6952">
                <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="6953">
                <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="6954">
                <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="6955">
                <text>1901-07-11</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="6956">
                <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>
