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                  <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>
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              <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>
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              <text>PINOKNET, LIVINGSTON OO., MICH., THURSDAY, APR. 26, 1907. No. 17&#13;
Efcff-..'T»i.. , r&#13;
P O P&#13;
Q u a l i t y Bowman's&#13;
Laces and Embroideries&#13;
For&#13;
P F I c e&#13;
Oar Complete Spring Line* are now&#13;
on sale.&#13;
Prices are a* low JUS we ever Bold similar&#13;
quality (or.&#13;
Edge* can be matched with insertions.&#13;
Beautiful assortment of Corset Cover&#13;
and all-over Embroideries. ,&#13;
Fine variety of All-over Laces.&#13;
New Stock of "American Lady',&#13;
and J. C. C. Corsets.&#13;
Buy your next corset of us.&#13;
Every department in our store is complete. It's a pleasure to hand out a big&#13;
!tem at a bargain price, when we know we are getting Cash, Eggs&#13;
or Butter, no'bad accounts.&#13;
Gome to us—every day is bargain day at&#13;
B. A . Bowman's&#13;
Howell's Busy Store j&#13;
'•**"&#13;
GASOLINE&#13;
RED STAR BRAND,!&#13;
Best By Test&#13;
DOES NOT SMOKE&#13;
YOUR DEALER&#13;
t26&#13;
SPECIALS for APRIL&#13;
With every dozen photos&#13;
at $2&lt;00 or more per&#13;
dozen, 1 will give one&#13;
for only 50c extra.&#13;
The pictures are nicely&#13;
finished and mounted for&#13;
framing in 16x20 frame&#13;
advantage&#13;
. , . _ _ off** ^ ,&#13;
DAISIE K. C H A P E L L ,&#13;
Photograph Stiiiii, SioGkbridge&#13;
Matt Rrady, of Howell, was in&#13;
town the last of last week.&#13;
Kentuckey tbe home of the illicit&#13;
distileries—95 out of 119 counties go&#13;
dry.&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Black, of St. Johns, is&#13;
visiting old friends and relatives here&#13;
and in this vicinity.&#13;
Is it right to take care of your own&#13;
boy, and vote to license a place which&#13;
will rain yoar neighbor's boy?&#13;
Warren Hoff paid the county seat,&#13;
Howell, a visit one da? last week, the&#13;
first time in twenty three years—he&#13;
must have seen some changes by tbe&#13;
way.&#13;
Brighton has begun a work along&#13;
the lines of cleaning up and beautifying&#13;
cemeterys, streets and homes.&#13;
Well "horrid coming" is a benefit in&#13;
more ways than one.&#13;
All section men, except foremen, on&#13;
the Ann Arbor Ry. we understand&#13;
struck list week for an increase in&#13;
wages, It is said that men on the&#13;
other roads will follow spit.&#13;
The affairs of the water works and&#13;
electric light commission in Howell&#13;
are reported in a tangle, it is not&#13;
thought it is through any intential&#13;
wrong but through carelessnetl in&#13;
book keeping by toraor 0*4« in&#13;
charge. , . y&#13;
Several launches bare been rpnt into&#13;
&amp;• waje* at the lakes and their&#13;
ulHtafcT, wnaek" proclaims that the&#13;
ot&amp;inf MMron is near at hand. The&#13;
fleet at Lakeland will be increased by&#13;
several bringing the number up close&#13;
to the 30 n ark.&#13;
OBITTABT.&#13;
Alice Smith was born in Dubiin&lt;&#13;
Ireland October 12, 1886 and died in&#13;
j Pontiac of Pneumonia at the home of&#13;
her aon Apr, 17, 1907. She came to&#13;
this country when 10years of age and&#13;
at the age of 18 was united in marrage&#13;
to James Greer. To this union&#13;
was born 8 children, 6 daughters and&#13;
2 sons, 4 of whom are now living.&#13;
They are James Greer, Mrs. 0. C&#13;
Tayior aud Mis. Ella Sheets, of Pontiac,&#13;
and Mrs. Fred Kuerr, of Toledo*&#13;
Ohio, her husdand having passed&#13;
away about 22 &gt; ears ago.&#13;
Airs Greer has been a residence of&#13;
Pinckney for over 40 years and was&#13;
a devoted member of St. M a r y s&#13;
church. She moved to Pontiac just&#13;
two weeks before her death, which resulted&#13;
from pneumonia after five days&#13;
illness.&#13;
Besides her children she leaves a&#13;
number of grand children and two&#13;
little great gran children to mourn&#13;
the loss of a kind and loving mother&#13;
and grand rrother. *%&#13;
Dearest Mother thy troubles and trials are; oe'r&#13;
We will live to meet you on yonder shore ,&#13;
Where our meeting and par Mag tfill be no more.&#13;
Improvements at Portage.&#13;
A contract has been let t o the&#13;
Washtenaw Dredging Co. to dredge a&#13;
navigable waterway between Portage&#13;
and Base lakes which will open up a&#13;
continuous chain of communication&#13;
between Portage and Lakeland.&#13;
This will be much appreciated by&#13;
the cottage owners on the whole seven&#13;
mile chain of lakes. The work is&#13;
to be completed by the Fourth of&#13;
July.&#13;
Tbe plan is to dredge out the low&#13;
land, near the river, for the thirty&#13;
rods or so where the river is the most&#13;
shallow, making a sort of canal that&#13;
will acommodate launches as well as&#13;
row boats.&#13;
M. £. Church Notes.&#13;
L O C A L N E W S .&#13;
There was the usual good attendance&#13;
Sunday morning and a stirring&#13;
sermon bv the pastor. The attendance&#13;
at Sunday school was 115 with a&#13;
collection of 12.37.&#13;
Do not forget the prayer meeting&#13;
tonight and that it will commence at&#13;
the first ringing of the bell, 7:00&#13;
o'clock, so as to give all a chance to&#13;
attend tbe missionary meeting at the&#13;
Cong'l church. Do not forget to&#13;
come early.&#13;
Services as usual next Sunday—&#13;
Class meeting at 10, preaching at&#13;
While in Howell the past week we [ 10:30, Sunday school at 12, Epworth&#13;
^.S'V*&#13;
«7* /U_" u&#13;
A*&#13;
Perry Blunt was in Detroit, one day&#13;
last week.&#13;
Alex Mclntyre was in Detroit one&#13;
day last week.&#13;
Miss Norma Vaughn spent Sunday&#13;
with ber sifter in Hamburg.&#13;
Mrs. M. C. Wilson, of Flint, visaed&#13;
her sister, Mrs. Willis Topper, And&#13;
other ltiends here the past week. W&#13;
Chas. Hoff is the man who has been&#13;
employed to ta*e charge of the State&#13;
Sanitorium farm, instead of Ralph&#13;
Hess as WB quoted last week.&#13;
In the case, Urumb vs. Alex Mclntyre&#13;
was in the circuit court last&#13;
took the time to visit J. A. Brown's&#13;
green house and fonnd it a place of&#13;
•heauty. Hert knows how to make&#13;
ilowers do their best and has a good&#13;
business built up He makes a specialty&#13;
of drapes, sprays and set pieces.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Plowman are in t.oub&#13;
le again and Mrs. Plowman is seeking&#13;
divo'rce for a second time on the&#13;
grounds of habitual drunkenness and&#13;
cruelty. Plowman started a paper at&#13;
Hartland and after .vards wcrked for&#13;
the Herald here.—Tidings. Mr.&#13;
Plowman is quite well known here&#13;
having spent a week or more here&#13;
canvasing"&#13;
*'•'• Ho well people have been enjoying&#13;
week, Mr. Mclntyre won out, the # « ^ ^ Mod °* lettuce the past few&#13;
'•t ing a verdict of no cause&#13;
M l i l t s *&#13;
. F&#13;
V".&#13;
I * - "&#13;
• # /&#13;
A s ^ ^ s l a Monks gave a house&#13;
party to the Chance Club last Saturday&#13;
sight tbe club remaining over&#13;
Bight. To say the girls bad a good&#13;
time would be putting it mild.&#13;
Foakeit Broe* of Howell, have ordered&#13;
a large dredge with which to do&#13;
the tbe work on some tf the large&#13;
drains Being dug and others that may&#13;
follow in and adjoining counties*&#13;
weeks grown in the ^reen bonses&#13;
there under the manageuent of Lee&#13;
Chamberlain &amp; Co. Tbe steam for&#13;
the houses is tarnished by the exaust&#13;
from the electric and water company&#13;
and seems to be in abundance. The&#13;
quality of the lettuce is as fine as we&#13;
ever saw and the firm are and have&#13;
been for some time shipping several&#13;
barrels a day besides furnishing their&#13;
home market. It is a good thing for&#13;
Howeil and bids fair to grow to large&#13;
porportions.&#13;
League at 7, evening sermon at 7:30.&#13;
Seats free and all welcome.&#13;
Cong'/ Church Notes&#13;
The subject at the Cong'l church&#13;
next Sunday morning will be "Hope&#13;
and Faith." Evening, "Our country."&#13;
All are welcome at all services.&#13;
Rev. Gates, of the Cong'l church&#13;
spoke at the Kensmen street church,&#13;
Cleveland, Ohio, last Wednesdey even&#13;
ing on "Ourey, the gem of the liockies.,,&#13;
i&#13;
I&#13;
Mrs. Ida Vose Woodberry, of Bos-:&#13;
ton, Mass , the Field Secretary of the j&#13;
American Missionary Association,;&#13;
will speak in the Congregational i&#13;
church on Thursday evening Apr. 25. 1&#13;
Her address, "Glimpses of Life," will&#13;
tell of the brotherhood of m *n and&#13;
take one in imagination to the Sioux&#13;
Indians, the Indians of Oklahoma, the&#13;
black belt of the South and the&#13;
mountain teaions of Kentucky. She&#13;
will giye glimpses of the lives, houses&#13;
and eo8toms of these people, and show&#13;
the elevating influence Christianity&#13;
has had upon their ±*vee. Corns and&#13;
hear her. ltkeartalnly a rare treat.&#13;
••-*?&#13;
•Sv-&#13;
»A • &gt; / . &gt; / ^ &gt; : H ^ &gt; ; ^ ; ^ X # &amp; ^ ^&#13;
Come and Examine&#13;
Our New Stock of&#13;
Up-to-Date&#13;
W A L L PAPER&#13;
3V 'SuW £»"\T\e o^ S B S U T T O S \ Carrls&#13;
Pure Drugd—Prescriptions Carefully Compounded at&#13;
P. A. SIGNER'S&#13;
;rfl&#13;
Spring Overcoat:&#13;
We have a few Spring Overcoats&#13;
left and will close them for , - * :&#13;
3 8 . 5 0 Bach&#13;
They would be Cheap at $10.00&#13;
A&#13;
v ., •&#13;
T"^&#13;
Cravenette Rain Coats&#13;
This is the time of year you need these&#13;
garments, Call and see our Prices. |&#13;
L. L. Holmes Clothing Co.&#13;
J. P. PRESLEY, jPngr. ~&#13;
:• * - ;-/.'Tji&#13;
*r-&#13;
Kay Tompkins&#13;
Contractor and Builder&#13;
Can furnish large or small bills&#13;
of lumber within thirty days and&#13;
save you monay, especially on inside&#13;
finish. Let me figure on&#13;
vour job.&#13;
Lakeland, Michigan&#13;
^^^^^^^^^^&#13;
'-•* '*A&#13;
• / » \ 2&#13;
N O T I C E 5 8 ^ •'&#13;
* . ; ; ^ at&#13;
W e a r e in position to store your base-burner&#13;
S2.50&#13;
At Owner's Risk&#13;
Tceplc Hardware Co.&#13;
-~w&#13;
' '&gt; *&lt;•.&#13;
',',*':,.-' •&gt;..&#13;
F»-V".'*c&#13;
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H e a l t h o f S c h o o l Cfilldrsn.&#13;
T h e m e d i c a l i n s p e c t i o n o f s c h o o l&#13;
• c h i l d r e n — a s u b j e c t n o w p v o v o k t n *&#13;
g e n e r a l d i s c u s s i o n i n t h i s c o u n t r y ,&#13;
a n d p a r t i c u l a r l y i n t h i s c i t y — i s t h e&#13;
t o p i c of &amp; Iviok r e c e n t l y p u b l i s h e d in&#13;
L o n d o n . " T h e H e u i t h o f t h e S c h o o l&#13;
C h i l d , " by D r . W. L e s l i u M a c k e n z i e .&#13;
H o uutw* t h a t i n E n g l a n d , its t n certaJlii&#13;
c o u n t r i e s o n t h e c o n t i n e n t ( a n d&#13;
h o r e a l s o , w o m a y a d d ) , t h e p h y s i c a l&#13;
e x a m i n a t i o n of c h i l d r e n iss "no l o n g e r&#13;
a q u e s t i o n of d o u b t f u l p o l i t i c s ; " it&#13;
h a s " p a s s e d i n t o t h e r e g i o n of a d m i n -&#13;
i s t r a t i o n . " A p o i n t ol K'eui p r a c t i c a l&#13;
i n t e r e s t w h i c h h e b r i n g s out ib t h a t ,&#13;
"by a l i u l e c o o p e r a t i o n a m o n g t h e&#13;
t e a c h e r s , Ihe a m o u n t el w o r k t h r o w n&#13;
on the d o c t o r s and t h e c o n s e q u e n t&#13;
&lt;\&gt;^t of t h e i n s p e c t i o n nia\ be c o n s i d -&#13;
e r a b l y b'khteneri. Ih\ Kerr, lor exa&#13;
m p l e , ol i h e L o n d o n c o u n t y c o u n c i l ,&#13;
' f uirid that, w i t h a l i u l e c a r e , t h e&#13;
u jcherti w e r e able to iind out a l m o s t&#13;
all t h e c h i l d r e n that suffered f r o m e y e&#13;
d e f e c t s . " T h i s t e s t i m o n y will n o t&#13;
;;urpris-e c a s u a l a n d unoiHeial s c h o o l&#13;
v i s i t o r s a n i o n s w h o m w e r e c k o n ours&#13;
e l v e s w h o a r e o f t e n a m a z e d a t t h e&#13;
i n d i f f e r e n c e of t e a c h e r s t o d e f e c t s of&#13;
s i g h t or h e a r i n g that are a m a n i f e s t&#13;
h a n d i c a p to p u p i l s . I k i y s a n d g i r l s&#13;
w h o a r e half-blind or d e a f will m o v e&#13;
S l o w l y f r o m g r a d e to g r a d e , w i t h o u t&#13;
a w o r d of w a r n i n g to p a r e n t or g u a r d -&#13;
i a n f r o m t h e u n o b s e r v a n t t e a c h e r .&#13;
W e h o p e t h a t the g r o w i n g a t t e n t i o n&#13;
to t h i s m a t t e r will, e v e n w h e r e t h e r e&#13;
i s no f o r m a l m e d i c a l i n s p e c t i o n ,&#13;
q u i c k e n t e a c h e r s to a duty that i s t o o&#13;
oft i n n e g l e c t e d .&#13;
\ ON DRESS . PARADE.&#13;
EVENTS NOTED&#13;
A BILL TO STOP THE BREAKING&#13;
OF SCHOOL TEACHERS'&#13;
CONTRACTS.&#13;
STATE STONE BREAKING&#13;
*&#13;
M a t t e r s of N o t * ••a.i, C o m m t n t Gatli&#13;
ercd H e r e an:;&#13;
S t a t e .&#13;
YottitN WMt&#13;
H o w i n t e n s e l y praeTk-.J and s e n s i -&#13;
ble i s m u c h of th&lt;- mode.-u m i s s i o n a r y&#13;
w o r k is s h o w n by i':'. W i l f r e d T.&#13;
vrrenfeil, t h e medi&lt; a! m i s s i o n a r y of&#13;
t h e L a b r a d o r c o a s t . In a roeent add&#13;
r e s s d e s c r i p t i v e el' h i s work h e s a i d ,&#13;
' ^ P e p a i d m o r e a t t e n t i o n to b e n e f i t -&#13;
i n g t h e p o v e r t y - r i d d e n p e o p l e by aidi&#13;
n g i n t h e i r p h y s i c a l w e l f a r e t h a n by&#13;
p r e a c h i n g and p r a y e r . W e e s t a b l i s h -&#13;
ed h o s p i t a l s to care for t h e sick, o p e n -&#13;
ed s t o f e s w h e r e c l o t h i n g and food a n d&#13;
t o b a c c o c o u l d b e o b t a i n e d at a l o w e r&#13;
p r i c e a n d of a b e t t e r q u a l i t y t h a n i n&#13;
t h e r e g u l a r s t o r e s . W e h e l p e d t o&#13;
t e a p h t h e fishermen m o r e a b o u t t h e i r&#13;
b u s i n e s s o f f i s h i n g a n d t h e c o n d i t i o n s&#13;
u n d e r w h i c h t h e y l i v e d , and h o w t h e y&#13;
c o u l d b e t t e r t h e c o n d i t i o n s ; and by&#13;
s o d o i n g w e a c c o m p l i s h e d a g r e a t e r&#13;
g o o d t h a n m i g h t h a v e b e e n w r o u g h t&#13;
by a h o s t of p r e a c h i n g and p r a y i n g&#13;
m i s s i o n a r i e s w h o i g n o r e m e n ' s b o d i e s&#13;
i n t h o c u r e of t h e i r souls.''&#13;
T e a c h e r s M u s t S t i c k .&#13;
Tim n e x t p r t t i y s e h o u l i u a n u w h o&#13;
u o l a t e s h e r c o n t r a c t w i l l g e t i n t o&#13;
t r o u b l e . S o muny c o m p l a i n t s h a v e&#13;
c o m e in t o t h e d e p a r t m e n t o f p u b l i c&#13;
i n s t r u c t i o n b e c a u s e of t e a c h e r s w h o&#13;
m a k e a c o n t r a c t w;ith o n e s c h o o l b o a r d&#13;
s e e m t o feel f r e e to j u m p t h e c o n t r a c t&#13;
a s s o o n a s tiiey a r e offered, m u r e p a y&#13;
s o m e w h e r e e l s e , t h a t Kep. Privy, of&#13;
sjsceul:-*, i n t r o d u c e d a d r a s t i c bill&#13;
w h i c h ha;- b e e n r e p o r t e d by t h e c o m -&#13;
m i t t e e on e d u c a t i o n . T h e bill provided&#13;
ihat a n y c o n t r a c t m a d e by a t e a c h e r&#13;
c o v e r i n g a t e r m for a n y part of w h i c h&#13;
he ur s h e is a l r e a d y u n d e r c o n t r a c t .&#13;
shal; be \uiii, a m i n o s c h o o l m o n e y&#13;
shall be paid o n o n e c o n t r a c t m a d e in&#13;
v i o l a t i o n of . m o t h e r . T h e d e p a r t m e n t&#13;
of p u b l i c i n s t r u c t i o n is g i v e n a u t h o r i t y&#13;
to s u s p e n d or r e v o k e tile c e r t i f i c a t e of&#13;
a n y t e a c h e r w h o h a s v i o l a t e d h i s or&#13;
h e r c o n t r a c t .&#13;
M a k e P r i s o n e r s C r u t h S t o n e .&#13;
S e n a t o r M o r i a r t y , of C r y s t a l F a l l s ,&#13;
/u.d R e p r e s e n t a t i v e S t a n n a r d , of Iron,&#13;
in w h o s e d i s t r i c t K e w e e n a w c o m i t y is&#13;
l o c a t e d , i n t r o d u c e d H i g h w a y C o m m i s -&#13;
s i o n e r E a r l e ' s bill for a trap-rockc&#13;
r u s h i n g p r i s o n in K e w e e n a w c o u n t y .&#13;
T h e s u m of $1200,UUO m a y be s p e n t in&#13;
b u i l d i n g t h e p r i s o n , w h i c h rihuil lie&#13;
k n o w n a s t h e .state p e n i t e n t i a r y , and&#13;
s h a l l confine t h e m o r e d a n g e r o u s c l a s s&#13;
I of c r i m i n a l . T h e p r i s o n s h a l l b e huilr&#13;
by the laiinr o f 10u p r i s o n e r s fi'ori&#13;
.Marquette. J a c k s o n unci I o n i a, a m i&#13;
w h e n buiii i h e work of rock c r u s h i n g&#13;
J for rjad p u r p o s e s s h a l l b e g i n . T h e&#13;
I s t a l e will nay freight on rock de:i\&#13;
the ioe::liiies shall p a y ileum!'-&#13;
L a d i s s C a n n o t W t « r&#13;
P o i n t B o y s ' O w r c o a t t *&#13;
D . H . C r i s s e y , a c a d e t f r o m Michig&#13;
a n , in o n e o f t h e 17 y o u n g m e n a t&#13;
t h e m i l i t a r y a c a d e m y w h o i n u s t f a c e&#13;
trial for l e n d i n g t h e i r o v e r c o a t s t o girl&#13;
f r i e n d s d u r i n g t h s d r e s s p a r a d e S u n -&#13;
day, April 7.&#13;
A l t h o u g h 22 r ^ a n g w o m e n a p p e a r e d&#13;
o n t h e p a r a d e g r o u n d w e a r i n g t u t&#13;
g r a y o v e r c o a t s five g o t a w a y b e f o r s&#13;
t h e i d e n t i t y of t h e o w n e r s of t h e c o a l *&#13;
w a s a s c e r t a i n e d ,&#13;
... _ T h e i m p r e s s i o n i s t h a t t h e p u n i s h -&#13;
Vhero A b o u t t h e } m e n t of t h e y o u n g m e n will n o t b e&#13;
; u i o r e s e v e r e t h a n t h e i m p o s i n g of a&#13;
i f e w d e m e r i t s .&#13;
Col. H u w z e w a s w i t h Col. S c o t t , t h e&#13;
s u p e r i n t e n d e n t , w h e n h e n o t i c e d tivu&#13;
| y o u n g w o m e n a m o n g t h e c r o w d w a t c h -&#13;
I i u g t h e p a r a d e w h o w e r e w e a r i n g&#13;
j c o a t s . He w i n k e d at that. A f e w&#13;
i m i n u t e s l a t e r h e s a w 17 m u r e g i r l s&#13;
{ s i m i l a r l y c l a d . S o m e e v e n h a d c a d e t&#13;
i c a p s . T h e n h e c a l l e d a s e r g e a n t of t h e&#13;
; g u a r d .&#13;
"In a s c o u r t e o u s a w a y a s p o s s i b l e , "&#13;
Col. H o w x e s a i d t o t h e s e r g e a n t , "inform&#13;
.ihost* y o u n g l a d i e s that t h e o w n -&#13;
' e r s of the c o a t s t h e y a r e ' w e a r i n g vio-&#13;
': l a t c d the r e g u l a t i o n s w h e n t h e y l o a n e d&#13;
i t h e m . T h e n p r e s e n t m y c o m p l i m e n t s&#13;
and ask the y o u n g w o m e n t o r e m o v e&#13;
litem."&#13;
i This t h e s e r g e a n t did, and m o s t of&#13;
i t h e young; '-omen o b e y e d . O t h e r s ol&gt;&#13;
j e c t e d .&#13;
•ifct*****«#Mfflwrm OhUuHf j^il&#13;
MRS. THAW AND MR8. HOLMAN&#13;
ARE TO MEET IN INTER*&#13;
EST OF HARRY.&#13;
EVELYN MAY A S S I S T .&#13;
erod.&#13;
n u m .&#13;
A l l i s o n W a n t s a P a r o l e .&#13;
Mrs. J o h n A l l i s o n , wife of J o h n Al-&#13;
.ison, w h o e s c a p e d from J a c k s o n prison&#13;
after he had b e e n c o n v i c t e d of the&#13;
•Richmond b a n k r o b b e r y , a n d w e n t to&#13;
W a b a s h , w h e r e h e m a r r i e d , i s i n Kalam&#13;
a z o o in h e r h u s b a n d ' s i n t e r e s t s . All&#13;
i s o n c l a i m s , a n d s o d o e s h i s w i f e ,&#13;
t h a t h e h a s b e e n a m o d e l j n a n s i n c e&#13;
h i s e s c a p e , a n d t h a t h e s h o u l d be paro&#13;
l e d . Shp h a s a 2-year-old d a u g h t e r , '&#13;
born to h e r a n d A l l i s o n , and for w h o m j&#13;
A l l i s o n is said to be g r i e v i n g h i s h e a r t&#13;
out. Mrs. A l l i s o n h a s a p e t i t i o n s i g n e d ,&#13;
by 400 r e s i d e n t s of M o l i n e , 111., testify- [&#13;
i n g to A l l i s o n ' s ideal c o n d u c t w h i l e&#13;
in that city.&#13;
A n A m e r i c a n c l e r g y m a n w h o ' h a s&#13;
r e c e n t l y r e t u r n e d from V e n e z u e l a rep&#13;
o r t s that s o o n a f t e r h e r e a c h e d Carac&#13;
a s lie w a s arif ste&lt;i on t h e c h a r g e&#13;
of v i o l a t i n g a. law w h i c h f o r b i d s fore&#13;
i g n c l e r g y m e n IO - l i t e r t h e c o u n t r y .&#13;
T h r o u g h t h e i n t e r n s s i o n of t h e A m e r -&#13;
ican consul he wa* ii l e a s e d on the-1&#13;
p r o m i s e ihat. h e would l e a v e w i t h i n ;&#13;
M-veu d a y s . T h e H ;e-on for excluding&#13;
c l e r g y m e n is ne; e v i d e n t , for mininters&#13;
of The g o s p e l ,e. e t ;-irely i n c i t e r s&#13;
of r e v o l u t i o n , at ho.i,e (,,r abroad. :&#13;
T w e n t y - e i g h t C h i l d r e n .&#13;
T h e a n c i e n t M o t h e r G o o s e n u r s e r y&#13;
r h y m e of " T h e r e w a s an old w o m a n&#13;
w h o l i v e d in a s h o e , " f a m i l i a r t o e v e r y&#13;
g e m - r a t i o n a n d ail n a t i o n a l i t i e s , is&#13;
a m p l y i l l u s t r a t e d in t h e f a m i l y of Mr.&#13;
a n d Mrs. T a t r o , of S t a n d i s h . T h e twenty-&#13;
eighth e d i i i o n h a s a r r i v e d , a n d rec&#13;
e i v e d just a s w a r m a w e l c o m e a s&#13;
did the first If ;m o r d i n a r y diningroom&#13;
w a s u s e d , breakfast w o u l d r e a c h&#13;
into the s u p p e r t i m e , w h i l e o n e squad&#13;
wci:e w a i t i n g for the o t h e r s to rat.&#13;
s o an extra l a r g e room is u s e d ,&#13;
it c o s t * $ l o a s i l t i n g to fill all&#13;
htimtry m o u i h s . At l e a s ; , This is&#13;
st ;il is: tea j v i e w of t he m a t t e r ,&#13;
Old L o v e W a s Cold.&#13;
A l t e r b a s k i n g - j a t h e . s u n s h i n e of&#13;
I " w e d d e d b l i s s " for t b j o e d a y s , M r s . A .&#13;
| C. Criflin, t h e u e w l y - n i u d e bride of A.&#13;
: C. Griffin, a p r o m i n e n t f a r m e r of D e e r -&#13;
field t o w n s h i p , t o l d h e r h u s b a n d s h e&#13;
did not p a r t i c u l a r l y c a r e for h i m or&#13;
thv c o u n t r y in w h i c h lie r e s i d e d a n d ,&#13;
p a c k i n g h e r g r i p , t o o k t h e t r a i n for&#13;
h e r old h o m e in N e w Y o r k c i t y . T h e&#13;
c i r c u m s t a n c e s c o n n e c t e d w i t h t h e&#13;
c o u p l e ' s m a r r i a g e s t a r t e d out in rather&#13;
r o m a n t i c s t y l e , a n d but for t h e vers&#13;
a t i l e nifnd of w o m a n , m i g h t h a v e&#13;
e/.uhi-d h a p p i l y .&#13;
H a c k in N o w York, :Ut y e a r s a g o ,&#13;
T n h l n and h i s n e w w i f e w e r e s w e e t -&#13;
b.^r.-ts, but a s t h e y e a r s r o l l e d by&#13;
i.;.;&gt;y d r i f t e d a p a r t , e a c h h a v i n g mar-&#13;
.:, (i and r a i s e d a f a m i l y in a f t e r y e a r s .&#13;
J l a t e n t l y (iriilln l e a r n e d that h i s f o r m -&#13;
er s w e e t h e a r t w a s a w i d o w a n d still&#13;
lived in N e w York. H i s w i f e h a v i n g&#13;
been d e a d a n u m b e r of y e a r s , he o p e n -&#13;
ed a c o r r e s p o n d e n c e w i t h t h e w i d o w ,&#13;
r e s u l t i n g i n th^ir marriage- t h e r e a&#13;
few d a y s a g o . M r s . l l a v e r l y ( t h a t w a s&#13;
t h e w i d o w ' s n a m e ) , c o m i n g all t h e&#13;
w a y f r o m N e w Y\&gt;rk.&#13;
T h e B r y a n t D i s a p p e a r a n c e .&#13;
D o u b l e d i s a p p e a r a n c e — t h i s m a y b e&#13;
i h e d e v e l o p m e n t in t h e t a s e ° f J*&gt;na&#13;
A. B r y a n t , t h e S t a t ^ "Normal- s t u d e n t&#13;
w h o d r o p p e d out of Bight on M o n d a y&#13;
m o r n i n g of l a s t w e e k . S a t u r d a y h e r&#13;
f a t h e r, G e o r g e B r y a n t , of D o w l i n g , ' w a * r&#13;
m i s s i n g .&#13;
Mr. B r y a n t left Y p s i l a n t i for B a t t l e&#13;
Creek F r i d a y a f t e r n o o n to i n t e r v i e w&#13;
a roall clerk" a t B a t t l e C r e e k r e l a t i v e&#13;
to bin s t a t e m e n t that h e s a t a t t h e&#13;
s a m e table at a r e s t a u r a n t w i t h a girl&#13;
o f ' M i s s B r y a n t ' s defrortntJou. N o t a&#13;
word h a s b e e n h e a r d f r o m Mr. B r y a n t&#13;
s i n c e .&#13;
It i s k n o w n t h a t Mr. B r y a n t w a g - o n&#13;
t h e v e r g e of n e r v o u s p r o s t r a t i o n w h e n&#13;
h e left t h e r e for B a t t l e Creek. It w a s&#13;
h i s i n t e n t i o n to g o on to h i s h o m e at&#13;
H o w l i n g f r o m B a t t l e Creek. Efforts&#13;
to c o m m u n i c a t e w i t h h i s h o m o l o d a y&#13;
w e r e futile.&#13;
and&#13;
The&#13;
l he&#13;
W o m e n in (in-at i'.iiiain a r e w e l l&#13;
r e p r e s e n t e d in the p r o f e s s i o n s a n d&#13;
t r a d e s , and a b o u l 4,.ru'i0.000 e a r n t h e i r&#13;
o w n living. T h e r e are 1124,000 w h o&#13;
t e a c h ; 10,00«) a r e b o o k b i n d e r s ; o v e r&#13;
15,000 are p r i n t e r s , and n e a r l y 500 a c t&#13;
its e d i t o r s and c o m p i l e r s ; 1,:100 a r e&#13;
e n g a g e d in p h o t o g r a p h y ; civil s e r v i c e&#13;
c l e r k s n u m b e r n e a r l y 2,300; 3,800 a r e&#13;
e n g a g e d in m e d i c a l w o r k a n d nursi&#13;
n g and 350 w o m e n a r e b l a c k s m i t h s .&#13;
T h e c o n d u c t o r of a B o s t o n s t r e e t&#13;
c a r w h o r e t u r n e d $5,869 t o A w o m a n&#13;
w h o had l o s t it. in h i s c a r t M r e w a r d -&#13;
ed w i t h a s m i l e . B o s t o n m u s t h a v e&#13;
r e m a r k a b l e s t r e e t c a r s . IB t h e r e o n e&#13;
In a n y o t h e r c i t y w h e r e a p a s s e n g e r&#13;
c o u l d s m i l e , e v e n w h e n h a n d e d | 5 , -&#13;
8 6 9 ? A n d it s h o w s , t o o , t h a t therU&#13;
a r e w o m e n in B o s t o n vrho c a n s m l l o .&#13;
A m o n g t h e i n t e r e s t i n g t h i n g s s h o w n&#13;
In*'tli? L o n g f e l l o w e x h i b i t in t h e C a m -&#13;
b r i d g e - p u b l i c l i b r a r y , i n h o n o r of t h e&#13;
h u n d r e d t h a n n i v e r s a r y of t h e p o e t ' a&#13;
b i r t h , w a s t h e flr«t m a n u s c r i p t of "'«•-&#13;
c e l s i o r . " T h e p o e m w a s w r i t t e n OB tm&#13;
I n v i t a t i o n , t h e poet, e v i d e n t l y h a v i n g&#13;
u s e d t h e first p i e c e of p a p e r t h a t&#13;
c a m e to h i s h a n d .&#13;
Allegan County Oddity.&#13;
One of i)u&gt; o d d e s t m e t h o d s of disp&#13;
o s i n g of n c a s e of d r u n k e n n e s s on&#13;
reror.d in A l l e g a n c o u n t y w a s u s e d&#13;
by J u s t i c e Milton' C h a s e , of O t s e g o . Mile;&#13;
a p r i s o n e r off on s u s p e n d e d sente&#13;
n c e on his a g r e e i n g in w r i t i n g io&#13;
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to l a k e tiie p u n i s h m e n t for perjury it'&#13;
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a p a r t i c l e of a l c o h o l or b u y s the ;iatm&#13;
for o t h e r s w h i l e in this s t a t e . T h e&#13;
n a m e of t h e p r i s o n e r h a s been supp&#13;
r e s s e d .&#13;
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a s w a m p n e a r R o c k w o o d .&#13;
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ner. It p r e v e n t s a n y p e r s o n f r o m ob-t w o m a n e x o n e r a t i n g C h a r b e n e a u . J u d g e&#13;
t a i n i n g title to a n y p a r t of p u b l i c prop- j L o c k w o o d t o o k t h e m o t i o n u n d e r ade&#13;
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h e r e n t e r t h e s t o r e from a c r o s s t h e&#13;
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a g e s e n t up a n d t o buy n e c e s s a r i e s .&#13;
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of p r e p o s s e s s i n g m a n n e r s .&#13;
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S e n a t o r T r a v e r s u c c e e d e d by quietn&#13;
e s s In p a s s i n g a bill of g r e a t i m p o r t -&#13;
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s t a t e m e n t s m a d e tu f r i e n d s by M r s&#13;
T h a w s i n c e h e r a n i v a l in P i t t s b u r g .&#13;
T h e i m p o r t a n c e a n d s i g n i f i c a n c e ol&#13;
s u c h u m o v e o n f u t u r e d e v e l o p m e n t s&#13;
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w a i t i n g in t h e T o o m b s for h i s s e c o n d&#13;
trial, are g r e a t , a n d f r i e n d s of the&#13;
p r i s o n e r h o p e for the very best r e s u l t s&#13;
frolli it.&#13;
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g o e s to h e r s u m m e r h o m e , in C r e s t o n .&#13;
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v a l u a b l e a d j u n c t t o t h e f o r c e s of tht&#13;
d e f e n s e In t h e n e x t trial of &gt; o u m ;&#13;
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m o r e . T h e y b e l i e v e Mrs. H o l m a n c a n&#13;
b e i n d u c e d t o t a k e t h e s t a n d in behalf&#13;
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tion of i n e s t i m a b l e v a l u e m a y&#13;
he s e c u r e d f r o m hvv. Mrs. Hoi&#13;
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too h a r s h l y o f Mrs. l i o l m a n .&#13;
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h e r s e l f r e a d y to l a k e her duugiitei&#13;
n t o h e r o w n h o m e a n d io aid h e r in&#13;
e v e r y w a y p o s s i h l e , tit,, y o u n g Mrs.&#13;
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.Mrs. W i l l i a m T h a w ' s d a u g h t e r , t h e&#13;
c o u n t e s s of Y a r m o u t h , will h a v e ' ass&#13;
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m a k i n g t h e first o v e r t u r e s to Mrs.&#13;
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p l a n s .&#13;
FAMOUS CHURCH.&#13;
M e x i c o C i t y ' s G r a n d C a t h e d r a l D a m&#13;
a g e d by 'Quake.&#13;
It h a s b e e n d i s c o v e r e d t h a t t h e&#13;
C a t h e d r a l of M e x i c o City, o n e of t h e&#13;
l a r g e s t arid m o s t f a m o u s c h u r c h e s In&#13;
t h e w o r l d , w a s c r a c k e d from t o p to&#13;
b o t t o m by t h e r e c e n t e a r t h q u a k e . T h e&#13;
fissure i s an e i g h t h of an Inch w i d e .&#13;
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e x a m i n e t h e b u i l d i n g .&#13;
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is bullf on t h e old s i t e of the A z t e c&#13;
t e m p l e , a n d is t h e l a r g e s t and m o s t&#13;
s u m p t u o u s c h u r c h in A m e r i c a . It&#13;
t o w e r s a b o v e (lie o t h e r public buildi&#13;
n g s g r o u p e d a b o u t t h e c e n t r a l plaza&#13;
of the city. It f a c e s the north s i d e of&#13;
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n g i n g a s c a n d e l a b r a .&#13;
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placed t h e f a m o u s c a l e n d a r s t o n e , t h e&#13;
most i n t e r e s t i n g relic of A z t e c culture.&#13;
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t o r e p o r t on t h e a d v i s a b i l i t y of&#13;
v e r s e p o s s e s s i o n .&#13;
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t h a t half t h e p e o p l e «ft S p a i n l i v e o n&#13;
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c a p a c i t y .&#13;
T h e RmphU D i s s a t i s f i e d .&#13;
C i t i s e n s o f G r a n d R a p i d s d o n c ;&#13;
feel t h a t t h e UnSted S t a t e s a r m y e n -&#13;
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d i t i o n s f u l l y a p p r e c i a t e t h e i m p o r t a n c e&#13;
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l a n d . T h e y w e r e In t h e c i t y j u s t 24&#13;
h o u r s .&#13;
p l a c i n g h i m on p r o b a t i o n . Clark's&#13;
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j w e e k , i s a p p a r e n t l y o u t o f d a n g e r .&#13;
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Mrs. J a n e D o w i e fs s c h e d u l e d to arr&#13;
i v e at B e n M a c D h u l in a w e e k or s o&#13;
and a n u m b e r of b o a r d e r s are c o m i n g&#13;
w i t h h e r . S h e will a l s o b r i n g a typew&#13;
r i t e r to the r e s o r t and b e s i d e s si arci&#13;
n g a s m a l l s u m m e r resort w h e r e re-&#13;
/ h i e d peojdo m a y r e s t on W h i t e L'.tkc&#13;
s h o r e s , m a n y t h i n k that Mrs. D o w i a&#13;
p l a n s t o - w r i t e and publish s t o r i e s rehiring&#13;
iv the inside w o r k i n g s of / t o n&#13;
City.&#13;
It. w a s staii d s o m e t i m e arm thr,d&#13;
i h e s u r v i v i n g m e m b e r s j f t h e D o w l o&#13;
f a m i l y w o u l d r e v e a l s e c r e t s a n d t h e&#13;
h e r a l d i n g of Hie t y p e w r i t e r is t a k e n&#13;
a s tjie f o r e r u n n e r of t h e e x p o s u r e&#13;
:* t h e l o n g - a w a i t e d s e c r e t s .&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
D e t r o i t — P r y fed Ote»»-« and heifers,&#13;
$u 2MUT) SO; s t ^ r * ' ffnd heifers, 1,000 to&#13;
1.200. jr. r« fi X!&gt;: *tt&gt;«-rs «nd heifers, 800&#13;
to 1,000, | 4 .tO^fR; s t e e r s and heifers&#13;
t h a i are fftt. r.00 to 700, $ 4 # 4 50; c h o i c e&#13;
fat cows, | 4 f c 4 f&gt;0; good fat &lt;-0w«, $H BO&#13;
¢/4: c o m m o n c o w s , J2(fr3 50; c a n n e r s ,&#13;
$2&lt;&lt;rL! f&gt;0; choice h e a v y bulls. $4@4 76;&#13;
fair to K&lt;»C«J bolognat*. bulls, |:t 5 0 0 4 ;&#13;
s t o c k bulls. |:t 2h@li 70; choice f e e d i n g&#13;
fltevrp, 800 to 1,000, $4tJiU !&gt;0; fair f o t d -&#13;
itiK Hteers, 800 to 1,000. $15 75©'4 25;&#13;
choice KtoekerK. fi00 to 700, $:: .r&gt;0&lt;fl)4;&#13;
fair Blockers, f.00 to ?P0, |,t J 5 « 3 50;&#13;
• took heifer*, f,1(^3 50; milkers, large,&#13;
rouriff. incdluiii a g e , $*0^5(i; c o m m o n&#13;
m i l k e r s . JlSfc/20.&#13;
Venl ciilva*-—Market 5c l o w e r ; licst,&#13;
J.-p 50(J;C r. 0 r others. $4 (7/15; milch &lt;&lt;nvR&#13;
fcmi sjiririKern steady.&#13;
S l i c e s ;iii&lt;l Jambs- -Market ste;v'&lt;. nt&#13;
last w e e k ' s prices: he)M hi nibs. &gt;(t :,(i;&#13;
l a i r ID HIMII) lambs. JXffi1&#13;
C&lt; mi limn ] a m bs, J 7 &lt;ti X ;&#13;
\W\ fair ID K&lt;i(id huteliei&#13;
•mil* aiul common, $ I (a I 50; clip lambs&#13;
; t! 51) ^ 7 1 li,&#13;
T l o g s - .M.-ii-ki t s i i ( i d y&#13;
r i c e s . KiOlK* n l n r i e e : . :&#13;
r'it eiu r-.. ? (. 7.'. j.IKS. $I!&#13;
rr---, $t! ', i. i oii^'-'ns, $*;&#13;
s I&#13;
5; l i g h t to&#13;
year! (, iK«,&#13;
eep, |5th'B;&#13;
at h. st w c o k ' j&#13;
i fcfh t I D I,-((IHJ&#13;
l i M ' l u \ D i - k -&#13;
&gt;(itg.M, 1-3 off.&#13;
1.&#13;
K n s i&#13;
:&gt;;.. i o Tr,')&#13;
$ 0 f ( ( «. 1«!&#13;
slot 1's. ?,', a&#13;
d-i. $4.15 «7 ~&#13;
t'a'r fo K&lt; '&lt;m&#13;
I ' . ' i f ' f i i l . I&#13;
'..ad 11&#13;
1 . : . ^ 1 ( 1&#13;
. l i ; l . i&#13;
b e s t flit&#13;
%:&lt;.',('fa:;.&#13;
fat&#13;
(Tr&#13;
&lt;\&#13;
'•I• J . a l i ; b . N »&#13;
m e d i u m to Rood,&#13;
Nteors. *$.|.i'5 •&lt;/ 1.50&#13;
S:'..:•»5 if/ 3,50:&#13;
3.25; export&#13;
ro'iK $?.?;, fj -I. Ktoi k bulls,&#13;
'Yin t o w marl&lt;4»t-WS« -siMHitf"&#13;
l.'isf. wcek'.^ prices; KOoC &lt;4L-i&#13;
•' S( e x p o r t St( t r«5,&#13;
I Wo .'••( rict ly clinice,&#13;
lo l^ulUi-Ib s h i p p i n g&#13;
st e.mio «o 1,100-lb&#13;
cows, $ j.25 (&lt;t 4,5(b,&#13;
75: t rln,n\ :rs, $:&gt;, Li5&#13;
boilers, \ 4,75(5( 5;&#13;
1.115: best feeding&#13;
Ve.-irlhlg- 5d.ee rn,&#13;
-Dtiimon siiiek st«ers. %'X®&#13;
1-iUlls. $4.:5/-(/14.501 b o l o g n a&#13;
5«i; mod in in 1.&#13;
$1X^23.&#13;
UOKR-—Market J o w s r : m i x e d msd.'am*&#13;
and heflvit^. S i f f r . o S : y o r k e r s , good&#13;
;-s.&#13;
Id.&#13;
w e i g h t s . $7.05¾ 7.10; pi&#13;
closed firm; IS cars unso&#13;
Rtieap—Market aetlvr&#13;
5ft.4fl&lt;ff'3.F.fl:&#13;
7.25&#13;
S.2r,; e w e i&#13;
$ 7 . 7 6 © S : elipped wetherR, $fi#fi2fi;&#13;
e!itfp«d r.wes. $5.5006.7^- he$it c a l v e s ,&#13;
$8: mpfltum to goo--'., $6y?-7.50; heavy.&#13;
¢-1 ¢,5.&#13;
iM: culla, $8«0)8.75; w e t h e r s , 1 / ®&#13;
•ullf. $4.5fl(Sr&gt;.50; vearllnjf« $fi©&#13;
JW«*. $fi.25#fi.S0; c-Jippod iH.nba,&#13;
ferula. E t c .&#13;
D e t r o i t — C a s h w h e a t . No.&#13;
May. 5,000 bu at SOr, fi.OOO&#13;
12,000 hu at 7 9 ^ 0 , 15,000&#13;
10,000 hn Rt 19 '4C 20,000&#13;
10,000 bu at 7 9 ^ 0 . 141,000&#13;
2 rod.&#13;
bu at&#13;
bu a t&#13;
hu s t&#13;
bu at&#13;
July. 2S.000 bu at. 81c, 20.000 bu at Kft&#13;
20,000 bu at «0%c, 10,000 bu a t 8p%e.&#13;
15,000 bu at SO^c, 20,000 bu at 8 0 U c .&#13;
tO.000 hu at SOVfrc, 10,000 bu at 8 0 * 0&#13;
: | s p t e m b e r , 20,000 bu a t 82%c, 25,000 bl»&#13;
a t 82%c, 19,000 bu at 82}*c, 15,000 btt&#13;
a t I 2 ¾ c , 18,000 bu at 8 * H c 2S.OO0 bu nt&#13;
82c. 10,000 bu a t 8 2 ½ ¾ 1R.0O0 bu a t&#13;
8 2 ¼ ¾ 10.000 bu at 8 l f l e ; No. 3 re«L&#13;
7 « $ c ; No. 1 w h i t e . 78c. ^&#13;
Corn—Caah No. 3, 44%c; No. 3 y e l l o w *&#13;
K CM.T at 47c: No. 4 y e l l o w , 2 cars a t 45«,&#13;
1 « t 4 4 t f c ; hot, 2 cara at 17e. ^&#13;
C l o v e r a e e d — P r i m e i p o t , 4f» h a r a aS.&#13;
f « 75; October. 80 b a n at 87 15; nam&#13;
ole. 20 b a a " «t $8 60, 14 St $7 25,&#13;
16 50; prime aluik*. 15 bairn at 87&#13;
pie, 7 baaa at $«, *l a t |R.&#13;
Oat«—Canh No. 3 w h i t e , 4fie.&#13;
Rye—Caah N o , 2. 74c nominal.&#13;
B«an*—Canh, $1 32; May, | i 34 a s k e d :&#13;
.Tune, | 1 36 Mnked.&#13;
T i m o t h y s e e d — P r l l m e apot, 50 bau»&#13;
AMXSKMKNTS I N D R T R O l f&#13;
Waek Kndinf April 27, 1M7.&#13;
/.AFAYKTTK THKATK* — MStinMW _&#13;
^:10—lQe, lftc,20e, 36c; Bvary Eronln&#13;
-I0c,aftc90c, fiOc. High Claw Vau&#13;
WHITKKY—Kveniflffg. 10c. a n . «0e; Mstlnsss.&#13;
10c, lfic, 26c Four Cornsn of t h s Earth.&#13;
Lvcxux—Prices s l w a r i l8o, 35c. 60c. 7»o. 3Re&#13;
MMiness W s d s s s d s y s n d ^ i S a t u r d a » .&#13;
TSKM,* TXSATBS AAV W o » D S » t A K l &gt; -&#13;
Aftsmoons 2:16, tfto to 7bc: Kvantnta B n&#13;
V«tnHr * r o U y K &lt; k J &gt; ' P S t S l n r « T " ^ •'&#13;
13 a t&#13;
iM &amp; * •&#13;
.;?*&amp;£&#13;
'M&#13;
THE UONS&#13;
OF&#13;
THE LORD&#13;
A Talt of tbe Old Wut.&#13;
By HARRY LEON WILSON&#13;
Author of '' Tbt Aytaden.''&#13;
A RevelatCioHnA CPTonEcRer nXinXgX tIhIIe. True Order&#13;
of Marriage.&#13;
While matters of theology and consanguluity&#13;
were being debated In Box&#13;
canyon, the little bent man down in&#13;
the first house to the left, in bis struggle&#13;
to free himself, was tightening the&#13;
meshes of his fate about him. In his&#13;
harried mind he had formed one great&#13;
resolution. He believed that a revelation&#13;
had come to him. It seemed&#13;
to press upon him as the culmination&#13;
of all the days of his distress. He&#13;
could .see now that he had felt it years&#13;
.before, when he first met the wife of&#13;
Elder Tench, the gaunt, gray woman,&#13;
toiling along the dusty road; and&#13;
again when he had found the imbecile&#13;
boy turning upon his tormentors. A&#13;
hundred times it had quickened within&#13;
him. And it had gained in force&#13;
steadily, until to-day, when it was&#13;
overwhelming him. Now that his&#13;
flesh was wasted,, it seemed that his&#13;
spirit eould see far.&#13;
His threat discovery was that the&#13;
revelation upon celestial marriage&#13;
given Joseph Smith had been "from&#13;
beneath"-—a trick of Satan to corrupt&#13;
.them. Not only did it flatly contradiet&#13;
earlier revelations, but the very&#13;
Book of Mormon itself declared again&#13;
and again that polygamy was wickedness.&#13;
Joseph had been duped by the&#13;
powers of darkness, and all Israel had&#13;
alaaed in consequence. Upon the&#13;
golden plates delivered to him, concerning&#13;
the divine source of which&#13;
there could be no doubt, this order of&#13;
marriage had been repeatedly condemned&#13;
ajid forbidden. But as to&#13;
the revelation which sanctioned it&#13;
there could rightly be doubt; for had&#13;
not Joseph himself once warned them&#13;
that "some revelations are from God,&#13;
some from m*n, and some from the&#13;
devil.*' Either the Book of Mormon&#13;
was not inspired, or the revelation&#13;
was not from God, since they were&#13;
fatally in opposition.&#13;
If en ate to him with the effect of a&#13;
blinding light, yet seemed to endow &gt;&#13;
him with a new vigor, so that he felt&#13;
strong and eager to he up, to spread&#13;
his truth abroad. Some remnant of i&#13;
that old fire of inspiration flamed up !&#13;
within him as he lay on the hard bed&#13;
in his little room, Willi the summer'&#13;
scents floating in and the out-of-doors&#13;
sounds a woman's voice calling a&#13;
child afar off, the lowing of cattle,&#13;
the rhythmic whetting of a scythe- j&#13;
blade, the echoing stroke of an ax, '&#13;
the mellow toting of a robin—all \&#13;
„^c*ttiU4_to htm a little muted, as it j&#13;
.he werel*toftfeu ia tHe world. j&#13;
He raised upon hie elbow, Rowing&#13;
with iho flush of old memories when&#13;
his heart had been perfect with '{fee&#13;
lord; when he had wrought miracles&#13;
in the face of the people; when he&#13;
had besought Heaven fearlessly" for&#13;
signs of its favor; when he had&#13;
dreamed of being a pillar of fire to&#13;
his people in their mflrch across the&#13;
.-desert, and another Lion of the Lord&#13;
to fight their just battles. The little&#13;
bent man of sorrows had again become&#13;
the lute of the Holy Ghost.&#13;
He remembered the day was Saturday,&#13;
and he hegan at once to word&#13;
the phrases in which he would tell&#13;
his revelation on the morrow. He&#13;
knew 'hat this iuu*t be done tactfully,&#13;
m spite of. its divine- source. It&#13;
would be a momentous thing to the&#13;
people and to the priesthood. It was&#13;
conceivable, indeed, that members or&#13;
the latter might dispute it and argue&#13;
with him, or even denounce him for&#13;
a heretic. But only at first; the thing&#13;
was too simply true to be long questioned.&#13;
In any event, his duty was j jf"&#13;
verted frooTJJGrf b W affaiia' tf bgti alio&#13;
o b f e r v s ^ i m morVqlbeely.'&#13;
&gt;*i**^2M'°!nf* atpj^-you'ro burning&#13;
'utf ,wUtt feferf Yo4;muBt be covered&#13;
•-up* a* * once add have sage, tea."&#13;
Hie laughed at her, a free, full&#13;
laugh, such as abe had never heard&#13;
fromr him in all the years.&#13;
"It's no. fever, child. It's new life&#13;
come to me. I'm strong again. My&#13;
face burns, but it must be the fire of&#13;
health. I hare a work given to me—&#13;
God hjtts not wholly put me aside."&#13;
"But I believe you are sick. Your&#13;
hands are so hot, and your eyes look&#13;
so unnatural. You must let me—"&#13;
"Now, now—haven't I learned to&#13;
tell sickness from the glow of a holy&#13;
purpose?"&#13;
"You're sure you are well?"&#13;
"Better than for IB years."&#13;
She let herself be convinced for the&#13;
moment.&#13;
"Then please tell me something.&#13;
Must a man who comes into our faith,&#13;
if he is baptized rightly, also marry&#13;
more than one wife if he Is to be&#13;
saved? Can't he be sure of his glory&#13;
with one tf he loves her—oh, very,&#13;
very much?"&#13;
He was moved at first to answer&#13;
her out of the fullness of his heart&#13;
telling her of the wonderful new&#13;
revelation. But there came the impulse&#13;
to guard it jealously In his own&#13;
him, and- refuted Lorena-&gt; sag* tea. | in Zion the purtiest. And I'm mighty&#13;
glad &gt;BHqfjther Joel' »aa ' turn ont tomorrow,..*&#13;
Of course .you heard the&#13;
He was not to be cajoled into treating&#13;
at» sickness the first real happiness&#13;
he bad felt for years. He lay still un-i news?'&#13;
til his. little room grew shadowy in&#13;
the dusk, filled with a great reviving&#13;
hope that the Lord had raised a new&#13;
prophet to lead Israel out of bondage.&#13;
. . . .&#13;
As the night fell, however, the shadows&#13;
of the room began to trouble him&#13;
as of old, and be found himself growing&#13;
hotter and hotter until he burned&#13;
and gasped, and the room seemed&#13;
about to stifle him. He arose from&#13;
the bed, wondering that his feet&#13;
should be so heavy and clumsy, and&#13;
his knees so weak, when he felt otherwise&#13;
so strong. His head, too, felt&#13;
large, and there rang in his ears a&#13;
singing of incessant quick beats. He&#13;
made his way to the door, where he&#13;
I heard the voices of Prudence and Follett.&#13;
It wae good to feel the cool&#13;
night air upon his hot face, and he&#13;
reassured Prudence, who chlded him&#13;
for leaving his bed.&#13;
"When you heai me discourse tomorrow&#13;
you will see how wrong you&#13;
were about my being sick," he said.&#13;
But she saw that he supported himself&#13;
carefully from the doorway along the&#13;
wall to the near-by chair, and that&#13;
he sank into it with every sign of&#13;
weakness. His eyes, however, were&#13;
Tm Afraid Hard to Marry&#13;
Couldn't."&#13;
Another Siinrdy&#13;
breast a little longer, to glory (secretly&#13;
in it; half-fearful, too, that some&#13;
virtue would go out of it should he&#13;
impart it too soon to another.&#13;
"Why do you want to know?''&#13;
"Rue! Follett would join our church&#13;
if he didn't have to marry more than&#13;
one wire. If he loved some one very&#13;
much, I'm afraid he would find it hard&#13;
to marry another girl—oh, he simply&#13;
aglow with l\ia secret, and he sal&#13;
nodding his head aver it in a lively&#13;
way. ••Brigham was right," he said,&#13;
"when he declared that, any of us&#13;
might receive revelations from on&#13;
high; even the least of us—only we&#13;
are apt to he deaf to the whispered&#13;
words until the l^ord has scourged us.&#13;
[ have been deaf a long time, but&#13;
my oars are at last unstopped — who&#13;
couldn't—no matter how pretty she j is it coming, dear?"&#13;
was. lit* never ronld do it." TIere&#13;
she pulled one of the ribbons from&#13;
A tall figure, vague in the dusk,&#13;
was walking briskly up the path that&#13;
uu' broad hat. She gave a little ex- led in from the road. It proved to he&#13;
elumation of relief as if she had&#13;
•eally meant to detach it.&#13;
"Tell him to wait a little."&#13;
"That's what I did tell him, but it&#13;
seems hardly right to let him join&#13;
believing that is necessary. 1 think&#13;
some one ought, to find out that one&#13;
wife is all Cod wants H man ever to&#13;
have, atid to tell Mr. Follett so very&#13;
plniniv. His mind is really open to&#13;
iruth, and you know ho might do&#13;
something reckless—he shouldn't1 be&#13;
made to wait too long."&#13;
"Tell him to wait till to-morrow. 1&#13;
shall speak of this in meeting then.&#13;
, ... will be all right—all right, dear,&#13;
plain; with righteousness as the Bfr- | Kverylhins will be all right!"&#13;
die of his loins he must, go forth on , » 0 n l v x a m s u r e y o u a r e s l c k f J n&#13;
the morrow and magnify his office in j s p i t e 0 'f w h a r v o n s a v . r k n o w h o w&#13;
the sight of Heaven. I t 0 vroyc i t t o a _ c a n v o u o a t r&#13;
When prudence came softly in to ; . T m t o o b l l R V thinking of great&#13;
him, like a cool breath of fragrance | r n j n g S to be hungry."&#13;
tram tke'.canyon, he smiled up to her | -There—vou would be hungry if&#13;
wttfc~»*l»llne99 of delight she had | y o u w e r e WPn."&#13;
jiever seen in his face before. | ' «i c a n - t tPu y o u h o w w o n i am, and&#13;
There was a new light in her own i as for food—our Elder Brother has&#13;
nm, J. will&#13;
:i bit nwre&#13;
eyes, new decisions .presaged, a. new&#13;
desire imperfectly Giipprensed. He&#13;
him o i the' fcd, wondering if she&#13;
had at last learned her own secret.&#13;
But she became crave and was di&#13;
been feeding me all day with the&#13;
breath of truth. Such wonderful new&#13;
stroke* her hand aai she sat bestd.ej'fhingK tbe Lord has shown me!"&#13;
"But you must not get. up. Lie still&#13;
and we will nurse you."&#13;
He refused the food she brought&#13;
the Wild 11am of the Mountains, freshened&#13;
by the look of reeufale that tinrazor&#13;
gave in Ids face each Sarnrda.v&#13;
night.&#13;
"Evening. brother Rat --eyeeiim.&#13;
you youm:1 udks. Thank&#13;
lake a ehair. Ymi i'eeHiu&#13;
able than usual. tVrivhei Uae"&#13;
"Much brtior. Brother Se&#13;
shall be nt the meeting ;o-n;orrow."&#13;
'Glad to hoar it. that's righs good&#13;
you .. in't boon ont for so long. And&#13;
we want to have a rousing time,&#13;
too."&#13;
"Only we're afraid he has a fever,&#13;
instead of being so well," said Prudence.&#13;
"He hasn't oaten a thing all&#13;
day."&#13;
"Well, ho never did overeat himsojf.&#13;
that I know of," said the bishop. "Not&#13;
eating ain't any sign with him. Now&#13;
it would bo with me. I never believed&#13;
in fasting the flesh. The Spirit of the&#13;
Lord ain't ever so close to me as after&#13;
I*ve had a good meal of victuals—meat&#13;
and potatoes and plenty of good sop&#13;
and a couple of pieces of pie. Then&#13;
I can unbutton my vest and jest set&#13;
and set and hear the promptings of&#13;
the Lord God of Hosts. I know some&#13;
men ain't that way, but then'a the&#13;
time when I kmutify my inheritance&#13;
at&#13;
"What news, Brother Beth?"&#13;
"Brother Brigham gets here&#13;
11 o'clock from New Harmony."&#13;
"Brother Brigham coming?"&#13;
"We're getting the bowery ready&#13;
down to the square to-night BO'B to&#13;
have services out of doors."&#13;
"He's coming to-morrow?" The&#13;
words came both from Prudence and&#13;
her father.&#13;
"Of course he's coming. Ben Hadley&#13;
brought word over. They'll have&#13;
a turkey dinner at Beil Wardle's&#13;
house and then services at two."&#13;
The flushed little man with the revelation&#13;
felt himself grow suddenly&#13;
cold. He had thought it would be&#13;
easy to launch his new truth in A ma&#13;
Ion and let the news be carried to&#13;
Brigham. To get up in the very&#13;
presence of him, in the full gaze of&#13;
those cold blue eyes, was another&#13;
matter.&#13;
"But it's early for him. He doesn't&#13;
usually come until after conference,&#13;
after It's got cooler."&#13;
The bishop took on the air of a man&#13;
who does not care to tell quite all&#13;
that he knows.&#13;
"Yes; I suspicion some one's been&#13;
sending tales to him about a certain&#13;
young woman's carryings on down&#13;
here."&#13;
He looked sharply at Prudence, who&#13;
looked at the ground, and felt grateful&#13;
for the dusk. Follett looked hard&#13;
at them both and was plainly inter&#13;
ested. The bishop spoke again.&#13;
"1 ain't got no license to say so,&#13;
but having done that young woman&#13;
proud by engaging himself to marry&#13;
her, he might 'a' got annoyed if any&#13;
one had 'a' told him she was being&#13;
waited on by a handsome youug Gen&#13;
tile, gallivantin' off to canyons day&#13;
after day—holding hands, too, more&#13;
than once. Oh, I ain't saying anything.&#13;
Young blood is young blood;&#13;
mine ain't always been old. and 1&#13;
never blamed the young, but, of&#13;
course, the needs of the Kingdom is a&#13;
different matter. Well, I'll have ie&#13;
she wouldn't ever have married him,&#13;
would sfce?"&#13;
"No, she refused at once; she refused&#13;
to&gt; consider it at all." • .&#13;
He was burning again with hie&#13;
fever, and there was something in&#13;
his eagerness that seemed to overcome&#13;
Follett's indignation.&#13;
"Well, let it go till to-morrow, then.&#13;
And you try to get some rest now.&#13;
That's what I'm going to do."&#13;
But the little bent man, flushed&#13;
though he was, felt cold from the&#13;
night air, and, piling more logs on&#13;
the lire, he drew hit» chair close in&#13;
front of it.&#13;
As often as Follett wakened through&#13;
the night he saw him sitting there,&#13;
sometimes reading what looked like&#13;
a little old Bible, sometimes speaking&#13;
aloud as if seeking to memorize a&#13;
passage.&#13;
The last Follett remembered to&#13;
have heard was something he seemed&#13;
to be reading from the little book:&#13;
"The Lord is my Shepherd; I shall not&#13;
want. He maketh me to lie down in&#13;
green pastures; He leadeth me beside&#13;
the still waters."&#13;
He fell asleep again with a feeling&#13;
of pity for the little man.&#13;
CHAPTER XXXIV.&#13;
be retting along now. We're ;om&#13;
to put up some of the people at urn&#13;
house, and I've got to iix to bed moth&#13;
or down ia the' wagon-box again. I&#13;
reckon. I'll say you'll be with us tomorrow,&#13;
then. Brother Joel?"&#13;
The little bent man's voice had lost&#13;
much of its life. ,--&#13;
"Yes, Brother Seth, if I km able."&#13;
"Well, I hope you aie." £Ie arose&#13;
and looked at the sky. "LooiW ttt? it&#13;
we might have some falling weather.&#13;
They say it's been moisting quite a&#13;
bit up Cedar way. Well—good night,&#13;
all!"&#13;
When he was gone the matter of his&#13;
visit was not referred tc. With some j&#13;
constraint they talked a little while]&#13;
of other things. But as soon as the \&#13;
two men were alone for the night. |&#13;
Follett turned to him, almost fiercely, j&#13;
"Say, now, what did that old goat&#13;
whiskered loon mean by his hintings&#13;
about Prudence?"&#13;
The little man was troubled.&#13;
"Well, the fam is. P.righam has j&#13;
meant to marry her."&#13;
"You don't mean you'd have let ,&#13;
lum Say. I'd hate to I e e l Mi i i v f o r&#13;
1 have!&#13;
I hat ni me."&#13;
en - n i n g to&#13;
holding off on you liki&#13;
"No. no. don't thin 1&#13;
"Well, what were&#13;
do?"&#13;
"I hardly knev.."&#13;
"You hoiU'i' hnd out."&#13;
"1 know" 'i j did find out. today,&#13;
i know, and it will i&gt;o* ajl rfghr. T.rI,si&#13;
me. I lost my faith for a moment just&#13;
now when I heard Brother Brigham&#13;
was coming to-morrow; but I see how&#13;
it is—the Lord has wished to prove&#13;
me. Now there is all the more reason&#13;
why i should nor flinch. You&#13;
will see that 1 shall make it all right&#13;
to-morrow."&#13;
"Well, the time's about up. I've&#13;
been here over two months now, just&#13;
because you were so kind of helpless.&#13;
And one of our wagon-trains will he&#13;
along here about next Monday. Say.&#13;
A Procession, a Pursuit and a&#13;
ture.&#13;
Follett awoke to find himself superfluous.&#13;
The women were rusbiag excitedly&#13;
through their housework in&#13;
order to be at hand when the procession&#13;
of Brigham and his suite should&#13;
march in. Of Joel Rae he caught but&#13;
a glimpse through the door of his&#13;
little room, the face flushed that had&#13;
a long time been sallow and bloodless.&#13;
When the door had closed he&#13;
eould hear the voice now stuong again,&#13;
lie seemed to be, as during the night,&#13;
rehearsing something he meant to&#13;
say. And later it was plain thai he&#13;
prayed, though he heard nothing more&#13;
Mian the high pleading of the voice.&#13;
Follett would not have minded these&#13;
things, but Prudence was gone, and&#13;
no one could tell him where. From&#13;
Christina, of the rock-bouad speech,&#13;
he blasted the iLoins that she was&#13;
wearing "a dress all new" and "a redribboned&#13;
hat." Lorena. too. with §11&#13;
her willingness oj speech, knew nothing&#13;
definite.&#13;
"All I know is she fixed herself up&#13;
like she was going to an evening ball&#13;
or party. 1 wish to the lands I'd kep'&#13;
my complexion the way she does hem.'&#13;
And she had on her best lawn that&#13;
her pa got her in Salt Lake, the one&#13;
with the little blue figures in K.&#13;
She does look sweeter than honey on&#13;
a rag in a store dress, and that Leghorn&#13;
hat with the red bow. though&#13;
what she wanted to start so early for&#13;
I don't know. The procession can't&#13;
be along y«t, but she might have gone&#13;
down to march with them, or to help&#13;
decorate the bowery. I know when&#13;
I was her age I was always a great&#13;
hand for getting ready long before any&#13;
one come, when my mother was making&#13;
a company for me, putting up my&#13;
waterfall and curling my beau-catchers&#13;
on a hot pipesiem. But, land! I&#13;
ain't no more time lo talk with you."&#13;
Down the main road he hesitated-&#13;
To the right he could see where the&#13;
green mouth of the eanyojji invited;..&#13;
but to the leJi lav tbe village, where&#13;
i'rudenc* o\&gt;ubtl ess was. He would&#13;
'h'.', her and hi ing her a.wity. for Pollen&#13;
was determined n toe '.he mark&#13;
'. :7ns"ll now. '•&#13;
in the ore1 street of Am'alon Ma-re&#13;
was the usual Sabeath hush; hut&#13;
above this was an air of dignified festivity.&#13;
The village in its Sunday best&#13;
homespun, with nere and there a suit&#13;
of store goods, was holding its breath.&#13;
In the bowery a few workers, • under&#13;
the supervision of Bishop Wright,&#13;
were adding the last touches of decoration.&#13;
It :*'aa a spot of pleasant&#13;
green in the dusty square—a roof of&#13;
spruce houghs, with evergreens and&#13;
(lowers garnishing the posts, and 4k&#13;
bank of flowers and fruit back of&#13;
the speaker's stand.&#13;
(TO B £ C Q N T I N T E D . )&#13;
Settled Case Right There&#13;
Revenue Officer's Argument&#13;
and AH-Convincing.&#13;
1),.&#13;
T ) i roaomer. was&#13;
tiemtieii ama; :n&#13;
my prer-eTs . o ;.&#13;
"For insoince.&#13;
i \ . . ; n :&#13;
&lt; i','Mng&#13;
rieaeic&#13;
I.e.&#13;
h *&#13;
. &gt; A O .&#13;
alio;;-&#13;
Cogent 'and in ihe r.en; of i" a rewp.i;e waieer&#13;
• arriving with a truck proeoed-?d to put;&#13;
ike metoovi'e aboard. "1 claim her for&#13;
:'r.e ge\ cruiuen:,' he sari, "as an article&#13;
iiitr.Hpnced in'i&gt; Mie eeantry willwout&#13;
Tie-men: of d.r "•'.' "&#13;
t at&#13;
asdi'-&#13;
/OlV&gt;&#13;
r.e vend.&#13;
aid. '\hero i..&#13;
1 the well-known case o: the meteorite&#13;
that fell on a Vermont farm in 'thV It&#13;
was a valuable meteorite, and the.&#13;
landlord at once stepi«vl up arfri claimed&#13;
it. 'All minerals and metals on&#13;
the Ir.nd belong to me/ he said. "That's i&#13;
in the lease." |&#13;
"Rut the tenant demurred. "This |&#13;
meteorite,' he said 'wasn't on the \&#13;
farm, you must remember, when the j&#13;
lease was drawn up.' \&#13;
"The landlord perceived the justice&#13;
of that claim. He thought a moment.&#13;
Then he said, decisively: I claim her&#13;
as flying game."&#13;
"But the tenant. wa3 ready for him.&#13;
'She's got neither wings nor feathers.'&#13;
he said. 'Therefore, as ground game,&#13;
she's mine.'&#13;
"They continued tielr argument,&#13;
Fellow Passengers.&#13;
"Pardon me, vour necktie has beea~&#13;
.•r. ieking our fo. some time. 1 refralnett&#13;
from telling you sooner because* those&#13;
young ladies seemed so much aroused."&#13;
Farmer—"Thankee; an' the oil from&#13;
that lamp has been dropping on that&#13;
light ovbreoat o' yourn for the last ten&#13;
minutes, but every one seemed so&#13;
tickled that I hated to spoil the fun."&#13;
—London Mirror.&#13;
U p to H i m .&#13;
Close—i don't like that suit you are&#13;
wearing.&#13;
Mrs. Close—Neither do I, but it was&#13;
the best 1 could get with the money&#13;
you gave ine.—Detroit Free Press.&#13;
Let a man htive hisi own way about&#13;
everytJUag and anybody can get along.&#13;
wit* V 4 ~&#13;
x .&#13;
V.&#13;
-y&#13;
a&#13;
V&#13;
' *&#13;
^ 1&#13;
• w - F • - U"&#13;
kr&#13;
Ifei fwcknrg f i^patch&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS d CO. PROPRIETOR&#13;
T H U H S D A T , A P R I L 25, 1907.&#13;
The News—No P a r e P r u ^ Cough&#13;
Curt* Laws would be needed, if all&#13;
Cough Cures were like Dr. Snoop'8&#13;
Cough Cure is—and baa been tor 20&#13;
yeans. The National Law now requires&#13;
that it any poisons enttir into a&#13;
cough mixture, it must be printed on&#13;
the label or package. For tins reason&#13;
mothers, and others, should insist on&#13;
h a v i r g Dr. Hbocp's Cough Cure. No&#13;
poison marks on Dr. Shoop's labels—&#13;
and none in the medicine, else it must&#13;
by law be on the label.. And it's not&#13;
only sate, but it fs said to be by those&#13;
t h a t know it best, a truly remarkable&#13;
cough remedy. Take no chance, particularly&#13;
with your children. Insist&#13;
on having Dr. Shoop's Cough Cure.&#13;
Compare carefully the Dr. Snoop&#13;
{package with others and see. No&#13;
poison marks there! You can always&#13;
be on the safe side by demanding Dr.&#13;
Bhoop's Cough Cure. Simply refuse&#13;
t o accept any other. Sold by alldealera.&#13;
Notice of b e t t t a * of Drain Contract.&#13;
N o t i c e I s H e r e b y G i v e n , That I, FKAKK £. MowtR*. County Drain&#13;
CommiBHioner of the County of Livingston and State of Ml&lt;jhigan, will, on the 3rd day&#13;
of May, A. D. 1907, at the Residence of William McDowell in the Township of&#13;
Marion, in said County of Livingston at 9 o'olook In the forenoon of that day, proceed&#13;
to receive bids for the construction of a certain Draiu known and designated'as "Marion&#13;
Number Three Drain" located and established in the Township of Marion in said&#13;
County of Livingston and described as follows, to-wit;&#13;
M A R I O N NUMBER 3 D R A I N .&#13;
Minutes of survey of center line of a drain iu the towusbtp of Marion Livingston&#13;
Couuty, Michigan, to be known as Marion No. 3 Drain. Commencing at a stake marked&#13;
" 0 " standing uu Section line and 15 c, 80 1, S. of the N. W. Cor. Sec. 224, T. 2 N.&#13;
K. 4 E. Michigan and thence running up atieam on the N. J N. W. ^ said Sec. 24.&#13;
Hearings of&#13;
the&#13;
Cuurseb&#13;
•5 -=1 2 a&#13;
N 7 7 p V .&#13;
-w&#13;
a §&#13;
* §&#13;
g w&#13;
JS a&#13;
* s s_ . a&#13;
m .&#13;
JS £&#13;
O N *&#13;
115 o \~SL&#13;
a o 3 °&#13;
•&#13;
M J3&#13;
O J&#13;
O&#13;
2 fl a&#13;
iC&#13;
$&#13;
M&#13;
A&#13;
O&#13;
2&#13;
aa&#13;
'A&#13;
—&#13;
a&#13;
o&#13;
Width&#13;
•&#13;
Ft.&#13;
.a 1&#13;
Ft.&#13;
5 a c o&#13;
a.&#13;
a&#13;
Descriptions of Land Crossed&#13;
Keuiarks, Explanations, Etc.&#13;
O&#13;
Thence n 5¾° e&#13;
Thence u 16¾0 e&#13;
Tlieucen2° e..&#13;
Thence u l l ^ w&#13;
0&#13;
"2&#13;
2&#13;
4&#13;
6&#13;
8&#13;
10&#13;
12&#13;
12&#13;
14&#13;
18&#13;
18&#13;
19&#13;
74&#13;
" W a r is a g a m e w h i c h , w e r e t h e&#13;
p e o p l e wise, K i n g s w o u l d n o t&#13;
p l a y a t " w a s said m a n y y e a r s ago.&#13;
T h e p e o p l e a r e w i s e r n o w t h a n&#13;
t h e n a n d w a r is lees f r e q u e n t .&#13;
W i t h t h e i n c r e a s e of w i s d o m&#13;
t h e r e will b e an i n c r e a s e in t h e&#13;
i n f r e q u e n c y of war. T h e w i s e r&#13;
p e o p l e s of t h e w o r l d a r e comb&#13;
i n i n g a n d p l o t t i n g p e a c e a s n e v -&#13;
e r b e f o r e , for o n l y r e c e n t l y , as&#13;
t i m e gQJfi, h a v e t h e y b r o u g h t&#13;
cloBe t o g e t h e r b y s t e a m a n d elect&#13;
r i c i t y .&#13;
•-?&#13;
Rest is the *reat restorer. We tire&#13;
,t^.; ,,,-^. Our muscles by exercise and then rest&#13;
" ~'"-:. ^"' " fo restore them; yet a great many of&#13;
lis do not stop to think how little rest&#13;
we give our stomachs. As a usual&#13;
thing no part of our bodies is so generally&#13;
overworked as onr digestive organs,&#13;
A tired and overworked stom&#13;
ach will give signs of distress to&#13;
which we pay no heed until at last&#13;
Dyspepsia takes hold. Indigestion is&#13;
j u s t a warning, and it we heed the&#13;
w a r n i n g we can easily avoid, farther&#13;
consequences. KODOL is a m o a t&#13;
thorough stomach relief. It digests&#13;
what you eat and gives the stomach&#13;
t h e needed rest and greatly assists in&#13;
restoring it to its normal activity and&#13;
setnlnest\ KODOL is sold o n a&#13;
g u a r a n t e e relief plan. I t i a h e r e&#13;
Sold by F. A. Bigler, Drugglit.&#13;
119&#13;
Tlience u 3|° e. 20&#13;
J22&#13;
124&#13;
;2t&gt;&#13;
|2«&#13;
30&#13;
32&#13;
34&#13;
'36&#13;
138&#13;
40&#13;
!42&#13;
44&#13;
40&#13;
4S&#13;
50&#13;
;52&#13;
154&#13;
|55&#13;
i&#13;
Thence n28|° w',59&#13;
60&#13;
60&#13;
62&#13;
84&#13;
53&#13;
69&#13;
74&#13;
36&#13;
4 84&#13;
6 85&#13;
122.85;&#13;
123 28&#13;
2 28 38&#13;
3,32.40&#13;
4 26.94&#13;
21&#13;
25.38&#13;
6.45&#13;
6.76&#13;
8.46&#13;
9.80&#13;
7.98&#13;
7.46&#13;
O . The commencement, 3.10&#13;
from bottom Grade is 4 ft&#13;
to the mile whole dist.&#13;
7 26.70 7 90&#13;
SI2S.40J 6.80&#13;
926.221 7.74&#13;
5&#13;
35 31 6&#13;
10|21.79 5.23&#13;
1123.19 6.73&#13;
12 23.70 6.90&#13;
13 31.83; 9.61&#13;
14 25,14: 7.38&#13;
15 25.08 7,36&#13;
1626.221 7.74&#13;
17125.50! 7.50&#13;
18'27.66 8.82&#13;
19130.21 j 9.07&#13;
20|29.85; 8.95&#13;
2127.42 8.14&#13;
22 29.61 8.87&#13;
23 26.101 7.70&#13;
24 25.62; 7.54&#13;
26 26.43: 7.81&#13;
26 25.62 7.54&#13;
27*26.34 7,78&#13;
Thence n,&#13;
15 5 15 7&#13;
Thence w.&#13;
'64&#13;
66&#13;
67&#13;
68&#13;
70&#13;
i72&#13;
!72&#13;
50 35&#13;
30&#13;
31&#13;
32&#13;
33&#13;
34&#13;
35&#13;
36&#13;
23.64&#13;
22.351&#13;
21.30&#13;
20-1«&#13;
20 58)&#13;
21.151&#13;
20.31&#13;
6.88&#13;
6.45&#13;
6.1©&#13;
5.92&#13;
5,86'&#13;
6.05&#13;
5.77&#13;
19 53&#13;
4.57 from bottom of st 4&#13;
Cross sec line 5 c 8 I e sec corn&#13;
On u J aw J; sec 24, Mrs.&#13;
Johnsons which is left here&#13;
and enter aw J bee 13, A.&#13;
C, Wright.&#13;
40 52&#13;
Enter lake 5.55 below top&#13;
water.&#13;
Leave lake 16 r in lake&#13;
Cross ^ line 5 c 32 1 e ± post&#13;
On sw { sec 13 which leaves&#13;
here and enter w fc n w J&#13;
sec 13 McDowells.&#13;
12 67&#13;
18&#13;
Cross Hec line 7 c 35 1 n of ^&#13;
Post.&#13;
On w \ nw I sec 13 which is&#13;
left here and enter ne ^ sec&#13;
14 land of W. K. Sexton.&#13;
73 ,37 18,00 4.91 St. 37 eod of ditch from&#13;
top water.&#13;
On ne fc sec 14.&#13;
Also run down stream from&#13;
said commencement St. O&#13;
6 c for an outlet.&#13;
On e 130 a of ne \ sec 23 land&#13;
of Peter Fitzsimmons and&#13;
C. E. Bullock.&#13;
Making total distance of 79 C. lesa 4 C. in lake—making 75 C. to be dug—all of&#13;
said ditch being connected together forming one complete and entire drain,&#13;
Station stakes and grade hubs are placed arery 2 oiulni measured from eommenotf&#13;
meat to end except from at 36 tort87 is l . O . tad-:•!*; BWafcertd- *&amp;***&amp; tad&#13;
oonsecudvely up atream, and are plaoed on the left bank and 12 feeffrom ths oeo^r&#13;
line. Angle stakes are numbered consecutively, and are wt 12 feet from (fatt center&#13;
line.&#13;
AH augles are to be turned at an easy grade by outting 2 rods each way |frow |ae&#13;
angle on a curve or circle. The total width required for the right of way is 40 feet&#13;
on each aide of the center line.&#13;
AH excavations are to be removed, at least 4 feet from the edfe of the drain, and&#13;
spread.&#13;
The bottom width to be at least 3 feet. *&#13;
Openings are to be left through the excavations at most desired pointa so as not te&#13;
obstruct the flow of water from the outside into said ditch.&#13;
The slope of the sides to be 1J feet outwards to one foot in height from the&#13;
bottom,&#13;
I The depth of the ditch, and width on top, are measured from a level with the top /&#13;
of the grade hubs set by the station stakes,&#13;
The same specifications apply to the 24 rods down stream from the commencement&#13;
for au outlet. The Highways are to be crossed at right angles to the same.&#13;
As to culverts, or sluices, and the removal of the tile, the same will be aunouueed&#13;
at time of letting.&#13;
Survey finished Feby. 16th, A. D. 1907.&#13;
By order of FHA.NK: E. MOWKKS, County Draiu Commissioner.&#13;
Miuw W. BULLOCK, Surveyor.&#13;
Said job will be let in one or more stations. The section at the oiillet of Hie said&#13;
Drain will be let first, and the remaining sections, if any, in their order up stieam, in&#13;
accordance with the diagram now on tile with the other papers pertaining t&lt;&gt; said Drain,&#13;
in the office of tbe County Drain Commissioner of the said County of Livingston," to&#13;
which reference may be had by all parties iuterested, anil bids will be made and&#13;
received accordingly. Contracts will be made with the lowest responsible bidder&#13;
giving adequate security, for the performance of the work, in it sum then and there to be&#13;
fixed by me, reserving to myself the right to reject any and all bids. No person wLl*&#13;
be permitted to bid uutil he tirst deposits the sum of fifty dollars either iu cash or&#13;
certified check with the Drain Commissioner, conditioned that he will enter into&#13;
contract for the faithful proformance of said job. The date for the completion of such&#13;
contract, and tbe terms of payment therefor, shall and will be announced at the time&#13;
and place of letting.&#13;
N o t i c e . I s F u r t h e r H e r e b y G i v e n , That at the time and place of said&#13;
letting, or at such other time aud place thereafter, to which I, the County Drain Commissioner&#13;
aforesaid, may adjourn the same, the assessments for benefits and the lauds&#13;
comprised within the "Marion Number Three Draiu Special Assessment District,"&#13;
aud the appointment thereof will be announced by me and will be subject to review&#13;
for one day, from nine o'clock in the forenoon until five o'clock in the afternoon.&#13;
The following is a description of the several tracts or parcels of laud constituting&#13;
the Special Assessment District of said Drain, via:&#13;
Section 13.&#13;
W £ of s w 1 of u w \ ; E * of s w \ of n w i ; S e J of n w } ; W } i ) £ &lt; e j ; S f J ,&#13;
Section 14.&#13;
S e \ of u e \ ; N e \ of s e \ ; N \ of s e \ of s e \; S h of s e | of s e };&#13;
Section 24.&#13;
N \ of n w \.&#13;
The above lands ure all located in Towhship 2 North of Range 4 E-ist Michigan.&#13;
Township of Marion at Lirge.&#13;
N o w , T h e r e f o r e , All unknown and non-resident persons, owners aud persons&#13;
interested in the above described lands, and you William McDowell, Thomas&#13;
Gordon. Mary C- Gordon, VV. K. Sexton, Charles O'Connor, Wesley J. Witty,&#13;
Margaret Johnson, Harry Harmon, M. Lorane Lonsburry, Charles Welker, Arthur&#13;
Wright, Josephine Wright, and you John Mussou, supervisor of the Township of&#13;
Marion, and you George Wright, highway conintiesoner of the Township of Marion,&#13;
are hereby notified that at the time and place aforesaid, or at such other time and&#13;
place thereafter to which said hearing may be adjourned, I shall proceed to receive&#13;
bids for the construction of slid "Marion Number Three Drain," in the manner hereinbefore&#13;
stated ; and also, th it at such time of letting from nijie o'clock in the forenoon&#13;
until live o'clock in the afternoon, the assessment for benefits ami the lauds comprised&#13;
within the Marion Number Three Drain Special Assessment Districts will be&#13;
subject to review.&#13;
A n d Y o u a n d B a c h o f Y o u , Owners and persons interested in the aforesaid&#13;
lands, are hereby cited to appear at the time and plaoe of such letting as aforesaid,&#13;
and be heard with respect to such spt'ci:d assessments and your interests in relation&#13;
hereto, if von so desire.&#13;
Dated Howell, Mich. \&#13;
April 13th, A. I). 1907. i&#13;
I'RANK K. MOWERS,&#13;
County Drain Commissioner of the&#13;
County of Livingston. w&#13;
S o m e S t a t e s m e n h o l d t h a t t h e&#13;
U . S. C o n s t i t u t i o n was w r i t t e n for&#13;
a c o l l e c t i o n of s m a l l f a r m i n g comm&#13;
u n i t i e s w h o s e a g g r e g a t e p o p u -&#13;
l a t i o n w a s less t h a n t h a t of o u r&#13;
l a r g e s t city t o d a y ; t h e y say t h a t it&#13;
w a s w r i t t e n by t h o s e w h o h a d not,&#13;
n o r c o u l d h a v e h a d , a n y c o n c e p -&#13;
t i o n of o u r t e r r i t o r i a l e x t e n s i o n ,&#13;
p h y s i c a l r e s o u r s e s a n d c o m m e r c -&#13;
i a 1 d e v e l o p m e n t a n d p q w e r .&#13;
A p a r t f r o m w h a t t h e s e v a r i o u s&#13;
s c h o o l s m a y t h i n k , it is c e r t a i n&#13;
t h a t t h e c o n s t i t u t i o n was m a d e for&#13;
m a n , a n d n o t m a n for t h e c o n s t i -&#13;
t u t i o n . " O u r little s y s t e m s confe&#13;
a n d go, t h e y h a v e t h e i r d a y a n d&#13;
c e a s e to b e . " I n t h e light, of e n d -&#13;
l e s s t i m e a n d s p a c e t h e C o n s t i t u -&#13;
t i o n of t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s is a&#13;
l i t t l e s y s t e m a n d t r a n s i e n t . !&#13;
Doing Business Again.&#13;
" W h e n my friends thought I was&#13;
, a b o u t to take leave of this world, on&#13;
account of indigestion, nervousness&#13;
and general debility,"' writes A. A.&#13;
Chi.-holm, Treadwell, N. Y., " a n d&#13;
when it looked as if there was no hope&#13;
left, I was persuaded to try Electric&#13;
Bit srs, and I rejoice to aay t h a t they&#13;
are enreing me. I am now doing&#13;
business again as of old, and am still&#13;
g a i n i n g daily.11 Best tonic medicine&#13;
on earth. Guaranteed by F. A. Sigler&#13;
d r u g g i s t . 50c.&#13;
Siravr Rope Snioir*.&#13;
Korea is perhaps the oldest country&#13;
In the world, and the customs aud actions&#13;
that go to make up the daily life&#13;
of the people are uot at all governed&#13;
by the logic or tradition which movcn&#13;
us on our enlightened way. They have&#13;
no clearly regulated sports, nothing ap&#13;
parently that could be ltkentMl to n&#13;
A Sight.&#13;
"Do you know, 1 saw something re&#13;
•narknhle Just now," observed a broker&#13;
to a friend in front of the Stock Ex&#13;
change In Broad street.&#13;
"What was It?"&#13;
"I saw no fewer than five lending&#13;
lawyers of the financial district walk&#13;
past, and every one of them hud his&#13;
national game. They pass most of 'hands In his own pockets."—New York&#13;
their recreation hours swinging In Tribune,&#13;
straw rope swings and seem entirely&#13;
happy In the eport. The straw rope.&#13;
If well made, Is extremely durable and&#13;
enn Htand considerable weight, as may&#13;
be Judged when three ablebodled&#13;
young men impose their weight upon&#13;
the swing, standing on the shoulders&#13;
of one another after the manner of&#13;
acrobats. It may be very fine pastime,&#13;
but the average American, It Is safe t.-&#13;
•ay, wonld find in It very little appeal.&#13;
r X 1UUTA EM Imm for MEM, m^™An WOM&amp;* and ^ I n l - Ut-[Lit.'.- 1 •&gt;.«•.!•&#13;
Pll O O D P I »'"l ir )&#13;
Instant relief to sufferers of&#13;
Rbaumailsm,KldneyTroublo,&#13;
Stomach Disorders.&#13;
"Good for everything a salve ii used&#13;
tor and especially reemmended tor&#13;
piles.11 That is what we say about&#13;
De W i t t s Carbolized Wi^ch Hazel&#13;
Salve. That, is what twenty years ot&#13;
usafcje has proven. Get the original.&#13;
8oM by F. A. ffister, D n m l * t&#13;
Get a bottle today, la purely a vegetable compound,&#13;
in effect but one the most effectual remedies known for restoring&#13;
the entire system. It is derived frcm nature, not&#13;
compound of drugs and chemicals that only allay the pain,&#13;
but cures to stay cured after all so-called '' scientific " treatments&#13;
have failed.&#13;
For sale by druggists. Send for circulars. Address,&#13;
INDIAN MEDICINE CO., Mllford, Ohio.&#13;
When you need a pill, take a pill,&#13;
and be sure it's an Early Riser. De&#13;
Witt's Little Early Risers are safe,&#13;
sure satisfactory pills. The pills with&#13;
a reputation. They do not gripe or&#13;
sicken. They are hero&#13;
Bold by F. A. Sigler, Dragglat.&#13;
A Difficulty.&#13;
Mistress — Why don't you boll the&#13;
eggs? Took—Sure, I've no clock In&#13;
the kitchen to g,» by! Mistress Oh.&#13;
yes; yon have! Cook—What good is If"/&#13;
It's ten minutes fast—rhll.idolphia Inqrdrer.&#13;
^ o r Catarrh, let, m* send ynu tree,&#13;
jnst to prove merit, a Trial size Box&#13;
of Dr. Shoop's Catarrh Remedy. It is&#13;
a snow white creamy, uealin« anti^ep&#13;
tic halm that ^ives instant relief to&#13;
Catarrh of the nose and throat. Make&#13;
f he free test and see. Address Dr&#13;
Shoop, Racine, Wis Large iars 50&#13;
cents. Sold hy Ali Dealers&#13;
KnHnlFor Indlgestk*.&#13;
A » ^ # * * * ^ * Relieves soar stom*ch,&#13;
palpitarkffl &lt;d tbe heart Digests whatyou eat&#13;
OeWlTrS &amp; £ £ WITCH HAZEL&#13;
3 A I # V E . For Pile*, Bono, Sore*.&#13;
Health and Woalth.&#13;
Insured health to the average m»n means&#13;
great wealth.&#13;
if, n&#13;
DR. JOHNSON'S&#13;
AFTERDINNERP1LL&#13;
INSURES HEALTH. TRY IT.&#13;
IS PURELY VEGETABLE,&#13;
nnrl was imed by the Doctor&#13;
for twenty years in&#13;
active practice, and IR&#13;
conceded by all having&#13;
used it to be the best&#13;
Little Stomach Pill&#13;
on the ninrVet. It i« a&#13;
PREVENTATIVE of&#13;
S i c k H e a d a c h e ,&#13;
Dyspepsia, Dizziness,&#13;
H e a r t b u r n ,&#13;
B a d T a s t e In&#13;
M o u t h , Coated&#13;
T o n g u e , Loss of&#13;
A p p e t i t e&#13;
and all other m or h i d&#13;
conditions arising from&#13;
a disordered stomach. •&#13;
P R E V E N T I O N&#13;
1» the order of this day and age, M it Is much&#13;
more scientific to prevent a diseased condition&#13;
than to cure it. You can secure this&#13;
LITTLE PILL of ANY FIRST-CLASS DRUGGIST&#13;
who will be pleased to serve yon, 88 doses for&#13;
2fl cents. Don't takp some other "Just as&#13;
good" for there isn't nny other that will&#13;
please you at all after trying this one.&#13;
L. L. J O H N 8 0 N , M . D. P r o p .&#13;
A t l a n t a , C e o r g i a .&#13;
and add 10 Years&#13;
to Your Lift.&#13;
The bast Spring Bed on&#13;
Earth. Perfeotly Noisoless.&#13;
For both Wood and&#13;
Iron Bodatoadsm&#13;
Ninety per cent, of the Spring B e d s m a d e are not fit to sleep on.&#13;
Pay just a little more and get a « H Y G E I A , " which Is perfection In&#13;
itself. Guaranteed for ten years. If your dealer does not handle the&#13;
Hygeia write direct to us giving his address.&#13;
ENTERPRISE BED CO., Mfrs., Hammond, Indiana. ||&#13;
More Money for Eggs under most any conditions. There ia a lot of money to be made&#13;
in the egg business if conditions are ripht. There is no reason&#13;
why F a r m e r s and P o u l t r y Raisers should not make j ust as good&#13;
profits on their investments as any other line of business, and it is&#13;
possible for them to do so. The price of eggs during the winter&#13;
months is double and sometimes mora than double that paid&#13;
during the summer months. The only way to take advantage of this advance is&#13;
to hold summer eggs for winter prices, That fresh eggs can be kept from six to&#13;
nine months or more has been proven by careful testing with&#13;
HACER'S ECC PRESERVATIVE&#13;
and anyone usinp this Preservative need never sell a doten egfjrs for anything but&#13;
the highest market price. Stud for Sample and Circulars telling you all nSoutil.&#13;
IMAGER ECC PRESERVING CO., - St. Louie, Mo.&#13;
H&#13;
X&#13;
L&#13;
t V&#13;
mtim i-_ « • i ^&#13;
• &gt; ; ' ; . - . * .&#13;
f •&lt;»'&#13;
::&gt;j&#13;
,,. :**'.:f •'-'.&#13;
"+*&gt;** i&#13;
1&#13;
T C h u m s i&#13;
1 The Longer You Drink It-&#13;
The Better You Like It&#13;
That's because McLaughlin's X X X X&#13;
Coffee is always the same- day in—day out&#13;
—always of the same good quality, blended&#13;
just right, and roasted to a turn—that's&#13;
satisfaction, and 16 full ounces to the&#13;
pound is economy.&#13;
The handy air-tight package and the&#13;
glazing of pure sugar keeps the coffee&#13;
clean and fresh— protected from dust, dirt&#13;
and foul odors.&#13;
McLaughlin's XXXX Coffee is Sold by&#13;
W E. M r r p h y&#13;
W . W- Barnard&#13;
H. M. Williston&#13;
PATENTS P R O C U R i r . D A N D D E r r . N D E D . SVml model,&#13;
rtt.-i wins' "i • | in'ili i. tort \]&gt;&lt; I I M-IUVII ami live report.&#13;
Five wlviev, luiw to oliuiiu pnU'iitM, lt;i&lt;li&gt; marks,&#13;
ci&gt;pyri)thi:&lt;, i'K'„ J N ALU C O U N T R I E S .&#13;
Business tiircrt with Washington sai ts time A&#13;
money ami often the patent.&#13;
Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Wi'ltoorciinwlu ibat&#13;
033 Ninth BtrMt, opp. TTnit«d BUtM Patent Ofic*,|&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N . P . C. GASNOW&#13;
T l i c FjitlHM' S o y o n i : '&#13;
Nupixwl in;. (liiiiirlitorV Tli" •&#13;
( !&lt;&lt;• SUIT I ("111. »i?'. il ,VT1&#13;
u s o u t . ' D i e F i i t ' s o - I'll h o i "&#13;
all riirht. nil ri.u'hi! \Vb&lt;"' •&#13;
s u i t e r d a - l f " ) l r u i d ] ' «'o- &gt;&#13;
st('I»s w i t h t h e t'iitlior ;• c | &gt;'-"&#13;
t h o r;w-&lt;\ &lt; ' 1 » &lt; \ T I ; I U I ''1&#13;
N •'ci'NNii :•&gt;• i • : . i:\'. Ian-..&#13;
i'llvsUiau I w.i.;.:. • , i - - v - : ;:&#13;
i-atlfiit -Well, it w ill luvu to ; c&#13;
tbiu^ that agrees \itli the rook,&#13;
Ynrtf Sun&#13;
i ; : i ' i .&#13;
s cue&#13;
p|-= REMOVE WITH EASE ALL PARTICLES OF&#13;
D9RT AND&#13;
CREASE&#13;
and leave trie, skin soft and&#13;
v/hlte. Superior to all other&#13;
soaps, The Laborers' friend.&#13;
For Mechan cs Farmers.&#13;
Painters, Pinters, Pr.urioers.&#13;
Miners arid all Ra'iroid Mm.&#13;
A trial J/iilcoiwincaVc-:vherels no other soap like u. 2 sizes 5 v and 1 Oe&#13;
I W a r ^ . c ^ ^ d byaOWXSO** COMP*tf Y, -Juntngton, Iowa.&#13;
M :&#13;
•3t*iVl&#13;
V T r i t m&#13;
DELICIOUS&#13;
W h « a y o u r back h u r t s it is a l m o s t&#13;
a w a r n i n g Iroixi y o u r k i d n e y s . W h e n&#13;
y o a r k i d n e y s a r n w r o n g ther»&lt; is n o t h -&#13;
i n g HO good a s t h e use ol l ) e W i t t ' s&#13;
K i d n e y a m i B l a d d e r P i l l s . They assist&#13;
tl.e kidneys.&#13;
Sold b y F . A. S l * l e r , Dru*«l«t.&#13;
y^'.'j^-} A ; J I J : « c i o n .&#13;
" N o w i h . . ;, oil a I T t h o l l t tl&gt; £0 t o&#13;
I'ullt'Ki'. my sou, ).-1 . v '.'.'join upon&#13;
you tu I.HMi- iii iioiul o . filling."&#13;
" W l i u l i-; l i n n , I L I I - I ' : "&#13;
" I t Is This, my liuy-LUe g r e a t e s t re&#13;
BUlts a r e a l w a y s achieved by close a p&#13;
plication."&#13;
" W h y , dad, you t a l k j u s t like a por&#13;
ous plii^h"-."' V'iva.v Stories.&#13;
W h a t is it tlr-ii ia&gt;ts a- p l e a s a n t as&#13;
m a p l e suy;ir rind q u i r k l y iHheves&#13;
COUJ/IJH a n d coldsV M o t h e r s w h e&#13;
h a v e used it will q u u ' k l y a n s w e r :&#13;
'Mveunedy'H L a x a t i v e Uoujjh S y r u p . "&#13;
Tbw p t e a s a n t told r e m e d y t h a t expels&#13;
i b e culd throuurh i t s l a x a t i v e action on&#13;
tli« bowels. C o n f o r m s s t r i c k l y lo t h e&#13;
I ' u r e Food a n d D i n t ' s L a w . C o n t a i n s&#13;
n o o p i a t e s .&#13;
Sold b y F . A. Sigler, D r n g g l a t .&#13;
THE ORIGINAL&#13;
LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP&#13;
For all Cough* and assists in&#13;
•spelling Cold* from ths system&#13;
by gontly moving the&#13;
bowels. A certain&#13;
relief for croup and&#13;
whooplnsr-couirb.&#13;
Nearly all other&#13;
cough cures are&#13;
c o n s t i p a t i n g ,&#13;
•specially those'&#13;
containing Opiates?&#13;
Kennedy's Laxative&#13;
Honey &amp; Tar moves&#13;
the bowels, contains&#13;
BO Opiates.&#13;
T h e K«4&#13;
CtoveiT __&#13;
•omaaatkg&#13;
Honey&#13;
i* oa&#13;
botti*.&#13;
KENNEDY'S i i CONTAIN INQ HONEYiHTTAR&#13;
FRJtPAMD AT TH* LABORATOUT • »&#13;
• . a DeWITT &amp; CO.. CHICAQO, U. 8 . A.&#13;
j Sold by F . A. Sigler, D r u g g l i i t&#13;
T H E GREATEST&#13;
OF ALL CEREAL FOODS.&#13;
No fad or uncertain mixture. A Natural FOOD&#13;
LAXATIVE. A whole kernel of R y e to each flake.&#13;
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR I T or writ. us for o u r t h r e e s p e c i a l&#13;
Offer*. A pound package b y mail, postpaid, for 25 cents. It will&#13;
positively cure t h e most aggravated case of cor,: ! . u . e n n . Write to-day.&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS CEREAL COMPANY,&#13;
H. H. Dept. M I N N E A P O L I S , M I N N .&#13;
Solicitor* Wmntnti Ewrywtmrm.&#13;
X&#13;
EXPERIENCE! E x p e r i e n c e is n n e of t h e Rrentost factors in a l m o s t&#13;
a n y w a ' k in life. It is w h a t ffives t h o f a r m e r , Doc"&#13;
tor, M e r c h a n t a m i M e c h a n i c success. In m a n u f a c t -&#13;
u r i n g rt is a n all i m p o r t a n t c l e m e n t . W o a r c c a r r i a a r e&#13;
m a n u f a c t u r e r s of over twenty-five y e a r s ' e x p e r i e n c e&#13;
a n d w e claim t o k n o w t h e b u s i n e s s from A t o Z. W e&#13;
will s t a k e ° u r r e p u t a t i o n t h a t w e m a k e a s frood w o r k&#13;
for t h e m o n e y as i t i« possible t o m a k e . O u r t w o&#13;
l e a d e r s a r e o u r N o . 30 T o p ^ B u g g y a t t h e p o p u l a r&#13;
price o f JM.OO a n d o u r N o . 60 T o p&#13;
B u g g y a t ffiO.00. N o t h i n g b u t t h e b e s t&#13;
g o i n t o t h e s e j o b s i n o r d e r t o m a k e&#13;
t h e m c o m e u p t o o u r s t a n d a r d . W r i t e&#13;
fbr foil specifications, c u t s a n d refere&#13;
n c e s . D o i t to-day a n d see w h a t w e&#13;
c a n offer y o u fbr y o u r c a s h a n d s a v e&#13;
all d e a l e r profits. W r i t e a t o n c e a n d&#13;
g e t o u r g r e a t offer.&#13;
J. A. HUNCERFORD A SON, Lapeer, Michigan,&#13;
Mortffaire Sale&#13;
W H K H K A S default IMP been made in the uontlitione&#13;
of a certain m o r t g a g e , whereby the power&#13;
of pale t h e r e i n lias become o p e r a t i v e , m a d e by&#13;
HKN11Y T H 1 E B O L T a n d hie wife C A R O L I N E&#13;
T H I E R O L T . of n-eertield, L i v i n g s t o n County,&#13;
Michigan, to NELSON LAMH of the same place&#13;
aforesaid; b e a r i e ^ date March '*lth, A. D, 1S8U,&#13;
and recorded in the ofike of t h e Keeister of&#13;
Deed-* for Livingston County, Michigan, in Liber&#13;
52 of Morlages afrpage 50T thereof on March M t h&#13;
A D. IsHvJ which said mortgage w a s duly assi^'rea&#13;
by NELSON LAMB on t h e 10th day of August,&#13;
1MW tu JIENJIY T U I E B O L T J U , which assignment&#13;
wae recorded in t h e Ke^ieter of Deed's oifice&#13;
for the County of Livingston o n t h e llith day of&#13;
Augu-i, 1SCG in Liber 80 of Mortages at paye 47,&#13;
and l\v I t E N I t Y T H E 1 B O L T JU. duly assigned&#13;
to ( V V U O L I N E T H E I H O L T on November t\ 1«96&#13;
and recorded in the Ke^ietcr's office, Office for&#13;
Livingston (Jbunty on t h e 18th day of May, 18M'&#13;
in Liber 85- of Mortgages at* page 267. And by&#13;
CA HOL1NE T l I E I f l O L T duly assigned to H E N -&#13;
RY TH EI BOLT .IB. on March 32, 19(17 and record&#13;
ed in the Office of the Register of Deeds fori Livi&#13;
n g s t o n County on March A9, li&gt;07 in l.il)er 1» at&#13;
p a g e i U l . And whereas the a m o u n t claimed to&#13;
be due on said Mortgage at This date is the s u m of&#13;
One hundred and eighty dollars and eighty rive&#13;
cents (SlWXi) of p r i n c i p a l and interest a n d no&#13;
suit or proce^dint; h a v i n g been instituted to recover&#13;
the debt secured by fi\U\ m o r t g a g e or any&#13;
part thereof:&#13;
Therefore notice is hereby given that, by virtue&#13;
ot said power of sale a n d in persmtnee of the&#13;
statues in such cast1 m a d e a n d provided the said&#13;
m o r t g a g e will be foreclosed by Bale of t h e , p r e m i s e s&#13;
therein described at public miction to the highest&#13;
bidder at the West front door of t h e Court H o u s e&#13;
in the village of Howell in said County nf Livlngstov&#13;
that being the place ol bidding the '^ircnit&#13;
Court, for t h e County of L i v i n g s t o n on Saturday&#13;
the t:lth day of J u l y A. D. 1!K,7 at in n ' d o r k in t h e&#13;
forenoon of said day, of so much thereof as m a v&#13;
e necessa :y to pay t h e principal and interest&#13;
d u e on said m o r t g a g e , t h e Attorney tee provided&#13;
therein a n d costs of said sale, of t h e following&#13;
described premises, to wit c o m m e n c i n g twentyrods&#13;
East, of the Northwest corner of Section&#13;
tweu'y two (2"J1 In t o w n s h i p four ill North of&#13;
Range tlva (5) East Michigan, r u n n i n g thence&#13;
SOUTH eight rods thence East sixty rods t h e n c e&#13;
North eiyht rods ther ce West, to begining cont&#13;
a i n i n g thret- acres of land.&#13;
H E N R Y TITElROLT,.TR.,&#13;
Assignee of i b e Mortgagee.&#13;
Dated, Howell, April 4, COT.&#13;
\VM. C. V A N W T N K T . K ,&#13;
Attornev for Assignee.&#13;
CJTATK o-.- MiCHUiAX. T h e l'robate ('ourt for the&#13;
^ C o u n t y of Livingston,&#13;
At a session of said court held At the Vro-&#13;
, bate office in the village of Howell, in said&#13;
countv, on the _^th day of March, A. r&gt;. 1f)c?,&#13;
Present, Hon. A r t h u r A. Montague, J u d g e of&#13;
l'r &gt;bate, Tn t h e m a t t e r of the e s t a t e of&#13;
SU.AS S RICHIUONO, deceased.&#13;
tieorge L. lachmoml h a v i n j tiled in sniil court his&#13;
petition p r j y i n t r t h a t t h e adminstration of said&#13;
estate, be eranfed to Cenrgi L. Richmond or to&#13;
some other suitable person.&#13;
It is ordered that live Oflth da&gt; of April, A. n.&#13;
1'.*&gt;;, at ten o'ebvk in the foreno &gt;n, .it said prohate&#13;
offlce, be and Is hereby appointed for n e a r i n ^&#13;
j said petition.&#13;
• It is further ordered, t hat public n o ' i e thereof&#13;
be given b^ publicitioiiof a copy of this order, tor&#13;
, three successive week-* p r e v i o u s to saui day of&#13;
h e a r i n g in the P I W K V K V f&gt;tsrarcn, a n e w s p a -&#13;
der priuted and cir-ulaw-d in -4,-11 1 e o i i i t v . t Iti&#13;
, ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE.&#13;
I Judge of Probata.&#13;
T h e W o e - . ! J:; Old V i o l i n a .&#13;
T h e WO-KI.S ii.'..- ; ,', ,i:\'.i liy iia.* o i d&#13;
m u s t e r s lor ,';O,;M • .iiai-n, : .u \-, i.-iv&#13;
l&gt;iiu', jicar, I j - h. 1,;..;,,, and&#13;
s y c a m o r e , ami Ly sn,::r of ihc lat"!&#13;
IJieli a p p l e V.',,S li:&gt;i-l|, l ? o \ Wo-,,:l \\ : s&#13;
Uixivorsully eu:;t! lyci fur lii'i-lp's,&#13;
H a w e i s nays, "\\ p c r i i r t l y hannoii .!i;:&#13;
murriui/e is a s rare heiwiu'ii viol' is&#13;
mitl (.heir hridui's a s ii is ln'twivii I..,UJ&#13;
and wouii-ii." 11&lt;- ifciduivs the he ,.L&#13;
less HUbsthuiioii uf new briilp-s t'ur&#13;
old o n e s and insists t h a t a n e w bi'id re&#13;
j will n e v e r m a l e perlVrtly with a n oM&#13;
! violin, a n d rat h e r t h a n r e s o r t t o tstib&#13;
! Jitltutlou b e a d v i s e s p a t c h i n g a n d rep&#13;
a i r i n g t h e olil one a s long a s It c a n he&#13;
m a d e t o last. Cirele JJaguzine.&#13;
" P r e v e n t i c V will prorr.ptly tditick a,&#13;
cold or t h e (;iri[&gt; w h e n takem early or&#13;
a t t h e " s n e e z e -tatfe." F r e v e n t i c s&#13;
c u r e seated colds as well. P r e v e n t i c s&#13;
a r e little candy cold c u r e tablets, a n d&#13;
Dr. IShoop, Liaciue, W i s . will g l a d l y&#13;
mail y o u s a m p l e s a n d a book on Colds&#13;
t r e e , i t ' y o u will w r i t e h i m . T h e s a m -&#13;
ples p r o v e t h e i r myri t. Check early&#13;
colds with P r e v e n t i c s a n d stop p n e u -&#13;
m o n i a . Hold 111 5c a n d 25c IUXHS by&#13;
All D e a l e r s .&#13;
She fitubtuit ili^patth&#13;
PUULiaUKIJ KVK»T TUUHSBAY MUKM..U i5X&#13;
F R A N K l_. A N D R E W S &amp;, C O&#13;
tUITOHb *'•;; t'HOPHltTOKb.&#13;
Sutiricrlptioii 1'rice 51 i n A d v a u c e&#13;
'interact t t t h e Pobtotllce tit C i u c k a e y , M i c h i ^ a r •&#13;
an BbCoud-claBtj u i i t t e r&#13;
Advurcitsiu&gt;; r a t e u uiade known on a p p l i c a t i o n .&#13;
BuelueaB C a r d e , J4.UU p e r y e a r .&#13;
T e n t h a n d m a r r i a g e n o t i c e s publlaUed t r e e .&#13;
A u n o u n c e m e a t B of e u t e r t a i n m e n t B tuay be p a l t&#13;
for, if desired, by p r e s e n t i n g t h e office with t i c k&#13;
0ttf of aduiisBion. I n case t i c k e t s a r e uut h r o u ^ i t&#13;
to t h e office, r e g u l a r r a t e e w i l l b e c h a r g t d.&#13;
A l l m a t t e r In l o c a l n o t i c e c o l u m n w i l l b e c h a r e d&#13;
oil a t 5 c e n t s p e r l i n e o r f r a c t i o n t h e r e o f , f o r each&#13;
l u e e r t i o n . W h e r e n o t i m e i s specified, all n o t i c e s&#13;
will b e i n B e r t e d u n t i l o r d e r e d d i s c o n t i n u e d , a n d&#13;
will be c h a r g e d f o r a c c o r d i n g l y , gWA-U c h a n g e ?&#13;
of K d r e r t U e m e n t B M U S T r e a c h t h i s office aa e a r l )&#13;
»8 T U E B D A V m o r n i n g t o i n s u r e a n I n s e r t i o n t h e&#13;
n a m e w e e k .&#13;
JOS -P-RWIIJVG !&#13;
i n all lt« b r a n c h e a , a s p e c i a l t y . We h a v e a l l k i n u B&#13;
a n d t h e latest s t y l e s 01 T y p e , e t c . , which e u a b l t «&#13;
us t o e x e c u t e all k i n d s of work, auch as Book a,&#13;
PainpltHe, P o s t e r s , P r o g r a m m e s , Bill H e a d s , Note&#13;
H e a d s , S t a t e m e n t s , C a r d s , Auction Bills, e t c . , i n&#13;
s u p e r i o r styles, u p o n t h e shortest n o t i c e . Prices ai&#13;
low as good w o r k c a n b e acme.&#13;
ALL BILLS PAYABLE KIKHTOKKVKHY MONTH.&#13;
" P n e u m o n i a ' s D f t d l y W o r k&#13;
bad so P i o u s l y affected my r i g h t&#13;
l u u * , " w r i t e s M r i . b a n n i e C o n n o r , of&#13;
R u r a l Uouto 1, G e o r g M e w o , T e n n , ,&#13;
" t h a t I c o u g h e d e o n t i o u o u s l y n i ^ b t&#13;
a n d d a y a n d t h e n e i g h b o r s p r d i c t i o n&#13;
— c o n s u m p t i o n — s e e m e d i n e v i t a b l e ,&#13;
u n t i l my h u s b a n d b r o u g h t h o m e a bottle&#13;
of D r . K i n g ' s N e w D i a c o . e r y i&#13;
w h i c h in m y c a s e p r o v e d to be t h e only&#13;
KEAL c o u g h j u r e a n d r e s t o r e r of&#13;
w e a k , sore l u n g s , " W h e n all o t h e r&#13;
r e m e d i e s u t t e r l y fail, y o u m a y still&#13;
w i n in t h e b a t t l e a g a i n s t l u n « a n d&#13;
t h r o a t t r o u b l e s w i t h N e w Discovery,&#13;
t h e KKAL c u r e , l i u a r a n t e t - d by Y\ A .&#13;
S i ^ i e r , d r u g g i s t . 50c. a n d $1.00-&#13;
T r i a l bottle free.&#13;
A Poor Artiat.&#13;
r a t i o n e d Ho you k n o w Jules, t h e&#13;
a r t i s t V&#13;
P a t r i e e -Yes, b u t I d o n ' t like h i m .&#13;
"Why uot?"&#13;
"Oh, I like a m a n w h o c a n look y o u&#13;
In t h e e y e . "&#13;
" C a n ' t he'.'"&#13;
" W h y , he c a n ' t even p a i n t a : tffetUtt&#13;
of a le'Lsoa w h o cau look yoU i n t h a&#13;
r y ! " Yonkers Statesiium. PAIN&#13;
THE VILLAafc" DIRECTORY&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
P H B B I D B N T&#13;
TuLlrtTKKH S. J . Tee pie,&#13;
J&amp;meti S m i t h ,&#13;
\V. A. Nixon I&#13;
C L K K K&#13;
T H E A H L K E H&#13;
A S S E S S O R&#13;
STKEKT COM.MlSblOSEU&#13;
liKALTll U K l i e t l i&#13;
ATTOHNtY&#13;
.MAU^IIALL&#13;
J. C. Dunn&#13;
Kd. F a r u u i n ,&#13;
.lames Koche.&#13;
V. VauWiuKle.&#13;
Uoger C a r r&#13;
, A. Cadwell&#13;
1). W . M u r t a&#13;
M. Lavey&#13;
Or. 11. K . M g l e r&#13;
\V. A. C a r r&#13;
Chae. Eldert&#13;
UHURCHtS.&#13;
irain In t h e h e a d — p a i n a n y w h e r e , h a t it* 1&#13;
P a i n iscongestion, p a i n is blood pressure—nothinjr&#13;
«lae u i u a l l y . A t least, so says Dr. Snoop, a n d to)&#13;
p r o v e it h e h a s created a little p i n k t a b l e t . T h a i&#13;
tablet—called Dr. S h o o p ' s H e a d a c h e T a b l e t -&#13;
coaxe^ blood pressure a w a y from p a i n center*.&#13;
I U c f l e c t i s c h a r m i n g . pleasingly delightful. Gently,&#13;
t h o u g h safely, it m r e l y equalizes the. b l o c d circul&#13;
a t i o n .&#13;
If y o u hiiYe a h e a d a c h e , it'» b l o o d p r e s s u r e .&#13;
If it's painful periods w i t h women, s a m e c a u s e .&#13;
If y o u are sleepless, restleaS, n e r v o u s , it's b l o o d&#13;
congestion—blood pressure. T h a t s u r e l y Is ft&#13;
certninty, for Dr. Shoop's H e a d a c h e T a b l e t s s t o p&#13;
it in '20 minutes, a n d t h e t a b l e t s s i m p l y (ILstributS)&#13;
t h e u n n a t u r a l blood pressure.&#13;
Bruise y o u r l i . - :-, a n d d o e s n ' t it g e t r e d , a n d&#13;
•well, a n d pain you'.' Of course it does. I t ' a c o n -&#13;
gestion, Mood p n -Mire. You'll find i t w h e r e p a i n&#13;
la—always. I t ' s s i m p l y C o m m o n Sense.&#13;
We sell a t 25 cents, a n d cheerfully r e c o m m e n d&#13;
Dr. Shoop's&#13;
Headache&#13;
Tablets&#13;
"ALL DEALERS."&#13;
VALVELESS AUTOMATIC&#13;
Stock Fountain&#13;
PAYS FOR ITSELF THE FIRST YEAR.&#13;
i € I ! V i K T H U U l s r K i ' l S C O P A L C U C H C U .&#13;
l l i . i t e v . U. C, Littloioha iiaator, Sarvicee ever&gt;&#13;
S u n d a y m o r u l a ^ a t lo:Ju, a n d every b u a f l a j&#13;
evening at T:0o o ' c l o c k . P r a y e r m e e t i u ^ T h a r e .&#13;
day e v e n i n g s . Sunday HCHUOI a t close of n o CSV&#13;
i n ^ a e r v i c e . M i ? ; MAKY V A N K L K E T , S a p t .&#13;
/ ^ O N U r t K G A l T O . N A L C l l U RC1J.&#13;
**».' Kev. G. \V. Mylue p a s t o r , nervier « v e i ,&#13;
S u n d a y &lt;uorQln^ at b e j u n:id e v e r y . i u n d « o&#13;
e v e n i n g at 7:0C b ' c i J C k . P r a y e r m e e t i u i , I'uurs&#13;
Jay e v e a i n ^ e . S u n d a y aciiool at c l o s e ot m o r n&#13;
intjflervice. Percy s w a r t h o u t , Supt,, .Mocro&#13;
Teeple S e c .&#13;
j ^ T . M A U V ' X ' J A T l i O L l C C H C K C U .&#13;
I O Kev. M. J . Comiuerford, T a e t o r .&#13;
a very S u n d a y . Low&#13;
high m a s s with s e r m o n *t&#13;
t ; i : 0 u p , in., v e s p e r s a n - i&#13;
'Jerviceb&#13;
m a s s a t ,:31)o'clori,&#13;
30 a. m. C a t e c h i s m&#13;
. d i c t i o n a t 7 :S0 p . in&#13;
bOCIETItS:&#13;
rjlhe A. O. H. Society ot thin place, meets everj&#13;
X t h i r d Sunrtay i n t n e Kr. Matthew i l a l l .&#13;
J o h n T u o m e y a n d M. T. Kelly, Comity D e l e g a t e s&#13;
fllfclh; W. C. T. U. meetB the lirat F r i d a y of e a c h&#13;
J . m o n t h at ~ :.% p . m. tit t h o home of I)r. LI. F .&#13;
s i l l e r . Everyone i n t e r e s t e d in t e m p e r a n c e is&#13;
tu.-nliaHy invited. M r s . Leal S i g l e r , Pros; M r s .&#13;
K t t a D u r f e e , S e c r e t a r y . rh e C . T . A. a n d LC Society of t h i n p l a c e , ««&lt;•&#13;
every t h i r d S a t u r d a y e v e n i n g in t h e F r . Mai.&#13;
thew H a l l . J o h n Uonohue, I r e s i d e n t .&#13;
Automatic&#13;
N e v e r fails t o&#13;
work. Does&#13;
not overflow.&#13;
No m u d o r&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
T o d o a s&#13;
claimed.&#13;
Bij Seller&#13;
.+ Sold on 30 Day*' TrlmS.&#13;
M O N E Y BACK I P N O T S A T T S f X M k&#13;
GEDGE BROS. IRON ROOFING CO.&#13;
Fountain St.. Aprferson, Ind.&#13;
KN I l i l t T S O F M A C C A B E E S .&#13;
M e e t e v e r y F r i d a y e v e n i n g on o r b e f o r e full&#13;
of t a e m o o n a t t h e i r hall i n t h e S w a r t h o u t , b l d g&#13;
Visiting b r o t h e r s a r e e o r i i i a l l y i n v i t e d .&#13;
( ' H A S , 1., CAMVTIKLL. Sir K n i « h t C o m m a e i&#13;
LivinRflton Lodge, No. lt&gt;, F &amp;; A . M. Kejjulai&#13;
C o m m u n i c a t i o n Tuesday evening, o n or before&#13;
t h e till! of the moon. Kirk Van Winkle. W. M&#13;
6 0 YEARS*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
0 KDKK O F KASTFKN S T A R m e e t s each m o n t h I&#13;
\J t h e F r i d a y e v e n i n g following t h e r e g u l a r F. 1&#13;
.½ A . M. m e e t i n g , M R S . N K T T K V A U O H N , W . M. i&#13;
OK: KR OF M O D E l i N WOODMEN Meet, t h e&#13;
first T h u r s d a y e v e n i n g ofeaoh M o n t h in t h e&#13;
Maccahe.^ hall. C, L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LA D I E S OF T H E M A C C A B E E S . Meat every 1?&#13;
and ;lrd S a t u r d a y of each m o u t h at 12:30 p "m.&#13;
K. O. T. M. hail. Visiting sisters e o r d i a l l v 111&#13;
v i t e d . LII.A C O N I W A Y , Lady C o m ,&#13;
• / N I G H T S of n i K L O Y A L GUAKD&#13;
F. IJ, A n d r e w s P. . ^t&#13;
TRADE M A R K S&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS AC.&#13;
Anvone seoJIri^ n sketch arfd d'escrlptum may&#13;
rmirkly aseertiuo o u r opinion free w h e t h e r a n&#13;
laveiitum is prehnhlv patentable, Comraunlcatlons^&#13;
tricMycontidctittal. HANDBOOK on P a t e n t s&#13;
sunt tree. oMest acency for securinK patenta.&#13;
Patents taken through Munn * Co. recelT«&#13;
tv^riiil notice, without charge, in t h o » ScivntifrC Hmerkast A handsomely i'ln!«trB(e&lt;t weekly. T/inzas*&lt;IB&gt;&#13;
erl.ittoTi 1 if ;inv si-ient IHc journal. TOITUSW • • •&#13;
v e t r ; tour month,*, *1. Sold by aU new.idealeTB.&#13;
MUNN &amp;Co.36iBro«d"^ New York&#13;
Rranch office. Rs&gt; F SL, W a s h i n s l o n . D. C.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. S'GLER M. D- C, L. SIGLER M. D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
P h y s i c i a n s a n d SurgeLinn. A l l call? promptly&#13;
nttended t o d a y or n i g h t . Office on Main street&#13;
P i n c k e e r , Mich.&#13;
Lax-ets 5 c Sweet to Eat&#13;
A Candy Bowel Uutin.&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SE1L&#13;
AT DiSPATCH OFFICE&#13;
ILLTHE C O U C H&#13;
AND CURE THE LUNGS&#13;
w TH Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
^OtNSUMPTION&#13;
0UGHS and&#13;
Price&#13;
50c &amp; $ 1 . 0 0&#13;
G u a r a n t e e d for a l l T H R O A T a n d&#13;
I.TJNG T R O U B L E S , o r M O N E T&#13;
B A C K .&#13;
,!Hp,PWpi&#13;
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The Evolution of&#13;
" Household Remedies.&#13;
T t i e m o d e r n p a t e n t m e d i c i n e b u t i -&#13;
n e w i s t h e n a t u r a l o u t g r o w t h o i t h e&#13;
okt-ticfie h o u s e h o l d r e m e d i e s . •&#13;
I t t h e e a r l y h i s t o r y of t h i s t o t t u f c r y ,&#13;
E V E R Y F A M I L Y H A P I T S H O M E -&#13;
M A D E M E D I C I N E S . H e r b t e a s ,&#13;
b i t t e r s , l a x a t i v e s And t o n i c s , w e r e t o b e&#13;
f o u n d i n a l m o s t e v e r y h o u s e , c o m p o u n d -&#13;
e d b y t h e h o u s e w i f e , s o m e t i m e s a s s i s t e d&#13;
b y t h e a p o t h e c a r y o r t h e f a m i l y d o c t o r .&#13;
S u c h r e m e d i e s a s p i c r a , w h i c h w a s&#13;
a l o e s a n d q u a s s i a , d i s s o l y e d i n a p p l e&#13;
b r a n d y . S o m e t i m e s a h o p t o n i c , *- d e&#13;
of w h i s k e y , h o p s a n d b i t t e r b a r * . - A&#13;
s c o r e o r m o r e of p o p u l a r , h o m e - m a d e&#13;
r e m e d i e s w e r e t h u s c o m p o u n d e d , t h e&#13;
f o r m u l a e f o r w h i c h w e r e p a s s e d a l o n g&#13;
f r o m h o u s e t o h o u s e , s o m e t i m e s w r i t t e n ,&#13;
s o m e t i m e s v e r b a l l y c o m m u n i c a t e d .&#13;
T h e p a t e n t m e d i c i n e b u s i n e s s i s a&#13;
n a t u r a l o u t g r o w t h f r o m t h i s w h o l e -&#13;
s o m e , o l d - t i m e c u s t o m . I n t h e b e g i n -&#13;
n i n g , s o m e e n t e r p r i s i n g d o c t o r , i m -&#13;
p r e s s e d b y t h e u s e f u l n e s s of o n e of&#13;
t h e s e h o m e - m a d e r e m e d i e s , w o u l d t a k e&#13;
i t u p , i m p r o v e i t i n m a n y w a y s , m a n u -&#13;
f a c t u r e i t o n a l a r g e s c a l e , a d v e r t i s e i t&#13;
m a i n l y t h r o u g h a l m a n a c s f o r t h e h o m e ,&#13;
a n d t h u s i t w o u l d b e c o m e u s e d o v e r a&#13;
U r g e a r e a . L A T T E R L Y T H E H O U S E -&#13;
H O L D R E M E D Y B U S I N E S S T O O K&#13;
A M O R E E X A C T A N D S C I E N T I F I C&#13;
F O R M .&#13;
P e r u n a w a s o r i g i n a l l y o n e of t h e s e&#13;
o l d - t i m e r e m e d i e s . I t w a s u s e d b y t h e&#13;
M e n n o n i t e s , of P e n n s y l v a n i a , b e f o r e i t&#13;
w a s offered t o t h e p u b l i c f o r s a l e . D r .&#13;
H a r t m a a , T H E O R I G I N A L C O M -&#13;
P O U N D E R O F P E R U N A , i s of M e n -&#13;
n o n i t e o r i g i n . F i r s t , h e p r e s c r i b e d i t&#13;
for h i s n e i g h b o r s a n d h i s p a t i e n t s .&#13;
T h e »xii of i t i n c r e a s e d , a n d a t l a s t h e&#13;
e s t a b l i s h e d a m a n u f a c t o r y a n d f u r -&#13;
n i s h e d i t t o t h e g e n e r a l d r u g t r a d e .&#13;
P e r u n a i s u s e f u l i n a g r e a t m a n y&#13;
c l i m a t i c a i l m e n t s , s u c h a s c o u g h s , c o l d s ,&#13;
s o r e t h r o a t , b r o n c h i t i s , a n d c a t a r r h a l&#13;
d i s e a s e s g e n e r a l l y . T H O U S A N D S O F&#13;
F A M I L I E S H A V E L E A R N E D T H E&#13;
U S E O F P E R U N A a n d i t s v a l u e i n t h e&#13;
t r e a t m e n t of t h e s e a i l m e n t s . T h e y&#13;
h a v e l e a r n e d t o t r u s t a n d b e l i e v e i n&#13;
D r . H r t t m a n ' s j u d g m e n t , a n d t o r e l y&#13;
on h U r e m e d y , P e r u n a .&#13;
W o r l d ' s C h e a p e s t G a s .&#13;
AorMPliris t o t h e G a s W o r l d , p r i d e&#13;
of p l a c e u s t h e s u p p l i e r s of t h e c h e a p -&#13;
e a t g a * i n t h e w o r l d ip n o w s h a r e d&#13;
w i t h t h o Widnf-a c o r p o r a t i o n b y t h e&#13;
HhetHold ( l a * c o m p a n y of E n g l a n d ,&#13;
•who h a v e just a n n o u n c e d a r e d u c t i o n&#13;
of OHM p e n n y p e r t h o u s a n d e u b i c f e e t&#13;
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I s e v e r a l d o c t o r s , a n d s p e n t a b o u t t h r e e j&#13;
! h u n d r e d d o l l a r s , w i t h o u t a n y s u c c e s s , ;&#13;
h u t t h i s is i n i h i y t h e s e v e n ' h d;ty t h a t&#13;
I lu!.ve b e e n u s i n g t h e ( ' u t i e n r a i t e n u e&#13;
1 d i e s i c o s i i i r ; :t d o l l a r a m i a h u d ' i , :&#13;
w h i c h h a v e c u r e d m e c o m p l e t e l y , s o&#13;
thai. 1 c a n a g a i n a t t e n d t o m y b u s i -&#13;
n e s s . 1 went, to w o r k a g a i n to-nighi..&#13;
i 1 h a d b e e n s u f f e r i n g f o r e i g h l &gt; c a r s&#13;
| a n d h a v e n o w b e e n c u r e d b y t h e C u t -&#13;
i n t r a R e m e d i e s w i t h i n a w e e k . F r i t z&#13;
H i r s c h l a f f , 24 C o l u m b u s A v e . . N e w&#13;
j Y o r k , N . Y., M a r c h 29 a n d A p r i l 6,&#13;
j 1906." _&#13;
U n i t e d S t a t e s L e a d s in O i l .&#13;
I Of e v e r y 100 g a l l o n s of i l l u m i n a t i n g&#13;
• oil u s e d i n t h e w o r l d , 54 g a l l o n ' s a r o&#13;
p r o d u c e d i n t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s .&#13;
i m p o r t a n t t o M o t h e r s .&#13;
Examine c*wfu.Uy erery bottle of CASTORIA.&#13;
a s&amp;fc and unfa remedy for infants aad children.&#13;
and iec that it&#13;
Bear* the&#13;
Signature of&#13;
to Use For Oter 3 0 Ycar». -&#13;
I h a Klndr Ton B a r s Aiwafa Sou*m&#13;
I t ' s difficult for s t i i h t - f t s t e d |&#13;
p r e a c h e r t o h o l d b i s C 0 Q g r « t a \ i n u ,&#13;
. Protective Paint&#13;
P a r e W h i t e L e a d P a i n t protects&#13;
prop.-rtv a^Aii^t repairs, replacement&#13;
a n d clcttuiortUon. It n - u k ^ buildings&#13;
look better, wc-ir Ixittor—-md soli h e i .&#13;
t e r . Use only P u m Linseed Oil a a d&#13;
P u r e W h i t e L e a d m a d e b y t a s&#13;
Old Dutch rrocpr-s,, which is sold i a&#13;
k e g s with thid Dutch 1.5oy t r a d e m a r k&#13;
o n t h e side.&#13;
T h i s t r a d e m u r k ' p r o t e c t s y o u&#13;
against fraudulent&#13;
White L&lt;-ad&#13;
adulterations a n d&#13;
substitutes.&#13;
SEND FOR&#13;
BOOK&#13;
"A. Talk on P a i n t "&#13;
gl»*» valuable* informatlrm&#13;
on tho palot&#13;
•nbj*-t. Ront tnm&#13;
ttpoa r«Que«t. AH /«•** i&#13;
1*07 bears tki* MOlHk.&#13;
N A T I O N A L L E A D C O M P A N Y&#13;
In wkichtvtr of the follom.&#13;
ing cilitt u n*&lt;*rtrt ymt:&#13;
Maw York. Bottaa. Bnffalo* 0l**tla»4&#13;
Utanlaaati. Otau*«o. Rtei-onta. Pfcll*drt&#13;
»aU(.TohnT. X*«t»«Br&lt;». Oo.l ~&#13;
(Nalloa*! LmaA • Oil Go.1&#13;
"*Hte..&#13;
'*&#13;
B*. 1».&#13;
... * " " t " ^ -&#13;
VjM' a&#13;
::f'.&gt;•;-'&#13;
.«?&#13;
* i :&#13;
* * k - :&#13;
ftiv&#13;
GO THEIR OWN WAY&#13;
•u « "&gt; * * • • « • * .&#13;
QHtMISgUl AJAftCA MAKE. UVTLs*&#13;
T R O U B L E .&#13;
e « t t J « m e n t § H a v e T h s l r O w n " M a y o r , "&#13;
Wl|0 (a A b s o l u t e R u j e r »jid,6Qt&gt;&#13;
t i c * AH Oiaputea • — f u n c -&#13;
t i o n s of " H i g h b i n d e r s . "&#13;
OONT QRUMBLC AT TRIFLEaV&#13;
T h e r e w e r e a b o u t 40,000 p e r s o n a in&#13;
SftU Franclbco'B C h i n a t o w n before t h e&#13;
7^earrthiiuaJ»e a n d t h e r e a r e a b o u t 7,000&#13;
; I n t b a t a t N e w York, a n d t h e s e t w o&#13;
. aettlementH a r e v e r i t a b l e cities w i t h i n&#13;
• citle*\' E a c h h a s its* o w n " m a y o r , " w b o&#13;
r u l e s o v e r It' w i t h o u t r e f e r e n c e t o t h e&#13;
law** of tlae land, b u t w i i t / u i a n a g e s to&#13;
m a i n t a i n oi'der m u c h mui'e succesbfully&#13;
t h a n xhe w h i t e luayn* a n d hia police&#13;
do iu t h e i r tfiTiiurii.^.&#13;
No CMj^aman &lt;'\er s e e k s t h e aid ut&#13;
t h e ' A m e r i c a n " courts. H e lias lew business&#13;
d i s p u t e s , f'ui- t h e Chiiuuuuu ix&#13;
n o t e d for ii!« I m i t ^ t y a s a t r a d e r .&#13;
C o m m e r c i a l "ijai&gt;cr" ib u n k n o w n&#13;
a m o n g them. T h e C h i n a m a n i s t h e&#13;
one m a n in b u s i n e s s w h o s e word is&#13;
a c c e d e d by w h i t e m e r c h a n t s a s being&#13;
a s £opd a s h i s bond, if m i s f o r t u n e&#13;
o v e r t a k e s h i m a n d lie c a n n o t pay h e&#13;
c o m m i t s suicide a n d b e q u e a t h s all t h a t&#13;
r e m a i n s of his p r o p e r t y 10 his c r e d i t o r .&#13;
Occasionally a dead C h i n a n i a n is&#13;
found i n tin; s t r e e t with a knife o r&#13;
bullet -wound t o t«dl h o w h e c a m e by&#13;
his d e a t h . T h e w h i t e police t a k e&#13;
c h a r g e of t h e body a n d m a k e t h e usual&#13;
inquiries, b u t they n e v e r discover anything.&#13;
At t h e s i ^ h t of a p o l i c e m a n or&#13;
d e t e c t i v e C h i n a t o w n b e c o m e s d u m b ,&#13;
but t h o s e w h o h a v e t h e confidence of&#13;
t h e C h i n a m a n c a n easily learn t h a t&#13;
W i n g S i n g w a s a m a n w i t h o u t r e s p e c t&#13;
for t h e e m p e r o r o r his a n c e s t o r s , w h o&#13;
neglected t o obey t h e m o s t e x c e l l e n t&#13;
c o m m a n d s of t h e " m a y o r . "&#13;
T h e " H i g h b i n d e r s " w h o h a v e b e e n&#13;
m e n t i o n e d a r e supposed to fill a n o t h e r&#13;
f_ujiciion. as welJ a i t h a t of an inofficial&#13;
police. T h e y a r e said t o bo maintained&#13;
by t h e S i x C o m p a n i e s , t h a t&#13;
m y s t e r i o u s t r a d i n g o r g a n i z a t i o n w i t h&#13;
h e a d q u a r t e r s i n China, which c o n t r o l s&#13;
nearly every C h i n a m a n in America.&#13;
The great C h i n e s e l a u n d r y b u s i n e s s&#13;
in most of t h e cities of A m e r i c a i s&#13;
conlroled by them, a s a r e t h e C h i n e s e&#13;
grocery a n d supply s h o p s a n d t h e&#13;
curio shops, w h e r e o r i e n t a l a r t i c l e s&#13;
a r e sold to t h e w h i t e m a n a t astonishingly&#13;
low prices. T h e " H i g h b i n d e r s "&#13;
c a r r y o u t t h e will of t h e i r m a s t e r s , t h e&#13;
Six C o m p a n i e s .&#13;
0 « r » r e occasions t h e A m e r i c a n poller&#13;
a n c a i t e v i d e n c e e n o u g h to justify&#13;
a n aaYaat on t h e c h a r g e of a s s a u l t o r&#13;
m a n a t a l i g h t e r a g a i n s t a C h i n a m a n w h o&#13;
is s u p p o s e d to be o n e of t h e s e m y s t e -&#13;
rious s e c r e t police. T h e m a n n o sooner&#13;
a p p e a r s in t h e police c o u r t t h a n o n e&#13;
of t h e a b l e s t c r i m i n a l l a w y e r s obtainable&#13;
a p p e a r s t o defend h i m a n d a&#13;
cloud of w i t n e s s e s i s p r o d u c e d t o&#13;
s w e a r t h a t h e w a s a t h o u s a n d m i l e s&#13;
a w a y w h e n t h e c r i m e w a s c o m m i t t e d .&#13;
T h e p o w e r of t h e Six C o m p a n i e s is&#13;
tuiid t o e x t e n d even t o China. T h e y&#13;
c a n w r e a k thoir v e n g e a n c e on t h e rela&#13;
t i v e s of t h e m a n w h o offends t h e m in&#13;
America, should h e s u c c e e d in escaping,&#13;
and so g r e a t is t h e family affection&#13;
which is c h a r a c t e r i s t i c of t h e&#13;
C h i n a m a n t h a t h e seldom m a k e s a n y&#13;
effort t o e s c a p e , p r e f e r r i n g t o suffer&#13;
the c o n s e q u e n c e s of his w r o n g doing&#13;
in Ids own person.&#13;
Moth in N e w York and S a n Frnn-&#13;
* i^ro t b e C h i n a t o w n s a r e self-eontit&#13;
i tied cities'. T h e y a r e n o t even dependent&#13;
on t h e w h i t e m a n for t h e i r&#13;
food supply. Dozens of q u a i n t , weirdlooking&#13;
t h i n g s t o e a t a r e t o be found&#13;
in t h e C h i n e s e q u a r t e r s . C h i n e s e cloths&#13;
a n d altfta a r e imjjprted fHotn C h i n a&#13;
for c j o j h l n i a n d C h i n e s e f u r n i t u r e a n d&#13;
^ r t a ^ U a ^ f o T H b ^ a M a a a J i o l d . S w n t h e ^&#13;
fresh v e g e t a b l e ^ jt»*iroirn by Cbtnose •&#13;
m a r k e t g a r d e n « * a l m t h e s u b u r b s of&#13;
t h e cities, a n d t h e poultry which forms*&#13;
ao large a p a r t of t h e C h i n a m a n ' s food&#13;
is bred b y C h i n e s e p o u l t r y f a r m e r s .&#13;
E g g s a r e Imported from C h i n a a n d a r e&#13;
c o n s i d e r e d a g r e a t delicacy w h e n they&#13;
h a v e a t t a i n e d t h e a g e of t w o y e a r s .&#13;
T h e h e a l t h a u t h o r i t i e s find t h e Chin&#13;
e s e c l e a n t y a n d r e m a r k a b l y free from&#13;
d i s e a s e a n d a m e n a b l e t o discipline.&#13;
Twanty-flva Busbars Wheat arid Fortyfive&#13;
Bushel* O a t s P a r A e r a A r e&#13;
in W s t t t r h C a n a d a .&#13;
S a l t c o a t a , 8ask.,&#13;
8th D e c e m b e r , 1906.&#13;
T o t h e E d i t o r .&#13;
D e a r Sir,&#13;
I willingly give you t h e r e s u l t of m y&#13;
four a n d a half y e a r s ' e x p e r i e n c e i n&#13;
t h e District of S a l t c o a t a .&#13;
P r e v i o u s t o c o m i n g h e r e I f a r m e d i n&#13;
B a l d w i n , St. Croix County, W i s c o n s i n ,&#13;
a n d a s I h a v e h e a r d a g r e a t deal about&#13;
t h e C a n a d i a n N o r t h - W e s t , I decided&#13;
t o t a k e a t r i p t h e r e a n d s e e t h e count&#13;
r y for myself. I waskj^.-Ampressed&#13;
with t h e r i c h n e s s of t h e soil t h a t i&#13;
b o u g h t half a section of land a b o u t&#13;
five miles from t h e town of S a l t c o a t s .&#13;
I m o v e d on t o t h e l a n d t h e following&#13;
J u n e a n d t h a i y e a r b r o k e $0 a c r e s ,&#13;
which I cropped i n 1904, a n d h a d lit)&#13;
b u s h e l s w h e a t p e r a c r e . Ln 1905, with&#13;
a n a c r e a g e of 160 a c r e s , 1. h a d 1M bushels&#13;
wheat a n d 35 b u s h e l s of outs per&#13;
a c r e . Jn iyu*j, with 175 a c r e s under&#13;
crop, 1 hud 25 bushels w h e a t a n d •!&amp;&#13;
b u s h e l s of outs per a c r e .&#13;
F r o m t h e above m e n t i o n e d yields&#13;
you c a n readily u n d e r s t a n d that 1 a m&#13;
very well pleased with t h e C a n a d i a n&#13;
West. Of course, I h a v e h a d t o work&#13;
h a r d , b u t I don't m i n d t h a t when I&#13;
get such a good r e t u r n for my labor.&#13;
To a n y o n e t h i n k i n g a b o u t c o m i n g to&#13;
t h i s c o u n t r y 1 c a n truthfully say t h a t&#13;
if t h e y a r e p r e p a r e d t o w o r k a n d not&#13;
g r u m b l e a t trilles, t h e y a r e bound t o&#13;
g e t on. S o m e t h i n g s 1 would like different,&#13;
b u t t a k e t h e c o u n t r y all round,&#13;
I d o n ' t k n o w w h e r e t o go to g e t a better.&#13;
Y o u r s truly,&#13;
(Signed) O. 15. OLSOX.&#13;
W r i t e t o a n y C a n a d i a n G o v e r n m e n t&#13;
Agent for l i t e r a t u r e a n d full particul&#13;
a r s .&#13;
GONE FOREVER.&#13;
mm mmm&#13;
be dved . w i t h T U T N A H ^ A D K L E S S S | R K H E A D A C H E&#13;
DYES, fart,-bright, durable colors. • j P l f J P l a l a W a a a » » J | f P a T » W P a | a a »&#13;
A bird in t h e bnah la w o r t h t h r e e in&#13;
t h e hand—'from t h e b i r d ' s viewpoint.&#13;
Mr*. Wlnalow'a Boothia* Byrup.&#13;
For children uwtalng, toilet* tie gun*, radacea ftv&#13;
flunm»Uoa,*]tftjpp*ia,carMwia4colk;. S&amp;cabottt*.&#13;
I t ' s usually t h e m a n w h o h a s somet&#13;
h i n g t o any w h o tluesu't s a y i t .&#13;
Take Garfield Tea us the Spring—it will :&#13;
gave you many day* of headache, lassitude&#13;
and general ill health. This natural laxa- !&#13;
tive purines the blood, cleanses the by«- j&#13;
tern and establishes a normal actiun ur-i&#13;
liver, kidneys and bowels. *]&#13;
Britons Fond of Theatricals.&#13;
It lb e s t i m a t e d t h a t G r e a t Britain&#13;
s p e n d s $150,01)0 a day on t h e a t e r s .&#13;
F a m o u s Book F r e e .&#13;
Kveiv I'cjidi'r cf Ulirf p a p e r c m j.rM iriv !&#13;
of charj-T ''lie &lt;&gt;i' C:\ CoJtYc's Kmioic l;&lt;&lt;i&gt;k&lt;&#13;
whifh tells ( 1' a n r w rmuhui'l hy &lt;\ !iit-It '&#13;
pc'i&gt;;ms atllicted with JV;;:'JI.--&gt;', l i e u !&#13;
Nui.-t".-, Sure Kye-. |-';ii!iii&gt;i Sii'iil r'r. t.;i ;u:v&#13;
i-ausc, &lt;-;i'i cure ; lit'iu -el vc-j ;•! h.'j'.'^u til&#13;
r-m;dl cxpeiiM'.&#13;
Wi-itc ,i letter iijiiiicJi'dely U, Dr. W . O.&#13;
ConVe, '.'A'/} Crii(iir&gt; Uidg., J A'- .'.lu.nes, l a .&#13;
C h a n g e W r o u g h t by T i m e .&#13;
Dinizulu, t h e Zulu chief o n c e widely&#13;
k n o w n and feared in war, h a s a&#13;
g r a p h o p h o u e with which h e .entert&#13;
a i n s h i s g u e s t s . H e h a s also a n org&#13;
a n built in E n g l a n d , on which h e :&#13;
plays.&#13;
P o c i t t r e l y emre* bf&#13;
the* Utm WOm&#13;
Tbqr aiao reUere Sav&#13;
txaas trom Dyipepala, Dh&#13;
g\gmttQ2 and Too Hearty&#13;
lWlnjfr A perfect rem*&#13;
Drowstaasa, Bad Taste&#13;
la Uu) MoaUw Ooaua&#13;
Toagoe, Palo ln tbe side,&#13;
TORPID LTVKR. TJwgr&#13;
regolate toe Bowela. Purely Yegetaale.&#13;
SMALL M L SMIUDOSE. SHALL WIDE.&#13;
CARTERS&#13;
llTTLB IVER&#13;
PIUS.&#13;
Gfnuine Must Bear&#13;
Fac-SimiiB Signature&#13;
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. m THE&#13;
L i a n g ' s Diplomatic A n s w e r ,&#13;
of t h e s u r e s t i n d i c a t i o n s of t h e&#13;
revolution of s e a t i m e n t t a k i n g place&#13;
in C h i n a i s t h e p o p u r a r m o v e m e n t toward&#13;
t h e e d u c a t i o n of w o m e n . O n e&#13;
of t h e s t r o n g a d v o c a t e s for t h e n e w&#13;
d e p a r t u r e i s t h e p r e s e n t C h i n e s e mini&#13;
s t e r a t W a s h i n g t o n , S i r Liang, w h o s e&#13;
ABMrieva) a c h o o l life, w h e n for p a r t of&#13;
t h e tiaa* ft* w a s n a d e r t h e i n s t r u c t i o n&#13;
j t woeaam t e a c h e r s , g a v e h i m a l a s t i n g&#13;
VP^^rmfmA • » f e m i n i n e i n t e l l e c t u a l powers.&#13;
SfcoTtfy before h e left C h i n a for&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n S i r L i a n g h a d a n interview&#13;
w i t h t h e e m p r e s s d o w a g e r a n d&#13;
t h e aubject w a s b r o u g h t up. " I h a v e&#13;
b e e n a d v i s e d , " said h e r m a j e s t y , " t o&#13;
r i n t r o d u c e s c h o o l s f o r g i r l s into t h e&#13;
e m p i r e . B u t I h a v e noticed t h a t a s&#13;
soon a a w o p e n b e g i n t h e p u r s u i t of&#13;
leavBtafc tgfcy a r e seized w i t h t h e&#13;
\ i i e d d l i n g in politics." S i r&#13;
&lt; U s u a f Waal , e q u a l t o t h e occasion.&#13;
" T e a r m i j e e t y ' s a u b j e c t s rejoice,', h e&#13;
replied, " t h a t t h e 400.000,000 of China&#13;
for t h e i r r u l e r a n e d u c a t e d wornftamoa&#13;
expovted, 1n 1905; 27\L t o o l&#13;
of cacoa beans.&#13;
T e n y e a r s a g o a f a r m e r p u t his initials&#13;
on a dollar bill. T h e n e x t day lie&#13;
w e n t to t h e n e a r e s t t o w n a n d spent it&#13;
with a m e r c h a n t , l'efore t h e y e a r w a s&#13;
out h e got t h e dollar back. F o u r t i m e s&#13;
in six y e a r s t h e dollar c a m e buck t o&#13;
h i m for p r o d u c e a n d t h r e e t i m e s h e&#13;
h e a r d of it i n t h e p o c k e t of his neighbors.&#13;
T h e last t i m e lie g o t it back four&#13;
y e a r s a g o . H e sent it t o a mail o r d e r&#13;
h o u s e . H e n e v e r h a s s e e n t h a t dollar&#13;
since, a n d n e v e r will. T h a t dollar bill&#13;
will n e v e r pay any m o r e school o r&#13;
road t a x for him, will n e v e r build o r&#13;
b r i g h t e n a n y of t h e h o m e s of t h e comm&#13;
u n i t y . H e s e n t i t e n t i r e l y out. of&#13;
t h e c i r c l e of usefulness t o himself a n d&#13;
his n e i g h b o r s .&#13;
P a t r o n i z e your local m e r c h a n t w h o&#13;
h e l p s you t o pay your taxes, support&#13;
your schools a n d c h u r c h e s , a n d lends&#13;
a h e l p i n g h a n d i n t i m e s of s i c k n e s s&#13;
a n d t r o u b l e .&#13;
Q u e e n ' s Most Prized Decoration.&#13;
O n e of t h e d e c o r a t i o n s of which t h e&#13;
/pieen of Portugal is proudest is t h e&#13;
medal of t h e British H u m a n e society,&#13;
which s h e w a s asked t o accept after&#13;
•die had leaped into t h e h a r b o r a t&#13;
,'dsbon a n d saved a d r o w n i n g m a n .&#13;
On all g r e a t occasions this decoration&#13;
Is to be seen pinned on h e r dress. Her&#13;
majesty, who is a sister of the Dtvch-&#13;
(••s-s d'Aosta. recently visiting us, is&#13;
a n o t h e r special favorite of t h e royal&#13;
lamily, and, like h e r sister, w a s born&#13;
at York House. T w i c k e n h a m . Queen&#13;
Amelia w a s one of t h e very first women&#13;
to qualify herself a s an .\f. 1).&#13;
She laughingly tells h e r friends t h a t&#13;
her m o s t t r y i n g patient is King Carlos,&#13;
w h o m for years s h e h a s tried t c&#13;
diet for " t o o solid flesh."—Tit B i t s . /&#13;
A P P E N D I C I T I S .&#13;
N e t a t All N e c e s s a r y t o O p e r a t e In&#13;
Many C a s e s .&#13;
Wll ull i::il;b^, f h " ) ii1 :,;: y o n % I:J:-JI u; ^u...if c&#13;
:-.L'UJ: .('ill hi,nnil jiu.» .&gt; K.:i. i'..&gt;u&lt;1,t,.;ii lu-t wt-erj Lilt:&#13;
gf I i' :; .iU 'JO u J . ii i-'ji: :-u 111. ;• . - r n u u n ; U •&lt;:.: ijp|n i;&#13;
l i e ! •:• ;i ,v:i :.i-. -Jin. :S ; j , : ;, i•.-; • &gt;• g, J ,1 I;-OIH U. 1&#13;
U' •'•. '.;: •:. JUUi'tiHilli'3, O-'J.:-:-. :„,L)is. COIJ;.)*-11-,::.&#13;
ui'i\i&gt;-::'$r&lt;, •j.'iiji-TiUer.., r u . r - : IH-.ITS, iiretiicn&#13;
Mi.'iuiis, c:i&gt;«tkb, ijit: , Iji-i »v:in, iil .1 mi ,'ij ) v.ara, &lt;•:'&#13;
Isosijinil ApynsnlU'-s bf.rti'i1 .. !*J ;u:d S y u j i s&#13;
li&gt;iie&lt;i iri s i i c j u i ; raiiiiKSS wiOi Miit^.^li- |&gt;a.y. Hi&#13;
w B i a u . ' i 1 an/e-lijiii-Ois j.-iiy rirtcl 0 l,«&gt;v :i/i(je.'i ;il;&#13;
)t«;ir.s st''Vice. Aiipln:;wit(i, mii^t 6c A m f r . c i i i&#13;
zeu.s. Sij « o r i l i lit &lt;_•:,;: iiitiK lie© u i r u c i i i t 1 - . I&#13;
tUxtmnrtm t ,1','L'I u U o v . u n r c i r c r r s \&lt;uc uain •&#13;
ut unii siiiiiBjn . i'ljniii r 1 j'.-r moiit iis u;ty n:ul i /1^1&#13;
ia JM.V u p o u ; o (.•jjllKtruetii w a t i i n " imir iiimu!. .&#13;
U. S. N A V Y RECRUITING S T A T I O N S : !&#13;
No. SI Lafayette Avenue, - DETROIT. MICH. J&#13;
ChmuLer o! Comrarrce Buildiuji, - TOLEDO, OHIO.&#13;
Ymi Offire Building, - » JACKSON. MICH.&#13;
Fusl 0'Ma Builiiiu^. - - SAUiflAW. MICH,&#13;
...r-&#13;
M J I -&#13;
'.)»'•,'-&#13;
I I . U -&#13;
i . r k v ,&#13;
en-&#13;
• 1 . 1 1 ' -&#13;
t : : t , -&#13;
' | U i l&#13;
&gt; .1: 0&#13;
THE CHANGE OF LIFE&#13;
Sensible Advice to Women from Hrs. Henry Lee,&#13;
firs, Fred Certia and Hrs. Pinkham.&#13;
MRS HENRY LEE&#13;
Owing- t o m o d e r n m e t h o d s of livingn&#13;
o t o n e w o m a n i n a t h o u s a n d a p -&#13;
p r o a c h e s t h i s p e r f e c t l y n a t u r a l c h a n g e&#13;
w i t h o u t e x p e r i e n c i n g a t r a i n of very&#13;
a n n o y i n g a n d s o m e t i m e s p a i n f u l&#13;
s } ' m p t o m s .&#13;
T h i s i s t h e m o s t c r i t i c a l p e r i o d of&#13;
h e r w h o l e e x i s t e n c e a n d e v e r y w o m a n&#13;
w h o n e g l e c t s t h e c a r e of h e r h e a l t h&#13;
a t t h i s t i m e invites d i s e a s e a n d pain.&#13;
W h e n h e r .system is i n a d e r a n g e d&#13;
c o n d i t i o n o r she is predisposed t o&#13;
a p o p l e x y o r c o n g e s t i o n of a n y o r g a n ,&#13;
t h e t e n d e n c y is a t t h i s p e r i o d&#13;
likely t o become active a n d w i t h a&#13;
host of n e r v o u s i r r i t a t i o n s niahe life ;•&#13;
b u r d e n . At, this t i m e also c a n c e r s&#13;
a n d t n m o r s a r e m o r e liable t o fo&#13;
and b e g i n t h e i r d&lt;*structive w &lt;irk .&#13;
Such w a r n i n g s y m p t o m s a s &gt;&lt; 1&#13;
of suffocation, hot flashes. h&lt;&#13;
t a c k a c h e s , m e l a n c h o l i a , drc:.&#13;
p o n d i n g evil, palpifat ion 01 :)&#13;
i 1T1 g u l a r i t ies, c o m t ip;&gt;; c :i ..,&#13;
TICS-, a re p n nnpl \y ]ic«nled I&#13;
iii. &lt; iii w o m e n w h o a re a&#13;
1 he period of 1 ifc w h e n 1&#13;
c h a n g e m a y he e x p e c t e d .&#13;
V i s . F r e d Certia. 10 1-1 So&#13;
S t r e e t . So. llend, l u d . , ^ r&#13;
Denr Tdrs. Pinkham :&#13;
"Lydia K. Imikliam's Vegttrtli'u&#13;
poujid is the i'leai in&#13;
i-m&#13;
as&#13;
i i i ( 1&#13;
i l l '&#13;
in&#13;
. I ' d&#13;
' e l . i ' l&#13;
i n ' . e ' .&#13;
' i e .': , l: !.'&#13;
' 1 ' '&#13;
•lie&#13;
v. j .&#13;
MRS. fRED CERTIA&#13;
are passing through Change of Life. F o r&#13;
several months I suffered from hot flashes,&#13;
extreme nervousness, headache and sleeplessness.&#13;
I had no appetite and could not&#13;
sleep. I had made up my mind there was&#13;
no help for me until I began to use Lydia&#13;
E. Pinkhain's Vegetable Compound, my&#13;
had symptoms ceased, and it brought oie&#13;
safely through the danger period, built&#13;
up my system and I am in excellent health.&#13;
I consider Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable&#13;
('nm])ound unsurpassed for women during&#13;
this trving period of life."'&#13;
Mrs. H e n r y Lee, 60 W i n t e r S t r e e t .&#13;
N e w H a v e n , Conn., w r i t e s :&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—&#13;
"Aftersuffering untold misery for three&#13;
years during Change of Life I hoard of&#13;
Lydia 1']. Pinkhain's Vegetable Compound.&#13;
I wrote you of my condition, and Itegan to&#13;
take Lydia P. I'mkliarn.s Vegetable Coin&#13;
pound and followed your advice, and to-day&#13;
1 MH well and happy. 1 can now walk anywhere&#13;
am; w( ;k a&gt; well as anyone, and fur&#13;
• years p;v\ i&lt;;.- 1 had tried hut could not p&gt;t&#13;
j IIHIIIHII Mi'hi!!' In hv I consider vour niedicine&#13;
,"L S(I\ ereiqn hiilni for sutl'eiin^ 'UHIICMI ."'&#13;
j \Von-uTii . -.sin:.' ilirough this critical&#13;
i j.el'ioJ s l ; o i ; : d r e l y n p o n L y i i i a K.&#13;
i l';nkiKim'.s \ c g c - a i i l e (\',nijionnd. If&#13;
( t h e r e is a n y t h i n g a b o u t y o u r case&#13;
yon don't u n d e r s t a n d w r i t e t o M r s .&#13;
i I'inkhum. I , u m , Mass., for advice. I t&#13;
• is free a n d lias g u i d e d t h o u s a n d s t o&#13;
odieine tor weim h e a l t h .&#13;
When a medicine has been stressful in restoring to health,&#13;
actually thousands of women, yon cannot well say without tryingit,&#13;
" I do not believe it will help me." It is your duty to yourself&#13;
and family to try Lydia E. Pinkhain's Vegetable Compound.&#13;
A u t o m o b i l e s a n d A p p e n d i c i t i s s c a r e |&#13;
s o m e people before t h e y a r e h i t .&#13;
A p p e n d i c i t i s i s often c a u s e d by too&#13;
m u c h s t a r c h in t h e b o w e l s . S t a r c h i s&#13;
h a r d t o digest a n d clogs u p t h e digest&#13;
i v e m a c h i n e r y — a l s o t e n d s t o form&#13;
c a k e s in t h e cecum. ( T h a t ' s t h e blind&#13;
pouch a t e n t r a n c e t o t h e a p p e n d i x . )&#13;
A N . H. girl h a d a p p e n d i c i t i s , b u t&#13;
lived on n # k for a w h i l e — t h e n Grape-&#13;
N u t s a n d g o t well w i t h o u t a n operation.&#13;
S h e s a y s : " F i v e y e a r s a g o w h i l e a t&#13;
school, I suffered t e r r i b l y with constip&#13;
a t i o n a n d indigestion." ( T o o m u c h&#13;
s t a r c h , w h i t e bread, p o t a t o e s , etc.,&#13;
w h i c h s h e did n o t digest.)&#13;
" S o o n a f t e r I left school I h a d a n att&#13;
a c k of a p p e n d i c i t i s a n d for t h i r t e e n&#13;
w e e k s lived on milk a n d w a t e r . W h e n&#13;
I r e c o v e r e d e n o u g h t o e a t solid food&#13;
t h e r e w a s n o t h i n g that, would a g r e e&#13;
w i t h m e , u n t i l a friend r e c o m m e n d e d&#13;
G r a p e - N u t s .&#13;
" W h e n I b e g a n t o e a t Grape»Nuts I&#13;
w e i g h e d 98 lbs., b u t I soon g r e w to 115&#13;
lbs. T h e d i s t r e s s after e a t i n g left m e&#13;
e n t i r e l y a n d n o w I a m like a n e w pers&#13;
o n . "&#13;
(A l i t t l * G r a p e - N u t s dissolved in hot ;&#13;
w a t p r o r milk would h a v e been m u c h&#13;
b e t t e r for t h i s c a s e t h a n milk a l o n e ,&#13;
for t h e s t a r c h y p a r t of t h e w h e a t a n d&#13;
b a r l e y I s c h t m r e d i n t o a form of dig&#13;
e s t a b l * s u g a r i n m a k i n g G r a p e -Nuts.)&#13;
N a m e g i v e n b y P o s t u m Co.. B a t t l e&#13;
C r e e k . Mien. Read t h e little book,&#13;
" T h e Road t o Wellvllle," IA p k g s .&#13;
" T h e r e ' s ft R e a s o n . "&#13;
The Endurance Test is a&#13;
good test for Boys' Shoes&#13;
The four-cybnder 40 horsepower boy who strikes anywhere&#13;
from a 15 to 40 mile gait and keeps it up from the peep of day&#13;
until bed t i m e - n e e d s a pair of&#13;
" H A R D P A N " SHOES&#13;
Because they wear like t h e everlasting hills. A sturdy&#13;
strength of build to stand the roughest, toughest wear that&#13;
any boy can give them. If your dealer handles this line he&#13;
will recommend this shoe, he knows that " H a r d - P a n " Shoes&#13;
'will keep right on going to school twice as long as an ordinary&#13;
pair of shoes, h e knows t h a t he is giving you better than good value—ha i s giving&#13;
yon t h e best.&#13;
Our name on t h e strap of every pair of t h e only Hard P a n s .&#13;
Mail a postal for our Boys booklet "Chips off t h e old block."&#13;
T h e Herotd Bertsch Shoe Co., Grand Rapids, M i c h .&#13;
•KI BEAUTY&#13;
For Preserving, Purifying:&#13;
and Beautifying tbe Skin,&#13;
Scalp, Hair, and Hands.&#13;
CuMmiru Soap ccmblnPfl delicate medicinal, cniol-&#13;
Urst, :;iw.tive. aiiiisojjiiL- pre; &lt; nii'd derived Kora&#13;
C\;t:air.l. the enut^JuiiCur.'. wUU tlie purist of sap-&#13;
OD'-cuiis I n w d i r n t i , ami m'Wt refreshing of flowrr&#13;
odor.s. Depots: Lundon, ^7 CCirterlioui-c .Sq.; raris,&#13;
ft Ruerte la l*aix; Austria. !£• Tv*:r,a ft Cw.. fcyoney;&#13;
India, B. K. IMul.CakutKi; ho. Africa, hennon,&#13;
Ltd., rape Town, etc.; Ifcjston. U7 Columbus&#13;
Ave., I'otter oru* A I'hrin. Corp.. tole Props.&#13;
lit*1-Mailed IT?c. liinv to ftt^ervt, Purity, awl Be&amp;utiiy Uio SJuo. i&gt;ca]p, HAir. JUU! iumte.&#13;
Fertile Farming&#13;
LANDS&#13;
Cheap&#13;
Easy Terms&#13;
In the Best Section&#13;
off the South&#13;
Une-^ellecr for General Farming.&#13;
Slock Kaisiug, berries, Fruit&#13;
and Vegetables.&#13;
Cantaloupes, .Strawberries, Peaches&#13;
Apples, Grapes, etc., give&#13;
handsome returns.&#13;
Cattle need but little winter feed.&#13;
HF.AT.TTIY T L ^ r A T K .&#13;
(iOOD W A T l ' K .&#13;
H&gt;N(i (&gt;KO\VlN(i .-HAS ON.&#13;
Address G. A. PARK, Gen. Im. * Inri'l Act.&#13;
'V- V-*.&#13;
Louisville &amp; Nashville&#13;
Re R. C o .&#13;
L O U I S V I L L E , KY,&#13;
W. L. DOUGLAS&#13;
$3.00 A N D $3.50 SHOES&#13;
W. L. D0U6US S4.00 GILT EKE SHOE? CANNOT BE EQUAUEQ U ANY MICE.&#13;
SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT All PRtOESx&#13;
N « B ' I Shoe*. *ft t o Sl.AO. KojV ?-h«^«. ».? t o SI iT,. V o m r n ' l&#13;
SboM, • * (o S1.A4). HI lM«fi' &amp; t »»tiar*&gt;ir« sh«&gt;e«, »d.-!5 ta Sl.OO,&#13;
W . L . Douglas slioes arc iecojrt../f»tt ly expert judges of footwe*r&#13;
to be the best in st.vle, fit a»«l wt&gt;ar pnxl'm^l in this country. Each&#13;
part of the shoe ami every detail or :he ui&amp;kinc is looked after&#13;
and watched over by skilled ^ofim/urn?, without regard to&#13;
time or cost. If i could take y&lt;&gt;u into my later farc&lt;.ries at}&#13;
Brockton, Mac*., a r d show ymf in'W rarrftiliy W. L. Douglas| _&#13;
shoes are made, • t; would then i &gt;MlrvM.mirt Why taey held their shape, tit better,&#13;
wear lonaer, And are of gTeater value than anr ether makea.&#13;
V. J« D«iufl*« 'ain* »ud urtj«« »« ituiipttl ou I l*r Iwiiow. wtiitfcjmlKt. !»• ««*ivr amtut Utah&#13;
rmfCtSf Ivetentse4u$t4tifli- &lt;'a^«v KMR.W/.M. W . A.. Ski%imfAut ArMklM»ai»iw.&#13;
Canadian Government&#13;
Free Farms&#13;
Over 200,000 American&#13;
(arnieN M-IIO have &gt;ettled&#13;
in Canada tluring&#13;
the past few veafs lestify&#13;
to the fact that Canada&#13;
is, bey cud question,&#13;
the greatest farming land in the'world. OVER NINETY&#13;
MILLION BUSHELS of wheat from the harvest of 1906 means good&#13;
money to the farmers of Western Canada when&#13;
the world has to be fed. Cattle Raising. Dairyi&#13;
n g a n d Mixed Farming are also profitable callings.&#13;
Coal, wood and water in abundance;&#13;
churches and schools convenient; m a r k e t s easy&#13;
of access. Taxes low.&#13;
For ad rice and iuformation address t h e Superintendent&#13;
of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, o r&#13;
a n r authorized Canadian Government Agent.&#13;
M. V. McINNES, 6 Ateaae Theatre BUck, Detrait,&#13;
Mkaifaa; ar C. A. UURIEK, Sadt Sla,&#13;
Marie, Mickifaa.&#13;
• J » .&#13;
•JBJBJBjpk BjsjsjBjj To c o n v l n e a MV&#13;
W^Um r r woman t h a t Paxh&#13;
W s V h a i l B l t&gt;B«AntlMptf«wHi&#13;
• ^ mm W~ pff^ improve her health,]&#13;
• • I k L and do all we claim&#13;
• ••S^SUBfor i t - W e w i I i&#13;
send her aasdutery free a large trial&#13;
box of Pax tine with book « laetnwv&#13;
tlons and genuine tertimontals. S e n d&#13;
jour name and address on a postal card.&#13;
c l e a n s e s&#13;
and Iteals&#13;
m u c o u s&#13;
m • a -&#13;
. . w bran* a t&#13;
lection*, such as nasal catarrh, perrte&#13;
rai-irrh and inflammatioaxaused try feminine&#13;
ills; sore eyes, sore threat and&#13;
mouth, by direct local treatment I t s cur.&#13;
ativrf power over these troubles Is extraordinary&#13;
and gives immediate reliet&#13;
Thousands of women are using and teeomtnending&#13;
i t every day. 16 eenta a t&#13;
dn.*g!«* orhTmsJL Rem^aber, bowerer.&#13;
• i llinn i II ii v&amp;uusw toxwxIT:&#13;
PAXTINE&#13;
^*WPP''&#13;
4 /&#13;
X&#13;
\&#13;
w^3"&#13;
. &gt; •&#13;
;yJ&amp;mm' IMtf£Mm***:"'" 4N » ^ &gt; H f^M ,.^*«jti\sm*-Jk0&#13;
^ ,/*i'i'--&#13;
,r; ;&gt;*&#13;
&gt;&#13;
1 5 5 m i l '&#13;
Oilr CorrespondBQh&#13;
*&#13;
• fte,&#13;
*•?•••&#13;
V"*&#13;
5&#13;
..1&#13;
p^&#13;
CTUDIIXA,&#13;
is on feh$&#13;
Mrs. Oberf; is a guest at A. (J.&#13;
Wsteon'e.&#13;
iMrs. H a r r y Stouftr i s in v e r y&#13;
p o o r h e a l t h . . , , 0&#13;
_ , r r ., • , . • " , ! A r t h u r G l e u n w a s h o m e b u u&#13;
P e a r l U a d l e y is s u f f e r i n g a u a t - ,&#13;
t a c k of e r y s i p e l a s . '&#13;
J . D . C o l t o u a u wife, of Chel»e*t&#13;
were^in U u a d i l l a S a t u r d a y .&#13;
J o h n H a r r i s , of t S t o c k b r i d g e ,&#13;
c a l l e d ou h i s p a w n t s last S u n d a y .&#13;
M r s . W m . G l e n n a n d d a u g h t e r&#13;
B o s e , o f - N o r t h L a k e , v i s i t e d h e r&#13;
s i s t e r , M r s J o h n Wejjjj, last S a t -&#13;
iny.&#13;
SOUTH V A B I O f f .&#13;
i g n o r e B r o g a u is sick a t h o m e .&#13;
C l y d e B u r d e n is in t h i s v i c i n i t y&#13;
s a w i n g wood.&#13;
M i s s I d a C l e m e n t s is s t a y i n g at&#13;
W i n . B l a u d s a t p r e s e n t ,&#13;
C h r i s . J3rogau is p r e p a r i n g to&#13;
b u i l d h i s h o u s e t h i s s e a s o n .&#13;
Bitten by a Spider.&#13;
Through blood,&#13;
Win. C h a m b e r s t r a n s a c t e d b u s -&#13;
^ w j ^ y "• | i u e s s at H o w e l l S a t u r d a y .&#13;
1 L. H . N e w m a n a n d wife v i s i t e d&#13;
at I. J . A b b o t t ' s S a t u r d a y a u d&#13;
^ s o ^ i i r i K caused by | S u n d a y .&#13;
a spider bite, Johrr Washing-tun of • ' » H ,, ... ... * ' Al b e r t. Mvfi-lnJ e r. ice lb a ckI i+•r om. iJ jau-&#13;
Boyqueviile, '.JVx,, would have-lost his s i n g a n d is s t a y i n g w i t h F . N .&#13;
«-s&#13;
| £ * £ u ; .&#13;
1*8* Whittle became a mass of r u n n i n g 1 " ^ ,&#13;
porta, Wi-fae not been persuaded to ! i 3 l l r ^ e S 8 -&#13;
^ ^ ^ B q c l d t n s Arnica Salve. He j W m . U r o g a n , wife a n d c h i l d&#13;
writ»t;/"Tfi* first application relieved ! v i s i t e d h i s p a r e n t s , C. U r o g a n a n d&#13;
and four boxes healed all the sores.'j wife, of t h i s p l a c e S u n d a y .&#13;
Heals every sore,&#13;
druggist,&#13;
25a. V. A JSigler's&#13;
i.»»VN&#13;
O J I T f i H A f l f t U R G .&#13;
M r . a n d M r s . J a s . F i t c h called&#13;
a t B e r t N a s h ' s $ i i n d a y .&#13;
M r . a n d Airs. J u o . F o h e y yisit-&#13;
IOSCO.&#13;
S e y m o u r H o l c o m b h a s s o l d h i s&#13;
farm to B e r t D a n i e l s .&#13;
Ii. C. S m i t h h a s b e e n a p p o i n t e d&#13;
h e a l t h officer for Iosco.&#13;
A. W. E l l i o t t r e c e n t l y b o u g h t&#13;
Jl&#13;
e d t h e i r d a u g h t e r a t "Wh'itmore J4o a c r e s of M . Hotftiieyor.&#13;
L a k e last week. &lt; ' | T h e P r e 6 b , t L m l h V A i d w i n&#13;
P r e p a r a t i o n s - a r e b e i n g m a d e ; m e e t T h u r s d a y p . m . w i t h M e s -&#13;
for a S. S. c o n v e n t i o n s o m e ' t i m e | d a m e s H a v i l a n d a n d G r e e n i n g ,&#13;
i n t h e n e a r future;, t i m e will be , M r u n d M r s . p l o y d H o w o l l e n _&#13;
a n n o u n c e d later. ! t e r t a i n e d t h e F o w l e r v i l l e s e n i o r s&#13;
R e v . G a t e s p r e a c h e d a n o t h e r in- a n d Prof. Woodruff last T h u r s d a y&#13;
t e r e s t i u ^ e r m o n S u n d a y a n d after ] e v e n i n g .&#13;
t h e s e r v i c e s an u n a m i m o u s vote j M * B r a d l e y b o u g h t o u t W m .&#13;
w a s tajfeen for himv to. r e m a i n w i t h '&#13;
m. „,r. .... ,-X&#13;
R e c t o r t h e p a s t w e e k . H i s s o n&#13;
M i l t o n a n d f a m i l y tff W e b b e r v i l l e&#13;
T h e F a r m e r s C l u b will m e e t will s o o n m o v e on t h e f a r m .&#13;
t h e p e o p l e of N . fi.&#13;
.•.&amp;tfH&#13;
&gt;v&#13;
'V&#13;
.. f f l l ; . ^ . afld M*e. W m . C a d y&#13;
S a t a r d a y . B r i n g l a p b o a r d s a n d&#13;
, j j ( ^ ) e t for d i n n e r . T h e f o l l o w i n g&#13;
p r o g r a m will be r e n d e r e d :&#13;
Reading, Mrs. Nash&#13;
Ree, Mi*. A. Flintoit'.&#13;
Song, Howard Harris.&#13;
Reading, Mrs, S. E. Swart Lent.&#13;
Rec. heigh Van Horn.&#13;
Ins, Duet, Fern Hendee and Fanny&#13;
Swarthout.&#13;
Reading Mrs, H. F. K'ice.&#13;
Kec, Hern ice Cady&#13;
Solo, Adda Kice&#13;
Recitation, Sadie Swarthoilt&#13;
Bong, Florence Kiae&#13;
, "and Clob &amp;fcaci«&#13;
The Price of Health. **\.&#13;
"The price of health in a malarious&#13;
district is just 2o t e n t s : the cost of&#13;
'a box of I &gt;;•. King's New Life Pills,"&#13;
writes Flla Clayton, of Noland, Ark.&#13;
New Life PilU cleanse gently and impart&#13;
new lift- and vigor to the systeni-&#13;
25c. Satisfactory guaranteed at F. A.&#13;
Sigler's. druggist.&#13;
N/VIL&#13;
efitton BQX&#13;
* - v&#13;
W E S T P U T K A M ,&#13;
Mrs. M u r p h y is n o b e t t e r .&#13;
W i l l G a r d n e r s p e n t S u n d a y at&#13;
N o r t h L a k e .&#13;
G e o r g e S w e e n e y of C h e l s e a ,&#13;
i v i s i t e d h e r e last week.&#13;
"Nothing so goodf as Uasasweet, A. G. Wi l l s o n a n d wife c a l l ed&#13;
writes va mother who has u ed it. ^It : on f r i e n d s h e r e t h e iirst of t h e&#13;
saved iiiy ImbyV life," writes another.' | week.&#13;
tlascasweet is a vegetable corrective1 \ r „ \ i • r T •&#13;
^ i V C ; M r s A n n a I r w i n , of L a n s i n g ,&#13;
.is v i s i t i n g h e r sister, M'-s. W m .&#13;
! D o y l e .&#13;
;;i|m the disorders ol a child's stomach.&#13;
Contents en the buttle in plain English.&#13;
&lt;ri0 doses, for 25 cent&#13;
mended by F. A. Sigler.&#13;
Reco m-&#13;
St.* Business Pointers 4&#13;
V&#13;
House to Rent.&#13;
Inquire at Dispatch Olhce.&#13;
Ijl W.DAXIKI.s,&#13;
l i . f.KXKRAl. AVCTrONKKK,&#13;
Hatihtiictii ii ( i u i i r a n t e c d . F o r i n f o r m a -&#13;
tion call :il LiscATCH Office or addrtwe&#13;
G r e g o r y , M i c h , r. f. &lt;l. 2. L y n d i l l a p h o n e f&#13;
c o n n e c t i o n . Auction hills :ind tin CQpe&#13;
fiirninlieO frt-c.&#13;
W m . D o y l e a n d f a m i l y a t t e n d e d&#13;
t h e w e d d i n g of R o s e M u r r y a n d&#13;
E d w n r d S p e a r s at D e x t e r , T u e s -&#13;
day A p r i l 23.&#13;
K i r k Y a n W i n k l e , W a l e s L e l a n d&#13;
a n d H. B . G a r d n e r a t t e n d e d a&#13;
m a s o n i c r e c e p t i o n at B r i g h t o n&#13;
M o n d a y n i g h t .&#13;
T l u ' L i v i n g s t o n M u t u a l Tele--&#13;
p h o n e Co. h a v e i n s t a l l e d p h o n e s&#13;
in t h e h o m e s of M r s . L . B. W h i t e ! Michigan Central railrcad at,&#13;
Mrs. Drown is still very l o w . ,&#13;
William Going has moved bis family&#13;
to Pontia&lt;J whore he h&amp;a secured&#13;
jirork. '&#13;
The Mayor of Flint has' designated&#13;
April 2£ (today) a« general yard&#13;
cleaning day.&#13;
The Governor* proclamation cams&#13;
to our desk this wee*k announcing&#13;
Friday, AJay 3 aa Arbor Day.&#13;
.VJrs Lucy A. Dunk, of Port Perry,&#13;
On!., is the guest of J a s . A. Wilcox&#13;
and Mrs. Edwin Sales, her brother&#13;
a d sister here.&#13;
Miss Wells, of Ann Arbor, and Miss&#13;
Huively, ot Philadelphia. Pa., were&#13;
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Uilette&#13;
over Sunday.&#13;
A wreck occured en the M, A. L&#13;
near Alunith last Friday that tied up&#13;
tra(ffi( for a few hours and uitde all&#13;
rains late for a day or two.&#13;
The P u t n a m and H a m b u r g farmers&#13;
club will meet th:s week Saturday at&#13;
the home of Mr. aud Mrs. Will Cady,&#13;
of Lakeland, Dinner will be berved.&#13;
W, T. W r i g h t of A n n Arbor has&#13;
purchased ti.e dental outfit formerly&#13;
belonging to .Dr. E L. Moore, and&#13;
will open t h e : ; d e n t a l parlors in the&#13;
same rooms next week. More later.&#13;
A Flint man walked from that city&#13;
to Saginaw one day last week, 135&#13;
miles, in nine hours and six minutes.&#13;
He had ten hours to do the s t u n t in,&#13;
on a wager ot $100.00. He won easiiy-&#13;
Married at Dexter, Tuesday morn&#13;
ing, April 23, Mr. E d w a r d Spears ol&#13;
this place and Miss Rose Murry, of&#13;
Dexter. They will be at home to&#13;
their many friends at the old home in&#13;
North P u t n a m .&#13;
While we have had a good&#13;
sale of post cards all through the year&#13;
the real post card season is just commencing.&#13;
We shall carry a full line&#13;
of the souvenir cards of the village&#13;
and surrounding country as usual&#13;
Coal dealers have been doing a&#13;
good stroke of business the past few&#13;
weeks. The weather man was certainly&#13;
whh them this season -there&#13;
has been but few days since winter set&#13;
in but what a good tire was needed all&#13;
day.&#13;
The Kenton Independent wants the&#13;
village "dads" to "appoint a dHy for&#13;
the citizens to suspend business and | ¢^ a j r without&#13;
clean up their yards, streets, etc&#13;
May he all right in Fenton but the&#13;
citizens of Pinekney need no such invitation-••-&#13;
their yards are always kept&#13;
in nice shape and clean.&#13;
Some one is in the habit, of opening&#13;
goods and leaving the papers, etc. to&#13;
blow all over the alley and con^c&#13;
quently nut on the street, where the&#13;
more careful ones who are trvintr to&#13;
keep the streets and yards clean have&#13;
to pick them up. VVnnld it not he&#13;
well j ' the ordinance prohibiting&#13;
the prat ice IK-&gt; enforced ?&#13;
E, T. Kearney, of tb ^ Hank of i)a.koto&#13;
County, ,la:d&lt;son, Neb,, has our&#13;
thanks for a souvenir booklet of the&#13;
21?t irthday of the bank. TI.e book&#13;
let not, only contains many points as&#13;
to why the bank is .sure, sate and a&#13;
good place to put your money, but&#13;
also contains many points useful to&#13;
the household—needles.&#13;
Surveyors are at work fo&#13;
.Leah Thompson, of Dar»«d i i t h e&#13;
g a e t t oi relatives here.&#13;
Ploris tforan and Fred Campbell, of&#13;
Pinekney, Mich., were guests of Rey,&#13;
G. W. Mylne the first of the week.&#13;
Mr. Mo tan is a t t e n d i n g school at Aon&#13;
Arbor. Both y o u n ^ tn*n have for&#13;
years been officers and active workers&#13;
in the Young Man's Uluh and Gymnasium&#13;
in 'heir home town and Mr.&#13;
" '»f ' in i&#13;
denae the awctvrHI&amp;&#13;
high in the tnba, a*0&#13;
.vy*,, •i&#13;
Ala&#13;
the&#13;
*f the tot*&#13;
"low M l *&#13;
'•'A&#13;
pmrnit" bot if tin&#13;
mercury will atand&#13;
and we then nee the&#13;
• w e . " -"'••&#13;
Over the United S t a t e c Canada and&#13;
other part^ of the warid the p&#13;
U ubcertatneU each day at s u r a&#13;
stations. The barometer rending*,&#13;
. . , , ,., , . . . i L fpresaeu lu inc-Uea of mercuiy, are&#13;
Moran has been, u n t d lately, in the j mvh&amp;d t o a central point and&#13;
employ of the pastor,—baingsburg charted on a map. The&amp;exact regions&#13;
News. where the pressure la*Jugh or low&#13;
' w m * , muy then be seen at a gl&amp;nce. i t haa&#13;
_ . __, oeen learned from such observations&#13;
^ ^ I v e s t . MjUt these areas are constantly moving&#13;
eastward at an average rate of ahout&#13;
Died at the hospital in Jackson, BOO miles per day.&#13;
April 21, Mrs. Marv Ewen, daughter Technically the low-pressure, areas&#13;
in li aw ol* ot* M»i rs. D, ^. 1r ^. Euiw eu ot.• t*hi i•s ' are culled "c^y-c.l.o nve,s " a, nd ,, mi, • pressure areas "^atiqycloni*. . They&#13;
place. I ho funeral was helci lroiu the H r e r m i L U , u l i y i,pod or more miles in&#13;
home of her daughter, Mrs. Pearl diameter. The U t t i t jstorms: of great&#13;
Vorton, Tuesday. She was a woman destructive force _so ofteu called cyclones&#13;
are really tornadoes. .&#13;
The higher the pressure in/any particular&#13;
region relative to some other&#13;
region the greater will be the velocity^&#13;
of the wind. The winds blow much&#13;
faster lu wiujer than in summer, because&#13;
the greater contrasts of temperature&#13;
cause more (leeiiied differences In&#13;
pressure.&#13;
Observations demonstrate, however,&#13;
that" the wind never blows in straight&#13;
llne.s, because all bodies ol' air when&#13;
In motion are acted upon by a law of&#13;
nature called the "dcileeting force of&#13;
M&#13;
who made many friends, especially&#13;
among the poor, for her deeds of kind&#13;
neBs and ajts of love.&#13;
On« by uiii&lt; tlit* chtiir stands vuiiunt&#13;
Tluil well1 flllail by those wo lnvc,&#13;
&lt;)inv 1&gt;\ iDiM tliti fluiiiri arc Illtiug&#13;
In mar Kailmr's lnuiiy ubuvo, ,"&gt;•.,,&#13;
CAHD OF T H A N K S .&#13;
M&#13;
We desire to thank th,e people of&#13;
Ciuekney and vi&lt;;inity, Hso all who&#13;
extended symyathy and help in our the earth's rotation." This force turns&#13;
late bereavement, in the loss of o u r ' a l l wind to the right of its course in&#13;
husband and father.&#13;
Mas. LYMAN FECK AND FAMILY.&#13;
WHITHEWIND BLOWS&#13;
A Study of the Circulation of the&#13;
World's Atmosphere.&#13;
FORCES THAT MOVE THE AIR.&#13;
ivf'&#13;
Contrasts In Temperature, High and&#13;
Low Pressure and a Law of Nature&#13;
Called the Deflecting Force of the&#13;
Earth's Rotation.&#13;
It is a matter of common observation&#13;
that when the window of a warm&#13;
the northern hemisphere and to t h e&#13;
left in the southern.&#13;
Thus if a wind in our hemisphere&#13;
•tarts north it is soon tulued slowly&#13;
toward the northeast, or if it s t a r ^&#13;
west it will soon turn toward th?&#13;
northwest. When it Is remembered&#13;
that at the equator the earth is rotating&#13;
at the enormous velocity of 2,035&#13;
miles an hour, one will not wonder that&#13;
such a deflecting force could exist. AJl&#13;
areas of high and low pressure! from&#13;
whatever cause, therefore -aecoine&#13;
whirling masses of air, and a little&#13;
thought will show that they must turn&#13;
in opposite directions. In the northern&#13;
hoiniflpSere the low areas, ©r&#13;
"'lows," ajjf 'hey are designated on tile&#13;
weather map, always rotate in a direction&#13;
contrary to that of the hand*&#13;
af a watch.— Youth's Companion.&#13;
OLD TIME CALENDARS^&#13;
V&#13;
4&#13;
" . * • • &lt;&#13;
room-U omened on n still winter night T h e 8 a x ° n Clogg, Whence Comes the&#13;
the cold air from without rushes into j Name "Almanac."&#13;
the room. Nearer the ceiling the&#13;
warmer air is forced out of the window,&#13;
thus completing a general atmospheric&#13;
circulation on a miniature scale.&#13;
These currents of air, which might&#13;
properly be called wind, would not&#13;
occur if the air within doors was not&#13;
In these days, whim printed calr'i'huv&#13;
are in evidence everywhere, the m vs&#13;
tion as to what device the elder i'otk&#13;
employed to help them mark the progress&#13;
of time is not uninteresting.&#13;
"They." says Verstegau, alluding to&#13;
the Saxons, "used to engrave upui&#13;
w a n n e r and consequently lighter than certaine squared sticks alunii a t'om in&#13;
j length, or shorter or longer, us-Jhey&#13;
The range in temperature between pleased, the courses of the niooiiTS' of&#13;
the eqiintor and the north pole amounts the whole yeere. whereby 4|Ufl*J?Voiil;!&#13;
&gt;i v&lt;inier to considerably more than alwales certainly tell when th# new&#13;
loo degrees P., and In summer the naoones, full moones und changes&#13;
contrasi is also great. Moreover, in should happen, as also their l'estivall&#13;
fin miner the continents are warmer , dales, and wuch a carved stick they&#13;
the&#13;
and&#13;
"•••S,&#13;
••v . .&#13;
Expert Auctioneer&#13;
** *&#13;
"' Orer 20 Yeacs Eiprifince&#13;
DEXTER, MICH. ,&#13;
$Xid J o h n D u n n e .&#13;
P L A I K F I E L D .&#13;
M r , \ S i l a s Wiiflson i* still quite,&#13;
p o o r l y .&#13;
Tiie c h i c k e n pox is u'oii:^ t h e&#13;
r o u n d s h c r r , j u s t n o w .&#13;
S o m e of o u r h u s t l i n g f a r m e r s&#13;
.drilled t h e i r oats last week.&#13;
than 1 lxo oceans, but in whiter the reverse&#13;
Is true. Three examples will&#13;
s e n o to illustrate how such contrast:;&#13;
affect the winds of the world.&#13;
At The equator the leniperature averages&#13;
about st) degrees throughout the&#13;
year. &lt;'nusoiiuontly (he lower air Hows&#13;
in from regions of high pressure on&#13;
each side, forming w hat are known ns&#13;
the 1i;ni,'s These winds rover nearl&#13;
one-half •»!' the earih's surface and&#13;
blow wilh uineh .steadiness the yv:\v&#13;
round.&#13;
The monsoons, oi 'seasonal wind:'."&#13;
of India and the Indian ocean are the-i&#13;
most interesting of iheir class. Tn&#13;
summer the cooler ocean air pushes in&#13;
toward 1he land, while the warmer air&#13;
over the continents rises to a considerable&#13;
height and then Hows out to&#13;
sea, forming a systematic circulation&#13;
between ocean and continent. In winter&#13;
the ocean is warmer than the continent",&#13;
and the winds reverse their&#13;
direct ion.&#13;
The 'land unci sea breezes" occur&#13;
with much regularity near largo bod'u^&#13;
called an al mon-aght—that is to say,&#13;
al-inou-heeu. to wlt„ the record or observation&#13;
of all the moones, and hence&#13;
is derived the name almanac."&#13;
Au instrument of this kind was also&#13;
called 11io ef'Vg, from its form and&#13;
matter, and had a ring on the upper&#13;
end of it to hang on a nail somowhero&#13;
about tlu&gt; house. On each of the four&#13;
sides wore throe months, the days&#13;
ing represented by no tehee,&#13;
seventh notefc, being: of a li&#13;
represented Sunday, tsiwii&#13;
the right side of tb.e notches were inscriptions&#13;
audj^sgures marking the&#13;
festivil day*-^yl some endowment of&#13;
the saints or illustrating the season of&#13;
the year by some work or sport characteristic&#13;
ofvit.&#13;
gflfust June 2&lt;J. St. Peter's day,&#13;
rved his keys. On Feb. 14 a&#13;
trrur.'tifc;i;rv knot appeared, and against&#13;
the notch designating Christmas day&#13;
was the old wasshalliu"; or carousal&#13;
horn that the forefathers used to make&#13;
merry with.&#13;
about Ann Arbor and many Mt'innrs The l»aii's, Swedes-and Norwegians&#13;
are afloat as to what, the outcome may o f v , „ , , i n , ( &gt; l n e p a v t s o f t h o w o v J ( L , , , ^ ! l K ,s t , : i , m n u n ™ ' u n d o r various&#13;
be. It seems that there is a mystery The ocean is cooler than the land dur- names, such as Keinstooks, Iiuiistocks,&#13;
about their-workincrs there as there is l"g the lay and warmer at night, cans RuHstaffs, Annnles, Staves, Stakes'&#13;
the&#13;
the&#13;
loner the line of tho M' A. L. at&#13;
amount of work heint? don?) to&#13;
crarle between here and Jackson.&#13;
Mrs. S. W. Walker left Los Angeles&#13;
Cal., for Detroit Tuesrln\ with the remains&#13;
ot her hn.-h-ind. it i&gt; expected&#13;
she will reach the cifv &gt;o that the&#13;
small^^cale a daily inter- Clo'jjgs, Uunicf. ;&gt;nd so forth. Before&#13;
aitr similar to that, causeil ^Jlffflng was introduced and when&#13;
lis. ni.TSiiKcripts were rare and dear these&#13;
Ing on a&#13;
change o&#13;
by t h e m o&#13;
-V ciejajiBmoWlodgo of the term "air Ruule almanais s'/cre made the Instru&#13;
pressure" is very helpful In studying ments of ins (ruction and regularity.&#13;
the causes of wind. Air, like a stone. That they might be more serviceable&#13;
presses against tlie ground—in other they were often carved on the tops of&#13;
words, it has weight, amounting to no pilgrims' slaves or stakes so as to&#13;
&amp;r.&#13;
•'Jfiw,"&#13;
PHONE 3 8 , FREE BOX 6g&#13;
4*&#13;
J. W. BIRD&#13;
PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
F o r i n f o r m a t i o n , call nt tlu- P i n e k n e y l')r&#13;
PATCH oftio-. Auction Hills F r e e&#13;
' , " ^ f f . b s t . e r R u r a l P h o n o&#13;
Arrangements mnnV for nale by fdn&gt;ne&#13;
my expeiiHe.&#13;
A d d c r e s s , D e x t e r . aAir.hioan&#13;
W a t c h for tlie d a t e of tiu&#13;
F e s t i v a l to b e given l&gt;y t h e L . A . S&#13;
M r s . N e t t i e Keilo^cr a n d f a m i l y&#13;
aiv n o w s e t t l e d in t h e R e y n o l d s&#13;
h o u s e .&#13;
• c j burial will take place in&#13;
'* -v ; day, April 20. She wi&#13;
Detroit ' We understand that her&#13;
son, Murry, goes to Ryolite, Nevada,&#13;
and doe- n"it return here at present.&#13;
Week before la-d the RKVIKW announced&#13;
the sale by Frerl Rathfmn nt&#13;
sea level&#13;
mos]ilie"c&#13;
' l l l i l ;&#13;
a ;•. '&#13;
b u t . u n i k e a s t o n e .&#13;
fr&#13;
I.uella C a s k e y a n d h e r uncde! h," , s t o&#13;
r ^k f X«n(}*u&gt; ^- »• Bri&gt;tol,&#13;
.. - - 1 n - n ' , l o n n I'inlananri H rancis uommiskev,&#13;
im t o w l e r v i l l e v i s i t e d \\ ill J ,,n f w h e n t h e i n v e n f n r y w a a t a k e n&#13;
•[.&#13;
C a s k e y last F r i d n y .&#13;
T h e L. A. S. of t h e P r e a b t .&#13;
' c h u r c h m e e t w i t h M r s . W i l l&#13;
i&#13;
a t I G r e e n i n g ; on T h u r s d a y h f t e r n o o n&#13;
I of t h i s week, for s u p p e r . All a r e&#13;
i n f i t e d .&#13;
y&#13;
the value of the stock was oonsroWable&#13;
moi**-ttffl1r^stimated and rermn^&#13;
] ftd"mor*i capifAl than the three yoAn,v&#13;
men thou ht they conkl safely handle • tl&#13;
and consequently the sale was declared&#13;
off and Mr. Rathhnn continaee the&#13;
bneinHs* himself.— Fowlerfille Review.&#13;
" ' . . " ' " less il:an "J. 117 pounds upon ever; regulate :ieii- time of assembling at&#13;
W ay no, Mnn- a q n . m . t-();ii o f 1]H. d r i l l ' s snrfaee at particular places. They were also cut&#13;
on sword Hcabbards and implements of&#13;
husbandry. These cloggs are not entirely&#13;
unlike the Egyptian obelisks,&#13;
which have been called fingers of tha&#13;
*nn and which mny he regarded as a&#13;
species of alumnae.&#13;
One of tlie first prifited almanacs or&#13;
calendars was that of John Muller,&#13;
who opened a printing house and published&#13;
his almanac at Guremburg In&#13;
the year 1472. It gave not only the&#13;
characters of each year and of the&#13;
months, but foretold the eolipsee for&#13;
thirty years In advance.&#13;
In England the year book of Henry&#13;
T I L gives the first recorded account of&#13;
t h e atto&#13;
a lo'i'li d e g r e e&#13;
so p r e s s e s ill all o t h e r d i r e c t i o n s .&#13;
i-,-oil,,; of t h i s e l a s t i c i t y of t h e&#13;
r' .i: : f o r c e s w l 'eh a r i s e f r o m&#13;
c. l e m p e r a • a r e a n d t h e&#13;
• ,' c.-m.-'i' it , •• bee '. ,•&#13;
''ley e i ,[• ' „• in &lt;• inie :,"..:, in -; a i:&#13;
r:i re ey .'.•'.: in o t h e r r e g i o n s .&#13;
U i- the I'ffort of 11H^ atmosphere to&#13;
overcome these pressure differences&#13;
and roseine a ^tate of equal density&#13;
nit" causes 'he ^\-Jin 1 s^ to blow.&#13;
The I'ffhfimn of mercury In a barometer&#13;
tube is always just balancing a&#13;
column of air nf the same diameter.&#13;
i reaeliin from the barometer to the&#13;
• * *&#13;
• * * •&#13;
1&#13;
almanacn. ( ! ' f c ; i . lteeord-TTeraM.&#13;
*&#13;
\&#13;
" i&#13;
•'i&#13;
r-X&gt;- «W i^^m^ji</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch April 25, 1907</text>
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                <text>April 25, 1907 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                  <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>
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              <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>
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              <text>PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MAY. 2, 1907. No. 18&#13;
tii-'i "' Mi&#13;
Bowman's FOP&#13;
P r i c e&#13;
For&#13;
Quality&#13;
Everything for S u m m e r N e e d s&#13;
New Ribbons, Laces, Embroidiery, Hosiery, Underwear, Corsets,&#13;
India Linens, VViiite Goods, Art DeniinH, Silkalines, Ladies' and Men's&#13;
Glove*, Work Shirt?, Overalls, Small Hardware.&#13;
Our Notion Department is complete with items at .saving prices.&#13;
House Purnishiny Goods ot every description.&#13;
B n a m e l D l i h P a n * 2 5 c Enamel Waah Bailn lOc&#13;
Enamel Dippers lOc 6 Quart fin Milk pan» 5 c&#13;
lOc Quality Dust Fans 9 c&#13;
The Cleveland "Hydro Carbonite" Roof Paint&#13;
The Best in the World&#13;
Our price on this great Roof Paint is only 50c per gallon&#13;
Every day is bargain day&#13;
E. A. Bowman's&#13;
Howell's Busy S t o r e&#13;
S c h o o l Notes.&#13;
Rev. Gate* visited the school Monday&#13;
atteruuou.&#13;
The following persons have finished&#13;
the work as required in the Pinckney&#13;
High scnool and have satisiactorially&#13;
passed the third grade teachers examination,&#13;
which is required ot all our&#13;
students before graduating: Miss&#13;
Norma Vaughn, Miss Maude Mortenson,&#13;
Miss Mabel Clinton, Miss Florence&#13;
Harris, and Mr. Leo Monks and&#13;
Mr. Adrian Lavey.&#13;
On account or our speaker, Prof. S.&#13;
13. Laird, who baa been engaged to&#13;
deliver the commence address, commencement&#13;
day will be J u n e 18, instuad&#13;
ot June 19, HS stated in catalog.&#13;
R e a d y for B u s i n e s s&#13;
GASOLINE&#13;
;!RED STAR BRAND.'1&#13;
Best Hy Teat&#13;
DOES NOT SMOKE&#13;
ASK YOUR DEALKK i&#13;
5 ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ^ ^&#13;
SPECIALS for APRIL&#13;
W i t h every d o / e n photos&#13;
At 82.0() or more p e r&#13;
dozen, 1 will ^'ive o n e&#13;
H i?fi\ r c-jRci Pficot coc-j riv f&gt;-B&#13;
for only 50c extra.&#13;
T h e pictures are nicely&#13;
finished and mounted for&#13;
f r a m i n g in 16x20 frame&#13;
Don't fail to take advantage&#13;
this offer&#13;
DAISIE K. CHAPKLL,&#13;
Photograph SWdio, Stockbridge&#13;
* - ,v&#13;
Spring Wheat Flour&#13;
We have now gotten the mill in&#13;
shape to properly ?rind Spring Wheat&#13;
as well a?;' winter wheat and to all&#13;
those who prefer it, will say, we are&#13;
making it of the very best, quality.&#13;
Spring Wheat is more of a glutenious&#13;
wheat, thereby making the raising&#13;
qualities a little stronger.&#13;
W * Guarantee E v e r y&#13;
^ V ° Sack.&#13;
Pinckney Floiring Mills.&#13;
L O C A L N E W S .&#13;
Tomorrow—Friday—Is Arbor Day.&#13;
Adrain Lavey has been on the sick&#13;
list&#13;
J . J . Tuomey was in Detroit last&#13;
week.&#13;
E. R. Brown is treating his residece&#13;
to a coat of paint.&#13;
B, F. Andrews spent the first of the&#13;
week at his old home in Parshallville.&#13;
Miss Florence Andrews spent the&#13;
past week with her friend, Miss Mae&#13;
Ratz, of Howell,&#13;
Our farm implement men are busy&#13;
these days setting up new maceinery,&#13;
getting them ready for the seasons&#13;
trade,&#13;
Mrs. John Monks and daughter,&#13;
Lela, were in Jackson Saturday to attend&#13;
the funeral ol an uncle of Mrs.&#13;
Mouks. .&#13;
Mis&gt; Maude White of Big Rapids&#13;
and Mrs. Johnstin ot Fostoria, 0! io,&#13;
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. M.&#13;
Glenn la^t week.&#13;
Word was received here Tuesday&#13;
that there was born to Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Frank Parker of Boyne Falls on Monday&#13;
a 9 pound girl.&#13;
During the st.rm Monday evening&#13;
lightening struck the blacksmith shop&#13;
belonging to Art, Flintoff at Pettysville.&#13;
The damage will be slight.&#13;
Miss Zoe D. Coleman of Grand Rapids,&#13;
and and Mrs. H. E. Brown, of&#13;
Stock bridge, were guests of Chas.&#13;
Love's family Thursday, April 25th.&#13;
Alex. Mclntyre is packing his&#13;
household goods preparatory to moving&#13;
to Detroit. Detroit will have&#13;
quite a settlement of Pinckneyites if&#13;
it keeps on.&#13;
W. H. Harris of Dexter arrived&#13;
here this week to commence work on&#13;
the Read residence. He has erected a&#13;
tent on the lot adjoining and he and&#13;
his wife will lire there.&#13;
Bishop Foley, who has been in St.&#13;
Mark's rectory, Monroe, since his serious&#13;
illness la*t fall, is reported as&#13;
steadily gaining in strength and hopeful&#13;
or r a m m i n g in another monlh or&#13;
two to rhe active dnties of his office.—&#13;
Chelsea Standard.&#13;
County School Commissioner Knooihuizen&#13;
announces the holding of&#13;
eighth grade examinations this year&#13;
at the following places: Howell, Fowlerville,&#13;
Gregory, Brighton, Oak Grove&#13;
and Finckney. The dat.^ ot holding&#13;
the same is May 10 and 11.&#13;
County drain commissioner, Frank&#13;
Mowers, was in ttwn Tuesday. He&#13;
had been to Gregory where the Gregory&#13;
drain was let by special commissioner,&#13;
Miles Bullock. The dram was&#13;
let to F . Hineman, of Washtenaw&#13;
county, for 13.59 per rod. The drain&#13;
will cost with its breach—, tile, etc&#13;
about $4,000. / ,r&#13;
Dr. W. T. Wright of Ann Arbor,&#13;
has again opened the dental parlors&#13;
formerly occupied by Dr. E. L. Moore&#13;
over the clorhing storo in this village,&#13;
and is ready to do, in fact has already&#13;
been doing dental work of all kinds.&#13;
Dr. Wright is a graduate of the U.&#13;
of M., has had over twenty years of&#13;
experience in the work and comes&#13;
highly recommended.&#13;
He will use the same methods for&#13;
extraction and other vvcrk that was&#13;
employed by Dr. Moure and guarantees&#13;
all his work.&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
The usual services next Sunday.&#13;
Topic for morning sermon, "Why am&#13;
1 not a Christian." Evening, "The&#13;
Bible a Divinely inspired book."&#13;
All are welcome to all services.&#13;
The Home Missionary lecture at the&#13;
Cong'l church last Thursday evening&#13;
by Mrs. Ida Vose Wcodberry of Boston,&#13;
wis well attended and was very&#13;
instructive as well as entertaining,&#13;
Mrs. VVoodberrv is an excellent speaker&#13;
and keeps her audience interested&#13;
from start to rinish.&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
^M&#13;
The church was filled again Sunday&#13;
morning and the pastor preached&#13;
a "Home Missionary" sermon after&#13;
which the collection and subscription&#13;
for that object was taken and 147.75&#13;
raised. The Foreign Missionary collection&#13;
vvill bo taken later.&#13;
Although within the past six weeks'&#13;
there have been over 20 names taken ;&#13;
from the Sunday school roll by reason j&#13;
the families have moved to other&#13;
places, there was an attendance of 114 j&#13;
and the collection amounted to $3.02.&#13;
If you are not already an attendant of&#13;
j some Sunday school you will bo made&#13;
welcome here.&#13;
Next Sunday will b3 Communion&#13;
Sunday and all are especially invited&#13;
to attend. All seats are free.&#13;
Miss Edith Smith of Cohoctah visited&#13;
here the past week,&#13;
Herbert Gilette and wife visited her&#13;
people in Howell over Snnday.&#13;
C. P . Sykes is in Plymouth and&#13;
Wayne this week looking after some&#13;
jobs of plumbing.&#13;
The Order of Eastern Stir are ai- j&#13;
ranging'for an entertainment to be i&#13;
held May 17, The Winding of the May i&#13;
Pole. Program later.&#13;
This is the month for cleaning up ,&#13;
and dumping old rubbish. The council&#13;
have something about the matter&#13;
in their proceedings this week.&#13;
The ladies of the M. E. Church will&#13;
serve tea at the home of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Jeff Parker on Wednesday of next&#13;
week, May 8. Tea from 5 until all&#13;
are server].&#13;
The common run of "nickel in the&#13;
slot machines1' are a nuiance, but&#13;
someone suggests that a slot machine&#13;
for the &gt;ale of gasoline at all the four&#13;
corners, would be a benefit to the&#13;
automobiljfti(?) %&#13;
;t%: !l%&#13;
.M&#13;
» • • • : *&#13;
• * '•&#13;
Come and Examine&#13;
Our New S t o c k of&#13;
Up-to-Datt&#13;
WALL, PAPER&#13;
•£'•' I&#13;
l'tne Dnigs Prescriptions (..'aivl'tilly (.'orupimmk'd at&#13;
F. A. SIGNER'S&#13;
,*&amp;&#13;
Suits to Order&#13;
We have received a&#13;
Line ot Samples from&#13;
one of the Be^t Tailoring&#13;
Establishments in&#13;
Chicago a i d are now&#13;
prepared to n:ake Suits&#13;
to Older&#13;
From $14.00 to $40.00&#13;
Per Suit&#13;
A Nobby Linenf St les&#13;
and Perfect Fit Guar&#13;
an teed.&#13;
4&#13;
..•a'&#13;
"'f/r./Ari /r. //A ^ ^ holmes Clothing Co.&#13;
ff /if&#13;
P i n c k n e y , Mich.&#13;
Ray Tompkins&#13;
Contractor and Builder&#13;
Can furnish larsre or small bills&#13;
of lumber within thirty days and&#13;
save vou money, especially on inside&#13;
finish. Let me figure on&#13;
your job.&#13;
/&#13;
Lakeland, Michigan&#13;
^ * * &gt; - &gt; • * «&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
We a r e in positron to store your base~hjurner&#13;
$2.50&#13;
At Owner's Risk&#13;
Tccple Hardware C&#13;
. * • • # * -&#13;
•' • * • ; • •&#13;
'«C«Br*3«(r , ^ ^ 4 « i r t ^ » » mm*&#13;
* - * •&#13;
W&amp;.&#13;
fc"&#13;
\&#13;
T H E ARCADIA T O U N D E R 8 NEAR&#13;
P E N T W A T E R AND FOURT&#13;
E E N PERISH.&#13;
SHE LEFT PORT IN STORM.&#13;
C.ptctln May Had Fitted Up the&#13;
Steamer and Made it the Home for&#13;
H i * Family.&#13;
Bound for Detroit.&#13;
Wreckage drifting ashore has been&#13;
Identified as liarts of the sieambarge&#13;
Arcadia, and there is no doubt but&#13;
that the boat foundered with all&#13;
hands. H e r o n s as to t'Ue number of&#13;
persons who perished uve conflicting,&#13;
but the most reliable statement&#13;
Is That L4 were drowned.&#13;
The Arcadia left -Manistee for Two&#13;
Kiveru, Wis., with u cargo of hardwood&#13;
lumber on April VI, and it is&#13;
presumed that she succumbed to the&#13;
storm that prevailed on Lake Michigan&#13;
lor several days. Capt. Ewald, of&#13;
the Pentwater life saving station, was&#13;
the first to discover the identity of&#13;
the wrecked steamer. A piece of bulwark&#13;
bearing the name Arcadia, was&#13;
picked up by him. Later a section of&#13;
the wreck, on which was a small safe&#13;
bearing the name Arcadia was also&#13;
found three miles north. The lost&#13;
boat's pilot house also drifted ashore.&#13;
No bodies have yet been recovered,&#13;
but the beach ^between Pentwater and&#13;
Little Point Sable Is being patroled&#13;
for them.&#13;
Capt. Harry May, master and principal&#13;
owner of the lost Arcadia, purchased&#13;
the boat last February, the&#13;
deal being closed through the Parker&#13;
Chartering Co., of Detroit. Mr. Parker&#13;
fctlll retained an interest in the craft.&#13;
"After discharging her cargo at Two&#13;
Rivers the Arcadia was to load for&#13;
Detroit," said Mr. Parker. "I have&#13;
been waiting for a telegram from&#13;
Capt. May ever since that l^ake Michigan&#13;
storm." For many yearE Capt.&#13;
May commanded the steamer 1). P.&#13;
Dobbins, and being of frugal turn,&#13;
he saved his wages until he had&#13;
enough to purchase the little Arcadia&#13;
last February.&#13;
The boat cost him $3,000, and he&#13;
spent 12.000 more in fixing up everything&#13;
that could be fixed to make the&#13;
steamer a floating home for himself&#13;
and family, for Capt. May expected&#13;
to take his wife and children with&#13;
him and make the Arcadia their&#13;
houseboat for the season.&#13;
PRIMARY ELECTION*&#13;
! * » . ' •&#13;
\"«'&#13;
Will See the World.&#13;
With the intention of seeing the&#13;
world before he settles down to study&#13;
law at the IT. of M , Gerald Clifford, of&#13;
Escanaba, has started on a trip around&#13;
the world, on which he intends to earn&#13;
his own way.&#13;
He is now headed for New York,&#13;
and he expects to work his way across&#13;
the Atlantic on a cattle boat. His&#13;
ilinerary includes every country in&#13;
Europe, the principal points of interest&#13;
in Asia, Japan and the Philippines.&#13;
He will probably be gone more than&#13;
two years. Young Cliffords friends say j&#13;
that he will make a success in his efforts&#13;
to eain his way. as he is strong&#13;
physically and mentally.&#13;
'I don't expect to travel In steamer&#13;
cabins or first-class trains," Clifford&#13;
says, "but I intend to go everywhere&#13;
1 have any desire to go, and you bet&#13;
I'll get through."&#13;
Veteran Drowned.&#13;
Ferdinand Newman, aged 81 years,&#13;
an inmate of the Soldiers' home, was&#13;
found dead in the Little mill pond,&#13;
inst east, of the dormitory building,&#13;
and but a short distance from the&#13;
street car tracks. Whether he had&#13;
taken this means to end his life or&#13;
Lad accidentally fallen into the water,&#13;
which in this point ifi t p n *e e t deep,&#13;
will probably never be known, but&#13;
this latter theory is advanced by the&#13;
home authorities. Coroner Leroy -was&#13;
summoned in the case and after viewing&#13;
the remains he decided no inquest '&#13;
would lie necessary.&#13;
The deceased enlisted February &lt;;, I&#13;
1M.4, In the New York Heavy artil- I&#13;
1« ry, and was discharged June UK, i&#13;
1SK5. He entered th&lt; home October&#13;
2, is»4, from Bay City. As far as is&#13;
known he has no living relatives.&#13;
St. Joe's Marriage Mill.&#13;
St. Joseph and Berrien county arc&#13;
known in every portion of the United&#13;
States as the Gretna Green center of&#13;
the middle west. In t'oe last few years&#13;
the marrying business has grown by&#13;
leaps and bounds. The total record,&#13;
as culled from the books for the last.&#13;
twenty y«ars, roads &amp;s follows: 1887,&#13;
54ft; 1881, 177; 1889, 434; 1890, 441;&#13;
1891, 441; 18S2, 429; 1893, 466; 1894,&#13;
417; 189B, 4«7; 1896, 432; 1897, 472;&#13;
1898, 4R1; 1899, 1,096; 1900, 1,460;&#13;
1901, 1.491; 1902, 1,490; 1903, 1,193;&#13;
19M. 1,189; 1905, 1,542; 1906, 1,763.&#13;
Total for all y e a n , 10,547.&#13;
A Woman's Good Work.&#13;
Had it not been for n woman's Idea,&#13;
Ray City would probably not now he&#13;
preparing to convert a nine-acre strip&#13;
of river front, occupied by business&#13;
louses, into a public park. The woman&#13;
is HfiL Alfred E. Boustield, wife of&#13;
jne oflfce wealthiest residents of the&#13;
city. He ^B also one of the three men&#13;
who brouffct the 1250,000 hotel and&#13;
tuditorium project to &amp; successfu' is-&#13;
»ue.&#13;
The governor Sends In a Special Me»&#13;
»age.&#13;
T h e present primary election »yetem&#13;
of having a portion of the nominations&#13;
made in June and ihe balance&#13;
later In the year is expensive and&#13;
tends to keep the electorate In a constant&#13;
state of political turmoil," no&#13;
Bays Gov. Warner In a special message&#13;
lo the legislature.&#13;
"In my judgment, the law of 1&amp;05&#13;
should be so modified aa to provide&#13;
absolutely for the nomination of governor&#13;
and lieutenant-governor in the&#13;
primaries.&#13;
"1 urge the elimination of all percentage&#13;
divisions because of the extra&#13;
expense and extra burden such&#13;
provisions must of necessity put upon&#13;
the candidates for these efllee*u&#13;
"The motive which prompted the&#13;
people to make this change In the&#13;
manner of nominating candidates for&#13;
governor and lieutenant-governor was,&#13;
us you all know, the widespread desire&#13;
to remove these unices from the turmoil&#13;
of convention politics.&#13;
"It is impossible for me to resist&#13;
the conclusion that such action providing&#13;
for the nomination of United&#13;
States senators by the people on your&#13;
part will be generally indorsed by&#13;
your constituents. It will certainly&#13;
remove much unnecessary factionalism&#13;
and strife which tends to disastrously&#13;
complicate all important m a t&#13;
ters which are subsequently presented&#13;
to the legislators for consideration and&#13;
action.&#13;
"Too many party workers are offering&#13;
their services for sale at and Defore&#13;
the primaries and too many candidates&#13;
are found entirely too willing&#13;
to buy or in apparent self-defense&#13;
are forced to buy.&#13;
"The hired political worker should&#13;
be driven out of employment.&#13;
"The business of settling political&#13;
Influence should be made so hazardous&#13;
that few will have the temerity to offer&#13;
it for sale."&#13;
The occasion for the message was&#13;
the coming consideration of the Dickinson&#13;
bill. This measure Is along the&#13;
lines of the governor's message and&#13;
with the bill In the senate providing&#13;
for strict restriction of the use of&#13;
money at primaries, embodies the governor^&#13;
ideas as to what the primary&#13;
election law should provide.&#13;
Born Thi«f.&#13;
A thief from early childhood Is Arthur&#13;
Baldwin, aged 14 years, of Port&#13;
Huron, according to his own story as&#13;
told to Sheriff Wesley Davidson. Captured&#13;
while committing a burglary, he&#13;
said to the sheriff: "I am a born thief&#13;
and burglar. Do you know I would&#13;
rather steal and get Into trouble than&#13;
anything else. I know It isn't right, but&#13;
i t s in me and I guess I have just got&#13;
to let it out."&#13;
lie admitted that he had robbed the&#13;
Campbell residence on two previous&#13;
occasions and had entered a number of&#13;
other residences in the city. He also&#13;
confessed to peeping in windows&#13;
throughout the city and frightening&#13;
children. Sheriff Davidson Is of the&#13;
opinion that the "Jack the Peeper"&#13;
who has been quite prominent during&#13;
the winter is none other than young&#13;
Baldwin.&#13;
Arthur has spent two years at the&#13;
Industrial school at Lansing and it is&#13;
probable that he will be now given a&#13;
term at Ionia for his last offense.&#13;
Fllmflammed Them.&#13;
A smooth stranger appeared in New&#13;
Richmond several weeks ago soliciting&#13;
orders for a new atlas of Allegan county.&#13;
He called on the old settlers, got&#13;
the story of their lives and then politely&#13;
requested them to sign documents,&#13;
"Just to show that the story&#13;
was true." The documents later turned&#13;
out. to be notes of from $15 to $50 at&#13;
6 per cent interest.&#13;
A smooth old man appeared afterwards&#13;
delivering the books and collecting&#13;
«n the notes. Failing to do so, he&#13;
cashed them at the Feunvllle bank&#13;
at a discount.&#13;
The old settlers swear vengeance on&#13;
the first, book agent that appears in&#13;
the vicinity.&#13;
THE GUNS OF FIVE&#13;
T H E JAMESTOWN EXPOSITION&#13;
18 OPENED BY T H E&#13;
PRE8IDENT.&#13;
Chief Lost His Diamond.&#13;
Not. all of them. but. a few who&#13;
sport a "sparkler," are asking themselves&#13;
what show they have to dodge&#13;
the footpad and petty highwayman&#13;
when a trio of this gentry can politely&#13;
pick a $200 diamond stud off the chief&#13;
of police's shirt bosom. That offense&#13;
occurred Thursday night. Chief Royle&#13;
was strolling along the street when&#13;
three men jostled him. In tho melee&#13;
the chiefs jewel vanished. The commotion&#13;
attracted pedestrians, who&#13;
managed to hold a man, who gives the&#13;
name Gt-orge Reynolds, until a patrolman&#13;
arrived. Reynolds is locked up on&#13;
suspicion, but the diamond is still&#13;
missing.&#13;
Michigan's Display.&#13;
The Michigan board of managers of&#13;
the Jamestown Ter-Centennial exposition&#13;
is anxious that Michigan make a&#13;
creditable exhibit at the exposition,&#13;
and they especially desire that, these&#13;
exhibits he hurried to Jamestown at&#13;
once. The Michigan building is nicely&#13;
located and the management hag been&#13;
liberal in allowing space for a fine&#13;
display. Aside from its building Michigan&#13;
will have two displays, that, in&#13;
the Mines and Metallurgy building and&#13;
the other, much broader in scope, will&#13;
be in the building for state exhibit*.&#13;
LAND, WATER DISPLAY&#13;
Rogeevflt'a Address For a "Square&#13;
Deal"—Scenes and Incidents of the&#13;
Great Opsning.&#13;
The Jumestown tercentennial ex&#13;
position—a land and water display&#13;
such as never was attempted in this&#13;
country or on foreign shores—was&#13;
opened Friday with that pomp and&#13;
ceremony which always attends an&#13;
event where the president, of thw&#13;
T'nited Stales is a central figure and&#13;
diplomatic representames of foreign&#13;
nations, governors of states and llkt&#13;
dignitaries are honored guests and&#13;
participants.&#13;
The trim Mayflower, bearing the&#13;
president and Mrs. Roosevelt, Secretary&#13;
Loeb and a few invited guests,&#13;
arrived at the head of the column ot&#13;
war vessels in Hamilton Roads this&#13;
morning almost an hour before the&#13;
usual call for quarters Is sounded&#13;
aboard a man-of-war. As she ap&#13;
pro ached with rainbow flags aflutter&#13;
the American flagship boomed out the&#13;
first gun of the presidential salute. In&#13;
a flash the other American ships and&#13;
the, foreign vessels had manned their&#13;
cannon and a roar of 21 guns, fired&#13;
from each vessel of the fleet, sounded&#13;
almost simultaneously.&#13;
The Mayflower pointed her way up&#13;
the roads toward Norfolk, passing&#13;
along the outer line of foreign ships,&#13;
"close aboard." As she cleared the&#13;
first of these, the visiting vessel&#13;
opened Are with a new series of salutes,&#13;
repeated in turn by every battleship&#13;
and cruiser' of the big fleet.&#13;
The Mayflowers way had been kept&#13;
Llear by steam guard launches, which&#13;
acted as pickets. These "little policemen"&#13;
of the roads were a unique and&#13;
interesting feature.&#13;
Bach foreign and American ship&#13;
manned the rails as the president&#13;
passed in review. The crews were&#13;
drawn up In close order along the&#13;
forward and quarter-decks and elevations&#13;
of the superstructure, and stood&#13;
at attention as the Mayflower skimmed&#13;
by.&#13;
On coining to anchor the president&#13;
received on board ;the Mayflower the&#13;
officers of the Atlantic fleet and of&#13;
the foreign ships, after which the&#13;
party went to the parade grounds&#13;
where President Tucker welcomed the&#13;
nation's executive.&#13;
When the president began to speak&#13;
he mounted a table so that everyone&#13;
might see him. He was greatly concerned&#13;
by the danger in the crowd to&#13;
women and children Rnd requested&#13;
that enthusiasm be kept down. He&#13;
asked that there be no crowding, saying:&#13;
"If there Is one thing that marks&#13;
a body of Americans, and espscially&#13;
a body of Virginians, it is that they&#13;
take good care of women and children."&#13;
This stopped the danger for a&#13;
time, but it was not long before the&#13;
people's enthusiasm again swept away&#13;
all semblauce of order. Gen. (Jrant.&#13;
then sent a squad of cavalry into the&#13;
throng, and saved it from breaking&#13;
through the ropes, in which event&#13;
there must have been many casualties.&#13;
Some of the special points of the&#13;
tiddress follow:&#13;
It was men of English stock who&#13;
did the most in molding our national&#13;
character. '-"«Nfl&#13;
Reforms are needed, but he bears&#13;
In mind Burke's statement: "There&#13;
is a state to preserve as well as a&#13;
state to reform."&#13;
The man who swindles or cheats,&#13;
whether on a big scale or a little&#13;
scale, will be treated like any criminal&#13;
by Americans.&#13;
We are not looking for indiscriminate&#13;
vengeance on any class. We are&#13;
building up, rather than tearing down.&#13;
We will not tolerate the abuse oi&#13;
wealth.&#13;
We will fight any tendency to reduce&#13;
the people to economic, servi&#13;
tude.&#13;
This government, will never become&#13;
a plutocracy. Neither will it. ever become&#13;
a government of a mob.&#13;
INHUMAN.&#13;
Hcrriblc Treatment of Prisoners by&#13;
Russians.&#13;
Th* mutiny in the prison at rU#a&#13;
was debated in the duma Tutaday.&#13;
it was declared that the prison ot*&#13;
flcialg tortured prisoners almost in*&#13;
«aue, and t^eu uave them an opportunity&#13;
to mutiny, so as to he able to&#13;
shoot down some and kill others&#13;
through drumhead courts martial.&#13;
M. Pergament read a report which&#13;
detailed 70 case* or torture. The&#13;
names of the victims were given.&#13;
They were beaten with Cossacks'&#13;
whips and rubber rods, their finger&#13;
nails and hair were pulled out. etc.&#13;
The tortures In some cases were&#13;
prolonged for eight to ten days. Oat&#13;
man, only 22 years old, looked like an&#13;
old man after the torturing. The roport&#13;
said that all who were sentenced&#13;
by drumhead court martia1! Cr who&#13;
overpowered the prison officers 8t&#13;
Riga April 1" passed through the torture&#13;
chamber.&#13;
Vice Minister of the Interior Maka-&#13;
,roff said the official investigation&#13;
showed the charges IU bo well founded.&#13;
The new M. E. church in Thetford&#13;
township has been completed and will&#13;
be dedicated May 12. The edifice is&#13;
said to be one of the handsomest&#13;
building* of its kind in the state.&#13;
Swettenham Again.&#13;
Gov. Swettenham has stirred up another&#13;
hornets1 nest, by announcing the&#13;
receipt, of a bill from the Panama canal&#13;
commission for $10,000. This is for&#13;
the food supplies, tents and other comforts&#13;
hurried there from Panama to&#13;
relieve the suffering of the people after&#13;
the earthquake.&#13;
The supplies, of course, were sent&#13;
an a gift. Btit following hi» insult to&#13;
IT. 9. Admiral Davis, for which he had&#13;
to apologize and then resign, he Insisted&#13;
on the Panama canal commission&#13;
sending in a bill for the relief&#13;
It had Charitably furniBhed. His inlistence&#13;
forced the commission, to render&#13;
the bill and Kingstoa is again&#13;
roundly denouncing Swettenham. Gov.&#13;
Oliver, Swettenham's successor, will&#13;
arrive there in about 10 days and all&#13;
Jamaica will sigh with relief when&#13;
Bwettenhaaa sails away.&#13;
The baggage coach on a Pere Marinette&#13;
train was discovered in flames&#13;
between Mears and Pentwater, and&#13;
Engineer Wells pulled It away from&#13;
two passenger coaches. The mail&#13;
alerkn were singed. The loss Is over&#13;
M.0O0.&#13;
^--^i^-w^ii-^wv&gt;**ir*»*w •&#13;
T H E MAKINQ OF -I °f^''-$%al45f&#13;
have&#13;
Infernal Machine Found.&#13;
Great excitement prevails In the Toledo&#13;
postoffice as the result of the&#13;
discovery of an infernal machine In&#13;
the private drawer of Inspector Henneu.&#13;
It Is said that a few days ago Hennen&#13;
discovered the mysterious hoi&#13;
and turned It over to secret service&#13;
officers, inspector Holmes, ot Cincinnati,&#13;
was notified and secret service&#13;
men put to work immediately.&#13;
Every emplbye of the Toledo postoffice&#13;
has been sworn to secrecy, but&#13;
enough Is known to Indicate the government&#13;
is very much concerned in&#13;
the matter. Affidavits from Postmaster&#13;
Tucker down to special delivery boys&#13;
and Including men at outlying stations&#13;
are being taken.&#13;
Inspector Hennen refused to discuss&#13;
the case. He is said to have been&#13;
working on an important case and It&#13;
is thought the box was sent by persons&#13;
implicated.&#13;
Thaw** Bail.&#13;
Mrs. Wm, Thaw, mother of Harry&#13;
K. Thaw, and hie sister, the countess&#13;
of Yarmouth, returned to New York&#13;
Saturday from Pittsburg and went to&#13;
the Tombs to see Harry. Mrs. Evelyn&#13;
Thaw was calling on her husband at&#13;
the time.&#13;
Mrs. Thaw would make no statement,&#13;
but it Is understood that she&#13;
has failed to raise the bail money lor&#13;
which It was said she went to Pittsburg.&#13;
The money could have been&#13;
raised, but It wai reported by doing so&#13;
the securities held by the Thaw estate&#13;
would be greatly depreciated.&#13;
The elder Mrs. Thaw, it is said, Is&#13;
greatly disappointed over her iuabiW&#13;
lty to raise the money with which she&#13;
had hoped to obtain her son's temporary&#13;
liberty.&#13;
Miss Margaret McCall came all the&#13;
way from Scotland to wed Alex.&#13;
Clarke, of Calumet.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
D e t r o i t K x t r a d r y - f e d .staers aivl&#13;
h e i f e r s , $5 25(3 6: s t e e r * a n d h e i f e r s ,&#13;
1,000 to 1.200 lbs, $6&lt;&amp;5 *fi; s t e e r s a n d&#13;
lieifera. 800 to 1,000 lbs, $4 7 5 ^ 5 26;&#13;
s t e e r s a n d h e i f e r s t h a t a r « fat. 50u to&#13;
700 lbs, $4 2f&gt;4J 4 76; r h o i e e f a t c o w s ,&#13;
$4 25&lt;?4 75: g o o d f a t c o w s , $3 7 5 ® 4 28;&#13;
c o m m o n r o w s , $3 25@,1 75; c a n n e r a ,&#13;
| 2 50ft)3; choice h e a v y bulla, $4 2BQ&#13;
4 T5; f a i r t o good b o l o g n a * , b u l l s , $3 75&#13;
&lt;&amp;M 26; s t o c k bulle, S3 50; choice feed-&#13;
Inn s t e e r * . 800 to 1,000 IbH, $3 7 6 0 4 40:&#13;
fair f e e d i n g s t e e r s , 800 to 1,000 lbs,&#13;
i 3 5 0 ® 4 ; c h o i c e s t o c k * ™ , 500 to 700 lbs,&#13;
IS 7 5 © 4 : f a i r BtQck#r§, 500 to 700 lbs,&#13;
| 3 25&lt;§S 76; Mock h e i f e r s , | 3 2f&gt;f&amp;&gt;3 75;&#13;
m i l k e r s , l a r g e , young-', m e d i u m age, MO&#13;
@K0; c o m m o n m i l k f t r i , | 1 8 ® 2 B .&#13;
Veal c n l v e s — M a r k e t , good g r a d e s ,&#13;
25c; c o m m o n , 80c l o w e r ; best, $fi 50©&#13;
6 26; o t h e r s , $4®B.&#13;
S h e e p a n d l a m b s — M a r k e t 2&amp;C to G0c&#13;
l o w e r ; c o m m o n c l i p s , v e r y dull. ( Q u o -&#13;
t a t i o n * a r e for c l i p p e d s t o c k . ) R e s t&#13;
l a m b s , ffl 60(3:7; f*tr t o g o o d l a m b s ,&#13;
$P. fi0(g:6 26; light, t o c o m m o n l a m b s ,&#13;
$4 50®B; y e a r l i n g s , $B®C; fair to good&#13;
b u t c h e r *heep, &gt;4 50(9)5: culla a n d c o m -&#13;
mon, $2 50¢¢3 R0; w o o l I a m b s , ffifaa 50,&#13;
H o g s — M a r k e t 16c t o 20e lower,&#13;
l t n n g e of p r i c e s : L i g h t to good b u t c h -&#13;
e r s . | S :&gt;f&lt;; pigB. $fi 50; l i g h t y o r k e r a ,&#13;
?6 50; r o u g h s , | 6 ; s t a g s , 1-3 off.&#13;
E a s t Buffalo.—-Cattle m a r k e t a c t i v e&#13;
a n d Ki@i:,c. h i g h e r ; bf*&lt;t e x p o r t s t e e r s ,&#13;
jr,.S0(g«; few l o a d s cboine a t tfi.2B; heat&#13;
1.20(1 t o 1,300-lh s t e e r s . 16. IR &lt;8 5.B5 ; heat&#13;
1,000 to 1.100-lb, $4.50 0$G.2!i;' best fat&#13;
cow», $4.2R(&amp;4,50; f a i r to good, $3.00®&#13;
;-!.75; t r i m m e r s , $2.25®2.50; b e s t h e i f e r s ,&#13;
$4,710(5.25; m e d i u m to good, $fl@6.25;&#13;
best, f e e d i n g s t e e r s , $4.25 (© 4.50; y e a r -&#13;
l i n g s , $3.25(y&gt;3.50; c o m m o n s t o c k s t e e r s ,&#13;
$3#3.2fi: e x p o r t b u l l s , $4.50(3)5; b o l o g -&#13;
n a s , $3.76(^4,25: s t o c k bulla, $2.50®3.&amp;&#13;
T h e cow m a r k e t w a s f r o m $2 t o |&#13;
h i g h e r ; good to e x t r a , $42(9 52: m e d i u m&#13;
to good, $28 (ft 35; c o m m o n , $1S®23.&#13;
H O K ? — M a r k e t l o w e r ; m e d i u m , h e a v y&#13;
a n d y o r k e r s , $G.90@8.!)5; p i g s , $6.00;&#13;
r o u g h s , $ 5 . 9 0 0 6 .&#13;
S h e e p — M a r k e t s l o w ; best c l i p p e d&#13;
l a m b s , $7.40(5)7,50; w o o l s . $8,50©8.75;&#13;
v e a r l i n g s , $ 5 . 7 6 ^ 7 ; w e t h e r s , $fi.25J&gt;&#13;
6..":0; a w e s , $6.75®«.&#13;
C a l v e s — S l o w a t $4(9)7.25.&#13;
Important Part Alcohol Playe ty|&#13;
Human Curve.&#13;
• ' ,, ' : f. I *&#13;
wbrl&lt;rlB*%ni undeveloped, dwa&#13;
sluggish Intellect. StaUstlCB&#13;
placed the number of defective children&#13;
in the United States as 180,000,&#13;
enough to make a city of nearly 200,-&#13;
oou. What ib the cauae of this alarminfc'&#13;
increase In idiocy? One eminent&#13;
authority says that 35 per cent, of the&#13;
I'eeble-mlnded are the results of strong&#13;
drink. What a stumbling block this&#13;
nation is placing before tho children?&#13;
in the form jf the licensed dramshop!&#13;
O mother, you whose arms are folded&#13;
about your bright, laughing, dimpled&#13;
little one, think of the thousands&#13;
of helpless Infants, forced into an almost&#13;
Joyless, senseless existence&#13;
through the obnoxious rum traffic.&#13;
Each mother should say, "I am but&#13;
one—but I am one. I cannot do much,&#13;
but I can do something, and what I&#13;
can do, by the grace of God. I wilt&#13;
do."&#13;
No matter how well directed the effort&#13;
for the idiot's development, he&#13;
will always be handicapped, and never&#13;
in this world will he be what he has arlght&#13;
to be.&#13;
Because of the degradation of rumdrinking&#13;
parents in one large city,&#13;
100,000 children, owing to their filthy&#13;
physical and moral inheritances and&#13;
bad environments, are prohibited from&#13;
attending the public schools. Belle&#13;
Kearney, In an address at Ann Arbor,&#13;
j told of one of her experiences while&#13;
touring the South. At the close off&#13;
I one lecture a little boy came running&#13;
1 toward her. "O Miss Kearney," he&#13;
I cried, stretching out his claws toward&#13;
j her, for his thin hands were little*&#13;
; more; 'don't you think the boys and&#13;
| girls ought to be protected from&#13;
strong drink?'&#13;
! In a small village of Michigan, says&#13;
! Irene Davis in the Home Herald, there&#13;
exists a family of nine children. Tho&#13;
father is a habitual drinker. His children&#13;
are all dull and some of them&#13;
have criminal tendencies. Their one&#13;
little girl was an exception. This&#13;
little child was very pretty and appeared&#13;
normal up to her second year.&#13;
Later, one afternoon her mother went&#13;
away and left her in the care of the&#13;
two younger boys. In her absence t h e&#13;
little girl attempted to light the gasoline&#13;
stove. Her clothing caught fire&#13;
and she was burned beyond earthly&#13;
hope when her screams brougu* a&#13;
passerby lo her relief. Theh- older&#13;
boy is now in jail. For months the&#13;
children have absented themselves&#13;
from school. The teachers say they&#13;
do not want them to attend, for their&#13;
presence always starts trouble. This&#13;
family crtn be multiplied many times.&#13;
The boys are growing up without&#13;
Christian training, and when they are&#13;
21 their vote will count as much as aminister's.&#13;
Physicians assert that in many&#13;
towns more than one-half of the women&#13;
to-day are incapable of nursing&#13;
their children. This incapacity is on&#13;
the increase and has been found to&#13;
be hereditary. Their milk h a s to be&#13;
supplemented with cow's milk. It&#13;
has been found that human milk, to&#13;
meet special r e q u i r e m e n t of the hu»&#13;
man Infant, is poorest in albumen&#13;
and richest in lactic acid. The latter&#13;
component is the principle element&#13;
used in building up the brain.&#13;
If for no other reason than love&#13;
to these little human flowers, let us,&#13;
HR mothers, wives, sisters and daughters,&#13;
do all we can to take down t h e&#13;
Stars and Stripes from the liceiMttd&#13;
ssloon and wrap it around the Ci1*^&#13;
cious children.&#13;
Grain, Wtp.&#13;
Whea*:—Oanh No. 2 red, file; May,&#13;
5.000 b u fit 8l^4c, lfl.000 b u a t fil-^o,&#13;
5,000 bu a t 81V4c, 5,000 b u a t 8 1 ½ ¾&#13;
12,000 bu a t 81*i&lt;\ 5,000 b u a t 83 **c,&#13;
10,000 bu a t SlVic; J u l y , 20.000 b u a t&#13;
&amp;2%C 25,000 b u at. 82\4e, 10,006 b u « t&#13;
K2%c\ 20,000 bu J.t «2%c, 15,000 b u a t&#13;
S3r, 15.000 bu' a t 8 2 ^ 0 . 10,000 b u a t&#13;
S2*ie; S e p t e m b e r , 5,00ft bu a t 84 H e , 25,-&#13;
nnn bu at. 84V4n. 30,000 bu a t 84¾ e, 10,-&#13;
OHO bu a t S 4 S c , 10,000 bu a t !UHe\ 20,-&#13;
000 bu a t S 4 V ' , 25,000 bu at S4i£c; No&#13;
3 red, 78r; No. 1 w h i t e . 75 \c.&#13;
T o r n - - 1 ' a s h Xo. 2, 4 Or; N'n. 3 v e l l o w ,&#13;
1 e a r ;it hie.&#13;
( t o t s ('(ish No. n w o i t e , 1 e a r at&#13;
4 5 ¾ ^ No. 4 w h l t n , 2 e n r s at. 45c.&#13;
i ; y e - - - r a s h No. 2. 74&lt;\&#13;
Rfatis C a s h , Si 22; May, $1 31- J u n e&#13;
$1 3fi ftuked.&#13;
C l o v t r K t e d - -Prime- spot, 30 h a g * a t&#13;
$S tMi; O c t o b e r , 100 bug* a t $7 40; s a m -&#13;
ple, 15 bagR a t $S 25, 17 at $7 50, 9 a t&#13;
$7; p r i m e a l s l k e , 30 h a g i a t 1 7 ; ' s a m p l e , '&#13;
5 ba«r» a t $6 50, 5 a t $6.&#13;
T i m o t h y t e e d — P r i m * upot, BO b a r a at&#13;
$2 0B. * ^&#13;
The Church and the Saloon Question,&#13;
Bishop R. S. Foster has said: "The&#13;
church of to-day, much more the&#13;
church of the future, must, take to its&#13;
heart the duty of combining and mass&#13;
ing its force against the gigantic&#13;
atrocity of Christian civilization that&#13;
mothers nine-tenths of the woes and&#13;
sorrows that blight and curse our modern&#13;
age—the traffic In intoxicants,&#13;
which hides its deformity under&#13;
forms of law. The conflict is now&#13;
upon us. The church must lead In&#13;
this reform. This is her most peculiar&#13;
province. It comes in the line&#13;
of the great class of moral Issues of&#13;
which she is the recognized guardian.&#13;
The rum hole must be closed, or t h e&#13;
rum hell will engulf Christendom. If&#13;
ever the pulpit had a right, the duty&#13;
to flay with unsparing rebuke, it ia&#13;
here."&#13;
Chosen Editor.&#13;
Mr. Don O. Shelton, president of tho1&#13;
newly formed National Bible institute&#13;
—the headquarters of which are In&#13;
Ihe Presbyterian building, New York&#13;
city—-hag been 'chosen editor of( fhe&#13;
lilble To-day, the organ of this new&#13;
toovemen*&#13;
**si*we-:&#13;
vflr,&#13;
v * '&lt;&#13;
w&#13;
- AN"&#13;
y \&#13;
^ :&#13;
&lt;Ju•&amp;*;^*&amp;s::i***&#13;
"""^.tayfl^v*"&#13;
ja^.&#13;
V -,. pWk*-*rUl«!P^^ t; y « jR*,3PViv.ujiii vjiviHi 1 W &lt;» i*P -4--&lt;«» i ' n w * &lt; M « i i w i i i &gt; ^ 4 • \MErtM4nytv*):.&#13;
&gt; . • - &lt; '&#13;
• #&#13;
r \&#13;
TE"&#13;
^ . - , , , , , , j , ii, ,,,,1,'jagg&#13;
•#k&#13;
IE LIONS&#13;
OF&#13;
THE LORD&#13;
A Tals of the Old West&#13;
By HARRY LEON WILSON&#13;
Author of "The ,Sp*ao«r»."&#13;
(CtopyHgtit, IWS, bjr LotHroDPub!lslilnK V&gt;&#13;
CHAPTER XXXIV.—Continued.&#13;
But Prudence was not tfcere, and&#13;
Az "wondered with dismay if she had&#13;
joined the rest of the village and&#13;
gone out to meet the prophet, lie&#13;
had Been the last at' them going along&#13;
the dusty road to the north, men and&#13;
women and little, children, hot, excited,&#13;
aud eager. It did not seem like&#13;
her io b;&gt; among them, and yet except&#13;
for those before him working&#13;
about the bo'.very, and i. l'o'.v mothers&#13;
with children in arm.-;, the town was&#13;
apparently deserted.&#13;
Hue even as he waited he heard&#13;
the winding alarm oil a bugle and&#13;
the&#13;
Wild&#13;
i'e\V&#13;
final&#13;
saw a scurrying of backs in&#13;
dusty iuue t'ar up the road. 'J'he&#13;
Ham of the Mountains gave a&#13;
hurried com mantis for the very&#13;
touches, called off his force from the&#13;
mow complete bowery, aud a solidary&#13;
'Gentil:&gt; was l'ci' the moment left to&#13;
greet the oncoming procession.&#13;
Presently, however .from the dark&#13;
interiors of the log houses came the&#13;
mothers with babies, a few aged sires&#13;
too feeble for the. march, and such of&#13;
the remaining housewives as could&#13;
leave for a little time the dinners&#13;
they were rooking. They made hut&#13;
a thin line along the little street, and&#13;
follett saw at once that Prudence was&#13;
not among them. He must wait and&#13;
•see if she marched in the approaching&#13;
procession.&#13;
Already the mounted escort was&#13;
-coming into view, f^ur abreast, captained&#13;
by Elder Wahllo, who, with&#13;
a sash of red and gojd slanted across&#13;
his breast, was ridinjg nervously, as&#13;
his seat could be kept only by the&#13;
most skillful horsemanship, a white&#13;
mule that he was known to treat with&#13;
fearless disrespect on days that were&#13;
not great. Behind the martial&#13;
Wardle was Peter Peterson, Peter&#13;
L o h f . M t M r , ' W»d Peter Lonfe Peter&#13;
Peterson, tke nioet martial looking&#13;
m e n ttrAmalon after their leader; and&#13;
then came a few more fours of proud&#13;
ly mounted Saints.&#13;
After thi.; escort, separated by an&#13;
interval that would let the dust settle&#13;
;\ little, came the body of the procession,&#13;
first a carriage containing&#13;
Hi.1 prophet, portly, strong-faced, easy&#13;
of manner, as became a giant who&#13;
felt, kindly in his might. By his side&#13;
was his wife, Amelia, the reigning favorite,&#13;
wh &gt; could play the piano and&#13;
sing "Fair Bingon on the Rhine" with&#13;
a dash that was said to be superb.&#13;
Behind this float of honor came other&#13;
carriages bearing the prophet's counsellors,&#13;
the apostles, chief bishop,&#13;
bishops generally, elders, priests and&#13;
deacons, each taking precedence near&#13;
the prophet's carriage by seniority of&#13;
rank or ordination. Along the line&#13;
of carriages were outriders, bearing&#13;
proudly aloft the banners upon which&#13;
suitable devices were printed:&#13;
"God Bless Brigham Young!"&#13;
"Hail to Zion'a Chief!"&#13;
"The Lion of the Lord."&#13;
"Welcome to our Mouthpiece of&#13;
God!"&#13;
Behind the last carriage came the&#13;
tiUtarts iff p w « l o n , each detachment&#13;
with Its keener. The elderly&#13;
brethren stepped briskly under "Fathers&#13;
in Israel'*; the elderly sisters gazed&#13;
proudly aloft to "Mothers in Israel."&#13;
Then came a company of young men&#13;
whose banner announced them as "Defenders&#13;
of Zion." They were followed&#13;
by a company of maidens led by Ma&#13;
Hlda Wright, striving to be not too&#13;
much elated, and whose hanner bore&#13;
Hie inscription, "Daughters of Zion."&#13;
At the last came t h e children, openly&#13;
set up by the occasion, and big-eyed&#13;
with importance, the boy who carried&#13;
their banner, "The Hope of Israel,"&#13;
ejoing with wonderful rigidity, casting&#13;
not so much as an eye either to right&#13;
or left.&#13;
But Prudence had not been in this&#13;
triumphal column, nor was she among&#13;
•*ny of the women who stood with chilli-&#13;
en la their arms, or who rushed to&#13;
tee doors with sleeves rolled up and a&#13;
\-*t tpoon or fork in their hands.&#13;
- T&amp;** All at once &amp; great inspiration&#13;
caase-to Follett. When the last dusty&#13;
little white-dressed girl had trudged&#13;
solemnly by, and the heart of the procession&#13;
was alredy winding down the&#13;
lane that led to Elder Wardle's place,&#13;
he called 'himself a fool and turned&#13;
back. He walked like a man who has&#13;
suddenly remembered t h a t which he&#13;
should not have forgotten. And yet he&#13;
had remembered nothing at all. He&#13;
had only thought of a possibility, but&#13;
one that became more plausible with&#13;
every step; especially when he&#13;
reached the Rae house and foundlt deserted.&#13;
Whenever he thought of MB&#13;
stupidity., which was every score of&#13;
steps, he would break into a little trot&#13;
that made the willows along the creek&#13;
on his- left run into a yellowish green&#13;
blur.&#13;
He was breathing hard by the time&#13;
he had made the last accent and stood&#13;
in the cool shade of the comforting&#13;
pines. He waited until his pulse became&#13;
slower, wiping his forehead with&#13;
the blue neckerchief which Prudence&#13;
had suggested that she liked to gee&#13;
him wear \u place of the one of scarl&#13;
e t When he had cooled and calmed&#13;
himself a little, he stepped lightly on.&#13;
Around the big rock he went, over the&#13;
"down timber" beyond it, up over the&#13;
rise down which the waters tumbled,&#13;
and then sharply to the right where&#13;
their nook was, a call to her already&#13;
on his lips.&#13;
Rut she was not there. He could&#13;
see the place at a glance. Nothiug below&#13;
met his eye but the straight red&#13;
trunks of the pines and the brown earpet&#13;
beneath them. A jay posed his&#13;
deep shining blue on a cluster of scarlet&#13;
of sumac, and, cocking his crested&#13;
head, screamed at him mockingly.&#13;
The canyon's cool breath fanned him&#13;
and the pine-tops sighed and sang. Al&#13;
He redoubled his speed over t i e&#13;
rocks. When she next caiue-luto view,&#13;
still far ahead* he shouted long and&#13;
loud. It was almost certain that she&#13;
must hear; and yet she made no sign.&#13;
She teemed even to speed ahead the&#13;
faster for his bail.&#13;
Again h e sprang forward to cover&#13;
the distance between them, and again&#13;
he shouted when the next view of her&#13;
showed that be was gaining. This&#13;
time he was sure she heard; but she&#13;
did not look back, and she very plainly&#13;
increased her speed.&#13;
For an instant be stood aghast at&#13;
this discovery; then he laughed.&#13;
"Well IX you want a race, you'll&#13;
get It!"&#13;
He was off again along t h e rough&#13;
bed of the stream. He shouted no&#13;
more, but slowly increased the gain he&#13;
had mado upon her. Instead of losing&#13;
time by climbing up over the bank,&#13;
he splashed through the water at two&#13;
places where the little stream was&#13;
wide and shallow. Then at last he&#13;
saw that he was closing in upon her.&#13;
Soon he was near enough to bee that&#13;
she also knew it.&#13;
1 le began at that moment an extended&#13;
couiso of marveling at the ways of&#13;
woman. For now she had reached the&#13;
edge of the little open park, aud was&#13;
placidly seating hex-self on a fallen&#13;
tree In the grove of quaking aspens.&#13;
He could not understand this change&#13;
of manner. And when he reached the&#13;
opening she again astounded him by&#13;
greeting him with every manifestation&#13;
T&#13;
"\ Never Would Have Given You Up— I'm Never Going To."&#13;
first he was disheartened; but then&#13;
his eyes caught a gleam of white and&#13;
red under the pine, touched to movement&#13;
by a low-swinging breeze.&#13;
It was her hat swaying where she&#13;
had hung It on a broken bough of the&#13;
tree she liked to lean against. And&#13;
there was her book; not the Book of&#13;
Mormon, but a secular, frivolous thing&#13;
called "Leaflets of Memory, an Illuminated&#13;
Annual for the Year 1847." It&#13;
was lying on its face, open a t the&#13;
sentimental tale of "Anaatasla." He&#13;
put. it down where she had left it. The&#13;
canyon was narrow and she would&#13;
hardly leave the waterside for the&#13;
steep trail. She would be at the up- j&#13;
per cascade or in the little park above j&#13;
it, or somewhere between. He crossed I&#13;
the stream, and there in the damp j&#13;
sand was the print of a small heel&#13;
where she had made a long step from&#13;
the last stone. He began to hurry&#13;
again, clambering recklessly over&#13;
boulders, or through the underbrush&#13;
where the sides of the stream were&#13;
steep. When the upper cascade came&#13;
in sight his heart leaped, for there he&#13;
caught the fleeting shimmer of a skirt&#13;
and the gleam of a dark head.&#13;
He hurried on, and after a moment's&#13;
climb had her In full view, standing&#13;
on the ledge below which the big trout&#13;
lay. There he saw her turn so that&#13;
he would have sworn she looked at&#13;
him. It seemed impossible that she&#13;
had not seen him; but to his surprise&#13;
she at once started up the Btream,&#13;
swiftly footing over the rough way,&#13;
now a little Btep, now a free leap,&#13;
grasping a willow to pull herself up&#13;
an incline, then disappearing around a&#13;
clump Qf cedars.&#13;
of surprise, from the first nervous&#13;
start to the pushing up of her dark&#13;
brows.&#13;
"Why," she began, "how did you&#13;
ever think of coming here?"&#13;
But he had twice hurried fruitlessly&#13;
this hot morning and he was not again&#13;
to be baffled. As he advanced toward&#13;
her, she regarded him with some apprehension&#13;
until he stopped a safe six&#13;
feet away. She had noted certain&#13;
lines of determination in his face.&#13;
"Now what's the use of pretending?&#13;
—-what did you run for?"&#13;
"1?—run?"&#13;
Again the curving black brows went&#13;
up in frank surprise.&#13;
'Yes,—you run!"&#13;
He took a threatening step forward,&#13;
and the brows promptly fell to a serious&#13;
intentness of his face.&#13;
"What did you do it for0'"&#13;
She stood up. "What din I do it&#13;
for?—what did I do it forn"&#13;
But his eyes were searching her and&#13;
she had to lower her own. Then she&#13;
looked up again, and laughed nervously.&#13;
"I—I don't knoy—I couldn't help it."&#13;
Again she laughed. 'And why did you&#13;
run? how did you think of coming&#13;
here?"&#13;
"I'll tell yon how, now I'vo caught&#13;
you." He started toward her, but she&#13;
was quickly backing away into the&#13;
opening of the little park, still laughing.&#13;
"Look out »or that blow-down back&#13;
of you J" he called. In the second that&#13;
she halted to turn and discover his&#13;
trick he had caught her by the arm.&#13;
"There—I caught you fair—now&#13;
what did you run far*"&#13;
"I couldn't help It." Her face was&#13;
crimson. His own was pafe under the&#13;
tan. They could hear the beating of&#13;
both their hearts. But with his cap&#13;
turo made so boldly he was dumb,&#13;
knowing not what to say.&#13;
The faintest pulling of the imprisoned&#13;
arm aroused him.&#13;
"I'd 'a' fullowed you till Christmas&#13;
come If you'd kept on. Clear over the&#13;
divide and over the whole creation. 1&#13;
never would have given you up. I'm&#13;
never going to."&#13;
He caught her other wrist aud&#13;
sought to draw her to him.&#13;
With head down she came, slowly,&#13;
yielding yet resisting, with little shudders&#13;
of terror that was yet a strange&#13;
delight, with eyes that dared give him&#13;
but one quick little look, half pleading&#13;
and half tear. But then after a few&#13;
tense seconds h e r struggles were all&#13;
housed far withiirhls arms.; there was&#13;
no longer play for t h e faintest of&#13;
them; and she was strained until she&#13;
felt her heart rush out to him as she&#13;
had once felt It go to her dream of a&#13;
single love, -with the utter abandon of&#13;
t b e falling water beside them.&#13;
His voice came to her in a dull murmur,&#13;
and the sound of t h e running&#13;
water came, again like the muffled&#13;
tinkling of little silver bells in the distance.&#13;
Both his arms were strong&#13;
about her, and now her own hands&#13;
rose in rebellion to meet where the&#13;
kerchief was knotted at the back of&#13;
his neck, quite as the hands of the&#13;
other woman had rebellious!}- Hung&#13;
down the scarf from the balcony.&#13;
Then the brim of his hat came down&#13;
over her hair, and her lips felt his&#13;
kiss.&#13;
They stood so a long time, r; seemed&#13;
io them, in the high grass, amid the&#13;
whir«'-bark&lt;'u quaking aspens, while a&#13;
little- wind from the dark pines at their&#13;
side, lowered now&#13;
ness, played over&#13;
aroused at last by&#13;
half-way down the&#13;
spruce Lo bark in&#13;
believing they menaced his winter's&#13;
store of spruce cones piled at the foot&#13;
of the tree. With rattle after rattle&#13;
»iis alarm earn*', until he had the satisfaction&#13;
of noting; an effect.&#13;
The young man put the girl away&#13;
from him to look upon tier in the new&#13;
light that enveloped them both, still&#13;
holding her hands.&#13;
"There's our good thing about your&#13;
marriages, -they marry you tor eternity,&#13;
don't they? That's for ever--&#13;
only it isn't long enough, even so—not&#13;
for me."&#13;
"I thought you were never coming."&#13;
"Hut you said"—he saw the futility&#13;
of It, however, and kissed her instead.&#13;
"I was afraid of you all this summer,"&#13;
he said.&#13;
"I was afraid of you, too."&#13;
"You got over it yesterday all right."&#13;
"How?"&#13;
"You kissed me."&#13;
"Never—what an awful thing to&#13;
say!"&#13;
"Hut, you did—twice—don't you remember?"&#13;
"Oh, well, it doesn't matter. If I&#13;
did \t wasn't at all like—like—"&#13;
" L i k e t h a t — "&#13;
" N o - - I didn't think anything&#13;
about it."&#13;
'And now you'll never l^ave me, and&#13;
I'll ne\ er leave you."&#13;
i'licv !• ;ii on t lie fullen 1 roe.&#13;
"And io think of \ hat old "&#13;
"Oh, don't talk of it. That's why 1&#13;
ran off here—so 1 couldn't hear anything&#13;
about it until he went away."&#13;
"Why didn't you tell mo you were&#13;
coming'.'"&#13;
"I didn't think you were so stupid."&#13;
"How was I to know where you were&#13;
coming?"&#13;
But now she was reminded of something.&#13;
"Tell me one thing—did you ever&#13;
know a little short. tat girl, a blonde&#13;
that you liked very much?"&#13;
"Never!"&#13;
"You uon't nee&lt;3 to—we'll call it&#13;
even."&#13;
And so the talk went until the ton&#13;
had fallen for an hour aud they knew&#13;
it was time to go below.-&#13;
"We will go to the meeting together/'&#13;
she said, "and then father&#13;
shall ten Brigham — tell him—"&#13;
"That you're going to marry me.&#13;
Why don't you say it?"&#13;
"Thai l'xu going to marry you, aud&#13;
be your only wife." bhe nestled under&#13;
his a r m again.&#13;
"For time and eternity—that's the&#13;
way your church put* It."&#13;
Then, not knowing it, they took their&#13;
last walk down the pine-hung glade.&#13;
Many l i m e s he picked her lightly up&#13;
to carry her over rough places and&#13;
was loch to put her down,—having, in&#13;
truth, to be bribed thereto.&#13;
The RJJ&#13;
C H A P T E R X X X V .&#13;
Bent U t t l e&#13;
to a yearning softtheni.&#13;
They were&#13;
a squirrel that ran.&#13;
trunk of a near-by&#13;
dignautly at them,&#13;
and Fall of a&#13;
Prophet.&#13;
Down in the village the various dinners&#13;
of ceremony to the visiting officials&#13;
were over. An hour had followed&#13;
of decent rest and informal chat between&#13;
the visitors and their hosts,&#13;
touching impartially on matters of&#13;
general interest; on irrigation, t h e&#13;
gift of tongues, the- season's crop of&#13;
peaches, the pouring out of the Spirit&#13;
abroad, the best mixture of sheep-dip;&#13;
on many matters not uupleasing to tho&#13;
practical-minded Deity reigning over&#13;
them.&#13;
Then the entire populace of Amalon,&#13;
in its Sunday best of "valley tan"&#13;
or store-g'oods, flocked to the little&#13;
square and sat expectantly uii the&#13;
benches under the green roof of the&#13;
bowery, ready to absorb the droppings&#13;
oil' the sanctuary.&#13;
In due time &lt; am..' Brigham, scrolling&#13;
between Elder Wardle and Bishop&#13;
Wright, bland, affal.de. and benignant.&#13;
On the platform, about him sat his&#13;
Counsellors, the more distinguished of&#13;
his suite, and the local dignitaries of&#13;
the Church.&#13;
Among those came the little bent&#13;
man wiih an unwonted color in his&#13;
face, coming in absorbed in thought,&#13;
shaking hands even with Brigham&#13;
with something of abstraction in his&#13;
manner. Prudence ami Follett came&#13;
late, iinding seats at the back next to&#13;
a generous row of the .Mrs. Setb,&#13;
Wright.&#13;
When th'*y had settled into their&#13;
seats, the Wild Ram of the Mountains&#13;
arose and invoked a blessing on those&#13;
present and upon those who had gone&#13;
behind the veil; adding a petition that&#13;
Brigham he increased in his basket&#13;
aud in his store, in wives, flocks, and&#13;
herds, and in the gifts of the Holy&#13;
Spirit.&#13;
They sang another hymn, and when&#13;
that was done, the little bent man&#13;
arose and came hesitatingly forward&#13;
to the baize-covered table that served&#13;
as a pulpit. As President of the Stako&#13;
it was his office to welcome the visitors,&#13;
and this he did.&#13;
There were whisperings in the audi*&#13;
ence when his appearance was noted.&#13;
It. was the first time he had been seeu&#13;
hy many of them in weeks. They&#13;
whispered thai he was failing.&#13;
The words of official welcome&#13;
spoken, he b^g;»n his discourse; but&#13;
in a timid, shunting manner so unlike&#13;
his old self that still others whispered&#13;
of his evident illness, Inside he&#13;
burred with his purpose, bu',. with all&#13;
his resolves, the presence of Hrigham&#13;
left him unnerved. He began by referring&#13;
to their many adversities since&#13;
the day when they had first knelt to&#13;
entreat the fnercy of (tod upon the&#13;
land. Then he spoke of revelations.&#13;
"You must all have had revelations,&#13;
because they have come even to me.&#13;
Perhaps you were deaf to the voice,&#13;
as I have been. Perhaps you have&#13;
trusted too readily in some revelation&#13;
that came years ago, supposedly from&#13;
"Then what did you talk so much J God—in f ruth, from the Devil. Perabout&#13;
her for yesterday if you didn't?&#13;
You'd speak of her every time."&#13;
"I didn't think you were so stupid."&#13;
"Well, I can't see—"&#13;
haps you have been deaf to later revelations&#13;
meant to warn you of the&#13;
other's falseness."&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
Ready to Take Notes&#13;
Cruel Husband Had Stenographer to&#13;
Record Wife's Remarks.&#13;
Frederic Irland, at the last convention&#13;
of the National Association of&#13;
Stenographers at Atlantic City, said&#13;
of a somewhat harsh rebuke that one&#13;
stenographer had administered to another:&#13;
"That rebuke was a little to cruel,&#13;
was it not? It reminds me of the cruelty&#13;
of a Washington man—a piece&#13;
of cruelty wherein stenography played&#13;
an unwitting part.&#13;
"As this man came to bed one night&#13;
his wife said to him:&#13;
" 'Has the stranger gone; I didn't&#13;
,, hear him.'&#13;
" 'Oh, no, dear. He hasn'l gone,' t h e&#13;
husband replied. 'I have instructed&#13;
the maid to let him out In three or&#13;
four hours.'&#13;
"Tbe wife looked amazed and stupefied.&#13;
" 'What—why—who on earth Is ha,&#13;
anyway?' she stammered.&#13;
" 'My dear," said the husband, quiet*&#13;
ly, Tie Is a shorthand reporter. You&#13;
see, I nearly always forget what you&#13;
say to me during your discourse from&#13;
ITr till two and sometimes I go to sleep&#13;
while you're talking. So I thought I'd&#13;
have your lecture written out to-night&#13;
and study it at my leisure. The young&#13;
man is all ready, the door ts open so&#13;
that he can hear you, and you may be*&#13;
[gin as soon as you I l k * " '&#13;
Mtf&#13;
«&#13;
\Jt&#13;
mm h W t n ^ u * »*»i«,» q U V .V&#13;
leg,.* . *&#13;
1«'-''&#13;
•$'•&#13;
. ftttf jfinrltiug dispatch&#13;
— _ . . _ k . .&#13;
F. L. A N D R E W S &lt;fc CO. PKOfHlfcTu&#13;
~s&#13;
THUIiSUAY, &gt;hYY'2, WU7.&#13;
The repeal of tho mortgage tax&#13;
law iu beiug largely .dibouaBed in&#13;
ar^umwuta pro and con, but the&#13;
sentiment aeetua to prevail pretty&#13;
Htrungly for its repeal, which&#13;
would certainly produce- the greatest&#13;
irood to the irreateat numher.&#13;
ADDITIONAL LOCAL,&#13;
My IfcNt F r i e n d ,&#13;
A l e x a n d e r Benton, who lives on&#13;
K u r a l R o u t e 1, Port E d w a r d , N . Y.,&#13;
s a y s : " D r . K i n d ' s N e w 1/iscovery is&#13;
my best e a r t h l y jl&amp;mjpi. Jt c u r e d me&#13;
of a s t h m a six' y^af's tygo. d t has also&#13;
perforumd a wonderful imre of incipi&#13;
e n t c o n s u m p t i o n lor my sou's wife.-&#13;
Tbrt fiiv-1 bottle mid ad. t h e • ,-tBv ri-tuM&#13;
cough, a n d th^s H^-CJ nupli^b id ,- t h e oth,-&#13;
er s y m p t o m s left one by o n e , u u t i l s h e&#13;
was perfectly woll. Dr. K i n g ' s N e w&#13;
Discovery s power over c o u g h s a n d&#13;
colds is simply' marvelous.'1 N o o t h e r&#13;
r e m e d y h a s ever equaled it. F u l l y&#13;
g u a r a n t e e d by K. A. Siglor, d r u g g L t&#13;
50c am! SUM). Trail b o t t l e free.&#13;
being&#13;
A bill p r o h i b i t i n g minors u n d e r 17&#13;
a n d s t u d e n t s u n d e r 21 e n t e r m g bowling&#13;
alley* has passed t h e l e g i s l a t u r e .&#13;
A n o t h e r r u m o r its afloat That Dexter&#13;
is to have an electric line t h e coining&#13;
season c o n n a c t i n g t h e m with&#13;
J a c k s o n .&#13;
The Chelsea pear p l a n t a n d t h e&#13;
W h i l e c e m e n t plant a r e lor bale, b u t&#13;
the Glazier stove works a r e t u r n i n , -&#13;
o u t a t r a i n load of goods every m o n t h .&#13;
•—To bad t h a t eyery t o w n c a n n o t have&#13;
its Ulazier.&#13;
A t r a v e l i n g dress good peddler was&#13;
a r r e s t e d a n d lined $5.00 last week in&#13;
B r i g h t o n for s e l l i n g goods w i t h o u t&#13;
t h e r i g h t license. H e h a d a "foot&#13;
p e d d L r V ' license b u t w a s t r a v e l i n g&#13;
with a horse, a n d t h e r e t o r e s h o u l d&#13;
h a v e secured a n o t h e r license.&#13;
T h e r e p o r t t h a t t h e M i c h i g a n Cent&#13;
r a l K. lv. is m a k i n g a s u r v e y a t A u n&#13;
•Arbor is w i t h o u t f o u n d a t i o n as t h e&#13;
m a n a g e r of t h a t road disclaims a n y&#13;
k n o w l e d g e of t h e m a t t e r . T h a t a survey&#13;
tor some p u r p o s e is b e i n g m a d e&#13;
in a n d a b o u t t h e u n i v e r s i t y city&#13;
is sure b u t tor w h a t reuse is more of a&#13;
m y s t e r y now tliau ever.&#13;
Rev. F r . J a m e s Cab Ian, of Hillsdale,&#13;
who is q u i t e well k n o w n here, h a v i n g&#13;
visited here several times, was q u i t e&#13;
Considerable money is&#13;
sent from this country to China&#13;
to aid the famine •-auftVrers- and&#13;
there is considerable dissatisfaction&#13;
among some of the citizens of&#13;
the U. S. as they think the'money&#13;
should be scattered ^mong the&#13;
poor of our own 'country. The&#13;
case is entirely different. This&#13;
country does not know what a&#13;
famine is and in thos'&gt; times of&#13;
prosperity there is plenty of work&#13;
for all eo that want need scarcely&#13;
be known in any of our cities&#13;
There are but few people in these&#13;
United States but who could earn&#13;
a good living if they would.&#13;
Under Llie Cross&#13;
[ U i - i - ' . i i i i i l . j&#13;
Eli I ' l a u WUH having a hard t i m e t o&#13;
m a k e a living H e weal I'rom house&#13;
lo house selliuy; any lhile uriiole he&#13;
could gel a dealer tu t r u s i him with,&#13;
mid bis lit*- w a s passed principally in&#13;
looking in at doors which were slum&#13;
Hied in his lace. One day, receiving&#13;
n o a n s w e r to his ring ai a h a n d s o m e&#13;
residence, he iried ilie knob, opened&#13;
tShe door a n d walked in. H e a r i n g no&#13;
•ound, h e reconnoltered us fur a s t h e&#13;
leeoud story, from a back window of&#13;
Which he s a w a woman in t h e y a r d&#13;
h a n g i n g u p clothes. T h e premises h a d&#13;
evidently been left In her cure. I'ull&#13;
Lcuj open u b u r e a u drawer, he s a w a&#13;
box a n d , o p e n i n g t h e box, u small for&#13;
t u n e In j e w e l s .&#13;
T h e h u m a n tulnd Is capable of g r e a t&#13;
deliberation iu a very smull apace of&#13;
time. Eli P i a t t ' s certainly w a s . H e&#13;
had n e v e r stolen o r robbed. Indeed,&#13;
h e hud calculated t h e chances of such&#13;
m e t h o d s a n d k n e w they w e r e decided&#13;
ly a g a i n s t dishonesty. T h e goods were&#13;
usually recovered, uud t h e thief w e n t&#13;
to s t a t e prison. P i a t t concluded to&#13;
t a k e t h e jewels, hide them, suffer t h e&#13;
consequences of t h e theft a n d w h e n a&#13;
free m a n a g a i n recover t h e t r e a s u r e&#13;
and t a k e a good long comfortable rest.&#13;
H e decided a n d acted deliberately, not&#13;
on t h e usual impulse of a thief.&#13;
T h a t night h e took t h e j e w e l s to a&#13;
block on which t h e only building w a s&#13;
a brick J u n k s h o p . Somebody h a d once&#13;
badly b u r n e d one d a y last week * b i l c ', t a u g h t him to tlud t h e n o r t h s t a r by&#13;
r e s c u i n g a n old l a d y whose clothe^ | ^ e pointer stars, so he took t h i r t y&#13;
. . „ . ., , • , . . • , steps from t h e n o r t h w e s t corner of t h e&#13;
causrht fire while b u r n i n g r u b b i s h . . . . , , , . ..&#13;
a ^ B , . , | j u n k s h o p t o w a r d t h e north star, stop-&#13;
T h e lady w a s fatally b u r n e d a n d t h e | p e d a m l &gt; w , t h a ^ ^ s h o v o , h e f o m u l&#13;
Rev. received some very painful i outside t h e j u n k s h o p , d u g a hole a n d&#13;
b u r n s . His m a n y friends here h o p e ! burled h i s t r e a s u r e&#13;
old m o t h e r in heaven, w h o p u f thTs&#13;
chapel a n d t h e cross over it t h a t I&#13;
might find It t o work a m i r a c l e on my&#13;
return."&#13;
Ell P i a t t , though a converted m a n ,&#13;
though his conscience Is f a r tenderer&#13;
thun t h a t of millions of bin brothers, remains&#13;
a n ex convict, a n d a s such his&#13;
road Is more thorny t h a n before. B u t&#13;
there Is no t e m p t a t i o n fur him to attempt&#13;
t o a m e l i o r a t e his condition by&#13;
ifsbonesty. H e is wuiting for release.&#13;
Tor a different r e w a r d , in t h e hereafter.&#13;
Is h e not nearer thuu his fellows to&#13;
that Christianity when t o be a Ohribfltiu&#13;
u n a m t m a r t y r d o m V&#13;
FftJLNK P . O H B N K Y&#13;
C.iscHsvveet lor babies is t h e best&#13;
reiiiudy for colic, s u m m e r c o m p l a i n t ,&#13;
d i a r r h o e a a n d sour - t o m a c h It is especially&#13;
good in cases of t e e t h i n g&#13;
when i r r i t a t i o n affects Hie stomach&#13;
and i n t e s t i n e s . Casasweet is a pleasa&#13;
n t , sale r e m e d y , c o n t a i n i n g n e i t h e r&#13;
opiates n o r n a r e a t i c s ; a'l tl'n iuwrcdients&#13;
a r e p a i u t s d plainly on t h e w r a p&#13;
per. E n d o r s e d by m o t h e r s because it&#13;
acts so quick ly.&#13;
Sold by F . A. Sitfler. DrugKist.&#13;
Wonderful Eczema Cure.&#13;
" O u r l U l e boy had eexema for five&#13;
years,1 ' w r i t e s N . A. A d a m s . H e n r i e t -&#13;
t a , Pa. " T w o . ol our h o m e doctors,&#13;
said t h e case was hopeless, his l u n g s&#13;
b e i n g affected. We then e m p l o y e d&#13;
o t h e r doctors b u t no benefit r e s u l t e d .&#13;
By chance we read about E l e c t r i c Bit-&#13;
4»rs; b o u g h t a bottle a n d soon noticed&#13;
i m p r o v e m e n t . We c o n t i n u e d this&#13;
medicine until several bottles w e r e&#13;
used, when o u r hoy. . w a s c o m p l e t e l y&#13;
cured.1 ' Best of all blood medicines&#13;
and body b u i l d i n g h e a 1 t h tonics,&#13;
G u a r a n t e e d at, V. A, S i g l e r ' s&#13;
store. 50c.&#13;
t h e y m a y n o t p r o v e serious h o w e v e r ,&#13;
R. C. Reed, of Howell has been appointed&#13;
by t h e A m e r i c a n Holstein&#13;
Association to r e p r e s e n t t h e m at t h e&#13;
S e m i - C e n t e u n i a l c e l e b r a t i o n of t h e&#13;
Michigan A g r i c u l t u r a l College, May&#13;
28-¾). As this is t h e t i m e w h e n P r e s .&#13;
Roosevelt is to honor t h e college with&#13;
a visit a n d is to be t h e g r e a t e s t t i m e in&#13;
the history of t h e college, Livingston&#13;
c o u n t y c a n feel p r o u d t h a t one of hei&#13;
citizens should receive t h e appointment.&#13;
Teachers Wages.&#13;
D r u g&#13;
The &gt;enate, u n d e r pressure from&#13;
some f a r m e r c o n s t i t u e n t s , has killed&#13;
t h e bill to m a k e $35 a m o n t h t h e mini&#13;
m u m salary t h a t can be paid to a&#13;
H e h a d been seen coming a w a y with&#13;
the Jewels a n d w h e n they w e r e missed&#13;
w a s a r r e s t e d , Identified a n d sent to t h e&#13;
penitentiary.&#13;
Seven y e a r s later Ell Piatt, j u s t (lis&#13;
charged, s a u n t e r e d by t h e block w h e r e&#13;
he h a d buried t h e jewels. A n u m b e r&#13;
of buildings h a d been erected; but, for&#13;
tunutely for Eli, he recognized t h e Junk&#13;
•hop, t h o u g h It w a s now used for a&#13;
feed store. H e looked t o w a r d t h e&#13;
spot w h e r e he had buried his t r e a s u r e&#13;
a n d s a w thut It w a s covered by t h e&#13;
rear end of a chapel. T h e roof of this&#13;
vad w a s rounded u p to a point, on&#13;
which w a s a cross.&#13;
If his mind w a s c a p a b l e of deliberation,&#13;
it w a s also capable of calling up&#13;
pictures. As h e looked a t t h e cross&#13;
he s a w a n old w o m a n kneeling at&#13;
an altar. She w a s his mother. Then&#13;
he s a w himself toddling along by her&#13;
side to church, later his continuation.&#13;
And n o w t h e t r e a s u r e he had taken&#13;
from a n o t h e r a n d had stiffered seven&#13;
long y e a r s to possess w a s sheltered by&#13;
A H o m e m a d e W e a t h e r Glass.&#13;
A very reliable w e a t h e r glass c a n be&#13;
m a d e o u t of such simple m a t e r i a l s ua&#13;
an e m p t y salad oil bottle a n d a q u a r t&#13;
fruit j a r . H a v i n g procured these articles,&#13;
pour sullicient w a t e r into t h e j a r&#13;
bo that it covers t h e m o u t h of t h e hot&#13;
tie w h e n t h e latter is inserted into the&#13;
former. in line w e a t h e r it will be&#13;
found t h a t t h e w a t e r will rise Into the&#13;
bottle, but will fall back into t h e j a r&#13;
when w e t w e a t h e r is due. T h o u g h the&#13;
Idea of this q u a i n t h o m e m a d e barometer&#13;
Is n o t n e w , it is quite reliable.&#13;
W h e n y o u r food lias not been prop&#13;
erly digested t h e e n t i r e system is impaired&#13;
in t h e Mime p r o p o r t i o n . Y o u r&#13;
stomach needs help. Kodol for Iodi&#13;
gestion a n d Dyspepsea not only digests&#13;
w h a t y o u eat, it tones t n e stomach&#13;
a n d adds s t r e n g t h \.o t h e whole&#13;
body. Makes rich, p u r e bh&gt;;&gt;d. Kodol&#13;
conforms to t h e N a t i o n a l P u r e&#13;
Food a n d - D r u g Law .&#13;
Sold by F. A Slgler, Drugglit.&#13;
\ - e ' - " e .&#13;
I . I . I l l :&#13;
( I ]• V &lt; - e , "&#13;
• i . l I I • •. . i . . • ' • i !&#13;
\ ) s e , r " • ;• I ' i i i ' i&#13;
s a i d . " I f ' h-i! ol: i i ;&#13;
emblem of t h e cross.&#13;
Life, like t h e world, is of t w o hem&#13;
Ispheres. To pass from one earthly&#13;
hemisphere to another m a y require&#13;
weeks, p e r h a p s months. A p a s s a g e&#13;
from one spiritual hemisphere to an&#13;
A great deal has been said tl&gt;e&#13;
past few weeks in regard to "Elmore&#13;
mixture" for burning coal&#13;
ashes and the editor of the Fowler&#13;
v die Review in last weeks issue&#13;
says: "The writer has often tried&#13;
the same mixture, just, coal ashes&#13;
and water in the kitchen range&#13;
and found that it burned very&#13;
nicely there and produced considerable&#13;
heat and some people in&#13;
this village have burned the coal&#13;
ashes that way all winter in their&#13;
furnace." If the above is true&#13;
the editor of the DISPATCH sees&#13;
where there is about #70 worth of&#13;
good fuel in an ash heap in the&#13;
alley. I t will cost us another dollar&#13;
to get them hauled away but&#13;
the first man who offers us $2.01)&#13;
for the lot gets them now don't.&#13;
all speak at once.&#13;
district school teacher. T h e reason j a H a cred temple puarded by t h e holy&#13;
for k i l l i n g it is t h a t m a n y districts reported&#13;
t h a t t h e y h a v e no t r o u b l e in&#13;
g e t t i n g satisfactory t e a c h e r s for $ 2 5 a&#13;
m o n t h , or even less,&#13;
It seems t h a t t h e r e is n o one to&#13;
blame b u t the t e a c h e r s a n d these w h o j o t h o r m a y be accomplished in a fra,-&#13;
, . , , .. , . . . n . • tion of a seiumd. As Eli looked up ai&#13;
try to teach tor t h e p r e s e n t low wages. *&#13;
If more of t h e t e a c h e r s would follow&#13;
t h e e x a m p l e set by some a n d leave,&#13;
off t e a c h i n g f o r a y e a r or t w o&#13;
these districts t h a t a r e w i l l i n g to put&#13;
u p with an $18 or $20 teacher would&#13;
soon w a n t a real i n s t r u c t o r and be&#13;
willing to pay a r e a s o n a b l e price,&#13;
A N a r r o w E s c a p e .&#13;
ela .sc was lackcn lo i'\ory scj i.ira I r ai&#13;
I a ai pt-rsaadeil I hat .P \ ;nv.&gt; . ',viai'..&#13;
taP off (Jo in To per cent. This law&#13;
was that when a n u n ^ot a &lt;li\orce h.-&#13;
could not under auv c i r c u m s t a n c e .&#13;
1 marry a n o t h e r woman younger ilia i&#13;
his ex-wife. An innocent law, a brlei&#13;
! law, not much to look at, but low&#13;
many divorce suits would be nippeu&#13;
in t h e bud if all h u s b a n d s knew t ha,&#13;
after ihe separation they cnahi noi&#13;
marry younger women lhai; ihe w i \ e&#13;
they had cast oil'!" Philad phia Pill&#13;
let in.&#13;
THE MOON'S VOLCANOES.&#13;
e - I l &gt; &gt; l &gt; I I - » i ^ I t i M M ) &lt;W&#13;
O I U H * &amp; th« Qlgantlo Qmfetra and&#13;
Q^Mt Fiaaura EriiptUaa.&#13;
I t la evident to a n y one w h o glances&#13;
upward at t h e moon t h a t I t s volcanoes&#13;
are o n a n luimeaaely larger ncale t h a n&#13;
t h o s e w h i c h atud o u r globe. O n e ex&#13;
p l a u a l i o n , n o w abandoned, is t h a t t h e&#13;
force of g r a v i t a t i o n being (here only&#13;
one-sixth t h a t of t h e e a r t h t h e m u t t e r&#13;
• x p e l l e d from a m i t e r would b e spread&#13;
f a r m o r e widely, a n d explosions would&#13;
b e generally uu a fur m o r e magnificent&#13;
scale. 1'rofessor P i c k e r i n g q u o t e s t h h&#13;
t h e o r y only to^ refute It tu soma »*«iv&#13;
p a r l s o u s which he m a d e oW^wwi li^i&#13;
g r e a t volcanic region or H a w a i i auo&#13;
one oV t h e smaller c r a t e r s of t h e moon,&#13;
T h e f a c t s seem .to h i m t o be t h a t t h e&#13;
l a r g e r c r a t e r s on t h e moon c a m e Into&#13;
[ e x i s t e n c e w h e n t h e thin, solid crust&#13;
j c o v e r i n g t h e molten Interior w a s , owing&#13;
to tin- isolidilioation a n d contraction&#13;
' of t h e crust, m u c h too small to contain&#13;
t h e liquid material. T h e c r a t e r s were&#13;
t h e r e f o r e formed by t h e lava bursting&#13;
t h r o u g h t h e crust a n d so relieving t h e&#13;
pressor .. Pnier, after this relief had&#13;
been found a n d t h e crust hud thicken&#13;
ed. t h e interior regions by cooling&#13;
s h r a n k a w a y from t h e solid shell,&#13;
which w a s now too large a n d , being&#13;
lusutlieiently supported, caved iu, perm&#13;
i t t i n g t h e great lissure eruptions&#13;
which produced t h e so called lunar&#13;
aeas. T h e s e extensive outflows of lava&#13;
dissolved Ihe original solid shell when&#13;
ever they c a m e Into c o n t a c t with it,&#13;
m u c h a s they do In t h e p r e s e n t d a y in&#13;
H a w a i i . H a d t h e moon been much&#13;
s m a l l e r t h e s e eruptions m i g h t n o t have&#13;
occurred at till, a n d if t h e moon had&#13;
: been m u c h larger their r e l a t i v e size&#13;
would have been greater. Most probably&#13;
on t h e e a r t h similar o u t b u r s t s were&#13;
greater, a n d o u r original g i g a n t i c craters&#13;
w e r e destroyed by t h e out How of&#13;
the earlier archaic rocks which completely&#13;
s u b m e r g e d a n d dissolved them&#13;
—London P o s t .&#13;
, Stripped a t t h a Law.&#13;
I D i c k e n s describes in hlfl novel&#13;
"Bleak H o u s e " the woes of t h o s e w h o&#13;
w e r e involved in suits in t h e chtfncery&#13;
! court a n d t h e delays to w h i c h they&#13;
w e r e s u b j e c t e d before t h e E n g l i s h Judicial&#13;
p r o c e d u r e w a s reformed. Tradij&#13;
tion s a y s that an artist once represented&#13;
t h e s a m e idea in m u c h less space.&#13;
[ T w o suitors in chancery, being reconciled&#13;
to each other afier a very tedious&#13;
and e x p e n s i v e suit, applied to h i m to&#13;
paint a device In c o m m e m o r a t i o n of&#13;
! their r e t u r n to peace a n d amity. H e&#13;
gave t h e m entire satisfaction by painti&#13;
l u g t h e m in t h e a c t of s h a k i n g hands—&#13;
' one (dad in h i s shirt, t h e o t h e r w i t h o u t&#13;
I even that.&#13;
| W h e n y o u r bach ach •* w i- almost&#13;
jinvar.aiMHy an indication that somet&#13;
h i n g is w r o n g with p n u kidneys.&#13;
W e a k , d'MMseii Kidneys f r e q u e n t l y&#13;
! cause a hiv.ik down ol t h e i-nfire syst&#13;
e m . Do W i t t s Kidney m i Mladdor&#13;
Pii atl'oi d prompi i rim! tor weak&#13;
kidneys, backache, iiitlam.it mil of t h e&#13;
bladd r n l • i in1 IMI'V t r o u b l e s .&#13;
! Sold by V. A. Slgler, D r u g g l i t&#13;
# ,&#13;
tit&lt;»H&#13;
j - y%:. r - - .o/MI&#13;
whid as a child he had been laugln&#13;
to reverence it occurred to him that&#13;
It had been placed over his t r e a s u r e&#13;
t h a t no h a n d should profane it. For&#13;
w h a t purpose? To save his soul. P.y&#13;
w h o m ? S h e w h o had Ion-- passed lo&#13;
her honvAiily homo his mot ''er.&#13;
In a i w m k b n g lie was changed. In&#13;
a twinkl:'CJ.' that which in prison he&#13;
had looked forward to longingly, coir it&#13;
ing t h e days between hi'ii a n d its pas&#13;
session, h a d become only a means hy&#13;
H. W. Cloyd, a m e r c h a n t , of f l u n k , which he m i - h t be rescued from evil.&#13;
Mo., had a n a r r o w escape four years&#13;
•ago, w h e n he r a n a jimson b u r into&#13;
his t h u m b . He s a y s : " T h e doetor&#13;
wanted to a m p u t a t e it b u t I would&#13;
not consent. T b o u g h t a box of Buck-&#13;
I m ' s A r n i c a Halve a n d t h a t cured t h e&#13;
d a n g e r o u s w o u n d . " 25c a t F . A. Sigler's,&#13;
D r u g g i s t .&#13;
Ji-cdth."&#13;
&gt;as b e e n va i'i casly&#13;
I . o i l i e r . I M\ .lolca&#13;
k l u \&#13;
For a cold or a cough take Kennedy's&#13;
L a x a t i v e Cough S y r u p It is&#13;
BKTTKK t h a n a n y other r o u g h r e m e d y&#13;
because its laxative p r i n c i p l e a s - u i e s&#13;
a h e a l t h y , copious action of t h e bowels&#13;
a n d at t h e s a m e it heals i r r a t a t i o n of&#13;
t h e t h r o a t , s t r e n g t h e n s t h e bronchial&#13;
t u b e s a n d always i n t l a m a t i o n of t h e j&#13;
mnc.ons mamuranft. C o n t a i n s Honey j&#13;
and T a r , pleasant to t a k e . C h i l d r e n !&#13;
l i k e it- Conforms to t h e N a t i o n a l j&#13;
P u r e Food a n d Drnrr l ^ w . j&#13;
Hold by F. A. Slgler, Druggltt. j&#13;
KnrlftlFor taOseft&amp;ML&#13;
A E W U w A Relieves sour stomach,&#13;
palpitation of the heart. Digests what you eat&#13;
- C : d H'...-&#13;
" O M id u n d i ' i :.. ; i "&#13;
ascribed to Martin&#13;
Howland and William br.&#13;
l.i,well Mason \vn&gt;1e unite a ir.-a'be&#13;
on ilie o!d tiiiie in l^.'i-. say:;:.; ••&#13;
phai ii-ally ilia r '.' w a s writ V:i oy &lt; i u;&#13;
lantiie i V, iliiai , i 'i aia-i. in le b&gt; ;.u ;&#13;
later i,.;;si,-ai in.- irians a n d a ni i &gt; j. 11;:&#13;
1'ian.s who have investigated n e ' e : ] .so&#13;
ly say it w a s composed by l.ichs I'.oir,'&#13;
ueois, burn about ITiiK) and died alum;&#13;
loTU- some say in the massacre of St&#13;
Bartholomew, iu lool-rvj.-Musical Million.&#13;
Don't T a y Alimony&#13;
to be divorced from y o u r a p p e n d i x&#13;
T h e r e ;vill be n o occasion for it, if ynu&#13;
keep y o u r bowels r e g u l a r with l)r&#13;
K i n c ' s N e w Life Fills. T h e i r action&#13;
is so genilfl t h a t t h e a p p e n d i x never&#13;
has cause to m a k e t h e least c o m p l a i n t .&#13;
G u a r a n t e e d hy F, A. S i g l e r , d r u g ^ i s * .&#13;
T.y them.&#13;
oewirr^s a a a WITCH HAZEL&#13;
S A L V E . For Piles, Bums, Sores.&#13;
Going to t h e front of t h e chapei, no&#13;
found t h e doors open a n d enlered.&#13;
There w a s t h e stillness of a house of&#13;
worship when no services w e r e beini.;&#13;
held. Several people wore kneeling be&#13;
fore t h e altar. H e went forward and&#13;
dropped on his knees.&#13;
Long be stayed immovable, his head&#13;
bowed upon his breast, H o w a s thinking&#13;
of t h e old woman who took h i m to&#13;
church when he w a s a little boy- h o w .&#13;
doubtless, she had waited while he&#13;
w a s In prison for this moment, h o w&#13;
Rhe h a d interceded for him a n d h o w in&#13;
the i n s c r u t a b l e w a y s of t h e heavenly&#13;
hosts ail this b a d been brought about.&#13;
Beside the a l t a r w a s a booth shieldcd&#13;
by a curtain in which a priest, w a s&#13;
hearing confession. When t h e confessor&#13;
c a m e out Eli Tlatt, entered a n d&#13;
told t h e priest t h e story of his theft.&#13;
hts e n d u r a n c e for its final possession&#13;
and w h e r e he had buried his treasure.&#13;
The next d a y Ihe priest conducted&#13;
the chief of police aitfl a p a r t y of work&#13;
men to t h e cellar of the chapel. Taking&#13;
up t h e cement floor, they d u g in&#13;
the earth, and a few feet under t h e&#13;
surface directly benenlh the cross they&#13;
found a box of Jewels. They wore sent&#13;
to their rightful owners.&#13;
A f e w d a y s after their return the&#13;
prtlWt sent for Eli Piatt a n d told him&#13;
that a lady w h o had been t h e possessor&#13;
of w h a t he had stolon had been so&#13;
pleased a t getting her property again&#13;
that she had sent him a present of&#13;
P500. Ell declined to touch a cent of It.&#13;
"It all belongs to me, not a s a t h i n g to&#13;
be converted into money, b u t ns a key&#13;
by which my better n a t u r e has been&#13;
unjocked. Tt w a j kept for_ me by- my&#13;
'-AWAH T»*WMAflx U P n&#13;
The Reliable Iri.O.iu&#13;
B L O O D P U R i r i E D&#13;
I am for MEM,&#13;
WOMEN and&#13;
CHILDREN&#13;
Instant relief t o sufferers of&#13;
Rheumatism,KidneyTrouble,&#13;
Stomach Disorders.&#13;
Got a bottle to-day.' Is purely a vegetable compound. Mild&#13;
in effect b u t one t h e most effectual remedies known tot restoring&#13;
t h e entire system. I t is derived from nature, not&#13;
compound of drugs and chemicals that only allay t h e pain,&#13;
but cures to stay cured after all so-called " s c i e n t i f i c " treatments&#13;
have failed.&#13;
For sale by druggists. Send for circulars. Address,&#13;
INDIAN MEDICINE CO., Mllford, Ohio,&#13;
Buy a "HYGEIA" " V K X " - The best Spring Bed on&#13;
Earth. Perfectly Noiseless*&#13;
For both Wood and&#13;
Iron Bedsteads*&#13;
Ninety per cent, of the Spring Beds made are not tit to sleep on.&#13;
Pay just a little more and get a '• HYGEIA," which is perfection in&#13;
itself. Guaranteed for ten years. If your dealer does not handle the&#13;
Hygeia write direct to us giving his address. ^&#13;
ENTERPRISE BED CO., IVfrs,, Hammond, Indiana. [&#13;
More Money for Eggs under most any conditions. T h e r e is a lot of money t o be made&#13;
in the egg business if conditions are right. Thorc is no reason&#13;
why F a r m e r s and P o u l t r y R a i s e n s h o u l d not make just as good&#13;
prolits on their investments as a n y other line of business, and it is&#13;
possible for them to do so. T h e price of eggs during the winter&#13;
months is double and sometimes more than double that paid&#13;
during the s u m m e r months. T h e only way to take advantage of this advance is&#13;
to hold summer eggs for winter prices. That fresh eggs can b e k e p t from six to&#13;
nine months o r more has been proven by careful testing with&#13;
HAGER'S EGG PRESERVATIVE&#13;
and anyone using tide Preservative need never sell a dozen eggs for anything but&#13;
the highest market price. .S&gt;«&lt;/ for SampU and Circulars telling you all about tt.&#13;
HACER I C O PRESERVING CO., - St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
.•*'*.TvV: w-&#13;
"/'At1&#13;
' * *&#13;
• « M « M i x j m x i »&lt;.«r&gt;,ii^W 4 » p » &lt; r ^ &lt; n » f tm&lt;m*\* 4*-*,i»ut wy*** .tmH ,»MJUU^l ^ • T &gt;wT LI . - mm&#13;
•*&lt;W'&#13;
/AAX Ccffee&#13;
C h u m s&#13;
^ RVr-r L^'V'^vV^T-^/S&#13;
E#\-&#13;
: a # ^&#13;
m&#13;
Use McLaughlin's XXXX&#13;
Coffee Every Day Because—&#13;
McLaughlin's XXXX Coffee is always&#13;
uniform in quality and properly blended&#13;
and roasted.&#13;
You do not get good coffee one day and&#13;
poor coffee the next.&#13;
The handy air-tight package and the glazing&#13;
of pure sugar keeps this coffee clean and&#13;
fresh, protected from dust, dirt and foul odors.&#13;
Each package is one pound full weight.&#13;
McLaughlin's XXXX Coffee is Sold by&#13;
W . E. Murphy&#13;
W . W . Barnard&#13;
H. M. Williston &amp; Co.&#13;
v f P&amp;TENTS b n n c i i R E D A N D D E F E N D E D , ^'ml model,&#13;
" £ . u * . 7 f l ° ". U.° ",M'l ,ni.vl. and f .ve .vjK.rt.&#13;
Five tuYvu'o, liow to uUaiu l'iiU'iits, 11 lulc marks,&#13;
copyrights, elc, | N ALL C O U N T R I E S .&#13;
Business direct v/ith Wtt.Jtingloii sure* / i W , ]&#13;
money and ojU* tit*p*t*nt&gt;&#13;
Ntsat Mrf IsfrtajMisMtfttttlM IxslusKely.&#13;
WrMa or oom* to UP a* nun, •*&gt;. W M wwm&#13;
WASH IWOTOW. P. 0.&#13;
GA-SNOW&#13;
Tie Dial li'dps the evil lmvt'&lt;&#13;
pood. -Socrates.&#13;
\\'r.r,'.:. "."•)! c Ti• r n l?oaMt;/.&#13;
T h o i n i i ' i ' " ' i I - - L ! i " i : i , i :' &gt; n :&gt;.&#13;
r o o l c o m m o n S C T - I i h , ; n I ' v - : s v :&#13;
m ' l i i n i I ' . ' S I 1 ! . ' ! ' . A ' &gt;•! ; i i ! ' n ! w •'::) '. ;i&#13;
t r a c t s h i s i',\ c . a n d l i e t• J;L&gt; h.i '• " i , i&#13;
i i m t ' a &gt; . ' i ii.1 '^' •' •. I " ' i i l:.i i i'i • 'i i' ; : : o n ,&#13;
»1 t r a n s i e n t n ; i . ' i i . d 'S ; v ' i • -. I ' " :Ui v li&#13;
Ot l i d ' r i v i •&lt;!: :in a la : , . , 11 ' '••• ' . m&#13;
g e l lien Ul \ r u i n i i; li: 'i 1 v. i : : 1 i l • " ' ' . ' i ' '&#13;
he ^'ors in l'nr ]i!,i ;,!!'•'•: .. ! J ;I i" i (.\&#13;
men's Life.&#13;
W l l KEBIOVE WITH EASE ALL PARTICLES OF&#13;
1DIRT AND&#13;
»flKJaf GREASE&#13;
t-**t ; ^3i*Wf*^^ and leave tn-: skin soft and&#13;
white. Supe-ior to .ill ot.ho.isoaps,&#13;
T h e i. iborcrs t-nand.&#13;
F V M e d w . : s F a r m e r s ,&#13;
?aints--s, P m . - r s , Piumbci's,&#13;
M.ners :and ill Ra-lrond Men.&#13;
A r , i a u m c o n y 5 u c 3 y o u ^ e M i : i n o o t h 3 v s o i p i r « : e i u 2 sizes 5 : andlOc&#13;
U ^ v f f i c t u ' o d ov . OW \ S O A * C O K I P 4 N Y , . • ^ • u n g t o - Q o w ^&#13;
k*I.S. ?O^ES.CIe Ptf&#13;
T0AOM * M » *&#13;
AS IT IS GOOl&#13;
&gt;&#13;
THE GREATEST&#13;
OF ALL CEREAL FOODS.&#13;
No fad or uncertain mixture. A Natural FOOD&#13;
r- LAXATIVE. A whou: kerne] of Rye to each flake.&#13;
'ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT or writ, us for our t h r e e Special&#13;
Offers. A pound package by mail, postpaid, for 25 cents. It will&#13;
positively cure the most a ^ r a v a t r d case of constipation. \ \ n t e to-day.&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS CEREAL COMPANY,&#13;
H. H. Dopt. M I N N E A P O L I S , M I N N .&#13;
Solicitor* Wantod £w9*.ymhmmm.&#13;
F M ^ B M a w M 1 mm S k i / * 1 f " I E x p e r i e n c e i s o n e o f t h e g r e a t e s t f a c t o r s in a l m a s t&#13;
a n y w a l k in life. I t is w h a t RIVCR t h e F a r m e r , Doc&#13;
t o r , M e r c h a n t a n d M e c h a n i c success. I n n i a n n f h c t -&#13;
urinff it is a n all i m p o r t a n t e l e m e n t . W e a r e c a r r i a g e&#13;
m a n u f a c t u r e r s of o r e r twenty-five y e a r s ' e x p e r i e n c e&#13;
a n d w e c l a i m t o k n o w t h e b u s i n e s s from A t o Z. W e&#13;
will s t a k e o u r r e p u t a t i o n t h a t w e m a k e a s good w o r k&#13;
fbr t h e m o n e y a a i t i s possible t o m a k e . O u r t w o&#13;
l e a d e r s a r c o u r N o . 30 T o p B u g g y a t t h e p o p u l a r&#13;
p r i c e o f $60.00 a n d o u r N o . fiO T o p&#13;
B u g g y a t ¢80.00. N o t h i n g b u t t h e beat&#13;
g o i n t o t h e s e j o b s i n o r d e r t o m a k e&#13;
t h e m c o m e u p t o o u r s t a n d a r d . W r i t e&#13;
fbr full specifications, c u t s a n d refere&#13;
n c e s . D o It to-day a n d nee w h a t w e&#13;
can offer yon fbr yoar eeee, asd save&#13;
all dealer profits. WkMe •* eece and&#13;
A. HUNCERFORD A SON,&#13;
get our great offer.&#13;
Lapeer, Michigan.&#13;
INDIAN LODGES.&#13;
NorrtM of the Savagea In the Deye of&#13;
the Buffalo.&#13;
While *u buffalo days tsonie of. itie&#13;
Wild IuUlans of the iJluiuss oeeui)kitl per&#13;
BBftuuut dwellings during u part of the&#13;
year, tUeru were oiut'is who lived whul&#13;
ly In movable lodges.&#13;
These were made of buffalo ski 11.-=&#13;
tanued white and sew ed together. The&gt;&#13;
were uf different sizew, the poor oceu&#13;
eying biuallei- lodges, wlule the wealiiiy&#13;
luuu, he wiiu owned niany injrses, &gt;. ery&#13;
likely bad a large family and required&#13;
K larger lodge. The bine of a man's&#13;
kxlge w a s to some extent an ludieatioji&#13;
&amp;f liis wealili. 'Vwu horses were ueed&#13;
ed to drag the pules of a large lodge&#13;
and one to carry the lodge iiseir, three&#13;
horses for the transportation of the&#13;
fln^.lhtg alone, to say nothing ot the&#13;
othe'.' property and the different mem&#13;
bet*) ut the family.&#13;
A iodge of moderate tsize required&#13;
eleven skins, and eighteen poles were&#13;
needed to set it up. A sixteen skin&#13;
lodge required twenty-two poles. The&#13;
larger t h e lodge the greater was the&#13;
number of poles needed. From the&#13;
fact that they used an unusual number&#13;
of poles in setting up their lodges It re-&#13;
| suited that the Cheyennes had well&#13;
Ktretehed. nice looking lodges.&#13;
The northern Cheyennes declare that&#13;
an odd number of hides w a s always&#13;
used for the best lodges, and the 1111m&#13;
I ber might range from eleven to twenty-&#13;
1 one. The skins were sewed together&#13;
j witii sinew thread. First, of course.&#13;
! the hides must be tanned, the hair re-&#13;
I moved and the skin softened. Then&#13;
I the Cheyenne woman held a sewing&#13;
I bee which was not unlike the bee.-&#13;
I of our ancestors In the early days of&#13;
this country. She invited her friends&#13;
! to come and help her sew her lodge&#13;
and provided them with refreshments.&#13;
Among them was always one woman&#13;
especially skillful in cutting out the&#13;
lodges, and she lifted the skins together&#13;
before the women began to sew them.&#13;
— Forest and Stream.&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, loes ot strength,&#13;
Bess, headache, oonstipation, bad&#13;
general debility, eow risings, and catsnfc&#13;
of the stomach t i e ell due to Indigeetiosi,&#13;
Kodel relieves Indigestion. This new discovery&#13;
represents ths natural Juices of dlget*&#13;
Hon as they exist In a healthy stomach,&#13;
combined with the greatest known toalt&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodoi for&#13;
eyspepsla does act only relieve ledlgestteei&#13;
end dyspepsia, but this famous remeej&#13;
helps ell stomaoh troublee by cleansing&#13;
purifying, sweetealng and etrengthenief&#13;
the mucous membranes lining the stomach.&#13;
Mr. S. 5. Baa, of Rwrenswood, W, Vs.. sayr—&#13;
" I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty years.&#13;
Kodol cured me aad we are now usiuc It tn ma%&#13;
for baby."&#13;
Kodol Digests W h a t Y o u E e t&#13;
Bottles only. Rallavas indigestion, sour stooaSB*&#13;
belching of pas, e t c .&#13;
P r e p a r e d by E . O. D a W I T T &amp; Q O . , OHIOAOXX&#13;
Sold by F . A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
Mortgage Sale&#13;
W H K.HI'.AS default lint* been made in the comlitlona&#13;
ut' ;i rtirtam mortKa^o, wtierohy 1 he power&#13;
of Biile therein has lioi-omc cipornt ivt?, made by&#13;
H l l N l t V LMltEBoLT a n d hi* wife I'AUOLINK&#13;
T H U ' I H I L T , uf llcprtield, l.ivin^flton County,&#13;
Mirlngan, to NKLSON LAMB of t h e H»mi! place&#13;
aforepaid; lioarivg date March i'.tth, A, I). 1SHJ,&#13;
and recorded in the office of t h e Register of&#13;
Deed- for l.ivtn^eton i:onnty, Michigan, in Liber&#13;
'Y2 of Mortatfoo at I&gt;H^e .r)01 thereof on March .li'ith&#13;
A I&gt; ISSC which said mort^aRc svas duly aasi^r od&#13;
by Ni:LSON LAMB on the 10th day of August,&#13;
1R0K t o HKNHY TUTKBOLT M\. which aa^iRnmeot&#13;
wap recorded in t h e Ue^iptcr of Deed's othce&#13;
for the County of Livingston on t lie ICtli day of&#13;
Anpi.-d. 1S','6 i n Liber Ho of Mortage^ at paj;e 47,&#13;
and by H K N R V T 1 I E I E O L T J R . duly aenifined&#13;
to C A l i d L l N L T i l EI BOLT on N o v e m b e r ;•., lMfi&#13;
and r e r o t d e d in t h e Ue^ieter'^ office, ()fllc&lt;» for&#13;
I.ivin^Bton County on t h e 1?th day of May, 1S!W»&#13;
in Lihor S,"i of Mortga^eB at pap;? -RT. And by&#13;
CAHOTilNK T H E I B O L T duly assigned t o HKXRY&#13;
T H E I B O L T J R . on March Vi, 1007 and record&#13;
od in t h e Office ot the Register of Deeds for, Livn&gt;;;?&#13;
ton c'ounty o n March 19, V.HiT in Liber !Ki at ;&#13;
pane till. And whereas t h e AWA u".t claimed to |&#13;
be due o n said M o r t f a ^ e at t h i s date is t h e pnm of j&#13;
One h u n d r e d a n d eighty d o lars a n d eighty tlve&#13;
cents (S180.SM of p r i n c i p a l and interest and n o j&#13;
suit ur p r o c r ^ l i n ^ having been instituted to r e - j&#13;
cover the debt secured by eaid m o r t ^ i ^ e or any I&#13;
part thereof:&#13;
Therefore notice is hereby ^iven that by virtue •&#13;
ot paid power of sale a n d in persi::iiiee of t h e&#13;
statues in mich case made a n d provided t h e said .&#13;
mortcjisze \sill l&gt;e foveclo^d h\ Bale of the premises&#13;
therein described at public auction to the highest&#13;
bidder lit the West front door of the Court H o u s e ,&#13;
in t h e village of rtowell in said County of Living- :&#13;
st01: t h a t beini; the place ot holding t h e '"irL-nit (&#13;
Cuiirr for t h e County of Livingston en .-.iturdav 1&#13;
the l«th day of July A. D. tl.V7 at ie n\ W* ;n t h e j&#13;
forenoon of said dny, or so much thereof :i-' mav&#13;
lie neeessary to pay t h ^ principal and m t e r t s t j&#13;
due on -iiiil 11101 ttface, t h e Attorney h v provided ',&#13;
thiToin ami cost&gt; uf said sale, of the following;]&#13;
di'seribed premises, to wit com:uencin&gt;_: twenty I&#13;
roils East of t h e Northwest rovnfV of Section I&#13;
twenty two \-fi) in t u w n s b i p tour , }• North o f :&#13;
b'anK'e tlvi&gt; (M'Eust Michigan, r u n n i n g t h e n c e ,&#13;
South el^ht rods thence Kasl sixty rods thence&#13;
North e k b t rods Cience W o t to he^iniiiL" ' o n - '&#13;
tait'diiv' three acre,- ot land.&#13;
i l L N K Y T i l l 1BOI.T, J R . .&#13;
A-sk'ilee uf ; be M01 i i.-:i'_'et"&#13;
[Cited, Howeil, April 4, 1 ':v.'.&#13;
W'M, V. V A N W INKt.t,&#13;
Attorney for A&lt;sii;n«H».&#13;
Lightning Superstition.&#13;
T b e aucii'iit Kuuiauu avoided places&#13;
s t r a c k by lightning. The houses if&#13;
damaged wen- pulled down or fenced&#13;
In so that no one could use the building&#13;
on which the god.s hud ser the mark&#13;
ot their displeasure. This feeling \v;ts&#13;
probably deepened by the face that cer&#13;
taiii iocailtie!-) are visited by thuud*T&#13;
irtorins more than others, t h e wrath uf&#13;
Jove descending in white llanie linie&#13;
anil again 111 the same «pot. And it&#13;
was the same superstition, lingering&#13;
among Christians in a slightly dili'ei1 ;;t&#13;
form, whn-h matte it so dittieult f&lt;&gt;r&#13;
Benjamin Franklin to Introduce i!ie&#13;
liirhtning rod, for the pious Americans&#13;
of that day declared lltai "it was as&#13;
impious 10 erect rods to ward oil' heaven's&#13;
lightning as for a child to ward tiff&#13;
the chastening rod of its father."&#13;
Weak&#13;
Kidneys&#13;
W e a k Kidneys, sorely point t o w e a k k l d n s f&#13;
Kerves. T h e K l d a e y s , Ilka t h e H e a r t , a n d (toe&#13;
Btomach, find t h e i r weakness, n o t i n t h e o r g a n&#13;
1 tmeil, b u t In t h e norvtik t h a t control a n d g u i d e&#13;
1 a a d s t r e n g t h e n t h e m . Dr. Shoop'B Keatorative i s&#13;
a inedlclno ttpuc-iticiilly p r e p a r e d t o r e a c h theae&#13;
controlling nervea. T o doctor t h e Kidney a u.Ioue,&#13;
is futile. It is a wrist-e of lijuu. u u d uf ujuuey a a&#13;
w e h .&#13;
If y&lt;iur tjiick uehes o r is w«-;ik, if U»e u r i n e&#13;
atiilds, o r ia 1 lurk in id &gt;u c;i^, if y o u h a v e &amp;&gt; uiyu^iaa&#13;
of l i r l g h t s o r o t h e r itisiressiua o r d u n g e n u i i kidney&#13;
d i s e u s f . i r y Dr. siiunj/s R e s t o r u t i v e a luuulh—&#13;
Tabletn ur I iquld -and seo w h a t i t c a u a n d will&#13;
d o fury on. brutujiht ro&lt;^onuut»ad a n d Belt&#13;
UeVVitt^ Uarbolized Witch Ha/.ei&#13;
iSalvH does nut ire rely heal on the surface:&#13;
it penetrates t h e pores and&#13;
pkumptly releives p a m , caused by&#13;
boils, burns, acalds, cuts a n d &gt;kin diseases.&#13;
I t is especially jfoud tor piles.&#13;
Beware ot imitations.&#13;
Sold by F . A. BUjtler, D r u g g i s t&#13;
Dr. Shoop's&#13;
Restorative&#13;
"ALL DEALERS."&#13;
i * U b L l B H K O KVJCMY T H D 1 M 1 I A V X O K M l N U h\&#13;
F R A N K L , A N D R E W S So C O&#13;
LUITOKd t a u PHUh'KltTuhB.&#13;
a'ib»&lt;rfl|!ition P r i c e J l i n A d v a n c e&#13;
Health and Wealth,&#13;
I n s u r e d h e a l t h t o t h e a v e r a g e m a n Mieanu&#13;
^ r c a t w e a l t h .&#13;
if,&#13;
^uieroii ai the I'ostulllce at t ' i a c k u e y , Miud i i - ^ a j&#13;
*H aecuuci-claaa m a t t e r&#13;
A d v e r t i s i n g r a t e u u i a d e k n o w n o a a p p l i c a t i o n .&#13;
I&#13;
BttBlueatJ C a r d s , J4.00 p e r y e a r .&#13;
T'eaiti a n d m a r r i a g e u o t i c e a p u b l i u h e d f r e e .&#13;
A u n o u n c e m e n t B u t e n t e r t a i n m e n t s m a y b e p a i c \&#13;
for, if desired, by p r ^ a e n t i n g t h e office w i t h tick-&#13;
B tu of a d m i s s i o n . I n c a a e t i c k e t a a r e u o t b r o u g h t&#13;
to t h e office, r e g u l a r r a t e a w i l l b e c h a r ^ r d ,&#13;
A H m a t t e r i n l o c a l n o t l c e c o l u m n w l l i b e c h a r e d&#13;
ed a t 5 c e n t s p e r l i n e o r f r a c t i o n t h e r e o f , for each&#13;
' i n s e r t i o n , w h e r e n o t i m e i a a p e c i f l e d , a i l n o t i c e *&#13;
w i l l b e I n s e r t e d u n t i l o r d e r e d d i s c o n t i n u e d , a n d&#13;
#1U b e c h a r g e d f o r a c c o r d i n g l y , |3e^"All c h a n g e s&#13;
of adTerCiaements M U S T r e a c h t h i s office a a e a r l j&#13;
• aB T U E B D A T m o r n i n g t o i n s u r e a n i n B e r t i o n t h j&#13;
1 s a m e w e e k .&#13;
JOS mijVZZ.VG /&#13;
I n a l l its b r a n c h e s , a s p e c i a l t y . Wu h a v e a l l k i a a b&#13;
I a n d t h e latest BtyleB ol T y p e , e t c . , which e n a b l e "&#13;
UB t o execute a l l k i n d s of w o r k , such as Hooka,&#13;
! r t u a p l e t a , P o s t e r s , P r o g r a m m e s , Bill i ! e a d » , N o t e&#13;
H e a d s , S t a t e m e n t s , Cards, Auction Bills, e t c . , i n&#13;
DR. J O H N S O N ' S&#13;
FTER DINNER PILL"&#13;
INSURES HEALTH. TRY IT.&#13;
IS PURELY VEGETABLE,&#13;
a n d w w uaed b y t h e Doctor&#13;
for t w e n t y y e a r s in&#13;
active p r a c t i c e , a n d is&#13;
c o n c e d e d by a l l h a v i n g&#13;
used i t t o be t h e beat&#13;
Little Stomach Pill&#13;
on t h e m a r k e t . I t is a&#13;
P B E V E N T A T I V E of&#13;
- JOHNSON'S&#13;
^TER-DlNNEf&#13;
i 6¾ PILL&#13;
2 5 CentJ&#13;
k»duui!iirt 1&#13;
•fCn MB 1&#13;
m a r. a i&#13;
acntaMuJ..&#13;
3&#13;
s u p e r i o r etyles, upon t h e shortebt n o t i c e ,&#13;
luw as good w o r k c a n be n o n e .&#13;
Prices m&#13;
A L L H I L L S P A Y A B L E K I U B T OV B V K H Y M O N T H .&#13;
l'dK VILLAGF DIRECTORY&#13;
VILLAGE OFFlCEHb.&#13;
P H E W I U E N T J , C. Dunn&#13;
TiiL"!*TEE» S. J . T e e p l e . Ed. F a r n u i u .&#13;
.lames S m i t h , .)nines lloclie.&#13;
W. A. Nixon ('. V, VauWiriKle.&#13;
CI.EKK iiuger C a r r&#13;
T H K A B U H L H . A. l.'adwell&#13;
ABSBBBOM 1&gt;. VV'.Murta&#13;
S-TKKET COMMISBIUN EU M. L a v e /&#13;
llKAi.ru U f n c E i i D i . i l . . K.tsit;ler&#13;
A'rniHNKV W. A. Carr&#13;
M A R S H A L L Chap. Kldert&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
' i - e c t i o n a&#13;
' t o l l - iJlillUiBRl*&#13;
hK JOHN SON]&#13;
S i c k H e a d a c h e ,&#13;
D y s p e p s i a , Dizzin&#13;
e s s , H e a r t b u r n ,&#13;
B a d T a s t e in&#13;
M o u t h , C o a t e d&#13;
T o n g u e , L o s s of&#13;
A p p e t i t e&#13;
a n d ull o t h e r m o r b i d&#13;
4 c o n d i t i o n s a r i s i n g from&#13;
a d i s o r d e r e d st&lt;&gt;i:iach.&#13;
P R E V E N T I O N&#13;
is t h e o r d e r of t h i s d a y ami HRC, a s it is m u c h&#13;
m o r e scientific t'&gt; p r e v e n t :. dNe:t~ed condition&#13;
t h a n t o cure il. V » u c;ui s e c u r e t h i s&#13;
L I T T L E P I L L of ANY FIRST-CLASS DRUGGIST&#13;
w h o will be pleased t o serve y o u , 35 doses for&#13;
•J.i cents, l u n ' t t a k e : o n i e " o t h c r " j u s t a s&#13;
good " for t h e r e i - u ' t a n y o t h e r t h a t will&#13;
pi CUM,' v o u at all a l t e r t r y i n g t h i s o n e .&#13;
L. L. J O H N S O N , M. D. P r o p .&#13;
A t l a n t a , C e o r g i a .&#13;
VALVELESS AUTOMATIC&#13;
Stock Fountain&#13;
PAYS FOR ITSELF THE FIRST YEAR.&#13;
M £1'HU1)1ST E P I S C O P A L , C U L U C H .&#13;
Uev. 1). C, Littiojoha p a s t o r . Services everj&#13;
S u n d a y m o r m u ^ ut lo;;io, a n d e v e r y sSunan&gt;&#13;
e v e n i n g at T :im u ' c l o c k . P r a y e r m e e t i n g T h u i c -&#13;
d a y e v e n i n g s . S u n d a ) ' s c h o o l at close of m o r n&#13;
i n ^ s e r u c e . Mina-\1AKV V A N ! LKEI', &gt;upt.&#13;
(jyM i . \ u l i i i l 4A L'LO.N AL, Cl lL t iCH. Hev. Cr, \V. Mylue p a s t o r , s e r v i c e e\ e i .&#13;
S u n a a y m o r n i n g a t U);3U a m i e v e r y a n n u a . ,&#13;
e v e n i n g at 7:0C o ' c l o c k . P r a y e r m e e t i n g 'IT: 1,11,&#13;
j d a y e v e n i n g s , rtunday s c h o o l a t ; l o s e of m o r n&#13;
i u i t s e r v i c e . Percy S w a r t u o u t , -Mipt,, Moa:o&#13;
l e e p l e Sec.&#13;
&lt; T . MA It V • S -J ATH O L1C C H U KC « .&#13;
O Uev. M. J , C o m m e r i o r d , P a s t o r . Merviepr&#13;
e v e r y S u n d a y . Low m a s s a t 7:3(io'clock&#13;
hi&gt;;h m a s s w i t h . s e r m o n a t "".30 a. m . Catecaiaiv.&#13;
t &gt;i:0u p . 111., v e s p e r s an . . .'diction a t 7 :30 p . 111&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
Il h e A. O. U. Society of t h i s place, m e e t s e v e n&#13;
. t h i r d S u n d a y inttie F r . Matt new H a l l .&#13;
J o h n T u o m e y "and M. T. Kelly, County Delegate;,&#13;
^ n i l K \V. C. T . U. meets t h e first F r i d a y of each&#13;
X. m o n t h at-^:130 p. in, at t h e home of [)r. l i . F .&#13;
M^ler, Everyone i n t e r e e r e d i n t e m p e r a n c e i s&#13;
c o r d i a l l y invited. M r s .&#13;
r , t t a H u r f e e , S e c r e t a r y .&#13;
^eal S i l l e r , Pre?; M r , .&#13;
Sold on 30 Day*' TrlmJ.&#13;
M O N E Y BACK I F N O T S A T I 8 F I E D .&#13;
GEDGE BROS. (RON ROOFING CO.&#13;
Fountain St., Anderson, Ind.&#13;
A'he C. T . A. a n d B. Society of thiB p l a c e ,&#13;
every t h i r d S a t u r d a y e v e n i n g i n t h e F r .&#13;
t h e w H a l l . J o h n D o n o h u e , P r e s i d e n t ,&#13;
Mat i 6 0 YEARS*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
L ' N I G H T S O F M A C C A B E E S .&#13;
JCk^Meetevery F r i d a y e v e n i n g o n o r b e f o r e fuil |&#13;
o t t h e m o o n a t their hall In t h e S w a r t h o u t hld^ !&#13;
ViaitinR b r o t h e r s a r e e o r d i a l i y i n v i t e d .&#13;
&lt; H A S . L, C A M T H L L L , s i r k n n t h t Comnink-: :&#13;
LivingPton Lodge, No.76, F A ^ , M. Regular&#13;
C o m n m n i e a t i o n Tuesday evening, o n&#13;
or before&#13;
i v i n g p t o n P&#13;
~ 'ay t h e l u t l of the moon. Kirk VanWinklp, W. M&#13;
OK D E R OF FASTEKN S T A R r u e e t a e a c h m o n t h&#13;
the Friday evenint? following t h e r e g u l a r F .&#13;
A A. M, m e e t i n g . M R S . N K T T K V A I T G U N , W . M.&#13;
Oir EK OF MODERN W O O D M E N Meat t h e&#13;
irst T h u r s d a y evening of each M o n t h in t h e&#13;
Maocabefc hall. C. L . U r i m e a V. C.&#13;
LA D I E S O F T H E M A C C A B E K S . Meat everT i s&#13;
a n d i i r d S a t u r d a y of each m o n t h a t d:30 p "ru.&#13;
K.. O. T. M. hall. Visiting s i s t e r s c o r d i a l l y ia&#13;
v i t e d . I.ir A ( \ I N I W A Y , Lady C o m .&#13;
[7 M l t t l T S I I V T H K L O Y A L C T I I A R D&#13;
\ F . L, A n d r e w s P . M,&#13;
* .&#13;
TRADE M A R K S&#13;
DESIGNS&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C&#13;
Anyone sntirtlnir a !»l;etelt*»jd d e j e r i p t ^ n m a r&#13;
Quickly as.vrr;,'.:i o u r opinion free wJi^fher a n&#13;
invention is probably psfiantable. roninnmicatlons^&#13;
trietlyeonttdeutlal. HANOBO0K on P a t e n t *&#13;
s^nt free, oldest agency for w c u n n g patent*.&#13;
Patents taken throuRh. M u n n A Co. recfllvfl&#13;
spfcuj/flofic^, withont chanre. In t h e Scientific American \ h a n d i o m p l r illn«tr»fivi weekly. T.arjretit olfn-&#13;
lHtion of any scientltlf journal. T e r m s . S3 a&#13;
year; four month*. $L 0old&amp;yaU ne»nrteal«ia. MUNN &amp; Co."'8 -*-'. New Yort&#13;
Branch Office. B5a» V St. Waahlncton D. c.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
M. F. S'GLER M. 0- C, L. SIGLEH M. S&#13;
DKS. SIGLER SL SIGLER,&#13;
P h y s i c i a n a a n d Sur^Honc- A l l calla promptly&#13;
;ittended t o d a y or n i g h t . Orace on Main st.ieet„&#13;
i'inokney, Mich.&#13;
I o v otc Q C Sweet to Eit&#13;
LuA*Cl3 J ACuMtyMwdUuth&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEIL&#13;
AT DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
T C I L L T H E&#13;
AND C U R E TH&#13;
COUCH&#13;
HE LONCS&#13;
w ™ Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
™c ' ON SUMPTION&#13;
0UGHS and&#13;
I0L0S&#13;
Prict&#13;
50c V$ 1.00&#13;
FrMlritJ.&#13;
Guaranteed for a l l T H B O ^ f f a a d&#13;
L U N G TBOT7BLS8, o r M O V Z T&#13;
^&#13;
•*i^.jf.&#13;
-•A. VM : Ob&#13;
TW(T BIG QUESTIONS&#13;
T H E "MORAL OBLIGATION" AND&#13;
•DOES IT PAY'/"&#13;
SHOULD BE CONSIDERED&#13;
An Honest Answer to T h e « Will&#13;
Keep the Trade with the&#13;
Home Merchant Every&#13;
Time.&#13;
(Copyrighted, • W06, ijy Alfred C- Clark.&gt;&#13;
When the thrifty person or Ha wife&#13;
«lts down for the first time—or any&#13;
time- with the mail order catalogue&#13;
and its temptations, there are two,&#13;
aud ouly two, poims to be taken into&#13;
consideration.&#13;
One of these is moral obligation,&#13;
aud the chances are tb.at that will be&#13;
dismissed as -sentimental nonsense.&#13;
The other is—Will it pay? and to&#13;
that the thrifty person will be inclined&#13;
to interpret an answer from the&#13;
prices quoted in black-faced figures In&#13;
the catalogue.&#13;
Neither of these questions should&#13;
be lightly dismissed. Moral obligation&#13;
is not sentimental nonsense, and&#13;
black faced figures sometimes He.&#13;
The duty a man owes to his own&#13;
community and his obligation to trade&#13;
at home are so often reiterated in the&#13;
country pre&gt;.s that, possibly like some&#13;
of the preaching, it has a tendency&#13;
to harden the hearts of the sinners.&#13;
Nevertheless, the principle is true as&#13;
gospel.&#13;
What has your neighboring town&#13;
given v;;',!, Mr. Farmer? A market for&#13;
your pi'.idi'ee. What has made lio to&#13;
50 per (.•:.'ill. of the present value of&#13;
your farm'.' The accessibility of a&#13;
market You know what your grandfather&#13;
di i on that same farm? Drove&#13;
his hogs an t hauled his grain 1.0, "0.&#13;
maybe 75 n.il"s to the nearest marker&#13;
town, ;i:ri revived prices for them j&#13;
that wou'.d make you howl about the&#13;
trusts, Ami he hauled back the family&#13;
supplies for which he paid what&#13;
you would consider monopolistic&#13;
prices. I'M you happen to know what&#13;
town affords the advantages for the&#13;
rural citizen that have been enumerated,&#13;
there exists what we may call an&#13;
interdependence and a moral obligation&#13;
between the two. Are you, Mr.&#13;
Thrifty Farmer, living up to that obligation&#13;
when )i.ni do your trading&#13;
with the mail order house?&#13;
To this line of argument the farmer&#13;
may answer that his greatest obligation,&#13;
his first duty, is to his immediate&#13;
household, and that among the duties&#13;
to his family and to the heirs of his&#13;
estate is that of practicing judicious&#13;
economy—buying where be can buy&#13;
the cheapest aud to the best advantage.&#13;
And this brings ua to the second&#13;
poiut in the argument--the paramount&#13;
question in this commercial&#13;
a g e - " W i l l it pay?"&#13;
By most people an affirmative answer&#13;
to that question is accepted as&#13;
the call of duty. As a matter of fact,&#13;
"Will it pay?" is a good test to apply&#13;
to any project or proposition. There&#13;
are commercial, as well as political,&#13;
catalogue article Is the cheaper ] u ^&#13;
because the price is lower?&#13;
An element that must enter into the&#13;
comparison of goods and prices is,&#13;
that in any attempt to fool the customer,&#13;
the local merchant is decidedly&#13;
at a disadvantage, lie must show&#13;
the goods, not merely describe them.&#13;
tils business depends wholly upon the&#13;
limited trading area of his town and&#13;
his ability to inspire confidence within&#13;
that circle. He caunot afford to make&#13;
a practice of misrepresenting his&#13;
goods.&#13;
The mail order house is not so tied&#13;
down to the maxim that "Honesty Is&#13;
the beat policy." It has no neighbors,&#13;
no fellow citizens, no mutual interests&#13;
with its patrons. Its trade area IB&#13;
wide and always shifting. Naturally&#13;
these conditions do not demand extraordinary&#13;
vigilance in supplying honest-&#13;
made goods. And where Vigilance&#13;
is not a needed employe in the business&#13;
he is generally taken off the pay&#13;
roll, which makes a saving is expense,&#13;
the ol1 was worth then? Well,&#13;
it lacked a good deal of being $75 or&#13;
$100 an acre.&#13;
Yes, the home town, with its handy&#13;
market, has advanced the value of&#13;
your property and made you worth&#13;
several thousand dollars more than&#13;
your grand father was worth. The&#13;
lu&gt;ine town affords schooling for your&#13;
children, and perhaps social and&#13;
church privileges which your family&#13;
would not otherwise enjoy. The rural&#13;
mail routes and telephone systems,&#13;
radiating from the home town, as&#13;
spokes from a hub, bring to your&#13;
homo I ho groat est conveniences of&#13;
modern times.&#13;
What would your farm be worth&#13;
and how many of these advantages&#13;
would you be enjoying now, if tin*&#13;
city front which that mail order catalogue&#13;
came were your imaiest market,&#13;
yom most accessible trading point,&#13;
yom unly post othce and social center,&#13;
the only place to which you could loot;&#13;
to "onn 'f( J.JU with the outside&#13;
W O I M :&#13;
llave you over noticed (hat the fust&#13;
thing the setilers of a newiy opened&#13;
reservation do is to semi for a wagon&#13;
l;&gt;al of mail order catalogues? Well. I&#13;
ilnveift. They lay out. a town site&#13;
• evei-y six or eight miles, start, two or&#13;
three general stores, build a school&#13;
.house, a church, a blacksmith shop, a&#13;
;grain elevator, petition the department,&#13;
for a post office, and start a&#13;
newspnper. They know, from former&#13;
.experience that, with these things&#13;
•close by, life will be endurable, whatever&#13;
hardships may come. They know,&#13;
also, that without them they must live&#13;
lives of isolation and endure an existence&#13;
that is contrary to all natural&#13;
human instincts.&#13;
On the other hand, It goes without&#13;
saying, that the average country town&#13;
cannot exist without the support, of&#13;
its tributary territory. Then, if that&#13;
The fire of publicity is the medium the mail-order houses are using to&#13;
destroy this community. It Is up to you, Mr. Merchant, to fight the devil&#13;
with fire. By the aid of the local press you can hold him oyer the scorching&#13;
flames, and put a stop to his devastating competition so far as this community&#13;
is concerned. W i l l you not .assist in the good fight?&#13;
demagogues, and the man who is appealed&#13;
to on the score of patriotism&#13;
or prolit, duty or dollars, can scarcely&#13;
do better than to sit down by himself&#13;
aud submit, that question ---"Will it&#13;
pay'.'"- to his own best judgment.&#13;
Provided always, that he goes to the&#13;
very bottom of it.&#13;
What are (he relative advantages of&#13;
buying at the local store and ordering&#13;
from a "atnlogue hous'? Advantages,&#13;
understand, that figure in the question,&#13;
"Will it pa,\','" Don't g e t a w a y&#13;
from that question. Tt certainly is&#13;
\ e : v comfortable to sit down by your&#13;
own fireside and select a dress pattern&#13;
or a sulky plow from a printed description&#13;
and a picture of the article;&#13;
much more comfortable, in fact, than&#13;
hitching up anfl driving to town on a&#13;
raw day.&#13;
A consideration more important,&#13;
perhaps, is that the printed price in&#13;
the catalogue seems, In some cases at&#13;
least, to be lower than the price&#13;
quoted at the local store. Isn't that&#13;
conclusive? Let's see. The catalogue&#13;
describes the goods and quotes a&#13;
price; maybe it gives a picture of the&#13;
article also, but you don't Hee the&#13;
goods. The local merchant shows you&#13;
the goods; you may examine them&#13;
critically; he may allow you to test&#13;
them or to call in an expert to advise&#13;
you. Is it fair to conclude that the&#13;
as well as in the cost of the goods. If&#13;
lower prices are quoted by the catalogue&#13;
house, may not this account for&#13;
it?&#13;
'Will it pay?" Is it a matter of&#13;
economy to buy Inferior and damaged&#13;
goods when the same money, or even&#13;
! a little more, will pay for goods of the&#13;
! best, quality? Which course does a&#13;
J man's first duty to his own household&#13;
dictate?&#13;
Hut to get at the bottom of that&#13;
( question, we must consider the farreaching&#13;
general effect of mail order&#13;
i lading. If single catalogue houses&#13;
: ate to be capitalized at $40,000,000,&#13;
j they must, be reckoned with along&#13;
| with Standard Oil, the beef trust and&#13;
, railroad mergers, if they are allowed&#13;
to suck the blod from our country&#13;
towns, your grandchildren will find&#13;
conditiotn, much t n e same as those of&#13;
your grandfather's time. Their markets&#13;
will be 30, 50 or 75 miles away.&#13;
The towns and villages will be deserted,&#13;
and the "hubs" will be too distant&#13;
to send the radiating Bpokes of&#13;
rural mail, telephone lines and othar&#13;
modern conveniences far intc the&#13;
country.&#13;
CHARLES BRADSHAW.&#13;
Burden We Would All Assume.&#13;
Rich may be a burden, but few of&#13;
us are willing to kick at a burden of&#13;
that kind.&#13;
SHE FOUND AN ANCESTOR.&#13;
But the Record was a Shock to the&#13;
Pedigree Seacher.&#13;
A well dressed woman walked into&#13;
the office of the Turlington countyclerk&#13;
at Mount Holly. N. .T.. a day or&#13;
two ago and introduced herself t.n&#13;
"William S. Sharp, the search clock,&#13;
Bays the New York Times.&#13;
"You see," she began, "I'm engaged&#13;
in getting up the genealogy of&#13;
our family—a very old and honored&#13;
one by the way- and I am quite sure&#13;
you will be interested? Am I&#13;
right?'"&#13;
"Quite right, madam." rejoined Mr.&#13;
Sharp.'*&#13;
"My great-grandfather," continued&#13;
the pedigreed dame, "as 1 am told,&#13;
was in some way connected with the&#13;
county courts here away back in&#13;
the olden days. I want to gfet-t-he&#13;
date to complete my record."&#13;
' Mr. Sharp got down a dusty old&#13;
volume containing records as far back&#13;
as 1710. A&gt; ie* opened the bonk his !&#13;
glance tell •-•a the w r y name the I&#13;
woman was looking for, but. he did&#13;
not allude to the fact further than&#13;
to say that he believed she could&#13;
find what, she wanted.&#13;
About half an hour later the woman&#13;
closed the book and started for&#13;
the door. Mr. Sharp asked if she&#13;
had completed the family tree. He&#13;
was very much surprised when she&#13;
snapplly answered: "No, It was not&#13;
there."&#13;
As soon as she had gone Mr. Sharp&#13;
looked up the record. It showed that&#13;
the woman's ancestor had been hanged&#13;
for piracy.&#13;
Words of Cheer.&#13;
Mr. William O'Brien, when he waa&#13;
last In prison in Ireland, spent the&#13;
time In close study of the Bible. The&#13;
copy he read had been read by the&#13;
former occupant of his cell. At the&#13;
end of Jeremiah this prisoner had&#13;
scrawled: "Cheer up, old boy! Cheer&#13;
up!"&#13;
Senses of Monkeys.&#13;
Monkeys are remarkably keen of&#13;
sig'nt. but deficient in sense of smell.&#13;
Names Were Eneugh to Kill.&#13;
A few years ago a railway porter&#13;
wrote to Admiral Beresford of the&#13;
British navy, saying: "Our home has&#13;
been blessed with twins, and I write&#13;
to ask your lordship if you will ask&#13;
the princess of Wales If we may call&#13;
the little girl Princess of Wales Brown&#13;
and the little boy Lord Charles Beresford&#13;
Brown." Lord Charles procured&#13;
the necessary permission from the&#13;
princess and sent, it, together with his&#13;
own. A month later came the following&#13;
from the same man: "My Lord;&#13;
I am happy to inform you that Lord&#13;
Charles Beresford Brown is well and&#13;
hearty and that Princess of Wales&#13;
Brown died this morning:"&#13;
Lepers in Norwey.&#13;
Norway has five leper hospital*&#13;
with about 600 patients.&#13;
SPRAYING F R U I T T R E C 3 .&#13;
Cunning and Ignorance.&#13;
Cunning always has been the offensive&#13;
and defensive weapon of if.&#13;
norance. "Match cunning with cunning"&#13;
only as a last resort.—John A.&#13;
Uowland.&#13;
&gt;tf-&#13;
Thing* -Which #h«rh*-• * f ~ R e m a t i v&#13;
be red in Fighting Pests.&#13;
Haying .had &amp; exeat deal of e^perle&#13;
n c ^ l n spraying fuAL tt*ens-J find that&#13;
there', are t o r e * e s f t u d l T t b t f l j s t h a t&#13;
should be fipru* In mind.' F i r s t knowing&#13;
what t $ « i * a y tor; taps*, uaiq*&#13;
the proper solution, and third, to spray&#13;
at the right time. I am u w a r i of the&#13;
fact that a great many owners of fruit&#13;
trees have some very indefinite ideas&#13;
as t o what to spray with, when to&#13;
spray, or whether it makes any difference&#13;
how it is done, Just so as they&#13;
spray. It la certain that spraying&#13;
might as well be given up entirely unless&#13;
it is done thoroughly and regularly&#13;
at the proper time each season.&#13;
While it is by no means a cure for all&#13;
the ills of tree fruit culture, 4UI.lt 1*&#13;
a powerful adjunct to successful orchard&#13;
management. As 1 have practiced&#13;
spraying regularly each season&#13;
for several years 1 have found that&#13;
one of the first requisites toward success&#13;
is a good outfit complete. After&#13;
experiencing the use of three different&#13;
outfits the best one I have yet found&#13;
consists of a 100-galIon cask which&#13;
rests on its side lu a rack to hold it&#13;
in place. A strong force pump with&#13;
an automatic s t i r n e r which is put in&#13;
the bulge of the cask, two half-inch&#13;
hose 10 feet long, two ten feet extension&#13;
rods and two double venuorel&#13;
noz:des. With this outfit, three men,&#13;
a team and a wagon, we usually spray&#13;
300 \2 year-old trees in one day. But&#13;
little time is lost in having to repair,&#13;
unclog nozzles, etc., and the spray produced&#13;
is most sat'••: factory. To obtain&#13;
good results from spraying the&#13;
materials to be used should be firstclass&#13;
aud carefully compounded. As&#13;
I have exporimcuUed with the different&#13;
ingredients recommended, continues&#13;
this writer iu Farmers' Review, [&#13;
lind that the most effectual formula&#13;
is a half pound of purls green, ejght&#13;
pounds of blue vitriol and eight pounds&#13;
of lime to 100 gallons of water. In&#13;
preparing the mixture 1 put1 "- pounds&#13;
of blue vitriol in a burlap sack and&#13;
suspend it in a barrel containing •'&gt;-&#13;
gallons of water the day before it is&#13;
to be used, ;-o as to give it ample&#13;
time to thoroughly dissolve. i then&#13;
slack eight pounds of fresh lime, and&#13;
when ready to use it I s'o-aia it into&#13;
another vessel ami slack eight pounds&#13;
more to be ready when wanted. I&#13;
next put a half-pound of paris green&#13;
in three-fourths of a gallon of waie«-&#13;
and keep it thoroughly stirred until&#13;
ready for use the next day. The following&#13;
morning when ready to begin&#13;
spraying I fill the cask almost full of&#13;
water, leaving room, however, for the&#13;
ingredients. I then strain the lime&#13;
solution into the cask, next eight gallons&#13;
of the blue vitriol solution and&#13;
lastly the paris green mixture. 1 then&#13;
put the ends of the pump hose so as&#13;
to pump the mixture back into the&#13;
cask, and run the pump for several&#13;
minutes in order to thoroughly mix&#13;
the entire solution. In spraying I apply&#13;
the mixture with sufficient, force&#13;
to reach every part of the tree and&#13;
foliage, giving a tine moist spray until&#13;
the entire tree is well covered, which&#13;
is Indicated by slight dropping of mixture&#13;
from the trees. 1 spray three&#13;
times each season. The first spraying&#13;
is commenced just before the&#13;
blossom buds open in the spring. At&#13;
this time the canker worm, bud moth,&#13;
leaf cnminler, leaf folder and cigar&#13;
case bearer are making preparations&#13;
to begin their destructive work in the&#13;
orchard. As these insects are in their&#13;
infancy at this period, it is the proper&#13;
time to gain possession ahead of them.&#13;
In spraying the second time I begin&#13;
just as soon as the petals of the blossoms&#13;
have dropped and make the third&#13;
3praying ten days later. I regard the&#13;
second spraying as being the most important&#13;
of all, as almost every pest by&#13;
this time is doing ravenous work. Of&#13;
all the enemies of fruit culture I&#13;
consider the codling moth the most destructive.&#13;
It lays its eggs m the calyx&#13;
^r blossom end of the forming apple&#13;
nr pear and in a few days the egg&#13;
hatches and the tiny worm eats its&#13;
way into the fruit. About the only&#13;
way any beneficial results can be obtained&#13;
by spraying for this pest, is to&#13;
ipray while the calyx is expanded and&#13;
while the forming fruit is standing upward&#13;
upon its stem. If the spraying&#13;
a neglected until the calyx closes and&#13;
he fruit has turned downward, most&#13;
if the insects will he Inside the fruit&#13;
ind spraying then wdll he of Httle&#13;
^ood.&#13;
Feed the Trees.&#13;
When trees commence to show&#13;
n^ns of unthriftiness a liberal application&#13;
of barnyard manure will usutlly&#13;
give them new vigor. It is the&#13;
itrong, vigorous tree that gives the&#13;
nost perfect fruit, and such trees are&#13;
ess liable to damage from insect or&#13;
'ungous pests. In the old orchard, a&#13;
lalf of a wagon load of manure&#13;
iround each tree is none too much.&#13;
Scatter the manure out as far as the.&#13;
tranches reach. If the litter is&#13;
:oarse, so much the better, as this&#13;
will aerve also as a mulch: if well&#13;
-otted manure is used, work it into&#13;
he sod with aa orchard disk.&#13;
"THE MARRYING 8QUrReV&#13;
Justly Geo, ¢. Uw* of. Braill, tnd*&#13;
Hat Married 1460 Couplet.&#13;
Justice Geo. El Law, or Brasil, lad.,&#13;
has .taifly eamad the'title "Toe Marrtfog&#13;
Squire," by which he Is known&#13;
far and wide, havlug&#13;
tmrrried some&#13;
was Jiroken at night, and tne rj&gt;ii'ii»eHtV&#13;
of the kidney secretions were too fiPt&gt;&#13;
qu&amp;t and contained sediment Th«*»&#13;
boxes of Doan's Kidney Fflla cured sit&#13;
in 1897, and for the past nine years I&#13;
have been free from kidney complaint&#13;
and backache."&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box*&#13;
Foster-MIlburn Co.. Buffalo. N. Y.&#13;
Chamois Skins from 8heep.&#13;
Chamois skins in a majority of&#13;
cases, according to a United States&#13;
consular report recently issued, are&#13;
really an oil tanned sheep or lamb&#13;
skin lining. The supply of skins from&#13;
the chamois is very limited. Enough&#13;
could not be obtained i n a., year to&#13;
supply the United ^.States" -for ' more&#13;
than a single day, a fair average&#13;
crop from Switzerland being only&#13;
about 5,000 to 6,000 skins. The chamois&#13;
skin is heavier than the skin of&#13;
the sheep or Iamb, ami much coarser.&#13;
For strength and durability the chamois&#13;
is preferable, but for ordinary&#13;
use and appearance the oil-tanned&#13;
sheepskin lining would, in most instances,&#13;
ho preferred.&#13;
BABY iN T E R R I B L E S T A T E .&#13;
Awful Humor Eating Away F a c e -&#13;
Body a Mass of Sores—Cuticura&#13;
Cures in Two Weeks.&#13;
"My little dam-dPer broke out all&#13;
over her body with a humor, and wo&#13;
used everything recommended, but&#13;
without results. -I culled iu thre&lt;* doctors,&#13;
but she continued to grow worse.&#13;
Her body was a mass of sores, and her&#13;
little face was being eaten away. Her&#13;
ears looked as if they would drop off.&#13;
Neighbors advised me to get Cuticura&#13;
Soap and Ointment, and before I had&#13;
used half of the cake of Soap and box&#13;
of Ointment the sores had all healed,&#13;
and my little one's face and body were&#13;
as clear as a new-born babe's. I would&#13;
not be without it again if it cost five&#13;
dollars, instead of seventy-five cents.&#13;
Mrs. George J. Steese, 701 Coburn St.,&#13;
Akron, O., Aug. 30, 1905."&#13;
Queen Alexandra, after a residence&#13;
of 4 5 years In England, has visited the&#13;
tower of London. She is said to have&#13;
been "much Intarastad l a waat., ebe&#13;
saw."&#13;
• " »11 EOTIFDnilSD&#13;
TRY OR. W I L L I A M S ' P I N K PILLS&#13;
FOR Y O U R R H E U M A T I S M .&#13;
Any fool can spend money, bnt It&#13;
axes brains to earn It&#13;
The Pills Have Cured the Disease In&#13;
Almost Every Form and Even In&#13;
Advanced Stages.&#13;
Rheumatism is a painful inflammation&#13;
of the- muscles or of the coverings&#13;
of the joints and is sometimes accompanied&#13;
by swelling. The pain is sharp&#13;
and shooting and does not confine itself&#13;
to any one part of the body, but after&#13;
settling iu one joint or muscle for a&#13;
time, leaves it and passes on to another.&#13;
The most dangerous tendency of the&#13;
disease is to attack the jfeatt. ^External&#13;
applications may givenaliejf from pain&#13;
for a t i n e 4mt the diseas* canno* be&#13;
cured until t h e blood is purified. Dr.&#13;
WilUam4V-PinkPuUs are tfetfcest medi.&#13;
cine for t h i s purpose as their action is&#13;
directly e p tfae blood, m a s f c * I t rich,&#13;
red and healthy. W h e n t h e blood it&#13;
pure thertftan be no rfaefimatlsm&#13;
Sirs. EHett A. Russell, of South Got?&#13;
St., Auburn, Me., says; " I had been&#13;
sick for fifteen;&#13;
brought on bj .&#13;
weak a n d m y&#13;
troubled with *&#13;
spells, which iiMsaffij s i t i J M f f a S i t n T&#13;
I liad n o appetite and used to have awful&#13;
fainting spells, fusing down when at&#13;
my work. I frequently felt n u m b all&#13;
over. My liead ached continuously for&#13;
five years.&#13;
"About two years ago I began to feel&#13;
rheumatism in m y joints, which became&#13;
so lame I could hardly walk. My joints&#13;
were swollen and pained me terribly.&#13;
"Dr. Williams' Pink Pills were recommended&#13;
to me by a friend, after I had&#13;
foiled to get well from tun- doctor's&#13;
treatment. When I began tailing' t h e fills, the rheumatism was a t its worst,&#13;
had taken only a few boxes, when the&#13;
headaches stopped and n o t long afterward&#13;
I felt the pain i n my^joiuts becoming&#13;
less and less, until there was&#13;
none at all. The stiffness was gone and&#13;
I have never bad any return of the rheumatism.**&#13;
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have cured&#13;
such diseases as nervous and general&#13;
debility, indigestion, nervous headacheneuralgia&#13;
and even partial paralysis and&#13;
locomotor ataxia. Aa a tonic for t h e&#13;
blood and nerves they are unequalled-&#13;
« , A ^ P ^ P " 1 * * on "Diseases of t h e&#13;
Blood ' a n d a copy of our diet book will&#13;
be sent free on request to anyone interested.&#13;
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a m sold by&#13;
all druggists, or sent, postpaid, • » receipt&#13;
of price, 50centaperbox,six boxes&#13;
for ta.60, by the Dr. Williams Medicine&#13;
Company, Schenectady, N, X&#13;
&amp;$~&#13;
* • * * ' - : sin&#13;
mm T^ T&#13;
V-V - * ; • •&#13;
Pe-ru-na Relieves&#13;
Spring' Catarrh.&#13;
KOREAN SOUL W I N N E R S .&#13;
N*&gt;&#13;
tp\&#13;
MISS D O R A H A Y D K N .&#13;
"Without hesitation I write to thank&#13;
you for the great relief / have found in&#13;
your valuable medicine, Per una t and&#13;
tvill call the attention of all my friends&#13;
tufferiyig xvith catarrh to that fact. Besides&#13;
I cheerfully recommend it to all suffering&#13;
zvith catarrh in any form."-—&#13;
Miss Dora ffayden, Sig 6th St., S. IV.,&#13;
Washington, D, C.&#13;
A Case of Spring Catarrh.&#13;
Mrs. N. P. Lawler, 423½ N.Broadway,&#13;
Pittsburg, Kas., writes: ' 'Last spring I&#13;
caught a severe cold, which developed&#13;
into a serious case of catarrh. I felt&#13;
weak a n d sick, and could neither eat&#13;
nor sleep well.&#13;
"A member of our club who had been&#13;
cured of catarrh throiigh'the use of Peruna&#13;
advised me to try it, a n d I did so&#13;
at once. I expected help, b u t nothinglike&#13;
the wonderful change for the better&#13;
I observed almost as soon as I started&#13;
taking it. I n three days 1 felt much&#13;
better, and within two weeks I was in&#13;
tec health. Peruna is a wonderful&#13;
:ine."'&#13;
Nature makes occupation a neces*&#13;
sity to us; society makes it a duty;&#13;
habit may make it a pleasure.—Cape)&#13;
le.&#13;
There It more Catarrh In tbli uctlon of tbe country&#13;
than all otherdlaeaaci put together, and until the laat&#13;
few years was aupposed to be incurable. Fur a great&#13;
many ye are doctor* pronounced It a local disease and&#13;
rreicrlbed local remadlei, and by coast astlv falling&#13;
tuoure with local treatment, prono«set4Itlseursble.&#13;
Science baa proven Catarrh to be acostsdts ttscal disss**.&#13;
a*4 Ui*i£fure_re&lt;iulreiconatlt»Uoaa; treatment.&#13;
Bail'a CMSli Oat*. ssss*|*f turee) b y T . J. Cheney&#13;
*©*.,Ta talis.Otto, fa a*»*»if Cofltt1taUa«*ieuro on&#13;
*mwmm*. tt H fsfcei |a*fnal)r 1»&#13;
tfMM t&gt;A MMMMBBfa^II I&#13;
mmWmmtfSHmMtM m*&#13;
i from 10&#13;
• 6B tkef obrlo oodne&#13;
^ . T « « i i « i i a t a » a M . ""&#13;
Address: P. J. CHKKKY &amp; CO., Toledo, OhJo.&#13;
Sold by DnigsieU, 7ftc.&#13;
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.&#13;
sstfsJPYI Mia dlrwstfy o* i t *&#13;
Mess** tpsayttsra. Tksf otle&#13;
+*m*etst it fails to car*&#13;
Work of Cupid in Germany.&#13;
The number of marriages in the&#13;
German empire in 1905 was 485,906.&#13;
It is a pity to be ill! Take Garfield Tea.&#13;
the laxative exactly suited to the needs of&#13;
men. women and children; it is made&#13;
wholly of hcrhn; it piiritien the blood,&#13;
rrndicates diwaKe. overcomes constipation,&#13;
brings (»ood Health.&#13;
A really good complexion doesn't&#13;
come out in the wash.&#13;
-'DODD'S v&#13;
K I D N E Y ^&#13;
/ PILLS&#13;
Some Native Converts Who Have Become&#13;
Prominent aa Gospel Workers.&#13;
Korea is probably more responsive&#13;
o missionary effort than any other&#13;
oriental country.&#13;
A M i s s i o n a r y&#13;
writes: "It is my&#13;
honest conviction&#13;
that bad we the&#13;
proper missionary&#13;
force, Korea would&#13;
be a Christian nation&#13;
in five or&#13;
ten years."&#13;
Several native&#13;
converts are do-&#13;
'ng remarkable work in soul winning.&#13;
Prominent among them is the high&#13;
oorn Yu, who before his conversion&#13;
prided himself upon his birth and his&#13;
t a m i n g and spoke contemptuously of&#13;
the Gospel as the "cult of t h e ignorant."&#13;
But Yu is by no means the&#13;
inly influential Korean who has accepted&#13;
Christ, and is doing ardent,&#13;
personal work. Another notable soul&#13;
winner Is Cho, whose sister married&#13;
the brother of t h e emperor of Korea.&#13;
Since Cho's conversion he h a s opened&#13;
uis bouse for nightly meetings for&#13;
Bfble study and prayer, and is using&#13;
his great Influence with telling effect&#13;
among the people of his class.&#13;
Another great personal worker is&#13;
Kim, formerly chief of police of Seoul.&#13;
Kim had read the Bible considerably&#13;
before he was arrested—at the time&#13;
of the political upheaval in Korea—&#13;
%nd thrown into jail. While In jail&#13;
he pondered more deeply upon the&#13;
word, and was converted. He is now&#13;
assistant secretary of the Y. M. C. A.,&#13;
and Dr. Gale says he possesses a wonderfully&#13;
winning character, and is a&#13;
genuine sleuth-hound for souls, drawing&#13;
them from among the men in&#13;
highest authority, as well as among&#13;
school boys whom he may meet.&#13;
Ko was of a very different character&#13;
from either of these others, being a&#13;
gambler, a drunkard, a liar, a thief,&#13;
an adulterer and a street brawler.&#13;
He tried to kill himself when he found&#13;
that he was hopelessly in debt, and&#13;
the missionaries nursed him back to&#13;
life. The truth of God gradually dawned&#13;
in his heart. He accepted Christ,&#13;
and has Bince that time showed the&#13;
same beautiful, humble spirit and&#13;
earnest zeal for soul winning as has&#13;
been shown by the other men of&#13;
more fortunate early experience. In&#13;
the matter of depth of understanding&#13;
of the spiritual meaning of the Word&#13;
he excels.&#13;
IN W E S T E R N CANADA.&#13;
Delicate In the Old Home; Better&#13;
Health in the New.&#13;
' G H T - s D'V"&#13;
THE CANADIAN WEST&#13;
IS THE BEST WEST&#13;
The testimony of tbonaanda&#13;
during tbe peak W it la that the Canadian&#13;
eat la the beet Weat.&#13;
Tear by year the a*rimjlturalretnraB&#13;
have in*&#13;
creased In volume and In&#13;
vslss, andatlll Uie Canadian&#13;
Government offers&#13;
I W M i t i r e t S C to&#13;
•very bona fide ssttlse.&#13;
Some of the Advantages Th* phenomenal Increase In railway mlleajre—&#13;
rr.r.ir, i.aaa,—i branches— aaanutalmoatsverv DOTUMB&#13;
«* Wtmmmrr within etaay rcacn of churches.&#13;
cheap fuel and every modern&#13;
•ttr.n.o.* BOTBKLwrrrA'Pcftop&#13;
»«a •ttlQOO.MU to th« farmers of&#13;
. span from tbe resell* of other&#13;
v wor advice and infenoation »ddress the PUPKTt-&#13;
JNTBNU1WTOF IMMIOHAT10N. Ottawa, Uiuiad*,&#13;
or any a*ith«risMl 6overnme*t Agent.&#13;
M. V. McINNES, 6 Avteee Theatre Week, D*.&#13;
, Ukaifs.; m C A. LAURIE* See* St*.&#13;
r • : , •• ••'•&#13;
•mZSiXtl Tkmmt* Eft Wn»&#13;
W. k . U , DETROIT, NO. 18, 1907~&#13;
Layman's Missionary Society.&#13;
Missionary work is everywhoro and&#13;
always largely promoted by ministers&#13;
and women. Men Rive much of the&#13;
money, but not many laymen give the&#13;
time and attention which the work&#13;
deserves. It is to change this condition&#13;
so far as possible that the Laymen's&#13;
Missionary society has been organized,&#13;
says Youths' Companion. A&#13;
general committee has been created,&#13;
composed of prominent men in the&#13;
different denominations. It i s ' n o t to&#13;
be a new missionary board, but an&#13;
Interdenominational organization to.&#13;
work through existing boards. Two&#13;
things In particular it will attempt: a&#13;
campaign of education In the churches&#13;
of the United States, by which,&#13;
through conferences in private houses,&#13;
.it is hoped to reach t h e influential&#13;
men; and the appointment of commissions&#13;
of 50 or more laymen who shall&#13;
visit foreign missionary fields and report&#13;
what they see. The first party&#13;
will sail from the' Pacific coast early&#13;
in August for Japan, China, Korea,&#13;
the Philippines, India, Arabia, Turkey&#13;
and Africa.&#13;
Churchbridge, SgBk.,&#13;
December list, 1«06.&#13;
To the Editor.&#13;
Dear Sir,&#13;
I came to this country from t h e&#13;
State of Wisconsin thre« years ago,&#13;
and must say that I am greatly pleased&#13;
with t h e outlook In thla western country.&#13;
For my own part I am entirely&#13;
satisfied with t h e progress I have&#13;
made since coming here. I have raited&#13;
excellent crops of grain of all varieties.&#13;
Last season my wheat averaged&#13;
23 bushels of wheat to the acre, outs&#13;
60 and barley 40.&#13;
We had a splendid garden this year,&#13;
ripening successfully tomatoes, r uskmelons,&#13;
water melons, sweet corn and&#13;
kindred aorts.&#13;
The country is well adapted to&#13;
wheat growing and mixed farming, and&#13;
to my mind it is the best country under&#13;
the sun for a man with a family&#13;
and small means, aa it is possible tor&#13;
a man to commence farming operations&#13;
with much less capital than is&#13;
required in the older settled countries.&#13;
The climate if ull that could be desired,&#13;
being very healthy and invigorating.&#13;
My wife came out about six months&#13;
ago, and although inclined to be delicate&#13;
in t h e old home, she has enjoyed&#13;
the best of health since coming here.&#13;
In short, I am more than satisfied&#13;
with t h e land of my adoption, and I&#13;
am also satlslied with the laws of the&#13;
country.&#13;
Yours very truly,&#13;
(Signed) JOHN LANGDON.&#13;
Write to any Canadian Government&#13;
Agent for literature and full particulars.&#13;
PUTNAM FADELESS DYKS color&#13;
more goods, per package, tha-zi others, uud&#13;
the colors ure brighter and faster.&#13;
Ape no greatness. Be willing to pass&#13;
for what you are. A good farthing la&#13;
better than a had sovereign.—Sterne.&#13;
Mrs. WLaafow/'s Boothia* Syrap.&#13;
Fur c&amp;Udres teotblotf, sof tens the g-uruj, reduce* b&gt;&#13;
flammatlon.aUayap«ai,cuxea wloduoUu. '.ttcuUttU*-&#13;
A pretty girl is aa fond of drawing&#13;
attention aa a political officeholder ia&#13;
of drawing a balary.&#13;
For more rea*son« than one, Garfield Tea&#13;
in the heht choice when a laxative is&#13;
needed: it is Pure, Pleasant t o take. Mild&#13;
and Potent. Guaranteed under tbe Pood&#13;
and Drugts Law.&#13;
The archdiocese of Cologne, Germany,&#13;
is the largest In the world,&#13;
with a Catholic population of more&#13;
than 2,000,000.&#13;
Shake Into Your Srioea&#13;
Allen's Fout-Kui-.e. i t cure*. p;'.iiilui&gt;woilen,&#13;
'Jii.-irtnig, MvciiiiiiK; feet. Muke« new «hoes&#13;
tiixy. Sold hy all DruKgiMts- and Shoe Storen.&#13;
Don't accfjii iinv suiislitute. SampleFKKK.&#13;
•Addreiw A . S. Olmsted, Le K m , N . Y.&#13;
English Ribbon Trade Flourishing.&#13;
The English ribbon trade is said to&#13;
be now iu a more flourishing condition&#13;
than It has been in many years,&#13;
owing to the huge demanda the dressmakers&#13;
and milliners a r e making upon&#13;
the output of the manufactnrera.&#13;
SICK HEADACHE P o s i t i v e l y easvsl fry:&#13;
t h e s e L i t t l e Pills*&#13;
They alao relieve Ittri&#13;
tnss trom Dyspepsia, la-j&#13;
aitfeeskm and Too Beavrty&#13;
^rcwy A perfect ras*&#13;
e4y for Dim ram Kaqaeaw&#13;
DrowBUieaa. Bed Tuatej&#13;
tn the HouUi. Coated&#13;
Toagne.yatolntaeSUle.1&#13;
TOKPTD LTVEB. Zhey&#13;
regulate tt» Bowels. Forel? Vegetable.&#13;
SMALL PILL SHALL DOSE. SHALL PRICE!&#13;
CARTERS&#13;
• i T T L&#13;
WIVE 1^ rrrie&#13;
IVER&#13;
PIU8.&#13;
Genuine Must Bear&#13;
Fac-Simile Signature&#13;
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.&#13;
JOIN THE NAVY Whicn enlisu for 4 years JOUUK men ul gvod character&#13;
&lt;iud aound pbyaical CuaHitiuu Uetweeu ibe agei&#13;
ot ita,a(l'£t us ui«preuilco teamen; fine oypurtunt-&#13;
L.O* for aovuneeuient; pay I1K to I7U a nionib. Klectritmmt,&#13;
uiacblnisut. bJttcktnjubs, copperbUiiibs,&#13;
cirpeaiera, sblp-fltiera, coul-uutisjers, Bremen, wutticUns,&#13;
cuoks, etc., between 21 ur»ua6 years, clerka,&#13;
hospital apprentices betweeu IB and '&amp;&gt; years, enlisted&#13;
in apeclal ratings witb suitable pay. Ketirement&#13;
on three-fourths pay and allowances after 31&#13;
years service. Applicant* must be American citisena&#13;
M5 worth of clothing free to recruits. Upoc&#13;
discbarse travel allowance • cent* per mile to place&#13;
of enlistment. Bonus fouruiontha puy and Increase&#13;
in pay upon ra-eulistmeci within tour months of&#13;
JisobarKe.&#13;
U. S. NAVY RECRUITING STATIONS:&#13;
No. 13 Lafayette Avcaut, - DETI01T. MICH.&#13;
Cbamber a! Canacrce Builalnj. . TOLEDO, SUIf.&#13;
real Office BuUsisf, - - JACKSON. HICB.&#13;
f..l OHJCS Bolldin*. - . SA0INAW. M1CS.&#13;
Puritans No Longer In Control.&#13;
The changed character of Boston's&#13;
population could hot be more typically&#13;
illustrated than in the reading of the&#13;
names of the committees of the Boston&#13;
common council. As the Patriots'&#13;
day committee, for example, President&#13;
Barrett selects Couucilmen Kachkowsky,&#13;
Santosuosso and Purcell.—&#13;
Hot ton Traveler.&#13;
Important to M o t h e r s . j&#13;
Examine cart-fully every bottle of CA8TORIA, j&#13;
a safe ar.d sure remedy for infanta and children, j&#13;
and tee that it Bearr- Ihe ^W^S"&#13;
Signature of&#13;
In Use For Over 3 0 Tcara.&#13;
The Kind You Have Alweva Bought.&#13;
The deepest sympstfcy man can&#13;
Bhow to man is to help him do his&#13;
duty.—Mulock.&#13;
Krause's Cold Cure.&#13;
For cold in hcrnl, thioat, idit-#l or back.&#13;
Bei-t remedy ioi' LalJri|ip«\ l)ruggi».tf&gt;, ^Sc.&#13;
The reward for a good deed done it&#13;
In having done it.—Emerson.&#13;
M R S . C E , F I N K&#13;
HEALTH OF WOMEN&#13;
In this nineteenth century t o keep&#13;
n p with t h e march of progress every&#13;
power of woman ia strained t o ite&#13;
utmost, a n d t h e t a x upon h e r physical&#13;
system is far g r e a t e r t h a n ever.&#13;
I n t h e good old-fashioned days of&#13;
our grandmothers few d r u g s were&#13;
used in medicines. They relied upon&#13;
roots a n d herbs t o cure weaknesses&#13;
and disease, a n d t h e i r knowledge of&#13;
roots a n d herbs w a s far g r e a t e r&#13;
t h a n t h a t of women today.&#13;
I t w a s i n this study of roots a n d&#13;
herbs t h a t Lydia E. P i n k h a m , of&#13;
Lynn, Mass., "discovered a n d gave&#13;
to the women of t h e world a remedy&#13;
more potent a n d efficacious t h a n&#13;
any combination of drugs.&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkhatn's Vegetable Compound&#13;
is a n honest, tried and t r u e remedy of unquestionable therapeutic value.&#13;
This medicine made from native roots and herbs contains no narcotics&#13;
or other harmful drugs and today holds the record for t h e largest n u m b e r&#13;
of actual cures of female diseases of any medicine t h e world h a s ever&#13;
known, a n d thousands of voluntary testimonials a r e on file in t h e&#13;
laboratory a t Lynn, Mass., which testify to its wonderful value.&#13;
MrsfeT. B . Fink, of Carnegie, Pa., writes:—Dear Mrs. Pinkham:— " I&#13;
wish every angering woman would take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound and write to you for advice. I t h a s done me a world of good&#13;
and w h a t it has accomplished for me I know it will do for others."&#13;
When women are troubled with Irregularities, Displacements, Ulceration,&#13;
Inflammation, Backache, Nervous Prostration, they should r e -&#13;
member there is one tried and t r u e remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable&#13;
Compound.&#13;
Mrs. Pinkhatn's Standing Invitation to Women&#13;
Women suffering from a n y form of female weakness a r e invited t o&#13;
write Mrs. Pinkham, a t Lynn, Mass. Out of h e r vast volume of experience&#13;
she probably h a s t h e very knowledge t h a t will help your case.&#13;
X"&#13;
(&#13;
H E V A L U B&#13;
OF&#13;
A Queen's Influence.&#13;
The queen of Holland has initiated&#13;
a daily religious service at the palace&#13;
in The Hague, which is open to every&#13;
member of her household, from the&#13;
grand chamberlain to the butler. The&#13;
queen takes her seat at a small table&#13;
In the diningroom and begins by&#13;
reading a psalm, which is afterward&#13;
sung by all present. She then reads&#13;
a chapter from the Scriptures, and&#13;
the ceremony closes with t h e singing&#13;
of a hymn.&#13;
Consecrated Bishop.&#13;
Rt. Rev. William A. Jones, D. D., O.&#13;
8. A., bishop-elect of San J u a n , Porto&#13;
Rico, was consecrated in the cathedral&#13;
at Havana on Sunday, March 24. A&#13;
number of his brother priests of the&#13;
order of St. Augustine went from the&#13;
United States to attend the ceremony.&#13;
Refutes to Yield,&#13;
The Protestant bishops in Ireland,&#13;
with tne- exception of the primate,&#13;
who is a graduate of Oxford, have&#13;
adopted and issued a series of reso-&#13;
^ t l o n s in which they refuse to accept&#13;
the university scheme outlinsd eX*&#13;
* MMrr.. Bryee.&#13;
PERSONAL KNOWLEDGI&#13;
Personal knowledge is the winning (actor in the culminating contests of&#13;
this competitive age and when of ample character it places its fortunate&#13;
possessor in the front ranks of&#13;
The Well Informed of the World.&#13;
A vast fund of personal knowledge is really essential to the achievement of the&#13;
highest excellence in any field of human effort&#13;
A Knowledge of Forms, Knowledge of Functions and Knowledge&#13;
of Products are all of the utmost value and in questions of Hfe and health&#13;
when a true and wholesome remedy is desired it should be remembered that Syrup&#13;
of Figs and Elixir of Senna, manufactured by the Cartfornia Fig Syrup Co., is an&#13;
ethical product which has met with the approval of the most eminent physicians and&#13;
gives universal satisfaction, because ft is a remedy of&#13;
Known Quality, Known Excellence and Known Component&#13;
Parts and has won the valuable patronage of millions of the Wefl Informed of the&#13;
world, who know of their own personal knowledge and from actual use that it is the first&#13;
and best of family laxatives, for which no extravagant or unreasonable claims are made.&#13;
This valuable remedy has been long and favorably known&#13;
under the name of—Syrup of Figs—and has attained to worldwide&#13;
acceptance as the most excellent family laxative. As its pure&#13;
laxative principles, obtained from Senna, are well known to physicians f ^ s w&#13;
and the Well Informed of the world to be the best we have ^^r(f j^&#13;
adopted the more elaborate name of—Syrup of Figs and* -39T --*&amp;&#13;
Elixir of Senna—as more fully descriptive of the remedy,&#13;
but doubtless it will always be called for by the shorter&#13;
name of—Syrup of Figs—and to get its beneficial&#13;
effects, always note, when purchasing the fuQ&#13;
name of the Company—California Fig Syrup&#13;
Co. — printed on the front of every package,&#13;
whether you call for—Syrup of Figs&#13;
— ot by the full name—Syrup of&#13;
Figs and EJbir of Senna.&#13;
km&#13;
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.,&#13;
LOUISVILLE, KY. LONDO^ENGLAND. N EW YORK,N.Y&#13;
"•^fly&#13;
;A£':/*rw fis*S»» &lt;X&#13;
':-r&#13;
. ; # ' "&#13;
r£ ,;&lt; - - &gt;&#13;
V:&#13;
Kv&#13;
h:&#13;
% ; •&#13;
\r*&#13;
» ) *&#13;
'•»&#13;
£&#13;
Hfc^' *&#13;
lii'ir *tf-'.&#13;
fr~ t * ;&#13;
'*:'&#13;
,1»;;&#13;
• H&#13;
• v:&#13;
Among flilr Correspairdents r&#13;
W18T PlTTlf AJt.&#13;
M i b . M u r p h y i« s l o w l y i n i p r o v -&#13;
• W t ? * W T # T # T ^ T * T W ? » f&#13;
N O R T H H A M B U R G . j&#13;
M i a a E d n a l i o h a o n a n d M i e a j&#13;
P i t k i n w e r e g n e s t H a t C h a t * . Roli.-- '&#13;
H O L I ' « S u n d a y , j&#13;
T h e P u t u a u t a n d H a m b u r g&#13;
i&#13;
f a r m e i H e l u b m e t w i t h M r . a n d \&#13;
M r s . W i n . C a d y S a t u r d a y a n d c o n -&#13;
- i • t i t , - i C a l l . , n o w&#13;
a i d e r i n g t h e b u s y t i m e a g o o d '&#13;
c r o w d w a s p r e b e n t . M i s s V i o l a&#13;
P e t t e y » h i r n i a h e d BO m e t i n e l i m b i c&#13;
w i t h a p h o n o g r a p h , a r e c i t a t i o n&#13;
g i v e n b y M I H . J . H e n r y a n d r e a d -&#13;
b y M i s b A d d a K i e v . A v e r y i u -&#13;
t e r e b t i i i ^ ' t a l k w a n y i v e u b y M i .&#13;
H e n d r i e k b a b o u t h i . s t r i p t o T e x a s .&#13;
H e d e s c r i b e d t h a t p a r t o f T e x a s&#13;
h e v i w i t e d a s a l a n d o f r o s e s a n d s e a s o n&#13;
m y .&#13;
M i s s M o l l i o K e l l y o f L a n s i n g&#13;
v i s i t e d h e r h o m e h e r e t h e p a s t&#13;
w e e k&#13;
M i s s M a y K e n n e d y s p e n t F r i -&#13;
d a y e v e n i n g w i t h M i s s E m m a&#13;
G a r d n e r .&#13;
ANCIENT ATHENS.&#13;
B a n q u e t i n g In t h e G r e c i a n C i t y In t h «&#13;
T i m o of P l a t o .&#13;
I n P r o f e s s o r T . »1. T u c k e r ' s " L i f e I n&#13;
l u c i e u t A t h e n s " i h c a u t h o r g i v e s t i n s&#13;
i s a p i c t u r e of u l y p u - a l b u m m e t in&#13;
t h a r \-ny m t h e thin.' ol P l u t o : " W h e n&#13;
nil a c i ' iu p l a c e t h e s e r v a n t s count-&#13;
omul &gt;\ iili a v e s s e l , f r o m w h i c h t h e y&#13;
p o u r W U U T o v e r tin- b u n d s of t h e&#13;
g u e s t s . T h e r e a r e b r o u g h t In s m a l l&#13;
ijUfhii, light a n d o r n a m e n t a l , o u e uf&#13;
A l e t t e r f r o m W e l l i n g t o n W h i t e M i m a is s e t d o w n b e t u r e c a d i c o u e h&#13;
i n f o r m s u s t h a t h e i s a t K i v e r s i d e , ( o r t w o p e r s o n s , a n d o u t h e s e a r e&#13;
p l a c e d t h e s e v e r a l d i s h e s u s t h e y c o m e&#13;
In o r d e r . T h e t a b l e s a r e l o w e r t b a u&#13;
I t i s r e p o r t e d t h a t M r . A n d r e w t h e c o u c h e s , su t h a t t h e righi h a n d&#13;
H a e k e t , o f D e t r o i t , w h o i s w e l l K u ; 7 u " b d " N V U e a s i I * v t o ih*™- K l i [ ^&#13;
. . . ] a n d f o r k s t h e r e art? n o n e , t h e rotni Is&#13;
k n o w n m t h i s v i c i n i t y , i s s e r i o u s - . t i i k v n i m w i t h {hii u u g e r 8 . i t is t r u e&#13;
l y i l l . I t h a t iu d e a l i n g w i t h v e r y s o f t f o o d s&#13;
. . . ! o r g r a v i e s o r iu e x t r a c t i n g t h i u &lt; *&#13;
* r e d L e l a n d h a s d e v e l o p e d t h e tTolu S U e l l s N l K K , n a w t , „ . n o t u n k n o w n .&#13;
( m a l i t i c a t i o n s o f a n o l d t i m e b u t u s u a l l y t h e l i n g e r s w e r e a s s i s t e d&#13;
s p o r t s m a n , h e h a v i n g c a u g h t o v e r ^ &amp;wv* o f , ^ , h o l ! ? w i 1 , ° U t * *&#13;
UXS.MMX L* £ * Tt . , t h e p u r p o s e . I t i s c l e a r t h a t t h e r e w a s&#13;
M 5 U . U 0 w o r t h o f f u r s t h e p a s t p l e n t y of r o o m f o r n e a t n e s s a n d d a i n t l&#13;
ADDITIONAL LOCAL.&#13;
a n d p e r p e t u a l M o w e r s b u t s a i d i t j&#13;
w a s a l m o s t i m p o s s i b l e t o p i c k ; y[n^ ftt t h » U n i v e r s i t y S c h o o l o f&#13;
f l o w e r s w i t h o u t c o m i n g i n c o n t a c t M u s i c , r e s u m e d h e r w o r k T u e s -&#13;
w i t h a t h o r n a s t h e c a c t i g r o w s o ; a t t y a f t e r a w e e k s v a c a t i o n ,&#13;
p r o f u s e l y . I n N o v . h e n o t i c e d a | w R G a r d n e r a n d J a m e s&#13;
m a n s o w i n g s o i u i * . s e e d w h i c h&#13;
n e s s i u h a n d l i n g food, a n d It w a s n o&#13;
. . . &gt;, T T T • i - i i s m a l l a d v a n t a g e t o h a v e f i n g e r s n o t&#13;
M i s s S a d i e H a r r i s , w h o i s s t u d - t o o s e u s i t j Y i . .&#13;
" T h e r e w e r e n o n a p k i n s . P o r t i o n s&#13;
of s o f t b r e a d , o f t e n e s p e c i a l l y p r e p a r e d&#13;
f o r t h e p u r p o s e , w e r e u s e d f o r w i p i n g&#13;
t h e l i n g e r s a n d w e r e H f t e r w a r d t h r o w n&#13;
fc&gt; t h e d o g s w h i c h m i g h t b e p r e s e n t t o&#13;
c a t c h t h e m ; b u t , a p a r t f r o m t h e d o g s ,&#13;
It D o v l e h a v e s t a r t e d w o r k o n t h e i n a v be s,&gt;;i:ethliig of a s h o c k t o&#13;
p r o v e d t o b e o a t s o n a b l u e g r a s s ! b H 8 u m e u t s u f t h e i r b a m s . M r . l e a r n t h a t t h e Moor, w h i c h w a s , „f&#13;
s o d d e d f i e l d . A f t e r h i m c a m e a ; a a n l m n . w i l l l l 8 e s t o u e f o r l l i s c o u r s e , w i t h o u t a c a r p e t , w a s t h e r e -&#13;
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F o r m n e t e n y e a r n o u t of t w e n t y&#13;
o n e S p a r t a h a s Imen d r y , b u t ia*t y e a r&#13;
t h e l i q u o r e l e m e n t s u c c e e d e d i n g e t -&#13;
t i n g t h e s a l o o n in a g a i n , b u t a f t e r a&#13;
y e a r ' s e x p e r i e n c e t h e s a l o o n s w e r e&#13;
a g a i n p u t o u t at t h e r e c e n t e l e c t i o n&#13;
by a g o o d m a j o r i t y .&#13;
J . A . U a d w e l l a n d wife w e r e i n D e -&#13;
t r o i t T h u r s d a y a n d F r i d a y t h e y r e -&#13;
t u r n e d in t h e i r n e w C a r t e r c a r , G e o .&#13;
U e a s o n , l r . b r i n g i n g t h e m v i a Y y s i -&#13;
l a n t i a n d t h e i r s o n , K u e l . r e t u r n e d&#13;
w i t h t h e m . I b e i r m a c h i n e is o n e of&#13;
l a r g e o n e s w i t h a t o p .&#13;
T h e o l d N a t i o n a l h o t e l a t H o w e l l is&#13;
b e i n g r e f i t t e d , d e c o r a t e d , a n d p u t in&#13;
s h a p e tn r e o p e n in t h e n e a r f u t u r e .&#13;
T h e n e w p r o p r i e t o r is t o b e H e n r y&#13;
W h i p p l e . T h e h o t e l h a s a l w a y s b e e n&#13;
a d e a d l e t t e r p r a c t i c a l l y b u t if a n y&#13;
o n e c a n ;v.ake a s u c c e s s of t h e b u s i n e s s&#13;
it will b e M r . W h i p p l e .&#13;
D u r i n g t h e m o n t h of M a r c h , 1 4 , 1 3 8&#13;
l e t t e r s w o r e r e t u r n e d to w r i t e r s , j r o m&#13;
t h e d e a d l e t t e r office a f t e r b e i n g o p e n -&#13;
e d . S a v e tli.it t r o u b l e a n d g e t y o u r&#13;
l e t t e r h a c k s o o n e r b y g e t t i n g y o u r r e -&#13;
t u r n a d d r e s s p r i n t e d o n V'-inr e n v e l -&#13;
o p e s . 1 5 0 f u r n i s h e d a n d p r i n t e d f o r&#13;
50 c e n t s , a t t h e D I S P A T C H office.&#13;
W h i l e in t o w n S a t u r d a y t h e h o r s e&#13;
d r i v e n b y M r s . W a l \s L e l a n d , b e c a m e&#13;
f r i g h t e n e d , a t a n a u t o , a n . l r e a r e d&#13;
n o , fell o v e r a n d a b a d l y b r o k e d&#13;
h a r n e s s w a a t h e r e s u l t a s w e l t a s&#13;
b r o k e n t h i l l s . T h e h o r s e w a a so b a d -&#13;
ly f r i g h t e n e d t h a t i t s q u e a l e d a n d h a d&#13;
e i d e n c e of b e i n g f r i g h t e n e d so t h a t i t&#13;
c o u l d d o n o t h i n g b u t fall d o w n .&#13;
M11 f o r d b u s i n e s s m e n a s w e l l a s t h e&#13;
b u s i n e s s m e n of o t h e r v i l l a g e s a r e&#13;
f o r m i n g c l u b s a n d i m p r o v e m e n t , a s s o -&#13;
ciafian's f o r t h e b e t t e r m e n t of t h e i r&#13;
r e s p e c t i v e h o m e t o w n s . W h i l e P i n c k -&#13;
n e y is in g o o d s h a p e i n m a n y t h i n g s ,&#13;
s t i l l t h e r e is m u c h t h a t c o u l d he d o n e&#13;
by u n i t fid effort a n d w o u l d i t n o t he a&#13;
g o o d t h i n g t o r s o m e s u c h a n o r g a n i z a -&#13;
t i o n h e r e .&#13;
T h e c a s e i n c i r c u i t c o u r t , M i l e s&#13;
H i r d s e l l VA t h e L i v i n g s t o n M u t u a l&#13;
M t e I n s u r a n c e C o . w h i c h w a s t r i e d&#13;
l a s t w e e k a n d t o o k f o u r d a y s t h e j u r y&#13;
g a v e M r . B i r d s e l l $ 4 5 0 . T h e b a r n of&#13;
p l a i n t i f f w a a s t r u c k b y l i g h t n i n g o n e&#13;
e v e n i n g l a s t y e a r a n d t h e c o m p a n y&#13;
r e f u s e d t o p a y t h e d a m a g e a a t h e y&#13;
c l a i m e d t h e bejrn w a a b l o w n d o w n a s&#13;
t h e r e W M n o e v i d e n c e of fire. S e v e r -&#13;
al e x p e r t s o i l i g h t e n i n g a n d i t s effects&#13;
w e r e o n t h e eUMid.&#13;
• v ;&gt;-&lt;!%-ii*'&#13;
! " " • &gt;&#13;
F r a n c i s O a r r , s p e n t S u n d a y i n D e -&#13;
t r o i t .&#13;
T h e r e i s e v e r y i n d i c a t i o n o f a l i t t l e&#13;
b e t t e r w e a t h e r .&#13;
M i s s M a r y K e l l y of L a n i M p , v * i 4 « i&#13;
h e r p e o p l e h e r e t h e p a s t w i f E ,&#13;
M i * C l a r e D u n n o f&#13;
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w a s n e e d e d — g r a s s b e g i u 9 t o -v few7,&#13;
g r e e n a g a i n *&#13;
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w a s 7 5 y e a r s o l d a n d a t o n e t i m e&#13;
w o r k e d i n t h e h a r e w a r e s t o r e of h i s&#13;
b r o t h e r i n P i n c k n e y . H e a r t f a i l u r e&#13;
w a s t h e c a u s e of d e a t b .&#13;
F . L . A n d r e w s a n d w i f e a t t e n d e d&#13;
t h e s a c r e d c o n c e r t a t t h e E v a n g e l i c a l&#13;
c h u r c h a t H o w e l l S u n d a y e v e n i n g .&#13;
T h e s e c o n c e r t s a r e g i v e n m o n t h l y b y&#13;
t h e Y o u n g P e o p l e s A l l i a n c e of t h a t&#13;
c h u r c h a n d a r e v e r y p o p u l a r a f f a i r s .&#13;
I n t h e t e m c l i p p e d f r o m t h e F j w -&#13;
l e r v i l l e R e v i e w l a s t w e e k i n r e g a r d t o&#13;
t h e s a l e o t t h e F r e d R a t h b u n s t o c k&#13;
of g o o d s t o C, H . B r i s t o l , J o h n P i n l a u&#13;
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o f f — w e l e a r n t h a t t h e b o y s s t o o d&#13;
r e a d y t o b u y t h e g o o d s b u t w e a r e&#13;
t o l d a n i n j u n c t i o n w a s s e r v e d o n t h e&#13;
s t o c k t o r e s t r a i n M r . R a t h b u n f r o m&#13;
s e l l i n g — t h e b o y s d i d n o t b a c k o u t .&#13;
T h e officials o t t h e M i c h i g a n C o n -&#13;
d e n c e d M i l k F a c t o r y a r e c o n t e m p l a t -&#13;
i n g s o m e e x t e n s i v e i m p r o v e m e n t s o n&#13;
t h e g r o u n d s . T h e s h e d i n f r o n t o f t h e&#13;
f a c t o r y w i l l b e r e m o v e d t o t h e H o w e&#13;
p r o p e r t y a c r o s s t h e r o a d w h i c h h a s&#13;
b e e n p u r c h a s e d f o r t h i s p u r p o s e a n d&#13;
t h e f r o n t y a r d w i l l b a d e c o r a t e d w i t h&#13;
a b e a u t i f u l l a w n a n d flower g a r d e n s ,&#13;
t h i s c h a n g e w i l l b e g r e a t l y a p p r e c i a t -&#13;
e d b y b o t h p a t r o n s a n d i m p l o y e e s , —&#13;
R e p u b l i c a n .&#13;
A l a r g e p a r t y ot l a d i e s , o l d f r i e n d s&#13;
a n d n e i g h b o r s of M r s . S. J . K e n n e d y&#13;
a n d M i s s F l o t a H a l l , g a v e t b e m a s u r -&#13;
p r i s e f a r e w e l l v i s i t a t t h e h o m e of M r .&#13;
a n d M r s . E . W . K e n n e d y , W e d n e s d a y&#13;
a f t e r n o o n . E a c h r e c e i v e d a s m a l l t o k -&#13;
e n t o r e m i n d t h e m of t h e i r f r i e n d s&#13;
t h e y l e a v e b e h i n d i n o l d M i c h i g a n .&#13;
M r s . K e n n e d y a c c o m p a n i e d by h e r s i s -&#13;
t e r , M i s s H a l l , e x p e c t t o l e a v e for&#13;
W a s h i n g t o n s t a t u , t o j o i n ttr.-S. J .&#13;
K e n n e d y w h o h a s b e e n t h e r e f o r i f *&#13;
t e e n m o n t h s . " ^ -' &gt;&#13;
Council Proceedings&#13;
Of t h e V i l l a g e of P i n c k n e y&#13;
:4&#13;
M o n d a y , A p r . 2 9 , 1 9 0 7 .&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
C o u n c i l c o n v e n e d a n d c a l l e d t o o r d e r&#13;
by p r e s i d e n t D u n n .&#13;
P r e s e n t : T r u s t e e s F a r n a m , S m i t h ,&#13;
T e e p l e , R o c h e , V a n W i n k l e , N i x o n .&#13;
M i n u t e s of l a s t m o o t i n g r e a d a n d&#13;
a p p r o v e d ,&#13;
M o v e d by T e e p l e a n d S m i t h , t h a t&#13;
T r e a s u r e r ' s b o n d b e a p p r o v e d , c a r r i e d .&#13;
A n o r d i n a n c e f o r t h e s u p p r e s s i o n of&#13;
s a l o o n s p r e s e n t e d , m o v e d b y N i x o n&#13;
a n d V a n W i n k l e t h a t o r d i n a n c e b e&#13;
a d o p t e d , N o , F a r n a m , T e e p l e , S m i t h ;&#13;
Yes, R o c h e , V a n W i n k l e , N i y o n a n d&#13;
P r e s . D u n n .&#13;
U p o n m o t i o n of t r u s t e e s T e e p l e a n d&#13;
Smith, w. A. Nixon « M anpom+ed&#13;
street commissioner. .&gt;'*""'"**"•--'.^""&#13;
Pres. Dunn appointed trustees&#13;
R o c h e a n d T e e p l e , a s m e m b e r s of b o a r d&#13;
of r e v i e w u p o n m o t i o n t h e a p p o i n t -&#13;
m e n t s w e r e c o n f i r m e d .&#13;
T h e f o l l o w i n g b i l l s w e r e&#13;
a n d r e a d :&#13;
11. F . S i l l e r , H e a l t h officer,&#13;
C h a r l e s Khlret, marshiill service $11.25&#13;
1. S. P . J o h n s o n , lighting l a m p s , $12.50&#13;
M . M . J e f f r i e s , labor, $ 1 . 2 5&#13;
G . W . Reason &amp; Son, supplies, $80.00&#13;
M o v e d b y T e e p l e a n d S m i t h t h a t&#13;
b i l l s be a l l o w e d .&#13;
A y e : F a r n u m , S m i t h . T e e o l e , V a n&#13;
W i n k l e , N i x o n , R o c h e .&#13;
D r u g g i s t b o o d of F . A , S i g l e r , w i t h&#13;
H . F . S i g l e r a n d F . G . J a c k s o n , a s&#13;
s u r e t i e s r e a d .&#13;
M o v e d b y T e e p l e a n d K i i o a t h a i&#13;
b o n d b e a c c e p t e d . "*&#13;
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A f o r m e r O r d i n a n c e p r o h i b i t i n g t h e&#13;
d u m p i n g of r u b b i s h i n t h e s t r e e t s o r&#13;
a l l e y s w a s r e a d . T h e s a m e t o b e&#13;
s t r i c t l y e n f o r c e d i n t h e f u t u r e .&#13;
U p o n m o t i o n&#13;
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R . J . U A R R , C l e r k .&#13;
p e r s e n t e d&#13;
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                  <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>
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            <elementText elementTextId="40326">
              <text>INCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MAY. 9. 1907. No. 19 .*.'-&#13;
* &amp; •&#13;
* For p 3 9 For&#13;
Quality U U W I I I C l I l 2 &gt; P r i c e&#13;
Everything for Summer Needs&#13;
New Hibuoott, Laces, Einbroidiery, Hosiery, Underwear, Corsets,&#13;
India Lin«n&gt;, White Good.', Art Denials, Silkalines, Ladies1 and Men's&#13;
[Gloves, Work Shirt-., Oyeral's, Small Hardware.&#13;
Oar Notion Department is complete with item* at saving prices.&#13;
House Furnisuinu Goodd ot every description.&#13;
Bnamet DUh Pans 2 5 c Enamel W a s h Basin 10c&#13;
b n a m e l D l p p e n lOc 6 Quart tin Milk pans 8c&#13;
IOC Quality Dust Pans 8 c&#13;
The Cleveland "Hydro Carfaonite" Roof Paint&#13;
The B e s t in the World&#13;
O u r p r t o « V # n t h i s g r e a t R o o f P a i n t i s o n l y 5 0 c p e r g a l l o n&#13;
E v e r y dmy Im b a r g a i n d a y&#13;
B. A . Bowman's&#13;
1¾ Busy S t o r e&#13;
L.OCAL, H&amp;W5.&#13;
8PEGIBL8 for RPRIL&#13;
W i t h every dozen p h o t o s&#13;
at &amp;2.&lt;X) or more per&#13;
dozen, 1 will give one&#13;
for only 50c extra.&#13;
T h e pictures are nicely&#13;
finished and m o u n t e d for&#13;
framing in 16x20 frame&#13;
D o n ' t f a i l t o t a k e , a d v a n t a g e&#13;
of t h i s o f f e r&#13;
HATHIK B. ( HAPELL,&#13;
Myograph 8M4io, Stockbridge&#13;
A little more like spring again.&#13;
• Only three weeks to Decoration day&#13;
—May 30.&#13;
Mrs. E. W. Martin is under the&#13;
doctor's care.&#13;
The Misses Jessie Green and Lela&#13;
Monks were in Howell Friday.&#13;
Lyle Younglove of Detrcit spent&#13;
Sunday with his parents near here.&#13;
Many of our citizens have bee*&#13;
planting their gardens the past week.&#13;
W K. Murphy took in the Detroit&#13;
Chicago bail gaiua at Detroit Thq^j.&#13;
day.&#13;
Gferis BrogftA of Marion it making&#13;
arrangments to bnild an addition to&#13;
his residence.&#13;
G. W. Reason Sr. is giving his residence&#13;
a coating of white paint and&#13;
otherwise improving it.&#13;
The Senior class of the PHS will&#13;
serve ice cream at the town hall Saturday&#13;
evening of this week.&#13;
Bert Johnson, who worked tor Wm.&#13;
Moran for a wonth or sc a year or two&#13;
ago, died at Jackson last week.&#13;
Mrs. H. D. Grieve was called to&#13;
Howell Monday by the severe illness&#13;
ct* her father, Wm. Heramingway.&#13;
Mrs. M. T. Richards of Hay City is&#13;
the guest of her mother, Mrs. E. W.&#13;
Martin and other relatives and friends&#13;
here,&#13;
Mrs. Chas. Carpenter and sister of&#13;
Grand Rapids were guests of their old&#13;
friend, Mrs. Perry Blunt the past&#13;
week.&#13;
OBITTABY. J&#13;
Miss Elizabeth Lewis was born in&#13;
Oakland comity, turn state, May 18,&#13;
1837. July 4, 1854 she married&#13;
Jerome Drown and in 1873 they moved&#13;
to Pinckney and have resided here&#13;
until ber death.&#13;
For the past two yearn and a half&#13;
she has been a patient sufferer much&#13;
ot the time being confined to her bed.&#13;
Death relieved her of her suffering&#13;
Thursday evening, May 2, 1907.&#13;
In 1868 she waa converted and&#13;
united with the Baptist church of&#13;
Dansville and when she removed to&#13;
Pinckney she always attended the&#13;
Cong 1 church and was a consistent,&#13;
faithful christian. The funeral was&#13;
held from that church Sunday at 2:30&#13;
Rev. Thompson of Dnrand officiating,&#13;
assisted by Rev. D. C. DiUlejohn ot&#13;
the M. E. Chmch.&#13;
She was the mother of three children,&#13;
Mrs. Geo. idea dee of this place,&#13;
Mrs. W. D. Thompson of Darand, and&#13;
Kirk Drown o* Uaadilla, who with&#13;
number of r e U t t m awl frioacT a*r&#13;
left to monrn their&#13;
CA&amp;D OF THANKS.&#13;
We deaire ; to thank the many&#13;
friends and Pfggnbors who have so&#13;
kindly aMiftod as during the long illness&#13;
i n d d o a t h of our wife and mother.&#13;
Yottr kindness will never be for-&#13;
^ JKBOME DROWN and FAMILY,&#13;
^^^, ^,^^^^^, __&#13;
Ifafcohoo) last Friday—Arbor Day.&#13;
Gr. Dinfcel and family have a new&#13;
piano.&#13;
Morlfey Vaughn was in Howell last&#13;
Friday.&#13;
E. VV. Kennedy visited in Fowlerville&#13;
the last of last week.&#13;
Wm. Kennedy was in Detroit on&#13;
business the last of last week.&#13;
Rev. A. G, Gates left Monday for&#13;
Lansing and Ionia for a few days.&#13;
F . G . Jackson, Geo, Teeple and&#13;
John Jeffreys were in Detroit one day&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Mark ot Detroit were&#13;
guests ot tneir daughter, Mrs. D. C.&#13;
LittlejohD Tuesday.&#13;
Maud, the great trained mule,&#13;
worth the price of admission alone, at&#13;
Freed and Perriues Show. 10 and 20&#13;
cent-.&#13;
Word was received here the past&#13;
week that the family of S. G. Kime&#13;
ot Breckenridge have been critically&#13;
ill with diptheria.&#13;
The ladies of the Cong'l church will&#13;
The new steal, bridge west of town ' *fi&gt;'v« supper at the opera house Wednesday&#13;
afternoon, May 15, from five&#13;
V.&#13;
Ice Cream Soda&#13;
Come in and eat&#13;
a p u r e , refreshing&#13;
dish of - - -&#13;
"Silk Floss" Ice Cream&#13;
e i t h e r in the form of v&#13;
a " S u n d a y or S o d a . "&#13;
i.&#13;
m*^&#13;
•&#13;
***??.&#13;
.^&#13;
d V&#13;
r \&#13;
&gt; ~ *&#13;
Soft Drinks of All Kinds&#13;
on Ice.&#13;
NEVER CLOSED&#13;
jgtyfcl Door XoHH Qt 11TO4 fc\ou&#13;
C. KL S\&amp;\w,&#13;
over Portage creek has been completed&#13;
by the Grand Trunk Ry. and the&#13;
second wood bridge rebuilt.&#13;
Mas. Estella Graham and gr .ndson,&#13;
Weldon Milne, wlo have been spending&#13;
lour weeks with her parents here,&#13;
returned to Cement City Monday.&#13;
The fir.it, ice cream social of the season&#13;
will be given by the Senior class&#13;
of the PHS at, the town hall Saturday&#13;
evening of this week. Giye the class&#13;
a lift hy your presence.&#13;
Raymond S gler of tha II. of M. was&#13;
thegusetot his parents hare over&#13;
Sunday and looking after his interests&#13;
in the ies cream parlors. He is in the&#13;
dental department of the U. ot M.&#13;
M. W. Brooker and H. K. Brooker&#13;
and wife of Detroit, came to their&#13;
cottage on Llase lake Tuesday where&#13;
they will remain all summer. W. A&#13;
Niron met them at Lakeland with the&#13;
launch.&#13;
Jacob Fleming nf Allamuchy, N. .1.,&#13;
brought a fonr year old mare here the&#13;
past week for J. L. Rcohe to track.&#13;
If there is any spaed in the animal&#13;
Roche can bring it out if anyone can.&#13;
It is a long ways to bring a horse to&#13;
train, but the owners showed good&#13;
judgement.&#13;
until all are served. Everyone invit&#13;
ed.&#13;
The past week Sigler Brothers,&#13;
Raymond ;.nd Cecil, opened the ice&#13;
cream parlors in the rear of Sillers&#13;
Drug Store and is prepared to cater to&#13;
the wants of the public in that direc&#13;
tion. The weather has not, been in&#13;
their favor however, but July will&#13;
bring a change.&#13;
Herbert Schoenhals, who has been a&#13;
trusted employe of the Michigan Condensed&#13;
Milk Co. at this place for the&#13;
past, four years, has purchased the ice&#13;
business at Chelsea and moved his&#13;
family to that place last w^ek. May&#13;
success attend him is the wish of his&#13;
numerous Howell friends.— Democrat.&#13;
For the past two months the Order&#13;
of Eastern Star have been making arrangements&#13;
to hold a masquerade&#13;
social. Elaborate arrangements have&#13;
been completed and the social, including&#13;
the winding of a May Pole with&#13;
several new features in the masquerade&#13;
line will he introduced at the&#13;
opera house Friday evening, May 17.&#13;
Remember the date and also that&#13;
every one is invited to come and mask.&#13;
Ticket for ice crean, 10 cents.&#13;
«.&lt;!&#13;
t'&#13;
" f.;&#13;
_ N e w Straw Hats&#13;
"v A Fine Line&#13;
Jant-IUdafred&#13;
New, Nobby Styles&#13;
For Men&#13;
and Boys&#13;
25c, 5 0 c , 75c, $1.00, $1.50 Each&#13;
Hickory Hats&#13;
1 5 c t o 2 5 c&#13;
We have a few S t r a w H a t s - a l l good&#13;
styles -in our B e l d i n g stock, t h a t wa&#13;
will sell for \ R e g u l a r Price&#13;
L. L. Holmes Clothing Co.&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
-•-rt&#13;
rT'i-^r&#13;
Ray Tompkins&#13;
Contractor and Builder&#13;
Can furnish large or small bills&#13;
of lumber within thirty days and&#13;
save you money, especially on inside&#13;
finish. Let me figure on&#13;
your job.&#13;
bakeland, Michigan&#13;
» :&#13;
•.--V'''-&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Wc arc in position to store your base-burner • * , . , -&#13;
$2.50&#13;
At Owner's Risk&#13;
Tecple Hardware Go.&#13;
&amp;?&amp;.&#13;
. &gt; * '&#13;
« — i * » — »1 II • •!&#13;
FjKAKJt I* ASDKEW8, Pub.&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN&#13;
••Entitled to a Jo*.&#13;
Ail Munich wan astounded the other&#13;
day tb wake up and find the city&#13;
placarded with a legend which read&#13;
as folluws: "Without A Head, It la No&#13;
Use." Pot u whole 24 hours the citie&#13;
s wondered what thlu could xueajo.&#13;
The next day the legend wan replaced&#13;
with a signed announcement that the&#13;
advertiser was desperately in need of&#13;
smployment as a clerk or office manager,&#13;
and that, In hits de&amp;pair, he had&#13;
hit upon this way of attracting attention&#13;
to hia needs. As bib money was&#13;
now all gum*, he hoped that some&#13;
kind hearted person whose attention&#13;
he might have attracted would give&#13;
him employment without loss of time.&#13;
'Without a head," he explained, "It'i&#13;
no use trying to work; but you cannot&#13;
have a head unless you also have&#13;
a stomach, and food to put into it."&#13;
Whether this ingenious advertiser obtained&#13;
the work he desired does not&#13;
appear, for Munich papers MX* too indignant&#13;
over what they gpneider. the&#13;
effrontery of the man in thus introducing&#13;
"undesirable American methods&#13;
of advertising" to record his success&#13;
or failure. To an American&#13;
who is familiar with the "mystery"&#13;
signs of the street cars and billboards&#13;
this seems but a slight offense, and&#13;
one sadly lacking in originality. But&#13;
Munich has not yet lost its feeling o(&#13;
outraged propriety.&#13;
EVENTS NOTED&#13;
THE PRIMARY SILL H A » P A t * * D&#13;
THE HOUII ANO NP.W&#13;
TO THE SENATE.&#13;
FLOOD OF AMENDMENTS.&#13;
Ths Fight to Emasculate the Bill&#13;
W«* Fleroe ftut Futile, and No* It&#13;
la Up te the **nat«.&#13;
A Delusion of Seventy.&#13;
To the boys of Princeton university,&#13;
the, other day, Mr. Cleveland declared&#13;
that he was not disposed to seek sympathetic&#13;
consolation for his 70 years.&#13;
In other words, he bad not yet begun&#13;
to talk to himself about the compensations&#13;
of age. This state of mind in&#13;
Mr. Cleveland's case is, of course, encouraged&#13;
by contemplation upon what&#13;
is behind him as well »3 ty the presumably&#13;
happy circumstances of his&#13;
present being. None the less, his&#13;
statement points a wholesome fact&#13;
which is very apt to be forgotten&#13;
when we begin to philosophies: The&#13;
so-called compensations of old age&#13;
are, in many cases, no more than the&#13;
excuses with which we try to defend&#13;
the deficiencies of our own part in&#13;
life. The dictum, a man is as old as&#13;
he feels, only tells half the truth. A&#13;
man is as old as be makes himself&#13;
feel, comes nearer to it, Bays Saturday&#13;
Elreoing Post. And about the quickest&#13;
way to make hImseH feel old is to&#13;
begin hunting for those compensations&#13;
with which Mr. Cleveland says&#13;
he has not yet been troubled.&#13;
It is a timely question whether&#13;
there should not be some way of punishing&#13;
the "fake" prophets of terrestrial&#13;
disaster who are exciting the&#13;
fears of the timid and the credulous.&#13;
One of these charlatans predicted an&#13;
earthquake in New York, fixing the&#13;
exact hour at which the disturbance&#13;
would occur, and when the hour arrived&#13;
a lot of panic-stricken persons&#13;
rushed to-, open spaces to escape the&#13;
danger which , impended. Down in&#13;
Texas another panic was created h&gt;&#13;
the prophecy that a great comet&#13;
would "side-wipe" the earth, that section&#13;
of the country being ^especially&#13;
exposed to peril. Of course, says&#13;
Troy Times, nothing of the sort predicted&#13;
happened in either case, and in&#13;
fact March, which had been fixed&#13;
upon by the augurs of evil as a month&#13;
of peculiarly dreadful calamities due&#13;
to outbreaks of nature's forces, passed&#13;
away in an uncommonly peaceful&#13;
mood. The worst shakeups were&#13;
those given the nerves of believers in&#13;
the "fake" prophecies.&#13;
Hew it Went Through.&#13;
The houae finally passed the Dickinson&#13;
direct nominations hlU, with&#13;
only one serious change from the bill&#13;
aa paaaed in committee of the whole,&#13;
though the minority kept the friends&#13;
of primary reform baay for several&#13;
hours arguing against and debating&#13;
with their amendments and proposed&#13;
excisions. The final vote was 74 to&#13;
7, and the seven were Reps. J. 8. Monroe,&#13;
F. T. Bennett, Dougnerty, Double,&#13;
Knight, Beeman, Simpson.&#13;
Tinkering with the bill began almost&#13;
as soon as the bouse sat, and continued&#13;
for hours. Rep. Waters moved&#13;
to substitute "20 per cent; where, the&#13;
bill of 1905 had "40 per cent," requiring&#13;
that plurality to nominate a candidate.&#13;
This was the first thing to&#13;
Come up, and therefore the flrbt thing&#13;
to go down, and H went by a vote of&#13;
60 to 34.&#13;
The Campbell amendment to the&#13;
penalty clauses came up for more discussion.&#13;
This amendment forbids the&#13;
purchasing of space in a newspaper,&#13;
and by the terminology of the section&#13;
makes it bribery and a felony. Rep.&#13;
Miller, of Detroit, succeeded after one&#13;
of the Miijer-Campbell debates, In&#13;
substituting what perhaps should be&#13;
called the "William Alden Smith&#13;
clause." This provision makes it a&#13;
felony for:&#13;
Every person who directly or Indirectly&#13;
pays for space in any newspaper,&#13;
which space is used or is intended&#13;
to be used for the purpose Ot assisting&#13;
or hindering tire nomination&#13;
of any candidate to any office, whether&#13;
local,, slate or national; and every&#13;
person being the owner or part owner&#13;
Of any newspaper or controlling It1 or&#13;
any interest thereon or in any company&#13;
owning any newspaper or controlling&#13;
the same who uses or procures&#13;
to be used said newspaper for&#13;
advertising purposes in order to assist&#13;
him in securing the nomination&#13;
to any office.&#13;
This is to make it an offense for the&#13;
owner of a paper to use it to forward&#13;
his own candidacy for office.&#13;
Chapter 5 provides that It is a felony&#13;
for candidates to hire workers or&#13;
pay Jfrr space in any newspaper. This&#13;
Is made punishable by a fine from $300&#13;
to $500 and six months' imprisonment.&#13;
Rep. George Lord, of Detroit, moved*&#13;
to have the entire newspaper clause&#13;
eliminated, but this was lost as being&#13;
out of order. Reps. Miller, Greusel and&#13;
L'EJsperance voted for the substitution.&#13;
Rep. Colby moved to add a prohibition&#13;
against cards and posters, giving&#13;
t humorous description of bill-pasting&#13;
campaigning in Wayne county, but-the&#13;
amendment and the humor both went&#13;
down pleasantly.&#13;
Rep. Turner now made a motion to&#13;
strike out subdivisions 4, f&gt;,' 6, 7 and&#13;
8 of the penalty clauses. Rep. Campnell&#13;
moved to amend to regain section&#13;
7, the corporation bribery clause. This&#13;
amendment was accepted by Rep. Turner.&#13;
Rap. i/Espera/ice moved #o&#13;
amend by* retaining also subdivision&#13;
i, the Miller advertising section. This&#13;
was accepted. TJhen &lt;he house voted&#13;
!o retain the r«ftt of the clauses and&#13;
then the. £111 want_ fcp ,a« vote and&#13;
passed. Th» briborte»rtl question-were&#13;
termed 'misdemeanors" instead of felinles.&#13;
An enterprising woman ifi Berlin&#13;
has started a school to teach the science&#13;
of divination and the reading of&#13;
the future by such occult means as&#13;
coffee grounds, flight of birds, yolks&#13;
of eggs and the like. If the pottee do&#13;
not Interfere with this establishment&#13;
it is within the reach of humble divination&#13;
of the future newspaper necromancy&#13;
to predict that this shrewd&#13;
student of human nature in her profits&#13;
will make the 520 per cent, get-richquick&#13;
scheme appear like a streetstand&#13;
busirkss in peanuts.&#13;
Astronomers long ago came to the&#13;
conclusion that the men's surface is&#13;
very hot during the height of the lunar&#13;
day, which lasts two weekR, and&#13;
very cold during the lunar night,&#13;
which is equally long. These extremes&#13;
of temperature reach their height at&#13;
the lunar.noon and midnight and are&#13;
greater than any natural temperatures&#13;
on the earth&#13;
Thk Tubba Are Frt:&#13;
The jury in the/ aase of Levi and&#13;
Charles Tubbs returned a verdict of&#13;
not guilty. The men were tried for&#13;
murder in the Eaton county circuit&#13;
sourt.&#13;
Over two years ago, a ditcher named&#13;
Bouts was found dead in a field near&#13;
he Tubbs farm. The Tubbs brothers,&#13;
*nd a son, George, were arrested for&#13;
the crime. Two years ago to a day&#13;
the son was convicted of firing the&#13;
«hot which killed Bouts, and sentenced&#13;
U&gt; serve the remainder of bis life in&#13;
Jackson prison.&#13;
In the course of the trial of the&#13;
Tubbs rrothers, on a charge of con&#13;
ipiracy, resulting in the murder of&#13;
Bouts, the son was brought from Jackson&#13;
and testified that the aged brother*&#13;
were wholly innocent of any in-&#13;
;ent to do wrong, and that he was the&#13;
rmly one guilty of murder. \&#13;
The old men were released after tpe&#13;
verdict was rendered, and wenr/to&#13;
their homes.&#13;
3ROTRER AND SI8TER.&#13;
Orphans Married and Raised Family&#13;
of Imbeciles,&#13;
Swallowing- a tableepoon proved fatal&#13;
to Ferndo Hunsberger at the Asylum&#13;
for the Insane at poatlao. He&#13;
was 31 years old and demented. There&#13;
is a suwy connected with *a\ Into—it&#13;
Is the tragedy of a family.&#13;
Half a century or more ago a happy&#13;
family was broken up. Misfortune&#13;
had" followed amisforume. Brothers&#13;
and sisters were separated, taste never&#13;
to meet again. They were little to*$&#13;
most of tnem, and^dla not remember&#13;
therr own nrnsnoe wjften. they grew tip.&#13;
When Ferndo Hunsberger's father&#13;
became a man he met a woman whose&#13;
manner and appearance'attracted him.&#13;
Friendship ripened Into love and they&#13;
were married. They did not -know&#13;
their own history except that both&#13;
were orphans, as far as they knew.&#13;
It was not until after they had&#13;
raised a family .that Ferndo'* parents&#13;
learned that they were brother and&#13;
sister. Three of their children are&#13;
in the same condition aa was Ferndo,&#13;
helpless imbeciles. The father was&#13;
found dead on the railroad tracks here&#13;
about a year ago.&#13;
Mrs. MoeVide Acquitted.&#13;
Mrs. Del McBride was acquitted of&#13;
the charge of murder in the death of&#13;
her brother Win Duke, who was shot&#13;
during a quarrel between them at the&#13;
camp meeting grounds near Grand&#13;
Ledge laat January. The jury was&#13;
out four hours. She was the first&#13;
woman to be tried on a murder charge&#13;
in gaton county In 50 years.&#13;
The defense was that the woman&#13;
had been threatened anonymously&#13;
with tar and feathers because of her&#13;
friendship for "Bobby" Burns, a local&#13;
character against whom her divorced&#13;
husband and her brother, who were&#13;
close friends,, had a grievance. She&#13;
was told by Officer Toax that she&#13;
might carry a revolver to defend herself&#13;
and while her brother was trying&#13;
to take the weapon away from her be&#13;
was shot Duke died six weeks after&#13;
the shooting. .The affair was witnessed&#13;
by several p e r s ^ ^ ^ n ^ J^bn&#13;
TOttgiMtfaa charged with SeWao.accomplice,&#13;
•'vt^Sw* &gt; tin " ' *&#13;
Mrs. McBride-was married the first&#13;
time when she was a girl of 14 and&#13;
now at the age of tt has a married&#13;
•^ ; 5 %;)*$*&amp;'**&amp;' 0&#13;
•&lt; That b*''|^4*aeiu%&#13;
the face of th* earth fyr&#13;
years was't^ldHft mai&#13;
0'B.rlei?; aged' iWeeMr/lrL- _ , ,&#13;
shew Port mm p^loe^flf ^ottglng.&#13;
(r*BH«ti ssMJBaf afUi •"" " "&#13;
^ v i a t M»T *pme&#13;
5 yaaffc-h* *§* n&#13;
and Jfgft bean b&#13;
city to&#13;
small and rounds. Hfc&#13;
nt said heT,&#13;
lumber wood's&#13;
|he stat* jB^aafure. a&#13;
though Jgft iejpngfresft»he*eay* he will&#13;
endeavor, trfooatfote Ma journey north&#13;
as beat he ean. * .&#13;
iiawiof&#13;
0n*&lt;Ji7hotne&#13;
kt ffpsSf one&#13;
_ _ _ _ _ IsT unusually&#13;
nfiK^wAfgjtr over 8ft&#13;
A his way. to the&#13;
northern part of&#13;
' fosltioa. Al-&#13;
'WSIME »&#13;
TRIAL OF ALL&amp;GKP MURDKRERI&#13;
OF 00V. t T l U N l N h M R Q&#13;
OF IDAHO.&#13;
MOST REMARKABLE CASE&#13;
These Are The Men Whom President&#13;
, RoeaevoH Criticised, Bringing QHI&#13;
. Hostile Defttsnaimaloas.&#13;
Mantled Victims Buried.&#13;
Cecil Nash, aged 6 years, one of the&#13;
four children run down and mangled&#13;
by a Grand Trunk train In the yards&#13;
in Flint, and then feared to he dying,&#13;
Btill lives, but she is badly hurt.&#13;
The other three were killed outright,&#13;
and funeral services were held at the&#13;
same hour Monday over all. They are&#13;
Ruth Nash, aged 16, and her nephews,&#13;
George, aged 4 and Harold, aged 16&#13;
months. The two little brothers were&#13;
buried la one casket.&#13;
Reform Needed.&#13;
Win, Laube appeared before Chief&#13;
of Police Dowd and told a touching&#13;
story of bis 16-year-old daughter being&#13;
given liquor in a Muskegon saloon.&#13;
Laube says scores of other&#13;
girls have been started on the road&#13;
to ruin through intoxicants sold in&#13;
defiance of the law. Society women&#13;
and the authorities are starting a crusade&#13;
against saloons and dens of vice&#13;
that harbor girls of tender age.&#13;
One From Detroit.&#13;
William D. Haywood, secretary and&#13;
treasurer of the Western Federation&#13;
of Miners, will, this week, be placed&#13;
pn trial charged y with killing former&#13;
Gov. Steunenberg, of Idaho. In all,&#13;
four men are in custody, charged with&#13;
the same offense; they are William V.&#13;
Haywood, CharleB H. Moyer, president&#13;
of the Western Federation of Miners;&#13;
George A. Pettlbone, a former member&#13;
of the executive board of the same organisation,&#13;
and Harry Orchard, formerly&#13;
of Detroit,-Mictt., a member of&#13;
tiie federation. These are the men&#13;
whom President Roosevelt called "iradesiraWe&#13;
cltlsens," which statement&#13;
aroused the wrath of the Socialists&#13;
and some labor organisaMooB In various&#13;
parts of the country, resulting in&#13;
processions and mass meetings hostile&#13;
to the.nation's chief executive.&#13;
Orchard, it is alleged, made a confession&#13;
in which he admitted that he&#13;
killed Bteunenberg, and, it Is alleged,&#13;
implicated the other men under arrest,&#13;
together with others, as accessories&#13;
before the fact. Under the laws&#13;
of the state of Idaho, while It is admitted&#13;
that Haywood, Moyer and Pettihone&#13;
were not in the state of Idaho&#13;
at the time of the murder, they are&#13;
charge* with the actual crime, the&#13;
contention under the statute being&#13;
that they were pn the spot in spirit;&#13;
that they planned and therefore com&#13;
passed the death of Bteunenberg.&#13;
The killing is a pivotal point in the&#13;
history of this case, the most remarkable&#13;
in American jurisprudence, for&#13;
the events develop backward and forward&#13;
from his assassination.&#13;
Steunenberg was blown to death on&#13;
the evening of Dec. 30, 1906. In the&#13;
gathering gloom of a stormy evening&#13;
he entered the side ga/e of his yard&#13;
in Caldwell, where, retired from politics,&#13;
he, lived the simple life of a&#13;
|sheep farmer. A bomb of peculiar&#13;
manufacture, with a fish Use attached,&#13;
waa sunk in the enow heeide'the gate.&#13;
The fish line was aleo fastened to the&#13;
gate. As Steunenberg entered the&#13;
opening of the gate sprang the trigger&#13;
of the bomb. He was terribly&#13;
mangled, being blown nearly 15 feet&#13;
from the gate. He lived nearly an&#13;
hour, was conscious and spoke, but&#13;
his ruptured ear drums were- dead to&#13;
sound, and he died without knowing&#13;
what had killed him. Re asked his&#13;
wife who had shot him, and the mystification&#13;
of his eyes' showed that he&#13;
could not hear her reply.&#13;
No Third Term.&#13;
A Massachusetts millionaire eeVUed&#13;
jn President Roosevelt after the regu&#13;
lar cabinet meeting last week and&#13;
during the chat a leading politician&#13;
from a western stale remarked to the&#13;
president that his etate surely would&#13;
send a delegation in favor of Mr.&#13;
.Roosevelt to the next Republican na&#13;
tional convention.&#13;
A^member of Hie cabinet present&#13;
expressed the confident opinion rhat&#13;
his state would do the same thing.&#13;
"1 tell you, Mr. President," said the&#13;
Massachusetts millionaire, i'Massachusetts&#13;
and other New England states&#13;
are disposed to insist on your renomination."&#13;
"Nomlense," blurted out Mr. Roosevelt.&#13;
"If I were to accept a renomlnation&#13;
after what I have said on the&#13;
subject history would damn me as a&#13;
liar."&#13;
Bon* 6f the .'inhabitants of the&#13;
b i a s * or«t%snitoli, who bwve fled&#13;
• c t f b f j V ifUPtldp of t i t •.troflaholi&#13;
volcano as terrific. The detonation*&#13;
wan oeafe^lng. Red, bujaiuB « o \ s e v&#13;
dtlies and cinders were thrown,ap,&#13;
add about a thousand feet overUhe&#13;
top of . t ^ xo^ajw&gt;;'whlcj| is tfob fewt&#13;
above the levej of tpt a6Jf, ejrin£aeawa&gt;&#13;
dark umbrella-sniped cloud formed/&#13;
The industrious 'population of a t *&#13;
inland, numbering about 2,000 per&#13;
hpd * ^ s ^ t ^ f l * r u - w a d u f c H -&#13;
vated the aldeej of the volcano&#13;
uj&gt; to the crater, chiefly aa vin&#13;
but the eruption has entirely&#13;
stroyed everything*'within* a*ra4! „&#13;
1,500 feet of the crater and hat aefi'&#13;
oualy damaged the rest of the islaiql&#13;
Off for Europe.&#13;
Having failed after repeated attempts&#13;
to win Mrs. Charles J. HolmaxL&#13;
to the side of her son, Mm. Wiityaji.&#13;
Thaw has announced that she will depart&#13;
shortly for Europe. Mrs. Holman&#13;
has told her friends that she feels&#13;
it her duty to testify as a witness for&#13;
the prosecution in the next Thaw&#13;
trial. This determination, she says,&#13;
results from the attempts of Dolphin&#13;
Delmae to besmirch her name in hia&gt;&#13;
conduct of the case.&#13;
Mrs. William Thaw, while in Pittsburg,&#13;
made repeated efforts to see Mrs.&#13;
Holman and act aeveral days when&#13;
she would receive her at the Thaw&#13;
mansion. Attorney David T Watson,&#13;
of Alaskan boundary fame, who .w}lf&#13;
be a part of the Thaw counsel at the&#13;
next trial was intrusted with the task&#13;
of winning over Mrs. Holman, but the&#13;
latter rejected all proposals that she&#13;
call upon Mrs. Thaw. She skid she&#13;
considered herself too good to mingle&#13;
with any of the Th»«r family.&#13;
Although it Je-Said in Pittsburg that&#13;
Mrs. Thaw'» efforts to secure promisee&#13;
of each bail for her son were unsuccessful,&#13;
there 1» a belief that had the&#13;
New York courts consented to admit&#13;
the prisoner to bail the money would&#13;
have been forthcoming from some&#13;
source In the city.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
Detroit—Common grades of mixed&#13;
eowi were $Svto fe per head lower, but&#13;
good cows erpusht.^uU., sUady Drkea&#13;
with laat w*elT ISO being the top natd&#13;
Csvalry Escort,&#13;
Cavalry Troop A, M. N. G., is to&#13;
have the honor of escorting President&#13;
Roosevelt when he attends the celebration&#13;
at Lansing the last of&#13;
this month. Capt. Paul B. Lino was&#13;
notified of the appointment yesterday&#13;
and immediately issued a general order&#13;
t^Hroopers to get in shape. Local&#13;
citiserl*- will take a special car to the&#13;
celebration.&#13;
/&#13;
Saw Her Boy Killed.&#13;
As his mother watched from s winlow&#13;
of her home, Henry Bouwman,&#13;
iged 5, fell in front of a steam roller&#13;
in Grand Rapids and his head was&#13;
crushed to a pulp by the 3,000-pound&#13;
machine. Engineer Van Komen, who&#13;
had warned several youngsters tr&gt;&#13;
Keep off of the roller, picked up the&#13;
body, when it was snatched from hi*&#13;
urns by the screaming, hysterical&#13;
nothpr who ran to her home with the&#13;
uangled romains. Mrs. Bouwman in a&#13;
*-idow and has three other children.&#13;
A Marriage 8tory.&#13;
There were unusual circumstances&#13;
in connection with the wedding of&#13;
Chas. Robinson and Mrs. Sophia S.&#13;
Brown, which was performed by Re\r.&#13;
W. P. French in Lansing. They were&#13;
attended by Mr. and Mrs. Clarence R.&#13;
Cady. Mr. Cady is a son of the bride&#13;
and Mrs. Cady is the bridegroom's&#13;
daughter. The groom was 62 years&#13;
old and the bride 31&#13;
The proposition to bond Traverse&#13;
"ity for $25,000 for paving street inersertions&#13;
and water main extensions&#13;
von out by a vote of 187 to 27.&#13;
Alonzo Squires, aged 47, a prominent,&#13;
resident of Dundee, was found&#13;
dead in bed by his wife. He leaves a&#13;
widow and two daughters.&#13;
Despondent over a love affair, Jesse&#13;
Riley, of Flint, drank the contents of&#13;
an ounce bottle of chloroform. Doctors&#13;
saved his life.* Riley professed&#13;
to be very much disappointed when he&#13;
awnko alive.&#13;
While lying on a flat car signaling&#13;
the engineer a sudden jar of the train&#13;
threw George Sautter, a (i. R. It I.&#13;
hrakeman. on his head, crushing his&#13;
skull and killing him Instantly. Sautter's&#13;
home was in Cadillac.&#13;
- Boy Was Murdered.&#13;
Kidnaped, murdered and returned to&#13;
the farm was undoubtedly the fate of&#13;
little Horace Marvin, whose body waB&#13;
found Saturday. This was the child's&#13;
fourth birthday and just two months&#13;
from the time he was stolen.&#13;
The state of Delaware is aroused.&#13;
Atty.-Gen. Satterfield is determined&#13;
that the case shall be sifted to the&#13;
very bottom. When Oliver Pleasanton,&#13;
a young man, was tramping across&#13;
Bay Meadbws farm shortly before noon&#13;
he saw a dark object resting upon the&#13;
surface of a small pool. It was little&#13;
Horace Marvin, his shoes sticking out&#13;
of the little shallow pool, the knit&#13;
Tam-o-Shenter pulled down over his&#13;
face clear to the neck.&#13;
Pleasanton stood aghast for a moment&#13;
and then decided to carry the&#13;
little body to the boy's father.&#13;
Hate Americans.&#13;
A party of enlisted men from the&#13;
American cruiser Taeoma dashed&#13;
with the police at Santiago early&#13;
Tuesday morning, and ten of the&#13;
sailors were seriously injured, and one&#13;
will probably die of a fractured skull.&#13;
The most seriously injured was Henry&#13;
Lee. a second class fireman. Joseph&#13;
Chandler Fember, an electrician, and&#13;
Leslie Baldwin Dustin, a seaman, rereived&#13;
broken arms. The others injured&#13;
were: Ensign A. T. Bristen,&#13;
Frank Leghorn, Elmer F. Anders,&#13;
f'has. B. Shackleton, Olen Cavender,&#13;
Harry J Sturdevant and James Kline.&#13;
The cause of the fracas ia not yet&#13;
known, but it is thought to be the&#13;
hatred of Cubans for American military&#13;
force*.&#13;
•TROMBOLL&#13;
Terrrflo Vclea&#13;
. ' * • '&#13;
W,M wsppwav&#13;
\ •-.„&#13;
Extra dry-fed steers s o d heifers, (ft 5«&#13;
« 5 71; steers and heifers. 1,090 to 1,100,&#13;
| S C 6 » do, »00 to 1,000, $4 lbti)t&gt; 10;&#13;
heavy bulls, $4 J l ® 4 CQ; fair to good&#13;
bologna bulla, $8 76C)4; stock bulls.&#13;
$3 26 # 8 36; choice feediag etoers, *•# to 1,000. $3 75 04 4fc«s|V4eecJM«teetw,&#13;
800 to 1,000, $8 &amp;0dUiJ---^ -3 ^•"—&#13;
coo to TOO, $9 719 ci n&#13;
to 700, |8 not «6; st^svawsfjsf, $8&#13;
®S 76; milkers, Urge,' jrejeasL ssedlwsa&#13;
•ffc, 1 4 0 t W ; common mffKers, 118%)¼&#13;
The vtal calf trade was steady with&#13;
last we«Jc, %ut the convowp was hard&#13;
to self. One bunch of extra good one*&#13;
brought M 9S, the top of massjtt. Best,&#13;
| 5 I0OC 35 otbevs, $ 4 # 5 .&#13;
Sheep-^-The sheep and. lamb trade&#13;
was active and prices paid averaged&#13;
16c per hundred hiaher than on last&#13;
Thursday. Everything was picked up&#13;
early, and butchers &lt;JM not get all they&#13;
needed. A few choice strings of lambs&#13;
brourht 120 per hundred. Best lambs,&#13;
| 7 12½; fair to good lambs, 16^6 76;&#13;
llsrht to common lambs, $ 4 6 8 ; y«arling-&#13;
B. $5 80; farr to good butcher sheep,&#13;
84 :&gt;0©6: cults spd common, |ff&gt;3 80;&#13;
wool lambs. $&amp;€?» 26&#13;
Hogs—Trade wa* active at last&#13;
week's opening prices. Range of prices:&#13;
lAght to good DUtchere. *6 SOfJf 58;&#13;
Igs, $« 50; light yorkrrs, f« 50; roughs,&#13;
6; Mage, one-third off. I&#13;
fCast BuataJo.—Best export steer*,&#13;
85.r&gt;OCU-7t; best 1,200 to 1,300-lb eMpping&#13;
sfeeps, 85¢1 ft.4«; beet l.ttOyto 1,1©*-&#13;
Ib. | 4 2&amp;@&amp;:&lt;best fat cows, |"4©4&gt;J5; fair&#13;
to good, 88.2f&gt;©3&amp;«; trimmers, $2,250&#13;
2f&gt;0; best fat heifers, $4.7606; medium&#13;
to good. $4 04.25: best feeding steers,&#13;
$4.2504.59: yearling steers, $a.25©&gt;3 60;&#13;
common stork steers, $3©&gt;3,26; export&#13;
hulls, $4:1004.7(1: bologna biills. $ V ? 6 0&#13;
4.25: stock bulls, $2.r&lt;O0S.6O; fresh cowe&#13;
$2 per head lower; fjrood to ejttra, $40-&#13;
0 5 0 : medium to good, $28086; common,&#13;
$18028.&#13;
Hogs—Market lower; mixed, medium&#13;
and heavy, $«.S5©«.»0;. yorkers and&#13;
pigs, $&amp;.»O0«.»6; closed steady; 10 oare&#13;
unsold,&#13;
Sheep—Market active on lambs, dull&#13;
on sheep: top lambs. $7.7507,80', m i l s ,&#13;
$6@C76; wethers, $606.26; culls, $ 4 0&#13;
5; yearlings, $6.6007; ewes, $5,260&#13;
5.75; olowed steady; 10 cars unsold.&#13;
Veals—Slow, tops, $707.86: medium&#13;
to good, $6.5006.60; heavy, $ 4 0 4 60,&#13;
C.raUa, Ete.&#13;
Detroit—Wheat—Cash. No. 2 rod,&#13;
&amp;2%c: May, 5.000 bu at 83Hc, 10,000 hu&#13;
at « 3 * c . 10.000 bu at 83%c. 6,000 hu at&#13;
fUc 16.000 bu at 8414c. 6.000. bu at 84%«&#13;
5.000 bu at M H c 10,000 bu at M £ C&#13;
15,000 bu at 84c, 10,000 bu at 83fcc':&#13;
July. 20.000 bu at 86Hc, 26.000 bu at&#13;
fiS'^c, 10,000 bu at S6Hc. 15,000 bu at&#13;
86 * c . 20,00» bu at *«c, 20.000 bu at&#13;
86 ^ , 18,000 bu at Sic, 10.000 bu at&#13;
85%c. 80,000 bu at 85Uc. 10,000 bu at&#13;
85\4c; September. 10,000 bu at 87r 1 0 -&#13;
000 bu at 87J*c. 26,000 bu at 87»4tt' 30'-&#13;
000 bu at 8"fcc, 20,000 bu at M%c[ lo!-&#13;
000 bu at 87 * r . 16.000 bu at 88c, 15 000&#13;
bu at S7\c. 20.000 bu at 87He, 6.000 hu&#13;
at 87*c. 20.000 bu at 87Hc, 6,000 bu at&#13;
8 7 * r , 20.000 bu at 87c; No. 2 red, 80Hc:&#13;
No. 1 white, 82 \e. '&#13;
Corn—No. 3. 52V,c; No. 3 yellow, 1&#13;
oar at 54 ttc. closing- at 54 %c bid.&#13;
Oats—Cash No. 3 white, 1 car at 47a&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, 74c.&#13;
$1 41 bid; July. $1 41 nominal.&#13;
MSl0,v*TZ**6-~TTim* "Po t - **&lt; October,&#13;
$. 60: December, 100 bags at $7 «6&#13;
sample. 20 bags at $8 50. 10 at $7 60:&#13;
prime alslke. i bags at $7 25; samplo&#13;
alslke, 4 baits at 86 76.&#13;
Timothy seed—Prime spo*. 40 bairn at&#13;
AftrTJftKMKWTa rjf DETROIT&#13;
*'•** Ending Msy II, 1907.&#13;
L * ^ \ 5 I T . " t THRATKR - Matinees Daily M ^I0~l0co Ik*,**, »*: Every Kvmlns at 8:10&#13;
-ion, 2&amp;c, aie. 50c. High cfaas Vaudeville,&#13;
^SLIT.2L1t\-~K75nIil,rl- 10c' 20c' **• Matinees.&#13;
10r, J6c, '-Tic. Montana. ^ ^&#13;
LYC'Kirw-Prires always lftc, 2¾. Mc. 71V. 2ft?&#13;
Matinees Wednesday and HatunUa&#13;
When Knighthood was In Flower.&#13;
Afternoons 2:16. tor to a*: B r e n i n « § | 6&#13;
%£ K K S . ^ ^ ^ ' J ^ ^ 1 GF» Art, "i* Man 2ST" ?0b6rt HlUlwd * «*• *&#13;
0*&#13;
M«j&#13;
( | M , I I I ^ * « ;"rti'swr."i .rSSSP' #v;?r*r **1&#13;
J U M * •^!7W***, "'™I, ^*"— » H f ' " &lt;W&#13;
.'&gt; P^&#13;
' I ' m i iwwnviWMiMti&#13;
.wf * • • "I**** •«*£•* .IT.&#13;
«fc »n«rfr* ff«MM M f l f | l l mmm wmmmm mm&#13;
•;••• v &gt; ' , ; : ' ^ : , : ^ , ^ : ^&#13;
1 . : &lt;&gt;L -.. .• V '&#13;
^&#13;
i * » 3PS55&#13;
• ,&#13;
-r&#13;
&lt;Copyri«tu, WW* by LOUITOB PttblUhinir To *&#13;
C H A P T E R XXXV.—Contlnued.&#13;
He was still uneasy, hesitating, fear-&#13;
'til; but he saw Interest here and there&#13;
4fe the faces before him. 'Even Brigituun,&#13;
though unBeen by the speaker,&#13;
was looking mildly curious.&#13;
"You remember the revelation that&#13;
oame to Joseph in an early day when&#13;
there w n trouble in raising money to&#13;
print the Book of Mormon.—'Some&#13;
««eveTaftons are from God, some from&#13;
man, and some from the Devil.' Recalling&#13;
ttfe many chastenihgs God has&#13;
put upon us, may we not have failed&#13;
•to test, all our other revelations by&#13;
•this one?"&#13;
J^eep within he was angry at himrself,&#13;
for he was not speaking with&#13;
words of fire as be had meant to; he&#13;
was feeling a shameful cowardice in&#13;
the presence of the Prophet. He had&#13;
rseen himself once more the Lute of the&#13;
Holy:'Ghost*,' strong and moving; but&#13;
now* he was t poor, low-spoken, hesitating&#13;
rambler. Nervously he went&#13;
on, skirting about the edge of his&#13;
truth as iqn$ as he dared, bat feeling&#13;
at last that he mast plough into Its icy&#13;
depths. * .&#13;
"In short, brethren, the Book of Mornaori&#13;
denounces and ^oroids our plural&#13;
marriages."&#13;
Even this astounding decliration he&#13;
made without warmth, in tones so low&#13;
that many did not hear him. Those cm&#13;
the platform he^ard,.however, and now&#13;
hegan to view his obvious physical&#13;
less in a new light. Yet he con-&#13;
I, gakuog * little in force.&#13;
' t M L V l M K S p M H l H B M . • * • so worded&#13;
denouncing aed fcwW^^jTJje'yjcin&#13;
this matter of the family Ufo."&#13;
In rapid succession he cited tile pasaajjea&#13;
to whiph he referred, thrive'Concerning&#13;
David and Solomon and Noah&#13;
and Ripkallsh, who "did hot do that&#13;
which was right in theoight of the&#13;
Lord, for he did have many wives."&#13;
There were murmurings and rustlings&#13;
among the pgonle now, and on&#13;
his right he heard Brigham stirring&#13;
ominn isly in u's chair; but he nerved&#13;
himsolf t i Keep n his feet, feeling he&#13;
had that to say which should make&#13;
tiiem hail him as a new prophet when&#13;
they understood.&#13;
"But besides these warnings aginst&#13;
the ain there are many early revelations&#13;
to Joseph himself condemning&#13;
it."&#13;
He cited several of these, feeling&#13;
the amazement and the a.arm grow&#13;
about him.&#13;
"And now against these plain words,&#13;
given at many times in many places,&#13;
written on the gplden plates in letters&#13;
6uU cannot lie, or brought to Joseph&#13;
sjptfce angel of the Lord, we have only&#13;
tttt omb revelation on celestial marriage.&#13;
'Read It now in the light of&#13;
these other revelations and see if it&#13;
doe* not too plainly convict itself of&#13;
having been counterfeited to Joseph&#13;
by an evil spirit. Such, brethren, has&#13;
been the revelation that the Lord has&#13;
given to me again and again until it&#13;
bwrns within me. and I must cry it out&#13;
to you. Try to receive it from me."&#13;
There was commotion among the&#13;
people in front, chairs were mqved at&#13;
hl^ side, and a tow voice called to him&#13;
to sit down. -He heard this voice&#13;
through the ringing that had been in&#13;
hia ears for many days, like the beattag,&#13;
of a sea against him, and he felt&#13;
th# strength go suddenly from his&#13;
Wlfces.&#13;
He stumbled weakly back to his&#13;
chair and sank into it with head&#13;
bowed, feeling, rather than seeing, the&#13;
figure of Brigham rise from its seat&#13;
and step forward with deliberate, unruffled&#13;
majesty.&#13;
As the Prophet faced his people they&#13;
became quite silent, so that the robins&#13;
eoiild be heard in the Pettigrew&#13;
poach trees across the street. He&#13;
poured a glass of water from the&#13;
pitcher on the table, and drank it slower:&#13;
Then, leaning a little forward,&#13;
iting both his big cushiony hands on&#13;
grflon of the table, the Lion of the&#13;
Lord began to roar—very softly at&#13;
Slowly the word? came, in tones&#13;
:»•• audible, marked indeed almost&#13;
by; U&gt;e hesitation of the first speaker.&#13;
BtJt Jhen a difference showed; gradually&#13;
thr&gt; tonr inrreased In volume, the&#13;
wnr.in rame faster, fluency succeeding&#13;
hesitation, and now hts voice was higlx&#13;
and searching, whija-hla yasy,, masterful&#13;
gesture* laid- their oltt spell upon&#13;
the, pjKW.V •'•,.-)&#13;
VJ^doe* not occupy my feelings to,&#13;
ctgrfjiaiyr.jpuvyual,'' he had begun,'&#13;
awkwardly; in fact, I feel to tender&#13;
aU thanks and praise for the discourse.&#13;
to whfcm w&lt;evhaYe JuiV listened, but I&#13;
oouJdnt IJelp sayinr to raVseH, 'Oh,'&#13;
dear, Granny! what a long tall our&#13;
puss has got!'"&#13;
( Aa uneasy titter came front the&#13;
packed square of faces in front of him.&#13;
He went on with rising power:&#13;
*Btrt It ii foretold ih the Book of&#13;
Mormon that the lord WTU remove&#13;
the bitter branches, «*4- k's a good&#13;
thing to And out where the bitter&#13;
branches are. „ We can remove them&#13;
ourselves, We can't expect the Lord&#13;
to "do all our dirty work. Now bear&#13;
it once more, you that need to hear it&#13;
—and damn all such poof pussyism as&#13;
sniffles 'And whines and rejects it!&#13;
We don't want that scrubby breed&#13;
here!—Listen, I say. The^celestial order&#13;
of marriage is necessary for our&#13;
exaltation to the fulness of the Lord's&#13;
glory in the world eternal! Where&#13;
much Is given much Is required. Understand&#13;
me,—those that reject polygamy&#13;
will be dajnueiL , Hiear it now&#13;
once for all. I ijfUl give, you to know&#13;
that God, ouc. Father, has many wives,&#13;
and so has Jesus Christ, our Elder&#13;
Brother* Our God and Father la-heaven&#13;
4a a being of'tabernacle; "or, in&#13;
other words, He has a body of parts&#13;
the game as you and I have. And that&#13;
God and Father of ours was Adam,''&#13;
Again there was a stirring below as&#13;
if a wind swept the people, and the&#13;
little man In his chair cowered for&#13;
shame of himself. He had meant to&#13;
dpea great, thing; h.e had thrilled so&#13;
strongly with it; it had promised to&#13;
master others as it had mastered him',&#13;
and now he was shamed by the one&#13;
true Lion of the Lord.&#13;
"Hear it now," continued Brigham.&#13;
"When God, our Father Adam, came&#13;
into the garden of Eden, *e came into&#13;
it with a celestial body,,and brought&#13;
one of his wives with him,—Eve. He&#13;
made and organised this world. He is&#13;
Michael, the Archangel, the Ancient of&#13;
Days, about whom holy men have&#13;
written and spoken. He is our Father&#13;
and our God, and the only God with&#13;
whom we have to do. I could tell yon&#13;
much more about this; but were I to&#13;
tell you the whole truth, blasphemy&#13;
would be nothing to It, in the estimation&#13;
of the superstitious and overrighteous&#13;
of mankind. But I will tell&#13;
you this, that Jesus, our Elder Brother;&#13;
was begotten in the flesh by the same&#13;
character (hat was' -in the garden of&#13;
Eden, and who is our Father la&#13;
Heaven."&#13;
He turnea and werit to "His seat wit!)&#13;
a last threatening gestnrtf/amld maty&#13;
little rounds of neopft relaxing from&#13;
strained positions/&#13;
But then, before another could arise,&#13;
a wonder came upon them. The little&#13;
man stood up and-came quickly forward,&#13;
a strange new life in his step,&#13;
a new confidence in his bearing, a curious&#13;
glow of new strength in his face.&#13;
Even his stoop had straightened for&#13;
the moment. For, as he had listened&#13;
to Brigham s last words, the picture&#13;
of his vision in the desert had come&#13;
back,—the cross in the sky, the crucified&#13;
Savior upon It, the head in deathagony&#13;
fallen over upon the shoulder.&#13;
And then before his eyes had come&#13;
page after page of the New Testament&#13;
with a wash of Wood across two of&#13;
them. He felt the new life he had&#13;
prayed for pouring into his veins, and&#13;
with it a fierce anger. The one on the&#13;
cross who had been more than man,&#13;
who had shirked no sacrifice and loved&#13;
infinitely, was not thus to be assailed.&#13;
A panorama of wrong—wrong thinking&#13;
and wrong doing—extended before&#13;
his clearing ga*e. For once he seemed&#13;
to see truth in a vision and to feel&#13;
the power to utter it.&#13;
There was silence again as he stood&#13;
in front of the little table, the faces&#13;
before him frozen into wonder that&#13;
he should have either the power of&#13;
the temerity to answer Brigham. He&#13;
spoke, and hin voice was again rough&#13;
with force, and high and fearless, a&#13;
voice many of them recalled from the&#13;
days when he had not been weak.&#13;
"Now I see what we have done. Listen,&#13;
brethren, for Got! nas not before&#13;
so plainly said it to any man, and I&#13;
know my time is short among you.&#13;
We have gone back to the ages of Hebrew&#13;
barbarism for our God—to the&#13;
God of Rattles worshipped by a heathen&#13;
people—a God who loved the reek&#13;
of blood and the smell of burning&#13;
flesh. But you shall not—"&#13;
He turned squarely and fiercely to&#13;
the face of Brigham.&#13;
•—you shall not conftise that bloody&#13;
God of Battlea with the true Christ,&#13;
nor yet with the true God of Love that&#13;
this Christ came to trll us of. Once&#13;
I believed in Him. I was taught to by&#13;
your priests. War seemed a righteous&#13;
thing, for we had been grievously put&#13;
upon, and T believed the God of Israel&#13;
should avenge our wrong? as He had&#13;
avenged those of His older Zion. And&#13;
hear me now—so lone as I believed&#13;
this, 1 was r.o rowmv&gt;f; while you,&#13;
sir—""&#13;
A Ion? forefinger was pointed&#13;
straight at the ama/eri HriRham.&#13;
"—while yon. sir. were a craven.&#13;
ronremptible in your rnwardice. I&#13;
would have foughr in Kcho canyon to&#13;
the end, because I believed. Rut you&#13;
did noL believe, and so you were afraid&#13;
to fl£ht. And for your cowardice and&#13;
ypuf wretched lusts your name among&#13;
all but your ignorant dupes shall become&#13;
a hissing and a vcorn. For mark&#13;
tt well, unless you forsake that heathen&#13;
God of Battles and preach the di-&#13;
-vlne Christ of the New Testament,&#13;
yon shall «ome to bold only tha Ignorant,&#13;
and them only by keeping them&#13;
Ignorant''&#13;
The commotion among the people tm&#13;
front was now all but a panic. On the&#13;
platform the «kea of Israel whispered&#13;
one to another, while Brigham gaaed&#13;
at- if fascinated, driven to admiration&#13;
for the speaker's power And audacity.&#13;
For the feverish, fleeting moment,&#13;
Joel Rae was that veritable Lion of&#13;
the Lord he had wray«»d to be, putting&#13;
upon the people his spell of the old&#13;
days. Heads were again strained up&#13;
and forward, and amased horror was&#13;
on most of the f*ces. Far back, Prudence&#13;
trembled; feeling that she must&#13;
be'away at once, until she felt the&#13;
firm grasp of FoUett's hand. The&#13;
speaker went on, having turned agfLin&#13;
to the front.&#13;
"Instead of a qhurch you shall become&#13;
justly hated and despised as a&#13;
people who foul their homes and dishonor&#13;
beyond forgiveness tHU names&#13;
•of wife and mother. Then your punishment&#13;
shall come upon you as it has&#13;
already come for this and ttfr other&#13;
sins. Even how the Gentfle&gt;is upon&#13;
us; and mark this truth that God has&#13;
but now given me to Xnow: we have&#13;
never been persecuted as a church,—&#13;
but always as a political body hostile&#13;
to the government of this nation.&#13;
Even no, you had no faith. Believing&#13;
as I believed, I would have fought&#13;
tihat nation and died a thousand bloody&#13;
deaths rather than submit. But you&#13;
had no faith, and you were so low that&#13;
you let yourselves be ruled by a coward—&#13;
and I tell you God hates a&#13;
coward."&#13;
He stopped, waiting as if he were&#13;
not done, but the spell was broken.&#13;
platform Elder Waxdle was saying,&#13;
"The trouble with hinf wks he: was&#13;
isjf JAM* fever. Why. Ill bet my&#13;
set &lt;JT harass his pneSe ain't less&#13;
m AflAdnsd atad twetfty th£s minute."&#13;
The, Pthgrji looked at Brigham.&#13;
"He's,- a crazy man, sure enough,"&#13;
assented the. JPrQpnelt, "but my opinion&#13;
is he'll stay crazy, And it wuuldu'l be&#13;
just the right thing by Israel to let&#13;
him go on talking before strangers.&#13;
You see, it sounds,so almighty sane!"&#13;
Back In the crowd Prudence and&#13;
Foilett had lingered a little at the latter*&#13;
S suggestion, for he had caught the&#13;
drift of the talt. When he had comprehended&#13;
its meaning they set off up&#13;
the hill, full of alarm&#13;
At the door Christina met them.&#13;
They saw she had been crying.&#13;
"Where is father, Christina?"&#13;
"Himself saddle his horse, and say,&#13;
'I go to toe some of those marks/ He&#13;
say, 'I sea you plenty not no more, so&#13;
good-bye!' He kdrsed me," she added.&#13;
"Which way did he. g o ; '&#13;
"So!" She pointed toward the road&#13;
that led out of the valley to the north.&#13;
"I'll go after him," said Foilett.&#13;
"I'll go with you. Saddle Dandy and&#13;
Kit—and Christina will have something&#13;
for you to eat; you've had nothing&#13;
since morning."&#13;
"I reckon I know where we'll have&#13;
to go," said Foilett, as he went for the&#13;
g a b l e s .&#13;
CHARTER X X X V I .&#13;
" 6 God, I Am Tired and Ready! Take&#13;
Ms and Burn M e ! "&#13;
The life, indeed, had in the later moments&#13;
been slowly dying from- his&#13;
words; and, as they lost their fire,&#13;
scattered voices of protest had been&#13;
heard; then voices in warning from&#13;
behind him, and the sound of two or&#13;
three rising and pushing back their&#13;
chairs.&#13;
The littje bent man tried again to&#13;
smile, hoping for a friendly glance,&#13;
perhaps a hand-clasp without words&#13;
from some one of them. Seeing that&#13;
he was shunned, he stepped down off&#13;
the platform at the side, twisting his&#13;
hat in his long, thin hands in embarrassment.&#13;
A moment he stood so.&#13;
turning to look back at the group of&#13;
priests and Elders around the Prophet,&#13;
seeking for any sign, even for a glance&#13;
that should be not unkind. The little&#13;
pained smile still lighted his face, but&#13;
no friendly look came from the others.&#13;
Seeing only the backs turned toward&#13;
him. he at length straightened out his&#13;
crumpled hat, still smiling, and slowly&#13;
put it. on his head; as he turned away&#13;
he pulled the hat farther over his&#13;
eyes, and then he was off along the&#13;
dusty street, looking to neither side,&#13;
still with the little smile that made&#13;
his face gentle.&#13;
But when he had come to the end&#13;
of the street ami was on the road up&#13;
the hill, the smile died. He seemed all&#13;
at once to shrink and stoop and fade,&#13;
—no longer a Lion of the Lord, hut a&#13;
poor, white-faced, horrified little man&#13;
who had meant in his heart to Rive a&#13;
great revelation, rnd who had succeeded&#13;
only in uttering blasphemy to the&#13;
very face of God's prophet.&#13;
From below, the little groups of excited&#13;
people along the street looked up&#13;
and saw his thin, bent figure alone in&#13;
the fading sunlight, toiling resolutely&#13;
upward.&#13;
Other groups back In the square&#13;
talked among themselves, not a few in&#13;
whispers. A listener among them&#13;
might have heard such expressions as.&#13;
He'll be blood-atoned sure!" —&#13;
"They'll make a breach upon him! "—&#13;
•"They'll accomplish his decease!"—&#13;
He'll be sent, over the rim of the&#13;
basin right quickr" One indignant&#13;
Saint, with a talent for euphemism,&#13;
was heard to say. "Brigham will have&#13;
his spirit disembodied!"&#13;
To the priests and Elders on the&#13;
The Little Bent Man at the Foot ef&#13;
the Cross.&#13;
It was dusk when they rode down&#13;
the hill together. They followed the&#13;
canyon road to its meeting with the&#13;
mam highway at the northern edge&#13;
of Amalon. Where the roads joined&#13;
they parsed Bishop Wright, who, with&#13;
his hat off, turned to stare at them,&#13;
and to pull at his fringe of whisker in&#13;
seeming perplexity.&#13;
"He must have been on his way&#13;
to our house," Prudence called.&#13;
"With that hair and whiskers," answered&#13;
Foilett, with some irrelevance,&#13;
"he looks like an old buffalo bull just&#13;
before shedding time."&#13;
They rode fast until the night fell,&#13;
scanning the road ahead for a figure&#13;
on horseback. When it was quite&#13;
dark they halted.&#13;
"We might pass him," suggested&#13;
Foilett. 'He was fairly tuckered out,&#13;
and he might fall off any minute."&#13;
Down out of Pine valley they went,&#13;
and over more miles of gray alkali&#13;
toward *a'*11ne of hills low and black&#13;
in the north.&#13;
They came to these, followed the&#13;
road out of the desert through a narrow&#13;
gap, and passed into the Mountain&#13;
meadows, reining in their horses&#13;
a» they did so.&#13;
Befpre them the meadows stretched&#13;
between two ranges of low, rocky&#13;
hltls, narrow at first but widening&#13;
gradually from the gap through which&#13;
they had come. But the ground where&#13;
the long, rich grass had once grown&#13;
was now barren, gray and ugly in the&#13;
moonlight, cut into deep gullies and&#13;
naked of all but a scant growth of&#13;
sage brush which the moon was silvering,&#13;
and a few clumps of shadowy&#13;
scrub oak along the base of the hills&#13;
on either side.&#13;
Instinctively they stopped, speaking&#13;
in low tones. And then there came&#13;
to them out of the night's silence a&#13;
gtrange, weird beating; hollow, muffled,&#13;
slow, a*4 rhtbymic, but penetrating&#13;
and curiously exciting, like another&#13;
pulse cunningly playing upon&#13;
their own to make them beat more&#13;
rapigff. The girl pulled her horse&#13;
close in by his, but ho reassured her.&#13;
"It's Indians—they must be holding&#13;
the funeral of oome chief*. ^ u ^ n o&#13;
raatter^rtheae Indians aren't any more&#13;
account than prairie dogs."&#13;
They rode on slowly, the funeral&#13;
drum sounding nearer as the/ wen,t.&#13;
Then far up the meadow by the&#13;
roadside they could see the mtrd,&#13;
square lines of the cress in the moonlight.&#13;
Slower still they went, while&#13;
the drum beats became louder, until&#13;
they seemed to fall upon their own&#13;
eardrums.&#13;
"Could he have come to this dreadful&#13;
placeT' she- asked, almost in a&#13;
whisper.&#13;
"We haven't passed him, that's sure;&#13;
and Tve got a notion he lied. I've&#13;
heard him talk about this cross off&#13;
and on—it's been a good deal in his&#13;
mind—and maybe he was a little out&#13;
of his head. But we'll soon see."&#13;
They walked their horsbs up a little&#13;
ascent, and the cross stood out&#13;
more clearly against the sky. They&#13;
approached it slowly, leaning forward&#13;
to peer all about it; but the shadows&#13;
lay heavy at Its bare, and from a&#13;
little distance they could- distinguish&#13;
no outline.&#13;
But at last they were close by and&#13;
could pierce the gloom, and there at&#13;
the foot of the cross, beside the cairn&#13;
of stones that helped to support it,&#13;
was a little huddled bit of blackness.&#13;
It moved as they looked, and they&#13;
knew the voice that came from ft&#13;
"Oh God, I am tHejd had toady!&#13;
Take me and bam pet?"&#13;
She was off her honat end quickly&#13;
at bis tide. Foilett, to let them be&#13;
alone, led the horses to the spring&#13;
below. It was almost gone now, only&#13;
the feeblest trickle of a rivulet remaining.&#13;
The once green meadows&#13;
had behaved, indeed, as if a curse&#13;
were put upon them. Hardly had&#13;
grass grown or water run through it&#13;
since the day that Israel wrought&#13;
there. When he had tied the horses&#13;
he heard Prudence calling him.&#13;
"I'm afraid he's delirious,' she said,&#13;
whev he reached her side. "He keeps&#13;
hearing cries and shots, and sees a&#13;
woman's hair waving before him, and&#13;
he's afraid of something back of him.&#13;
What can we do?"&#13;
At the foot of the cross the little&#13;
man was again sounding hi? endless&#13;
prayer.&#13;
"Bow me, bend me, break me, for&#13;
I have been soul-proud. Burn me&#13;
out—" , .&#13;
She knelt by his side, trying to&#13;
sooth him.&#13;
"Father—it's all right—it's Phidence—"&#13;
* '&#13;
But at her name he uttered a cry&#13;
with such terror in it that she shuddered&#13;
and was still. Then he began&#13;
to mutter incoherently, and she heard&#13;
her own name repeated many times.&#13;
"If that awful beating would only&#13;
stop," she said to Foilett, who had&#13;
now brought water in the curled brim&#13;
of his hat. She tried to have the lit&#13;
tie man drink. He swallowed some of&#13;
the water from the hat brim, shivering&#13;
as he did so.&#13;
"We ought to have a Are," she said.&#13;
Foilett began to gather twigs and sage&#13;
brush, and presently had a blaze in&#13;
front of them.&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
What She Asked Him&#13;
t »&#13;
They were sitting close together in&#13;
the gathering twilight, so close together&#13;
that she tickled his cheek with&#13;
her eyelashes.&#13;
"And do you really love me?" she&#13;
whispered, while her heart stood still&#13;
to await his answer.&#13;
I do." he averred. He had returned&#13;
The same reply about 3,000 times durins&#13;
the previous two years, so it was&#13;
probable he had come to believe it.&#13;
"Do you love me truly?''&#13;
"Truly, dear."&#13;
"Much?"&#13;
"Very much.'*&#13;
"Kver so much?"&#13;
'Ever so very much."&#13;
How much, dear?' It is an awkward&#13;
question for a girl to put, but&#13;
they all put. it. Love, you see, cannot&#13;
be measured in qpantiti^s. and that&#13;
makes it difficult to answer the lady&#13;
when she wishes to know the extent&#13;
of your affections. "How much, dear?"&#13;
"'Much more than I can tell you,&#13;
darling."&#13;
She sighed at that. Any reasonable&#13;
girl might have been satisfied.&#13;
"Do you love me a million pounds'&#13;
worth?''&#13;
"More than that, dear."&#13;
"Ten million pounds' worth?"&#13;
"Evpr so much more than that.'"&#13;
"Do you love me ,1ust as much as&#13;
ever you can?"&#13;
You know I do, darling."&#13;
She sighed again. Still shf&gt; v.-as not&#13;
contented.&#13;
"When we are married, dear, will&#13;
you be happy0-'&#13;
"Shan't I just!" he ejaculated.&#13;
"And, when we are married, will&#13;
you love me more than ever?"&#13;
"Yes, darling."&#13;
"More than you do now?"&#13;
"Yes, sweetheart."&#13;
"Oh, you false brute!" she sobbed.&#13;
"I knew you couldn't love me much&#13;
now—else hiw could you love me&#13;
more when were married? Oh, it's&#13;
cruel, cruel!"&#13;
'But darling—" he urged. But alio&#13;
would not have any buts. She west&#13;
straight away and left him, withoajt&#13;
saying good night, and it cost himtwo)&#13;
boxes of chocolates and a new gold&#13;
charm for her chain before she would&#13;
allow him to apologize and admit ho&#13;
was in the wrong.&#13;
Earth Becoming a Desert.&#13;
That the earth is becoming a desert&#13;
and that it is only a matter of&#13;
time when it will be a desolate waste.&#13;
was the statement made by Prof.&#13;
Lowell in a lecture before the Lowell&#13;
institute at the Massachusetts institute&#13;
of technology.&#13;
The water contained by the earth Is&#13;
passing gradually off into inter-stellar&#13;
space, and the great deserts such as&#13;
the Sahara and those in Arizona are&#13;
increasing in size much more rapidly&#13;
than most people rhink.&#13;
According to Prof. Lowell, what&#13;
were once well populated valleys in&#13;
the region of the Sahara, is now a&#13;
dry, sandy waste. In Mars similar&#13;
changes have been faking place, and&#13;
the planet is now about three-eighths&#13;
desert.—Boston Globe&#13;
Ifc.fct,&#13;
&gt; • ( • •&#13;
$*e f itwkiug Ji^patch ADDITIONAL LOCAL.&#13;
F. I. ANDREWS &amp; CO. PROPKIETO&#13;
THURSDAY, MAY y, 1907.&#13;
China was HO agitated by tbe&#13;
news of the Peace conference that&#13;
she immediately ordered 2,000,000&#13;
new rifles.&#13;
A X a r r o w E s c a p e .&#13;
(J. \V. Uloyd, a m e r c h a n t , of P l u n k ,&#13;
Mo,, had a n a n o w escape f o u r y e a r s&#13;
ago, when he ran a j i m s o n b u r i n t o&#13;
his t h u m b . He s a y s : " T h « d o c t o r&#13;
w a n t e d to. a m p u t a t e it but 1 would&#13;
n o t c o n s e n t . I b o u g h t a box of Hucklon1*&#13;
A r n i c a Salve a n d t h a t c u r e d t h e&#13;
d a n g e r o u s w o u n d / ' 2-V af F. A. S i g -&#13;
ler's, D r u g g i s t .&#13;
TrampB .are already a scarce&#13;
article in Kausab. I t ia estimated&#13;
that there will be 100,000,000&#13;
bushels of wheat to harvest there&#13;
this Hummer.&#13;
My Best F r i e n d .&#13;
A l e x a n d e r B e n t o n , w h o lives' on&#13;
R u r a l K o u t e l , L'ort E d w a r d , N. Y.,&#13;
s a y s : " D r . ' K i n g ' s N e w Discovery i"&#13;
my liest e a r t h l y trienu. It c u r e d m e&#13;
of a s t h m a six year? a*o. It has also&#13;
p e r f o r m e d a wonderful c u r e of incipient&#13;
c n t w u n p h o n for :i:y ^on's wile.&#13;
T h e f m t bottle ended the t e r r i b l e&#13;
coui/b, and this iiccomplislnsd , the other&#13;
s y m p t o m s ieft.pne Uy one, u n t i l she&#13;
was perfectly well. Dr. K i n g ' s N e w&#13;
Discovery's power over c o u g h s a n d&#13;
colds is simply m a r v e l o u s ' 1 No o t h e r&#13;
r e m e d y has ever e q u a l e d it. F u l l y&#13;
g u a r a n t e e d by F . A. S i g l e r , drui*gi.4.&#13;
50c a n d 51.00.. T r a i l bottle free.&#13;
T h e r e n e w a l of t h a t ^ 5 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0&#13;
a n t i - R o o s e v e l t c a m p a i g n f u n d&#13;
s t o r y s i m p l y a m o u n t s t o t h i s :&#13;
t h e r e a r e a w h o l e l o t of r i c h m e n&#13;
w h o d o n o t l i k e t h e p r e s i d e n t .&#13;
H. G. B r i g g s afcd wife visited relat&#13;
i v e s in Howeil a n d Oceula, the last of&#13;
last week.&#13;
ilva. b, J . K e n u e d y audt?oi;, l t u s * e l ,&#13;
visited friends in W i l l m r n s t o n t b e&#13;
p a s t week.&#13;
P e r f o r m i n g ponies, Comic dogs at&#13;
F r e e d and Perrintra S h o w . 10 a n d 20&#13;
c t . show. May 8 .&#13;
S t r e e t f a k n s in Chelsea- will have to&#13;
pay $10 p e r day h e r e a f t e r to do bus&#13;
m e s s in t h a t v i l l a g e .&#13;
T h e last of last week, w h e n we be&#13;
g u n to t h i n k t h a t p e r h a p s s p i i n g was&#13;
here, t h e w e a t h e r m a n ,sent us a c o u p -&#13;
le of i n c h e s of s n o w F r i d a y n i g h t ,&#13;
Way 3.&#13;
D a n i e l B a k e r of VVilliamston was a&#13;
visitor in this place last week and&#13;
s h a k i n g h a n d s with m a n y old friend.-.&#13;
H e is m a k i n g a r r a u j j e u i e n t s to go t a&#13;
Bay V i e w .&#13;
H e w h o raises fruits a n d v e g e t a b l e s&#13;
on his o w n l a u d has t h e m at t h e i r&#13;
best. P e o p l e w h o live in t b e cities&#13;
know n o t t b e m e a n i n g of fresh I r i u t s&#13;
j a n d v e g e t a b l e s .&#13;
j M a n y of o u r n e i g h b o r i n g villages&#13;
j w e r e t r o u b l e d by w a t e r iu their cel-&#13;
; lars d u r i n g the h e a v y r a i n the past&#13;
! week. T h e su:l in P i n c k n e y is su :h&#13;
, t h a t t h e r e is n e v e r t r o u b l e of this kind&#13;
j h e r e .&#13;
j H o w e l l has a n e w factory in sight if&#13;
tha business m e n c o m e to the f r o n t .&#13;
T h e s e little factories a r e w h a t h e l p in&#13;
a t o w n . L a t e r : W e l e a r n t h a t tbe&#13;
c o m m i t t e e did not t h i n k the factory&#13;
w o r t h .striving tor&#13;
for© Miss B a r E e r e n d e a v o r i n g x6 m a Re&#13;
&gt; * * 4 ' * * * &lt; &gt; &lt; K ' * * * 4 t « * * * * * # * | h e r t a k o a check for hulf t h e priqe o*&#13;
PAINTING UNDER A ;: the plcture&#13;
DOUBLE INSPIRATION | j °y lowing itr she uk«i.&#13;
**I advfced you to walk tn the after&#13;
"How did you do your work wit|$ut&#13;
&gt;*§*: If' J**^ '^'jK}*1 *' . M i " ^ . • VJKJK; '^ W w f W n 2jf uoon, brlbfug t h e m a i d a t t b e hotel to-&#13;
LUriuumi] j b r i n g t h a l a m u s t o m y room from&#13;
In intHriHktni, at tin* bane or the I y o u w flud w a t c h for your r e t u r n . "&#13;
S w i s s Alps, one Rets a line view of j " B u t ypu seem to h a v e done b e t t e r&#13;
t h e J u u g f r a u ruiwing its head, veiled ; t h a n y o u r piece t h a t b u s been h u n g in&#13;
w i t h snow, in a p p a r e n t close proximl- t h e •salon."&#13;
ty. Due day a girl s a t before nu easel " T h a t w a s because I painted u n d e r&#13;
e n d e a v o r i n g lo t r a n s f e r Ihe m o u n t a i n t h e Inspiration of Move.'"&#13;
t o c a n v a s . Whether it was t h a t she « i t h o u g h t . " gfee replied, with averth&#13;
a d little a r t i s t i c t a l e u t or w a s a be- ed face, " t h a t I p a i n t e d u n d e r an IngInner,&#13;
she did not succeed in m a k i n g dpiration/' G E R T R U D E GOWAN".'&#13;
a n Imposing picture.&#13;
T h e girl d r e w back to h a v e a look at U r l ! i M R W M e ; , ' l o r h a h i n / is the 1.«&gt;f&#13;
a e r work, sighed and dropped her pal&#13;
e t t e .&#13;
" M a d e m o i s e l l e s e e m s discouraged," ' d i a r r h o e a a n d s o u r - t o m a e h It is es-&#13;
Bttid a voice behind h e r in F r e n c h . , peoially good in case* o£ t e e i h i n g&#13;
She t u r n e d a n d s a w the p a l e face of w h ( j n i m U t i o n a f f e ( . t „ M l e s t o m u'h&#13;
a y o u n g m a n evidently in poor health.&#13;
* a n d i n t e s t i n e s&#13;
D o a ' t P a y Alimony&#13;
to be divorced from y o u r a p p e n d i x .&#13;
T h e r e will be no occasion for it if ynu&#13;
1&lt;eep y o u r bowels r e g u l a r with Dr.&#13;
K i n g ' s N e w Life P i l l s . T h e i r action&#13;
is so g e n t l e t h a t t h e a p p e n d i x never&#13;
-has c a u s e to m a k e t h e least c o m p l a i n t&#13;
G u a r a n t e e d by F , A. S i g l e r . d r u g g i s t .&#13;
T r y t h e m .&#13;
H0LD1N3 A CAMERA.&#13;
I only speak English," she suid. "I&#13;
a m a n A m e r i c a n . "&#13;
"Oh, a n American! So u m 1." And&#13;
b e r e p e a t e d w h a t he h a d suid in his&#13;
n a t i v e tungue.&#13;
"1 shull never learn to p u i n t , " said&#13;
t h e girl despondently.&#13;
" P e r h a p s you have been too long ut&#13;
w o r k . W h y not leave off a n d begin&#13;
a g a i n in the ^morning w h e n you aiv&#13;
fresh V"&#13;
" T h a t ' s a good suggestion. I began&#13;
t h e p i c t u r e in the m o r n i n g . "&#13;
"In t h a t case I would certainly reco&#13;
m m e n d yon to work on It only before&#13;
noon."&#13;
" W h y ? "&#13;
"Well, the m o u n t a i n is u n d e r differe&#13;
n t light in the m o r n i n g . Besides, usually&#13;
one's best work is d o n e in the&#13;
e a r l y p a r t of the d a y . "&#13;
" A r e you au a r t i s t ? "&#13;
" I paint, but every one of a n Ideal&#13;
t e m p e r a m e n t either p a i n t s a little or&#13;
d a b b l e s in w r i t i n g verses or s o m e t h i n g&#13;
of the kind."&#13;
E v e r y m o r n i n g after t h a t t h e girl&#13;
s a t before her easel, and often the&#13;
a t r a n g e r , who sojourned—for his health&#13;
—at t h e s a m e hotel a s she, strolled by.&#13;
THE ESKIMO BAWT.&#13;
' . ,. i&#13;
How the Little One Is Carried and&#13;
Oftrtji For by the Mother- x. • •&#13;
VSie arrival In the worlds of tbe&#13;
jrocthful Eskimo Is not greeted by&#13;
tbe orthodox cradle and swaddling^&#13;
clothes. Practically till be can shift&#13;
ftr himself he lives absolutely naked&#13;
Inside his mother's sealskin blouse,""&#13;
akin to skin keeping him warm, i"&#13;
This arruugemeut allows the mother&#13;
to go about her work almost immediately,&#13;
and she can also travel aiftf:'&#13;
hunt without a perambulator and&#13;
without having to leave any ottt'+t*&#13;
borne to."mlud" the baby. The mofltfg&#13;
er's dress is^almost eihctly like flEfbabies&#13;
is the h«&gt;t father's, except that it has a long iaff*&#13;
remedy for colic, summer complaint, 0f tail reaching nearly to the ground^&#13;
embryo, no doubt, of the modern&#13;
"train."&#13;
Spared the miseries of soap and&#13;
water and early weuned to the readily&#13;
swallowed diet of blubber and raw&#13;
seal meat, the infant rapidly develops&#13;
that In valuable layer of subcutaneous&#13;
fat which, while It enhances the "job&#13;
l y " a p p e a r a n c e of the I n d s - a n d t h e&#13;
shapeliness of Hie m a i d e n s , a s s i s t s m a - .&#13;
t e r a l i j iu economy In clothing.&#13;
T h u s in llieir frigid clime, once in&#13;
their skin teuf, the whole family will&#13;
d i v e s t themselves of every stitch o?&#13;
clothing, u n e m b a r r a s s e d by the factt&#13;
h a t so many families s h a r e the tent&#13;
with t h e m . S o c i a b i l i t y ' I s - e a r l y devel*,&#13;
oped w h e n one's n e x t dour neighbor&#13;
on each side Is only s e p a r a t e d by a n '&#13;
i m a g i n a r y line b e t w e e n the. d e e r s k i n ,&#13;
you sleep on a n d t h e one h e uses. T h e&#13;
w i n t e r deerskin s e r v e s a s bed a n d&#13;
b e d d i n g a t n i g h t a n d a s parlor furnit&#13;
u r e d u r i n g the d a y . C o m m u n i t y of&#13;
goods N almost I m p e r a t i v e u u d e r this&#13;
a r r a n g e m e n t . T h u s w h e n one kills a&#13;
seal all a r e fed, a n d likewise w h e n&#13;
h e d o e s n ' t all go h u n g r y together.--&#13;
A m e r i c a n Missionary.&#13;
Cjisasweet is a pleasa&#13;
n t , s a t e r e m e d y , c o n t a i n i n g neithn:-&#13;
opiates nor n a r c a t i c s ; a'l tbe, i n y r t d&#13;
ients a r e p a i n t e d p l a i n l y on thn w r a p&#13;
p e r . E n d o r s e d by m o t h e r s b e j t u s o it&#13;
acts so quick ly.&#13;
Sold by F . A. Sigler, D r u g g i s t .&#13;
A Brotherly Act.&#13;
A d m i r a l Lord C h a r l e s B e r e s f o r d comm&#13;
a n d e d a nuvul b r i g a d e in t h e Sudan&#13;
w h e n t h e British forces w e r e t h e r e&#13;
O n e day when t h e A r a b s w e r e m a k i n g&#13;
a terrilic o n r u s h the a d m i r a l ' s life w a s&#13;
s a v e d by a mule w h i c h fell d e a d upon&#13;
h i m . When t h e s q u a r e had been ref&#13;
o r m e d a n d t h e Aral is were repulsed.&#13;
L o r d C h a r l e s w a s rescued. H e looked&#13;
a t t h e mule for a m o m e n t and then rem&#13;
a r k e d gratefully. " N o w , that poor&#13;
b e a s t did w h a t I s h o u l d call a brotherly&#13;
a c t "&#13;
W h e n y o u r food ha&lt; not been p r o p&#13;
erly digested t h e e n t i r e system is imp&#13;
a i r e d in the same p r o p o r t i o n Y o u r&#13;
s t o m a c h lineds !u&lt;!p. K . d o l tVr Lidi&#13;
looked a t her work a n d s p o k e to her ; n a t i o n a n d D y s p e p s e a nor only digests&#13;
w h a t v.iu e t t , ir tones t'ie sto-&#13;
Wonderful Eezeimi Cure.&#13;
" O u r I'ttle boy had eczema for five&#13;
y e a r s , " w r i t e s N. A A d a m s . H e n r i e t -&#13;
t a , P a . ' ' T w o of o u r h o m e doctors&#13;
said the case was hopeless, his lung:-&#13;
b e i n g affected. We t h e n employed&#13;
o t h e r doctors b u t no benefit resulted.&#13;
By c h a n c e we read a b o u t E l e c t r i c Hitt&#13;
e r s ; b o u g h t a bottle and soon noticed&#13;
i m p r o v e m e n t . We c o n t i n u e d this&#13;
medicine until several bottles w e r e&#13;
used, when our boy was c o m p l e t e l y&#13;
c u r e d . " Hest of all blood medicines&#13;
a n d body b u i l d i n g h e a l t h tonics.&#13;
G u a r a n t e e d at K. A. vSiyler's D r u g&#13;
s t o r e ' 5 0 c&#13;
S o m e P r a c t i c a l&#13;
g i m v . r&#13;
o s t i , n s to t!io B • -&#13;
^otoco-a::li v.&#13;
( Hie I O'lp'-!'!;&#13;
L; ; : ! I ; " I&#13;
1'&#13;
. » , 1&#13;
Parental prohibition having&#13;
failed to keep Wisconsin boy^&#13;
from using tobacco, the state ba^&#13;
made if into law with a penalty&#13;
which is not half as serious as the&#13;
consequences of smoking; a first&#13;
cigar.&#13;
For a cold or a cough t a k e |vi-n;:e&#13;
dy's L a x a t i v e Cough S y r u p , it i&gt;&#13;
BETTKIS t h a n any other c o u g h remedy&#13;
becktise its laxative ] ) n n e i p l e as-nrfa&#13;
h e a l t h y , copious action et the li-uveis&#13;
a n d at t h e same it heals : : r a t a h o u of&#13;
t h e t h r o a t , strengthens, the bronchia!&#13;
t u b e s and always infUniation of the&#13;
m u c o u s m e m b r a n e . C,ontains Honey&#13;
a n d T a r , pleasant to t a k e . C h i l d r e n&#13;
like it. Conforms to tli* N a t i o n a l&#13;
P u r e Food and D r u g L*w.&#13;
tiold by P . A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
ea i i e&#13;
c.v; &gt;' &lt;••'] v. V. Meat •••'!' ih •!'. c &gt;o n ••;•, &gt;••&lt;•/&#13;
of l'ui!ii:ii;.'s , v ni'ier , 0 &gt;,n c: -•; v, '],•-',&#13;
gi\ e \ ell i&lt;o 1 lines ' he &lt; - i.,e:.; ::01-( 0,&gt;&#13;
held a b s o h u e l y le\e!. It' liii&lt; is n I&#13;
done, t lie - m o l d i n g in ihe ni. t i r o will&#13;
a p p e a r to bo lulling either ' ' a c k w a r d&#13;
or forward, a c c o r d i n g to the way in&#13;
whic-L the c a m e r a w a s tilted.&#13;
T h e r e a r e times, however, wheu the&#13;
caniftcu m a y be tilted to an a d v a n t a g e .&#13;
In some cases it is a n a b s o l u t e necessity.&#13;
F o r e x a m p l e , iu p h o t o g r a p h s of&#13;
clouds, w a t e r f a l l s , balloons, etc., the&#13;
c a m e r a may point u p w a r d , while in&#13;
t a k i n g pictures of people s w i m m i n g&#13;
or bhthiug, children at work or play,&#13;
etc., it m a y lie pointed d o w n w a r d .&#13;
Very successful p h o t o g r a p h s of&#13;
p r o m i n e n t speakers, p a r a d e s , crowds,&#13;
etc., h a v e boon t a k e n w h e n the camera&#13;
w a s upside d o w n . It m a k e s no difference&#13;
iu the negative w h e t h e r the camera&#13;
ie .-ight side up or not. I*v holding&#13;
t h e .rV-iiiora in the way suggested many&#13;
a r.hotographer has secured good pict&#13;
u r e s , while others w h o tried to use&#13;
t h e c a m e r a in the usual way made absolute&#13;
failures.&#13;
Often by holding t h e camera b y - t h e&#13;
side of the body and pointing it backw&#13;
a r d one m a y secure pictures of children&#13;
at play and of older people in&#13;
n a t u r a l pns,,s without the knowledge&#13;
of any&#13;
An,,;&#13;
u.coOo.rs of the group,&#13;
her v a r n i n g to b e g i n n e r s is nec-&#13;
I)o not try to take a time ex-&#13;
\\ h'.le holding Hie camera in the&#13;
1'ven if The camera is held&#13;
a g a i n s t tlio 1 roast a n d respiration stopped&#13;
the action of the h e a r t Is sullieienf&#13;
to cause the h e \ to \ ibrate a n d spoil&#13;
t h e p i c t u r e . - C i r c l e Magazine.&#13;
e s s a r ,&#13;
posure&#13;
hand.&#13;
Some one suggests that perhaps&#13;
the President is refusing to run&#13;
for a third term only because he&#13;
wants a four years rest and at the&#13;
end of that, time he will be willing&#13;
to take up the reins again. It&#13;
might take longer than four years&#13;
to undo what the other fellow had&#13;
done in those other four years.&#13;
Better keep the reins while he has&#13;
good control.&#13;
" H e r e ' s to y o u r health a n d happi&#13;
n e s s " — H e w i t t ' s Littln E a r n Kisera—&#13;
famaiw littie pi .-. Xa&gt;t", sick headache&#13;
or bilionsie'A* noiv crime on an;&#13;
t i m e : the &lt;»re is an E i H v lki.-er.&#13;
F r e n c h officials are said to be par&#13;
tioularly strict in t h e i r discipline of&#13;
tourists. A lately r e t u r n e d j r a v e l c&#13;
tells several more or less apocrypha'&#13;
stories to illustrate t h e s t a t e of affairs&#13;
An American lost bis footing, slippy '&#13;
d o w n an e m b a n k m e n t and fell into ;.&#13;
small, shallow pond. As he ^erntubl" V&#13;
drip]dug, up t h e embankment, to Ih&#13;
footpath he w a s confronted by an&#13;
a r m of t h e law.&#13;
"Your n a m e ? Your a d d r e s s ? " do&#13;
mandeiT*" this u n c o m p r o m i s i n g person,&#13;
notebook In h a n d .&#13;
"But I fell," began the Astonished&#13;
A m e r i c a n . "I only"—&#13;
T h e m a n w a v e d his a r m . " I t In for&#13;
bidden to b a t h e in thin lftke," he said&#13;
firmly. "I am not *here to listen to&#13;
e x t e n u a i i n g c i r c u m s t a n c e * , "&#13;
DeWITT'S {ESS WITCH HAZEL&#13;
Sold by 1\ A. Sigler. DrngHtf. j S A L V E For Piles. Burns, Sorca&#13;
a b o u t it, now and t h e n v e n t u r i n g a&#13;
friendly criticism. B u t t b a only words&#13;
Of e n c o u r a g e m e n t he g a v a IMPT W«re&#13;
" D o n ' t work too long . a t -one -tjaic&#13;
W h e n your work looks unaattBfactory&#13;
t o you, leave it, a n d likely yoaVwll! j&#13;
be b e t t e r pleased with It w h e a \ o u&#13;
h a v e Tested," And w h a t t h e a t r a n g e r i&#13;
said proved t o be t r u e . In t h a mofu\ t&#13;
l n g she w a s surprised t h a t she jMid*1p&#13;
b e e n dissatisfied wdth her w o r k of t h e '&#13;
p r e v i o u s day. She would sit d o w n be- !&#13;
fore her c a n v a s , a n d after s p e n d i n g a&#13;
couple of hours with her b r u s h e s it&#13;
would seem t h a t she bad u n d o n e all&#13;
s h e hail achieved t h e previous lay,&#13;
Tlien the s t r a n g e r would come along&#13;
a n d remind her t h a t In t h e morning&#13;
w h e n refreshed she would likely again&#13;
see her p a i n t i n g under a different influence.&#13;
"Go t a k e a walk this afternoon,"&#13;
h e said, " P a m t in t h e m o r n i n g ; stroll&#13;
tn the afternoon."&#13;
I n this way the picture grew day by&#13;
d a y like the mountain. T h e darkot&#13;
s h a d o w s grew deeper, the lighter blend&#13;
ed more perfectly with them or t i c&#13;
w h i l e snow. Every morning the aiii-1&#13;
noticed some beauty that had nppeare,1&#13;
c o m m o n p l a c e to her the night before&#13;
ami finally the whole a s s u m e d a g r a a&#13;
d e u r which delighted a n d surprised her.&#13;
B u t she w a s now p a i n t i n g every day&#13;
with the stranger beside her. T h e ' '&#13;
w a s s o m e t h i n g in Ids dark, d r e a m ;&#13;
eyes, his intellectual brow, his pie;,&#13;
a n t voice, his kindly s y m p a t h y , Mm'&#13;
c h a r m e d her. Then c a m e a revehiiion.&#13;
Shi1 w a s p a i n t i n g under (lie inspiration&#13;
of love.&#13;
T h e picture was finished. T h e girl&#13;
needed money, and t h e s t r a n g e r ad&#13;
vised her to tako it to P a r i s and offer&#13;
ft for sale. She determined to do so,&#13;
and Ihe s t r a n g e r promised to meet; be"&#13;
t h e r e and, if possible, assist her in dis&#13;
posing' of it. They mot one morning&#13;
in an a r t store where the picture ha i&#13;
been s e n t before them. T h e r e It s t o o l&#13;
on an easel, and when t h e dealer jolne }&#13;
them he said:&#13;
" A s soon as I looked at t h e canvas&#13;
I pronounced it a D e m o n d . Domond&#13;
h a d a picture h u n g last season in Ihe&#13;
salon, a Mont Pdrme, which Is not&#13;
equal to this. Resides, the style is&#13;
D e m a n d ' s coloring, tone, values, all.&#13;
W h e n I c a m e to look a t the n a m e am1.&#13;
s a w a n o t h e r ' s I w a s s u r p r i s e d .&#13;
T h e girl whoso work had been mitaken&#13;
for lhat. of a successful arlist&#13;
w a s delighted. A color rose to her&#13;
cheek, a light to her eye; a h a p p \&#13;
smile played about her lips.&#13;
" W h a t would the picture be worth&#13;
with D e m o n d ' s n a m e on it'.-" asked her&#13;
friend.&#13;
" T w e n t y thousand francs."&#13;
" A n d with Demnnd's n a m e as collabo&#13;
r a t e rV"&#13;
"Tn that case I would uot give more&#13;
t h a n Id.iino francs for it."&#13;
| On a shelf n e a r by lay a p a l e t t e and&#13;
b r u s h e s . l i e w h o w a s befriending the&#13;
girl took u p n brush and. s t e p p i n g to&#13;
t h e picture, w r o t e u n d e r her n a m e t h a t&#13;
of (}. Demond.&#13;
T h e t a b l e a u t h a t ensued w a s t h a t of&#13;
ene q u i e s c e n t figure and t w o who were&#13;
Astonished. The girl's face especially&#13;
Bhowed wonder, but a t a look from her&#13;
companion she refrained from speaking,&#13;
T1 '" ^.on,, m-ftnlanr D e m o n d stood bem&#13;
a c h a n d adds s t r o n g ! h fo the ivhole&#13;
body,. Makes rich, p u r e blood. 1\0-&#13;
dol c o n f o r m s to the X i t i o u a l P u r e&#13;
Food ami D r u g L a w .&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Droggiat.&#13;
sir. I:a&#13;
srivbr' a * : ;• '•'• • ..,&#13;
• That's j&#13;
repded •'' ' i j i i&#13;
in, X dii i ,- ,1 1-. a ov '• "&#13;
" ' f e l l it by i,.y w i v&#13;
e x p l a i n e d d i e b a r b e r .&#13;
W h a t t h e v ' d c a i l I I U I L&#13;
Him Kaccn.si",&#13;
A.—I say. old m a n , do *ae a f a v o r&#13;
a n d lend me $5. R---Sorry, b u t it's&#13;
quite Impossible. A. - Impijijsrblo?&#13;
And you are such a w e a l t h y m a n ? B.&#13;
—I k n o w , but I c a n ' t p a r t with my&#13;
money. It is a k e e p s a k e from m y father.—&#13;
Salon-VYitzblntt of Vienna.&#13;
Yes, Indeed.&#13;
A man may h a v e a h e a r t big e n o u g h&#13;
to love t w o w o m e n at one lime, but lie&#13;
aught lo h a v e more bead. S m a r t Set.&#13;
A d w a r f sees f a r t h e r t h a n U » g i a n t&#13;
wh l i e h i s t h e g i a n t s s&#13;
mount oti,-"{:Oler1dge.&#13;
!•; a n d h a m :&#13;
" Y o u a n d 1&#13;
n e I i c 11:, • o i a&#13;
And the electricity in my linger.- lake&#13;
t h e pain out of .\ our head. Hut I go&#13;
it. T h a i ' s why 1 know. Mv h a n d s a n&#13;
a c h i n g&#13;
C U s l o i i i t&#13;
h a \ e io&#13;
a r m s a,&#13;
gone,"&#13;
now. | don'i&#13;
•r l i k e v , e i ! , 1&#13;
: • o o i| 1 ( i f ! , ! ! - ; :&#13;
• h e f o r ;i h a l f !&#13;
N e w \ o r k F o r&#13;
ol&#13;
o u t&#13;
. c s, ' .&#13;
o ,. ; | '&#13;
1 ,&#13;
. t I&#13;
i . 1&#13;
v\\&#13;
T V&#13;
- i t is ,il most&#13;
on th.it soine-&#13;
-. o u r Kidneys.&#13;
in (pently&#13;
",o ire sys-&#13;
HII ! B l a d d e r&#13;
on weak&#13;
mJJ.HIMi I'"' ° ' the&#13;
'• i r\ t r c u b l e s .&#13;
Sigler, D r u g g i s t .&#13;
W-WAH Tm:f. ICWK iipiTrtfn&#13;
T h e R H i Ah\e l n &lt; i i , i t \&#13;
B L O O D P U R I F I E R&#13;
I am for MEM,&#13;
WOMEN and&#13;
Instant relief to sufferers of&#13;
Rheumatism,Kidney Trouble,&#13;
Stomach Disorders.&#13;
Get a bottle to-day. Is purely a vegetable c o m p o u n d . Mild&#13;
in effect but one the most effectual remedies known for restoring&#13;
the entire sysiom. It is derived from nature, not&#13;
compound of drugs and chemicals that only allay the pain,&#13;
b u t cures to stay cured after all so-called " s c i e n t i f i c " treatm&#13;
e n t s have failed.&#13;
For sale by druggists. Send for circulars. Address,&#13;
INDIAN MEDICINE CO„, Milford, Ohio.&#13;
and add 10 Years&#13;
Buy a "HYGEIA" to Your Life,&#13;
The best Soring Bet/ on&#13;
Earth* Perfectly Noiseless.&#13;
For both Wood and&#13;
Iron Bedsteads.&#13;
Ninety per cent, of the Spring Beds made are not tit to sleep on.&#13;
Pay just a little more and get a " HYGEIA," which is perfection In&#13;
itself. Guaranteed for ten years. If your dealer does not handle the&#13;
Hygeia write direct to us giving his address.&#13;
ENTERPRISE BED CO., Mfrs., Hammond, Indiana.&#13;
K&lt;Z&#13;
""pr&#13;
S*^ More Money for Eggs u n d e r most a n y conditions. There Is a lot of m o n e y to be made&#13;
in the et;g business if conditions are right. T h e r e is no reason&#13;
why F a r m e r * and P o u l t r y U n l s e r a should not make just as good&#13;
profits on their i n v e s t m e n t s as any other line of business, and it is&#13;
possible for them to do so. The price of ep£S during the winter&#13;
months is double- and sometimes more than double that paid&#13;
during the s u m m e r months. The only way t o t a k e advantage of this advance is&#13;
to hold s u m m e r e££s for winter prices. T h a t fresh f££B C a n l l c k e p t from six to&#13;
nine months or more has been proven b y careful testing with&#13;
HAGER'S EGG PRESERVATIVE&#13;
and anyone using this Preservative need never sell a dozen eggs for anything but&#13;
the highest market price. Send for Sample ami Circulars !rUtti% yon all e/W/ it.&#13;
)HACER ECC PRESERVING CO., - St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
,-~tmv*&#13;
;&gt;r&#13;
-^'"T.'t^^B 1 ^ ^ 4 ^&#13;
. - ( • ' •&#13;
FAMILY DISPUTES.&#13;
* . » ^.. - - «.. .' s • • I&#13;
The Clear Muathplece.&#13;
• rid) Russian bunker had been discovered&#13;
murdered iu his bouse in St.&#13;
Petersburg, s a y s u writer in the Green Weak&#13;
Kidneys ^ ¾ ^ V&#13;
.:'..•'.&#13;
:».'/.«*.:&#13;
Good&#13;
Coffee&#13;
How Thoy Were Once Bottled by Fair B a g . There wa« uu clew, but In the&#13;
Fight in Court ; room there w a s found a cigar mouth&#13;
In tome parta o f Germany In d a y s &gt; piece containing part of a ci^ar of such&#13;
t o n e by when the relations of husband a n expensive kind that it w a s sui&gt;-&#13;
and wife became strained, ao t o si&gt;eak posed t h e banker himself bad beeu&#13;
—in other words, when each returning smoking it Just before the crime had&#13;
day gave birth to new squabbles and been committed. On close exaxuiuu&#13;
the man's hand w a s a s ready as the Hon the mouthpiece w a s found to inwoman's&#13;
tongue—the couple were worn away by t h e teeth of its owner. __&#13;
Brought before the magistrate, who, but t h e dead man's teeth did not lit ooctrolhn* nerves. To doctor the Kidne alone,&#13;
after listening to recriminations, or- j the indentation. The servants wore lafutlle. It Is a waste of time, and of i aey as&#13;
j dered them to prepare for t h e ordeal! one by one examined, and it w a s then well.&#13;
i by battle. The man w a s placed In a ! found that the hollows of the mouth I ! y°u r b »e k u('h,'s o r l s W i a k ' i f t h e u r i x *&#13;
i cask, which w a s then nearly lilled with ! piece compared exactly to the forma ^ 1 ^ 1 o r i ! i , l i i r k l 'I u l a t •"»«• ifyoulmvo«mptomi&#13;
1 sand, so that he w a s covered up to the Hon of the front teeth of the cook, to of Bright3or«tiier d . : : , ^ u « o r d*.,Verou* idd-&#13;
. , , . . . ^ , , aey disease, try Dr. Shoops Restorative a mouth—&#13;
Whom no suspicion had been attached. ^ b U j t b o r r^uld-and , o what It can and will&#13;
B e afterward confessed to the murder. *o lor you. Druggist recommend and will&#13;
Weak Kldnen. surely point to weak kidney&#13;
Nervut. The Klduen, Uke the Heart, and tfee&#13;
Stomachy flad their wesknew, not in tbe etgae)&#13;
tteelf, bat In the nerves that control and raids&#13;
and •fcreoathen them. Dr. Shoop's Restorative Is&#13;
s medleme specifically prepared to reach these&#13;
XXXX Coffee Chums at work&#13;
Try One Cup of This Coffee&#13;
You won't pay any more for Mc-&#13;
Laughlin XXXX Coffee, but you'll get&#13;
the very best grade of coffee at a reasonable&#13;
price, because McLaughlin's XXXX&#13;
Coffee is always clean — always freshalways&#13;
good—always the same quality&#13;
— in fact, the Standard Coffee.&#13;
Sold in full 16-oz. packages.&#13;
The handy air-tight package and the glazing&#13;
of pure sugar keeps this coffee clean and&#13;
fresh, protected from dust, dirt and foul odors.&#13;
Each package is one pound full weight.&#13;
McLaughlin's XXXX Coffee is Sold by&#13;
E . IVf lll-plly&#13;
~W~ W. B a r n a r d&#13;
M. fWL. Wiili»ton Ac C o&#13;
wah^a^Iii Home towns a pit w a s kept&#13;
h a n ^ P f o r the purpose, just a s t h e&#13;
ducking fctool w a s kept ou Hankslde,&#13;
opposite St. Paul's. When he w a s&#13;
thus half burled, the m:ui received a&#13;
short stick for his ri^lit hand, while, , , ,&#13;
his left hand w a s tied up across his j Salvo due., not merely Lea! ou tae a r -&#13;
chest. H e w a s thus one armed audi face; it peuatiatas tb« ijores and&#13;
D e W i t t ^ Carboiizr'd Witch Hazel&#13;
could only deliver his blows if his opponent&#13;
came near enough.&#13;
The lady put o n a linen garment, the&#13;
right sleeve of which w a s lengthened.&#13;
In the end w a s tied up a stone. T h e&#13;
sleeve projected about twelve Inches&#13;
beyond her hand. She had thus a formidable&#13;
weapon, but in order to use It&#13;
she had to get close to her enemy.&#13;
Now, observe the situation and the&#13;
I'hances. If she succeeded In bringing&#13;
the stone down upon her husband's&#13;
head, s h e might knock him senseless;&#13;
she might even brain him, but in order&#13;
to do so s h e would expose herself to&#13;
the full blow of his stick. The battle&#13;
might, in fact, be settled by a single&#13;
assault. But mark t h e craftiness of&#13;
man. It w a s better to make a woman&#13;
ridiculous than to knock her silly. T h e&#13;
promptly r e v i v e s pain, caused by&#13;
boils, burns, scalds, cuts and skin diseases,&#13;
i t is ttapecially good tor pil«&gt;-.&#13;
Beware of imitations.&#13;
Sold by F . A . Slgler, D r u g g i s t&#13;
Dr. Shoop's&#13;
Restorative&#13;
"ALL DEALERS."&#13;
eVUUtUMD KVK*Y THUJUSDA* MOKNiKU U\&#13;
F R A N K L.. A N D R E W S So C O "&#13;
tDITOHb AND PHOPHItTOH*.&#13;
duDactiption Price $1 in Advance.&#13;
Baterea tit the Postoince at Plnckney, Michi^ai&#13;
as second-clabB matter&#13;
Advertising rates made known on application.&#13;
Health and Waalth.&#13;
I n j u r e d h e a l t h t o t h e a v e r a g e m a n m e a n s&#13;
^reitt w e a l t h .&#13;
DR. JOHNSON'S&#13;
AFTER DINNER PILL&#13;
INSURES MMLTK W i l l . ummxitmmz&#13;
ir&gt;&#13;
BuBliiebt; Cards, $4.01) per year.&#13;
Peath and marriage notices published free.&#13;
Announcements of entertainments may be pale&#13;
husbnnd. tliorcfore, if lifjwas a philos-j IOr, if desireik by i&gt;r renting the otlice with tick&#13;
opher, did not try to hit his win He etB of admitiBTon. In case ticket* are not bruuj/J t&#13;
warded hor blows with his stick. lit&#13;
tried to catch the sleeve upon his stick&#13;
to the ollke, regular rates willbechar^t ci.&#13;
All laatter in local notlcecolumn wiliae clK.rhO&#13;
i ed atocentbyer line ur fraction thereof, for each&#13;
Then llie stone flew round and round, j insertion. Where no tlineiespecified,ait notices&#13;
and the lady was caught. She could not&#13;
move, and the Victorious&#13;
(ha&#13;
his cask. -London ilueon&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, anc&#13;
will he charged for accordingly, £J»7~All change*&#13;
husband ! •! advertisements MUST reach this office ai earlv&#13;
w&#13;
:vd h e r . u n w i l l i n g , h e a d first i n t o | M T U M D A T morning to insure an insertion th=.&#13;
" same week.&#13;
JOS PSIJVIJTJVG/&#13;
In all its branches, a specialty. We haveallkinu-&#13;
Stomach&#13;
and the latest atylea 01 Type, etc., which enabltH&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such as Bookei „&#13;
I'ampiets.l'oaters, Programmes, Bill Heads,Note • i&#13;
Ueautj, Statements, Cards, Auction Bills, etc.,in '&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices a*&#13;
low a» ^oou work can be aone.&#13;
A L L B I L L S P A Y A B L E F I B S T OK E V'KHY M O N T H .&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
copyrights, rtw., | N A L i , C O U N T N l M .&#13;
Bttshirss direct with WctsMiifion smvtt Sim&#13;
motif y and often the f&lt;it&lt;nt.&#13;
Patent and infringement Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Writ* or pomu to us lit&#13;
0S3 Nlath fltnet, opp. United States Patent Otte*&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , D. C CASNOW&#13;
A ' l /' ..;&#13;
" \ \ ' e : i . v ••&#13;
leai-ne&lt;l {••-:•.&#13;
" i ' e s " L.I... i&#13;
"Words of on&#13;
"N(it yi'i. si:-." -&#13;
cau re.ul words o\'&#13;
left r \ n v "&#13;
A ! • ! . . . • •&#13;
Ih»bl ; S Vt\ !•&lt; &lt;&#13;
l i r e \ ni I.Mi'iii :••, ',&#13;
I ' m l c a i ' l i i l i ' \ v h : . l ;&#13;
e v e r s l a r i i n ' i n .&#13;
D e m o c r a t .&#13;
M»«ppetitft, IOM of strength,&#13;
tiloadaohd, constipation, bad&#13;
«1 datthly, tour risings, and c a t a n i I&#13;
ts* atomaoh am all due to indigoaTttoa. i&#13;
raMevat indlrMtton. This newdlaoov^ \ P^KMUSNT&#13;
PltLfTKEB&#13;
THE VILLAGF DIRECTORY&#13;
« 7 repress nts tha natural Juices of dffea*&#13;
ttan as they exist in a healthy stomada,&#13;
;. iiu-il . c ; / :&#13;
M Vr-^.tdi •&#13;
• , . ' t t c r ^&#13;
I I ' . ! I I !Oi&#13;
t h&#13;
»mblned with the greatest known&#13;
and reconstruotlve properties. Kodoi for&#13;
dyspepsia does not only relieve indigeatJo*&#13;
and dyspepsia, but ms famous remedy&#13;
kelps all stomach troubles by oleaneiiic&#13;
purifying, sweetealDg and strengthealif&#13;
the muoous membranes lining the stomach.&#13;
Mr. S. S. BaM, at lUrrantwood, W. Va.,3ayaT— i&#13;
I wa» troubled with soar atomach for twenty yaara, j&#13;
Kodol cured rae and w are now usine h in ms%&#13;
fcrbatjy," 1&#13;
Kodol Digests W h a t Y o n E a t&#13;
Bottles only. Rallevaa indigestion, aocr atooaass^ I&#13;
belchine of pas, etc.&#13;
•&gt;r«par«d by E. O. Da WITT &amp; OO., O H I O A O a&#13;
8 0 l d b y F . A . S l g l e r , D r u g g i s t . j a u u d a y moyuxnj; at l u ^ n , a u d every S a n a a )&#13;
« j M.. « . . U « I Q I I ^ ^ 8 6 ^ evening at i UNI o ' c l o c k , l ' r a y e r lueetiua i h u r « -&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
J . C. Dunn&#13;
S. r). Teeple. Ed. F a r u u m .&#13;
J a m e d S m i t h , J a m e s Hoc lie.&#13;
W. A. M x o u r . V. V a u W I u n I e .&#13;
L'LBiiii Kuger (Jarr&#13;
T H E A S U H E M .', A. Cadwell&#13;
AuaEssou 1». W . M u r t a&#13;
&gt;TUEET C'oM.His.-iuNti; -M. Lavey&#13;
tl^ALi'n O f n c E H U r . l l . K . S i y l e r&#13;
AxTviiiNEY W, A. (Jarr&#13;
'lAiuaiALL CKus. Eldert&#13;
._ bytae&#13;
tar aw twenty years in&#13;
•ettye practice, and ia&#13;
conceded by all having&#13;
ujed it to be the best&#13;
Little Stomach Pill&#13;
on t h e market. I t is a&#13;
PREVENTATIVE of&#13;
Sick Headache,&#13;
Dyspepsia, Dizziness,&#13;
Heartburn,&#13;
B a d T a s t e i n&#13;
M o u t h , Coated&#13;
Tongue, Loss of&#13;
Appetite&#13;
and all other m o r b i d&#13;
conditions arisinir, from&#13;
a disordered .*:i"?]ach.&#13;
P R E V E N T I O N&#13;
is t h e o r d e r of t i n s d a y a n d :*.?e. as= if i1-: m u c h&#13;
r.inre scientiiic t o p r e v e n t a di.;en&gt;c(l c,°"l'&gt;'-&#13;
tion t h a n t o c u r e it. Y o u c a n s e c u r e t h i s&#13;
i.ITTI.E P I L L of ANY FIRST-CLASS DRUGGIST&#13;
w h o will bo plen.-H'd t™ • f r v e y o n . 35 doses for&#13;
2-5 c e n t s . Do^i't t a k e s o m e o t h e r ' ' j u s t a s&#13;
tfnod '' for thi'ro i -i)"i a n y othi-r t h a t will&#13;
please von at all a t ; c r t r y i n g t h i s o n e .&#13;
L. L. JOHNSON, M. D. Prop.&#13;
Atlanta, Georgia.&#13;
VALVELESS AUTOMATIC&#13;
Stock Fountain&#13;
PAYS FOR ITSELF THE FIRST YEAR.&#13;
CHURCHES.&#13;
Vfl E i ' i i U D i s T K l ' L S C O i ' A L L T i U H C t i .&#13;
i l l l£ev. 1). I', i.utleioun p a s t o r , s e r v i c e s ev»r&gt;&#13;
\&gt; i- * i « ' E rislh EASE ALL PARTICLES OF&#13;
D I R T AND&#13;
CREASE&#13;
Mort{ruj,'&lt;» Sal*1&#13;
\VIIKI;I: \t* default hu* bt'eiMnaiU' in flu' condiday&#13;
e v o u i n ^ e . S u n d a y ncUiiol at close of n i o r :&#13;
i n ^ b e r v i c e . .Mi.-c- MA'KV V A N F L K K T , S U J J I .&#13;
=01^1¾&#13;
m VvS&#13;
IV "'IftCAUSt^KS rut&#13;
T*ADB UA*K&#13;
and leave Inn skin soft nnd&#13;
white. SupeMor t-&gt; aii ctr.^r&#13;
;oaps. The L iborers' Fn^tscl.&#13;
o M; zh.ir zs r a r m c i s ,&#13;
Painters, P'mirirs. Piumtic;s.&#13;
Miners and ail ':?.a'lro.id Men.&#13;
A trial *'illconvlnc3yo;.'-!^r^.&gt; no Dtharsoap like u. 2 s i z e s 5 ' and 10^&#13;
^ . , ^ - ^ . , ^ d by dOW * 3 0 . 4 S * CONI»»A^Y, ^ u u n g t o i low:^&#13;
tion«..l a r e r t a i n inortRii^i, wheri'ln- t h e power Ljuntiay i i i o r a i a ^ »llD:3U a n d c f . r y s u n , : . . ;&#13;
of PahMhoiviu has lun'oino onorative, madf hv evening at 7 ;uc o ' c l o c k . P r a y e r i.ie«Hu^ i u,., -&#13;
• ' day eveniD^a. S u n d a y s c h o o l at . ioee oi m o r a&#13;
J lli'-NKY T H I K B o l . T ami lii^ wifo (WKOF.rNK i n * s e r v i c e . Percy Swartliout, M ; p t „ .Mocoo&#13;
j I'HIIOIUII.T, nf Doorilolti, Li vins.'fton County, I 'I'eej.le Sec.&#13;
j Michigan, to S K I . S O N U M I i of tin- Patne place | ^ T &gt; M A U V &gt; , J A n i u i j [ u C H U K 0 1 I .&#13;
i ;ifore?aifl; licuri'-j,' duti- Marrh '^iili, A. !&gt;. 1 * ' , | O u e v . M. J . C o m m e r i o r d , 1'astor. S e r v i c e .&#13;
h i ' J recorded iu ttu' oflkr of rhi- K\':'iBfor rt\?**TS S u n d a y . L o w m&amp;sfl a t TiiWo clock&#13;
&lt; Hivd- for Livingston I'ounly, Alichi^an, in Liber&#13;
I ,V2 of Moi'ldRcs at pf)^&gt; 501 tlu'reof on March Mth J&#13;
A. I), lSSv' which aaiii nioi trtrtgc was duly nssim ed I&#13;
l»y NI-.L&gt;ON LAMR o n the 10th dny of August, j&#13;
, ISSXi to fr'LNKY TU11CROLT .II!. which a?si^n- !&#13;
! iiient wa« recorded in t h e I?e^ister ot DredM nihep&#13;
for thi&gt; County of Livingston o n t lie ICth day o f ] J o h n T u o m a y a n d M. T. Kelly, County D e l e g a t t r&#13;
I August, I Si 6 in Liber s,"&gt; of Morfiigpp at pat:e 47,&#13;
' high" in as 6 with a e r m o n a t "-'JOa. m. C a t e c h i e i .&#13;
t ;J :00 p . ra., v e a p e r s a n . • xliction a t 7:3U p . n:&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
fllhe A. O. H. Society of this place, meet* ever.,&#13;
J.third Sunday intne Fr. Matthew liall.&#13;
PEUCWUSMfL^SSI &gt;&#13;
* • • 1 * m^X^ MJ^^mm^^ T H E GREAT.&#13;
EST OF ALL CEREAL FOODS.&#13;
No fad or uncertain mixture. A Natural FOOD&#13;
LAXATIVE. A whole kernel of Rye to each flake.&#13;
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT or write: us for our t h r e e special&#13;
Offers. A pound package b y mail, postpaid, for 25 cents. It will&#13;
positively cure the most aggravated case of constipation. Write to-day.&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS CEREAL COMPANY,&#13;
H. H. Dept. M I N N E A P O L I S , M I N N .&#13;
Sal/cHor* Wanimd Evmrywimr:&#13;
.'omniQH&#13;
: and hv HKNRY T I I E I P O L T IK. duly a . ^ n e d | ' ^ 0 ^ « ^ Z K ^ ^ T I ^ Y . \&#13;
in C A R O L I N E T H U R o L T on Xovemhfr ' . I ^ f i Mgler. Everyone i n t e r e s t e d in t e m p e r a n c e i s i&#13;
and recorded in tlio Ilepister's oil'iec, o t l h e for coadially invited. M r s . Leal S i l l e r , Pros; M r s . |&#13;
Livinfiston County on the iSth day of May, 1 8 . ^ j ^-Ha D u r f e e . t f e c r e t a r y . _ _ j&#13;
in Liber S"&lt; of 5tort.RiiBe9 at p:i«e Cfi7. And by p Q e f. T . A . a n d B . s o u » i y o f t h i l p l a c e , m e t&#13;
I CAL'OT-INl' T H E I B O L T duly ns&gt;&gt;igned to H E X - j X av^ty t h i r d S a t u r d a y e v e n i n g i n t h e F r . 3 i s i j&#13;
' HV T U E I B O L T J R . on Mnrch 1J, lpr-7 'tnd. record j '^evv H a l l . J o h n Donohue, P r e s i d e n t .&#13;
edi:, the n f f u e o t the Register of Heed, for Liv- j y i G H T l ^ ^ A C C A B i f i K s ;&#13;
, in-Hton County on March 1», 1907 111 l.iher W at ] . I V M e e t every F r i d a y e v e n i n g o n o r b e f o r e full&#13;
. p:i"eiill. A n d whereas she a i n t u . ; ehiim^l f^ j o t t h e moon a t t h e i r u a l l l n t h e S w a r t h o n t bldR&#13;
I be due on said Mrtrtpasre at thl* .into i- the snm of \ Vi»itinK b r o t h e r s a r e c o r d i a l l y i n v t t e d .&#13;
, , , , ^ C H A S . L, t A«rm.LL. h i r k n i E h t Ct&#13;
1 One hundred and eighty do lars» an&gt;. eiuhiy nve&#13;
! cents \S18fl.STi) of principal Hint ii:fpiv?t a n d no | | - ivingeton Lodge, No.70, P A; A . M. Kejrulai&#13;
i Hint «&gt;r proce?din^ h a v i n g been instituted to r&gt;&#13;
cover the debt secured by ?=riiil mort^ace o r any !&#13;
part thereof: j / - v R D E R O V E A S T K K N S T A R m e e t s e a c h m o n t h&#13;
Tlierefore notice i? herohv i^iven that b\- virtue ; \J t h e Friday e v e n i n e following t h e r e g u l a r F .&#13;
ol said power of *ale and in persuatul of t h e \ A A - M - meeting, M R S . N K T T S V A U H H X , W. M.&#13;
ftatues in ^uch case m a d e and presided the said j ~ , ~ ^ R 0 F M O D E K N WOODMEN Heet t h e&#13;
nioftjsatrewlll heforeclo?erl by ealoof :he preratJes | ^ / f l r s t T h u r s d a y e v e n i n g of each M o n t h in t h e&#13;
therein flewribod at puhlic auction to the highest | Maocabea hall. C . L . l i r i m e a V . C.&#13;
bidder at the West front door of the Court U o n . e ! ^ ^ Qfc. T H E M A 0 0 A B E | B S &gt; M e , t e T e f T , g&#13;
in the village of Lowell iu said ( ounty of Livm.-- | j a n d ;ird Saturday of each m o n t h a t a : S 0 p *m.&#13;
No Valves&#13;
or floats t o&#13;
g e t o u t o f&#13;
order&#13;
Automatio&#13;
Never fails to&#13;
work. Doe9&#13;
not overflow.&#13;
No mud or&#13;
tilth. , P u r e&#13;
cool water.&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
T o d o a s&#13;
claimed.&#13;
Big Seller&#13;
Sold on 30 Dmym' Trtmi.&#13;
MONEY BACK I F NOT SATISFIED.&#13;
GEDGE BROS. IRON ROOFING CO.&#13;
Fountain St., Anderson, Ind.&#13;
Lj .. _ . . .&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or before&#13;
thefull of the moon. Kirk VaanaWii nkle. W. M&#13;
mm Y M p M a * • | k | ^ i p • Experience is one of t h e irreiitest factors in air&#13;
b S \ . • 1 1 ¾ 1 1 I U W * • • any walk In life. It i« what given the Farmer, :&#13;
most&#13;
Doctor,&#13;
Merchant aurl Mechanic success. In manvifnrturingr&#13;
It ia an all important element. Wc are carriage&#13;
manufacturers of over twenty-flve years' experience&#13;
and w e claim to know the bnainess from A to Z. We&#13;
will stake our reputation t h a t we make as good work&#13;
fbr t h e money as it ia possible to make. Our two&#13;
leaders a r e our No. 30 Top Buggy at the popnlar&#13;
price of &lt;LV).00 and our No. 60 Top&#13;
Bugjcy at 160.00. Nothing but the best&#13;
go into these jobs in order to make&#13;
them come up to our standard. Write&#13;
for foil ftpecificatlons, cuts and refereneea.&#13;
Do it to-day and nee what we&#13;
can offer yon tor your cash and save&#13;
all dealer profit*. Write at once and&#13;
get onr great offer.&#13;
J. A. HUNCERFORD A SON, Lapeer, Michigan.&#13;
sto:- t h a t heins the place ot boldin&#13;
1 Court for the Tounty of I.n in&lt;_&gt;tor. or. Saturday&#13;
j rhe VMh day of .Inly A. I1. l'.V7 :;t L &gt;', U&gt;ck in t h e&#13;
! (oivr.oonot said day, or so much thereof H,- :c.av&#13;
'i i&gt; r,erer-!»arr to pay t h e principal ar.it ir.re-e-.:&#13;
i due 011 saii; nun tgaRe, t h e A t t o r i u \ :•&gt;»• provided&#13;
j therein and co*t* of -~aid -&gt;ate, of the following&#13;
I I'eseribeil premiiai"*, to wit convaoTi ir,^ twenty&#13;
rod.s Fast of t h e Nnviiwest eortiev • t Section&#13;
t u r n ' y l w o cV^ in to&gt;vnship four : l North of&#13;
h'an&lt;e live ^M Fast Michigan, r n n n i n c t h r n c e ; H. F. S!GL£R M« D&#13;
Soutn ei^ht lods thenco Fast sixty rod.s thence&#13;
North e u h t rorlfl tlieree West to he-miro." m l -&#13;
Ininli:^ three acres o! land.&#13;
H F N K Y T l T l i l K i l . T . J l i , ,&#13;
Atni^nee o f : b e Mortu'afee&#13;
Dated, Howell, April i, I M/.&#13;
W M . I1. VAN\N INKl.lt,&#13;
Attornev for Assignee.&#13;
the e i r e n i t j K. O. T . M. hall. Visiting sisters c o r d i a l l y in&#13;
vited. Lit.v C O N 1 WAY, Lady Com.&#13;
r N l i T H T S ovTUK L O Y A L t i U A R D&#13;
i . b . L. A n d r e w ? 1'. .M, 1&#13;
6 0 YEARS*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
ATENTS&#13;
TRAOK Ma^ct&#13;
COPYRIGHTS A C&#13;
n . ^ ' i " ' * 9or'''- a f-ofrh a n d desert pf on m a y&#13;
? n J ^ . 7 T r;l".' ? " r °»"»'on free wheilier a i&#13;
invent,on ;s ,,;i,h-ii,.y patenrable. f o m m u n l c i .&#13;
»«nt.free. uhtest anenoy for teourfasoatents.&#13;
Patents t.iken through M u n T * CorecSVe&#13;
W f w ' notice, without oharve, in the r e c - T B Scientific flmcrkan. A handaomelT illtmtmled weekly. I,artr©9t oircrlatlou&#13;
vt any &gt;cientlflc Journal. Terms S3 a&#13;
MUNN i Co,36iBro-^&gt;. New York&#13;
Branch Office. rtfe&gt; Y SU WaahtnJton r&gt; 7_&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
C. L. SIGUER M. D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
P h y i t c i a n s and S u r g e o n s . AH calls p r o m p t l y&#13;
attended t o d a y or ni&gt;{ht. Office on Main street&#13;
t'inckney, Mich.&#13;
I av ate ^ C Sweet to Eit&#13;
L a A * C l 3 O A Candy Bowel Lduth&#13;
FRANK L A N D R E W S&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
Uuthrt.&#13;
WITH SEIL&#13;
AT DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
I C I L L T H E C O U C !&#13;
AND CURE THE LUNCal w™ Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery 'ONSU OPTION&#13;
0U6HS and&#13;
rOLDS&#13;
Prkt&#13;
50c 4 | 1 . 0 0&#13;
FrM Trial.&#13;
Guaranteed for a l l T H B O A T a n d&#13;
X U X Q TROTJBLBS, o r K O N X Y&#13;
B A G S .&#13;
SEEDING COMMENCED IN&#13;
* • '&#13;
STERN CANADA.&#13;
The Prospect* for a Lang* Acreage to&#13;
Bo Sown In w h e a t&#13;
• St. Paul, April t\, \Wt'.—Word haa&#13;
fceen received at the ufljce of the&#13;
\Janadiau tfoverument In St. Paul that&#13;
heeding has commenced at various&#13;
sjpolnbs throughout Manitoba, Saskatchewan&#13;
and Alberta.&#13;
The hea,yy snowfall during the past&#13;
winter has left the ground In splendid&#13;
•uape for successful seeding operajtiott*.&#13;
The Ants weather of the past&#13;
few days has taken much of the frost&#13;
Out of the ground and during next&#13;
week there will scarcely be a district&#13;
in which the seeder is not being operated.&#13;
The most optimistic conditions&#13;
exibt and in all districts the farmers&#13;
are busy getting things la shape.&#13;
There will be a very large acreage&#13;
sown In spring wheat, oats and barley.&#13;
At many points throughout the three&#13;
provinces the newcomers are busy unloading&#13;
their stock and effects, worktag&#13;
night and day in order to get on&#13;
.tfieir farms and become active agencies&#13;
In the effort to make the year&#13;
1907 the banner year In grain producing&#13;
iu Western Canada. As compared&#13;
Jrith districts maury* hundred miles&#13;
Centner south than thiah. it will be seen&#13;
Cnat Western Canada ranks amongst&#13;
the first in the hue of seeding opera-&#13;
Hfffll fnfi Utfi present year. It is safe&#13;
to say that farmers who get in their&#13;
crap before the 20th or 24th of May,&#13;
will receive magnificent returns. A&#13;
number of those coming in this ppring,&#13;
whe had not their land prepared last&#13;
fal^ will break up enough land to get&#13;
in % crop of oats and barley and probably&#13;
some' flar. This, together with&#13;
t£e vegetables they will plant, will&#13;
give them ample food for themselves&#13;
sott* stock during the coming summer&#13;
and winter. These early seeding operations&#13;
are not confined to one district,&#13;
but are spread over a country 900&#13;
mlMs long by 400 miles in width.&#13;
The agents of t*e Canadian Government,&#13;
located at different points&#13;
throughout the United States, are&#13;
busy giving information regarding the&#13;
many new districts that are being&#13;
made available for settlers. Low railway&#13;
rates, information and literaturef&#13;
HE HAD 1 0 SWEAR&#13;
. • - , . v • - - I K&#13;
OWLV WAY D W f c ) £ ' C 0 U L 9 QET&#13;
H O R S E S t p j w O V E .&#13;
ftlahop ClarWion, in View of the 8eriouenea*&#13;
of the Situation, Granted&#13;
a Dispensation for That&#13;
One Time.&#13;
FIRST TO CROM PACIFIC,&#13;
Kthelbert Talbot, new bishop of&#13;
central Pennsylvania, and for years&#13;
the bieboy. of .Wyoming, and Idaho in&#13;
the early days of that region, tells the&#13;
following:&#13;
it both pleased and amused hln^ to&#13;
notice that the stage driven—a class&#13;
accustomed to the use of free profanity—&#13;
were wont to be respectful gn4&#13;
clean-spoken In his present*, and tjhat&#13;
when one by chance let slip an oath&#13;
he followed ft by profuse apologies;&#13;
and he gives an illustrative anecdote&#13;
from the experiences of Bishop Clarksoa&#13;
on the nJaios of Nebraska.&#13;
"It s«em* Diat on one.occasion the&#13;
bishop was due to preach at a certain&#13;
town on the prairies of Nebraska.;, It&#13;
was in the spring, and the mad Was&#13;
up to the hubs in places. Already it&#13;
was growing dartf. and the lights of&#13;
the village which the bishop was trying&#13;
to reach seemed still a long way&#13;
off. He became a little nervous lest&#13;
he should be late.jfor his, appointment.&#13;
Just then they encountered a mud&#13;
hole and the stage coach stack fast.&#13;
The driver laid on the lash; but In&#13;
valnt the horsea would not move. The&#13;
bishop was on the box with the driver,&#13;
who was getting desperate. Uoable to&#13;
stand it longer, he turned to thj$ bishop,&#13;
and said: ""' 1( ***•&#13;
" 'Do you see those) wheelers looking&#13;
back at me?'&#13;
' "'Yes, rtarry. ^'hat does' • that&#13;
mean?" . w/ . ?..&#13;
" 'Bishop, you know^ I fyave friways&#13;
tried to treat yoiji jight, .and I Respect&#13;
ymirtHKb. Bur dtf you sa$ yoa want&#13;
to Dr****:in that there tc%fa to-n^ght?'&#13;
V*'Of course I do, Jtlarry! Why don't&#13;
jroowfcdp your horses?' 1(&gt; *'&#13;
,,!"WWp 'em. bishop! Ain't t&gt; been&#13;
a-wWppin' of 'em my levlel best?,&#13;
Side-Wheel Steamer Aroused Much&#13;
Interest In Japan.&#13;
MI saw the first steamship flying the&#13;
American flag that ever crossed t£e&#13;
Pacific ocean enter tJhe harbcr of&#13;
JJongkonaV* «*l&lt;| fterierlck R. Ster-&#13;
Hag, a merchant of Hongkong.. ,. t . .&#13;
"That vessel was the Colorado, a»d&#13;
it landed in Honr^ong i s 1869. It was&#13;
the first day of -auary, -«*d tilers was&#13;
a big crowd of people of all nationalities&#13;
to see her. Being a side-wheeler&#13;
of the old-fashioned type, she was a&#13;
curiosity. At the request of Isaac J.&#13;
Allen, the American consul general,&#13;
the ship gave an excursion aronnd the&#13;
island on which thectty is situated, I&#13;
was among the 1,*W on board. It&#13;
was.* gala day. Whistles blew, people&#13;
shouted, SAd numerous small sailing&#13;
boats and tugs escorted us.&#13;
"As I remember now, the vessel belonged&#13;
to the Pacific Mail Line and&#13;
sailed from Ban Ftancisco. She made&#13;
toe trip of 8.000 miles in 30 days, and&#13;
when she arrived was in perfect trim&#13;
and good order. Everybody realised&#13;
that it means the beginning of the&#13;
great development of the. Pacific."&#13;
INDIANA PEOPLE IN&#13;
CANADA.&#13;
" ' I ' M * '"'&#13;
WESTERN&#13;
What Shall Ws Do?—I've Got to&#13;
Graaafiee. '&#13;
lulld&#13;
„ - _ _. , ^ ^ Do&#13;
y o ^ s a y that you nrttst '^each 'there&#13;
, *o*lffct?\ • V .^1&#13;
are giVen on application to the agent, J " 'Qjr course I must/, ^V .ft&#13;
whose name appears In advertlsemeat '"Well, bishop, I ask W j u s t once&#13;
elsewhere i» this oafcer. Jf8*V*e% these horees art'used to m&gt;&#13;
IT WOULD BE&#13;
I ! , I •&#13;
SIMPLE.&#13;
Formalities Cdirtpfted with,&#13;
•«, from Hotsi ynAI Easy.&#13;
Escape&#13;
/ In MW^^W'Hitito-Wd&#13;
ame it wa» th« yractico of a certain&#13;
iwell racfwtf'autlior to wander up and&#13;
Uowifefjfe land peeking what he might&#13;
• d o v o y ^ tljj way^o* suggestion and&#13;
' locaj^colpr,.. Ja^Uiis, way he had drifted"&#13;
down into ArftannaB, "roaghlng it,"&#13;
i knd not, as^Wft-cxpresseSi It, presenting&#13;
an appearaace't;alouiated to inspire a&#13;
ho&amp;l proprietor-with unlimited confl-&#13;
Vlence.&#13;
; The only hotel in the y3»wn, a frame&#13;
structure, aeemed to have been built&#13;
upoa the theory that them was plenty&#13;
of room straight up, but that&gt; ground&#13;
had to be bought, and the wanderer&#13;
my&#13;
style of. talkin' U&gt; 'em. ^know/vft's a&#13;
bad habit, and nkifcdsrKlt^-wrotJt, but&#13;
will you please give^ine^a SliWensatlon&#13;
Just this one time? If^dtTwill,&#13;
I'll get you there or bust, w f i i t do&#13;
PUT RELIGIOUS DUTY SECOND.&#13;
Stern Laws ef lysines* Come First,&#13;
Says Austrian Court.&#13;
Aa Interesting case at law, which&#13;
centered on the observance of an old&#13;
Jewish custom, was decided in Vienna&#13;
recently. A merchant, says the American&#13;
Israelite, discharged a clerk on account&#13;
of neglect ot duty. Among the&#13;
charges against him was that he came&#13;
to the store late In the morning because&#13;
he attended service at the1 synagfjiue&#13;
in order to Bay Kaddlsh-— the&#13;
prayer for the dead—for his father.&#13;
The clerk argued that It was his privilege&#13;
and his duty to say the prayer for&#13;
his departed father, while the merchant,&#13;
who was also a religions mat,&#13;
maintained that "if Moses had known&#13;
that a man had to pay 8,000 gulden a&#13;
year rent he would have made different&#13;
laws." The judge would not allow&#13;
such an argument, but decided in favor&#13;
of the merchant, "because the&#13;
daily attendance at the synagogue&#13;
could not be considered the right of&#13;
the clerk without the consent of the&#13;
employer/&#13;
you say bishopl'&#13;
' ^Th'e-Wiop fel&#13;
) ( . i&#13;
op felt the caSe«tarfce extreme.&#13;
"'Well, Harry, I suppO^eTW have&#13;
to. Fire away this one titnV .^&#13;
"Harry ripped out an daA^aneVihe&#13;
horses got down on their ^awntjhes,&#13;
cleared the mud hole, and landed the&#13;
bishap in town just in time ,to keejp&#13;
Ws appointment.—Harper's Weekly.&#13;
.was shown to a room on the&#13;
floor, reached through many narrow&#13;
and winding passages From the one&#13;
•window it was a HtfAlgtg drop to the&#13;
jgrourid.&#13;
0 "Bay, how would I get out of this&#13;
place in case of fire?" ^he asked the&#13;
landlord, who had brought up his&#13;
grip.&#13;
The other eyed him coldly.&#13;
"Wall," he drawled, "all yo* would&#13;
have to do would be to show ther&#13;
night watchman—the one with ther&#13;
shotgun—a receipted bill foh yo'&#13;
board an' lodgln', an' get him to tie up&#13;
ther bulldog."—Harper's Weekly.&#13;
FAMILY'S SKIN TROUBLES.&#13;
Most Nearly Perfect .Vacuum.&#13;
It was Prof. Dewar's achievement&#13;
in liquefying hydrogen that led to the&#13;
discovery of an easy method of obtaining&#13;
an almost perfect vacuum,&#13;
third \ and that in a single minute.&#13;
When a glass tube filled with air&#13;
and closed at one end ban its open&#13;
end dipped into a cup of liquid hydrogen,&#13;
the iottfirs* cold coaaenier&#13;
the air into a kind of snow, that settles&#13;
to tfce beUosii ft, then, the upper&#13;
part of the tube, from which the solidified&#13;
air aaa Jatyen,- is removed by&#13;
heating antt* cooflrfV ft o»-1t becoriiea&#13;
a vacuum chamber so free from air&#13;
that it is difficult to force an electric&#13;
current through it.&#13;
A H a h Storjfj&#13;
T r o u t protection! Nonsense','' said&#13;
a gunnftf vdt,'Jaggf emlnepce. "Trout&#13;
are amply &lt;aele&gt;&gt;to protect- themselves.&#13;
Look at their depredations among&#13;
ducky, for example, and you will agree&#13;
with me that It's the birds that need&#13;
protection. It's a comnfcqp thing lor s&#13;
trout to Jump from the water, seise a&#13;
duck by the neck, drag the unfortunate&#13;
fowl into the depths sufficient ' to&#13;
leave its feet sticking in the air, where&#13;
It can get no purchase upon the universe,&#13;
and thus drown it: Then the&#13;
trodt picks the feathers from the bird,&#13;
eats it at its leisure and swims away&#13;
out of the Jurisdiction of the courts.&#13;
Are there any fishermen? None? Too&#13;
bad. Thli would be a match for one&#13;
of their fish stories.'*&#13;
Justified.&#13;
"You are charged with having&#13;
knocked your wife down, blacking&#13;
, her eyes and . loosening ft wo of &amp;«r&#13;
teeth. Have you anything to say for&#13;
yourself?" '\^&#13;
"She had it comin' to heipyerifeonor."&#13;
"What did she do or say that could&#13;
in any way Justify such treatment on&#13;
your part?"&#13;
"She said I didn't love her no more.'&#13;
—Houston Post.&#13;
Eczema, Heat Rash, and Scalp Affections&#13;
Afflict Different Members,&#13;
But Cuticura Cures Them.&#13;
! "My wife had eezortia for five or six&#13;
years. It was on her face and would&#13;
come and KO. We thought, we would&#13;
give the Cuticurn, Remedies a trial. We&#13;
41 d so and she han never had a. sign of&#13;
eczema for four years. I myself used&#13;
Cuticura Soat&gt; and Cuticura Ointment&#13;
gome time ae;r&gt; for falling hair. I now&#13;
have a very heavy head of hair. We&#13;
used Cuticura Remedies for our baby,&#13;
who was nearly bald when young. She&#13;
Thas very nice hair now. She is very&#13;
fleshy, and we had so much trouble&#13;
with heat that we would bathe her&#13;
"With Cuticura Soap and then apply&#13;
Cuticura Ointment, it. would dry the&#13;
lleat up ao much quicker than anything&#13;
elao. Mr. H. R Springmire, 323&#13;
So. Capitol Street, Iowa City.'Ia., July&#13;
18, 1905, and Sept. 16. 1906."&#13;
A Strong Appeal.&#13;
Almost modern is the Persian story&#13;
of the man whose disagreeaule voice&#13;
in reciting his prayers in the mosque&#13;
was annoying to everyone. One day&#13;
some one asked him how much he was&#13;
pa d for reciting. "Paid!" he. replied.&#13;
"I am not paid. I recite for the sake&#13;
of Allah!" "Then," replied the other,&#13;
"for Allah's sake don't!"&#13;
FRIENDS HELP&#13;
Poet*' Themes.&#13;
The cyntca of oar time hav« whitewashed&#13;
many of the vices. Poets like&#13;
the earlier Swiuburne practically&#13;
praised lust a&amp; an expression of the&#13;
Jove of life. Mr. Rurfyard Kipling&#13;
practically praised cruelty as an expression&#13;
of the love of' life. Poets&#13;
like Mr. Henley and Mr. John Davidson&#13;
have practically praised drnnkehness,&#13;
or violence, or obscenity as expressions&#13;
of the love of life.—C. K.&#13;
Chesterton in London Times.&#13;
Breaking It to Him Tactfully.&#13;
"George." she said, when her hubby&#13;
returned from the office. "I'm afraid&#13;
baby muHt h.ive nwallowed some&#13;
money.' *•&#13;
"(Aood gracious'" he cried, "don't&#13;
you know whether hf: did or not?"&#13;
'No. but. it'w the only way I can account&#13;
for the disappearance of the&#13;
weekly allowance &gt;MI fc&gt;r«i&gt;t to give&#13;
mo this morning."&#13;
Then tthe gctf. It—twiMi a little confidence&#13;
fund addition.&#13;
Confusion of John.&#13;
Jack, the Giant Killer, had successfully&#13;
got to bed by means of his invisible&#13;
coat. "That's all very well,"&#13;
remarked his wife coldly the next&#13;
morning, "but why did you leave your&#13;
seven league boots on the stairs?"&#13;
Thus we learn that even magic will&#13;
not avail poor man on lodge nights.&#13;
Deep Deaert Sand.&#13;
The sand of Sahara averages 30"&#13;
fe+'f in depth, but in some places it&#13;
haa bce-n found 300 feet below ttie surfaces&#13;
"» -• »&#13;
t t Paul Park Incident&#13;
"After drinking coffee for breakfast&#13;
I always felt languid and dull, hiving&#13;
no ambition to get to my morning&#13;
duties. Then in about an hour or so a&#13;
weak, nervous derangement of the&#13;
heart and stomach would come over&#13;
me with such force I would frequently&#13;
have to lie down.&#13;
"At other times I had severe headaches;&#13;
stomach finally became sheeted&#13;
and digestion so impaired'that I&#13;
had serious chronic dyspepsia and constipation.&#13;
A lady, for many - years&#13;
State President of the W. C. T. U.,&#13;
told me she had been greatly benefited&#13;
by quitting coffee and using&#13;
Postum Food Coffee; Bhe was troubled&#13;
for years with asthma. She said&#13;
It was no cross to quit coffee when&#13;
she found she could have as delicious&#13;
an article as Postum.&#13;
"Another lady, who had been troubled&#13;
with chronic dyspepsia for years,&#13;
found immediate relief on ceasing cof-&#13;
Tee and beginning Postum twice a day.&#13;
She was wholly cured. Still another&#13;
friend told me that. Postum Food Coffee&#13;
was a Godsend to her, her heart&#13;
trouble having been relieved after&#13;
leaving off coffee and taking Postum.&#13;
"So many such cases came to my&#13;
notlre that I concluded coffee was the&#13;
:ause of my trouble and I quit, and&#13;
took up Postum. I am more than&#13;
pleased to say that my days of trouble&#13;
have disappeared. I ajn well and&#13;
happy." •'There's a R e a s o n . ^ Rtbd&#13;
"Ins Road to Wellville," in pkgs.&#13;
A* l«tter written*^ a Canadian Osvertunent&#13;
agent frtm Ttp&lt;on'*,ta,diana.&#13;
is Dut one of many similar UueVaje in&#13;
the b u d s or the Csjiadi«d%o«wrB&gt;nent&#13;
agents whose privilege it 1» to offer&#13;
one hundred and sUty a*res e*1*nd&#13;
free, sod low railway faxes; * Butfhtre&#13;
Is a copy of the tatten "V&#13;
•Tinfcm, lad., Nctf! 28; 1806.&#13;
"At ytrar earnest solicitation * party&#13;
e* « • from Tipton left May 15 for&#13;
Western Caaada. Our interviews with&#13;
you and a careful study of your liter*&#13;
aturo led us to expect great things of&#13;
your country when we should arrive&#13;
there, and we were not disappointed.&#13;
We went prepared to make a careful&#13;
examination of the country and its resources,&#13;
and we did so. At early dawn&#13;
the second morning out of Tipton we&#13;
awoke in a new world. As far as the&#13;
eye could reach waa an apparently&#13;
limitless expanse of1 new sown wheat&#13;
and prairie grasses. The vivid green&#13;
of the wheat just beginning to stool&#13;
out,'and tne raky blackness of the&#13;
soil contrasted in a way beautiful to&#13;
see. An hour or two later we steamed&#13;
into Winnipeg. ; Here we found a number&#13;
of surprises. A hundred thousand&#13;
souls well housed, with every convenience&#13;
that goes to make a modern&#13;
up-to-date city-—banks, hotels, newspapers,&#13;
stores, electric light, street&#13;
railways, sewerage, waterworks, asphalt&#13;
pavements, everything. With&#13;
eyes and ears open we traveled for&#13;
two thousand miles through Manitoba,&#13;
Saskatchewan and Alberta, going out&#13;
over the Canadian Pacific railway, via&#13;
Calgary to Edmonton, and returning&#13;
to Winnipeg over the Canadian Northern&#13;
railway. In the meantime we&#13;
made several side trips and stopped&#13;
off at a number of points where we&#13;
made drives into the surrounding&#13;
country. On every hand were evidences&#13;
of prosperity. The growing&#13;
wheat, oats, rye, flax, barley, not little&#13;
patches, but great fields, many of&#13;
them a square mile in extent, the&#13;
three, five and sometimes seven-horse&#13;
teams laying over an inky black ribbon&#13;
of yellow stubble, generally In furrows&#13;
straight as? gun barrels and at&#13;
right angles from the roads stretching&#13;
into the distance, contrasted strangely&#13;
with our little fields at home. The&#13;
towns both large and small were doubly&#13;
conspicuous, made so, first by&#13;
their newness and second by the towering&#13;
elevators necessary to hold the&#13;
immense crops of wheat grown in tbq&#13;
immediate neighborhood.&#13;
The newness, the thrift, the hustle),&#13;
the sound of saw and hammer, the&#13;
tents housing owners of buildings in&#13;
various stages of completion, the piles&#13;
of household effects and agricultural&#13;
implements at the railway station*&#13;
waiting to be hauled out to tht?&#13;
"Claims," the occasional steam plow&#13;
turning its twenty or thirty acres a&#13;
day, the sod house, the unpalnted&#13;
house of wood, the up-to-date modern&#13;
residence with large red barn by, ail&#13;
these were seen everywhere we went,&#13;
an earnest of prosperity and wealth to&#13;
be. We talked with men and visited&#13;
their places thai four years ago was&#13;
unbroken prairie. Their houses,&#13;
barns, implements and live stock were&#13;
the equal of anything In Tipton County,&#13;
and why not, when they were raising&#13;
five, ten and twenty, yes. in one&#13;
instance, forty thousand bushels of&#13;
wheat a year. The fact that such&#13;
large yields of wheat are raised so&#13;
easily and so surely impressed us&#13;
very favorably. And when we saw&#13;
men who four or five years ago commenced&#13;
there with two or three thousand&#13;
dollars, and were now as well&#13;
fixed and making money much easier&#13;
and many times faster than lots of&#13;
our acquaintances on Indiana farms&#13;
fifty years cleared and valued at four&#13;
times as much, we decided to invest.&#13;
So we bought In partnership a little&#13;
over two thousand acres, some of it&#13;
improved and in wheat.&#13;
Before leaving Indiana we agreed&#13;
that if«ihe opportunities were as great&#13;
as they were represented to be, that&#13;
we would buy, and own in partnership&#13;
a body of land, and leave one of&#13;
our number to look after and operate&#13;
It. This we accordingly did.&#13;
Just before time to thresh I received&#13;
a letter from him. "What shall&#13;
we do?" said he; "I've got to build&#13;
granaries. There's so much wheat&#13;
that the railways are just swamped.&#13;
We can't get cars and the elevators&#13;
are all full. I never saw anything&#13;
like it." In reply we wrote, "Good for&#13;
you. Go ahead and build; your story&#13;
sounds better than the letters we used&#13;
to get from our friends In Kansas&#13;
when they bewailed the fact that^he&#13;
hard wheat had been destroyed by the&#13;
chinch bugs and the corn by hot&#13;
winds, and that they must sell the&#13;
stock for means to live on. Yes, build&#13;
by all means." And he did, and our&#13;
wheat put in by a renter made twenty-&#13;
seven bushels per acre.&#13;
Very truly yours,&#13;
fSd) A. G. BURKHART.&#13;
(Sd) J. TRKLOAR-TRESIDDER.&#13;
(Sd) WALTER W. MOUNT.&#13;
The Small Bxffir of Pais*&#13;
who takes care that&#13;
Boy trade mark, *hoe/n&#13;
appears on every k ^ o f&#13;
lead he buys, Is perfectly protected;&#13;
a t perfect!/ as if he&#13;
were a railroad official baying&#13;
hundreds of tons, and with a&#13;
corps of chemists at his back&#13;
to see that n o adulterant is&#13;
palmed off o n him.&#13;
P u r e W h i t e L e a d and Pare&#13;
Linseed Oil are absolutely necessary&#13;
to good&#13;
painting.&#13;
S E N D F O R&#13;
B O O K&#13;
"A Talk oa Pal*." mmr*mU «v*a OluKa «b*l*• I»n«tJon*-l MiUiwt. bent tnm •poa iTMjoaat. 4&#13;
NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY&#13;
AU ItmA jMMto*d in&#13;
to0 uitfa u mrtanrn » M .&#13;
*«wToTk, BMtoa. *»**)«, OtTvlMS,&#13;
OlaoUuutJ. Chicago, Bt, lewis, rtatladaiBbla&#13;
(Joka T. Lwta a Brat. Co.). Pitt*&#13;
Imtsfc. &lt; NaUoaai JUa4 * OU Oa.1&#13;
Importance of Sleep.&#13;
We should get up well every morning.&#13;
If we do not, we are certain&#13;
gradually to run behind in our physical&#13;
bank account. This proves that&#13;
sleeping is quite as important aa eating.&#13;
The luxury of sound sleep is one&#13;
of the greatest means given to a man&#13;
or beast for restoring and Invigorating&#13;
the whole system. No one should allow&#13;
business or anything else to curtail&#13;
this luxury, and parents should&#13;
promote It in children, Instead of&#13;
drumming them out of bed early.—&#13;
Homeopathic Envoy.&#13;
Instead of experimenting with drugs and&#13;
strong cathartics—which are clearly hart&#13;
tul—take Nature's mild laxative,&#13;
Tea! It is made whelly of ~~&#13;
cunatiptfciaaV .^ivsr^assi&#13;
A*4nAt tree la the back yard is&#13;
vorth two family trees in a glass case.&#13;
MSJBS&#13;
s* * I DODDS&#13;
KIDNEY&#13;
\ PILLS&#13;
"&gt;UETES&#13;
SICK HEADACHE&#13;
•sstiaas&#13;
Battog, A perfect&#13;
edj f»MatnesB, Kaoasa,&#13;
Puisiliawn, Bad Tssts&#13;
la the Month, Coated&#13;
Tongue. Pain lathe Bids.&#13;
TORPID UVXB. They&#13;
regulate tbs Bowels. Purely Vagstabtaw&#13;
SHALL FltL SHALL DOSE. SMALL PBCE.&#13;
CARTERS&#13;
One of the.things a man ran't un&#13;
deratand is why his enmtea have ariy&#13;
friends.&#13;
fITHvL¥ii&#13;
B J 5 ^ 5 5 M « ; I&#13;
Must Bear&#13;
fac-Siaila Signature&#13;
1EFUSE SUMTIfltlsU&#13;
felp the Horse&#13;
No article ia more lueful&#13;
•bout the etable than Mica&#13;
Axle C.reaae. Put • little oa&#13;
the aplndte* before voa "book&#13;
«g"-it win help the horae.sed&#13;
bring the load bone quicker.&#13;
MICA AXLE&#13;
UREASE&#13;
mean awO-better thaaVaev&#13;
oik?* S7***e. Coata the a*te&#13;
with a bard, itnooth ratface of&#13;
powdered mica which reduce*&#13;
friction. A*k the dealer for&#13;
Mica Axle Oreaae.&#13;
*tmmmm.tmn&#13;
l**ar»*rual&#13;
lt:&gt;:«.&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 1¾ 1M7,&#13;
*»&gt;*»*0m*fWwif^*MMir&gt;*i4t*m00*&gt;&gt;» m »*t&lt;t&lt;WJ&lt;jlSpi • • »' *»&gt;&#13;
M Mf|tlOf&gt;*f^L0Wt^ri.^&#13;
TEN YSARS OF FAIN.&#13;
• • * * &gt; i ""t.&#13;
Unable to Do Svott Housework JBt&gt;&#13;
causa of KMftay Troubift.&#13;
Mrs. MargftMt Emmerich, of Clin-&#13;
S t , Napoleon, s a y s :&#13;
•pltnded Wwk * * i h C f ^ l o n a l Plaqt,&#13;
Fl0Mp*r and Fr^HOulld.&#13;
i l W f 1 * « ^ « * ? a p o u p of N e w&#13;
f i t * fjimya.Jbibpfelaflif t h e m s e l v e s&#13;
- t d s e t t e i ^ w H k 4be,&#13;
^avpwecj, o M * # *1&#13;
•' " c a l r y f n g ^ V l g n t&#13;
Be** into th« Hvee&#13;
a t the. p4or&gt; and&#13;
to bring there JD(&#13;
touch wftn God's&#13;
world of nature/'&#13;
T h e y had come&#13;
to believe that&#13;
not poverty, not&#13;
Bicknesa, not even&#13;
Happy with Her want, were p r o&#13;
Flant. ductWe of so&#13;
much misery (and misery's twin-sister,&#13;
sin) a s the deadly monotony of&#13;
t h e lives of. t h e very poor and that&#13;
lack of* ideals which is the inevitable&#13;
deprivation of those who are reared&#13;
and dwell J n t h e slums. Acting from&#13;
t h e s e premises, the association of w o&#13;
men resolved to reach the hearts of&#13;
the "bi&amp;mer*-ed tenth" in their popr&#13;
h o m e s , - a s well a s in the institutions&#13;
wherever^sieR or sorry, they might be&#13;
sojournjns*. "The gift of flowers,"&#13;
they said, "can never pauperize; it&#13;
c o n v e y s a silent m e s s a g e of sympathy,&#13;
and often opens the way to mutual&#13;
understanding-and further opportunit&#13;
i e s for hejintulneBs."&#13;
T h e idea took s h a p e rapidly, and&#13;
soon working* branches of the'natlonal&#13;
guild were organised in N e w York,&#13;
Washington, Philadelphia, Albany,&#13;
Cincinnati and Columbus. '&#13;
Figures are dull reading, says the&#13;
Christian Herald, but they tell t h e&#13;
story of the National^'Flower Guild as&#13;
nothing else can do Last summer,&#13;
th« N e w York city'branch1 distributed&#13;
over 15;000 bunches of flowers e a c h&#13;
week during t h e ten-week heated term&#13;
t o t h e hospitals, rescue missions, children's&#13;
Institutions and tke h o m e s of&#13;
the poor, making a grand total of&#13;
nearly 200,000 n o s e g a y s given and&#13;
400,000 e y e s gladdened In N e w York&#13;
ctty alone. This beautiful work w a s&#13;
made possible by the faithful industry&#13;
of sftss eauntry branches, w h o s e great&#13;
piled high with the blooms of&#13;
* * l , d « U a* well a » t a r d e a , c a m e&#13;
risers In. t h e cUyT i t * i^mwfut m dittm*&#13;
f l e a s e e keavy wfele. t r o t * * ! * Jftpll*.&#13;
totte ( a c e o f a ditto*; K meniipw%*&#13;
yoaatk to a tired mother, or a m o m € W&#13;
of lorgetfuines* t e the racked suffere&#13;
r s wfeo filled tfce.Jtaxf hospital wards&#13;
i ,• I ".UjrV* ***•— -&#13;
Scriptures Written in Coptic.&#13;
White examining s o m e s h e e t s of&#13;
parchment bought a t Cairo fOT Coptic&#13;
manuscripts Herr Carl Schmidt made&#13;
a discovery ofr much irjipcjrtanoe to&#13;
phUology and history. T k e repetition&#13;
of t h e word Uru, which a m o n g modern&#13;
Nubians rrjeans king, convinced&#13;
the German eftvant, wlror'fs' an Authority&#13;
o n OiwBc, a n d t h e mTrTt?hrtstJ^n&#13;
archoeotogy of Upper Egjjt/Miit t h e&#13;
text wa« Nubian) T h i s , l a n g u a g e still&#13;
fa spekca, 'but no* longer wttf^eo. . , ^ h e&#13;
mftnwcripta dajte irwd^tfre es*htffT5entury&#13;
A. D , and *.re tirips&amp;ttotis from&#13;
Christian works in Wlvfci: f r e q u e n t&#13;
references fe Sa^^Jgaatf^are made.&#13;
One manuscript is a collection of extracts&#13;
from the jneny-. testa*iN»t, Arid&#13;
the other, 1a a hsmft 4% the c r o s s ;&#13;
^ - K o r e a n ' s Consecration, \&#13;
X jesing Korean, %bx&gt; sjuHjed m&#13;
AJBertaft* and majr^ed^ttfctnese'jady,&#13;
after k i t reUirn t o . K o r e a ^ I S W t b i a.&#13;
member of the cabinet and givenFjpe&#13;
portfolio of education.' ; r f e h j ^ jtipw&#13;
given up political life to take up work&#13;
In t h e mission and h a s IwWa g i v e n&#13;
charge of the educational warifc v T h e&#13;
result of his work and influence will&#13;
tell much for t h e x a u s e of Christ.&#13;
Church* Property Divided;-&#13;
The decision recently given byt'^ne&#13;
Elgin commission, appointed to arbitrate&#13;
in the case of the division 'ol&#13;
property of t h e United Free cfeunqfc&#13;
gives to the United Free chuwh- &lt;&amp;a&#13;
s M t m b i y halls and college buildings&#13;
Ul sMMMMfh, 'Glasgow and Aberdeen,&#13;
" » M ' * * l 2 E ¥ ^ e r afcar* ° f tb« foreign&#13;
U l l l l l l r W N e , T h a - ' W e e Fr^ea." rec&#13;
e i v e two additional church edifices&#13;
In Glasgow, a block of office buildings&#13;
in Edinburgh, and an annuity of $15,-&#13;
000 a year for maintenance of theh&#13;
theological college. In addition they&#13;
will receive something f o r , t h e i r foreign,&#13;
work, which i s conducted on a&#13;
scale.&#13;
Qfteen, year* I, w a a a greaj sufferer&#13;
from kidney troubles.&#13;
My back pained&#13;
jne terribly. E v e r y&#13;
turn or m o v e cauaadr&#13;
t ^ a ^ a ^ H b ^ a ^ a l a h a r_p, s h o p t i n g&#13;
nalna. My e y e s i g h t&#13;
waa poor, dark, ap^ts&#13;
appeared before me,&#13;
and ,1 b a d ydUzy&#13;
apeUa. i-*r U* *mvm-l W « A0t *o&#13;
housework, a n d for t w o y e a r s did not&#13;
g e t out of the house, T h e kidney accretions&#13;
-were lrrfgula#t and doctors&#13;
were n o t h o p i n g m e . Doan's Kidney&#13;
pHle brought m e quick relief, and&#13;
finally cured m«- T h e y saved my life."&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.&#13;
Foeter-MUburn Co., Buffalo, N , Y.&#13;
AH Cloth 7 a t a . Children's Dressst, etc..&#13;
made to look like new with PUTNAM&#13;
FADELESS DYES.&#13;
Most w j u e n a r e proud of their&#13;
ability t o Humble a man's pride.&#13;
&amp;3S&amp;" *•***• ,au»j»*«bv&#13;
? W h e n a woman pays a man a eoav&#13;
pllment s h e expects it t o be returned&#13;
"with cempennd l n t e e r s t&#13;
Ootrt Sneexe Your. Head Off.&#13;
TfraiWs Cold Capsuku will cure yoo almust&#13;
iantantly. At »11 Dru«ja»t*, 2 5 c&#13;
B e generous Jn judging the faults&#13;
of other8. Most of u s c a n only s e e&#13;
our o w n shadows.&#13;
ADVANTAGE A WIDOW H A S .&#13;
At Least T h s y Don't Have t e « l t and&#13;
Watch Husband's Flirt.&#13;
"I saw such a pretty woman a t a&#13;
disadvantage t h e other night," t h e kittle&#13;
real widow w a s saying. "She w a s&#13;
married. S h e w a s sitting a t a table&#13;
with s o m e other pretty women and&#13;
handsome m e n and h e r husband. Her&#13;
husband began to flirt outrageously&#13;
with one of the women. I wish you&#13;
could have seen the look that came&#13;
over her face. Everybody in the room&#13;
saw how distressed s h e was.&#13;
"Now, what I want to know is this.&#13;
W h y didn't s h e go t o work and flirt&#13;
with one of t h e handsome m e n to get&#13;
even? Anyone of them w a s quite&#13;
ready and willing, but, no, wives never&#13;
s e e m to be able to do that. They j u s t&#13;
sit ready to cry, with everybody noticing.&#13;
"Thst's t h e ' a d v a n t a g e ' w e reaj wido&#13;
w s have over wives. We don't have&#13;
to sit and watch our husbands flirting&#13;
with other women. We know where&#13;
t h e y are, and w e also know that whatever&#13;
they may chance to be doing,&#13;
they are probably not flirting."&#13;
Costly Cyclopedia.&#13;
T h e revision, o f - t h e great Korean&#13;
cyclopedia c a l l e d Mention Plgo, which&#13;
w a s ordered b y the government some&#13;
months ago, Is now completed, and i t&#13;
-consists of an edition of 29 volumes,&#13;
which will be published at an expense&#13;
of 47,500 yen.—Korean Dally N e w s .&#13;
MORE BOXES OF GOLD&#13;
And M a n y • r e e n b s e a s .&#13;
A Church Souvenir.&#13;
Brotherhood of St. Paul of t h e&#13;
Flfgf MetkesHat church, of Syracuse,&#13;
N . J I ^ r n a a issued an attractive soutessY^&#13;
toaklet containing 19 half-tone&#13;
the church building. inaMe&#13;
aii&lt;ToTrt. . , . , i&#13;
• • * • * , . ;*?.. -J*&#13;
Elected President.&#13;
Mr. J. CaqB4°»'*Riet»tt&gt;&#13;
bren e l e c ^ d j p r e ^&#13;
pregatlpnal Uni'oV&#13;
of €toM and Greenbacks&#13;
w i n be s e a t t o persona who write the&#13;
m o s t Interesting and truthful letters&#13;
o f experience o n t h e following topics:&#13;
L H o w h a v e you been affected by&#13;
coffee drinking and by changing from&#13;
coffee to Postum?&#13;
2. Give n a m e and account of o n e or&#13;
more coffee drinkers who have been&#13;
hart by It and have been induced to&#13;
quit and use Postum.&#13;
3. Do you know a n y o n e w h o h a s&#13;
been driven away from Postum bec&#13;
a u s e it c a m e t o t h e table weak and&#13;
characterless at the first trial?&#13;
4. Did yon s e t sueh a person right&#13;
regarding the easy w a y to mak« it&#13;
clear, black, and with a snappy, rich&#13;
taste?&#13;
5. Have you e v e r found a better&#13;
w a y to make It- than to use four heapi&#13;
n g teaspoonfuls t o t h e pint of Water,&#13;
l e t stand on stove until real boiling&#13;
begins, and beginning at that time&#13;
"When actual boiling starts, boil full 15&#13;
minutes more to extract the flavor and&#13;
food value. (A piece of butter the size&#13;
of a p e a will prevent boiling over.)&#13;
This contest is confined to those w h o&#13;
Tiave used Postum prior to the date of&#13;
this advertisement.&#13;
B e honest and truthful, don't write&#13;
poetry or fanciful letters, just plain,&#13;
truthful statements.&#13;
Contest will close June 1st, 1907,&#13;
and no letters received after that date&#13;
will be admitted. Examinations of letters&#13;
will be m a d e by three judges, not&#13;
members of t h e Postum Cereal Co..&#13;
Ltd. Their decisions will be fair and&#13;
final, and a neat little box containing&#13;
a tlO gold piece sent to each of the&#13;
five writers of the most interesting&#13;
letters, a box containing a $5 gold&#13;
piece to each of t h e 20 next best, a&#13;
$2 greenback t o each of the 100 n e x t&#13;
best, and a $1 greenback to each of&#13;
the 200 next best, making cash prizes&#13;
distributed to 325 persons.&#13;
Every friend of Postum Is urged to&#13;
write and each letter will be held in&#13;
high esteem by t h e company, a s an&#13;
evidence of such friendship, while the&#13;
little boxes of gold and envelopes of&#13;
money will reach m a n y modest writers&#13;
whose plain and sensible letters contain&#13;
the facts desired, although the&#13;
sender may h a v e but. small faith in&#13;
winning at the time of writing.&#13;
Talk this subject over with your&#13;
friends and s e e h o w many among&#13;
you.-Qan win prizes. Tt 1« a good, honest&#13;
competition and in t h f hest kind of&#13;
a cause, and c o s t s the competitors absolutely&#13;
nothing.&#13;
Address yonr letter t o the Postum&#13;
Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek. Mich.,&#13;
writing your o w n n a m e and address&#13;
clearly.&#13;
Kill tho, Flies Now&#13;
before they multiply, A DAISY FLY&#13;
KILLER kills thousands. ' Lasts' the «em-&#13;
A«k your •on. dealer, or ee«d 20c ta H. Somen*, 149 De Kalb Ave,, Brooklyn, N . Y.&#13;
H o w inconsistent your nelsjiieor*&#13;
are! They refuse to say that you are&#13;
a good man, but after the undertaker&#13;
gets you they delight in saying; that&#13;
you w e r e a good man.&#13;
It Curee While You Walk.&#13;
Allen's Foot-Ease is u eei^uin cure for&#13;
hot,', sweating, calloun, 4ml swollen, itching&#13;
feet. Sold by all Druggist*. Price 25c. Don't&#13;
accept any substitute! Trial package FREE.&#13;
Addretw Allen S. Olmsted, Le Ruy, N . Y.&#13;
Physician's Large Fee.&#13;
T h e late Dr. James Gale, the famous&#13;
blind medical electrician, i s said once&#13;
to have taken a fee of £50,000 ($260,-&#13;
000), the largest ever paid for medical&#13;
electrical attendance.&#13;
Garfield Tea, Nature's Remedy, brings&#13;
reliei from rmmy ailments; it overcome*&#13;
constipation, regulateu the liver und kidneye,&#13;
purifies the blood and clturw the&#13;
complexion. -It 1B made of Herbs, and its&#13;
absolutely. Pure.&#13;
Meaning Unknown.&#13;
De Wolf Hopper had a, slight cold&#13;
one night, and in a curtain speech he&#13;
referred to it in this faahjon:&#13;
"I went t© my doctor," be declared,&#13;
'.'and the doctor said I h a d been, e a t i n g&#13;
too much nitrogenous food, and must&#13;
stop it and eat farinaceous food! Since&#13;
then I haven't been able to eat at all,&#13;
for 1 don't know wjhat. either word&#13;
meansi." * «,v .,' '&#13;
The readers of tfcte p*a«t wlU tw ptofML to lean&#13;
that tbere 1« ttJaaet eae treated dlaeato ttM Mteace&#13;
baa been able Is eere si all lia ttagei, and taat U&#13;
Calarrh. Hairi Oatarrfc Care la U&gt;e only pittite&#13;
cere now bMVMS*tseae*e&gt;o*l fraternity. Caterrb irjatrs*ag^ ¢2¾ teraetl&#13;
•arfi&#13;
foul&#13;
_ . Brssnesis op t*e coo*Uu«tiba aad tMUttat&#13;
aatSfe is SStssttewetfc TS» WroprWore'lMe&#13;
aft-aMfS lelta to jt«ctt*a*Lr*,n«ven tbal tbajr offer&#13;
OM Bnssted Dollara for eny CAM tSat H fail* to&#13;
smsu; leadlorUM of he»tte**Jeiav - J&#13;
AMnmW. J CfltMEY a CO^ Totedo, 0.,&#13;
B e 7 i f en-DreafleU, 79c&#13;
Take Haii'e Famiu PtU» for ooaatlnettoB.&#13;
*lij, aeatea aweaeiy upee tee bleed and wireou&#13;
•oie ofllS) Sftteta, tSercbj deatroyinc the&#13;
1 lilies at IS* di*ea*6iaad stftaat Oe «wtk»at&#13;
They Go Tpflejther.&#13;
rHenry," aaid the youpg wife, w h o&#13;
had taken up physical culture, "how&#13;
d o you thins I am built?"&#13;
"My dear," replied her husband&#13;
fondly, "you a r e built like a watch,"&#13;
"Thank you Henry. And Henry?"&#13;
"Well?"&#13;
"If—if I am built like a watch, don't&#13;
you think 1 should have a few jewels?"&#13;
And then Henry frowned and eaid&#13;
the man who compliments a woman is&#13;
an idiot.&#13;
MISS N I C H O L S&#13;
W h i l e n o w o m a n iaontfcery sYee&#13;
from pexiodj£snifer*«4-, *t d o e s n o t&#13;
astern t o b e t h e p l a n of n a t u r e t h a t&#13;
w o m e n should snfler s o severely, Irregularities&#13;
and, peJa e r e positive&#13;
evidence t h a t something- i s w r o n g&#13;
w h i c h should b e s e t r i g h t o r t t wtlT&#13;
l e a d t o serious dersa»gem*j»t o f t h e&#13;
f e m i n i n e organism.&#13;
Thonsanda of wonaen, h » • e&#13;
found relief from s&gt;n periodie^strff&#13;
e r i n g b y t a k i n g t y d l i s K. P i n k -&#13;
ham's V e g e t a b l e Compound, Which&#13;
i s made from native roots a n d h e r b s ,&#13;
• a i t i s t h e m o s t t h o r o u g h f e m a l e&#13;
regulator k n o w n t o medical science.&#13;
I t cures t h e condition w t r k b&#13;
c a u s e s s o m u c h discomfort a n d robe&#13;
t h a t period of i t s terrors. W o m e n w h o a r e troubled w(ith painful o r irreg-&#13;
ular,functions should t a k e immediate action t o w a r d off t h e serious&#13;
consequences a n d b e restored t o h e a l t h a n d s t r e n g t h b y t a k i n g&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
Mia, Adelaide Nichols o f 524 W e s t 22nd Street, N e w Y o r k City,&#13;
writes:—Dear Mrs, Pinkhanx-"Lf w o m e n w h o buffer w o u l d o n l y rely&#13;
upon L y d i a E. Pinkham's V e g e t a b l e Compound their troubles would be&#13;
quickly a l l e v i a t e d . I feel g r e a t l y indebted for t h e relief a n d h e a l t h&#13;
which h a s been b r o u g h t t o m e by y o u r inestimable remedy."&#13;
L y d i a £ . Pinkham's V e g e t a b l e Compound coxes F e m a l e Complaints&#13;
such a * F a l l i n g a n d Displacements, a n d Organic Diseases. Headache,&#13;
General Debility, Indigestion, a n d invigorates t h e w h o l e feminine&#13;
s y s t e m . F o r t h e d e r a n g e m e n t s of t h e K i d n e y s of either s e x Lydtm&#13;
jL PlnkkMff'M Vcgetskle duapotiad i s e x c e l l e n t&#13;
MiW Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women&#13;
W o m e n suffering from a n y form o f female w e a k n e s s are i n v i t e d t o&#13;
w r i t e Mrs-Pinkham, a t Lynn,Mass. F r o m the-*ymptoms given, t h e t m b l e&#13;
m a y be l o c a t e d a n d t h e quickest a n d surest w a y of recovery adrised.&#13;
Just a Little Sum For You!&#13;
! / .&#13;
Bjdaglatt, V s . , Jaa. is, xaay.&#13;
1 kaye roa oat ef year Separators&#13;
aw twelve yeara wits $1.69 far rs&gt;&#13;
aeizs, and I taiak it eaa't ee seat.&#13;
IE.FD.7) L. 9 . CIAFPBXX.&#13;
O n e C e s s t • n e o o t t t ,&#13;
to maintain a U . 8 . Separator!&#13;
Sure^ that's a little s u n for y o u to pay to main tain&#13;
a machine that gets ALL the cream out of your&#13;
milk. That's what a U. does J&#13;
Yes, ml&#13;
Jactaay: "&#13;
V E R M O N T r A R M&#13;
Aahtses Distrtbimag Warebonaea.&#13;
HoWstheWorid'sReconi&#13;
for aEAN SKIMMING.&#13;
Time has p r o v e d it ia durably&#13;
L built. Not (,how cheap," but "how&#13;
good," is our watchword, and the&#13;
record of the U. S. during the past&#13;
sixteen yeacs prsves w e ' v e s t u c k&#13;
t o i t . "The beat is cheapest in the&#13;
end." B u y t h e V. &amp;&#13;
We» Betbd yWfrSs eer large heetoeaa&#13;
cataJof. Lota of pictatee eaowiat &gt;SBt&#13;
how the U. S. is built aad horn h worka,&#13;
See (or ycuractt w S y h wean longer tSaa&#13;
any other separator. Write ee today Wnm&gt;&#13;
Bv* s e w 1907 Cwtetogwe Wo. Q • "&#13;
MACHINC COMPANY&#13;
464 B e i t o w rsissa. Vt&gt;&#13;
Ve.tUL UfwtBx- tens&gt;oa Te. _&#13;
Pri ce complete. gTg, | o .&#13;
r &lt;rp Sttftwyi&#13;
34 YEASS SELLING DIRECT&#13;
Our TehicU* tad Saracas lta&lt;« tmem sold tfiract ttom oat Ucterj te&#13;
ft third ot m ceotury. W&gt; tbiptot «r»ml»fttWi« ft*d '&#13;
•^israaMeiAfecieiirerr. Yousfeo«teattdae;Ma«tei&#13;
tostytc, quality aad price.&#13;
tie arc uw Lareeal • • • • H f t s i m Is sse WSral&#13;
•cltiar to Ihm COIWDO «acto*iv«lf. Wi n»ak« tM styles ef&#13;
Vakiciaa, tftttylei of aaraesa. S«a4 tot larga. Sea ulalagwe.&#13;
EJkkart. I » " ^** **&#13;
PATENTS » n d T R A D S M A R K S ob-&#13;
"A M* ^X" ^4 »Nw1»E* « ' Uined. defended aiulprom»oiiu&#13;
(KrtabHfh*dlSr»&#13;
Book Aoflnfor&#13;
prof^ont-ed by&#13;
«te S O W I I , ! , , PM-iLwjm.&#13;
r lOTTthBt.j^-. W.WAaHlNQTON.b.lJ.&#13;
ttoateatrHSS.&#13;
VZcUStiSH ELECTROTYPES&#13;
a« t»e low««&lt;&#13;
9 00 DROPS&#13;
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT.&#13;
A^tabkRrpiraiionfirAs&#13;
simitafiir§jhrFoodafl(JRp§yta&#13;
I N F A N T S / C H I I D R K N&#13;
Promotes Di^tion£l«rfuf&#13;
ncss and Rpst.Confains retttr&#13;
0pinnii4orphutf nor&gt;facraL&#13;
N O T N A R C O T I C .&#13;
Apeifrf t Rrmcdy forCorettf*&#13;
Hon &gt; Sour StonadtDiarrhoa&#13;
WonnsXoJTVulsaBisJifwrisIr&#13;
ness w s i L o s s OF SEEEP.&#13;
rscSbnir Si0«nrrt of&#13;
A l b m o n t h s Old&#13;
CASTORIA For Infants and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
NEW WHEIT LANDS IN&#13;
THE CANADIAN WEST&#13;
( M A addition el mito;-&#13;
irVW 0 f railway tk*M&#13;
year have opened up n&#13;
largely iacreaecd terri.&#13;
tory to the progresstve&#13;
larmere ci Western&#13;
Canada aud the GOT&#13;
eminent of the I&gt;onii»-&#13;
io« continues to Kivc&#13;
ONE HUNDREDAND&#13;
SIXTY ACRES FRKE to every settler. &gt;&#13;
THE COUNTRf HAS&#13;
NO SUPERIOR&#13;
Coal, wood and water in abundance; ckurchee&#13;
and schools convenient; aaarkets eauyol acoew&#13;
taxes low; climate the best in the northern t e n&#13;
peratezone. Law and order prevails everywhere.&#13;
For advice and information adrfrenn lhn»&#13;
SUPERINTENDENT OF IMMIGRATION.&#13;
Ottawa, Canada, or any authorised Canadian&#13;
Government Agent.&#13;
M. V. McINNES, 6 Avesse Taearre Mock, De&#13;
traft, Mickifsa; or C. A. JLAUR1ER, SaaJt Ste.&#13;
Marie, Micsifas.&#13;
FREE send her absolutely&#13;
box of Psxflne wlfi&#13;
tlona and genuine 1&#13;
your name aad address o n a p c PAXTINE&#13;
To c o n v i n c e any&#13;
woman t h a t p»xtine&#13;
Antiseptic will&#13;
imprev* her health&#13;
and do all we claim&#13;
M ^ for It. We w i l l&#13;
send her absolutely free a large trial&#13;
box of Psxflne with book ot toatrnetlona&#13;
and genuine testimonials. S e n d&#13;
your name aad address on a postal card.&#13;
c l e a n s e s&#13;
and heals&#13;
m u c o u a&#13;
m • ai-v&#13;
s~« ». , braneWfections,&#13;
»nch as nasal catarrh, pelvle&#13;
catarrh and Inflammation caused by feminine&#13;
Ills; soro eyes, sors throat snd&#13;
mouth, by direct local treatment Its curative*&#13;
power over these trouble* is extraordinary&#13;
and gives immediate rellpf.&#13;
Thousands of women are using and reo»&#13;
ommending it every day. so cents s t&#13;
drumlstsorbyinafl. Remember, however,&#13;
IT COSTS TrtfJ NOTHING TO TRY IT,&#13;
THJG B . PAXXON CO^ Boston,&#13;
For Over J 0 I N THE NAVY 1 w I w W 1st I Whch enlist* for* yearn young men of aood fhnrtwduwfcrtrstl&#13;
Exact Copy of Wrappar&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORIA TMC eeMv«w* • • • M N T , new V4&#13;
Wh ch enlist* for 4 yearn young men of good rhnraotar&#13;
andsoum] yhvjuoiil condition between ibeiuira&#13;
of 1: untl 25 as u)&gt;preutice neaanen; one oppcrlointies&#13;
for unvaDcement; pay lit; to$7U a moiiilL Kleotrtr.&#13;
uns. luachiDKt.s. blacksniltna, c&lt;Wwt&amp;ilLli«.&#13;
narpeniors. shl^ntter*. coai-pnwtern, iNBSSA.a^&#13;
sictana, t-ooks. etc , between 2] and H5 yea&gt;5r«ler*a.&#13;
onspital apprentices between 18 and 'Aveara, enlisted&#13;
in sowiai r»tiiH^ mith suitable i»ay. Ketiremetit&#13;
on tnr&lt;M)-rinirthspay and allowance* after HO.&#13;
ysivrs jwrife. Ajiphciinu suust be american ctiitens.&#13;
»4o worth it doihing free to reorolu. Tcon&#13;
rt&lt;schfirKo travel ailowanee 4 rente per nolle toplnoo&#13;
or entistmcDt.. H(,nns four months any aad tncrea&amp;e&#13;
m r**v upon re-enlistu»eni wtthln four months of&#13;
alsah»rge.&#13;
U. S. N A V Y RECRUITING STATIONS:&#13;
Ne. S3 LafayeSe Avaaae. - DCTMlT. MICH.&#13;
CaaeaW al Casssaeece BaUaiag, . T«LS0w. OaM.&#13;
Fetl Olke I«fl*M. - JACISSH. RICK.&#13;
H$i flfkt BaiMiai. . . SS4UUV, R1CT&#13;
iif-v** -.^-&#13;
-flfSW/ tmif*^ «SB¥J«W»**. •,.#.. »•&lt;** •&lt; .«ci# &gt;*-.*«**; f+i-9&#13;
wp ^•IJJH'.&#13;
» *t-&#13;
+&gt;&gt;&#13;
j*"*&#13;
&gt;*&#13;
•t&#13;
:¾&#13;
Spring Wheat&#13;
FLOUR&#13;
T h e S p r i n g W h e a t is all graded in t h e&#13;
large grain centers. W e buy t h e very&#13;
best q u a l i t y which i s called N o . I&#13;
Northern.&#13;
T —&#13;
If y o u are u s i u g s p r i n g wheat flour&#13;
y o u will be pleased with the quality w *&#13;
are t u r n i n g out.&#13;
F o r a winter w h e a t flour y o u c a n&#13;
b a n k u p o n our P u r i t y brand every&#13;
time.&#13;
Both Varieties are Warranted.&#13;
S e e circular in e a c h aack for t h e elegant p r e s e n t s&#13;
w e give to our patrons,&#13;
Pinckney Flouring Mills.&#13;
-km km km km A * A * A&#13;
Among Oilr Correspondents&#13;
W E S T X A K I O H .&#13;
M i s s L e n a M i l l e r o f H a n d y i s&#13;
s p e n d i n g a few w e e k s wjth friends&#13;
here.&#13;
Mrs. A l i c e C a l g i u s of W a s h i n g -&#13;
ton visited at- Mrs. MeTritts last&#13;
week.&#13;
T h e r e will b e C h i l d r e n s day e x -&#13;
e r c i s e s at t h e church. D a t e give&#13;
n later on.&#13;
T h e L. A. S. will m e e t T h u r s -&#13;
d a y afternoon at t h e h o m e of Mrs.&#13;
F r e d Merrills.&#13;
T h e Jittla infant son o f Mr&#13;
Mrs. J a s . S m i t h is very sick&#13;
little h o p e s of its recovery.&#13;
A r b o r D a y was observed a t t h e&#13;
G r e e n school house, a n u m b e r of&#13;
trees were s e t out and a fine pole&#13;
raised with appropriate exercises.&#13;
g a s o -&#13;
IOSCO.&#13;
E . E . P h i l i p s has a n e w&#13;
l i n e e u g i u e .&#13;
Mrs. J a c k L e w i s i s laid u p with&#13;
rheumatism.&#13;
C. O. D u t t o n h a d a b a d t i m e&#13;
last week with a n ulcerated tooth.&#13;
JL. F . P e e t h a s returned from&#13;
M t C l e m e n s m u c h i m p r o v e d i n&#13;
h e a l t h .&#13;
M i s s May B i c k f o r d s p e n t Saturday&#13;
a n d S u n d a y with W m .&#13;
G r o e u i u g and wife.&#13;
i . L A K E L A N D .&#13;
A l f S m i t h * u d wife s p e n t k a t&#13;
T h u r s d a y at H o w e l l .&#13;
J o h n B e r g e n took a party of&#13;
real estate m e n t o A n d e r s o n last&#13;
Sunday-&#13;
Mrs. O s b o r n e a u d f a m i l y of&#13;
Whituiore L a k e visited at W m .&#13;
C a d y s W e d n e s d a y last.&#13;
P e t e r C o u w a y i s h a v i n g h i s&#13;
h o u s e painted. S e t t i n g a g o o d&#13;
e x a m p l e for t h e rest of us.&#13;
Wirt W h i t t l o c k of N e w p o r t w a s&#13;
y i s i t i n g h i s brother, Harry, a n d&#13;
o t h e r friends t h e last of t h e week.&#13;
Mrs. H a r r y R o s e a n d s o n of&#13;
A n n A r b o r visited her p a r e n t s , E .&#13;
C a r p e n t e r and wife, on S u n d a y&#13;
last.&#13;
O u r former operator W m .&#13;
Clink of Toledo w a s s h a k i n g&#13;
h a n d s with o l d friends S u n d a y&#13;
last.&#13;
B e r t H o o k e r of near C h i l s o u&#13;
lost a very valuble J e r s e y c o w last&#13;
F r i d a y . B e t t e r luck w e h o p e in&#13;
t h e future.&#13;
Mr. A r n o l d o f A n n Arbor s p e n t&#13;
t h e last of t h e week here at I s l a u d&#13;
L a k e f i s h i n g — c a n tell s o m e g r e a t&#13;
fish stories.&#13;
and&#13;
but&#13;
20 preforming dogs&#13;
Perrines Show Mav 9.&#13;
a1, Freed and&#13;
Ses the Ureal Trampoline act May&#13;
the 9th.&#13;
*&#13;
Business Pointers. i&#13;
FOUND.&#13;
In the clothing store in this place&#13;
a pair of glasses. Owner can have&#13;
by proving and paying for this notice.&#13;
Call at DISPATCH.&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG .&#13;
The Social and Literary club of&#13;
the North Hamburg church will&#13;
meet Saturday evening May 8.&#13;
The following is the program:&#13;
Music Club&#13;
Club Bulletin Kittie King&#13;
Solo Adda Kice&#13;
Keadiug Una Bennett&#13;
Music...., Will Nash&#13;
Debate:—Resolved that Electricity ia&#13;
of more benefit to civilization&#13;
than 8team.&#13;
Affirmative, Glenn Smith. Walter Van&#13;
Fleet&#13;
Negative, Will Nash. Wheeler Martiu&#13;
Music Mr. and Mrs. Barnard&#13;
Perrine Prince oi.Ulowns, at Freed&#13;
and Perrines new 10 and 20 ct. show.&#13;
May 9.&#13;
Home to Rent.&#13;
Inqoire at Dispatch Office'.&#13;
Breed and Perrines United 10 a i d&#13;
20 cent show will exhibit here May 9.&#13;
If W. DANIELS,&#13;
SL GENERAL AUCTIONEER.&#13;
Satistactitu Guaranteed. For information&#13;
call at DISPATCH Office or address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. Lyndilla phone&#13;
connection. Auction billa and tin cups&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
C.S.CYi&amp;mbexVta&#13;
Expert Auctioneer&#13;
Over 20 Years Experience&#13;
DEXTER, MICH.&#13;
PHONE 38, FREE BOX 68&#13;
J. W. BIRD&#13;
PRACTICALMUCTIONEER&#13;
SkTISFtCTION eUlRMTEED&#13;
For information, call at the Pinckney DISPATCH&#13;
offiee. Auction Bills Free&#13;
Webster RuraPPhone&#13;
Arrangement* made for Rale by ph'one&#13;
my expenae.&#13;
Address. Dexter. Michigan&#13;
S u n d a y S c h o o l C o n v e n -&#13;
t i o n .&#13;
"Prepare a g o o d d i n n e r and ring&#13;
a b i g bell" is Marion L a w r e n e e ' s&#13;
s u g g e s t i o n for " h o w t o have a&#13;
g o o d convention. T h i s m e a n s&#13;
prepare a good program, t h e best&#13;
y o u can, and then advertise y o u r&#13;
m e e t i n g s . — S u n d a y S c h o o l A d -&#13;
v a n c e .&#13;
H a m b u r g t o w n s h i p will hold&#13;
their semi-annual c o n v e n t i o n M a y&#13;
19, a t 1 o'clock sharp at t h e N o r t h&#13;
H a m b u r g church w i t h t h e followi&#13;
n g p r o g r a m :&#13;
Song Service&#13;
Prayer&#13;
Sinking&#13;
Paper, A Rift in the Clouds,&#13;
Lulu Benham&#13;
Solo Julia Bal!&#13;
Reading W. W. Hendricks&#13;
Soio Fannie Rolison&#13;
Paper, Primary Work, Adda Kice&#13;
Solo Florence Kice&#13;
Echoes from the State Convention&#13;
in papers on I. B. A.&#13;
Teachers Training Work, Horn e&#13;
Dept. Work, Cradle Roll and&#13;
Adnlt Bible Classes, written by&#13;
State Supts. of these Depts.&#13;
Solo Lulu Benham&#13;
Secretary's Report,&#13;
Election of Officers&#13;
Singing&#13;
ETTA H. GARTF.RLL, Pres.&#13;
Mr. B u d e , wife a n d little s o n&#13;
of T o l e d o are s p e n d i n g a f e w d a y s&#13;
h e r e at their s u m m e r h o m e , also&#13;
Mr. M a d i s o n and wife.&#13;
Mr. E u g i n e W i n e s and wife of&#13;
A n n A r b o r visited Mrs. W i n e ' s&#13;
parents. G. B l a d e at P e t t y s v i l l e&#13;
o n S u n d a y last.&#13;
D a v e V a n H o r n and wife a n d 0 .&#13;
B. W e l l e r and wife s p e n t S u n d a y&#13;
w i t h Mr. Weller's daughter, M r s .&#13;
W m . B l a d e near H a m b u r g .&#13;
O u r general merchant, L . A.&#13;
Mr*. B i n e b i r t , t h e landlady&#13;
o f t h e L a k e l a n d H o t e l i s l o o k i n g&#13;
for a large crowd t h e last of t h e&#13;
week.&#13;
T h e t e l e p h o n e m e n a r e b u s y&#13;
n o w s e t t i n g the p o l e s and stretcht&#13;
h e wire from P i n c k n e y t o H a m -&#13;
burg.&#13;
T h e r e i s s o m e talk of t h e n e w&#13;
Order of G l e a n e r s j u s t organized&#13;
a few w e e k s ago, o f renting t h e&#13;
room o v e r Mr. S a u n d e r s store for&#13;
a hall.&#13;
J a m e s L e w i s , a l a w y e r of A n n&#13;
Arbor took q u i t e a t u m b l e t h e&#13;
first of t h e week b y falliug out o f&#13;
the boat h o u s e door at I s l a u d&#13;
L a k e strikiug o n h i s head a u d&#13;
shoulders.&#13;
Working th» Minister.&#13;
"Don't imagine ministers have an&#13;
a u y tim^" remarked, the Brooklyn&#13;
preacher. "If I gave to every one applying&#13;
fur alms, I would be bankrupt.&#13;
Then there ure agents who always&#13;
want a minister to purchase their&#13;
ware* no that they may use hlu name&#13;
when going to other houseu In the&#13;
neighborhood. Last week a dapper fellow&#13;
called with an oil painting. He&#13;
was a good bilker, and, although I did&#13;
not buy the picture, he did persuade&#13;
me to give him one of my photographH.&#13;
The next day several of my church&#13;
people told me that he had visited&#13;
tbasn, showed them the photograph and&#13;
succeeded in making sales. A minister's&#13;
life may seem like a path of&#13;
rosea when rlewed from the pew on a&#13;
Sunday, but there are certainly thorns&#13;
In It during the week."—New Tork&#13;
ftwt&#13;
•?&#13;
Chlpptndale.&#13;
Chippendale not only made chairs,&#13;
but almost everything In the furniture&#13;
line, except the one article with which&#13;
his name has been most frequently associated&#13;
in later days. We refer to&#13;
sideboards. It Is doubtful If he ever&#13;
made a sideboard. In bis book there&#13;
Is no reference to sideboards, though&#13;
there are several large tables which&#13;
he calls "sideboard tables." Though&#13;
S a u n d e r s , has, a new l i n e of s p r i n g | **• w »rd sideboard was^ used long be&#13;
hats a n d other g o o d s ; g e t t i n g&#13;
Tin-&#13;
W'l);&gt;sf"&#13;
Spelling by Ear.&#13;
y i tin 114 French stenographer,&#13;
projijivss in English bad nof&#13;
ucp with her proficiency In shortwas&#13;
puzzling over Home notes&#13;
at&#13;
Ul rVXW «# ACCseietf^flleevvdttLliii aatt.&#13;
AH tie aewf Cor |LM ptr j&#13;
sht- had taken of a recitation at n&#13;
.malic entertainment.&#13;
As she tiMn.scrlbeil them tho recitation&#13;
becjan like thin:&#13;
La f.intht wurlaf awtdheu.&#13;
Oui panju out pelone.&#13;
"That's easy," wild the expert to&#13;
whom she submitted the notes. "It la&#13;
part of a poem that begins:&#13;
"Ijkush, and the world laughs with rem,&#13;
Wee* and you WMP alone."&#13;
—Chicago Tribune.&#13;
r e a d y for t h e s u m m e r s trade.&#13;
Mrs. V. W i e g a n d o f P e t t y s v i l l e&#13;
was very sick t h e first of last&#13;
week with L a g r i p p e a n d u n d e r&#13;
t h e doctor's care we understand.&#13;
A n y o n e that has butter t o sell&#13;
will g e t almost any pi »ce for it by&#13;
b r i n g i n g i t here as w e have to e a t&#13;
b r e a d w i t h o u t most of t h e t i m e .&#13;
F r e d B r o s s a n d Mr. G o o d r i c h&#13;
of A n u A r b o r are b u i l d i n g a h o u s e&#13;
boat for S a m Burchfield a n d w e&#13;
u n d e r s t a n d will stay o n B a s e&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Mrs. Maud Carpenter a u d&#13;
c h i l d r e n of P i n c k n e y visited h e r&#13;
parents, W m . H o o k e r and wife of&#13;
P e t t y s v i l l e , t h e last of last week&#13;
and t h e first of this.&#13;
T h e T o l e d o I c e a n d Coal Co.&#13;
t h e B e n n e t I c e house, are g i v i n g&#13;
a l m o s t any price for h e l p to work&#13;
in t h e I c e house. R u m e r s a y s&#13;
c o u l d use 4 more men.&#13;
O u r Supervisor, G e o r g e V a n&#13;
H o r n , is b u s y now a d a y s with h i s&#13;
work a n d finding p r o p e r t y a m o n g&#13;
t h e c a m p e r s that had never b e e n&#13;
a c c e s s e d — o u g h t t o had h i m e l e c t -&#13;
ed before.&#13;
Charles S a m s o n i s very sick&#13;
with t h e m e a s e l s b u t i s a l i t t l e&#13;
better at this writing, also h i s&#13;
children, A l i c e and L a v e r n e , a n d&#13;
Mrs. L o u i s e G i l m o r e is there t a k -&#13;
i n g care of t h e m .&#13;
I n s o m e way a fire started i n&#13;
the w o o d s in the east side of I s -&#13;
land L a k e b u r n i n g and k i l l i n g a&#13;
lot of y o u n g tiruker aud had n o t&#13;
h e l p arrived it would of b u r n e d&#13;
s o m e of t h e c o t t a g e s .&#13;
S p r i n g is here and h o u s e c l e a n -&#13;
i n g i s t h e order of the d a y a m o n g&#13;
the campers, a s there are s o m a n y&#13;
ont arround it m a k e s u s think o f&#13;
s u m m e r b y their m o v i n g in o n e&#13;
c o t t a g e and o u t of another.&#13;
O n m e e t i n g a L a k e l a n d&#13;
n e i g h b o r on W e d n e s d a y last w i t h&#13;
a b u n d l e under h i s a r m a n d a&#13;
satchel under t h e o t h e r arm, w a s&#13;
a s k e d w h e r e h e w a s g o i n g • H e&#13;
answered, " J u s t g o i n g t o t h e b a r n ,&#13;
my wife i s c l e a n i n g house.&#13;
fore hU day, it is probable that the&#13;
early English sideboards were merely&#13;
tables.&#13;
The Samlan Letter.&#13;
The tetter Y Is called the Samfen let&#13;
ter. It is so called because Its Greek&#13;
original was referred to by Pythagoras,&#13;
the philosopher of Samoa, to Illustrate&#13;
how deviation from the straight path&#13;
of virtue becomes constantly wider as&#13;
the lines are extended. The poet Pope&#13;
refers to this idea in the lines:&#13;
When reason, doubtful, Ilka the Samlan&#13;
letter,&#13;
faints him two ways, the narrower the&#13;
better.&#13;
—Housekeeper.&#13;
His Bluff.&#13;
Watchman (discovering a burglar in&#13;
the act of opening a bank safe)—Hold&#13;
on! What are you doing there? Burglar&#13;
-Don't make such a row, old man.&#13;
I want to see If my deposit is all right.&#13;
Nobody can trust his bankers nowadays.&#13;
--London Express,&#13;
The safest way of not&#13;
miserable Is not to expect&#13;
happy.—Schopenhauer.&#13;
!&gt;eing&#13;
to be&#13;
very&#13;
very&#13;
Her Fear.&#13;
A little girl remarked to her mother,&#13;
"I am not afraid in the dark."&#13;
"Of cour.se not," said the mother.&#13;
"I was afraid once, though, when I&#13;
went into the pantry to get a tart." she&#13;
added.&#13;
"What were you afraid of?"&#13;
"I was afraid 1 would not find the&#13;
tarts," was the reply.&#13;
Doa't f or**! toe .first »how tf the&#13;
- H i y 9 . ^ :&#13;
Perry Blunt was in Detroit Monday&#13;
buying a stock of leather.&#13;
Henry Ruenof Wteeonain is spendinff&#13;
a couple of weeks with bis parents&#13;
here.&#13;
The teachers and scholars cleaned&#13;
ap the school grounds here ia nice&#13;
shape Arbor Day,&#13;
Rev/ tffrfc, Stephens of Northvillo&#13;
visited his %ngbi*r,J»r». P. G. Jackson&#13;
the first of the week.&#13;
Those who desire to take the eighth&#13;
grade examination at Pinckney, bear&#13;
in mind that it takes place Friday and&#13;
Saturday of this week. Principal, T.&#13;
J. Gaul has charge.&#13;
The Anderson Farmer's club will&#13;
meet this week Saturday afternoon at&#13;
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Greiner.&#13;
Supper will be served, a program&#13;
rendered and a general good&#13;
time.&#13;
N e e d e d at Uakeland.&#13;
With the coming resort season the&#13;
need of a good well and pump at Lakeland&#13;
id manifest. The Grand Trunk&#13;
and Ann Arbor railways bring, thousands&#13;
of reporters sere every summer&#13;
besides iheir regular passengers and&#13;
it would seem shat it would be good&#13;
policy on their part to. see that some&#13;
comforts and at least the necessities of&#13;
a waiting, traveling public were looked&#13;
after.&#13;
Besides there are many tiresome&#13;
waits between trains tbe year around,&#13;
and the worst of it is there is no place&#13;
to t e t a drink of water outside of&#13;
walking a half mile.&#13;
Tbe railroads can make themselves&#13;
solid with the traveling public, especially&#13;
with mothers with small children&#13;
if they will give the matter attention&#13;
and see that there is a well or at least&#13;
a place to get a drink.&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
Tbers rs«* a goodly attendance Sunday&#13;
morning and the pastor gave an&#13;
excellent discourse. The evening service&#13;
was not so largely attended as&#13;
the weather was bad, however those&#13;
present enjoyed an interesting&#13;
League meeting and sermon*&#13;
There proved to be tbe usual interest&#13;
in the Sunday school and the&#13;
attendance was 113, with a collection&#13;
of 16.84. This was not a special collection&#13;
only the regular monthly&#13;
missionary. The Sunday school&#13;
organist bomg unable to keep up the&#13;
work has resigned and the girls in&#13;
Mrs. Towles claes are taking a p the&#13;
work in fine shape different ones playing&#13;
a p ece each Sunday. The maroh&#13;
for the classes was played by Miss&#13;
Grace and Master Harold Grieves—a&#13;
duet,&#13;
The third quarterly meeting will be&#13;
held at the church Saturday evening&#13;
at 7:30 and a good attendance is desired.&#13;
It is expected that Presiding&#13;
Elder, Wm. A. Dawe will preaoh Sunday&#13;
morning. Love feast at 10 a. m .&#13;
will take place of tbe regular class&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Seats are free and yon are invited&#13;
to ail these services.&#13;
Mftivle ?\$mo&gt;\\.Vi 'RocVs&#13;
KCittnat from attnuiv Tt\i» "\DViu\\iu lo»\» \T\ \h» *\n«tvd,&#13;
E3Q-G-S for HATOHHTOIf&#13;
you want Quality, buy of&#13;
W. A. REYNOLDS&#13;
There is money in thtm, besides&#13;
you have the pleasure of raising&#13;
one of the most beautiful fowls&#13;
now in existence.&#13;
Eggs reduced after May 28 to $2 per 15.&#13;
W. A. REYNOLDS, Howell, Mich.&#13;
• ' • , • ' . • " " "&#13;
* * 1&#13;
r » -&#13;
r*&#13;
:. X&#13;
#*h&#13;
&amp; •:f\i$ti*&#13;
™*-'^ -' -</text>
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                  <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>
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            <elementText elementTextId="40327">
              <text>PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MAY. 16, 1907. No. 20&#13;
«U-,&#13;
* •&#13;
f o r&#13;
.Quality Bowman's&#13;
Bvepythinfi fop S u m m e r N e e d s&#13;
New Kibtmiis, L:ice^, Em'u'uidiery, Hosiery, Underwear, I'orssetH,&#13;
India Linens, White (.rood.-, Act Denims, Silkaliues, Ladies1 and Men's&#13;
Glove-, Work S h i i h , Overalls, Bmall Hardware.&#13;
Our Notion Department is complete with items at aaving prices.&#13;
House Furnishing tiioo'ls at every description.&#13;
b n d m e l D i i h P d n * 3 5 c b n a m e l W a i h H d i l n lOc&#13;
L n u m r l D i p p e r s lOc U Q u a r t l l n M l l k panit 5 c&#13;
10c Q u a l i t y O u s t P a n * 5 c&#13;
The Cleveland "Hydro Carbonite" Roof Paint&#13;
The Best in the World&#13;
O u r p r i c e , o n t h i s &lt;£re.at R o o f P a i n t i s o n l y 5 0 c p e p g a l l o n&#13;
E v e r y d a y i s b a r g a i n d a y&#13;
£• A. Bowman's&#13;
Howell's Busy S t o r e&#13;
U i . . i n&#13;
GASOLINE&#13;
RED STAR RRAND,&#13;
HeHt Uv Test&#13;
DOES NOT SMOKE $&#13;
$&#13;
-i&#13;
r5* ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ : ¾ ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ^&#13;
ASK YOUR DKALKK&#13;
"SOT "Kla^&#13;
O n a c c o u n t of b a d w e a t h e r in&#13;
A p r i l , h a v e d e c i d e d to m a k e t h e&#13;
s a m e offer in May. F o r o n l y fifty&#13;
c e n t s e x t r a&#13;
I Will Give&#13;
With every dozen photos&#13;
at $2.00 or more per&#13;
dozen, one $1.00 portrait&#13;
for 10X20 frame.&#13;
Don't 'fail to GJ~t One.&#13;
Photograph Studio,&#13;
DSISY B. CHRPELL, StoGkbriije&#13;
M •.*"•'&#13;
Ice Cream Soda&#13;
C o m e in and eat&#13;
a p u r e , refreshi&#13;
n g d i s h of - -&#13;
"Silk Floss" Ice Cream&#13;
e i t h e r in t h e f o r m of&#13;
a " S u n d a y or S o d a . "&#13;
Garboruted Waters,&#13;
. AIF Kinds on Ice.&#13;
NEVER CLOSED&#13;
*&amp;iu&lt;\H Q«T Xarth &lt;tf "Oro* MOM&#13;
&lt;L. KL. S^W,&#13;
rtop.&#13;
L O C A b N E W S .&#13;
Wonder how tbe gardens stood the&#13;
Ireeze?&#13;
Fourteen students took the examination&#13;
here last week.&#13;
The trees are trying to force spring&#13;
by looking a little green.&#13;
Alex Mclntyre of Detroit was in&#13;
town the last of last week.&#13;
Don't miss the Winding of the May&#13;
Pole at the Opera House May 17.&#13;
Floyd Reason is excavating under&#13;
his residence tor a heating plant.&#13;
Don't forget the Masquerade Social&#13;
Friday nigh', May 17. Addmission&#13;
15 cents including dish of ice cream.&#13;
Th°ve was no school in the PUS last&#13;
Friday owing to the Principal being&#13;
engaged n the eighth grade examinations.&#13;
Xo, those are not large birds floating&#13;
arroui.d evenings, they are kites.&#13;
The Teeple Hardware Co. have some&#13;
tine ones.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Taylor and Dr. and I&#13;
Mrs. Holcomb of Xovi were guests at&#13;
the home of Air. and Mrs. E d w a r d !&#13;
^ u r t over S u n d a y .&#13;
Harry d o i n g and wife moved to&#13;
Pontiac the last of last W3ek. This&#13;
makes four families that have moved&#13;
to that city this spring.&#13;
The P u t n a m and Flam burg farmers&#13;
club will meet, at the home of Mr and&#13;
Mrs. H. G. Briggs on Saturday afternoon,&#13;
May 25. I h i n g lap boards and&#13;
dishes. j&#13;
Indians from the northern part of&#13;
the state are being brought to the i&#13;
township of Marion to work on farms j&#13;
the, coming season ^s farm help is so '&#13;
scarce. i&#13;
j Man}7 trees have been set the past j&#13;
i week on the square to take the nlar^&#13;
of these that have died. If, seems j&#13;
to be a hard place to make trees grow :&#13;
j hut perhaps perseverance will make it.&#13;
' We see by the St ekbridge exchanges&#13;
that Dr A. R. Green, Dentist, has&#13;
entered the field of advertising. We&#13;
do not, nor never could see why the&#13;
j doctor or dentist, should not adverties&#13;
as well as any other business.&#13;
On Friday last quite a snow storm&#13;
I visited this section making the ground&#13;
! quite white, although much of it&#13;
melted as fast as it fell. Probably&#13;
i there was nearly an inch fell in all.&#13;
; During tbe night the ground froze&#13;
! quite hard.&#13;
j A newspaper cannot live nn its subscriptions&#13;
alone hut depends largely&#13;
upon its advertisers. You should&#13;
notice carefully the advertisment.8 in&#13;
your local paper and then patronize&#13;
the firms who mako it possible for you&#13;
to have a local paper. There is nothing&#13;
better to draw people to a village&#13;
than a 100¾} paper fiPed .with live&#13;
advs. of live business r u e i .&#13;
Homeward Bound.&#13;
Fr. Comertord sailed from Queenstown,&#13;
Ireland, on the 8th inst. and&#13;
will arrive in New York on the 141b.&#13;
He will spend ;ome tiuiH in Yew Y'ork&#13;
aud Canada and then will come immediately&#13;
to dear old Pinckney . His&#13;
parishioners are preparing a grand&#13;
reception for him which will take&#13;
place bometiuie the week of the 19th&#13;
at the opera house. The exact date&#13;
will be given out next Sunday.&#13;
There will be present about t w e n t y&#13;
priests to welcome him while the&#13;
whole congregation of St. Marys will&#13;
be tht-re without fail. They also wish&#13;
it understood t h a t all are invited no&#13;
matter what their creed or nationality&#13;
may be. There will be presented to&#13;
Fr. Conierford on this occasion a purse&#13;
of five hundred dollars which Lis&#13;
people are sure of collecting before&#13;
his arrival. The following ptogram&#13;
will he carried out with some additions:&#13;
ChtiiruKtu J. V.. Dunn&#13;
Toastinaater Rev. Jus. Cahahtn&#13;
Address of welcome, Rev. J as, Hullj&#13;
Song, Kmrnett Harris&#13;
Citizens welcome Hon. (r. W. Teeple&#13;
Parish welcome Rev. T. F. Slattery&#13;
Song L. K. Smith j&#13;
Presentation of purse. I&#13;
RemHrkK Rev. M. J . Comerford j&#13;
Addmission free. i&#13;
i&#13;
The W. I. C. S o c i e t y I&#13;
The W. I . C . of the M. E. Sunday |&#13;
school have made a r r a n g e m e n t s t o !&#13;
give an entertainment at the church '&#13;
Wednesday evening, May 29, when )&#13;
Mrs. Lulu Belle Rodda, g r a d u a t e of j&#13;
the Detroit School of Expression will ;&#13;
give a reading. She comes highly!&#13;
r commended as an entertainer and&#13;
no one should miss the t r e a t . We&#13;
have had no such entertainments in&#13;
the village for some time. Admission, ]&#13;
10 and 20 cents.&#13;
The sound of the lawn mower&#13;
agrtin heard in our village,&#13;
Marion Reason broke the ground&#13;
for his new residence the past week.&#13;
If you want to laugh go the Masquerade&#13;
and see if vou know vour&#13;
neighbor.&#13;
Some riew post cards, souvenirs ot&#13;
Pinckney and vicinity, at the DisrAicu&#13;
office, 2 for 5 cents,&#13;
Floyd Reason has about completed&#13;
a new u p r i g h t on his farm residence&#13;
just south and west of town.&#13;
Louis Lonelier of Gros.se Islf. who&#13;
lias been spending the week here rel&#13;
u m e d to his home last Thursday.&#13;
Attend the Sunday school conven&#13;
tioi. at the North H a m b u r g church&#13;
Sunday afternoon. A good p r o g r a m '&#13;
The P u t n a m township Hoard ot Review&#13;
will meet at the town hall in&#13;
the village of Pinckney May 21-22 !&#13;
and 27-28. |&#13;
Miss Hattie Boucher and sister,)&#13;
Mrs. Hurdens, of Grosse Isle, Mich.,&#13;
visited Mrs. Brady and family last&#13;
week. i&#13;
A nice rain Wednesday morning j&#13;
made things look green and q u i t e like!&#13;
svring. The weather bureau promis- !&#13;
es another cold wave however. j&#13;
The Ep.vorth League of the M. E. i&#13;
chnrch will hold a reception at tne \&#13;
parsonage Wednesday evening, May&#13;
2o. All members of the League aud ,&#13;
all mt^restwd in the League work,&#13;
especially members of the S u n d a y !&#13;
school are invited.&#13;
" B a n k i n g by mail is getting to b e '&#13;
almost as much of a business as !'ne '&#13;
ordering goods ot mail aideT houses.'&#13;
B a n k i n g institutions ail over t h e '&#13;
conntrv are sending o m their rii\ u«'&#13;
lars, tell what they can and will do ii&#13;
for their patrons. It is with them as J&#13;
with every other business, the one&#13;
who advertises will get the business&#13;
and the home banks will have to fall&#13;
into line.&#13;
Come and Examine&#13;
Our New S t o c k of&#13;
Up-to-Date&#13;
W A L L PAPER&#13;
t'MTipiJoiis ( ':o'el'ully ( \&gt;aipwu;ii!«-&lt;l&#13;
P. A. S I G L B R ' S&#13;
1&#13;
N e w Straw Hats&#13;
A F i n e L i n e&#13;
J u s t R e c e i v e d&#13;
New, Nobby Styles&#13;
F o r M e n&#13;
a n d B o y s&#13;
25c, 5 0 c , 7 5 c , $1.00, $ 1 . 5 0 Each&#13;
Hickory Hats&#13;
1 5 c t o 2 5 c&#13;
W e h a v e a few S t r a w H a t s - all g o o d&#13;
n t y l e s - -in o u r B e l d i n g s t o c k , t h a t we&#13;
will sell for h R e g u l a r P r i c e&#13;
L. L Holmes Clothing Co&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
t&#13;
*&#13;
Ray Tompkins&#13;
Contractor and Builder&#13;
Can furnish larg'e or small bills&#13;
of lumber within thirty clays and&#13;
savc.von money, especially on inside&#13;
finish. Let me figure on&#13;
your job.&#13;
Lakeland, Michigan&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Wc are in position to store your b a s e - b u r n e r&#13;
£2.50&#13;
At Owner's Risk&#13;
Teeple Hardware&#13;
W^' ,«-*.*w*r» i, +*m WJMVJC&#13;
*&gt;4*„ • i ' &gt;&#13;
'&lt;£&lt;.•*&#13;
gintkn® £ispatrh.&#13;
FKAUK L. AMIKKWM, Pub.&#13;
PI NC KNEW MICHIGAN&#13;
Dan Cupid.&#13;
A pleauant feature of the congressional&#13;
parties that make journeys&#13;
abroad is the fact that Dan Cupid&#13;
eeeuiB always to be a passenger. He&#13;
went to thb Philippines, and three&#13;
matches resulted. Mr. Longwortb, of&#13;
Ohio; Mr. Cockran, of New York, and&#13;
Mr. Sherley, of Kentucky, all surrendered&#13;
to influences Insuring their happiness&#13;
for life. And now the steamer&#13;
Hluecher is no sooner docked on her&#13;
return with the Cannon party from&#13;
the West Indies than the engagement&#13;
of two of the company is announced.&#13;
What Is it that makes love the prevailing&#13;
and compelling topic at such&#13;
limes? asks the Washington Star.&#13;
Does a discussion of Uncle Sam's new&#13;
responsibilities lead to it? Or does the&#13;
delightful imprisonment on shipboard&#13;
explain it? Whatever the explanation,&#13;
the fact exists, and it may result in&#13;
making such trips exceedingly popular.&#13;
The curiosity of congress as to&#13;
our outlying possessions may come to&#13;
overshadow everything else.&#13;
EVENTS NOTED&#13;
CLERGYMAN N A B t E D IN LAND&#13;
OF FLOWERS NOW COMING&#13;
BACK.&#13;
ACCUSED OF FORGERY.&#13;
Most of those who believe that the&#13;
United States should have an overwhelming&#13;
navy will indorse the theory&#13;
of Admiral "Hob" Evans, that we&#13;
should have battleshlts and fleet tactics&#13;
in the Pacific, as well as in the Atlantic.&#13;
"When the navy Is built up to&#13;
its proper proportions I believe we&#13;
should have 16 battleships on the Atlantic&#13;
and 16 on the Pacific," says the&#13;
admiral. The*, we could defy the&#13;
world!&#13;
Sir Robere Hall, who has arrived in&#13;
New York, is professor of astronomy&#13;
at Cambridge university. "America&#13;
has done much in advancing the study&#13;
of astronomy," he says. "It is really&#13;
here in America now that all the great&#13;
discoveries in astronomy are made."&#13;
While in this country he will be the&#13;
guest of Andrew Carnegie and will attend&#13;
the dedication of ttfe Carnegie&#13;
institute, in Pittsburg.&#13;
When Dr. Buckley, editor of the&#13;
Christian Advocate, told the New&#13;
York conference last week that some&#13;
of. his best suggestions for editorials&#13;
came from persons shut up In asylums&#13;
as lunatics, the brethren were amuBed.&#13;
"I knew you would laugh," said Dr.&#13;
Puckley, "but I want to say that&#13;
some of the inmates of insane asylums&#13;
are as sane as you will ever be."&#13;
Spencer Eddy, secretary of the&#13;
United States embassy in Berlin, Is&#13;
taking an active interest in polo. He&#13;
has been a moving spirit In organizing&#13;
a number of young men in the German&#13;
capital with a view to establishing&#13;
the game in one or two of the&#13;
luburhs of Berlin. It is probable that&#13;
«t leasi iwo rival pojo teams will be&#13;
jmt into the field there this Fiuumor,&#13;
&lt;&gt;h, yes, the Long island woman&#13;
who left in her will a provision of&#13;
$!•"&gt; a month for the support of a&#13;
scotch collie dog knew that there were&#13;
poor children in the world, but when&#13;
bhe was attacked by a robber in iront&#13;
o,f her home, about a year ago, the&#13;
dog sprang at the man's throat and&#13;
he ran away and she was grateful.&#13;
Left Wife and Three Children and&#13;
Turn* Up as a MIeelonary in Honolulu.&#13;
A Long Chaee.&#13;
Rev. W. I). Clark, accused of passing&#13;
a forged check on the bank of&#13;
Kreejfort, Barry county, has been apprehended&#13;
in Honolulu, where he has&#13;
been H missionary of the Congregational&#13;
church to the Japanese and&#13;
Koreans. Sheriff Victor B. Kumiss has&#13;
been on the preacher's trail for two&#13;
years and will go after him as soon&#13;
as the necessary requisition papers&#13;
can be prepared.&#13;
Clark was pastor of the Congregational&#13;
church in Freeport for almost&#13;
two years prior to July 24, 1904. He&#13;
had a wife and three children and his&#13;
salary was small. He is said to have&#13;
borrowed |500 from his parishioners,&#13;
particularly from widows and maiden&#13;
ladies.&#13;
One day early in July, 1904, Clark&#13;
went into the bank of Freeport and&#13;
told the cashier, Hale Kenyon, that&#13;
he was expecting a remittance from&#13;
his home in Dayton, O., in a few&#13;
days. On July 24 he returned to the&#13;
bank with a check for $300, which&#13;
he presented to be cashed. Mr. Kenyon&#13;
deducted $40 the preacher owed&#13;
the institution and handed over the&#13;
rest. The next day the Congregational&#13;
church was without a pastor and Mrs.&#13;
Clark and her three small children&#13;
were, left to the mercy of her friends.&#13;
She did not remain long, but returned&#13;
to her home in Dayton.&#13;
After a warrant had been sworn&#13;
out charging the preacher with passing&#13;
a false check, the police of all of&#13;
the large cities were notified. He was&#13;
traced to Billings, Mont., where he&#13;
had another church, but he was gone&#13;
when the officers went to get him.&#13;
Soon after this an interesting story&#13;
was told by a traveling man who had&#13;
known Clark in Dayton and in Billings.&#13;
It was to the effect that Clark&#13;
and a Dayton woman were seen together&#13;
in Kansas City. Clark had&#13;
then put aside his ministerial garb,&#13;
had cut off his hair and wore rather&#13;
loud clothes.&#13;
The story was communicated to&#13;
John Qetard. brother of Mrs. Clark.&#13;
In February, Getard wrote to Cashier&#13;
Kenyon of the Freemont bank that&#13;
he had heard that Clark was in Honolulu,&#13;
and had Been his name mentioned&#13;
in a Hawaiian paper. Sheriff&#13;
Furnia8 put the wheels to work, but&#13;
not until April 22 did he receive any&#13;
definite information. Then a letter&#13;
was received from (low George B.&#13;
Parker of the Hawaiian islands, saying&#13;
that Clark had been identified by&#13;
a young man who had gone to school&#13;
to him when he was a teacher in&#13;
Ohio, and yesterday came news of his&#13;
arrest.&#13;
Clark is a well educated man, having&#13;
been admitted to the bar. He&#13;
occupied a pulpit in Holding before&#13;
coming to Freeport.&#13;
IMPROVING.&#13;
Representative Ward Not to Be Op&gt;&#13;
erated On.&#13;
It had been announced for several&#13;
days t h a t Representative Charles B.&#13;
Ward would undergo an operation for&#13;
appenditicitie. He was taken to the&#13;
Lansing City hospital Friday night for&#13;
that purpose. It was announced that&#13;
he had made a will la anticipation of&#13;
possible serious results, and that the&#13;
operation would be performed Sunday,&#13;
Saturday night Dr. E. T. Abrams, a&#13;
feHow member of the legislature and&#13;
vthe surgeon who expected to perform&#13;
the operation, said t h a t Ward had improved&#13;
to such an exteut that It waa&#13;
likely an operation would not be performed&#13;
unless there Is a sudden and&#13;
serious turn in his condition.&#13;
"He seems to be a great deal better,"&#13;
said Dr. ^ b r a m s . "I think that&#13;
if the present rate of Improvement&#13;
continues he will be able to be out In&#13;
HERE AND THERE&#13;
CENSUS OF CUBA BEING TAKEN&#13;
FOR THE COMING&#13;
ELECTIONS.&#13;
PRICE OF LOST LEGS VARY&#13;
FIERCE RIOT.&#13;
The Haywood Triai 1« On at Boise,&#13;
Idaho—Various Matters of Note and&#13;
Comment.&#13;
Magoon's Decree.&#13;
Gov. Magoon issued a decree for&#13;
the taking of a census of the inhabitants&#13;
of Cuba, which is the first step&#13;
of the program for the restab-&#13;
„ _ u • A . . . . i l i t j h l uent of the republic. Muuici&#13;
a week or ten days, but If an opera- ^ elections&#13;
tion is performed It will likely be three w e c u M B&#13;
or four weeks before he will be able&#13;
to leave the hospital."&#13;
Ward Is himself desirious that the&#13;
operation he postponed, as he Is said&#13;
to be anxious to get out as soon as&#13;
possible. His improvement since going&#13;
to the City hospital has been&#13;
marked.&#13;
Peverett Captured.&#13;
Albert E. Peverett, one of the celebrated&#13;
Richland bank robb.vrB, who&#13;
escaped from the Ionia institution on&#13;
July 7 last, was captured in Garrett,&#13;
Ind., and brought back. Peverett was&#13;
first sent to Jackson, then transferred&#13;
to Marquette.-He wouldn't work, and&#13;
sawed his hand off. Peverett was then&#13;
transferred to Ionia but returned as&#13;
ciired, then broke out a second time.&#13;
In the asylum they kept Peverett&#13;
under close surveillance, not allowing&#13;
him out of his ward, but one day when&#13;
all were at dinner his cell door was&#13;
mysteriously unlocked and he walked&#13;
out. No one knows how Peverett's&#13;
release came about, but they have&#13;
been after him ever since. His sentence&#13;
was fifteen years.&#13;
One of his associates in the Richand&#13;
affair is Allison, who is still in&#13;
will follow. The&#13;
completion of the census, and the&#13;
presidential election will be held later.&#13;
Article 17 of the decree provides&#13;
against the possibility of politics influencing&#13;
the apjM»intments, It saying&#13;
that the enumerators and employes&#13;
shall be selected for their fitness only.&#13;
It stipulates that if an employe wilfully&#13;
. neglects his work he will be&#13;
liable to a fine of $100. Making false&#13;
returns will entail a flue of 32,000 or&#13;
imprisonment for two years. Givers&#13;
pf false information may he punished&#13;
by the imposition of a maximum fine&#13;
pf |1,C00 or imprisonment for a year,&#13;
impersonation of a census enumerator&#13;
will render the impersonator liable&#13;
to a fine of $1,000 or imprisonment for&#13;
a year."&#13;
Mr. Olmstead, the director of the&#13;
ceusuB, will receive a salary of $750&#13;
monthly. An assistant director, who&#13;
Pettlbone'e Career.&#13;
hou „„• ,^* K .„ - , i George A. Pettlbone, indicted with*&#13;
t r ^ n " ? l ^ w b e e n n a m e d ' W i l 1 r e c e i v e M $500 monthly. ° y e r and Haywood, of the Western&#13;
Sf me Lege Are Costly.&#13;
By a decision in the supreme court&#13;
In New Trork the value of the left leg&#13;
of a young society woman who is&#13;
Jackson prison, though an effort if I F o n d o f c ancing, golfing and other out&#13;
being made* to secure a pardon.&#13;
Another Greet Electric Line.&#13;
The Mills-Moore syndicate, projectors&#13;
of the Michigan United Railway,&#13;
signed papers in New York Thursday&#13;
which gives them poisesslon of the&#13;
Jackson Consolidated Traction Co., and&#13;
makes the Michigan United supreme&#13;
in central Michigan interurbans and&#13;
city Hues. The Kalamazoo, Battle&#13;
Creek and Lansing city lines, with an&#13;
interurban line north to St. Johns and&#13;
a line south to Jackson, under construction,&#13;
also belong to the M. U. R.&#13;
it is understood that the price paid by&#13;
the Mills-Moore syndicate to Coler &amp;&#13;
Co. for the Jackson lines 1B $1,000,000.&#13;
The M. IT. R.'s capital is now $5,000,-&#13;
000, and with the lines now under construction&#13;
and completed, will be second&#13;
only to the Detroit United in mile,&#13;
age.&#13;
door sports, Is just three and one-half&#13;
times as much as the left leg of a&#13;
chauffeur, who has no time for such&#13;
emusements. It is possible that the&#13;
appearance of the fair plaintiff in&#13;
court in blooming health otherwise,&#13;
but obliged to hobble along on an artificial&#13;
limb, had a marked effect upon&#13;
the sympathies of the jurors before&#13;
whom the suit was tried&#13;
In any event they returned a verdict&#13;
for the plaintiff for the sum of $35,000&#13;
damages against the New York Central&#13;
railroad, for the injuries she had&#13;
received when the automobile that she&#13;
was riding in was struck by a train&#13;
near Van Courtland park.&#13;
The chauffeur, who was injured almost&#13;
precisely in the same manner&#13;
as the fair plaintiff, got a verdict of&#13;
only $10,000 for the loss of his left&#13;
leg.&#13;
The State Encampment.&#13;
After an inspection of the several&#13;
available sites, the military board has&#13;
decided to hold this year's annual en-&#13;
Haywood on T r i a l .&#13;
Wm. I). Haywood, secretary and&#13;
treasurer of the Western Federation&#13;
of Miners, was placed on trial jn Uoise,&#13;
Idaho. Thursday for complicity in the&#13;
campment. of the Michigan National i a B s a s p i n a t i o n a t C a l d w e n - Idaho, on&#13;
(Juard at Ludington. H r i g , ( i e n . ' M c ( i u r - i ^ e r e r i h ^ r M . J 9 0 5 ' °f tnT,nvr &lt; l o v '&#13;
rin. Hrig.-Gon. Kidd and Hrig-CJen p r a n k ^ ' ^ e n b e r g . Haywood is one&#13;
Wright Acquitted.&#13;
Tin' trial of Benjamin C. Wright&#13;
formerly of Benton Harbor, Mich,,&#13;
j H a n a h went to Ludington last week&#13;
j for the purpose of inspecting the site&#13;
] near that place, the. South Haven and&#13;
Saginaw locations having been visitcharged&#13;
with the murder of his wife ' &lt;'d previously, The troops will go to&#13;
camp on Wednesday, August 14, and&#13;
will return to their stations on Friday.&#13;
August 2:), giving eight full days&#13;
in ramp and parts of two others.&#13;
There is a woman in New York who&#13;
has been doing valiant service for the&#13;
Humane society by addressing drivers&#13;
and teamsters and telling them how&#13;
to use their horses better and in a&#13;
•lore humane manner. She is Mrs.&#13;
J)iana Belais, and her husiiand is&#13;
president of the New York Humane&#13;
lociety. t&#13;
In Canada the French settlers still&#13;
tontinue to use largo brick ovens out&#13;
Df doors such as, were built in France&#13;
250 years ago. The perfection of the&#13;
stove and range in the last. 50 years&#13;
has driven many of these ovens out of&#13;
commission, but many of the inhabitants&#13;
think that, no pood baking can&#13;
be done in any other oven.&#13;
and .Vyear-old daughter, was ended&#13;
abruptly Wednesday when, after hearing&#13;
the testimony of Prof. W. H, Rngle.&#13;
instructor of chemistry at Denver university,&#13;
counsel for the state announced&#13;
that the case against, Wright&#13;
would not be continued,&#13;
The- jury, in accordance with instructions&#13;
from the court, returned a verdict,&#13;
acquitting the defendant.&#13;
Prof. Engle testified that carbon&#13;
monoxide poisoning, generated by a&#13;
gas heater, caused the deaths.&#13;
at a&#13;
was&#13;
An irreverent Yale student, has collected&#13;
statistics of reading done in the&#13;
iiniversity which show incidentally&#13;
* hat. Yale professors take on an average&#13;
only about eight, or ten books a&#13;
oar from the rollege. library—hut&#13;
hat's nothing. Yale professors don't&#13;
read hooks; they write them.&#13;
A Brave Woman.&#13;
James McDonald, pumpman&#13;
station on a branch railroad,&#13;
brought to the Kscanaba hospital several&#13;
days ago, seriously ill. His wife,&#13;
although having the care of several&#13;
children, look up his work and did&#13;
it well until Monday, when her hand&#13;
was crushed in the pump. Taking her&#13;
.1-months-old babe in her arms, the&#13;
woman walked 12 miles to the main&#13;
line and, stopping an ore train, was&#13;
brought to Escanaha, a distance of&#13;
40 miles, before her hand could be&#13;
properly dressed. Both husband and&#13;
wife are now in the same hospital.&#13;
Boy Suicides.&#13;
Elton Davis, IK-ycar-old son of O.&#13;
L. Davis, a prominent Cadillac druggist,&#13;
committed suicide by shooting&#13;
himself through the temple. Ho had&#13;
been suffering from organic heart&#13;
disease for many months, being confined&#13;
to his bed during 1 he past few&#13;
weeks, and was rapidly Hearing&#13;
death.&#13;
Girl's Hard Run.&#13;
Howard Berry, 2-year-old son of Edward&#13;
Berry, of Cold water, while left,&#13;
in the care of his sister, agot! 8 years,&#13;
; climbed upon a chair and from there&#13;
• to a shelf and secured a bottle of&#13;
I carbolic acid, tipping the contents&#13;
i over himself. The child's arms, legs&#13;
and feet were frightfully burned. Mrs.&#13;
; Berry was at the station to take the&#13;
j train to Quincy. The daughter ran a&#13;
mile and a half to the depot, but was&#13;
unable to make her mother understand&#13;
as the train was in motion and she did&#13;
not get off. Neighbors secured a physician&#13;
and the child was made comfortable.&#13;
Wants to Stay.&#13;
Stella Mix, who left, her homo near&#13;
Nashville, Mich., last November, and&#13;
whose invalid mother expresses concern&#13;
over her whereabouts, has heen&#13;
located in Detroit. The girl is with&#13;
friends in the city and is not. anxious&#13;
to return to her old ho;ne. Miss Mix&#13;
sent her father a letter, informing him&#13;
as to her welfare and stating that, she&#13;
is, desirous of remaining in the city&#13;
of four defendants. The others art&#13;
Charles H. Moyer, president of the&#13;
federation; George A. Pettlbone, a&#13;
former member of the executive committee&#13;
of the federation, and Harry&#13;
Orchard, formerly of Detroit.&#13;
The last named is expected to be&#13;
the most, important, witness for the&#13;
state. He is said to have made a confession&#13;
involving the miners' officials.&#13;
Orchard will not be tried until all&#13;
of the other cases are disposed cf. It&#13;
is said that the evidence agHinst him&#13;
is so strong that he cannot hope for&#13;
other than a conviction of murder in&#13;
the first degree regardless of the verdict&#13;
upon the indictments against Haywood,&#13;
Moyer and Pettibone. Orchard,&#13;
it, is said, has been promised no degree&#13;
of clemency whatever for his admitted&#13;
active part in blowing the&#13;
former governor of Idaho to pieces&#13;
with a bomb at. the gate of his residence.&#13;
Federation of Miners, for complicity&#13;
in the assassination of ex-Gov. Steunenberg,&#13;
of Idaho, was a convict in the&#13;
Detroit house of correction during five&#13;
months in 1892-3.&#13;
Pettibone is said at the house of&#13;
correction t o have been a quiet, orderly&#13;
prisoner, who left no particular&#13;
impress on the minds of keepers. His&#13;
stay was cut short by a reversal of&#13;
his conviction.&#13;
Pettibone was a leader of the miners&#13;
who rioted at Coeur D'AIene,&#13;
Idaho, during 1892. A federal injunction&#13;
bad been secured restraining&#13;
the miners from Interfering with the&#13;
non-union workmen.&#13;
An armed mob over which PetUbou*&#13;
was one of the leaders attack** «MM&#13;
of the mines where strike-breaker*&#13;
were working and about 1,000 Stxrta&#13;
were exchanged. Then the striker* I *&#13;
gan to run short of ammunition. Pettibone&#13;
and some others, It was charged,&#13;
made a detour to the powder shed,&#13;
broke it open and took 200 pound*&#13;
of dynamite up the hillBide to the top&#13;
of a 500-foot chute leading into the besieged&#13;
mine building.&#13;
The dynamite was given a push, the&#13;
200 pounds slid faster and faster until,&#13;
at the bottom, there was an awful&#13;
crash* and the whole mine blew up.&#13;
Pettibone at the top of the chute, was&#13;
badly hurt. It was close afterward&#13;
that Pettibone was arrested, tried and&#13;
convicted along with several others.&#13;
BRIEFS.&#13;
Enough Chinamen have already&#13;
tworn that they are natives of this&#13;
:onnt.ry to credit cverv-Chinese woman&#13;
In the United States with :tt' births,&#13;
better start an oriental annex to the"&#13;
inanlas club.&#13;
Mr*. Zoo Potvin, aged S2, an ola&#13;
resident, of Alpena, who fell on a sidewalk&#13;
when returning from church, sus-&#13;
His father bar, been a sufferer from ' laining concussion of the brain, is&#13;
dead. She, did nor regain consciousness.&#13;
One son survives,&#13;
Snow fell in many places in Michigan&#13;
Fridav. Reports came from cities&#13;
that, are situated in the lower* tier&#13;
of counties and from those that are&#13;
hundreds of miles farther north. A&#13;
big drop in the temperature was re-&#13;
K&gt;rted as occurring Thursday night&#13;
and it Is feared fruit trees have been&#13;
locomotor ataxia for several years and&#13;
was. also sick in the house ar the&#13;
time of the' shooting.&#13;
The Davis family is ore of the most&#13;
I'Viiiaiiu nt in the city.&#13;
Wished to Drive a Wedfle.&#13;
John D. Pringle, editor of the I^ibor&#13;
World, of Pittsburg, has received a letter&#13;
from President Roosevelt, which&#13;
says:&#13;
"Nothing that has been spoken or&#13;
wiUten of the Moyer and Haywood&#13;
controversy has pleased me as much&#13;
as your editorial.&#13;
"In my last, letter I wished to drive&#13;
a wedge between the honest, law-abiding&#13;
man—with whom I feel such hearty&#13;
sympathy—and those worst foes of the&#13;
movement, who preach anarchy and&#13;
lawless violence; Just as I wish to see&#13;
a wedge driven between the capitalist&#13;
who is an oppressor or swindler and&#13;
the capitalist who strives to do right.&#13;
"Above all, I w a n t to express my&#13;
agreement with your final paragraph,&#13;
running as follows:&#13;
" 'The Labor World has not a word&#13;
to utter regarding the guilt, or inm.-&#13;
eence of Mover, Haywood or Pettibone.&#13;
We hope they are innocent and&#13;
Returning Shriners Killed.&#13;
Twenty-one passengers were killed&#13;
and 2'1 injured severely and eight or&#13;
ten slightly hurt in a wreck Saturday&#13;
afternoon on the coast line of the&#13;
Southern Pacific, five miles south of&#13;
Surf. The train was a special loaded&#13;
with Shriners who were on the way&#13;
from Los Angeles to their homes in&#13;
the east. The train consisted of six&#13;
coaches. Past. Imperial Potentate of&#13;
the Mystic Shrine Alvah P. Clayton&#13;
received a telegram from Imperial&#13;
Treasurer W. H. Brown, of Pittsburg,&#13;
who was on the train that followed the&#13;
wrecked section of No. 21. Mr, Brown&#13;
stated that the dead Shriners were&#13;
members of Al Koran temple of Cleveland,&#13;
Ismalia temple of Buffalo, and&#13;
Rajah temple of Reading, Pa. The&#13;
message says that some of the dead&#13;
arc known to be trainmen. The numbers&#13;
gifen are 21 dead and about, as&#13;
many seriously Injured.&#13;
In Eruption.&#13;
Enormous clouds of gray ashes appeared&#13;
this afternoon from the Fea&#13;
darkened the sky and fell on tjh*&#13;
town. Considerable apprehension v u&#13;
felt when it was realized ' t h a t the&#13;
clouds were ashes and cinders from&#13;
Mount Etna and Stromboli. A similar&#13;
phenomenon was noticed along the&#13;
southern coast and caused panics in&#13;
several places. The latest, reports declare&#13;
the situation to be more terrifying.&#13;
A few weeks ago Stromboli was&#13;
covered with rich vegetation; now&#13;
the island is stricken and desolate,&#13;
everything having been destroyed by&#13;
the fire or injured under ashes. Every&#13;
bont at the island has been pressed&#13;
into service by the inhabitants to&#13;
aid in their escape frJin the danger.&#13;
£*+•&#13;
Strikebreakers and Union M M Have&#13;
• A Shooting Witch.&#13;
The first attempt to run street care&#13;
in San Francisco Tuesday was marked&#13;
by bloodshed and fierce rioting.&#13;
One man, James Walsh, was killed&#13;
by a bullet from the rifle o r a strikebreaker,&#13;
and 26 others were taken&#13;
to hospitals with bullet wounds or&#13;
other injuries. Six of these are&#13;
pected to die.&#13;
A mob pursued the cars thr&#13;
the streets. Union men at wor&#13;
buildings threw bricks, stones, and&#13;
other missiles into t&#13;
the guards began to sh&#13;
was -u»a»m«4, A*it inai&#13;
frightened by the shoo&#13;
driven into a frenzy. .. u.j«a&gt;&#13;
The police did not act until later.&#13;
Then they dispersed the crowd when&#13;
one officer, Capt. Scott was brave&#13;
enough to wade Into t h e crowd, striking&#13;
right and left. The strikers regard&#13;
the police aa their friends, and&#13;
no resistance was offered except by&#13;
hotheads.&#13;
Gen. Mgr. Mullaly, of the Btreet&#13;
car company, asked Chief of Police&#13;
Dinan to release strikebreakers who&#13;
were under arrest. They included th#&#13;
men who did the shooting. Dinan fe&gt;&#13;
fused and then declared:&#13;
"Tomorrow I shall arm the poli«e&gt;&#13;
with rifles. If any strikebreakers start&#13;
any shooting from the cars they will&#13;
be shot in turn by the police."&#13;
Mayor Schmitz declared that t h e&#13;
affair waB not a genuine riot, and&#13;
that the police will be able to cope&#13;
with the situation. Gov. Gillette said&#13;
he would not call out the Btate&#13;
troopB until requested, but that if&#13;
the riots go on and the police cannot&#13;
stop them there will be no child's&#13;
play about it. The troops will go into&#13;
action.&#13;
AROUND THE STATE.&#13;
Leon McVeigh, a member of thr M.&#13;
N. (&gt;., was held up by three masked&#13;
men while crossing a bridge in Ionia i affected. The snow did not. last long&#13;
on his way home from drill, and re- j enough in any place to make any api&#13;
lieved of $6. ! preciable showing.&#13;
Soain's Crown Prince.&#13;
The Queen of Spain has given birth&#13;
n a boy at 12:45 p. m. Friday. The&#13;
will be proved so, but what we want I whole city went, wild with enthusiasm&#13;
to point, out is that, their innocence I ;1-s soon as it. was announced t h a i ' t h e&#13;
of the preferred charge will not exon- first-born of the king and queen was&#13;
crate them from that of preaching an "] huy, and dense crowds surged&#13;
Industrial and social policy, damning around the palace for hours shouting&#13;
to the best interests of wageworkers.'" j and wildly waving hands and hand-&#13;
— kerchiefs and hats, and in every way&#13;
Mrs. Charles Hardy, of Lapeer, displaying intense loyalty to the royal&#13;
awoke to find that she had been sleep- family, and the keenest satisfaction&#13;
ing all night beside the dead body of that the royal mother had given them&#13;
her mother, Mrs. E. Elwell. a man-child to inherit his fathfcr'ii&#13;
* throne is tne fullness of time&#13;
\&#13;
.'^•,-f&#13;
&gt; &gt; ~&#13;
, 1 * . '«• • » # • " , . &lt; ; ' . : . / 1&#13;
OF&#13;
LORD&#13;
A i m of t i a Old Wert.&#13;
By HARRY LEON WILSON&#13;
Author of " T h e Spoadors."&#13;
llfcpyri* ht. IW3. bjr Lothrofl Publiihlov to-*&#13;
. C H A P T E R XXXVI.—Continued.&#13;
In the light of the fire the little&#13;
man could see their faces, and he became&#13;
suddely coherent, smiling at&#13;
them in the old way.&#13;
"Why have you come so far In the&#13;
aight?" he asked Prudence, taking&#13;
oue of her cool hands between his own&#13;
that burned.&#13;
"But, you poor little father! Why&#13;
have you come, when you should be&#13;
home in bed? You are burning with&#13;
fever."&#13;
"Yes, yet?, dear, but It's over now.&#13;
This is the end. I came here—to be&#13;
here—I came to say my last prayer&#13;
in the body. And they will come&#13;
to find me here. You must go before&#13;
they come."&#13;
"Who will find you?"&#13;
"They from the church. I didn't&#13;
mean to do it, but when I was on my&#13;
feet something forced it out of me.&#13;
I knew what they would do, but I&#13;
was ready to die, and I hoped I could&#13;
awaken some of them."&#13;
"But no one shall hurt you."&#13;
"Don't tempt me to stay any&#13;
longer, dear, even if they would let&#13;
me. Oh, you don't know, you don't&#13;
know—and that devil's drumming over&#13;
there to madden me as on that other&#13;
night. But it's just—my God, how&#13;
just."&#13;
"Come away, then. Ruel will find&#13;
your horse, and we'll ride home."&#13;
*'IVi too late—don't as?k me to leave&#13;
my lieff now. It would only follow&#13;
me. It was this way that night—the&#13;
night before—the beating got into my&#13;
blood and hammered on my brain&#13;
till I didn't know. Prudence, I must&#13;
tell you—everything—"&#13;
He glanced at Follett appealingly,&#13;
as he had looked at the others when&#13;
he left the platform that day, beseeching&#13;
.some expressions of friendliness.&#13;
"Yes, I must tell you—everything."&#13;
But his face lighted as Follett interrupted&#13;
him.&#13;
"You tell her," said Follett, doggedly,&#13;
"how you saved her that day&#13;
and kept her like your own and&#13;
brought her up to be a good woman&#13;
—that's? what you tell her." The gratitude&#13;
in the little man's eyes had&#13;
grown with each word.&#13;
"Yes, ye8, dear, I have loved you&#13;
like my own little child, but your&#13;
father and mother were killed here&#13;
that day—and I found you and loved&#13;
you—such a dear, forlorn little girl—&#13;
will you hate me now?" he broke off&#13;
anxiously. She had both his hands&#13;
in her own.&#13;
"But why, how could I hate you?&#13;
You are my dear little sorry f a t h e r -&#13;
all I've known. I shall always love&#13;
you." »&#13;
"That will be good to take with me,"&#13;
he said, smiling again. ' I t ' s all I've&#13;
got to take—It's all I've had since the&#13;
day I found you. You are good," he&#13;
said, turning to Follett.&#13;
"Oh, shucks!" answered Follett.&#13;
A smile of rare contentment played&#13;
over the little man's face.&#13;
In the silence that followed, the&#13;
funeral drum came booming in upon&#13;
them over the ridge, and once they&#13;
•aw an Indian from the encampment&#13;
3t»nding on top of the hill to look&#13;
down at. their fire. Then the little&#13;
man spoke again.&#13;
"You will go with him," he said to&#13;
Prudence. "He will take you out of&#13;
here and back to your mother's people."&#13;
"She's going to marry me," said&#13;
Follett. Tho little man smiled at&#13;
this.&#13;
"It is right—the Gentile has come to&#13;
take you away. The Lord is cunning&#13;
in His vengeance. I felt It must&#13;
bo so when I saw you together."&#13;
After this ho was so quiet for a&#13;
time that they thought he was sleeping.&#13;
But presently he grew restless&#13;
again, and said to Follett:&#13;
"I want you to have me burled here.&#13;
Up there to the north, 300 yards from&#13;
here on the right, is a dwarf cedar&#13;
standing alone. Straight over the&#13;
ridge from that and half-way down&#13;
the other stde Is another cedar growing&#13;
at the foot of a ledge. Below that&#13;
ledge is a grave. There are stones&#13;
piled fiat., and a cross cut In the one&#13;
toward the cedar. Make a grave beside&#13;
that, one, and put me in it—Just&#13;
os I am. Remember that—uncoffineri.&#13;
It must be t h a t . way, remember.&#13;
There's a little book here In this&#13;
pocket. Let it stay with me—but&#13;
surely u^ilomneid, femaaaber, aa—as&#13;
the .rest f* tbeiij^were."&#13;
"But, father, why talk no? You are&#13;
going home with us."&#13;
1 "There, dear, it's all right, and&#13;
you'll feel kind about zne always when&#13;
you remember me?"&#13;
"Don't—don't talk BO."&#13;
"If that beating would only stay out&#13;
of my brain—the thing is crawling behind&#13;
me again! Oh, no, not yet—not&#13;
yet! Say thib with me, dear:&#13;
" 'The Lord is my Shepherd; I * hit 11&#13;
not want.&#13;
" 'He maketh me to lie down in&#13;
green pastures: He leadeth me beside&#13;
the still waters.' "&#13;
She aaid t h e psalm with him, and&#13;
he grew quiet again.&#13;
"You will go away with your husband,&#13;
and go at once—" H e eat up&#13;
suddenly from where he had been&#13;
lying, the light of a new design in his&#13;
eyes.&#13;
"Come—you will need protection&#13;
now—I must marry you at once. Surely&#13;
that will be an office acceptable In&#13;
the sight of God. And you will remember&#13;
me better for it—and kinder.&#13;
Come, Prudence; come, Ruel!"&#13;
"But, father, you are sick,"and so&#13;
weak—let us wait.."&#13;
"It will give me such joy to do it&#13;
—and this is the last."&#13;
She looked at Follett questionlngly,&#13;
but gave him her hand silently when&#13;
Thy rod and Thy staff t h e j comfort&#13;
me.' "&#13;
Follett spread the other saddle&#13;
blanket over him. He lay on his side,&#13;
his face to the tire, one moment saying&#13;
over the words of the psalm, but&#13;
the next listening in abject terror to&#13;
something the others could not hear.&#13;
"I wonder you don't hear their&#13;
screams," he Kaid, in one of these moments;&#13;
"but their blood ia not upon&#13;
you." Then, after a Uttle:&#13;
"See, it is growing light over, there.&#13;
Now they will soon be here. They&#13;
will know where I had to come, and&#13;
thjey will have a spade." He seemed&#13;
to be fainting In his last weakness.&#13;
Another hour they sat silently beside&#13;
him. Slowly the dark over the&#13;
eastern hill lightened to a gray. Then&#13;
the gray paled until a flush of pink&#13;
was there, and they could t e e about&#13;
them in the chill of the morning.&#13;
Then came a silence that startled&#13;
them all. The drum had stopped and&#13;
the night-long vibrations ceased from&#13;
their ears.&#13;
They looked toward the little man&#13;
with relief, for the drumming had&#13;
tortured him. But his breathing wae&#13;
shallow and irregular now, and from&#13;
time to time they could hear a rattle&#13;
in his throat. His eyes, when he&#13;
opened them, were looking far off.&#13;
He was turning restlessly and muttering&#13;
again. She took his hands? aud&#13;
found them cold and moist.&#13;
"His fever must have broken," she&#13;
said, hopfully. The little man opened&#13;
"Ohl Oh! My Poor Sorry Little&#13;
he arose ftpm the ground where he&#13;
had been sitting.&#13;
"He'd like It, and it's what we want&#13;
—all simple," he said.&#13;
In the light of the fire they stood&#13;
with hands joined, and the little man,&#13;
too, got to his feet, helping himself&#13;
up by the cairn against which he had&#13;
been leaning.&#13;
Then, with the unceasing beats of&#13;
the funeral drum In their ears, ho&#13;
made them man and wife.&#13;
"Do you, Ruel, take Prudence by&#13;
the right hand to receive her unto&#13;
yourself to be your lawful and wedded&#13;
wife, and you to be her lawful and&#13;
wedded husband for time and eternity—"&#13;
Thus far he had followed the formula&#13;
of his church, but now he departed&#13;
from it with something like defiance&#13;
coming up in his voice.&#13;
"—with a covenant and promise on&#13;
your part t h a t you will cleave to her&#13;
and to none other, so help you God,&#13;
taking never another wife in spite of&#13;
promise or threat of any priesthood&#13;
whatsoever, cleaving unto her and her&#13;
alone with singleness of h e a r t ? "&#13;
When they had made their responses,&#13;
and while the drum was&#13;
beating upon his heart, he pronounced&#13;
them man and wife, sealing upon&#13;
them "the blessing of the holy resurrection,&#13;
with power to come forth in&#13;
t h e morning clothed with glory and&#13;
immortality."&#13;
When he had spoken tho final&#13;
words nf the ceremony, he seemed&#13;
to lose himself from weakness,&#13;
reaching out his hands for support.&#13;
They helped him down on to the saddle&#13;
blanket that Follett had brought,&#13;
and the latter now went for more&#13;
wood.&#13;
When he came bark they were again&#13;
reciting the psalm that had seemed&#13;
to quiet the sufferer.&#13;
•• Yea, though I walk through the&#13;
valley of the shadow of death. I will&#13;
fear no evil; for Thou art with a e ;&#13;
Father—He Was So Good to M e ! "&#13;
his eyes to look up at her, and spoke&#13;
though absently, and not as if he saw&#13;
her:&#13;
"They will have a spade with them&#13;
when they come, never fear. And tho&#13;
spot must, not be forgotten—300 yards&#13;
north of the dwarf cedar, then straight&#13;
over the ridge and half-way down, to&#13;
the other cedar below the sandstone&#13;
—and uncofftned, with the book here&#13;
in this pocket where I have it. 'Thou&#13;
preparest a table before me in the&#13;
presence of mine enemies: Thou&#13;
anointest my head with oil; my cup&#13;
runneth over. Surely goodness and&#13;
mercy shall follow me all the days of&#13;
my life: and I will dwell in the house&#13;
of the Lord forever." "&#13;
He started up in terror of something&#13;
that seemed to be behind him. but fell&#13;
back, and a moment later was rambling&#13;
off through some sermon of tlv?&#13;
hygone year.&#13;
Slowly, then, the little smile faded&#13;
—the wietful light of it dying for the&#13;
last time. The tired head fell suddenly&#13;
back and the wan lips closed over&#13;
lifeless eyes.&#13;
From the look of rest on the still&#13;
face it, was as if, in his years of service&#13;
and sacrifice, the little man had&#13;
learned how to forgive his own sin in&#13;
the flash of those last heart-beats&#13;
when his soul had rushed out. to welcome&#13;
Death.&#13;
Prudence had arisen before the end&#13;
came. Follett was glad she did not.&#13;
see the eyes glaze nor the head drop.&#13;
Then he sprang quickly up and put his&#13;
arm about Prudence.&#13;
"Come, sit. here close by the fire.&#13;
dear—no, around this side, it's all&#13;
over now."&#13;
"Oh! Oh! My poor, sorry little&#13;
father—he was so good to m e ! " She&#13;
threw herself on tho ground, sobbing.&#13;
Follett spread a saddle blanket&#13;
over the huddled figure at tho foot of&#13;
the cross. Then he went back to take&#13;
her in his arms and give her such&#13;
comfort as he could.&#13;
ITO BE CONTINUED^&#13;
FOR FRIENDLESS M E N .&#13;
Good Work Being Done in Vancouver&#13;
by the W. C. T. U.&#13;
Mrs. Field.&#13;
Several thousand miles from New&#13;
York, on the island of Vancouver, in&#13;
the city of Victoria,&#13;
the Wome&#13;
n ' s Christian&#13;
T e m p e r a n c e&#13;
Union have been&#13;
carrying o n a&#13;
v e r y successful&#13;
work on practical&#13;
lines. One branch&#13;
of their work is&#13;
a mission for men&#13;
who are In a&#13;
strange land, far&#13;
from home and without friends.&#13;
Here they find a hearty welcome,&#13;
and people who take a personal Interest&#13;
In their welfare. There is a free&#13;
reading-room aud a pleasant diningroom,&#13;
where attractive lunches are&#13;
served at the smallest possible cost.&#13;
The latter is greatly appreciated by&#13;
those who have met with reverses,&#13;
yet wish to pay something at least for&#13;
what they receive.&#13;
Many men have difficulty when out&#13;
of work to live in a respectable way,&#13;
and this the mission helps them to do.&#13;
There are also some sleeping rooms,&#13;
the number of which will be increased&#13;
as soon as the much needed funds can&#13;
be secured. It is supported by voluntary&#13;
subscriptions. Every little while&#13;
some one whom the mission has&#13;
helped to make a new start in life,&#13;
returns to visit the mission and leave&#13;
something towards helping others in&#13;
distress.&#13;
The work was started several years&#13;
ago in very cramped quarters. Some&#13;
tfme ago better rooms were secured&#13;
in a suitable part of the city near&#13;
the landing places. Much of its saccess,&#13;
says the Christian Herald, is due&#13;
to the present manager, Mrs. Field,&#13;
who has stood by it through many&#13;
discouragements since she took&#13;
charge three years ago. Her great&#13;
tact and ready sympathy have won&#13;
many friends for the Vancouver mission&#13;
and the couse it represents.&#13;
Thaw Home Mortgaged.&#13;
Mm. William Thaw has mortgaged&#13;
Lyndhurst, her beautiful Pittsburg&#13;
home, for ¢100,000. The mortgagS&#13;
runs three years and is held by t h e&#13;
fidelity Titl« * Trust Co.&#13;
The mortgage was drawn In New&#13;
York March 7 aud is attested by&#13;
Clifford Hartridge, attorney of record&#13;
for Harry Thaw. It was tiled in secrecy&#13;
by extraordinary methods, being&#13;
transcribed in a new tile book thjht&#13;
hi still held in a clerk's room ia uia&#13;
courthouse in Allegheny, Instead of&#13;
having been placed in the county recorder's&#13;
office.&#13;
The suppression of Ellen Terry's&#13;
marriage, together with the suppression&#13;
of the Thaw mortgage, by sucU&#13;
devious methods has aroused the legal&#13;
fraternity. A movement is started&#13;
to euforce the laws regarding filing&#13;
of documents.&#13;
On the Wrong Side.&#13;
Dr. Ambrose Shepherd, of Glasgow,&#13;
preaching in London recently, called&#13;
attenttoir^to the remarkable and saddening&#13;
discrepancy between the intense&#13;
activity of the churches to-day&#13;
and the lack of spiritual results. How&#13;
is it that the churches have to say&#13;
again and again: "We have tolled all&#13;
night and have taken nothing?" Dr.&#13;
Shepherd answered his own question&#13;
in these words: "The reason why so&#13;
much of the prayer, toil, and sacrifice&#13;
of the Christian church counts for little&#13;
or nothing is because so many of&#13;
us are living on the wrong side of&#13;
Pentecost. Many of us know Christ;&#13;
many of us are following Christ; but&#13;
how many of us have claimed our own&#13;
Pentecost, or have sought at Christ's&#13;
hands that equipment for service without&#13;
which all other equipment counts&#13;
for nothing?"&#13;
Another Missionary Martyr.&#13;
Rev. Charles C. Godden, of the&#13;
Melanesian mission was murdered by&#13;
a native on the Island of Opa, New&#13;
Hebrides, on October 16. He had&#13;
only recently returned from Sidney,&#13;
Australia, with his bride. Mr. Godden's&#13;
murder was the revenge taken&#13;
by a half-witted Kanaka laborer, who&#13;
fancied that he had been ill used in&#13;
Queensland, and to whom all white&#13;
men were looked upon as enemies.&#13;
The missionary had been very happy&#13;
and successful in his work and hi?&#13;
loss will be keenly felt.&#13;
Endowment Fund for Clergymen.&#13;
We learn from different sources that,&#13;
a movement is in progress among several&#13;
of the religious denominations to&#13;
create endowment funds for the benefit&#13;
of their disabled and superannuated&#13;
clergy. At one of the recent&#13;
Methodist Episcopal conferences in&#13;
New York a special commissioner v.-as&#13;
;ipruunied to raise a fund of $200,000&#13;
for this purpose. The money when&#13;
raised will bo invested, and the income&#13;
devoted to the support, of infirm&#13;
and superannuated ministers, of whom&#13;
there are said to bo o0 in this particular&#13;
conference.&#13;
Revival Spirit Not Dormant.&#13;
Evan Roberts, being asked as to&#13;
present conditions in Wales, says:&#13;
'After the storm, the calm—not of&#13;
stagnation, but. of settled conviction—&#13;
not. so much ecstacy. but. much peace."&#13;
As was to be expected, some have already&#13;
grown weary, and others have&#13;
;;one back, but. not in any large proportion.&#13;
The life of the churches has&#13;
been distinctly and permanently quickened.&#13;
The fire is still burning, and&#13;
the churches have grown in power and&#13;
influence."&#13;
Beat All Records.&#13;
The Octopus, a uew submarine boat,&#13;
beat all records off Newport, R. I.&#13;
While running at full speed on the&#13;
surface, propelled with gasoline engines,&#13;
she was given the signal t h a t&#13;
the enemy was in s i g h t The engines&#13;
were stopped aud power was furnish*&#13;
ed by storage batteries. Diving rudders&#13;
were adjusted, 37 tous of water wore&#13;
taken into her tanks and in four&#13;
minutes she was submerged. W h e n&#13;
ruu 'ing awash at 10 knots she dived&#13;
and was submerged in 22 seconds.&#13;
Twerrty-four Days' Storm.&#13;
For 24 days a snow storm h a s raged&#13;
fn the southern Wyoming mountains,&#13;
and suow is seven feet deep oa the&#13;
level. Since Aorir 15 the sun h a s not&#13;
shone, and the storm has not ceased&#13;
a moment. The temperature has been&#13;
between zero and 10 degrees below&#13;
during the time. It is the moat remarkable&#13;
storm that ever visited tho&#13;
Wyoming mountains.&#13;
Soon Parted.&#13;
Mrs. Bessie Johnson-Marlanl,&#13;
daughter of Mayor Tom L. JohnBdn,&#13;
of Cleveland, and her Italian husband,&#13;
Frederico Mariani, who were married&#13;
in Cleveland 40 days ago, are living&#13;
apart. This is the story which comes&#13;
from New York city, where the couple&#13;
have been since the marriage, and&#13;
where they Intended to remain soma&#13;
months prior to a trip abroad.&#13;
M t Pleasant Fire.&#13;
The opera house block in Mt. Pleasant&#13;
was seriously damaged by fire&#13;
which started in the Temple theater,&#13;
where moving pictures are being exhibited.&#13;
The total loss by fire and Water&#13;
is about 110,000. Downey &amp; Witter,&#13;
millinery; Wellington &amp; Son, law&#13;
offices; Dr. Baskerville's office and&#13;
Hall's barber shop suffered most severely.&#13;
The Isabella county state ban!f&#13;
was not badly damaged.&#13;
Girls Not Barred.&#13;
The house, by an almost unanimous&#13;
vote, has rejected a resolution offered&#13;
by Rep. H. F. Baker, of Cheboygan,&#13;
that, after this session no more women&#13;
or ^irls be employed as legislative&#13;
stenographers, typewriters and committee&#13;
clerks.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
iK'trolt-K-Kxtra d r y - f e d s t e e r s a n d&#13;
h e i f e r s , $r&gt; 25^:5 50; s t e e r s a n d h e i f e r s ,&#13;
1,000 to 1,200, $5riir&gt; 25; s t e e r s a n d Jielf-&#13;
;M-S. 800 to 1,000, $4 75@5 10: s t e e r s a n d&#13;
h e l f o r s t h a t a r e fat, 500 t o TOO, 14 2 3 #&#13;
J »50: c h o i c e fat r o w s , | 4 25@4 65; g o o d&#13;
fat ro»,-s, $;] 7"&gt;(fi&gt;l 10; c o m m o n c o w s , 13&#13;
(ft 3 50; c a n n e r s . $2¾ 2 50; c h o i c e h e a v y ,&#13;
hulls. $4 2 5 ¢¢4 t&gt;5; f a i r t o Rood b o l o g n a s ,&#13;
hulls, $3 75 *&amp;'•»; s t o c k b u l l s , $3 25@3 S5j&#13;
c h o i c e f e e d i n g s t e e r s , 800 to 1,000, $3 75&#13;
' a t 40; f a i r f a d i n g s t e e r s . R00 to 1,000,&#13;
i.i n0@ 4; c h o i c e s t o c k e r s , 500 to 700,&#13;
%\ TMftM; fair s t o c k e r s , 500 t o 700, $3 25&#13;
¢ 3 (.5; d t o c k h e i f e r s . $S 2 5 ® 3 75; m i l k -&#13;
ers, l a r g e , y o u n g , m e d i u m a g e , $ 4 0 ® 4 5 ;&#13;
c o m m o n m i l k e r s , $ l S r $ 3 0 .&#13;
V e a l c a l v e s — M a r k e t 25e l o w e r t h a n&#13;
last w e e k ; heat. $5 75® 6; o t h e r s , J 4 ® 5 ;&#13;
milch c o w s a n d s p r i n g e r s s t e a d y .&#13;
S h e e p a n d l a m b s — M a r k e t s t e a d y a t&#13;
l a s t w e e k ' s p r i c e s ; b e s t l a m b s , $7 l o t&#13;
f a i r to g o o d I a m b s . $6(7? 6 S5; l i g h t t o&#13;
c o m m o n l a m b s , $4(g&gt;5; y e a r l i n g s , %5 60;&#13;
fair t o g o o d b u t c h e r s h e e p . $ 4 @ 5 ; c u t i s&#13;
a n d c o m m o n . $3ff3 50; w o o l l a m b s ,&#13;
$7 7 5 S S ; s p r i n g l a m b s , $7 50@9.&#13;
H o g s — M a r k e t . 5c l o w e r t h a n l a s t&#13;
w e e k . R a n g e of p r i c e s : L i g h t to g o o d&#13;
b u t c h e r s . $fi 45; p i g s , $6 50; l i g h t y o r k -&#13;
ers, $« 45; r o u g h s , $6; s t a g s , 1-3 off.&#13;
E a s t B u f f a l o — B e s t e x p o r t s t e e r s .&#13;
$.•&gt; 50(3 5 75; few. $5 90; b e s t , 1,200 tcj&#13;
l,.T00-lb s t e e r s . J5ff?5 40; b e s t 1,000 td&#13;
I 1.100-lb s t e e r s , $4 25.ft&gt;5: b e s t f a t c o w s ,&#13;
[ $4S?4 25; e x t r a , $4 50; f a i r t o g o o d , 1 | 3 257?\1 50; t r i m e r * . $2 25@2 B0; b e s t&#13;
f a t TuutVrs, $4 75tf?5; f e w f a n c y , $5 25;&#13;
n i r d i u m to good, $ i fl i 25; b e s t f e e d e r s ,&#13;
14 2-" tf 4 50; y e a r l i n g s . $3 25® 3 50J&#13;
c o m m o n s t o c k s t e e r s , $:¾ 25*??3 B0: QX*&#13;
p o r t h u l l s . $1 50 y 4 75: b o l o g n a b u l l a ,&#13;
$3 75'(M 25; s t o c k b u l l s . $2 50@3 50.&#13;
F r e s h c o w s , $2 p e r h e a d h i g h e r ; g o o d&#13;
to k-xtra, $ 4 2 ^ 5 2 : m e d i u m to g o o d , $30&#13;
j '•'t'^T; c o m m o n . $ 2 0 ^ 2 5 . H o g s — T o w e r ;&#13;
I m e d i u m h * a v v a n d v o r k o r s , $6 7 5 ¾&#13;
ri SO; p i g s , J6 S0(ft fi S5; r o u g h s , $5 75&#13;
WS: s t a g s . $4 25 S 5 2 5. S h e e p a n d&#13;
l a m b s - L o w e r ; b e s t l a m b s . J7 75JS7 85;&#13;
(Mills. StlWO 75; w e t h e r s , Sfiffjf! 10;&#13;
c u l l s . J t 'a &gt;); y e a r l i n g s . $£ 50@fi 75;&#13;
e w e s . $5 25'»?•." 50. C a l v e s l o w e r ; b e s t ,&#13;
$h .:&gt;0fa't&gt; 75. m e d i u m to g o o d , $ 5 ® 6 t&#13;
h e a v y , $ 4 fa 4 5 0.&#13;
G r a i n . K t e .&#13;
f r w r n i t W h e a t . — C a s h No. 2 r e d ,&#13;
$ 5 U , - ; M a w 10,1100 hu a t S l ^ c . 5.000 b «&#13;
a t S4: *c, 10,000 hu a t S 4 \ c , 3,000 hu « |&#13;
s r , r , 5.000 hu at. S.ic, 5,000 h u a t S5Vi&lt;L&#13;
5.000 hu a t S5r, 5,000 hu at S5Vve, 10,09§&#13;
hu a t $5 4 c : .Tulv. 20.000 bu a t 86c. 10,*&#13;
oo0 bu a t S i i ' , r , 15,000 b u a t SflVic I S , *&#13;
000 hu a t Sfii,r, 10.000 hu a t 86-^0, 2 5 , -&#13;
000 hu a t StiUr, 10,000 b u a t 5 6 ¾ ^ S e p -&#13;
t e m b e r , 10.000 hu a t S 7 \ c , 30.000 b u a t&#13;
87 "\,o; 15.000 b u a t 8Se, 25,000 b u a t&#13;
R S 4 0 , 10.000 h u at. &lt;!««.»,-, 5,000 b u a t&#13;
S S 4 c , 10.000 b u a t S S ^ c , 15.000 b u a t&#13;
SS»5 c; No. 3 r e d , S2V20; No. 1 w h i t * .&#13;
S 1 V» e.&#13;
Cor;&#13;
low,&#13;
at. 5.11f r.&#13;
O a t s - C a s h No.&#13;
4fiv.tr, 1 at (fir.&#13;
R y e C a s h No. 2 7'"&#13;
B e a n s - C a s h , f 1 45;&#13;
$1 47 hid.&#13;
C l o v e r st-ed- -Pri r v&#13;
t ober. 1 0 0 b a g s at. 17 ;&#13;
a g s nt $7 fill; s a m p l e .&#13;
•-Cash No.&#13;
i c a r a t 5 I 4 '&#13;
, 5 2 \r; No. 3 y e l - .&#13;
No. 4 y e l l o w , 1 c a r&#13;
w h i t e . 1 c a r a t&#13;
•tuns a n d J u l y ,&#13;
spot, S3 7 5 ; O r -&#13;
"&gt;. D e c e m b e r , 100&#13;
10 b a g s a t IS 50s-&#13;
• ' at I . 5". 4 at. I'i, pr'ruf* a l s l k c , 5 b a f t&#13;
,.t »7 2" *&#13;
j T i m o t h y s c ^ d — P r i m e s p o t , 20 b a g s at.&#13;
• » •&#13;
• V '&#13;
•.•rt"*vm '"•'• r-'-rt-'-'WiHwr?&#13;
ike f incktuM ftepitttk ADDITIONAL LOCAL.&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS &lt;fc CO- PHOPRICTO&#13;
r i l U K S D A Y , MAY y, 1907.&#13;
8 n u F r a n c i s c o ia j u s t b o g i u u i u g&#13;
to l e u r u t h e r e a r e c o n d i t i o n s&#13;
w o r s e thttu. a u e a r t h q u a k e .&#13;
« • — H H S H — ..•&#13;
A Narrow Escape.&#13;
(J. W. Cluyd, a merchant, of Plunk,&#13;
Mo., had a u a n o w ' escape four years&#13;
ago, wheu he r ;*n a jimson bur into&#13;
his thumb. He says: " T h e doctor&#13;
wanted to amputate it but 1 would&#13;
not consent. 1 bought a box of Buekb&#13;
n ' s Arnica .Salvo and that cured the&#13;
dangerous wound." 25c at F. A. Sigler's,&#13;
Dru^K'**-&#13;
T h e Ann Arbor action- men w b j&#13;
went out on a strike recently haye&#13;
t o n e back to work at au increase of&#13;
ten cents per day. They now receive&#13;
¢1 45 per day.&#13;
There are 77 students lrotn foreign&#13;
countries in the l.'uiversity. Tun&#13;
Philippines and Porto Kicu each send&#13;
" » » &lt; • » » &lt; » » » « • » &lt; &lt; • » * • !&#13;
BLIND JUSTICE&#13;
lOriKinul. |&#13;
The coroner was seated al hly desk. '&#13;
before which ou supports tested a. eol j&#13;
fin couiuluiii£ the dead body of u ,&#13;
young Kirl of the poorer class. Sht* hud I&#13;
bueu found murdered the night before&#13;
seven students, J a p a n seuds nine a n d ] « u u r o u u " Wading into the town. No&#13;
one knew her, and the body hud been&#13;
held as long us seemed best for tdeu&#13;
j tiflcutiou. The only person to whom&#13;
Mexico six. There are twenty differ&#13;
eut countries represented.&#13;
T h e University of Minnesota is ask-1 the slightest suspicion uttuehed was a&#13;
#m»r quickly.&#13;
"My daughter," waited the 0 4 man.&#13;
There was a alleuc* broken qnly by&#13;
tn* blind man's aoba; Own be w u led&#13;
away. The coroner turned to the wlt-&#13;
"You will be bold till you can abow&#13;
that you are not the man described as&#13;
having led the girl away."&#13;
The prisoner staggered, put his baud&#13;
to his head and would have fallen had&#13;
he uot been supported by a policeman,&#13;
who led hiln away. He was indicted&#13;
and tried for the murder, proved guilty&#13;
•and confessed on the scaffold.&#13;
TURNER C. HOYLE.&#13;
D e t r o i t a p p e a r s t o h a v e t h e&#13;
a n n e x a t i o n m a n i a . Misa A i m A r -&#13;
b o r a n d YpBiUinti b e t t e r k e e p&#13;
eloae t o t h e i r c h a p e r o n e s .&#13;
on&#13;
Y,&#13;
My Btst Frieud.&#13;
Alexander Benton, who lives&#13;
Hural Koute 1, Port Edward, N.&#13;
says: "Dr. Kind's New Discovery is&#13;
my best earthly friend, It cured me&#13;
of asthma six years ago. It has also&#13;
performed a wonderful cure of incipient&#13;
consumption tor ^ y sou's wife.&#13;
The first bottle ended the terrible&#13;
coui/h, and this accomplished, the other&#13;
symptom^ left one by one, until she&#13;
was perfectly uVd. Dr. K i n / s New&#13;
Discovery s power over coughs and&#13;
colds is simply marvelous." No otb.er&#13;
remedy has evi-r equaled it. Fully&#13;
guaranteed by F. A. Sie-b-r, d r u g g L t&#13;
50c and $1 00. Trail bottle free.&#13;
A d i v o r c e law t h a t w o u l d f o r b i d&#13;
m a r r i a g e on e i t h e r s i d e f o r five&#13;
y e a r s would soon w i p e o u t t h e&#13;
d i v o r c e evil.&#13;
to&#13;
Don't l'ay Alimony&#13;
be divorced from your appendix.&#13;
There will In* no &gt;rra-ion for it if you&#13;
keep your b;nve!&gt; regular with Dr.&#13;
King's New Life Fills. Their action&#13;
19 so gentle that the appendix never&#13;
has cause to make the least complaint&#13;
Guaranteed by F, A. Sigler, druggist-&#13;
25c. Try them.&#13;
So far t h e e a r t h q u a k e s h a v e&#13;
been c o n s i d e r a t e e n o u g h t o t h r o w&#13;
d o w n t h e h o u s e s in t h e c l i m a t e s&#13;
w h e r e t h e y art least n e e d e d .&#13;
''Here's to your health1 and happiness"-&#13;
Hewitt's Little Earl) Hisers -&#13;
famous little pilh. Nast", sick headache&#13;
or biliousness may come on any&#13;
time; the &gt;. ore is an Early Riser.&#13;
Bold by F. A~ Stgler, DrnggUt.&#13;
ing for an increase in appropriation&#13;
amounting to $1,40(.),OAK). Wisconsin&#13;
is asking tor an annual income of&#13;
|1,207'000. Michigans present income&#13;
from the state ia $440,000.&#13;
T h e proposition to bond the school&#13;
district in which Chelsea is situated&#13;
for $50,000 for a school building was&#13;
lost a t the election last week by a vote&#13;
of 151 to 84. Their present building&#13;
is not large enough to accomodate the&#13;
pupils.&#13;
The Michigan Uoudensed Milk Co&#13;
are lo'iking over this part ot the state&#13;
to find a place to lo 'ate another lactor&#13;
v. Anv village th it has a chance&#13;
man who had been seen wu Iking ou&#13;
the road near where the body hud been&#13;
fuuud. The police of the neighboring&#13;
towns hud beeu null tied, and the man&#13;
had been arrested and identified by the j&#13;
person who had seen him. The prisoner (&#13;
waa undergoing his examination, j&#13;
"Did you ever see the deceased be j&#13;
foreV" asked the coroner. 1&#13;
"Never." j&#13;
"What were you doing on the roadr" j&#13;
"1 am u commercial traveler and of- j&#13;
ten walk from one town to another in&#13;
stead of wuitiug for a train. It waa so&#13;
in this case."&#13;
"Did you see anything of this girt on&#13;
the r o u d r&#13;
"I huve told you that I never saw&#13;
her before."&#13;
The coroner conferred with a iwlice&#13;
KM'H SMUJII'S O Preventics and a&#13;
booklet or colds will be gladly mailed&#13;
you, on request, by Dr. Shoop, 1» icine.&#13;
Wis, simply to prove merit. I'reveutics&#13;
are little Cindy Cn'd Cure tablets.&#13;
No quinine, no Laxative, nothing&#13;
harmUil whatever. Pt&gt;venfi;-s pre&#13;
vent colds--as the name iirpiy&gt;—•&#13;
when taiien early, or at the "sneeze&#13;
stage," For a seated c o d or La&#13;
Grippe, break ;t up safely and quickly&#13;
with Preventirs. Sold by All&#13;
Dealers'&#13;
For a cold or a 00ugh take Kenned&#13;
y Laxatijre ..gougb 8 j r a g . It is&#13;
BETTER than any other cough remedy&#13;
beoaote it* laxative principle mw**&#13;
% healthy, copious action of the bowelb&#13;
and at the same it heals iiratation, of&#13;
the throat, strengthen* the bronchial&#13;
tubes and always i n t i m a t i o n of the&#13;
mucous u m u b r a n e . Contains Honey&#13;
and Tar, pleasant to take, Uhildr.eE&#13;
hae it. Conforms to the National1&#13;
Pure Food and Drug l»aw.&#13;
Sold by r . A. BlgHr. Dnaftfft.&#13;
r&#13;
°&gt;.&#13;
to get one of these lactones should | o t t k /h l 1 - ih™ t u r a e d a * a l u t o t h e l , r i s&#13;
pick it up quick as they are a gieat 1 m^hvve l 8 u o e v i d e u c e against you,&#13;
means of prosperity to any commun- , ^ r S U j , p o s e you are entitled to u&#13;
ity. j discharge, but you will huve to rej&#13;
main iu the care of the police for a&#13;
A l t h o u g h thd state has a large [8 n o r ^ time."&#13;
a m o u n t of primary school money on , At that moment several persons en&#13;
hand, it was not in the state treasury j tered, leading n blind man.&#13;
on A p r i r 1, and is, therefore, not ^ ^ m a n &gt; y ° u r h o u o r ' " 8 a i d o n e o f&#13;
I t is s t r a n g e w h e n o n e c o m e s to&#13;
t h i n k of it t h a t we h a v e a h a b i t of&#13;
l o o k i n g on d u r i n g tUe b l a c k e n i n g&#13;
of o u r s h o e s w h i l e its n e a r l y alw&#13;
a y s w h e n o u r b a c k s a r e t u r n e d&#13;
t h a t o u r c h a r a c t e r s a r e b l a c k e n e d .&#13;
available under the law until next&#13;
November. The spring appointment&#13;
will be I T per capita. In November&#13;
it will oe horn $3 to $4.&#13;
The spring trade is here whether&#13;
spring weather is or not and the enterprising&#13;
merchant will be looking&#13;
after you—the mail order man is&#13;
anyway. Scarcely a day goes by but&#13;
&gt;wbat one or more packages arrive&#13;
here from the catalog houses. We do&#13;
net doubt but, the purchaser could&#13;
have done as well or better with their&#13;
home merchant it that merchant had&#13;
asKeel them for their trade and let&#13;
them know they h«d the article. It&#13;
pays to advertise.&#13;
So many teachers have been resigning&#13;
their positions the past year or so&#13;
to accept better places as teachers,&#13;
even after their contract had been&#13;
signed that a hill has qeeu introduced&#13;
in the legislature which woui i be a&#13;
good cne for the solons to pass. The&#13;
bill provides that a teacher who en&#13;
ters into a contract to teach in a district&#13;
must abide dy the contract uu&#13;
less the resignation is accepted by the&#13;
board, else render himself or herself&#13;
liable to a revocation of his or her&#13;
certificate to teach during the life&#13;
the contract. Districts are barred&#13;
from accepting contract jumpers un&#13;
der the penalty of losing their prijnary&#13;
money.&#13;
Pil&gt; get quick and co-tain rehe!&#13;
from Dr. Shoops Magic Ointment.&#13;
Please note it is made alone for Piles,&#13;
and its action is positive and certain.&#13;
Itching, painful, prot. tiding or Mind&#13;
piles disappear like magic by its use.&#13;
Large nicke! c-ipped glass j a r s 5 cts.&#13;
Sold bv All T)P a W,.&#13;
F a i r v i e w officials a r e n o t t a k i n g&#13;
v e r y k i n d l y t o b e i n g a n n e x e d to&#13;
D e t r o i t , b u t p u b l i c c e n s u r e s h o u l d&#13;
n o t b e t o o h a r s h w i t h t h e p o t e n -&#13;
t a t e s w h o h a v e b e e n l e g i s l a t e d o u t&#13;
of office, for t h e i r s i t u a t i o n was&#13;
p e c u l a r . T h e y w e r e l i k e b o y s&#13;
w h o h a v e b e e n p l a y i n g ball on&#13;
t h e p u b l i c c o m m o n s u d d e n l y p u t&#13;
info t h e c o m p a n y of a l e a g u e&#13;
teatn.&#13;
Eating Grasshoppers,&#13;
"No wonder I inn brown," said a&#13;
globe trot tor. "I am just back from&#13;
the Sahara.. I spent two mouths wan&#13;
dering with a caravan of camels over&#13;
that white expanse of sun warmo-1&#13;
sand. The Sahara is like the beach ::t&#13;
Atlantic City, n flat immensity of 111«.•&#13;
w h i t e s ^ cleanest sand, and tho strao&#13;
gest thing I did in my wanderings wos&#13;
to e.it desert grasshoppers. The Ai'n'.is&#13;
record Ihe-e Lrrosshnppers as a SiiMUi,&#13;
airl I \v:i - temple'1 ! 1 try t !ie:n, jr.-t •• •&#13;
in Paris i have 'neon templed lo ' ry&#13;
S l l . l l i s . '!"!;&gt; L ' ; r ; ! S S l l O p p ' &gt; r s ^ " I ' e y i :&#13;
Y o l l p ' . O ' - k . ' '1 o f f l l l e W ' i h ^ S , t i l e ^ J,&#13;
and the bead, and then \ 01 at" 1 :&#13;
dried liihiy. Tlim niarsel tasled precis^&#13;
ly lilvcan Ivi^lisii walnut, I ate K':':e&#13;
hopper-, se\c:al times, and when I iv&#13;
turn 1 1 toe Sahara I am u;o:iiuC to e&#13;
them :iur:i:e,."&#13;
them, "has come to town looking for&#13;
his daughter, who, he says, has been&#13;
recently led away from her home. We&#13;
have told him of this dead girl, and&#13;
he desires to know If it is she he is&#13;
seeking."&#13;
The moment the old man appeared&#13;
the prisoner started. Then he lookeif*&#13;
about him to see if his agitation had&#13;
been noticed and, feeling assured that&#13;
all eyes were and had been on the j&#13;
blind man, resumed the careless air i&#13;
that he had shown during his examiua- |&#13;
tion. The blind inau, who was old and j&#13;
on whose face were the lines of suffer- '&#13;
ing, was let! up aud stood trembling&#13;
before the coroner. After some pre&#13;
Hniinary questions he was asked to tell&#13;
his story.&#13;
"My little girl," he said, "Is a good&#13;
girl. She is all I have to love and&#13;
the ouly person In the world who loves&#13;
me. She cannot be dead. She is not&#13;
dead. She must not he dead. She&#13;
worked In a factory, and when she&#13;
went to work in the morning she gave&#13;
me a loving kiss. All the long day I&#13;
waited for her to come home, and then&#13;
there was another loving kiss, and,&#13;
though tired, she talked brightly to&#13;
me, cheering me like the flame of a&#13;
fire ou the hearth to you who can see&#13;
She never went gadding about In the&#13;
evening, but stayed at home with me,&#13;
though I .encouraged her to bring her&#13;
young companions to our home. \&#13;
"But of late she had seemed troubled.&#13;
She could not cheer me as she had&#13;
nf | been used to doing, or, If she did, 1&#13;
knew It was with an effort. And I&#13;
noticed that the more troubled she&#13;
was the more affection she showed me.&#13;
Two weeks ago she embraced mo more&#13;
tenderly than ever before, hanging 1&#13;
about my neck as though she would&#13;
never let go."&#13;
"From that day I have not seen her.&#13;
My neighbors have told me that she&#13;
had been seen several times with a&#13;
man, but I could get no description of&#13;
him. I feel sure the man they saw her&#13;
with has been the cause of her leaving&#13;
me. I have visited a number of towns&#13;
In hopes of finding her, without success.&#13;
These people have told me that&#13;
you have a dead girl in here who |s&#13;
not known, lmt I do not think It can&#13;
be my girl. Still, I will satisfy myself&#13;
that she is not."&#13;
"How can yon do that?" asked the&#13;
coroner. "You can't see."&#13;
"I can tell my Maggie," said the witness.&#13;
"Your honor1' - said the prisoner,&#13;
then checked himself.&#13;
"Well, what is it?" asked the coroner.&#13;
"Nothing; only that an Identification&#13;
No N a t d to Cry.&#13;
"Don't cry, lluster," said Jack after&#13;
the catastrophe. "Napoleon didn't cry&#13;
every time his brother hit him accidentally&#13;
on the eye."&#13;
"1 know thai," retorted Buster. "Na&#13;
poleon did all the hittiu' on the eve&#13;
blsself."&#13;
Cascasweet lor babies is the best&#13;
remedy for colic, summer complaiut,&#13;
diarrhoea and sour tomach It is especially&#13;
good in cases of teething&#13;
when irritation affects the stomach&#13;
and intestines Casasweet is a pleasant,&#13;
safe remedy, containing neither&#13;
opiates nor 11110:1110-: a'l the inyr'-d&#13;
ients are painted plainly on thn wrap&#13;
per. Endorsed by mothers because it&#13;
acts so quickly.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigier, Druggist.&#13;
- ' f* # '&#13;
YV hen a ma&gt;j s u j l Ml C*U tap* a&#13;
uolae," it probably never occuw to&#13;
him that there is nothing In this wide&#13;
world that auybody can hear but *&#13;
noise.&#13;
Let me sen I you free, tor Catarrh,&#13;
just to prove merit, a trial a^'i-i boY ol&#13;
Dr. Shoop's Catatrh remedy. It is&#13;
a snow white eteamy, heating antiseptic&#13;
balm. C o n f i n i n g such heating&#13;
ingredients at- Oil Eucaliptus, Thymol&#13;
Menthol, etc., ; t ^'ives in-taut and tastiiiL'&#13;
iHti,-* to Catarrh ot the nose and&#13;
throat Make the free test and see tor&#13;
yourself what this preparation can&#13;
and will accomplish. Address Dr.&#13;
Shoop, Racine, Wis. Large j a r s 50&#13;
cents Sold by All Dealer's.&#13;
' ' Tb* Squall.&#13;
I "Where do you suppose that squall is&#13;
I coming from'.-" asked the amateur&#13;
1 yachtsman. "I don't know," replied&#13;
i the head of a small hut ob-;troporou*&#13;
; family, "unless it is coming from the&#13;
?radle of the deep." Baltimore Ainei&#13;
; lean.&#13;
1&#13;
j .A swarm of bees contains from 10,&#13;
D0O to liO.bXX) in a natural state, tn «&#13;
hlv« from 30,000 to 40.000 bees.&#13;
Characteristics.&#13;
"Geniuses are eccentric. Some of&#13;
them touch every post or tree Micy&#13;
run across."&#13;
"Most of 'em touch every friend they&#13;
run across or alinightily try to "&#13;
Louisville Courier-.Journal.&#13;
W hen \ '&gt;u r tond ha- n o b 01 p r e p&#13;
e r l v d i y e s f ^ i j toe e n t i i o -y stein l- u n -&#13;
p a i r e d m t h ' s a m e p r o p o r t i o n Y m i f&#13;
stomach needs help, K o d o l tor I n d i -&#13;
u e s ' i o n a m i I)ys•. eosoa nor o n ' v d i -&#13;
kfHsU w h •' \ o! e •', 1: t o n e - fa,- ~.\amach&#13;
a»'d ;.,piv &gt;r r e r i j l ' i ••, t|;,» ,, | | 0 | P&#13;
I ody '&lt; ' ^ - n&lt; li. pu re &gt;• , a ui \\ )&#13;
(iol coat 1 01. in • ti - N ,t 0 mil P a r e&#13;
I' o.id mid I)) ne L e v ,&#13;
Sold by V. A. Slgler, Druggiit.&#13;
| Let u e mail you free, to prove met-&#13;
! it, samples ot Dr. Shoop's Restoritive,&#13;
and my book on either Dy-mepsia,&#13;
The H e i r t . o r the Kidneys. Address&#13;
me. Jv Shoop, Racine, Wis. Troubles&#13;
of the Stomach, f-bart or Kidneys,&#13;
a i e nu-iviy Symptoms of a deeper ailtn&#13;
TIt Don't make the common error&#13;
o; treating the resu t ol your ailment&#13;
:aud not the cause. Weak Stomach&#13;
i&#13;
n e r v e s — t h e i n s n l " ne&gt; v e s — m e , ns&#13;
Stomdcl w e a k n e s s , a l w a y s And the&#13;
' r i e a t t , a n d Kidneys as well, have&#13;
' t h e i r t o n h o l l m g or inside n e r v e s .&#13;
W e a k e n ;lo*se n e r v e - , and you l u e v i t -&#13;
bly have weak vital o i g a n s . H e r e is&#13;
j w h e r e Dr. Shoop's Restoritive has&#13;
mad&gt;' its f,tine. Xa o t h e r r e m e d y&#13;
i HVMI clai'iis to treat the " i n s i d e&#13;
n e r v e s . " A!-o lor bloat;L,-. bilious&#13;
! ness, had b r e a t h or i.ompl»\ion, use&#13;
Dr Slhiop'-, R i t e r a t i v e . W r i ' e for&#13;
i ni\ l'r&gt; e b ok n o w . Dr. Shoop's Restora&#13;
\ e -old ov alt uYalers,&#13;
AWAH I am for MEN,&#13;
WOMEN mnd&#13;
Instant relief to sufferers of&#13;
Rheumatism. Kidney Trouble,&#13;
Stomach Disorders.&#13;
Get m bottle to-day."* Is purely a vegetable compound. Mild&#13;
in effect but one the most effectual remedies known for restoring&#13;
the entire system. It is derived from nature, not&#13;
compound of drugs ami chemicals that only allay the pain,&#13;
but cures to stay cured after all so-called "scientific " treatments&#13;
have failed.&#13;
For sale by druggists. Send for circulars. Address,&#13;
jiNDIAN MEDICINE CO., Milford, Ohio.&#13;
^'hfln your bacK aches it is almost&#13;
inv.t r aliley an indication t h a t s o u n -&#13;
tlr.ny ;s wroiik' with your kidneys.&#13;
V\ea.k, d'seaseivl kidneys frequent uy&#13;
cause a break ilmvn 1: the entire system.&#13;
D e W i t t - Ki la, v rnd Bladder&#13;
Fills afford nreiupt relief for vveak&#13;
kidneys, backache, intlamat.ion nt the&#13;
hlsflder and all urinary troubles.&#13;
Sold by F. • . S i d e r , Dmg»l»t&#13;
Woiuhifal Eczema Cure.&#13;
1 Our i ttle boy had eczema for five&#13;
yea i&gt;,"' writes "N. A. Adams, Henrietta.&#13;
VA. "Two of our home doctorsat&#13;
d the rase was hopebss, ho- lungs&#13;
being affected. We then emploved&#13;
other dortois but no benefit resulted&#13;
By ' h.ance we read about Elertne Bit&#13;
tei&gt;: 1 ought a bottle and soon noticed&#13;
improvf ment. We c.onfinu d tinmed'cine&#13;
until several bottles were&#13;
used, when our hoy was comp.etriv&#13;
cured." Best of ail blond ruedicin"s&#13;
and body build in;&#13;
Guaranteed at, F,&#13;
store. ,r)0e.&#13;
' h e a. ! t h tonics&#13;
.V. Sigler's Druu&#13;
U^MOTT'S r^SS WITCH HAZEL&#13;
S A L V E For PiUa, Bono. SOTM.&#13;
by a blind man is a travesty on jus&#13;
t rice."&#13;
1&#13;
"How does that concern you?" asked&#13;
the coroner, looking at f he prisoner&#13;
with a new interest.&#13;
"Only generally," replied the prisoner,&#13;
endeavoring to resume bis care&#13;
I less manner.&#13;
"By what means," said the coroner&#13;
to the witness, "can you know your&#13;
daughter?"&#13;
j "Let me put niy hands on her face,&#13;
and I will know her at once."&#13;
An ashiness spread Itself o-rer the&#13;
1 features of the prisoner.&#13;
"Lead him to the body," said the&#13;
&lt; coroner, "and place his hands on it."&#13;
The old mati's hnnd was placed on&#13;
1 the waist. He started. H e ran his fln-&#13;
I gers up the body till he came to the&#13;
1 neck, when he uttered a moan. Qulek-&#13;
! ly he passed his baud over the face&#13;
j from chin to forehead aud staggered.&#13;
1 "Oh, Maggie, Maggie!" he moaned.&#13;
I "Your daughter?" asked the cor-&#13;
Buy a "HYGEIA" " A ' l f "&#13;
The best Spring Bod on&#13;
Earth. Poriootiy Noisoiossm&#13;
For both Wood and&#13;
Iron Bodstoadsm&#13;
Ninety per cent, of the Spring Beds made are not fit to sleep on.&#13;
Pay just a little more and get a " HYGEIA," which Is perfection in&#13;
itself. Guaranteed for ten years. If your dealer does not handle the&#13;
Hygeia write direct to us giving his address.&#13;
ENTERPRISE BED CO., Mfrs., Hammond, Indiana, j&#13;
TRAOr More Money for Eggs r under most any conditions. There Is a lot of money to be made&#13;
R in the egej business if conditions are right. There is no reason&#13;
|s why F a r m e r s and P o u l t r y Raisers should not make j ust as good&#13;
|H profits on their investments as any other line of business, and it is&#13;
possible for them to do so. The price of egps during the winter&#13;
' months is double and sometimes more than double that paid&#13;
during the summer months. The only way to take advantage of this advance is&#13;
to hold summer eggs for winter prices. That fresh eggs can be kept from six to&#13;
nine months or more has been proven by careful testing with&#13;
HACER'S ECC PRESERVATIVE&#13;
and anyone using this Preservative need never Bell a dozen eggs for anything but&#13;
the highest market price. Sen J/or Samplr and Circulars telling ycu ail about tt&#13;
JHACER ECC PRESERVING CO., - St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
4*~&#13;
X X X X , w&#13;
Coffeef&#13;
Chums&#13;
FAMILY DISPUTES.&#13;
fRESH iig-a CLEAN A&#13;
*U*S;&#13;
T i e C'lvar N u a t b p t c c c .&#13;
A rich Kutsjsiau b i i u k e r h u d b e e n d l s -&#13;
e o r e r o d m u r d e r e d iu h i s h o u s e In 8 t .&#13;
I P t t a n b u r g , s a y s u w r i t e r iu t h e t l r e e u&#13;
H P W T h e y W e r e O n c e 8 e t t l e d b y Fair B a g . T h e r e w a s u u d e w , b u t in t h e&#13;
F i g h t i n C o u r t . r o o m t h e r e w a n f o u n d u c i ^ a r m o u t h -&#13;
I n m i n e p a r t s of G e r m a n y In d a y s p i e c e c o u t a i u m y ; p a r t o r a c i ^ a - ui bui-h&#13;
f o u e \&gt;y w h e n t h e r e l a l i o u H o f h u s b a n d a n e x p e n s i v e k i n d t h a i it w a s MUJI&#13;
a n d w i f e b e c a m e s t r a i n e d , s o t o s p e a k p o s e d t h e b u n k e r h i m s e l f h a d !&gt;»'»••,&#13;
—in o t h e r w o r d s , w h e n e a c h r e t u r n i n g w n o k l n i r i t j u s t i*?fore t h e c r i m e h c&#13;
d a y g a v e b i r t h tu n e w s q u a b b l e s a m i b e e n coin l u l l Led. O n c l o s e e x a m i:a&#13;
i t h e m a n ' s h a n d w a s aw r e a d y a s tin- tlou t h e m o u t h p i e c e w a s f o u n d u , u••&#13;
: w o m a n ' s t o n g u e — t h e c o u p l e w e r e w o r n a w a y b y i h e t e e t h of i t s o w n e r ,&#13;
b r o u g h t b e f o r e t h e m n g i s t n n e , w h o , i b u t t h e d e a d m a n ' s t e e i h d i d n m ti"&#13;
I a f t e r l i s t e n i n g t o r e c r i m i n a t i o n s , or- i h e i n d e n t a t i o n . T h e s e r v a n t s verai&#13;
d e t ' e d t h e m to p i v p a r e t o r t h e o r d e a l o n e by o n e e x a m i n e d , a n d It w a s liio.:&#13;
' b y b a t t l e , ' l ' h e m a n w a s p l a c e d i n a ; f o u n d t h a t t h e h o l l o w s of t h e m o u t h&#13;
c a s k , w h i c h w a s t h e n n e a r l y i d l e d w i t h j p i e c e c o m p a r e d e x a c t l y to t h e l o n n i&#13;
s a n d , s o t h a t h e w a s c o v e r e d u p t o t h e : t l o u of t h e f r o n t t e e l h of t h e cook, i.&gt;&#13;
j w a i s t . I n s o m e l o w n s a p i t w a s k e p t , w h o m n o s u s p i c i o n h a d b e e n a t t a c h e d&#13;
h a n d y f o r i h e p u r p o s e , j u s t a s t h e H e a f t e r w a r d e o n t e a s e d t o t h e murderd&#13;
u c k i n g s t o o l w a s k e p t o n H a n k s i d e ,&#13;
I o p p o s i t e S t . r a i d ' s . W h e n ^ h e w a s&#13;
I t h u s h a l f b u r i e d , t h e m a n r e c e i v e d a&#13;
s h o r t s t i c k f o r h i s r i g h t h a n d , w h i l e&#13;
h i s left h a n d w a s tied u p a c r o s s hi--&#13;
I c h e s t . l i e w a s t h u s o n e a r m e d a n d f;i''*"&#13;
H U.-i y •; C a r l ; ; i.'iic .&gt;..&#13;
M a i d \ .:;• i'.;.- - . i n . , S ; V yici, n i a d -&#13;
«ni. M i.;ii c,..&lt; 1 ; ; L ;,V ( li.mce. my&#13;
e n . i s m (l.e 11. o f o » o r . M a i d N o , h e&#13;
d o e s n ' t !oo!: a s c l e v e r a s t h a i . H e l o o k s&#13;
m o i e a s i l i o u g h he m i g l i t p r o p o s e t o&#13;
y o u . — F l i e g e u d e B l a t t e r .&#13;
i J e W i t i ^ Uai'buhz-'U W a u u lia/a-i&#13;
•Sdive i\uii&gt; ii'Jt m e r e l y he a; • u liie - . I ' -&#13;
ll j i e n n t i a t e s t i i e IHII&gt;,- ..tut&#13;
A Really Good Coffee&#13;
At a Reasonable Price&#13;
McLaughlin's X X X X comes to you in&#13;
clean, sanitary packages; always fresh and&#13;
sweet. Each package contains one full&#13;
pound of coffee,and it's a good, satisfactory&#13;
drink every time, for it is always the same.&#13;
In fact, it can be called the Standard&#13;
Coffee.&#13;
Do not confuse X X X X with inferior&#13;
coffees put up in packages.&#13;
McLaughlin's XXXX Coffee is Sold by&#13;
W . 1 :. M u r p l i y&#13;
W . W . B a r n a r d&#13;
XI. IVI. W i l l i ^ t o n *te O o .&#13;
: c o u l d o n l y d e l i v e r h i s b l o w s If h i s o p ! p r o m p t l y r e l e i v e&#13;
p o n e n t c a m e n e a r e n o u g h .&#13;
i T h e l a d y p u t o n a l i n e n g a r m e n t , t h e&#13;
'• r i g h t s l e e v e of w h i c h w a s l e n g t h e n e d .&#13;
• I n tlar e n d w a s t i e d u p a s t o n e . T h e&#13;
s l e e v e p r o j e c t e d a b o u t t w e l v e i n c h e s&#13;
! b e y o n d h e r h a n d . S h e h a d t h u s a f o r&#13;
' m i d a b l e w e a p o n , h u t In o r d e r t o u s e its&#13;
h e h a d t o -jet c l o s e t o h e r e n e m y .&#13;
j r\n\v, o b s e r v e t h e s i t u a t i o n a n d t h e&#13;
i c h a n c e s . I f s h e s u c c e e d e d I n b r i n g i n g&#13;
t h e s t o n e d o w n u p o n h e r h u s b a n d ' s&#13;
h e a d , s h e m i g h t k n m k h i m s e n s e l e s s ;&#13;
s h e m i g h t e v e n b r u i n h i m , h u t in o r d e r&#13;
t o d o s o s h e w o u l d e x p o s e h e r s e l f t o&#13;
i t h e full M o w o f h i s s t i c k . T h e b u t t l e&#13;
m i g h t , i n f a c t , b e s e t t l e d b y a s i n g l e&#13;
! a s s a u l t . H u t m a r k t h e c r a f t i n e s s of&#13;
j m a n . I t w a s b e t t e r t o m a k e a w o m a n&#13;
, r i d i c u l o u s t h a n t o k n o c k h e r sill v. T h e&#13;
p r i l U ,&#13;
boils, burn*, scalds, euti ami -km dieases.&#13;
It is especially j/uod lui p n ^ ,&#13;
Jittware ut umtatiuus.&#13;
Bold by F. A. Sigler, Druggiat.&#13;
Indigestion Stomach trouble is hut a symptom of. and not&#13;
In itself a true diseasa We think of Pysin-psia.&#13;
Hearttuini, and Indigestion no real dis* ;t^ s. yet&#13;
they art- byiuijtonih only ol a cenuin .-.cn-ciiiu&#13;
Nerve sickness notldiiK else.&#13;
lL\vu&gt;thU fuel tliat first correctly led Pr. Shoop&#13;
in th&lt;- cnauioii &lt;&gt;i that p'c.v very popular Stomach&#13;
Remedy Dr. Slio»»t&gt;'!j kcatorativc. liuiiijj direct&#13;
to tin- .-tomai.ti nerves, alone brought that sueeesa&#13;
and favor to Pr. stioopand his KeRtorutive. Without&#13;
thai original and highly vital principle, nu&#13;
such laslinjjariM iniiilislnjient.t were ever to 1«.; had.&#13;
Fur stomach distress, Molding, bilioUMiess, had&#13;
breath and sit! &gt;\v euniT'ltixion, try Dr. Shooy'i&#13;
Ke.-, lorn live '1'aliletii or Liquid—and see for yourself&#13;
v, act M ci:n ami will do. W« bell and cheerfully&#13;
iceoi amend&#13;
Dr. Shoop's&#13;
Restorative&#13;
¢11( guulmcg gispatt'U.&#13;
F R A N K L_. A N u R E W S So C ^&#13;
t L i T u H S &lt; H 1-HOI-hiLTOHt.&#13;
6 a b o c i i p t i o i i . P r i c e jjl i u A d v a n c e&#13;
•interaU a t t l . e i ' o d t o t l l c u a t i ' l u c k u e y , M:&lt;. til / a&#13;
a s b t j c u u d - c l a o i i u j s t t e r&#13;
Ativertit)in&gt;i r a l « B m a d e KKCJWJLI o u a v . p ; i c u : ; u i i .&#13;
".M&lt; M)bI" r .Al.I-.KS."&#13;
£^&#13;
BuBiuBBe Cards, 54.00 per year.&#13;
1'eaih ana marriage uoticeB published t r e e .&#13;
AuuouncementB ut entertaiauieatB may be ;sH»&#13;
h u s b a n d , t h e r e f o r e , if h e w a s a p h i l o s - I fur, if deaired, oy ,ir»aenting the office with tick&#13;
A&#13;
I wu\H • 1 1 a.it&lt;&#13;
f i v e OIIVIL'&#13;
Sfiul model,&#13;
\TJ"*• M ~ i t"Pi'.'iiT-lTiTi 1". 1 f r, 1 O'jxirt&#13;
jaiiikH,&#13;
R O C U R r D A N D D C T F C N D E D&#13;
how tu oljutia f.ateir&#13;
o.pyii^'hts, cU'„ | N A L L C O U N T H I E S .&#13;
Jht.iiii,^ Jinrt v.if/t H'&lt;!*//hi/,u&gt;&gt;ii MI:rs itmf,&#13;
moitiv mi if often the patent.&#13;
Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Write e r 0011a1 tu an IF&#13;
023 Ninth S t m t , opp. TJnlt«d 8UtM P»t«nt Offlc»,&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , D . C .&#13;
GASNOW&#13;
Tlieir Solution.&#13;
" T o m p k i n s a n d h i s wife a l w a y s JJTI :&#13;
alotlK spleinlidl.v . T l i e \ d o j u s t a s th»-&#13;
p l e a s e . ' '&#13;
" H o w f o r t u n a t e ! I l o w d o \ o n a,&#13;
c o u n t f o r i t ? "&#13;
"Tlie.v d o n ' t l i v e t o g e t h e r . " \; ; \ a - -&#13;
kee S e n t i n e l .&#13;
A P a i r of W h y s .&#13;
Site ( c u m i n s d'!\i n I.itoi \ \ ' h \ Iu o . i&#13;
w e a r I ha 1 \ , old i 11a •' '••&gt;'.' Vmi a ; e ine&#13;
r ou a y a c h t . I I e \V hy d o \ 011 w e,i 1&#13;
t h a t w a u l i ' : Von a r e n e v e r on t i m e .&#13;
H o h o m i a n M n ^ a / ' n o ,&#13;
• ophei", d i d n o t t r y t o h i t h i s w i f e . H e&#13;
, w a r d e d h e r b l o w s w i t h h i s s t i c k . H e&#13;
t r i e d t o c a t c h t h e s l e e v e u p o n h i s s t i c k .&#13;
T h e n t h e s t o n e llew r o u n d a n d r o u n d ,&#13;
a n d t h e l a d y w a s c a u g h t . S h e c o u l d n o t&#13;
1 m o v e , a n d t h e v i c t o r i o u s h u s b a n d&#13;
d r a g g e d h e r . u n w i l l i n g , h e a d first i n t o&#13;
! h i s c a s k . - L o n d o n &lt;&gt;ueen.&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, lots of strength,&#13;
Dees, headache, constipation, bad&#13;
fenoraJ debility, sour riaJngi, and catanfc&#13;
of the itoraaofa a n all due to Indlgeatioa.&#13;
Kodol rellevea Indif estion. This new dlMev»&#13;
ery represents the natural juices of dlfe»&gt;&#13;
Hon as they exist In a healthy stomaofc,&#13;
combined with the greatest known toast&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol for&#13;
dyspepsia does not only relieve indlgeatloa&#13;
and dyspepsia, but this famous remedy&#13;
helps alt stomach troubles by cleanaiogi&#13;
purifying, sweetening and strengthening&#13;
the mucous membranes lining the stomach.&#13;
Mr. S. S. BO, of lUYtnswood, W, Va., «ay«r-&#13;
" I w«s troublad with aour itcmach for twenty years,&#13;
Kodol cured me and we are now usint It to rola&#13;
for baby."&#13;
Kodol Digests What Y o o Rat.&#13;
Bottles only. Rellevea Indigestion, sour ftonMB*&#13;
belchlnt of pas, etc.&#13;
Prepared by E. O. OeWITT &amp; OO., OHIOAOOk&#13;
3olri hy F. A. Sigler, Dru»;gl«t.&#13;
ete of aduiieaion. Iu CUBB tickets are t o t '.ruiim : ;&#13;
tu tiieoflice,regular ratee willbe c h a r t e d . ;&#13;
All matter in lucalaotlcecolumn wiooe ca .IL,I i&#13;
eci ato cente per line or fraction taereof, tor «at 1 ] iaeertion. vV'hereno time iBBpecifJed,ail nutii-e*-&#13;
will beineerted until ordered dlecontlnued, t»ui&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. fc«T~All channel&#13;
of adTertleemente MUST reach thio office ag earl}&#13;
»9 TCKBDAT mornint; to ineare sn ineertlor. t!..&#13;
H.sir.e week.&#13;
JOB VRIA1IJSG .'&#13;
In all itb tranches, a specialty. We haTeail^iu..^&#13;
aud the latest stvlee ol Type, et«., which euablts j&#13;
uu to execute all kiuda of work, such ab Boukfi&#13;
Pamplete,Poatere, Programme*, Bill Heads.Note&#13;
Heads, statements, Cards, Auction Bills, tu-.,iu &lt;&#13;
superior styles, upon the nhort*at notice. Prices ai&#13;
low as good work can be clone.&#13;
ALL BtLLS PAYABLE f l K S T O K KVEHY MONTH. '&#13;
Health and Wealth.&#13;
i r i - i i r i d iii'iilt'i t o t h u :iver:ijri- r o a n m t a u a&#13;
DR. JOHNSON'S&#13;
AFTER DINNER PILL"&#13;
INSURES HEALTH. TRY IT.&#13;
IS PURELY VEGETABLE,&#13;
;md waaused by the Dector&#13;
for twenty yKirs in&#13;
active practice, ami 1¾&#13;
conceded by all hnviny&#13;
used it to be the bebt&#13;
[ &amp; J O h N S O N l&#13;
OINNEf&#13;
Little Stomach Pil&#13;
THE VILLrWb' DIRECTOKY&#13;
ViLLAG£ OFFICERS.&#13;
i'i^E^lUf'.NT&#13;
1'Kt P T E E B S. J . T c c p l e ,&#13;
J ;»aie(- &gt; : 11; l .&#13;
W. A, N i x o n&#13;
v. : . I : H K&#13;
T i n : A H : U E H&#13;
- T i . t f r C H M &gt; I I . ' &gt; .&#13;
!1;..A , , i n i &gt; v u ' K t \&#13;
A 1 . - 1 , : - ) : ^&#13;
'•LA 1.-^11....!.&#13;
L&gt;-&#13;
.1. ( . D;.nil&#13;
Eii. F u r i i , . : u .&#13;
• l a m e s U o c i . e .&#13;
. V. V a u W i u K l e .&#13;
i . n ^ t r C a r r&#13;
. A. C a d w e l l&#13;
i ' . W . M I U M&#13;
.M. L a v e /&#13;
il . r . a U . f i&#13;
'A'. A. C a i r&#13;
'. ,.:IK J i l d e r t&#13;
t« PILL ,&#13;
^Jce 2 5 Cental&#13;
jjjMJidir.uIiirf. tiflwjj on t h e n:arl&lt;c-t. It is n&#13;
H " iftir7HHUi|J PREVENTATIVE of&#13;
Jp'oi-irrjj'^i Litm S i c k H e a d a c h e ,&#13;
\ ' D y s p e p s i a . Dizzi-&#13;
••Oii-ectiona. ' n e s s . H e a r t b u r n .&#13;
Bad T a s t e in&#13;
a^r-.iir Mvxw.**, M o u t h , C o a t e d&#13;
t-L.JOHNSON* T o n g u e , Loss of&#13;
f * A p p e t i t e&#13;
f n t a . Q B IT S3 a n d a l l o t h e r m o r b i d&#13;
• " c o n d i t i o n s ,ir;--;! ;c f r o m&#13;
a d i s o r d e r e d s:&lt; i m u - h .&#13;
PREVENTION&#13;
is t h e O r d e r o f t h i s d a y a n d r.;.-'-. a s it is m u c h&#13;
m o r e s c i e n t i f i c t o j&gt;rev«":t a (list;i.~-ed v^ei:-&#13;
l ; m i t h a n t o c u r e it. V o u c a n s e c i r e tlii&gt;&#13;
J . 1 T T I . E P I L L of ANY F I R S T - C L A S S DRUGGIST&#13;
w h o w i l l b e 5&gt;len.sed t o s e r v e y n u , ^ 5 ilo^i-s t«&gt;r&#13;
. 5 c e n t s . D o n ' t t . i k e . e " n i e o t h e r " j u s t a -&#13;
j j o o d " f n r t h e r e i-m't ;• r;y O t i i e r t h a t will&#13;
l&gt;le:isc y n u a t a l l u l ' l i r t r y i n g t h i s o n e .&#13;
'. . L . J O H N S O N , M . D. P r o p .&#13;
A t l a n t a , C e o r g i a .&#13;
VALVELESS AUTOMATIC&#13;
Stock Fountain&#13;
PAY8 FOR ITSELF THE FIRST YEAR.&#13;
¥ W I, REMOVE W'JH EASE ALL PARTICLES OF&#13;
iDIRT mo&#13;
CREASE tell&#13;
and leave trvi s k n sc't ".n;i&#13;
white. Sups•!or to ..,; ^:-c.r M&#13;
Murt;,'aj;-&lt;' Sid*4&#13;
W i i n . i \-&lt; (l'-f;e;lt li.'e- liecn liiinlr in : i . ' ' e n m i i -&#13;
tnnirT lil a I'l'i'liiin in 0 r t vca^.-i, \\- fu-,r«,U\- t h e j a i w o r&#13;
of s i l c 1 h i ' i v i 11 ha-- lnaaiir.e o p e r a t i v e , miii'u' 1&#13;
, Jl± i\e\ . 1). &lt;&#13;
, o.iuilitj a . i '&#13;
r V d i l u :•-&#13;
I dHV e , 1" lii..&#13;
i Hi £ M-'I s .&lt;. e.&#13;
„,-i JRCHLS.&#13;
. . ' i M ' U l ' . - U . CM : I K l i .&#13;
; '.I'/iuim |'i»etnr. &gt;e:'VKa»r e\tu&#13;
. u i ; «1 I O : H I , , . K U .•-, 11 y &gt; . a . . ;&#13;
.. u'kiecii, i'mytr luetjtiufc Tua.&#13;
&gt; .; uvidV scimu at i lust) ut aii.'r.&#13;
.Hi^r M.\KV V A N t 1.1.K r, &gt; .;»!.&#13;
* \ e . \ a i i n i . V i a.).N.'u, &lt;'ii\ m -&#13;
H^,1 Hev. *.t. W. Mjiiit1 jmstoi ,&#13;
••^nriv.i.ty annua,,' *t Ue.io »::.!.&#13;
i,v f-venmi; »t I nx 0 clack. l';».,ir&#13;
. ' ; d*v ••veilings. .~&lt;aaJiy scum . ••"&#13;
1 IIKNKV TU'.KUut.T ami hit&gt; wif,' i' A K&lt; &gt;L[\K I i n i nervine. Percy Swurthoa', &gt;,&#13;
THI!:i!Ol/r, ..f IVenielil, l.i \ iTV.-^tnn i on ntv, ' 'l r t 1 ll' ^1^&#13;
,-\ m :&#13;
&gt;aine&#13;
A. IV&#13;
ace&#13;
IT IS GOOl&#13;
T H E G R E A T -&#13;
E S T OV A L L C E R E A L EOl )DS.&#13;
N o fad o r u n c e r t a i n m i x t u r e . A N a t u r a l E O O D&#13;
L A X A T I V E . A v l u i i r k e r n e l of R y e t o e a c h flake.&#13;
ASK YOUR GROCER EOR IT or writ, us for our three special&#13;
O f f e r s . A p o u n d p a c k a g e h y mail, p o s t p a i d , for ^5 c e n t s . It will&#13;
p o s i t i v e l y c u r e t h e m o s t a ^ r a v a t e d c a s e of e o ; :'; . ;UMI. W r i t e t o d a y .&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS CEREAL C O M P A N Y ,&#13;
H. H . D e p t . M I N N E A P O L I S , M I N N .&#13;
Sof/cffop* Wanted Evo*ymh**m.&#13;
nil ut&#13;
V i'.V^&#13;
ai no&#13;
P Y P F P i r N C P * Experience is 0&#13;
LA r&amp;I^lfcl^iWlCi • n n v w n i k in life&#13;
no of the proutost factors iu :i'.mfa-~t&#13;
It is what jrivos the l-'arnnr, Voc'&#13;
tor, Merchant and Mechanic success. Tn mannfacturing&#13;
it i« a n all important clement. We arc carriage&#13;
manufacturer* of over twenty-five years' experience&#13;
and wo claim to know the business from A to / . We&#13;
will stake onr reputation that we make as pood work&#13;
far the money as it is possible to make. Our two&#13;
leaders are our No. 30 Top BuRgy at t h e popular&#13;
price of $50.00 and our No. fiO Top&#13;
Bugpy at iJWO.OO. Nothing but the best&#13;
go into these jobs in order to make&#13;
them come up to onr standard. Write&#13;
for full specifications, cuts and references.&#13;
Do It to-day and n c what we&#13;
can offer you for your eafh and save&#13;
all dealer profit*. Write a i once a n d&#13;
A. HUNCERFORD &amp; S O N ,&#13;
get onr great offer.&#13;
Lapeer. Miohigan.&#13;
M i c h i g a n , M N K l . S i l X L A M B &lt;&gt;f t i n&#13;
af n r e - a i i l : tu'.ii'i" t; d a t e M a r c h 'J:*ili&#13;
il ii i v r u n l r d i n t h e iilliee of t h e l'c:;i&#13;
I iced- t'iv 1.1 \ i 11 LT-J r»&gt; 11 ' ' c a n i t y , M i c h i g a n , i n Idbc'.'&#13;
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X third Surmay nit.ue Kr. Maaiueiv tis'il.&#13;
John Taomav and M. L". Ivehy, County ii -&#13;
T r. r a a v&#13;
m o n t h a t 0:,-¾. j \ m . at t a e m i n i , .&#13;
M^'.er. Evov;, o n e i i i i c r e e i e u i n&#13;
c - j i . i a i l y i n v i t e i x . &gt; i r s . L e u , M , ; .&#13;
h i i j i 1 i n r t e e , ^ e c r e t n r y .&#13;
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I l O t O V ' T t l o u ' .&#13;
V a nn ul c&#13;
tilth. P u c i&#13;
c o o l \ v a t e r .&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
T o d o a s&#13;
c l a i m e d .&#13;
Big Seller&#13;
So/d on 30 Days' Trial,&#13;
M O N T . Y R A C K I F N O T S A T I S F I E D .&#13;
PF.DGE: BROS. IRON ROOFING CO.&#13;
Fountain St., Anderson, Ind.&#13;
1 n e w U ,lol&#13;
1 n : v. e&#13;
c: o.e;.&#13;
6 0 Y E A R S *&#13;
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a a . a , . HA.'.Ubl.h'r, on I a t e n t -&#13;
petit a .'-a ' a .'-' i m r . - y f o r aeeur-aa.' n u t e t t r s .&#13;
t\i" :;ta t a k e : rl.roi.krh .Menu , t Co. r e c u i v e&#13;
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MUNN &amp; "ce&gt;3ia;oai;,av:,New York Ilr.-nch -. ittii C St., W a s n . r i k ' t o n L». &lt;;&#13;
M . r . S&#13;
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L G A ' v l J O A Undy Bowel Ixutin.&#13;
, . v 0 A 1. . . . • . 0. , .&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEAL&#13;
AT D.SPAT.'H OFF-CE.&#13;
S"K A L I&#13;
'£ COUCH&#13;
Um Sifcsvery FOR r— ••icur&#13;
'S snd&#13;
?rice&#13;
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50c&amp;31.00&#13;
Free Trial.&#13;
i»•«.;••*,:tce.-.i :'cr --,11 TKHOAT and&#13;
LUNG TROUBLES, cr LIONET&#13;
BACK.&#13;
For Comfort in the Bedroom&#13;
ITS PROPER FURNISHINGS A N D&#13;
A P P U R T E N A N C E S .&#13;
But One Part of the House Is of More&#13;
Importance Than the Sleeping&#13;
Chamber, Says Practical&#13;
W r i t e r .&#13;
There la no part of a house of really&#13;
much more importance than the&#13;
sleeping rooms. They are only rivaled&#13;
la Importance by kitchens. Diningrooms,&#13;
living rooms, libraries and parlors&#13;
are secondary.&#13;
In an Interesting and informative&#13;
volume entitled "Homes and Their&#13;
Decoration," published by Dodd,&#13;
Mead &amp; Co., the author, Miss Lillian&#13;
Hamilton French, reveals a lot of&#13;
practical ideas of how to combine the&#13;
artistic and the comfortable in bedroom&#13;
furnishings. She tells some&#13;
common sense secrets that housewives&#13;
will be rejoiced to learn.&#13;
"A small bedroom,' she says, "may&#13;
be made dainty and attractive by&#13;
white woodwork and walls, an&#13;
enameled bed and white furniture,&#13;
white curtains at the windows and&#13;
white trimmings for the bed. If a&#13;
color is desired it may be added in&#13;
several ways. A colored rug may be&#13;
introduced—one of plain green or red&#13;
filling; or the white curtains and bedspread&#13;
may be trimmed with a border&#13;
of chintz, the mirror framed with it;&#13;
or the curtains may be tied back with&#13;
a color, and the small pillow have&#13;
ribbons to match. Ribbons, however,&#13;
are absolutely interdicted in a bedroom&#13;
unless the owner is able to replenish&#13;
them whenever they are&#13;
mussed or soiled. 'Faded finery/ I&#13;
once heard an old lady say, 'is a&#13;
sin.' Sometimes 1 am inclined to believe&#13;
the dear old lady was right.&#13;
"Tf you are in doubt Hbout what&#13;
should go on your bureau—and many&#13;
people are—remember (hat, like the&#13;
sideboard, the well appointed bureau&#13;
or dressing table must be first ol all&#13;
In spotless order and then be pretty.&#13;
No handkerchief rases should lie on&#13;
it, nor plush boxes for brushes and&#13;
perfumes, nor any materials manufactured&#13;
for the catching of the d u s t&#13;
Photographs in frames are permissible,&#13;
brushes and combs that are&#13;
made for the purpose, with gold, silver,&#13;
ivory, tortoise shell or woodeu&#13;
backs, but never the cheap ordinary&#13;
brush which has no pretension to&#13;
beauty and which should be kept out&#13;
of sight.&#13;
"A dressing table Is literally what&#13;
its name implies—a table to dress by.&#13;
It is so made that the kuees of the&#13;
person who sits before it need not&#13;
be obstructed as they would be by&#13;
the drawers of a bureau. It contains&#13;
no drawers except for extra toilet&#13;
articles. If by any chance there&#13;
should be both a bureau and a dressing&#13;
table in the room, I should prefer&#13;
ORIGIN OF T W O C U 8 T O M 3 .&#13;
Shfp Baptism Is of Dread Significance&#13;
— F i r i n g of Salutes.&#13;
If fair young women sponsors who&#13;
take a great deal of pride in breaking&#13;
a bottle of champagne over the prow&#13;
of a ship as she slides into the water&#13;
for her first float knew, something&#13;
about the origin and significance gf the&#13;
launching custom the chances are they&#13;
would not be so eager to see the bottle&#13;
crash and the foaming liqttid wet the&#13;
sides of the vessel&#13;
It ia a survival of a barbaric custom&#13;
when sacrifices were made to the gods&#13;
and some living victim or offering was&#13;
held up and its throat cut so that the&#13;
blood flowed over the prow of the ship&#13;
being launched. The vessel was baptized&#13;
in warm blood. Now sparkling&#13;
wine or pure water is used, and the&#13;
change has many advantages, though&#13;
the symbolism remains.&#13;
There is another curious custom&#13;
aboard ship that is interesting In the&#13;
way it has been handed down to us.&#13;
When a dignitary visits a foreign country&#13;
the moment that his ship enters&#13;
port a formal salute is fired as a signal&#13;
of welcome. Thia custom was observed&#13;
years ago, when It was considered the&#13;
correct thing for a port to fire its guns&#13;
to show the visiting stranger that the&#13;
citizens and authorities placed such&#13;
confidence in his friendliness that it&#13;
was not considered necessary to keep&#13;
MAKES PLEA FOR GAME,&#13;
London Journal Condemn! Suggestion&#13;
of Slaughter. ,&#13;
We remember the saying attributed&#13;
to Huxley that the single ladles of old&#13;
England are to be thanked for the&#13;
superlqrity of our beef, because they&#13;
keep cats to destroy the mice that&#13;
would otherwise exterminate the humble&#13;
bees that fertilise the red clover&#13;
on which our cattle are fed. Now&#13;
some one is writing the Spectator to&#13;
propose the slaughter of game In the&#13;
Zambesi valley In order to prevent the&#13;
spread of sleeping sickness. The proposal&#13;
hinges on what we consider to&#13;
be the mistaken statement by Mr. Austetn&#13;
of the British museum, that the&#13;
tsetse fly cannot exist long without&#13;
mammalian blood. The other step In&#13;
the argument is no more Bure—namely,&#13;
that the tsetse fly is indispensable&#13;
to the spread of sleeping sickness.&#13;
The evidence is not sufficient to&#13;
condemn the game of even a portion&#13;
of the Zambesi valley. The animal&#13;
that demands mammalian blood is, we&#13;
fancy, far greater than the tsetse fly,&#13;
and the fact that, unlike the deer, he&#13;
Is capable of writing to the papers,&#13;
must not be allowed to prevail.—London&#13;
News.&#13;
The National Anthem.&#13;
Admiral Dewey told the story of the&#13;
adoption of the "Star-spangled Banner"&#13;
EDUCATOR GETS RETIRING ALLOWANCE&#13;
Combination Window Seat and Book&#13;
Shelves.&#13;
removing the mirror from the bureau&#13;
and treating the bureau as a chest of&#13;
drawers. The mirror can be used&#13;
elsewhere."&#13;
"Color can be introduced In paper,&#13;
paint or hangings. In rooms occupied&#13;
by servants who come and go&#13;
paint of course is a necessity. It is&#13;
preferable in nurseries, unless the&#13;
paper can he changed at frequent intervals,&#13;
or, having been treated with&#13;
varnish, can be washed." |&#13;
PRETTY LUNCHEON FOR BRIDE ELECT&#13;
Exquisite Little Party Given for a&#13;
Southern Bride.&#13;
A southern girl was the guest of&#13;
honor at this exquisite luncheon the&#13;
week before her wedding. Only the&#13;
bridal party were invited. The tablecloth&#13;
was of white net over white satin&#13;
and over this were sprinkled hundreds&#13;
of delicate sweet pea blossoms cut&#13;
from the stems; they were shaded&#13;
from white to a deep pink. A dainty&#13;
/green vine ran carelessly through this&#13;
tnaze of color, over which like a fall&#13;
•bf crystal snow diamond dust was powdered.&#13;
The lights were shaded with&#13;
Opalescent glass and the dining-room&#13;
was a dream to enter. The chair ocea-&#13;
£ied by the bride-elect was marked by&#13;
a huge bow of white tulle, while overhead&#13;
wedding bolls with sweet pea&#13;
rims and clappers were suspended by&#13;
tulle streamers. The favors were pink&#13;
satin slippers and white satin wedding&#13;
bells. Knots of sweet peas tied with&#13;
tulle were also at each place and tiny&#13;
(bags rilled with rice. The following&#13;
menu was served: Grape fruit on&#13;
plates surrounded by smilax, bouillon,&#13;
fish in ramakins, potato balls, crown&#13;
roast lamb, green peas, mint, ice, fruit&#13;
salad, individual cream in shape of&#13;
wedding bells with myrtle decoration.&#13;
L E T T E R S IN EMBROIDERY.&#13;
Coffee was served in the library with&#13;
cheese and crackers.&#13;
Den for the Amateur Photographer.&#13;
In this nay when nearly everyone&#13;
owns a camera this description of a&#13;
"den" is timely.&#13;
Imagine a small room with walls of&#13;
a grayish blue cartridge paper, a cream&#13;
colored ceiling, black plate rail, and&#13;
you have the foundation for this most&#13;
artistic room. It had been a question&#13;
how to disposo of hundreds of good,&#13;
bad and indifferent prints, which had&#13;
accumulated and which were very dear&#13;
to the photographer's heart. She had&#13;
books filled, records of many summer&#13;
and winter outings, but there were still&#13;
countless prints unclassified. So this&#13;
method was devised.&#13;
There were the pictures of college&#13;
days. These were mounted on a piece&#13;
of paper matching the wallpaper, ar&#13;
ranged according to fancy, trimmed irregularly—&#13;
oblong, square, round—as&#13;
best suited the subject. They made&#13;
three panels and wore fastened to the&#13;
wall by narrow strips of black mould&#13;
ings. The prints of the Yellowstone&#13;
camping party and western scenes&#13;
made more panels, then all home j&#13;
scones, interiors and special fete day?&#13;
were grouped together and thus the&#13;
walls were covered. The effect, was&#13;
good and the room was a special delight&#13;
to visitors. Enlargements of spe&#13;
eially good negatives occupied the&#13;
plate rail, sonic framed, some clone in&#13;
"passo-par-tout."&#13;
For a screen this amateur made a&#13;
frame five feet, high, containing three&#13;
panels two feet wide, joined by hinges&#13;
These she covered with a grayish blue&#13;
burlap fastened with big flat headed&#13;
brass tacks. Exclusively blue prints&#13;
went on this screen; one panel wa?&#13;
composed of child studies, one marines,&#13;
one rural subjects. The furniture ol&#13;
the room is severely plain, the rugs&#13;
and pillows are all hint; ^od white.&#13;
M A I U M H Mi-:ui:r.&#13;
In Sheer Lawn.&#13;
Tn the sheer lawn some extremely&#13;
fetching lit'lo costumes HIT displayed.&#13;
They are rather ornate for this sort, o!&#13;
material, but they are intended to be&#13;
worn almost as owe. would wear ;\ silk&#13;
cost n me.&#13;
W. HENJAMIN- ANDREWS.&#13;
J. D. Bowman, secretary of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement&#13;
of Teaching, announced that, although the foundation has declined to admit&#13;
state universities to the accepted list of beneficiaries of the fund it occasionally&#13;
grants retiring allowances in state institutions to men who have rendered&#13;
distinguished academic service. In accordance with that plan the executive&#13;
committee of the foundation has given a retiring allowance to E.&#13;
Benjamin Andrews, chancellor of the University of Nebraska, who has been »&#13;
prominent teacher and educator for thirty years.&#13;
the guns loaded, so all the shot wa3&#13;
discharged.&#13;
Only Explanation.&#13;
It. was bargain day.&#13;
An excited man rushed fnt3 the&#13;
crowded drygoods emporium.&#13;
"Say, where will I find my wife?" he&#13;
queried of the head floorwalking gentleman.&#13;
"Really, I don't know, sir," replied&#13;
the party of the floorwalking part.&#13;
' S h e hasn't been here to-day."&#13;
"Great. Scott!" exclaimed the excited&#13;
man. "Then I must hurry home at&#13;
once. She is either dead or dying!"&#13;
Willing to Try.&#13;
"Remember," said the lawyer, "you&#13;
have undertaken to tell nothing but&#13;
the truth."&#13;
"I'll do my best," answered the expert,&#13;
witness, "but I won't, know how&#13;
Lir I have succeeded until I'm through&#13;
with the cross-examination."&#13;
as the national anthem at a meeting&#13;
of the Francis Scott Key Memorial association,&#13;
held recently in Washington.&#13;
He said he was instrumental in its&#13;
adoption by this government, stating&#13;
that once while he was abroad and&#13;
was dining with Prince Henry, of Prussia,&#13;
on the letter's flagship, the band&#13;
played "Hall Columbia." He called&#13;
the prince's attention to the fact that&#13;
it was not a national anthem, and referred&#13;
to the "Star-spangled Banner."&#13;
Later he and Justice Moody, then&#13;
secretary of the navy, discussed the incident,&#13;
the result of which was the issuance&#13;
of the president's order designating&#13;
the "Star-spangled Banner" as&#13;
the recognized national anthem of this&#13;
government.&#13;
Such a Silly Idea.&#13;
"Lingerie waists should be squeezed&#13;
and not rubbed," says a magazine&#13;
writer. Tut, tut. Who'd care about&#13;
rubbing one if he could squeeze it?&#13;
LAST OF OLD LANDMARK&#13;
O r i ^ v •;,(.;i in a ;::,i;ni dies&#13;
n r. ngr&#13;
A House in Lawrence, Kas., Built in 1859.&#13;
Lawrence, Kas., is soon to lose one of its oldest landmarks. An old stone&#13;
House standing just, off the main street has been sold and will be torn down&#13;
to make, room for two modern residences. The house was built in 1859 by the&#13;
Immigrant Aid company which sent out the company that founded Lawrence.&#13;
STOMACH J STRIKE&#13;
Dr. Wllllama' Pink Pills Cured This&#13;
Woman and Have Otffftfl Many&#13;
Hundred* of Other Gaeee Of&#13;
Common Ailment* :&#13;
Loss of appetite, coated tongue, bed&#13;
taete in the mouth, heavy dull headache&#13;
and a doll, sluggish feeling -these&#13;
the symptoms ox stomach toeabie. "&#13;
indicate that the stomach to on a i&#13;
that it ia no longer furniahing&#13;
blood the fall qaoiaof xumUbsmax&#13;
the body demands, *b*aca&#13;
suffers.&#13;
if&#13;
the old oft*&#13;
yityywuBd bawl _&#13;
and artincl|jlliBaajelMddF?ne new one&#13;
by which t f t i f e i i w IT ia toned a p to do&#13;
the work which nature Intended of it.&#13;
A recent cure by the tonic treatment ia&#13;
that of Mrs. Mary Staekpole, of 81&#13;
Liberty street, Lowell, Mass. She says:&#13;
" I suffered constantly for years from&#13;
stomach trouble and jberrible backache*&#13;
and was confined to m y bed the greater&#13;
part of three years. I was under the&#13;
care of our family physician most of the&#13;
time, but did not seem to get better.&#13;
•'I was completely run-Sown and waa&#13;
not able to do m y work about die house.&#13;
My blood was impure and m y complexion&#13;
pale. I suffered from flashes of&#13;
heat, followed suddenly by chills. I&#13;
had awful headaches, which lasted from&#13;
three to four days. I could get but littla&#13;
rest at night, as m y sleep waa broken&#13;
and fitful. As a result I lost several&#13;
pounds in weight and became very nervous.&#13;
" I was in a wretched condition when&#13;
I heard about Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.&#13;
I started to take the pills at once and&#13;
began to gain in weight and health. I&#13;
was encouraged by tliis to keep on until&#13;
I was cured. My friends and neighbors&#13;
often remark what a changed woman I&#13;
am and X owe it all to Dr. "Williams'&#13;
Pink Pills."&#13;
These wonderful pills are •useful in a&#13;
wide range of diseases such as anaemia-,&#13;
rheumatism, sciatica, neuralgia, nervous&#13;
headaches, and even locomotor ataxia&#13;
and partial paralysis. ^ » &lt; — « — i&#13;
The great value of Dr. Williams' Pink&#13;
Pills lies in the fact tliat they actually&#13;
make new blood and tliis carries health&#13;
and strength to every portion of the&#13;
body, ^ h e stomach is toned up, the&#13;
nerves are strengthened, every organ is&#13;
stimulated to do its work.&#13;
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by&#13;
all druggists, or sent, postpaid, on receipt&#13;
of price, 50 cents per box, six boxes for&#13;
¢3.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicine&#13;
Oompany, Schenectady, N. Y.&#13;
Z E A L T H A T WAS MISDIRECTED.&#13;
Housekeeper Meant to&#13;
ployer, but Alasl&#13;
Pteeee Cflfe.&#13;
"Such an article," said H. P. Judson,&#13;
the new head of the University&#13;
of Chicago, in declining a rather unusul&#13;
interview, "would be not only&#13;
futile but even In a mild way harmful.&#13;
It would bo like the work of the careful&#13;
housekeeper. There was an old&#13;
general who had brought home from&#13;
the war a splendid flag—a flag all&#13;
torn with bullets, faded with fierce&#13;
suns and stained with the dust and&#13;
blood of battle. This superb trophy&#13;
hung over the mantel In his library.&#13;
Well, one unlucky day he engaged a&#13;
new housekeeper and the next week&#13;
missed his flag. He rang at once.&#13;
'Where is that flag of mine?' he said,&#13;
pointing anxiously to the empty&#13;
space on the wall.&#13;
" 'I have been working on it, sir,'&#13;
the housekeeper answered. 'I've&#13;
washed it thoroughly and sewed up&#13;
all the rents and darned all the holes&#13;
and when I bring it back to you, sir,&#13;
I'm sure you'll say it looks as good&#13;
as new.'"&#13;
BABY'S ECZEMA GREW WORSE.&#13;
Hospitals and Doctors Could Not Relieve&#13;
H i m — B u t Cuticura Remedies&#13;
a Speedy, Permanent Cure.&#13;
"Eczema appeared when our baby&#13;
was three months old. We applied to&#13;
several doctors and hospitals, each of&#13;
which gave us something different&#13;
every time, but nothing brought relief.&#13;
At last, one of our friends recommended&#13;
to us Cuticura Soap and Cuticura&#13;
Ointment. A few days afterwards improvement&#13;
could be noted. Since then&#13;
we have used nothing but Cnttcura&#13;
Soap and Cuticura Ointmeit, and nV»J&#13;
the baby is six months old and Is quite&#13;
cured. All that we used was one cake&#13;
of Cuticura Soap and two boxes Cuticura&#13;
Ointment, costing In all $1.25. C.&#13;
F. Kara, 343 East 65th Street, New&#13;
York, March 30, 1906."&#13;
* - * « » •&#13;
Blind Man Expert Whist Player.&#13;
T?ert Trim, a blind resident of&#13;
Woonsocket, R. I., is an expert whist&#13;
player, being a valued member of a&#13;
local club. He UBes a special pack of&#13;
cards, on which there are faint imprints&#13;
sufficient to tell him what they&#13;
are, but which are far too fine for the&#13;
ordinary touch. Trim, wh{&gt; has beem&#13;
blind since childhood, is now 30 y e a n&#13;
old. He plays the piano and cornet&#13;
In excellent -style and is often hear&lt;i&#13;
In local entertainments.&#13;
WKRVVWS&#13;
T M e V V t S&#13;
IttlSftUa COMftT\PMXmOML&#13;
3k»t&lt; Kl OT*WW WWJVT.WCH..&#13;
KIDNEY TROUBLE&#13;
S*i&amp;*4 two Yiw-fr&amp;yijto 7km&#13;
tontki&#13;
MR. C. B. F I Z B E , M t S t e r l i n g Ky.,&#13;
w r i t e s :&#13;
**I have suffered with kidney ana&#13;
Madder trouble for ten years past.&#13;
*'Last March I commenced using&#13;
P t m n u . and continued for three months.&#13;
I have not used it bince, nor have 1 fell&#13;
• pain.&#13;
k* I believe that I urn well and I therefore&#13;
g i v e my h i g h e s t commendation to&#13;
t h e curative qualities of Peruna."&#13;
Pe-ru-na For Kidney Trouble.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. H. Siinscr, Grant, Ontario,&#13;
Can., writes:&#13;
" i had n o t been w e l l for about four&#13;
years. I had kidney trouble, and, In&#13;
tact, felt badly nearly all the time.&#13;
" T h i s s u m m e r I g o t so very bad I&#13;
t h o u g h t I would try l&gt; eruna, so I wrote&#13;
t o y o u and b e g a n at once to take Per una&#13;
and Manalin.&#13;
"I took only t w o bottles of Peruna&#13;
and o n e of Manalin, and n o w I feel&#13;
b e t t e r than I have for some time.&#13;
"I feel t h a t Peruna and Manalin cured&#13;
rae and made a different w o m a n of me&#13;
altogether. I bless t h e day I picked u p&#13;
the little book and read of your Peruna."&#13;
It Is the business of the kidneys to&#13;
remove from the blood all poisonous&#13;
materials. They must be active all the&#13;
time, else t h e system suffers. T h e r e are&#13;
times w h e n they Heed a little assistance.&#13;
Peruna is e x a c t l y t h i s sort of a remedy.&#13;
It lias saved m a n y people from&#13;
disaster by rendering the k i d n e y s ser&#13;
vice at a time w h e n t h e y were not able&#13;
to bear, their o w n burdens.&#13;
Socrates was henpecked, but no wo&gt;&#13;
c a n prove that he might not, !f&#13;
^ « had p o u N M d i happy home, have&#13;
l i t * • greater philosopher than he&#13;
w*a.&#13;
Spring always hrintr* i»to special favor&#13;
Nati»re'n blood purifier, Garfield Ten. It&#13;
1« made wholly of clean, nweet Herb*. It&#13;
purifies the blood, cleanses I he urstem,&#13;
clenrH tlie complexion, eradicate* disease&#13;
and uromotcH Good Health. For&#13;
and ord. young&#13;
Still Normandy's Heroine.&#13;
One of the favorite postal cards&#13;
offered for sale to tourlBts by shop&#13;
keepers of Rouen, Normandy, shows&#13;
a modern feminine compatriot of Joanof&#13;
Arc dressed and posed to represent&#13;
the great French heroine spinning&#13;
in her thatched roofed cottage&#13;
mt Domiemy.&#13;
I m p o r t a n t t o M o t h e r s .&#13;
Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA,&#13;
a w^e and rare remedy for lufante and children,&#13;
taxi tec Uiat it&#13;
HAY'S WRONG IDEA&#13;
S T A T E S M A N ERRED IN 8ETTING&#13;
LIMIT OF U S E F U L N E S S .&#13;
According to His Theory a Man Msd&#13;
Succeeded or Failed at the Age&#13;
of 40 But Time Proved&#13;
Its Fslsity.&#13;
DOES YOUR BACK A C H E ?&#13;
Profit fey the Experience of One W h o&#13;
Has Found Relief.&#13;
•turcor (^aSW. J&amp;cdUi Bear*i&#13;
La "Ceo For Over 3 0 Years.&#13;
The Kind You. Have Always Bought.&#13;
The Reason.&#13;
Shea—How long have you Deen&#13;
Biok?&#13;
Ryan—Five days.&#13;
Shea—Glory be! An' why don't ye&#13;
git. a doctor?&#13;
Ryan-—Shure, I got to go to wur-ruk&#13;
Monday marnln'.—Puck.&#13;
Cannon May Break Record.&#13;
Of the congressmen who have&#13;
fcrved since the foundation of this&#13;
government, more than 12,000 individuals,&#13;
only 34 have served 20 years or&#13;
more. The longest service w a s that&#13;
of John H. Ketcham, of N e w York,&#13;
who seryed 33 years, and was a memdied.&#13;
Mr. Cannon, who&#13;
next, has served 32 years.&#13;
Since he is elected to the next congress&#13;
he will, If he lives to the end of&#13;
his term, take the first place In the&#13;
list of veterans.—Youth's Companion.&#13;
be* when he&#13;
DODDS&#13;
KIDNEY&#13;
\ PILLS&#13;
)W WNS'&#13;
A quarter of a century ago I w a s&#13;
visiting John Hay at W h i t e l a w Reid's&#13;
house in N e w York, w h i c h Hay was&#13;
occupying for a few m o n t h s while&#13;
Reld was absent on a holiday in Europe,&#13;
says Mark Twain in hiB autobiography&#13;
in the North American Review.&#13;
Temporarily also, Hay w a s editing&#13;
Reid's paper, the N e w York Tribune.&#13;
I remember t w o incidents ot&#13;
that Sunday visit particularly well.&#13;
In trading remarks concerning our&#13;
ages I confessed to 42 and Hay to 40.&#13;
Then he asked if 1 had begun to write&#13;
my autobiography and I said I hadn't.&#13;
He said that 1 ought to begin at once&#13;
and that I had already lost two years.&#13;
Then he said in substance t h i s :&#13;
"At 40 a man reaches the top of the&#13;
hill of life and starts down on the&#13;
Bunset side. The ordinary man, the&#13;
average man, not to particularize too&#13;
closely and say the commonplace man,&#13;
has at that age succeeded or failed;&#13;
in either case he has lived all his life&#13;
that is likely to be worth recording;&#13;
also in either case the life lived is&#13;
worth setting down, and cannot fail&#13;
to be interesting it he c o m e s as near&#13;
to telling the truth about himself as&#13;
he can. And he will tell the truth in&#13;
spite of himself, for h i s facts and his&#13;
fictions will work loyally together for&#13;
the protection of the reader; each fact&#13;
and each Action will be a dab of paint,&#13;
each will fall in its right place, and&#13;
together they will paint his portrait;&#13;
not the portrait h e thinks they are&#13;
painting, but his real portrait, the inside&#13;
of him, the soul of him, his character.&#13;
Without intending to lie he&#13;
will lie all the time; not bluntly, consciously,&#13;
not dully unconsciously, but&#13;
half-consciously — c o n s c i o u s n e s s in&#13;
twilight; a soft and gentle and merciful&#13;
twilight which makes his general&#13;
form comely, with his virtuous prominences&#13;
and projections discernible&#13;
and his ungracious ones In shadow.&#13;
His truths will be recognized as&#13;
truths, his modifications of facts&#13;
which would tell against him will go&#13;
for nothing, the reader will see the&#13;
fact through the film and know his&#13;
man.&#13;
"There Is a Bubtle, devilish something&#13;
or other about autobiographical&#13;
composition that defeats all the writer's&#13;
attempts to paint his portrait his&#13;
way."&#13;
Hay meant that he and I were ordinary&#13;
average commonplace people,&#13;
and I did not resent my share of the&#13;
verdict, but I nvirsed my wound in&#13;
silence. His idea that, we had finished&#13;
our work in life, passed the summit&#13;
and were westward bound downhill,&#13;
with me two years ahead of him and&#13;
neither of us with anything further&#13;
to do as benefactors to mankind, was&#13;
all a mistake. I had written four&#13;
books then, possibly rive. I have been&#13;
drowning the world m literary wisdom&#13;
ever since, volume after volume;&#13;
since that day's sun w e n t down he&#13;
has been ambassador, hrilliant orator,&#13;
competent and admirable secretary of&#13;
state.&#13;
He Was Out of Sight.&#13;
Recently I photographed a large factory&#13;
group, and a few days later&#13;
brought the proofs to show the group&#13;
and take orders. Quite a crowd gathered&#13;
around me to see the picture.&#13;
Suddenly I felt someone pushing his&#13;
way through the crowd toward me.'&#13;
Up came a funny looking humpback&#13;
and wanted to look at the proofs.&#13;
There being about 120 in the group, it&#13;
w a s taking some time for this individual&#13;
to find himself. He looked so disappointed&#13;
that. I asked him where he&#13;
sat when It w a s taken. H e answered:&#13;
"I w a s in the engine-room s w e e p&#13;
ing."— Judge's Library.&#13;
-lameB R. Keeler, retired farmer, of&#13;
Fenner St., Cazenovia, N. Y., s a y s :&#13;
"About fifteen years ago I suffered&#13;
with my back and&#13;
kidneys, I doctored&#13;
and used m a n y remedies&#13;
without getting&#13;
relief. Beginning with&#13;
Dean's Kidney Pills,&#13;
I found* relief from&#13;
the first box, and two&#13;
boxes restored m e to&#13;
gcod, sound condition.&#13;
My wife and&#13;
many of my friends h a v e used Doan's&#13;
Kidney Tills with good results and I&#13;
can earnestly recommend them."&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 c e n t s a box.&#13;
Foster-Milbura Co,, Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
An Indian's View of an Organ.&#13;
After a while curiosity led me back&#13;
to. the sod house, and I saw for the&#13;
first time how the white woman pumps&#13;
so much air into a box that when she&#13;
presses on the top board it howls convulsively.&#13;
I forget my bashfuluess so&#13;
far as t o listen openly and enjoy the&#13;
operation, wondering much how the&#13;
white man puts a pair of lungs into a&#13;
box, which is furnished with a whole&#13;
set of black and white teeth, and&#13;
when he sings to it it appears to answer&#13;
him. This is how the white people&#13;
teach their children to do things,&#13;
I thought.—From the Outlook—Dr.&#13;
Charles A. Eastmau's "Schooldays of&#13;
an Indian."&#13;
SPECIAL T R A I N S .&#13;
National Editorial Association and&#13;
Christian Endeavor Conventions.&#13;
Personally conducted special trains&#13;
via the Chicago, Union Pacific &amp;&#13;
North-Western Line leave early in&#13;
July for the Pacific Coast. Special&#13;
all-eXpense tours at very low rates&#13;
for round trip, including sleeping car&#13;
accommodations, meals, etc. All the&#13;
advantages of a delightful and carefully&#13;
arranged tour in congenial company.&#13;
Write for itineraries and full&#13;
particulars. S. A. Hutchison, Manager&#13;
Tourist Department, 212 Clark Street,&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
T H O U G H T H E W A S W A N T E D .&#13;
8wede Returned According to Instructions&#13;
on Envelope.&#13;
Christ Nelson, having been in this&#13;
country only a few weeks, was slow in&#13;
learning American customs, and especially&#13;
the inscriptions on envelopes.&#13;
One of. his first acts after landing in&#13;
Oregon waB to take out naturalization&#13;
papers. On the corner of the envelope,&#13;
In which were contained the documents&#13;
that made him an American&#13;
citizen, were the words: "Return in&#13;
five days."&#13;
"Wal, I he har," he said yesterday,&#13;
as h e shuffled up to the counter in the&#13;
rounty clerk's office and spoke to Deputy&#13;
Prasp.&#13;
"What do you want?" asked that official,&#13;
carefully noting the embarrassed&#13;
! flush en the Swede's face.&#13;
j "Wal, it say on this liar envelope&#13;
I 'return in five tiavs.' and time be up&#13;
I to-day, so 1 ban come round."&#13;
1 When assured that nobody wanted&#13;
• .dm. he turned with surprise and&#13;
| walked sadly away, not certain&#13;
j whether he was naturalized or not.—&#13;
! Portland Oregonian.&#13;
i&#13;
Worth Observing.&#13;
Tn a certain preparatory school In&#13;
Washington an instructor one day&#13;
made the statement that "every year&#13;
a sheet of water 14 feet thick is raised&#13;
to the clouds from the sea."&#13;
"At what time of the year does that&#13;
occur, professor?" asked a freshman,&#13;
"It must be a sight worth going a&#13;
long way to see."'—Harper's.&#13;
C H A N G E IN FOOD&#13;
25 PER CENT OF DAIRY COWS HAVE BOVINE TUBERCULHtt &gt; . - *&#13;
HEALTH OFFICE REPORTS SHOW A N ALARMING I&#13;
DISEASE.&#13;
Thousands of People Are Dally Contracting Con&#13;
of Diseased Cattla.&#13;
NC R E A M P fjJPNMsftT&#13;
TT&#13;
''Br*'&#13;
mm and Meat&#13;
- r&#13;
'Tubercular c o w s in number prob- t o slaugkltr fe? t h e thousands, y e t t h e&#13;
ably in e x c e s s of 7,500 are dally contributing&#13;
t o Cleveland's milk supply,"&#13;
is the Btartllng declaration of Dr.&#13;
d i s e a s e Is continuing to spread.&#13;
tie owners e v e r y w h e r e • as&#13;
a s t h e millions of people&#13;
Ftiedrich, health officer, in his annual cently exposed t o contagion&#13;
report to the Board of Health.&#13;
Out of t h e 30,000 c o w s furnishing&#13;
milk to the city of Cleveland, and val-&#13;
Catw&#13;
e l l&#13;
innodally&#13;
from the consumption of the&#13;
7,500,000,000 Gallons of Milk&#13;
annually consumed in daily food u s e&#13;
ued at $300,000 the ratio s h o w s 7,656 will rejoice in the discovery of what i s&#13;
h a v e Bovine Tuberculosis, and in view claimed to be positive and simple proof&#13;
t h e fact that "Bovine Tuberculosis ventatlve—one that c o s t s but a few&#13;
and human Tuberculosis are identi- c e n t s a year to guarantee the dairy&#13;
cal," these figures present an alarming c o w against the disease.&#13;
problem to the people.&#13;
Bovine Tuberculosis Dangerous.&#13;
"Facts gathered show that Bovine&#13;
Tuberculosis is e v e n more dangerous&#13;
to the human race than human Tuberculosis&#13;
or Consumption. N o t enough meat in any form. It gives the whole&#13;
stress is laid on the fact that milk story in a very c l e a s and concise way,&#13;
A very Interesting booklet on t h e&#13;
subject is edited and distributed free&#13;
to all for the asking by The Mutual&#13;
Mercantile Co., Cleveland, 0., and&#13;
should be read by every o n e whether&#13;
a consumer or producer of milk and&#13;
from Tubercular Cows is an ethnological&#13;
factor in the production of human&#13;
Tuberculosis. The Tubercular cow&#13;
m u s t go before w e c a n get rid of hum&#13;
a n Tuberculosis."&#13;
and s h o w s h o w the claim Is m a d e t o&#13;
wipe out the d i s e a s e in a single generation&#13;
by feeding small amounts of&#13;
Kasawa and extract of Gentian, both of&#13;
which may be had at any Drug Store.&#13;
There are 70,000,000 cattle in U. S. Ask your Druggist or F e e d Dealer for&#13;
and the Govt, is daily condemning them a Free BookleL&#13;
Dont expect a man to have faith In&#13;
your judgment if you call him a fool.&#13;
Anyone can dye with PUTNAM FADELESS&#13;
DYES; no experience required;&#13;
BuccesH guaranteed.&#13;
"tyhere might is master, justice is&#13;
Bervant.—German.&#13;
Mr*. W i u l o w ' t S o o t h i n g S j r a p .&#13;
For children teetblajr, aofteaa tb» gum*, reduce* bfr&#13;
fl animation, allay a paia, cujrea wind colic. iScabottlo.&#13;
Speaking of shade trees—most family&#13;
trees are more or less shady.&#13;
Krause's Cold Cure.&#13;
For cold in head, throat, chest or back.&#13;
Best remedy tor La Grippe. Druggists, '25c.&#13;
SICK HEADACHE P o s i t i v e l y cure* by&#13;
t h e s e L i t t l e F i l l * .&#13;
Tbey also relieve BaV&#13;
zess trosi Dyspepsia* Iafligrstton&#13;
and Too Haarty&#13;
Satin* A perfect reskedylcrSizxlness.&#13;
Nausea,&#13;
Drowsiness. Bad Ttsts&#13;
In t£e Jlocth. Coated&#13;
Tongue, Pain In tne Skis,&#13;
JTORPXD LIYKB. They&#13;
regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.&#13;
SMALL PILL SMALL POSE SMALL PUKE.&#13;
Genuine Must Bear&#13;
Fac-Simile Signature&#13;
Work faithfully, and you will put&#13;
yourself in possession of a glorious&#13;
and enlarging h a p p i n e s s — R u s k i n .&#13;
Ladies Can Wear Shoes&#13;
One size smaller after using Allen'* Foot-&#13;
Ease. A certain cure for swollen,sweating,&#13;
hot. aching feet. At att~Druggists. 25c. Accept&#13;
no Fitbstitiite. Trial package FREE.&#13;
Addre*a A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy. X. Y.&#13;
Volume on Alpine Tunnels.&#13;
An Italian, G. B. Biadego, has written&#13;
a book of over 1,200 pages on the&#13;
Alpine tunnels.&#13;
The inducements 1o adopt Nature's perfect&#13;
Laxative, (Jarijeld Tea. are many!&#13;
It )K made wholly of simple Herbs and i«&#13;
guaranteed under the I'ure Food and&#13;
Drugs b w ; it overcome* constipation,&#13;
regulates the liver and kidneys, puntie*&#13;
the blood and brinps Good Health&#13;
Figures 8eem Contradictory.&#13;
The United Kingdom, which is the&#13;
largest importer in the world of cattle&#13;
and sheep for slaughtering purposes.&#13;
is oddly enough the largest exporter of&#13;
horses for the same purpose.&#13;
How's Thi^?&#13;
We ofJrr One Jliadre'l I)&gt;&gt;;:art Upward for any&#13;
ra*e &lt;if (itarrn that cannot W cured; by Uai: i&#13;
Catarrh Cure. '&#13;
F. J. CHKNFV &amp;\'&lt;V, Toledo. O,&#13;
We. the nndcrnUncd. havp kn.&gt;wu K. .1. Cheney&#13;
fnrihuUfi I.' year*, acil beiir\ e him perfen y honorable&#13;
n a'.l )iin1n*itK tmiiRnt'tluijs and financially&#13;
hint Ui citrr&gt; oi.i Any obligations made by h!» firm.&#13;
WAI.II; NC;, K I N V A V &lt;£ M n v i v .&#13;
Whnlpnale DnnflM*. Toledo O.&#13;
llali n Catarrh Cure li taken Internally, arilaj&#13;
directly ur&lt;&gt;n the blood and mucous (urfmcea ot the&#13;
*y«tem. Tentlmonlala «*nt free. Trice 75 ceata pe;&#13;
buttle. Sold by all Druse'*!*.&#13;
Take Hall'a Family Pin* JIT constipation.&#13;
Matador'* Foolhardy Deed.&#13;
One historic deed of daring In tb«&#13;
Spanish bull ring is that of the famous&#13;
matidor, Gorrito, who on stilts faced&#13;
the maddened animal.&#13;
FARMS&#13;
BEFUSE SUBSTITUTES.&#13;
THAT GROW&#13;
' N O . I H A R D " WHEAT&#13;
(Sixty-three P o u n d s to&#13;
t h e Bushel). Arc situated&#13;
in the Caaariian&#13;
We«t w h e r e Homesteads&#13;
of 160 acres can&#13;
be obtained tree by&#13;
e r e r y settler w i l l i n g&#13;
a n d able to c o m p l y&#13;
w i t h the Homestead&#13;
Regulations. During&#13;
the present year a large portion of&#13;
New Wheat Growing Territory&#13;
HAS JiF.KN M A D E A C C E S S I B L E TO MAR"&#13;
KKTs&gt; BV TlIK RAILWAY C O N S T R l ' C T I O N&#13;
that h a s i&gt;e«.-n pushed forward so rigorously by&#13;
the three gtcal jatlway c o m p a n i e s ,&#13;
Fur literature and particular* address SUI'ERI&#13;
N T l i N D K N T OF IMMIGRATION, Ottawa,&#13;
Canada, or the f o l l o w i n g authorized Canadian&#13;
Government A^ent :&#13;
M. V. MclNNES, 6 A*eM« Theatre BUck, Detroit,&#13;
Michifu; or C A. LAUR1ER, Sault Ste.&#13;
Mane, Micbigaa.&#13;
Metiuuu th:*. paper.&#13;
JOIN THE NAVY Wh.ch enlist* for * &gt;ear* young men of good character&#13;
a rut KotiDd physical cond.non between tbe aje*&#13;
i&gt;f l l n n d i ) ;i&lt;« apprentice fceamerj; floe opportuni*&#13;
;:&lt;*&lt;• fir iii.vinc-oment; pay 11« tolTO a tnontb. Ktao*&#13;
irn-uins, machinists, black tmitba, coppersmittra,&#13;
carpenters, adip-fltier*. t oal-pn&amp;iflra, flrenicn. rntK&#13;
sir latin, cooks, etc , between 1\ and jt&gt; Tear*, clerka,&#13;
ru&gt;*p.uii apprentices between 18 and'25 years, w&#13;
l.sred : ii stxjria! ratings with suitable pay. Retlreoierit&#13;
nrj three- fourths pay and allowances after 30&#13;
yeu.r_s se-r re. Applicants must be American eitlrens&#13;
ho worth or clothing* -free to recmirs. Upoo&#13;
c. si;nnrge I'ayel allowance 4 centa per mile to place&#13;
of enlistment Bono* four months pay and increase&#13;
• n par ujwn re-en!iitmerji within four months o f&#13;
(I »otiarge&#13;
U. S. N A V Y RECRUITING STATIONS!&#13;
Na. 53 Lafayette Aveaae. - DETI0IT. MICH.&#13;
Cbimaer ot Camnerce Boildjnf. . TOLEDO. OHIO.&#13;
Post Office BuiUiaf. . JACISOlf. MICH.&#13;
Pcit Office Bmlaiaf. . . SA61HAW. M1C1.&#13;
Works Wonders in Health.&#13;
It is worth knowing that a change&#13;
In foorl can cure dyspepsia. I ricera&#13;
it my duty tn let yon know how Grape-&#13;
Xuts food ha? cured me of indigestion.&#13;
"I had been troubled with it for&#13;
year?, imt.il last year my doctor recommended&#13;
Grape-Nuts food to be used&#13;
every morning. I followed instructions&#13;
and now I am entirely well.&#13;
"The whole family like Grape Xuts.&#13;
„ . , TT , „ t _ . we use four parltages a week. You&#13;
Friday sermon at Holt. Chapel-of-Ease J a r e W r l e o t n e t 0 u , e t b i s testimonial as&#13;
i you Fee fit."&#13;
! The reason this lady w a s helped by&#13;
! the use of Grape-Xuts food, is that it&#13;
Strange Story of a Title Deed.&#13;
A remarkable story w a s told at the&#13;
Easter vestry meeting at Wimhorne&#13;
Minster, Dorsetshire, according to the&#13;
London Tribune.&#13;
It was stated t h a P t h e document regarding&#13;
the payment of 10s. fid. yearly&#13;
to a clergyman to preach a Good&#13;
!•&gt;•&#13;
was missing from the parish chest until&#13;
some time ago. This deed w a s recovered&#13;
by the merest chance.&#13;
A sister of the veatry clerk bought&#13;
a drum at Thame fair for her children,&#13;
the toy being marked "Made in&#13;
Germany." Subsequently the drum&#13;
was broken and an examination of the&#13;
parchment showed it to be the original&#13;
title deed setting forth the conditions&#13;
governing the payment for the Good&#13;
Fridav sermon.&#13;
l+BET €5**2&#13;
It aafZflicfteXd writ4h [t T**JMJM » Eye Wattf&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 20, 1907?&#13;
Professional Pride Touched.&#13;
The municipal grafter had made a&#13;
full confession.&#13;
"Don't you feel better now?" thry&#13;
asked him, kindly.&#13;
"Well." he admitted, I'm a little&#13;
sore to find that 1 went cheaper than&#13;
soma of the other f e l l o w * "&#13;
is prodigested by natural processes&#13;
and therefore do^s not tax the stomach&#13;
as the food she had been using; it also&#13;
contains the elements required for&#13;
building up the nervous s y s t e m . If&#13;
that part of the human hrdy is in ror-&#13;
Ject working ».rde*\ there can be no&#13;
dyspepsia, for r ' r v o n s energy represents&#13;
the steam thr.t drives the er.&#13;
pine.&#13;
"When the r.ervo::&gt; s y - ' f m is run&#13;
down, the machir.rrv rf the body&#13;
works bad'y. Grape-Xuts food c;m be&#13;
used by small children as we'll as&#13;
adults. It is perfectly cooked and&#13;
ready for instant use.&#13;
Read. "The Road to WellviUe," In&#13;
p k t s . "THert'B a Reason "&#13;
Perfect&#13;
Womanhood&#13;
The greatest m e n a c e to woman's&#13;
permanent happiness in life is t h e&#13;
suffering'that comes from some deranfremett&#13;
of the feminine organs.&#13;
Many t h o u s a n d s of w o m e n have&#13;
realized this U&gt;o late t o save their&#13;
h e a l t h , barely in time to save their&#13;
lives.&#13;
T o be r. successful w i f e , t o retain&#13;
the love and admiration of I v r husband,&#13;
should be a woman's constant&#13;
study.&#13;
If a w o m a n finds t h a t her energ&#13;
i e s a r e n a g g i n g , that, she g e t s easily&#13;
tired, dark s h a d o w s appear under&#13;
her eyes, she h a s backache, headache.&#13;
In-aring-down sensations, nervousness,&#13;
i r r e g u l a r i t i e s or t h e&#13;
"bines." she should start, at once t o&#13;
build up her s y s t e m by :i tonic w i t h&#13;
specific powers, such as&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkhams Vegetable Compound&#13;
the great .woman'- r e d e l y for w o m a n ' s : ' i s . made only of roots ami herbs.&#13;
It cures F e m a l e I'ompiaints, src.h fts D r a g g i u p S e n s a t i o n s . Weak&#13;
Back, Falling und Displacements Inflammation and f l e e rat ion, and all&#13;
Organic Diseases, and is invaluable in the Change of Life. It d i s s o l r e s&#13;
and Kxpels T u m o r s nt an early s t a r e . S u b d u e s Paintne&amp;s, N e r v o u s&#13;
Prostration. E x h a u s t i o n , and s t r e n g t h e n s and tone* t h e S t o m a c h . Cnrea&#13;
Headache, General Debility, Indigestion, a n d i n v i g o r a t e s t h e w h o l e&#13;
female sysem. It is an e x c e l l e n t r e m e d y for d e r a n g e m e n t * o f t h e&#13;
Kidneys in either s e x .&#13;
I&#13;
.&gt;**.. .&lt;*«~&#13;
[.own;1&#13;
I •, t I „ / • •&#13;
; «&#13;
' • * . •.•.': v . . - 1&#13;
: , . j . •• - "&#13;
V ; . , . . . &lt; ( • &gt; •&#13;
f&amp;&#13;
y&#13;
• r&#13;
f i&#13;
: ^&#13;
h&#13;
':'.)&#13;
r- •'•&#13;
[^}¾¾ - *&#13;
• » J . *&#13;
;^-''&#13;
Spring Wheat&#13;
BREAD FLOUR&#13;
T h e S p r i n g W h e a t ib all g r a d e d in t h e&#13;
l a r g e g r a i n c e n t e r s . W e b u y t h e v e r y&#13;
b e s t q u a l i t y w h i c h is called N o . 1&#13;
N o r t h e r n .&#13;
If you a r e using s p r i n g w h e a t H o u r&#13;
y o u will be pleaded w i t h t h e q u a l i t y we&#13;
a r e t u r n i n g o u t .&#13;
F o r a w i n t e r w h e a t Hour y o u c a n&#13;
b a n k u p o n o u r T * u r i t y b r a n d e v e r y&#13;
t i m e !&#13;
Both Varieties are Warranted.&#13;
See circular in each sack for the elegant presents&#13;
we. Sive to our patrons.&#13;
Pinckney Flouring Mills.&#13;
J Business Pointers. i&#13;
KOH S A L B .&#13;
Two j^'iod fieoli, J e r e y cows.&#13;
J. J . Teeple.&#13;
FOL'XD.&#13;
In the el-.ttI)injjf &gt;:oYe iir'"lh^ place&#13;
a )hi\v o: g!;is?'»s. O.vn •:• can have&#13;
by proving iird paylny for.tbi- notice.&#13;
Cd\[ at 1)!-L'ATCII,&#13;
House to Kent.&#13;
Inquire at l?i»pat' I) Office.&#13;
Solo J alia Ball&#13;
ReadinK VV. W. Hendricks&#13;
Suio Fauuie Rolisou&#13;
Paper, Friui iry Work, Ad J a Kice&#13;
Solo 7loreuce Kice&#13;
Ei'Loas fruui the State- Convention&#13;
in papers on I 13 A.&#13;
Teach*-J a Training Work, Home&#13;
Dept, Work, Cradle Ro'l and&#13;
Ail nil Bible Clashes, written by&#13;
State Sujits. of these Depts.&#13;
Solo Lulu Henbaui&#13;
Secretary's lieport&#13;
Election of Officers&#13;
Singing&#13;
It is expected that the male q u a r t e t&#13;
of Pinckney will sin^.&#13;
ETTA H. GAKTKELL, Pies.&#13;
ADBXTIOIAL LOCAL.&#13;
HOWELL.&#13;
Kolliii H. Person of Lansing has&#13;
been secured to deliver Hie Memorial&#13;
address at Howell, Decoration Day.&#13;
Hotel Livingston, formerly known&#13;
as the National hotel, was opened to&#13;
the public Monday. It has been refitted&#13;
and made modern in every re- daughter of Mr and Mrs. Jobn Walsh&#13;
Never sign a paper until you a t&#13;
least see it (?)&#13;
H. M. Williston aud W. W. Barnard&#13;
were in Howell Tuesday.&#13;
T h e Chance club met with Miss&#13;
Florence Andrews Tuesday eveniuKMrs.&#13;
Matt Hrady of Howell is t h e&#13;
guest her a o t t e r , Mrs. Emma Morao.&#13;
Masquerade, May Pole, ice cream,&#13;
and a flood time, all for 15 cents at t h e&#13;
Opera House May 17.&#13;
Impels &amp; VanVortje, carpenters, a r e&#13;
making Kieat improvements on t h e&#13;
residence ft!' Thos. Shehan&#13;
The seniors of the P. H. S. cleared&#13;
over $13 at their ice cream social Saturday&#13;
evening although the weather&#13;
was col -.&#13;
M.s. H. F. Sitfbu' attended a u l i u e n&#13;
shower" at the home of Mr&gt;. Dwight&#13;
Monroe o! Howell, Tuesday, tfiven in&#13;
houor ot Miss .Minnie lies',.&#13;
Alice Walsh, seventeen year old&#13;
Ijl W . D A M K l . s ,&#13;
j . &lt;;KNI:KAI. A C C T I O N K K K .&#13;
Salisfiicr.' ii (lUJininU't'il. F o r infuriuation&#13;
call at D I S I ' A T C H &lt; HKce or -uKlress&#13;
(Ti-f^ory, M i c h , r. f. il. 2. Lymlilla p l u m e&#13;
c o n n t c l n a i . AuiMmn 1 &gt;i 1N a m ! t i n cu\&lt;&gt;&#13;
furnished t r e e .&#13;
Expert Auctioneer&#13;
Over 20 Years Eiperience&#13;
DEXTER, MICH.&#13;
PHONE 31. FREE BOX 68&#13;
J. W. BIRD&#13;
PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
SATISFACTION GtURJNTEEO&#13;
F o r inlorMiatinii, ( ;»11 at tin* Pirn ki&gt;f_v 1)1--&#13;
r VTi'H niliiv. A u d i , m Kill- Ktvr&#13;
W c h s l C! K'UI-.tl PhtitU'&#13;
A iTauyt'tiit ill- inude fur sale by j &gt;; 1. -1)(- it&#13;
my t'\)icM-c.&#13;
Athli « .-&gt;, 1)..-x I &lt;•) , Hit l a o o u&#13;
¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢¢++^&#13;
&lt;•&gt;&#13;
"All&#13;
Are not&#13;
Thieves&#13;
That&#13;
Dogs&#13;
Bark&#13;
At."&#13;
Appearances are not always to&#13;
be relied o n ; neither are all&#13;
kinds of advertising. Electrical&#13;
clock and similar catch-penny&#13;
devices are apt to entrap the&#13;
unwary They are hotter than&#13;
no advertising, but the same&#13;
money spent in the columns of&#13;
a local newspaper would yield a&#13;
hundred fold better returns&#13;
This is the local newspaper&#13;
in this community that reach**&#13;
the homes of the best people.&#13;
It is therefore the medium the&#13;
advertiser should use.&#13;
We take pride In our paper.&#13;
W e study the needs of our advertising&#13;
patrons and are&#13;
pleased at any time to aid&#13;
them In any manner possible.&#13;
I Among Oiir Currespondents •&#13;
L A K E L A N D .&#13;
C. G. S m i t h is not s o woll a t&#13;
t h i s w r i t i n g .&#13;
Mrs. R . T o m p k i n s i s sick a t&#13;
t h i s w r i t i n g .&#13;
J , G o r d o n w a s a W h i t m o r e&#13;
L a k e v i s i t o r M o n d a y .&#13;
J o h n V a n H o r n of H o w e l l is a t&#13;
h i s farm for a few d a y s .&#13;
Mrs. H . S m i t h a n d s o u , G l e n n ,&#13;
w e r e in H o w e l l S a t u r d a y .&#13;
M r s . J . R i c e i s v i s i t i n g h e r s o n ,&#13;
C . G. S m i t h , w h o is v e r y sick.&#13;
S. E . S w a r t h o u t h a s p u t i n several&#13;
p h o n e s h e r e t h e past week.&#13;
Mrs. W i n . H o o k e r w a s c a l l i n g&#13;
on L a k e l a t t d f r i e n d s F r i d a y last.&#13;
R e x B u r n e t t of tin- A n n A r b o r&#13;
tire d e p a r t m e n t w a s h e r e c a l l i n g&#13;
o n f r i e n d s .&#13;
H. 13. A p p l e t o n a n d wife of j&#13;
B r i g h t o n visited at K a y T o i n p - j&#13;
i&#13;
k i n s on S a t u r d a y last.&#13;
M r . T a t l o e k of A n n A r b o r&#13;
s p e n t T u e s d a y last at h i s s u m m e r&#13;
c o t t a g e at I s l a n d L a k e .&#13;
I. Hr M a r q u a r d t of A n n A r b o r&#13;
is h e r e m a k i n g i m p r o v e m e n t s&#13;
a b o u t h i s c o t t a g e .&#13;
H i g h w a y C o m . , W m . K e e d l t ,&#13;
h a s been m a k i n g s o m e i m p r o v e -&#13;
m e n t s o n o u r l o a d s .&#13;
T h e cold w e a t h e r d o e s n o t k e e p&#13;
t h e c a m p e r s b a c k if it does t h e !&#13;
1 i&#13;
c r o p s ; a s t h e r e w a s a l a r g e c r o w d i&#13;
out o n S u n d a y last.&#13;
i&#13;
Mr. B e r t H o o k e r a n d wife, C.&#13;
B. W e l l e r a n d wife, W m . B l a d e&#13;
a n d wife visited D a v e V a n H o r n&#13;
a n d wife S u n d a y last.&#13;
D r . H . C. N i c h o l s of A n n A r b o r j&#13;
is h e r e b u i l d i n g a p o r c h o n h i s !&#13;
c o t t a g e a n d o t h e r i m p r o v e m e n t s .&#13;
Win. C a d y is h e l p i n g h i m .&#13;
Chns. W o o d w a r d , clerk of t h e&#13;
G r i s w o l d H o u s e . D e t r o i t , a r r i v e d&#13;
he?&gt;' t h i s T u e s d a y a.m. to s p e n d&#13;
h few d a y s at h i s c o t t a g e o n&#13;
i S t raw Kerry p o i n t , d r o p e d d e a d&#13;
: t h i s T u e s d a y e v e n i n g . , of h e a r t&#13;
t r o u b l e .&#13;
Sunday School Convention.&#13;
: " P r e p a r e a g o o d d i n n e r - a n d r i n g&#13;
a big b e l l " i s Marion L a w r e n e e ' s&#13;
s u g g e s t i o n f o r " h o w to have a (&#13;
g o o d c o n v e n t i o n . T h i s m e a n s ;&#13;
p r e p a r e a good p r o g r a m , t h e b e s t j&#13;
y o u c a n , a n d t h e n a d v e r t i s e y o u r ,&#13;
meetings.— • S u n d a y School A d - j&#13;
Vftnce. !&#13;
i&#13;
H a m b u r g t o w n s h i p will h o l d j&#13;
t h e i r s e m i - a n n u a l c o n v e n t i o n May j&#13;
l'.t, a t 1 o'clock s h a r p a t t h e N o r t h '&#13;
H a m b u r g c h u r c h w i t h t h e f o l l o w - '&#13;
i n g p r o g r a m : I&#13;
S o n / Srti'v'&#13;
1 IVuMr&#13;
S i n L' ! n 'J&#13;
spwet.&#13;
The pa'-k committee ot Howell are&#13;
of Dexter township, died suddenly ot&#13;
heart disease Monday morning, May&#13;
laying plans to make Library Park a P3- She was a member of tha Dexter&#13;
place ot beauty in the future, t o n - High school seuior class. It is thought&#13;
siderable money will be expended. A , that her work m school may have&#13;
good park is needed in the county I hastened her death.&#13;
seat.&#13;
Mrs. James Barnard of Howell waa&#13;
burned to death last Friday afternoon&#13;
while alone. H e r clothing cau«ht&#13;
tire from an oii stove and she wadead&#13;
when found by her grand dautfter,&#13;
who boarded with her, coming&#13;
home trom school at four o'clock.&#13;
•John Witsiok the old fhgnan at t h e&#13;
Ann Arbor crcssing died last Friday&#13;
afternoon after a short illness, He&#13;
was supposed to be without property&#13;
but he made a will leaving over $2,000&#13;
to his wife and three daughters who&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
Rev. A. G. Gates preached fine sermons&#13;
both morning and evening with&#13;
good attendance. In the evening Miss&#13;
Ida Burchiel sang a beautiful solo.&#13;
It is very gratifying to know t h e&#13;
unanimous call extended to Mr. Gates&#13;
to become pastor of this church has&#13;
been accepted.&#13;
The following are the subjects at&#13;
the Uong'l church Sunday next:&#13;
Morning, "8nnles a n d Frowns of&#13;
Ii e in Prussia where he was born and . God," evening, "Mothers as Heroines."&#13;
spent most of his life. He was 62 | You are most cordially invited to&#13;
years old and lived alone in the flag i t'ome to this chnrch.&#13;
house. ; - - ' '&#13;
Too Long Winded.&#13;
The inhabitants of the Canary isles,&#13;
finding themselves oppressed bj famine,&#13;
sent to the governor of Galicia one&#13;
of their head pien as an ambassador.&#13;
They udviKtMl him not to lose himself&#13;
In long winded talk. He promised and&#13;
ktpt his word. H e took with him a&#13;
large number of sacks, and, arriving&#13;
at the town whore the governor w a s&#13;
on the circuit, he opened one of them&#13;
before him, saying only these words:&#13;
"It is empty, Fill it."&#13;
The governor ordered this sack ain't'&#13;
the rest to be illled with'meal, but be&#13;
•aid to the speaker: "You had no need&#13;
to tell us that the sack was empty nor&#13;
that It was necessary to till it. We&#13;
should have readily guessed that. Another&#13;
time be briefer in your talk."—&#13;
Bon Vivant.&#13;
My&#13;
WALL PAPER&#13;
Stock&#13;
Has boon moved t o t h e late&#13;
T h o m e s Clinton buildinir,&#13;
which I m u s t close o u t a t&#13;
once for&#13;
Look Into Spac*. : • , • i i r L I&#13;
A young man whose eyes had b en L G S S 111311 O n e - h H l t W H O l e -&#13;
troubhng him consulted a New York '&#13;
oeulis'. "What yon want to do," said&#13;
the specialist, "is to take a li'ip every&#13;
ilay o.i \\\ • fci'i'y ii/ in New .Iri'sc; .&#13;
Long I-lan! any pi.Mc WIUMV y&lt;m &lt;M &lt;&#13;
sot* loii'.; ili lanci's. [ onk up and down&#13;
the riv.'i\ a.To-^ t'h'!i]4 or. it' tha worst&#13;
ronies to th" worst, go on Ilia top of a&#13;
sk.vscr.Miar ami scan the hnri/.on from&#13;
tli.it point. 'Jin' hli\i is !o gi'i &lt;lis1a:irc&#13;
Yon use your eyes a great ileal and always&#13;
at. close : a lege. You can't Use&#13;
them any oiher way in town. Even&#13;
when not reading or writing the vision&#13;
i* limited hy small roo- --^1 narrow&#13;
streets. No matter a what direction&#13;
you look, there Is a I,lank wall not far&#13;
away to shut off sight."&#13;
sale cost&#13;
I have plenty left&#13;
W. B. DARROW&#13;
M. £. Church N*t9$.&#13;
Quarterly meeting WM well attended&#13;
from the Love Feeet to the closing&#13;
ot the Sunday school. Presiding&#13;
ttlder, Dawe, preached a sound seruiuu&#13;
th*t was well worth liuteniug to.&#13;
He remained to the opening of the&#13;
Snudey school and was well pleased&#13;
with the work. At the quarterly eonterence&#13;
Saturday evening the reports&#13;
showed the society tn a flourishing&#13;
condition ananoiallj and spiritaaRgfcgto--.&#13;
The P. £ . said the report o on Id not be&#13;
beat in the district.&#13;
For some time it has been t h e r a l e&#13;
in the Sunday school to give t h e&#13;
members ot smaller classes a card for&#13;
each birthday. Sunday t b e primary&#13;
class presented their teacher, Mrs. F .&#13;
L. Andrews, a very Hno chin &gt; berry&#13;
dish in houor of her birthday.&#13;
The attendance at prayer meeting&#13;
is krood—trom 30 to 'ID —but there is&#13;
still room and you are needed there&#13;
besides it will do you ^rood,&#13;
Please Don't.&#13;
It is a common oceurance to see oue&#13;
or more people who come out ot t h e&#13;
post office, open u p a newspaper or&#13;
two and throw t h e wrapper in t h e&#13;
street to be blown over someones y a r d&#13;
or nto t h e sewer. I t is hard wark to&#13;
keep the streets and lawns clean without&#13;
these thoughtless ones littering&#13;
them np. Would it not be better to&#13;
wait until you arrived home or p u t&#13;
the old wrapper into your pocket?&#13;
Council Proceedings&#13;
Of the Yillage of Pinckney&#13;
Monday, May 6, 1907&#13;
HEQULAK.&#13;
Council convened and was called to&#13;
order by i'res. Dunn.&#13;
Present: Trustees, Teeple, Roche,&#13;
Van Winkle, Nixon, Farnam.&#13;
Absent: Smith.&#13;
Minutes of last meeting read a n d&#13;
approved.&#13;
Street Comniissionet's report read,&#13;
and upon motion of Van Winkle a n d&#13;
Roche, report was accepted.&#13;
Aye: Teeple, Nixon, Roche, V a n&#13;
Winkle, Farnam,&#13;
Moved by Nixon and Roche that&#13;
bill of Teeple. Hardware Co. be tabeled&#13;
until next meet in^1&#13;
A &gt;'p : Nixon, VanWinkle, Roche,&#13;
Teeple. Farnam.&#13;
Tht President appointed Trustees&#13;
VanWinkle and Teeple as a committee&#13;
to confer with t h e business men a n d&#13;
ronort what, if a n y t h i n g , they would&#13;
do in aftijard to making overtures to&#13;
some manufactorinff industry to locate&#13;
here.&#13;
Moved by Teeple and Farnam t h a t&#13;
fixing ,luice at Floyd Reasons he left&#13;
with St. Commissioner.&#13;
Aye: Nixon, Teep]*, | { o c u e y a n&#13;
Wink If, Farnam.&#13;
The following bills weie presented&#13;
and read:&#13;
Htfvr .Teffr. \ , work on str.^u, |i„-,o&#13;
S. &lt;i. T«vpli\ work o n s t n v t , $iifW&#13;
W, A. Mxnn, St.roBt Com, &lt;wvi».&gt;H, gll.i8&#13;
-John Mortennon, work on strrrt, $6 ?»&#13;
CIIAS. Khlci-t, work on str.vr, ' Jio.ttt&#13;
C!;iu,lf I{..-iSon| work onsfreot, 816.75&#13;
K. ,1. Hri^ca, work on streot, $ 2 ^ )&#13;
•I. J. I'arkrr, .Iniwnin plunk, ^]oo&#13;
1 pon motion bills ivero allowed.&#13;
1 pon motion Council adjourned.&#13;
R .). ( AiiR, Clpr k.&#13;
» &gt; » » $ &gt; » ^ » » &lt; g &gt; » » « K » » ^ » » » »fy.-&#13;
Paper, A I(:'f in th- i 0 1 1 ( 1&#13;
l,'i''i li-nham&#13;
FARMERS!&#13;
We pay C A S H for y o u r&#13;
C r e a m . W e m a k e&#13;
p r i c e s baser! o n t h e&#13;
official N, Y. m a r k e t&#13;
q u o t a t i o n s f o r each&#13;
d a y s o t h a t you k n o w&#13;
e x a c t l y w h a t you a r c&#13;
doin |^&#13;
W e h a v e n o t h i n g t o&#13;
d o with T h e G r e a t&#13;
B u t t e r T r u s t , T h e&#13;
A'meriean F a r m P r o -&#13;
d u c t s C o m p a n y , o r&#13;
a n y t r u s t w h a t e v e r .&#13;
W r i t e u s&#13;
Dudley Butter Co.&#13;
E. F. DUDLEY. TREtS.&#13;
SAGINAW, MICHIGAN&#13;
AJD\v\U ^ m o u t t v ^ o c V s&#13;
EO-O-S for HATCHHTOIt&#13;
you w.inl I) 11 i ii!y . hii y of&#13;
W. A. R E Y N O L D S&#13;
Th&gt;M*e H money tn tlu.m, besides&#13;
ymi h^vflilie pleasure of raising&#13;
iinr ol the most, beautiful fowls&#13;
now in existence.&#13;
Eggs reduced after May 2 0 to $ 2 per 15.&#13;
W. A. R B Y N O b B S , Howell, Mich.&#13;
. &amp; -&#13;
•%'i&#13;
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch May 16, 1907</text>
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                <text>May 16, 1907 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1907-05-16</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <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>
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              <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>
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              <text>PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MAY. 23. 1907. No.m&#13;
—mm&#13;
For n 9 For ouamy D o w m a n s PF|C.&#13;
Everything for Summer Needs&#13;
New Ribbons, Lace*, Embroidiery, Hosiery, Underwear, Corsets,&#13;
India Lin^ms Wnite Good*, Art Denims, riilkalines, Ladies1 and Men's&#13;
Gloves, Work Shirt.-. Overalls, Small Hardware.&#13;
Oar Notion Department is complete with items at saving prices.&#13;
House Purnifbinir Goods ofevery dnKcription.&#13;
E n a m e l D l a h P a n t 2 5 c B n a m e l W « a h B a t l n l O c&#13;
B n u m e l D l p p e r a l O c 6 Q u a r t t i n M i l k p a n * B e&#13;
l O c Q u a l i t y D u s t P a n s B e&#13;
The Cleveland "Hydro Carbonite" Roof Paint&#13;
The Best in the World&#13;
Our price on this great Roof Paint is only 50c per gallon&#13;
Every day is bargain day&#13;
B. A . Bowman's&#13;
Howell's Busy S t o r e&#13;
Residence B urned.&#13;
Sunday afternoon a* Mrs. J. A.&#13;
Donaldson and two ^rdndcbildren,&#13;
who live just west of the village, were&#13;
in the chamber, bbe noticed smoke&#13;
com in? into the room. Opening the&#13;
door she found that the house was on&#13;
file and her way to the stairway cat&#13;
off by sm oke and flames. Closing the&#13;
door she took the little ones out onto&#13;
the woodshed roof and thence to the&#13;
ground. The building and contents&#13;
were all destroyed with the exception,&#13;
of sowing machine, cook stove, some&#13;
bedding, and a few small articles.&#13;
The building was insured but not the&#13;
contents.&#13;
Owing to the large west wind&#13;
burning shingles were blown into the&#13;
woods just east of the house and in a&#13;
few minutes the leaven and brush&#13;
were set on fire. After the fire had&#13;
sweep ovtr about 20 acres ot woodland&#13;
the firemen succeeded in putting I&#13;
it out. No damage was done&#13;
except to debtroy lences and kill a&#13;
I few trees.&#13;
GASOLINE&#13;
RED STAR BRAND,&#13;
Kest By Test&#13;
DOES NOT SMOKE&#13;
11&#13;
ASK YOUR DEALER&#13;
t26&#13;
i v:&#13;
*5OT "Nta^&#13;
On account of b a d weather in&#13;
April, have decided t o make t h e&#13;
same offer in May. F o r only fifty&#13;
cente extra&#13;
I Will Give&#13;
W i t h every dozen photos&#13;
at 12.00 o r m o r e p e r&#13;
dozen, o n e $1.00 p o r t r a i t&#13;
for 16X20 frame.&#13;
D o n ' t f a I1 t o 6 e t O n e&#13;
Photograph 8tilAio,&#13;
MI8YB. GHJPKLL, Stockbridge&#13;
&amp;*.&#13;
k Ice Cream Soda&#13;
Come i n a n d e a t&#13;
a p u r e , refreshj&#13;
* ; i n g dish of - - -&#13;
"Silk Floss" Ice Cream&#13;
either in t h e form of&#13;
a " S n n d a e or S o d a . "&#13;
Carborufed Waters,&#13;
^jm*fad* on Ice.&#13;
»:" ••••'.jg.'i' j a i v i s CLOSED&#13;
l^tVDawXor^^TiTMfcUM&#13;
C. "ML Sv^et,&#13;
?tc*.&#13;
* * i&#13;
UOCAL* NEWS.&#13;
Oeo Hick3 is under the doctor's&#13;
care.&#13;
R. E. Finah was in Detroit from&#13;
Saturday to Monday on business.&#13;
Miss Jessie Green spent Sunday&#13;
with her brother and family in Stockbridge.&#13;
v&#13;
B. F. Andrews is at Parshallville&#13;
this week doing some repainnc on his&#13;
property. *&#13;
Ruel Uadwell of Ypsilaoti and Harold&#13;
Brown of Ann Arbor spent Saturday&#13;
here.&#13;
When no one but the Devil speaks&#13;
ill of you you are sure to have a clear&#13;
conscience.&#13;
H. K. Jackson, representing the&#13;
Oliver Type writer, was in town the&#13;
last ol last week.&#13;
The ladies of the Cong'l churoh took&#13;
in over $11 at their tea at the opera&#13;
house last Wednesday.&#13;
The open season for bass fishing&#13;
commenced Monday. If it will only&#13;
stay warm a few days some may be&#13;
caught.&#13;
Quite a number from here attended&#13;
the Sunday school convention at the&#13;
North Hamburg church last Sunday&#13;
afternoon. *&#13;
A merry party of U. of M. students&#13;
were in town Saturday afternoon last.&#13;
They were well pleaded *\ith onr line&#13;
of souvenir postals.&#13;
Mrs. Will Shehan of Dansville has&#13;
been here the past week assisting her&#13;
sister-in law in getting ready for her&#13;
srip to Liberty N. Y.&#13;
Mrs. B. K, Pierca of Millin^ton is&#13;
visiting her parents, F. A. Sigler and&#13;
wite, and taking treatment. Her&#13;
many friends here hope health may&#13;
steadily improve.&#13;
Thos. Shehan and daughter, Cora,&#13;
left, here for Liberty, N Y., where&#13;
Miss Shehan will take treatment at&#13;
the Lnomia sanitorium. Her many&#13;
friends here hope she may soon regain&#13;
her health.&#13;
The weather man says that this&#13;
summer is going to oe a repetition of&#13;
1816 in which there occurred a frost&#13;
every month. Snow tell in Jvun° and&#13;
ice formed in July. We now ha~e a&#13;
snow storm scheduled for June 10.&#13;
The Eastern Star entertainment&#13;
last Friday evening was well attended&#13;
although the threatening storm kept&#13;
many away. The drill was fine and&#13;
while many dirt not mask there was&#13;
plenty of sport and a very pleasant&#13;
evening was spent.&#13;
H. H. Swarthont and wife received&#13;
a box ot Trailing Arbutis the past&#13;
week from their son Athur, from&#13;
Bijr Rapids. While somewhat&#13;
wilted the flowers were still&#13;
very fine and the fragrance al&#13;
nost equal to oiauge blostomt.&#13;
Union Temperance Meeting.&#13;
The following is the program ot the&#13;
Union Temperance meeting to be held&#13;
at the M. E. church next Sunday evening.&#13;
Piano Prelude Hazel Johnson&#13;
Music Male Quartet&#13;
Violin Solo Henry Ieham&#13;
Devotional Exereisee, Rev, D. C. Littlejohn&#13;
Solo Ida Bnrchlel&#13;
Address Rev. A. G. Gatee&#13;
Solo Florence Andrews&#13;
Violin Solo Henry Ieham&#13;
Addreat Rev. D. C. Littlejohn&#13;
MUBIC Male Quartet&#13;
Offertory, Duet; Henry Ieham, Hazel Johnson&#13;
JW'nediction Rev. A. G. Gates&#13;
Piano Postlude Hazel Johnson&#13;
Miss Lillian Boyle spent Sunday&#13;
with friends in Munith.&#13;
N. H. Caverly and Jas. Smith were&#13;
in Detroit the first of the week.&#13;
Henry Hicks of Jackson spent a&#13;
few days the past week with Ins parents&#13;
here. j&#13;
Those who have taken down their |&#13;
coal stoves are living by the kitchen&#13;
stove these days.&#13;
Some new post cards, souvenirs ot&#13;
Pinckney and vicinity, at the DISPATCH&#13;
office. 2 for 5 cents,&#13;
Roy Sprague of Howell made a bus&#13;
iness trip to this place Friday last,&#13;
comiOM over in his auto.&#13;
Mrs Frank Wolter and son of&#13;
Stillwater, Minn., is spending a few&#13;
weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
G. W. Teeple.&#13;
P. VV. Coniway. east of this village&#13;
has been having his house painted.&#13;
Matt, Jeffreys did the work and the&#13;
job speaks well for the workman.&#13;
Word was received here that Rev.&#13;
Fr. Comerford will arrive here Monday,&#13;
June 3, and .the reception mentioned&#13;
last week will be held at the&#13;
opera house that evening.&#13;
Miss Georgia Martin who has been&#13;
at Ypsilanti the past two years keeping&#13;
house for her two nephews, Fred&#13;
and Rex Read, who have been attending&#13;
college there, has returned home&#13;
for good.&#13;
Mrs. F. L. Andrews and daughter,&#13;
Florence, visited Mr. and Mrs. John&#13;
Sweeney at Chilson Saturday. Miss&#13;
Andrews boarded with Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
S. two years while teaching in that&#13;
district.&#13;
Miss Snsie Kennedy of Niagara 1&#13;
Palls is spending several days with ,&#13;
her parents, Mr. and Airs. Wm. .&#13;
Kennedy. Shc« finished her three \&#13;
years course in a hospital and school&#13;
for nurses therf in September.&#13;
The Livingston Tidings is adverhs&#13;
ina for a boy to team th* printer's&#13;
trade. The editor of the DTSPATCH&#13;
learned th§ Uade in Herald office&#13;
while it w § i i * d * t the management&#13;
of the preMttt •ditor and founder of&#13;
the TidjtaiJ#° *** &amp;lso the&#13;
founder dMHaHnUd*&#13;
«*&gt;T ~~#fc,.&#13;
*-»JS&amp;C. 1&#13;
Come and Esxamine&#13;
Our New S t o c k of&#13;
Up-to-Date&#13;
W A L L P A P E R&#13;
w.&#13;
• • • &amp; . &lt;&#13;
•%*:•&#13;
i J u r e Drugs—Prescript ioub (."artfully C o m p o u n d e d a t&#13;
F. A. S I G N E R ' S&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Read our "Special"&#13;
Adv. on pajc four of&#13;
this paper. No font... ...^&#13;
for it here. . . . » *™i&#13;
L. L. Holmes Clothing Co.&#13;
P i n c k n e y , Mich.&#13;
z ^ t l '&#13;
Ray Tompkins&#13;
Contractor and Builder&#13;
Can furnish large or small bills&#13;
of lumber within thirty days and&#13;
save you money, especially on inside&#13;
finish. Let me figure on&#13;
your job.&#13;
tw- ••WsU&#13;
Lakeland, Michigan ;-J-\.4&#13;
M't.;.;&#13;
m 99» . :.,&gt;&#13;
• S&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
^^¾½¾..&#13;
We are in position to store your base-burner&#13;
$2.50&#13;
At Owner's Risk&#13;
Teeple Hardware Go.&#13;
ITJM&#13;
* \&#13;
VL *m&#13;
"i •• "&gt;.. ^ . - . * » : W ' * " • \&#13;
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•U&#13;
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FJUIMA L. AKJUIUBWS, Pub.&#13;
•w SIS ssse&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
ES=&#13;
Millions for Mu»ic.&#13;
An industrious calculator haa ©stimated&#13;
that 110,000,000 were spent last&#13;
winter by the people of America for&#13;
the enjoyment of serious music—&#13;
music, that ia to say, as it is known&#13;
in our concert halls and opera houses;&#13;
uot the music of ttr* comic opera stage&#13;
and the vaudeville house. The figure&#13;
is more likely an ^underestimate than&#13;
an exaggeration, says Everybody's&#13;
Magazine. Few social phenomena of&#13;
recent years in this country have been&#13;
more remarkable than the enormous&#13;
Increase in the popular demand for&#13;
music of the better class. Then years&#13;
ago the works of Wagner, of Beethoven,&#13;
of Schubert, of Schumann, of&#13;
Tschaikowsky, were relegated in the&#13;
average mind, to the vague and unattainable&#13;
limbo of "classical" music;&#13;
to-day, one catches one's carpenter&#13;
whistling the "Siegfried'' motive from&#13;
"Der Ring des Niebelungen," and the&#13;
little dre&amp;smaker from the suburbs&#13;
discourses intelligently upon the revolutionary&#13;
art of Richard Strauss. The&#13;
publishers will tell you of the large&#13;
and increasing demand for operatic&#13;
guide books, for biographies of great&#13;
composers, for introductions of all&#13;
kinds to the secrets of that supposably&#13;
mysterious art—the art of muBlc;&#13;
and the great tribe of populariaers&#13;
flourishes as never before.&#13;
EVENTS NOTED&#13;
POSTOFFICE ROBBERS MAKE&#13;
SCRAP OF MIDLAND'S&#13;
SAFE.&#13;
The College Girls' Ideal.&#13;
Nearly three-fourths have as their&#13;
ideal a friend, while only four take a&#13;
historical character. The qualities of&#13;
this ideal friend vary considerably,&#13;
writes Amy E. Tanner, Wilson college,&#13;
Pennsylvania, in International Journal&#13;
of Ethice, and fall into three groups,&#13;
each group chosen by nearly the same&#13;
number of students—an altruistic&#13;
ideal, with breadth of view, tolerance&#13;
and unselfishness as the qualities most&#13;
cdmired; a broad personal ideal of&#13;
sweetness and strength of character;&#13;
a narrow personal ideal, with brightness,&#13;
attractiveness, good looks, popularity&#13;
and social influence as the desired&#13;
traits. For the most important&#13;
virtue, a little, more than one-third&#13;
take honesty; one-fourth love of humanity;&#13;
one-sixth, chastity, and onefifth,&#13;
self-control, One-sixth consider&#13;
dishonesty the greatest vice; onethird&#13;
drunkennes; one-fifth, impurity&#13;
of life or unchastity, and one-fifth&#13;
murder.&#13;
STOLE OVER A THOUSAND&#13;
No One W a s . Disturbed by the Dynamite&#13;
Explosion, So the TNeves Got&#13;
Away With 8w«g.&#13;
Watchman Heard Nothing.&#13;
The safe in the postofflce was demolished&#13;
by robbers, who secured |X(-&#13;
000 in money and stamps, Thursday&#13;
night. The deed was done BO quietly,&#13;
notwithstanding the amount of damage&#13;
that no one bad an inkling of the robbery&#13;
until Lynn, son of Postmaster&#13;
Northway, went to the office in the&#13;
morning.&#13;
Mr. Northway says he found the&#13;
front door unfastened and a large hole&#13;
in the window. The interior of the&#13;
postofflce waa strewn with debris, the&#13;
furnishings being badly wrecked and&#13;
the door of the safe blown across the&#13;
room. The clock had stopped at 1:41."&#13;
The nightwatchman says that he waa&#13;
on his beat, but that he neither heard&#13;
nor saw anything suspicious. Several&#13;
residents say that they heard a muffled&#13;
explosion, but it was not loud&#13;
enough to disturb them. The booty&#13;
the robbers carried away consisted&#13;
of $900 in stamps and $100 in cash.&#13;
The postofflce safe at Mattawan, 12&#13;
miles west of Grand Rapids, on the&#13;
Michigan Central, was dynamited&#13;
Thursday night and $150 worth of&#13;
stamps and $250 in cash was taken.&#13;
Officers are after the robbers.&#13;
Paranoia Is Queer.&#13;
Dr. Arthur I. Noble, superintendent&#13;
of the Kalamazoo asylum for the insane&#13;
proved a powerful aid to the insanity&#13;
defense in the Lewis murder&#13;
trial in Jackson. Lewis, he testified,&#13;
was suffering from paranoia ingrafted&#13;
on alcoholism, when he murdered&#13;
Capt Holzapfel.&#13;
The doctor further testified that&#13;
while, in his opinion, Lewis knew&#13;
right from wrong, when he did the&#13;
shooting, could realize the consequences&#13;
of the act, and its probable&#13;
effect upon himself, his paranoiac alcoholic&#13;
condition made it probable that&#13;
he did not have sufficient will power&#13;
to resist a wrong impression.&#13;
It would be hard to find, even in the&#13;
noblest fiction, a story more tragic or&#13;
more touching than that of the death&#13;
of M. Herthelot, the great French&#13;
chemist. Three months ago Mme.&#13;
Herthelot became ill, and it was discovered&#13;
that she had a form of heart&#13;
disease from which recovery was impossible.&#13;
M. Herthelot gave up all his&#13;
studies and all his other Interests and&#13;
took his place by his wife's bedside.&#13;
Prom that time on he scarcely left it.&#13;
Not only did he sit there by day, but&#13;
such sleep as he got he secured in the&#13;
same chair. When the end came he had&#13;
been 72 hours without sleep. Mme.&#13;
Herthelot, rousing herself as death&#13;
touched her, recognized her husband&#13;
holding her hand. "My dear, how&#13;
pood you are!" she murmured. Although&#13;
the accounts of the closing&#13;
scenta differ, they all agree that when&#13;
he knew that his wife was dead, he&#13;
expired almost instantly. In their&#13;
deaths they were separated by a few&#13;
moments only.&#13;
At a recent meting of the French&#13;
Societe de Biologie there was an animated&#13;
debate on the danger of being&#13;
poisoned by eating oysters. At Toulouse&#13;
recently a number of persons&#13;
were taken ill after eating oysters&#13;
laken from the beds at. Cetta; but&#13;
'Hie illness was traced by M. Baylac, a&#13;
rhemist of Toulouse, to other causes.&#13;
During the debate it appeared that&#13;
the handling of oysters after they are&#13;
taken, rather than the waters from&#13;
which they are taken, was the cause&#13;
.if infecting them with toxic germs.&#13;
One of trte speakers mentioned the curious&#13;
fact. that, "stale" oysters are less&#13;
unwholesome when suflered to remain&#13;
3tale, than they are when revived and&#13;
.efreshed by pure water.&#13;
State Analysis.&#13;
Secretary Bhumway, of the state&#13;
board of health, is already making&#13;
preparation* for establishing a state&#13;
bacteriological laboratory, fully expecting&#13;
that the bill passed by both&#13;
houses of the legislature will be signed&#13;
by the governor and give him authority&#13;
to make the outlay.&#13;
It is proposed to furnish free analyses&#13;
to public officials of the state, and&#13;
that the laboratory will be of great&#13;
benefit to the health department in&#13;
ascertaining sources of contagion.&#13;
Five thousand dollars is to be appropriated&#13;
for the first year and $3,600&#13;
for each subsequent year for the&#13;
maintenance of the laboratory.&#13;
Needs Correction.&#13;
A. Eanon Brown, aged 12, adopted&#13;
son of a Saginaw family, is In jail&#13;
charged with starling three fires within&#13;
an hour. Tfte first was at Cobb's&#13;
cooper shop, another in a stable in&#13;
the rear of the Valley hotel in Lyon&#13;
street, and another in a Niagara street&#13;
storeroom. The latter blaze was kindled&#13;
at the top of a stairway and&#13;
threatened to be a bad fire. The boy-&#13;
Hays he likes to see the fire horses&#13;
rim. He will be sent to Lansing.&#13;
Direct Nominations.&#13;
The Dickinson direct nominations&#13;
bill failed to pass in the senate, the&#13;
vote being 16 to 16. The failure was&#13;
due to the unsuccessful efforts of the&#13;
"convention senators" to hitch on a&#13;
40 per cent plurality amendment for&#13;
governor and lieutenant governor.&#13;
The bill waa reconsidered and re-referred&#13;
and now stands where it did before&#13;
the day's debate.&#13;
If the bill finally fails of passage&#13;
the administration is said to have&#13;
plans under consideration—a referendum,&#13;
or a Rpecial session of the legislature&#13;
next spring when the rebellious&#13;
senators are up for renomination.&#13;
ft/?, •&#13;
New the premier of Australia rie-&#13;
.-]air&gt;; that it. is Germany and Jrpan&#13;
hat. will fight for the supremacy of&#13;
he Pacific. The other nations" stem&#13;
Mthcr very anxious or very eager&#13;
ihout the possibility of Japan"*? getting&#13;
nto another war. Failing to make&#13;
irouble materialize with the United&#13;
States, Germany has now been select-&#13;
?d as the next best foe upon whom to&#13;
laic" tho Jana.n#*e&#13;
Naval Reserves' New 8hip.&#13;
Michigan Naval Reserves may secure&#13;
the steel cruiser Austria, captured&#13;
during the war with Spain, to&#13;
replace the good ship Yantic. The&#13;
Yantic is not seaworthy at present,&#13;
and to put her so will cost. $10,000.&#13;
The Austria is a steel boat built in&#13;
188!) and rebuilt two years ago. She&#13;
is IS!) feet long and has a speed of&#13;
14 knots. She is equipped with all&#13;
modern appliances and her engines&#13;
Rre in good shape. The boilers are her&#13;
weakest, part, but after an official&#13;
inspection it was decided that they&#13;
could stand two years of continuous&#13;
steaming.&#13;
Thr Saginaw police arc trying to&#13;
• top the- "stall saloon" evil in the city.&#13;
I An inspection of H dozer, .stall saloons&#13;
Hi night revealed over 100 girls in&#13;
revelry. In one place a young woman&#13;
was found stretched full' length on a&#13;
able, dead drunk, surrounded by t&lt;'p-&#13;
*v friends&#13;
Snort vf Hay.&#13;
The hay supply of Negaunee and&#13;
Ishpeming, which haa bee* abort for&#13;
tome weeks pact, it sow practically&#13;
exhausted, and as a result many horse*&#13;
and cows are getting abort ration*.&#13;
With the exception of an occasional&#13;
few cAxloadji, which are qnlckly&#13;
snapped up at $83 a ton. little hay has&#13;
been received since the first of the&#13;
year, prior to which time the home&#13;
crop had been exhausted. The price of&#13;
the forage 1s now 100 per cent greater&#13;
than laat fall. In some lnstanoe* the&#13;
increased coat of feeding stock led to&#13;
the slaughtering of cattle. The wholesale&#13;
price of floor haa advanced a dollar&#13;
a barrel.&#13;
8p*ndt a Million.&#13;
Taking the present dramatic season&#13;
now drawing to a close, as a criterion,&#13;
the people of Detroit will have poured&#13;
through the little windows of the box&#13;
offices in the local play houses a&#13;
stream of gold and greenbacks that&#13;
might he conservatively estimated a t&#13;
from 1760,00 to $1,000,000. When the&#13;
fact is considered that several of the&#13;
Detroit theaters are low-priced houses,&#13;
and that with a single exception they.&#13;
alf close their doors for the warm&#13;
weather season, the full import of the&#13;
figures may be appreciated. The theater&#13;
is but one of Detroit's sources ol&#13;
popular amusement, and there hre&#13;
only six of the larger houses.&#13;
M I M GJsason's. Sad Plight.&#13;
Bernice Gleason, aged 18 years,-&#13;
daughter of Charles Gleason, prominent&#13;
citizen of Kalamazoo, collapsed&#13;
on the streets in Chicago Friday night,&#13;
and it was not until noon Saturday&#13;
that the police In that city were able ?o&#13;
identify her. Alt she could remember&#13;
waB that she came from a city where&#13;
they made buggies. Mrs. Gleason sayB&#13;
that her daughter went to visit an&#13;
uncle and she believes- that the relative&#13;
missed the train and the girl became&#13;
confused and fainted. The young&#13;
lady was a student in the Kalamazoo&#13;
college. She recently underwent an&#13;
operation for appendicitis.&#13;
Popular Lam Sing.&#13;
Lam Bing, Chinese lad, who came&#13;
to America four years ago, is now doing&#13;
excellent work in the seventh&#13;
grade and hopes to enter the Battle&#13;
Creek high school next fall. Lam is 16&#13;
years old and attended school in China,&#13;
but he says his studies in China&#13;
have been but little benefit in this&#13;
country. Bing lives with his cousin—&#13;
every Chinaman is a cousin to every&#13;
other Chinaman—and after school&#13;
works in the laundry. Lam tried to&#13;
learn baseball, but has given it up. Heis&#13;
a favorite with the girls and is a&#13;
model of politeness.&#13;
'i raw* '*•&#13;
OAPTiSM O F T H E CROWN PRINCC&#13;
OF SPAIN QORQCOUS&#13;
AFFAIR.&#13;
SHE IS WORTH A MILLION&#13;
H o w ' a Kid Raises Hob VWth Navy's&#13;
Wireless Messages—Matters of Note&#13;
and Comment.&#13;
Alfonso of - Austurlas.&#13;
With even more pomp and ceremony&#13;
than attended his first presentation&#13;
to the officials on the day of hie birth,&#13;
Hay 10, A If on*©, prince of the Astu&lt;&#13;
rbis, wa* baptized Saturday in the private&#13;
chapel of the royal palace, Madrid,&#13;
in the presence of the royal family,&#13;
the state and court officials, the&#13;
representatives of the foreign powers&#13;
and a host of grandees, heads of the&#13;
various Spanish orders and other important&#13;
personages.&#13;
Thac pope was represented by Cardinal&#13;
Rinaldini, papal nuncio; King&#13;
Edward, by Prince Arthur of Conoaught;&#13;
Emperor William, by Prince&#13;
Leopold of Hoheazollern; Emperor&#13;
Francis Joseph, by Archduke Eugene&#13;
of Austria, and King Carlos of Portugal,&#13;
by the Dnke of Oporto. The officials&#13;
and invited guests began gathering&#13;
at the palace long before noon,&#13;
and as that hour approached the reception&#13;
halls were filled to their utmost&#13;
capacity, while outside gathered&#13;
large and enthusiastic crowds of people.&#13;
The greatest watchfulness has been&#13;
observed over the baby prince since&#13;
the hour of his birth, special guards&#13;
having been stationed day and night&#13;
outside of bis bedchamber, for Spanish&#13;
custom does not permit any possibility&#13;
of a changeling being foisted on the&#13;
natiop.&#13;
Jennie Flood's Freedem.&#13;
Mrs. Jennie Flood, who is serving a&#13;
life sentence fer the murder of John&#13;
London In 1893, may be pardoned. Attorney&#13;
C. E. Watkins, of Grand Rapids,&#13;
will present affidavits In favor of&#13;
the woman to the pardon board. London's&#13;
head was blown off while he was&#13;
eating his dinner at his farm house&#13;
and Mrs. Flood was suspected of doing&#13;
the deed to get his Insurance. Now&#13;
some of the jurors who convicted her&#13;
make affidavit to the effect that they&#13;
were not thoroughly convinced of her&#13;
guilt and favor her pardon.&#13;
Bandit Took the Rig.&#13;
While Mrs. Nelson Crosby and three&#13;
girls were on their way to Billings, in&#13;
Gladwin county, to visit her parents,&#13;
it became very dark and a man stepped&#13;
up to her, stopping her horse and demanding&#13;
her money or her life. She&#13;
told him she had no money, but he&#13;
could take her horse and rig, which&#13;
he did. She recognized his voice as&#13;
one of the young men of the neighborhood&#13;
and swore out a warrant, for him,&#13;
hut no officer could be found to serve&#13;
it, and the young ma« is still at large&#13;
with the rig.&#13;
A May Snow Storm.&#13;
People who are complaining that the&#13;
recent snowstorm in May is unprecedented&#13;
in southern Michigan, have forgotten&#13;
Memorial day, 1889, when snow&#13;
fell nearly, all day, and many celebrations&#13;
were called off as a result of the&#13;
cold. The mercury hovered about the&#13;
freezing point, and snow fell to such a&#13;
depth that it banked up on the windward&#13;
sides of the houses.&#13;
AROUND THE STATE.&#13;
When Vanderbilt's electric, light&#13;
plant, was started citizens paraded and&#13;
the band gave a concert.&#13;
Mrs. Grace Whitney Hoff, of Paris,&#13;
formerly of Detroit, has sent $200 to&#13;
the building fund of the Bay City Y.&#13;
W. C. A.&#13;
Nine arrests were made in Hillsdale&#13;
by State Deputy Rotting, of Sault Ste.&#13;
Marie, for illegal spearing. All pleaded&#13;
guilty and paid fines of $12 and&#13;
costs each.&#13;
Frank A. Osborne, for four years&#13;
a member of the legislature from Kalamazoo&#13;
county, desires to be a candidate&#13;
for the Republican nomination&#13;
for auditor general.&#13;
This story comes from Ludington:&#13;
A traveling man picked an uncut diamond&#13;
valued at S500 from crushed&#13;
stone, which was being used for paving.&#13;
Some careless laborer must have&#13;
lost his shirt stud&#13;
Braving flames and smoke, John&#13;
Erickson, of Haff. fought, his way into&#13;
his burning home and rescued his&#13;
wife, baby and a Miss Mialo. All were&#13;
quite badly burned.&#13;
Nathaniel l^aird, of Bay City, waft&#13;
notified some weeks ago that he was&#13;
one of the heirs of an estate in New&#13;
York. He has just received word that&#13;
his share is $50,000.&#13;
Mrs. Eddy's Fortune.&#13;
Two affidavits filed by the defense&#13;
In the suit of the Rev. Mary Baker&#13;
Eddy, by her next friend, VB. Calvin&#13;
A. Frye and others, for the first time&#13;
discloses to the world an idea of the&#13;
wealth of the founder and leader of&#13;
Christian Science, which will easily&#13;
reach $1,000,000. Fred. N. Ladd, Mrs.&#13;
Eddy's private secretary, who avers&#13;
that on March 6 he turned over to the&#13;
trustees under the deed of trust, executed&#13;
that day, bonds of the par&#13;
value of $788,770, and notes and bank&#13;
books for $68,614.64. The real estate&#13;
holdings are not given. Hawey N.&#13;
Chase, an expert accountant of Boston,&#13;
certifies Mr. Ladd's figures.&#13;
Kid Having Fun.&#13;
The fact that there is no law rejoeing&#13;
authority In government officers&#13;
to protect official wireless stations during&#13;
the exchange of wireless messages&#13;
is giving a great deal of trouble to the&#13;
station at the Washington navy yard.&#13;
A youth living in that vicinity, the son&#13;
of a policeman, has set up a Btation of&#13;
his own and takes delight in interpo-&#13;
"ating messages during official exchanges.&#13;
He has represented himself&#13;
o be at a distant naval station or at&#13;
sea on warships equipped with wireless&#13;
apparatus. The local police auhorities&#13;
were appealed to, but said&#13;
they had not the power to interfere&#13;
with the youth's experiments.&#13;
Ruef Pleads Qufttyi&#13;
Abraham Ruef, San Francisco's notorious&#13;
political boss, nervosa and&#13;
pallid, in Judge Dunne's court, pleaded&#13;
guilty to the crime of extortion,&#13;
for which he was to be tried by the&#13;
jury already selected. In pleading&#13;
guilty he made an impressive address&#13;
to the judge, stating that he had commenced&#13;
his career in politics with&#13;
high ideals for himself and for the&#13;
city, but that conditions had broken&#13;
him down, and now desired only an&#13;
opportunity to make reparation and&#13;
restore his character before the world.&#13;
As he concluded he fell back into&#13;
his chair, almost fainting, and the&#13;
tears coursed down his cheeks. His&#13;
health, he said, could not endure the&#13;
strain of the trial which he was facing&#13;
and the torture was beyond the endurince&#13;
of those who were nearest and&#13;
dearest to him.&#13;
Confederate Headstones.&#13;
The war , department will award&#13;
within a few days the contract ^Jor&#13;
the 20,000 white marble headstones,&#13;
to mark the graves of confederate soldiers&#13;
and sailors who died In federal&#13;
prisons and military hospitals in the&#13;
north during the civil war, and who&#13;
were buried near the place of their&#13;
confinement. This will be the first&#13;
step toward action by the government&#13;
to mark these graves.&#13;
Col. Wm. Elliott, an officer of the&#13;
confederate army, and formerly representative&#13;
from South Carolina, has&#13;
been appointed commissioner to take&#13;
charge of the work.&#13;
Down the Mississippi.&#13;
President Roosevelt intends, if possible,&#13;
to make a three or four days'&#13;
trip next fall down the Mississippi&#13;
river, from some point in middle Illinois&#13;
or Iowa to Memphis. It. will, if at&#13;
all, be made in company with the&#13;
members of the inland waterwavs commission,&#13;
of which Rep. Burton, of&#13;
Ohio, Is chairman, and who, like the&#13;
president, will be the guests of the&#13;
lAkes-fo-the-Oulf Deep Waterway association.&#13;
Off •m+*^m*+Q&gt;&#13;
f v&#13;
AMca'lfoefrided wttfc the practical&#13;
exterafesOps of Mm trtheama*. The&#13;
trouble was started by the ill treatment&#13;
«Sj8Mtlves received at the bands&#13;
bjTbe German military. They arose in&#13;
^rebellion and*witb their old-fashioned&#13;
guns a n * |&gt;*lr clomiy spears inflicted&#13;
defeat 4001 defeat upon the Germans.&#13;
The w * r costrfOerasny many millions&#13;
of dollars and eeveral thousandth&#13;
of lives. Nearly 100,000 men had to bar*&#13;
sent out to puV4own the uprising, and)&#13;
a demand had|td be made to the reich* .&#13;
stag to* more^money to cajry on mil*&#13;
itary operations. The money was m w&#13;
fused, whereupon the kalee* in a rafsjj*&#13;
dissolved ttVfcouie. v&#13;
Meantime the Hereros had exhaust*&#13;
ed their ammunition and finding it lm*&#13;
possible to get fresh supplies, ^had&#13;
g i f e n u p the unequal fight'and withdrawn&#13;
from German™ possessions.&#13;
There were about 15,000 of them left,&#13;
«(flL$h#y determined -to move northward&#13;
end seek a new Battlement In.&#13;
the Lake Ngaml region. Food waa&#13;
scarce and they met wifVmany hardships&#13;
on the way, and when they&#13;
reached their destination there were&#13;
only 4,000 of them left. All the otherf&#13;
had perished on the way.&#13;
Stiffs Competition.&#13;
A portion of the recommendations&#13;
of Attorneys Prank B. Kellogg and&#13;
Charles Severance to the interstate&#13;
commerce commission • eencerning&#13;
the Harrlman railroad investigation&#13;
has been published.&#13;
The report reviews the, testimony&#13;
and holds' that railroad competition&#13;
has been suppressed in an,area equal&#13;
to one-third of the United States; that&#13;
the contracts between the Union Paflc&#13;
and Rock Island for the control of&#13;
the Alton railway as well as the control&#13;
of the Illinois Central apd the&#13;
San Pedro road are all in violation of&#13;
the Sherman anti-trust act.&#13;
It recommends that the attorneygeuaral&#13;
Institute proceedings to annul&#13;
these agreements.&#13;
It also tecommends that there should&#13;
be new and effective laWB to prevent&#13;
Inflation of securities and declare*&#13;
that the profits of the great railroads&#13;
of the far west are being used to buy&#13;
stocks and control systems in the&#13;
east, iastead of building more road*&#13;
for the development of the weBt, aft&#13;
they should be.&#13;
Now He Resigns.&#13;
Rev. John L. Clark, whose action&#13;
in marrying William E. Corey, the divorced&#13;
head of the Steel trust, to Mar&#13;
belle Oilman, the actress, has been&#13;
criticised by many chsrehmen and&#13;
others, and denounced roundly by&#13;
Rev. Nehemiah Boynton, moderator&#13;
in Rev. Clark's church, has resigned.&#13;
Rev. Boynton characterized the&#13;
wedding as "a miserable, unholy and&#13;
disgustingly bestial proceeding."&#13;
"If the home means anything," said&#13;
Dr. Boynton, "if we are to be halfway&#13;
dscent, we can't have our clergy&#13;
standing up in the middle of the night&#13;
to sanction such promiscuity as the&#13;
Corey&lt;Gilman affair.&#13;
"I noticed in one newspaper a statement&#13;
that Congregational ministers do&#13;
not object to marrying divorced persons.&#13;
We have a church law that&#13;
no minister shall marry divorced persons,&#13;
and the Corey wedding was a&#13;
flagrant violation of that law. The&#13;
man who performed the ceremony does&#13;
not properly appreciate what he has&#13;
done. That is the most charitable thing&#13;
to say. A man did the same thing down&#13;
in Connecticut and died of a broken&#13;
heart."&#13;
"Well," said Dr. Clark, when shown&#13;
this statement, "I would not care to&#13;
dlspnte Dr. Boynton, "I have only&#13;
been in the Congregational church&#13;
since April, 1906, and I am not an authority&#13;
upon the church laws."&#13;
Severely Rebuked.&#13;
In stating that "Congregational ministers&#13;
do not mjbnd marrying divorced&#13;
persons," Rev. John L. ClarK, who cemented&#13;
the union of William Bills&#13;
Corey and Mabelle Oilman, has&#13;
brought down on his head a severe rebuke&#13;
from the Rev. Nehemiah Boynton,&#13;
moderator of the council which&#13;
received him into the bosom of the&#13;
Congregational church, and former&#13;
pastor of the First Congregational&#13;
church of Detfoit.&#13;
BRIEFS.&#13;
The proposition to bond Plymouth&#13;
for $12,000 for paving purposes was&#13;
defeat*!&#13;
Ralph Atkins, a Harris youth who&#13;
was arrested on a charge preferred by&#13;
Miss Nora Carl, of Harris, escaped&#13;
from the officer and- got stuck in the&#13;
mud in a swamp where he waft easily&#13;
captured. He was taken back tft f&#13;
his accuser. v&#13;
"I'm a regular human dynamo.&#13;
nect me with an electric light wire,&#13;
and I will fnurnish power for this&#13;
city's lighting plant. I'm a wonder."&#13;
This is the illusion under which Axel&#13;
Olson, of Marquette, has been laboring,&#13;
and caused him to be sent to the&#13;
asylum.&#13;
Mrs. Nellie Lewis, the woman who&#13;
climbed the fire escape and stabbed&#13;
her lover, Martin Post, so that he died&#13;
a few days later from his injffries,&#13;
will be held to' the circuit court in&#13;
Grand Rapids for trial for murder U&#13;
th* first degree. Her aged mathcM&#13;
t.innally sits near her in h w ca*V&lt;\&#13;
A Christmas card sent by Wfcj*'-&#13;
Martha E. Van Auken, of Orand Rapids,&#13;
to Mrs. Marion E. Boswell, of Milwaukee,&#13;
have led the police there to&#13;
believe that she is a sister referred to&#13;
in a letter found in Mrs. Boswell'R&#13;
room, near her charred remains. The&#13;
letter, started, "Dear Sister. Martha:&#13;
Your pfcayer«r are about to be answered."&#13;
Mrs. Van Auken had written teifisf fa*r sister to 4e better.&#13;
M - ....**• v +*•*•••**"**&gt;-»*+*•&#13;
&amp; &amp; &amp; • * *&#13;
if,,?.1: T. 1 , , , 7 ^ I I ^ I U ' K Z**mfJt-IMHtitmiJut n nml,*)4iJL*» . - 3 i — » * • * • • •&gt; » » i ' i i n » i i m | j | — t » ) &lt; » &lt; i y » ••""("••^•••^-t*"&#13;
.» &gt; " ' •&#13;
H*&#13;
THEUONS&#13;
OF"&#13;
THE LORD&#13;
A Tale ef the 014 West&#13;
By HAR1T 1E0IJ WILSON&#13;
A s U * of &amp; TM SfwadSCS."&#13;
fiD9»yr%M,«H ey Ulfcrsf raSttsfcls* 1»»&#13;
CHAPTER XXXVtl.&#13;
The Gen^Me Carrie* Off Hie Spoil.&#13;
Half an hour later they heard the&#13;
sound of voices and wheels. Follett&#13;
looked up and saw a light wagon with&#13;
Jourmen in it driving into the meadows&#13;
from the south. The driver was Seth&#13;
Wright; the man beside him he knew&#13;
to be Bishop Snow, the one they called&#13;
the Entablature of Truth. The two&#13;
others he had seenMn Amnion, but he&#13;
did not know their ttaujes.&#13;
He got u|p/and'wejttV forward when&#13;
the wagon stjopped, leaning., casually ]&#13;
an the wheel. {. »'&#13;
"He's already deady but you can&#13;
help me bury him as soon as I get&#13;
my wife out of the way around that&#13;
oak bUBh—I see you've brought along&#13;
a spade."&#13;
The men in the wagon looked at&#13;
each other, and then climbed slowly&#13;
aut.&#13;
"Now who eould 'a' left that there&#13;
?pade in the wagon?" began the Wild&#13;
Ram of the Mountains, a look of perplexity&#13;
clouding his ingenious face.&#13;
The Entablature of Truth was less&#13;
disposed for idle. talk.&#13;
"Who dyi you say you'd get'out of&#13;
the way, young man?"&#13;
"My wife, Mrs. Ruel Follett."&#13;
"Meaning Prudence Rae?"&#13;
"Meaning her that was Prudence&#13;
Rae."&#13;
"Oh!"&#13;
The ruddy-faced bishop scanned the&#13;
horizon witti a dreamy, speculative&#13;
eye, turning at length to his companions.&#13;
"We better get to this burying," he&#13;
said.&#13;
"Wait a minute," said Follett.&#13;
They saw him go to Prudence, raise&#13;
her from the ground, put a saddle&#13;
blanket over his arm, and lead her&#13;
slowly up the road around a turn that&#13;
took them beyond a clump of the oak&#13;
brush.&#13;
"It won't do!" said Wright, with a&#13;
meaning glance at Entablature of&#13;
Truth, quite as If he had divined his |&#13;
thought.&#13;
"I'd like toknow why not?" retorted&#13;
this good man, aggressively.&#13;
"Because times has changed; this&#13;
ain't '57."&#13;
"It'll almost do itself," insisted&#13;
Snow. What say, Olines?" and he&#13;
turned to one of the others.&#13;
"Lookrt all right," answered the man&#13;
addressed. "By heck! but that's a&#13;
purty saddle he carries!"&#13;
"What say, Taggart?"&#13;
"For God's sake, no, Bishop! No—&#13;
I got enough dead faces looking at&#13;
me now from this place. I'm ha'nted&#13;
into hell a'ready, like he said he was&#13;
yisterday. By God! I sometimes&#13;
think I'll have my ears busted and my&#13;
eyes put out to git away from the&#13;
bloody things!"&#13;
"Ho! Scared, are you? .Well, I'll&#13;
do it myself. You don't need to help."&#13;
"Better let well enough alone,&#13;
Brother Warren!" interposed Wright.&#13;
"But it ain't well enough! Think of&#13;
that girl going to a low cuss of a Gentile&#13;
when Brigham wants her. Why,&#13;
thin!v of letting Buch a critter get&#13;
away, even if Brigham didn't want&#13;
her!"&#13;
"You know they got Brother Brigham&#13;
under indictment for murder now,&#13;
account of that Aiken party."&#13;
"And paybe this cuss has got&#13;
frWn46L",auggested Glines.&#13;
'"Whole know but the girl?" Snow&#13;
Insisted. 'And Brother Brigham would&#13;
fix her all right. Is the houshold of&#13;
faith to be spoiled?"&#13;
"Well, they got a railroad running&#13;
through it now," said Wright, "and a&#13;
telegraph, and a lot of soldiers. So&#13;
don't you count on me, Brother Snow,&#13;
at any stage of it now or afterwards.&#13;
I got a pretty sizable family that&#13;
would hate to lose me, Look out.&#13;
Here he comes."&#13;
Follett now came up, speaking in a&#13;
cheerful M n M r that nevertheless&#13;
chlttee mm tbttaMfthuBiatm of {he&#13;
just by way of&#13;
friendly a3vi«e to you—like as not I'll&#13;
be stepping In front of some of you&#13;
in the next hour. But it isn't going&#13;
to worry me any, and I'll tell you&#13;
why Id feel awful sad for you all if&#13;
anything WM to happen to ins—if the&#13;
Injuns- jot me, or I was tsofc had with&#13;
a chin, or a Jack-rabbit eras* op and&#13;
bit me to death, or aayttfa* Yon&#13;
r s tiala ut t t tiig&#13;
Lpby wagons will rh« ajonf haaajorer&#13;
the 8 u Brmrdino tratt.' They art&#13;
•coming out £1} their way, almost say&#13;
ttime now, on&gt;urpos« to pick aae up,&#13;
.mfiearv life, been pricking&#13;
all p o 4 f j | t o S e t the old bull,&#13;
pa JracMrrrtefl'vere SI men In&#13;
Ithe train when they went down, and&#13;
there may be more coming back. It's&#13;
a train Qf Esra Calkins, my adopted&#13;
father. Yoa see, they know I've been&#13;
here on special ^business, and I sent&#13;
word the other day J was afcput due to&#13;
finish it, and they waant to go through&#13;
coming back without me- Well that&#13;
bull outfit will stop for me—and they'll&#13;
get me or get psy for me. Thafs&#13;
their orders. And It isn't a traia of&#13;
women and babies, either. They're such&#13;
an outrageous rough lot, quick-tempered&#13;
and all that, that they wouldn't&#13;
believe the truth that 1 had *a. accident—&#13;
not If you swore it on a stack&#13;
ot Mormon bibles topped off by the&#13;
life of Joe Smith. They'd go right out&#13;
and make Amalon look like a whole&#13;
cavayard of razor-hoofed buffaloes bad&#13;
raced back and forth over it. And the&#13;
rest of the 2,000 men on Ezra Calkins'&#13;
pay roll would come hanging&#13;
around pestering you all with Winchesters.&#13;
They'd paake you scratch&#13;
gravel, sure!&#13;
"Now, let's get to work. I see you'll&#13;
be awful careful and tender with me.&#13;
I'll b*t I don't get even a sprained&#13;
ankle, You folks get him, and I'll&#13;
show-fuou whjire he said the place was."&#13;
Tw© hours later FoUett came running&#13;
back to where Prudence lay on&#13;
the saddle blanket in the warm morning&#13;
sun*&#13;
"The wagon train is coming—hear&#13;
the whips? Now, look here, why don't&#13;
we go rjght on with it, in one of the&#13;
big wagons? They're coming back&#13;
light, and we can have a J. Murphy&#13;
that is bigger than a whole lot of&#13;
houses in this country. You don't&#13;
want to go back there, do you?"&#13;
She shook her head.&#13;
"No; it would hurt me to see it&#13;
now. I should be expecting to see him&#13;
at every turn. Oh, I couldn't stand&#13;
that—poor sorry little father!"&#13;
"Well, then, leave it all; leave the&#13;
place to the women, and good riddance,&#13;
and cOme off with me. I'll send&#13;
one of the boys back with a pack mule&#13;
for any plunder you want to bring&#13;
away, and you needn't ever see the&#13;
place again." . .&#13;
She nestled in his arms, feeling in&#13;
her grief the comfort of his tenderness.&#13;
- '*&#13;
"Yes, take me away now."&#13;
The big whips could be heard plainly,&#13;
cracking like rifle shots, and shortly&#13;
came the creaking and hollow&#13;
rumbling of the wagons and the cries&#13;
of the teamsters to their six-mule&#13;
teams,&#13;
A hail carr"* from the rear of the&#13;
train, and a bronzed and bearded man&#13;
in a leather jacket cantered up on a&#13;
small pony.&#13;
"Hello, there, Rool! I'm whoopin'&#13;
glad to see you,&#13;
Follett shook hands with him heartily,&#13;
and turned to Prudence.&#13;
"This is my wife, Lew. Prudence,&#13;
this is Lew Steffins, our wagon master."&#13;
"Shoo, now!—you young cub—married?&#13;
Well, I'm right glad to see Mrs.&#13;
Rool Follett—and bless your heart, little&#13;
girl!"&#13;
"Did you stop back there at the settlement?"&#13;
"Yes; and they said you'd hit the&#13;
pike about dark last nighL to chase&#13;
a crazy man. I told them rd be back&#13;
with the whackers if I didn't find you.&#13;
I was afraid some trouble was on, and&#13;
here you're only married to the sweetest&#13;
thing that ever—why, she's been&#13;
crying! Anything wrong?"&#13;
"No; never mind now, Anyway.&#13;
We're going on with you, Law."&#13;
"Bully proud to have you. There's&#13;
that third wagon—"&#13;
"Could I ride in that?" asked the&#13;
girl, looking at the big, lumbering conveyance,&#13;
doubtfully.&#13;
"It carried 6.000 pounds of freight&#13;
to Los Angeles, little woman," answered&#13;
Stemns, promptly, "and I&#13;
guess you to heft over 28 or 30 at the&#13;
outside. I'll have the box filled in&#13;
with spruce boughs and a lot of nice&#13;
bunch grass, and put some comforts&#13;
over that, and you'll be snug and&#13;
tidy. You won't starve, either, not&#13;
while there's meat running."&#13;
"And, say. Lew, she's got some tttuff&#13;
back at that place. Let the extra hand&#13;
ride back with a packjack and bring&#13;
it on. She'll tell him what to get."&#13;
"Sure! Tom Callahan can go."&#13;
An hour later, when the train was&#13;
nearly ready to start, Follett took his&#13;
wife to the top of the ridge and&#13;
showed her, a little way below them,&#13;
the cedar at the foot of the sandstone&#13;
ledge. He stayed back, thinking she&#13;
would wish to be there alone. But&#13;
when she stood by the new grave she&#13;
looked up and beckoned to him.&#13;
1 wanted you by me," she said, as&#13;
he reached her side. "I never knew&#13;
how much he was to me. He wasn't&#13;
big and strong like other men, but&#13;
now I see that he was very dear and&#13;
more than I suspected. He was quiet&#13;
and always so kind—I don't remember&#13;
that he was ever stern with ma once.&#13;
And though he suffered from tome&#13;
great sorrow and from sickness, hef&#13;
never complained* He wouldn't area&#13;
WSJT Bck; and h* always^&#13;
tried to smile in that little war he&#13;
had, so gentle. Poor, sorry little&#13;
father!;u&lt;nd gesterdaj *«H&gt;o©e of&#13;
them weuld fc* his friend, it broke&#13;
my heart too see him there s# wistful&#13;
when they turned their backs'on him,&#13;
Poor little man! Aad see, here's another&#13;
grave all grown ground with&#13;
sage and the stones worn smooth;&#13;
but there's the cross he spoke of.; It&#13;
must be aonte one that he wanted to&#13;
lie beside. Poor little sorry father!&#13;
Oh, you will have to be so much to&#13;
me!"&#13;
The train was under way again. In&#13;
the box of the big wagon, oa a springy&#13;
couch of spruce boughs and long&#13;
hunch grass, Prudence lay at rest,&#13;
hurt by her grief, yet soothed by her&#13;
love, her thoughts in a whirl about&#13;
her.&#13;
, Eollett, mounted on Dandy, rode beside&#13;
her wagon.&#13;
"Better get some sleep yourself,&#13;
Rool," urged Steffins.&#13;
"Can't Lew. I ain't sleepy. I'm too&#13;
| busy thinking about things, and I have&#13;
to Watch out for my little girl there.&#13;
You can't tell what these cusses might&#13;
rao."&#13;
"There's 30 of us watching out for&#13;
her now, young fellow."&#13;
"There'll be 31 till we get out of this&#13;
neighborhood, Lew."&#13;
He lifted up the wagon cover softly&#13;
a little later, and found that she slept.&#13;
AB they rode on, Steffins questioned&#13;
jhim.&#13;
"Did you make that surround you&#13;
was going to make, Rool?"&#13;
"No, Lew, I couldn't. Two of them&#13;
was already under, and, honest, I&#13;
Couldn't have got the other one any&#13;
more than you could haye shot your&#13;
kid that day he up-ended the gravy&#13;
dish In your lap."&#13;
"Hell!"&#13;
"That's right! I hope I never have&#13;
to kill anyone, Lew, no matter how&#13;
much I got a right to. I reckon it always&#13;
leaves uneasy feelings in a&#13;
r man's mind."&#13;
LOCATION OF ai at&#13;
« » • * » • « • i&#13;
MANY REOIOMS "., A&lt;tO£JAarO£|&#13;
WITH LOST PARADISE. '&#13;
Finding of Spot Has Always Been Oni&#13;
of the Fascinating Pursuits of&#13;
• Ages, But Quest Seems&#13;
Hoped&#13;
Eight days later a tall, bronzed&#13;
young man with yellow hair and quick&#13;
blue eyes, in what an observant British&#13;
tourist noted in his journal&#13;
as "the not unpicturesque&#13;
garb of a border ruffian,"&#13;
helped a dazed but very pretty&#13;
young woman on to the rear platform&#13;
of the Pullman car attached to the&#13;
east-bound overland express at Ogden.&#13;
As they lingered on the platform before&#13;
the train started they were hailed ]&#13;
and loudly chered, averred the journal&#13;
of this same Briton, "by a crowd of&#13;
the outlaw's companions, at least a&#13;
score and a half of most disreputable-&#13;
looking wretches, unshaven, roughly&#13;
dressed, heavily booted, slouch-hatted&#13;
( they swung their hats in a drunken&#13;
frenzy), and to this rough ovation&#13;
the girl, though seemingly a person&#13;
of some decency, waved her handkerchief&#13;
and smiled repeatedly, though&#13;
her face had seemed to be sad and&#13;
there were tears in her eyes at that&#13;
very moment."&#13;
At this response from the girl, the&#13;
journal went on to say, the ruffians&#13;
had redoubled their drunken pandemonium.&#13;
And as the train pulled&#13;
away, to the observant tourist's&#13;
marked relief, the young outlaw on the&#13;
platform had waved his own hat and&#13;
shouted as a last message to one&#13;
"Lew," that he "must not let Dandy&#13;
get gandered up," nor forget "to tie&#13;
him to grass."&#13;
Later, as the train shrieked its way&#13;
through Echo canyon, the observant&#13;
tourist, with his double-visored plaid&#13;
cap well over his face, pretending to&#13;
sleep overheard the same person&#13;
across the aisle say to the girl:&#13;
"Now we're on our own property at&#13;
last. For the next 60 hours we'll be&#13;
riding across our own front yard—and&#13;
there ain't any keys and passwords&#13;
and grips here, either—just a plain&#13;
Almighty God with no nonsense about&#13;
Every once in awhile an ingenious&#13;
theorist arises with the announcement&#13;
that the Garden of Eden has at&#13;
last been located. The world is concerned&#13;
more for the restitution to the&#13;
race of a large measure ot the innocence&#13;
and happinens that is associated&#13;
with the lost paradise than it is with&#13;
the location of the place which is&#13;
woven into the majestic lines of&#13;
Hilton In his pictures of the creation&#13;
and the tragedy of the garden.&#13;
Nevertheless, the strength of human&#13;
interest in the facts of human origin&#13;
makes the location of the Garden of&#13;
Eden one of the fascinating pursuits&#13;
-of the ages. As there is no known&#13;
spot upon the face of the earth that&#13;
corresponds with the features attributed&#13;
to the location of Eden, and as,&#13;
even admitting the validity of the&#13;
Bishop Usaher chronology, there has&#13;
elapsed sufficient time for the utter&#13;
transformation of the physical aspects&#13;
of Eden as described in Genesis,&#13;
the hunt for the actual Eden seems&#13;
hopeless.&#13;
The cradle of the race undoubtedly&#13;
lies somewhere in the east, and, accepting&#13;
the Indo-European theory of&#13;
race identity of the Caucasian races,&#13;
It would seem as though the approximate&#13;
birthplace of this branch of the&#13;
human family could be placed. But&#13;
ethnologists are themselves astounded&#13;
as they endeavor to track the path&#13;
of humanity and to trace the breakup&#13;
of the race into its many branches,&#13;
through the evidence of language and&#13;
other enduring records. They are&#13;
nonplused and cannot arrive at a&#13;
common agreement, excepting that,&#13;
after research has reached to the&#13;
farthest limit, the borderland of civilization&#13;
appears to be brought little&#13;
nearer.&#13;
Nevertheless, there is no tradition&#13;
among the nations so entrancing as&#13;
that of Eden. Hardly a nation of the&#13;
ancient east but that retains the story&#13;
among its folklore. But the tradition&#13;
has traveled westward and has spread&#13;
over the whole world. Even the&#13;
Sandwich islanders, the people of the&#13;
Pamirs, and it is even said the Eskimos,&#13;
have traditions of Eden not dissimilar&#13;
from the story of Genesis. The&#13;
records of the Aztecs disclose the&#13;
story of the serpent delineated unmistakably&#13;
in the picture language of&#13;
that ancient people. But while the&#13;
valley of Mexico has the credit of being&#13;
one of the spots identified with&#13;
the location of Eden, on the other&#13;
hand the north pole is a candidate&#13;
for the honor, it being claimed that&#13;
Eden was wiped out by the advance&#13;
of the ice sheet during the glacial&#13;
ages. South and Central America,&#13;
Mexico, the Sahara desert, the&#13;
jungles of the dark continent—almost&#13;
every tropical country—has its de&#13;
fenders in this respect.&#13;
Th/? point of these claims usually&#13;
rests upon evidence of the existence&#13;
of a race earlier than any of which&#13;
history has knowledge. But as these&#13;
ancient stocks are scattered throughout&#13;
the globe, this appears to prove&#13;
nothing. But tradition, world-wide,&#13;
enshrines the Garden of Eden among&#13;
the beliefs of widely dissimilar peoples,&#13;
and this fact itself indicates the&#13;
early identity of the races of mankind.&#13;
The Mexican tradition, relating&#13;
as it does to this continent, has especial&#13;
interest. This assumes there&#13;
was a race of human beings on this&#13;
continent many thousands of year?&#13;
r.go, and this is to some extent con&#13;
firmed by discoveries along the Pa&#13;
eifie coast of South America. Traces&#13;
of a race and a civilization have been&#13;
After the Natth Fait.&#13;
Contmandjr Robert 1. Peary Bag&#13;
decided upon soma changes in t h * matted ttr*.if*&amp;*u*&amp;rt*mm&#13;
tempt to reach the north pole.&#13;
"The main improvement over the&#13;
last plan," said the explorer, "will b*&#13;
that I shall continue farther to the.&#13;
westward along the North Grajkt. LaM.&#13;
soaat, and then, when 1 take to the&#13;
Ice, I shall bear always to windward&#13;
and thus offset the continuous drift to&#13;
Che east.&#13;
"There will be no separation of the&#13;
parties this time as there waa last,&#13;
snd I shall have the relay system so&#13;
perfected that at that time, la aajr&#13;
event, I can reload ample supplies&#13;
from the supporting sledges and prase&#13;
forward with the pole party. For the&#13;
rest there will be the dogs aa4 the&#13;
Esquimaux Just as on the former expedition.&#13;
This time I shall win."&#13;
Commander Peary said that fef&#13;
thought the necessary 1100,008 would&#13;
be forthcoming soon. He denied a report&#13;
that his wife would accompany&#13;
him.&#13;
Him."&#13;
Whereupon had been later added to \ discovered there, which go far back&#13;
the journal a note to the effect that&#13;
Americans are not only quite as prone&#13;
to vaunt and brag and tell big stories&#13;
as other explorers had asserted, but&#13;
that in the west they were ready blasphemers.&#13;
Yet the couple minded not the observant&#13;
tourist, and continued to enlarge&#13;
and complicate his views of&#13;
American life to the very bank of the&#13;
Missouri. Unwittingly, however, for&#13;
they knew him not nor saw&#13;
him nor heard him, being occupied&#13;
with the matter of themselves.&#13;
"You'll have to back me up when&#13;
we get to Springfield," he said to her&#13;
one late afternoon, when they neared&#13;
of recorded time.&#13;
the end of their exciting journey. | what to do. Every dressmaker in&#13;
"I've heard that old Grandpa Corson is&#13;
mighty peppery. He might take you&#13;
away from me."&#13;
Her eyes came in from the brown&#13;
rolling of the plain outside to light&#13;
him with their love; and then, the&#13;
lamps having not yet been lighted, the&#13;
head of grace nestled suddenly 0½ Its&#13;
pillow of brawn with only a tremulous&#13;
sigh of security for answer.&#13;
This brought his arm quickly about&#13;
her in a protecting clasp, plainly in&#13;
the sidelong gase of the now scandallied&#13;
tut not lets observant tourist&#13;
— —&gt;. THI ENDKing&#13;
Came to Rescue.&#13;
At the time of the marriage of the&#13;
crown prince of Sweden, Miss Emma&#13;
Thursby. the American singer, and&#13;
Mine. Christine Nillson were appearing&#13;
on alternate nights at the Royal&#13;
theater at Stockholm. Mme. Nillson&#13;
would sing in opera one night and&#13;
Miss Thursby in concert the next.&#13;
Both ladies were invited to the&#13;
court ball given by King" Oskar in&#13;
honor of the crown prince and his&#13;
bride, and both wished to attend.&#13;
But neither had a court train, and&#13;
rhey were at their wits' ends to know&#13;
Stockholm was busy night and day;&#13;
it was too late to order their trains&#13;
from Paris. Mme. Nillson finally&#13;
solved the difficulty.&#13;
"I will write to tfcC "ilng about it,"&#13;
she said. And she did.&#13;
"Your most gracious majesty," she&#13;
wrote In her letter, "Miss Thursby and&#13;
I have no flaps to wear to the court&#13;
ball. What shall we do?"&#13;
"Come without them. Oskar," was&#13;
the answer they got back the same&#13;
day.&#13;
They went to the ball and had a&#13;
i memorable time.&#13;
Russian Brutality.&#13;
Forty-five oflLcisis and workmen «t&#13;
Kuttner's spinning mills were shot&#13;
down in Lods by a patrol of Coeeaeki,&#13;
because a band of terrorists attacked&#13;
a mall wagon in the neighborhood,&#13;
killed a Cossack guard and wouaded&#13;
another Cossack and two postofflce officials.&#13;
While the wagon was psasiaf&#13;
through Lonkowa street the Urrarien&#13;
suddenly appeared from a side street,&#13;
opened fire on the Cossaek eeoof%&#13;
seised 11,000 from the wagon and eg*&#13;
caped. A moment later a patrol ol&#13;
Cossacks arrived on the scene ana,&#13;
infuriated by the fate of their comrades,&#13;
rushed Into the Kuttner factory,&#13;
which was near the spot where t s l&#13;
robbery occurred, and began firing indiscriminately,&#13;
killing 15 and wounding&#13;
over 30 persons.&#13;
The greatest iadlgnatloa prevails, aa&#13;
it is claimed that the employee of Ufo&#13;
factory had nothing to do with tnl&#13;
attack on the mall wagon.&#13;
A War Alllence.&#13;
The Paris corr««ppndent of the Rusa&#13;
in a dispatch aimohnees thit he has&#13;
obtained information from auyetttlb&#13;
sources to the effect that the rrahoo-&#13;
Tapanese agreement now in course of&#13;
negotiation will contain secret conff&#13;
tions applying to the eventuality of a&#13;
European war, and blading Japan to&#13;
place at the disposal of Trance io5s&#13;
000 men, while the British will land a&#13;
contingent of 100,000 to 160,000 m «&#13;
Great Britain and France, it is Ada*&#13;
3d, not only guarantee the invlolabili]&#13;
of Japanese territory, but also enga&#13;
.0 float several loans. The statemer&#13;
made are received with Incredulity&#13;
diplomatic circles there.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
attl* tr«4e ettady on afcia*&#13;
- - - - - - - ofaB&#13;
D e t r o i t , .&#13;
ping- g r a d e s . BtrllB a n * e«W sttrif Q- - . .&#13;
kinds, b u t c h e r g r a d e s a n d h a n d y c a t t l e&#13;
w i l l i n g f r o m 900 to 1.1*0 lQc h i g h e r .&#13;
The run w a a u n u s u a l l y light, w h l o l i&#13;
helped out on prices. Milch c o w s an&lt;J&#13;
.springers sold w e l l and good p r i m e&#13;
g r a d e s w o u l d b r i n g $50. but v e r y f«W&#13;
of t h i s k i n d reach t h i s m a r k e t a n d »4f&#13;
waa. t h * ' t o p paid. E x t r a d r y - f « d s t e e r s&#13;
and h e i f e r s , $5 3 5 ® 8; s t e e r s a n d heifer*.&#13;
1,000 to 1.200, *&amp;&lt;BI 35; ateera a n d&#13;
heifers, 800 to 1,000, $4 75 0 5 IB; 8te*r4&#13;
uhd helfera t h a t a r e fat, 500 to 70¾&#13;
$4 2 5 0 4 75; choice fat cow*, $4 2g&lt;&#13;
4 75; g o o d f a t c o w s , $S 7 5 © 4 IS; coll&#13;
•ron c o w ) , | 3 @ 3 50; c a n a e r s , S t $ 2 y&#13;
choice h o a v y bulla, p - - - *-&#13;
g o o d b6U)gna bulls, $3 7 $ A 4 ; EtQi&#13;
bulls. $3 2 5 f t 3 35; c h o i c e feefllng s t i l l&#13;
SO0 to 1,000, $H 75© 4 50; fair feedini&#13;
s t e e r s , 800 t o 1,000, IS 5 0 A 4 : chqjcfl&#13;
s u c k e r s , 500 to 700, $ | T 5 « 4 ; fail&#13;
utockers, 500 to 700, $1 2 5 6 3 75; s t o c k&#13;
heifers, $3 2»6&gt;3 75; m l l k a r s . l a r g e ,&#13;
y o u n g , m e d i u m a g e , $ 4 0 0 4 5 ; c o m m a *&#13;
m i l k e r s . 1 1 3 0 2 5&#13;
T h f v e a l c a l f trade a d v a n c e d o v a *&#13;
last w e e k a n d g o o d g r a d e s w e r e trmm&#13;
£5c to 50c h i g h e r . W« q u o t e : B a l l&#13;
jcradea. f « @ S 75; o t h e r s , $ 4 w 5 50.&#13;
The s h e e p snd l a m b m a r k e t w a s&#13;
s t r o n g a n d 25c h i g h e r t h a n l a s t w a a k ,&#13;
top g r a d e s b r i n g i n g aa h i g h a s $7 Ti.&#13;
A f e w s p r i n g l a m b s w e r « on sal ft a n d&#13;
b r o u g h t ID ISO. We q u o t e : B e s t l a m b s ,&#13;
$7 75; fair t o g o o d l a m b s , $ 7 © 7 B0;&#13;
light to c o m m o n lambs, $5 5 0 ^ 6 ; y e a r -&#13;
l i n g s . 15 50@« 50; fair to g o o d b u t c h e r&#13;
sheep, $4 5 0 ® 5 ; c u l l s and c o m m o n , |?5&gt;&#13;
3 «0.&#13;
In the h o g d e p a r t m e n t tho r e c e i p t s&#13;
w«re h e a v y and t h e t r a d e w a s a c t i v a&#13;
a t l a s t w e e k ' s o p e n i n g prices, a l l&#13;
Etrarias b r i n g i n g t e e o n e price—$6 45.&#13;
R a n g * of p r i c e s : L i g h t to g o o d b u t c h -&#13;
ers. | 6 45; p i g s . $ 8 . 4 5 ; l i g h t y o r k e r a ,&#13;
16 45; r o u g h s , |&lt;»; s t a g s , o n e - t h i r d off.&#13;
Grata, Kt&lt;*.&#13;
D e t r o i t — W h e a t — C a s h No. 2 red,&#13;
97 l - 2 c ; May, 2.000 bu a t 92 l - 2 o . 3,000&#13;
bu at 03c, 6.000 bu at 93 3-4o, 2,000 bU&#13;
at Otc, 8,000 bu at 9 4 l - 4 c , 10,000 bu a t&#13;
95c. 5.000 bu at 95 l - 2 c . 15,000 b u at 96c,&#13;
20,000 T-iii at !»7 1-2r; J u l y . 10,000 b u a t&#13;
53 1-4C 10,00 bu at 93 3-4r, 50,000 bu a t&#13;
04c. 2.VO0O b u at 04 1-4c. 15,000 bu a t&#13;
04 3 - l c , 10.000 bu nt 95c, 5,000 bu at&#13;
fi.i 1-Sc. ::5.oOO bu at 95 l - 2 c . 10.000 b u a t&#13;
9."i 7-Sr. 11).000 bu at 9fic, 15.000 hu at&#13;
9« 1-4.-. 13,000 bu at 97c. 10,000 bu at&#13;
HSc, 10.00 hu at 9 S l - 4 e ; S e p t e m b e r , 2»&gt;-&#13;
000 hu at 95 1-lc. 20.000 bu at 9"&gt;l-l€,&#13;
30.000 bu at 95 7-Sc., 10.000 bu at »**.&#13;
15,000 bu at Sfi 3-»c.. 15.000 bu a t 9« t - | e »&#13;
10,000 hu at 96 3-4c, 20,000 bu at f f c ,&#13;
22.000 hu at AT i-2c, 3.tf00 bu a t t i e ,&#13;
25.000 hu at 9K1-4r. 20.000 l&gt;u a t **c,&#13;
25.000 hu at $1, 11.000 b u at $1 00 1-4;&#13;
No, :: red. 94 1-2«; No. 1 w h i t e , 9ftc.&#13;
i.'nrn—t'aah N&lt;V 3, 54 l-2c.; No. 2 y e l -&#13;
low, 2 c a r s a t 56 l - 2 c .&#13;
O a t s — C a s h No 3 w h i t e , 4fic a s k e d ;&#13;
No, 4 w h i t e . 2 c a r s at 45 l - 2 c .&#13;
R y e — C a s h No. 2. Sin.&#13;
B e a n s — C a s h , | 1 56; J u n e a n d J u l y ,&#13;
II 58.&#13;
C l o v e r s e e d — P r i m e s p o t . $9; October,&#13;
$7 65; D e c e m b e r . $7 70; s a m p l e , 10 b a g s&#13;
at $8 50^5 a t $7 60; p r i m a alsilce, 6 b a g s&#13;
at «7 2S.&#13;
T i m o t h y s e * d — P r i m e spot, SO b * g a t&#13;
$2 0B.&#13;
AMmmrcnttrra m o r r a p i T&#13;
WMk Ending May tf, tt*7.&#13;
uituoA—r 1r0cm. t fe.TaHopB.A aTseK; *E —v eMrya tBinreiebsi nDga allty a%n» —10c, Tbe, aoo. We. High Glass VaoaeflUeT&#13;
LTcairu—Pricej always lfie,ap, SOo.Ho. B&amp;&#13;
Maibaesa Wsdneeday aTd Saturday.&#13;
TlKrLS THUTIK AMD W OR O KB LA KB-*&#13;
AIOOfta tron touotn. s "£T1b6s. s1t0uc ntnoi nWgo f:l rCsTaaaadiAlegna f|c U.&#13;
.-j.-jrvi&#13;
a.&#13;
r&#13;
i&#13;
\&#13;
A&#13;
t'HiTlfST—KTenlpga, lea. »o. Me;&#13;
8&amp;e f mcknry gtepatdi&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS &lt;fc CO. PNOPRIETO&#13;
THUHSDAY, MAY 2 8 , 1 9 0 7 .&#13;
" W a r d is d o i n g n i c e l y , " ways&#13;
t h e bulle^in^ ' I t i s n o t r e c a l l e d&#13;
t h a t a n y b u l l e t i n s w e r e issued a t&#13;
H o p e h o s p i t a l .&#13;
A Narrow Uacapf.&#13;
G W. Cloyd, a merchant, of Plunk,&#13;
Mo., Ij;id a narrow escape four years&#13;
ago, when he rati a jimson bur into&#13;
bis thumb. He says: •"The doctor&#13;
wanted to smipaUte it but 1 would&#13;
not consent. .1 bought a box of Kuckl.&#13;
jn's Arnica Salve and that cured the&#13;
dangerous wound." 25c at F. A. Sigier's,&#13;
Druggist.&#13;
i , _ , •" -i ..;. . * "&#13;
H a a t e r s a n d o w n e r s of 20 v e s -&#13;
{•lt* i c e b o u n d f a t F.ort W i l l Lain,&#13;
w o n d e r w h e t h e r t h e y a r e frozen&#13;
u p for last w i n t e r or f o r n e x t w i n -&#13;
t e r .&#13;
on&#13;
31y Btst Frieud.&#13;
Alesaudt-r Ttcnton, who lives&#13;
Ruf*al aoute 1, I'ort Edward, N.&#13;
says: "Dr. Kind's New Discovery is&#13;
my best earthly t.ieud,- i t cured me&#13;
of asthma *ix years ago. It has- also&#13;
performed a wonderful cure of incipient&#13;
consumption for :ry son's wite.&#13;
The tii\-t bottle ended the terrible&#13;
coujh, and this acco!iiolisb'&gt;d , the other&#13;
symptoms left one by ont, until she&#13;
was perfectly well. Dr. Kind's New&#13;
Discovery s power oveu. coughs and&#13;
colds is simply marvelous." No ctber&#13;
remedy has ever equaled it. Fully&#13;
guaranteed by F . A. Siller, druggiot.&#13;
50c and $1.00. Trail bottle free.&#13;
Old Boy Interested.&#13;
Jackson, Nebraska.&#13;
May 15,1907.'&#13;
My Dear Mr. Andrew-:&#13;
What al»our our Old Home Week&#13;
Association? 1 hear nothing about&#13;
it through "be DISPATCH these days&#13;
and hope interest in it u not dying&#13;
out. I believe there was a committee&#13;
appointed at the last meeting, wuo&#13;
should have met soon afterwards but&#13;
have not. Please stir them u p . 1&#13;
was unable to meet with you latt year&#13;
as was in California, but 1 am looking&#13;
forward eagerly to the next reunion&#13;
and wish to see it a "whopper," and&#13;
the very best one yet. I t there is anything&#13;
I can do in the way of pushing&#13;
this if.od thing along, you have but&#13;
to call on m e . Hope to oee you all&#13;
sometime this s u m i m r as missed my&#13;
last years visit to the good old town.&#13;
How would this be tor one of the&#13;
features of our next meeting: Have&#13;
Pn.f. Sprout select a play, assign the&#13;
several parts (with understudies for&#13;
eich) to some of those who formerly&#13;
starred under him, have them a n i v e a&#13;
few days ahead o\' time so he could&#13;
drill them, and prodive the play at&#13;
the opera bonse. 1 believe this would }&#13;
be of much interest to the people.&#13;
But keep pushing for an organisation&#13;
as it needs the Press to make good&#13;
progress.&#13;
Sincerely,&#13;
E. T . Kearney.&#13;
How do I stand as to dues?&#13;
You stand 0 . K — S e c .&#13;
T h e C o m m i t t e e .&#13;
G r o u n d h a v i n g b e e n b r o k e n for&#13;
t h e M i c h i g a n b u i l d i n g at J a m e s -&#13;
t o w n , t h e s t a t e s h o u l d i n v e s t in a&#13;
s e c t i o n a l a n d p o r t a b l e s t r u c t u r e&#13;
w h i c h c a n b e u s e d for all f u t u r e&#13;
expositions.&#13;
D—n Pay Alimony&#13;
to be divorced from your appendix,.&#13;
There .vill he no occasion for it if you&#13;
keep your bowels regular with Dr.&#13;
KititfV New Life Pills. "Their action&#13;
is so gentle that t h e appendix never&#13;
has cause to make t i n least complaint&#13;
Guaranteed by V, A. Sigler, d r u ^ i s t .&#13;
25c r v ttx'ui.&#13;
T h e s t r i k e of t h e l o n g s h o r e m e n&#13;
i n N e w Y o r k h a s forced s e v e r a l&#13;
o c e a n s t e a m e r s to sail w i t h o u t&#13;
t h e i r c a r g o of m e r c h a n d i s e b u t&#13;
f o r t u n a t e l y for t h e c o m p a n i e s t h e&#13;
l o n g s h o r a ' i n e n c a n n o t i u t e r f e r o&#13;
w i t h t h e h u m a n c a r g o e s w h i c h a r e&#13;
b r e a k i n g all r e c o r d s t h i s year.&#13;
" ( b i - f ' s t n y n n r health ;oid happi&#13;
ness"-.... Iwwiit.'s Little Early Risers&#13;
i'anuib lilt &gt;' pills. Na*ly, sick heart&#13;
ache or biliousness may come on :in\&#13;
tin e; riit&gt; i ore i- an E-trly Riser.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Drnggtat.&#13;
The above letter calls us again to&#13;
our duty as past secretary of the&#13;
association, that of informing the&#13;
people who the committee elected&#13;
were. There is but little over a year&#13;
between now and the third biennial&#13;
meeting of the old boys and g i n s of&#13;
onr own old home town and something&#13;
should be done to finish the&#13;
work by the committee e,eoting off.&#13;
cers for the coming vear.&#13;
They have been notified once or&#13;
twice but have tailed to hold a meeting.&#13;
The association i- in better shape&#13;
than ever now there being quite a&#13;
sum of money on hand to start in with&#13;
,'aud a good many faithful members.&#13;
It is gratifying to see the number of&#13;
villages throughout tue state that are&#13;
following the lead ol Pinckney in&#13;
holding these home comings. Pinckney&#13;
was the first town in the state j&#13;
outside of Had Axe to take u p t h e !&#13;
matter and bring the old boys and&#13;
girls together in reunion. We have&#13;
made a success of the meetings and&#13;
the interest should not lag now. The&#13;
following is the committee:&#13;
(iiiy I.. Teeple, chairman.&#13;
K. K. Brown.&#13;
(ii'o. Reason.&#13;
Mrs. J. A. Indwell.&#13;
Mrs. II. W. (Tofuot.&#13;
Can the t ommitioe not meet some&#13;
time within the coming week and&#13;
choose their officer-—it i&gt; only the&#13;
work of a lew moment- then the work&#13;
("in go on.&#13;
SPEC I AT F O R SATURDAY We have about T w o Dozen&#13;
For Boys from 12 to 18 years old. These Suits&#13;
are worth from $5.00 to $10.00 each and we&#13;
Guarantee Them to be as good a quality as you&#13;
can buy anywhere in the State of Michigan for&#13;
the above prices. In order to sell them Quick we&#13;
will place them on sale on the above date at the&#13;
rediculously low price of&#13;
SS.OO&#13;
For your choice of any suit in the lot. Come&#13;
, early if you want to secure a suit for your boys.&#13;
A b b LONG P A N T S&#13;
Sale Commences at 10 O'clock A. M. and continues until all are sold&#13;
L# L# Holmes Clothing Co.&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
T h e r e is b u t l i t t l e a b a t e m e n t of&#13;
t h e t h i r d t e r m t a l k . T h e P r e s -&#13;
i d e n t t o l e r a t e s a n d i t i s said even&#13;
a p p r o v e s i t , n o t t h a t h e e x p e c t s a&#13;
n o m i n a t i o n n o r t h a t h e d e s i r e s t o&#13;
r u n a g a i n f o r t h e P r e s i d e n c y b u t&#13;
t h e r e a r e y e t t w o m o r e y e a r s of&#13;
a d m i n i s t r a t i v e w o r k b e f o r e h i m .&#13;
T h e r e a r e u n a c o m p l i s h e d p o l i c i e s&#13;
w i t h w h i c h h i e n a m e a n d f a m e a r e&#13;
i n s e p a r a b l e . T h e t h i r d t e r m i d e a&#13;
f u r n i s h e s a r a l l y i n g p o i n t a n d&#13;
h o l d s t o g e t h e r tlie p o l i t i c a l a n d&#13;
m o r a l forces n e c e s s n r y to l e g i s -&#13;
l a t i v e a c c o m p l i s h m e n t .&#13;
Wnen your bacK aches it is almost&#13;
mv,it abley an indication that some&#13;
thine &gt; wrong with your kidneys.&#13;
WetK. diseased kidneys frequently&#13;
causr1 n break down of the entire system,&#13;
DeW-.tt's Kidney vnd Bladder&#13;
Filis afford prompt, relief for weak&#13;
kidnevs, backache, it.rlamatii.n of the&#13;
bladder and all urinary troubles.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler. DrnggteL&#13;
©•WITT'S S££g WITCH HAZEL&#13;
3 A L V X For Mat, Bono, Som.&#13;
When your food has not been prop&#13;
erlv digested the entire system is impaired&#13;
in the .same proportion. Your&#13;
stomach needs help. Kodol for Indi&#13;
gestion and Dyspepsea not only di&#13;
gests what. y.m eat, it tones the sto&#13;
mach and adds stren^t1 ' &lt;"("&gt; the ;vlinK&gt;&#13;
body. Makes rich, pure blood K v&#13;
dol conforms to the National I'nre&#13;
Food and Dray L a w .&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Dniggift.&#13;
For a cold or a cough takn Kennedy&#13;
s Laxatiye Cough Syrup. It. is&#13;
BF.TTER than any other cough remedy&#13;
becku.se its laxative principle assures&#13;
a healthy, copious action of the bowels&#13;
and at the same it, heals irratation of&#13;
the throat, strengthens the bronchial&#13;
tubes and always intiamation of the&#13;
mucous mambrane. Contains Honey&#13;
and Tar, pleasant to take. Children&#13;
like it. Conforms to the National&#13;
Pure Food and Drug Law.&#13;
Sold by F. A* 81*1«. Druggist.&#13;
A u d i t o r G e n e r a l B r a d l e y h a s&#13;
r e c e i v e d from t h e r a i l r o a d c o m -&#13;
p a n i e s d u r i n g t h e past m o n t h a n d&#13;
d e p o s i t e d i n t h e t r e a s u r y a b o u t&#13;
t h r e e m i l l i o n s of d o l l o r s , a n d t h e&#13;
b a l a n c e in t h e M i c h i g a n s t r o n g&#13;
box o n t h e first of M a y w a s o v e r&#13;
s e v e n millions, w i t h o u t a d o l l a r of&#13;
i n d e b t e d n e s s a g a i n s t t h e s t a t e&#13;
from a n y s o u r c e .&#13;
^ I V - get quick and certain relief&#13;
from Dr Snoops Magic Oiotmenf,&#13;
Please note it is made alone for Piles,&#13;
and its action is positive and cert in.&#13;
Itching, painful, protiudini? or blind&#13;
pitos disappear like magic by its use.&#13;
Large nickel capppd glass jars 50 cts.&#13;
Sold bv All Dealers.&#13;
Travel Free.&#13;
"Conductor,'* s:i id Iho gasping passenger,&#13;
vainly trying to mine a window,&#13;
"there are at least a billion microbes In&#13;
this car."&#13;
"You ought to be able to stand that&#13;
if the company can," growled the&#13;
street car conductor. "We don't get a&#13;
blamed cent for carrying "em."—Chicago&#13;
Tribune.&#13;
7-A-WAH r«*jf MA»K irrmtfD&#13;
I am for MEN,&#13;
WOMEN and&#13;
The Reliable InHi.ir-&#13;
B L O O D P U R I F I E R&#13;
Instant relief to sufferers of&#13;
Rheumatism,KidneyTrouble,&#13;
Stomach Disorders.&#13;
Get a. bottle to day. Is purely a vegetable compound. Mild&#13;
in effect but one the most effectual remedies known for restoring&#13;
the entire system. It is derived from nature, not&#13;
compound of drugs and chemicals that only allay the pain,&#13;
but cures to stay cured after all so-called ' ' scientific " treatments&#13;
have failed.&#13;
For sale by druggists. Send for circulars. Address,&#13;
INDIAN MEDICINE CO., Mllford, Ohio.&#13;
Let me mail yon free, to prove mer j&#13;
it, samples of D r . Snoop's Restoritive, i&#13;
and my hook on either Dyspepsia,&#13;
The Heart, or the Kidneys. Address |&#13;
me, Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. Troub&#13;
lea of the Stomach, Heart or Kidneys,:&#13;
are merely Symptoms of a deeper ailment.&#13;
Don't make the common error j&#13;
of treating the resn t of your ailment]&#13;
and not the cause. Wmk Stomach&#13;
norves—the inside nerves—me;.ns&#13;
Stomach weakness, always. And the&#13;
Heart, and Kidneys as well, have&#13;
their controlling or inpide nerves&#13;
Weaken thpse nerves, and you inevit&#13;
ably have weak vital organs. Here is&#13;
where Dr. Snoop's Restoritive bas&#13;
made its fame. No other remedy&#13;
evnn claims to treat the "inside&#13;
nerves." Al^o for bloating, bilioos&#13;
nes*, had breath or mmplexion, use&#13;
Dr. Snoop's Restorative. Write for&#13;
my free book now. Dr. Snoop's Restorative&#13;
sold by all dealers&#13;
Buy a "HYGEIA" - V a x * - ? The host Spring Bod on&#13;
Eartbm Porfooiiy Noiseless.&#13;
For both Wood and&#13;
Iron Bedsteads,&#13;
Ninety per cent, of the Spring Beds made a r e not t ! •.;• ^-v-.p or.&#13;
Pay just a little more and get a " H Y G E I A , " which is perfe;**!on In&#13;
itself. Guaranteed for ten years, if your dealer doc.' &lt;'o! iiaudi- :hhygela&#13;
write direct to us giving his address.&#13;
ENTERPRISE BED CO., Mfrs., Hamm^ \ ; : n.&#13;
im t ~ r « ? » ? &lt; * I ~ K ~ * a &gt; 7 S &gt; i r « &gt;&#13;
More Money for Eggs under most any conditions. There is a lot of money to be made&#13;
in the rgg business if conditions are right. There ts no reasoo&#13;
why F a r m e r s and P o u l t r y Raisersshould not make Justus good&#13;
pro tit s on their investments as any othwr line uf Lusinr -. and it 1m&#13;
possible for them to do so. The price of eggs r!ari t g tin' viv ;. •••&#13;
months is double and sometimes more than d&lt; ul&gt;le that paid&#13;
during the summer month*. The only way to take advantage of this advance is&#13;
to hold summer eggs for winter prices. That fresh eggs can be kept from six to&#13;
nine months or more ha3 been proven by careful testing with&#13;
!&#13;
HACER'S EGG PRESERVATIVE&#13;
and anyone using this Preservative need never Bell a dozen eggs for anything but&#13;
the highest market price. Send for Sample and Circulars tilting yon all ab^ut it.&#13;
HACER ECC PRESERVING CO., - St. Louis, M o .&#13;
1]¾^¾ •titi^^i'lk**}*****-&#13;
&lt;*ftmf*&gt; m*-mirKiiimm**~ *£4#+4if4 T r*gmm JI ,.1,,1 &lt; . » f l '*&gt;' 11V " V l - l l " l! i 'J&gt;' i l « 1 1 » Will | i • p i » i ^ » y w w » * )i &gt;. i i i » i H p t o * ! " * . 4? **&lt;"»"»' »y,'',rr I f W&#13;
.. v*&#13;
8i7*8sr*"&#13;
WuuderfnlEoaeina Lure.&#13;
kOur little boy bad trauma fpfy live&#13;
jeans," writes N. A. Adam*. Helvetia,&#13;
Pa. "Two ot o u r iupme „do^tori&#13;
said the cd»e was hoptlfta, bis iftWf*&#13;
being affected. We LBOD employed&#13;
other loot o its but no bone tit resulted.&#13;
„* By chance we read about Elsctrw Bit&#13;
ters; bought a bott}£ aod soon noticed&#13;
improvement. \tf« contiuiud this&#13;
mediciriH until several bottles were&#13;
used, when our boy was completely&#13;
cured.'" ii^st uf all blood un-diuines&#13;
and body Uuil'iiriy h * a I Mi tonic*.&#13;
Guaiautt^d *t F. \. Sijjii'-. Drujj&#13;
store. 50c.&#13;
PHOCU:..:0AND Dr.:'£NDjEO.*n d m o d »J'I&#13;
Frw Rifvi*.-, :&lt;i&gt;w to uLiiun jtiitenUs, trade inarkfl, |&#13;
cowi-ijjJiid, ;U-., |N ALL COUNTRIES.&#13;
Hush/ess direct with Wusii'wglon sates time^\&#13;
motley and often the putcnl.&#13;
Patent unci Infringement Practice Exclusivity.&#13;
W l il.0 111- CMM1U l'» US i l l&#13;
OU Nluth Stroet, upy. United BUtM htimt QflU«,|&#13;
WAbMINUTON, D. C.&#13;
GASNOWI&#13;
The impr«Mion Ho Gave.&#13;
Ills Uouor .Judge Willi*, on ouu occasion&#13;
UOLUK hoiiiL' iu an omoibuB which&#13;
lauded, him ut uu dim kuuwu as the&#13;
CJiveu Man, uti ugual i'M.ssed the time&#13;
lu filoudly discourse with the pu.sseugiH*&#13;
8. To out' housewife who bad been&#13;
luurUi'tiii^; lit' remarked that, owinyr to&#13;
free ti'udj, she wuss euabled to buy&#13;
Lum'h more for her muue; t:mu If «lie&#13;
lived In a i riff couuti'.v. To others he&#13;
talked iVeeiy and dispensed couuael&#13;
uud adviiv iadi^criuiiuately. Arrived&#13;
at his destination, he intimated to the&#13;
I'ouduetoi", "t want to got out at the&#13;
lireeu Man." Aeeordingly tho ouiuibua&#13;
slowed down, but as he was leaving&#13;
his seat a lady touched him uu the&#13;
sleeve and earnestly inquired, "My&#13;
goud man, don't you think you've had&#13;
enough?"-London Tit-Bit*.&#13;
Free samples o/ Proventics and" a&#13;
booklet on colds wil* be «Iadly mailed&#13;
you, on request, by Dr. Shoop, Racine,&#13;
Wis. simply to prove merit. Prevention&#13;
are little Candy Uold Cure tablets.&#13;
No quinine, no Laxative. nothing&#13;
harml'ul whatever. Preventirs prevent&#13;
colds—as the name i m p l y -&#13;
when taken early, or at the "«ntez&#13;
stage." For a Heated cold or L*&#13;
Grippe, break it up safely and quick&#13;
]y with- Preventics. Sold by Ail&#13;
| Dealers&#13;
KS&#13;
./•*«•»«&lt;-»,.» • : ^ :&#13;
.i.lr. . •«&#13;
CoFfefe'&#13;
CttU&#13;
The Longer You Drink It-&#13;
The Better You Like It&#13;
T h a t ' s because McLaughlin's X X X X&#13;
Coffee is always the same -day in—day out&#13;
—always of the same good quality, blended&#13;
just right, and roasted to a turn—that's&#13;
satisfaction, and 16 full ounces to the&#13;
pound is economy.&#13;
The handy air-tight package and the&#13;
glazing of pure sugar keeps the coffee&#13;
clean and fresh—protected from dust, dirt&#13;
and foul odors.&#13;
McLaughlin's X X X X Coffee is Sold by&#13;
W- E. Murphy&#13;
W . W- Barnai^&#13;
H. M. Williston&#13;
The Judge In Jail.&#13;
*'!/•' said an esteemed magistrate,&#13;
**8pent a week in jail before I entered&#13;
on my Judgeship. I ate the prison&#13;
food. 1 Hlept in a cell. I conformed&#13;
with all the prison rules. I wore the&#13;
prison clothes. I did the prison work.&#13;
Thus. I learned the value of the Ben&#13;
tencea I was to mete out later on. I&#13;
got to know what a week, a month, a&#13;
year, in jail meant. As a result 1 am&#13;
more merciful than most judges. I&#13;
think it would be a good thing if every&#13;
judge before taking office would spend&#13;
^a little while in jail as I did. lie would&#13;
then know the value of prison sentences,&#13;
a thing he doesn't know now.&#13;
Now he 3H like a insider who attempts&#13;
to pay out money in a coinage of&#13;
which he Is Ignorant. In Baden this&#13;
thing I speak of must be done. Every&#13;
judge in ltudeu before he takes hia&#13;
seat on the bench it* required by law&#13;
to pass weeks like a common prisoner&#13;
In jail."—Cincinnati Enquirer.&#13;
Let me j^end you free, tor Catarrh,&#13;
just to prove merit, a trial s.ze bo •" ot&#13;
Dr. Snoop's Catarrh remedy. It is&#13;
a snow white creamy, healing autiseptic&#13;
balai. Cou'aiuiUK such healing&#13;
ingredients as Oil Euoaliptus, Thymol&#13;
ilentbol, etc., it ^ives instant and laithitf&#13;
relief to Catarrh ot the nose and&#13;
throat. Make the free test and see tor&#13;
yourself what tb'is preparation ean&#13;
and will accomplish. Address Dr,&#13;
Sboop, Racine, Wis. Lar^e jars 50&#13;
cents. Sold by All Ueaiers.&#13;
V e r y I m p o s i n g .&#13;
" H o w w a s it I : i \ Iviiowit ^'&lt;&gt;t s u c h&#13;
a bi.t; fi'i' I'r.n:, T . i i k u l iveV"&#13;
" B o ;;:.;&gt;.' \ . - ! v n i.o w a s raik-i] u&gt; a t&#13;
t e n d M r s . T a l k a r l - . v i'ov a sJivclii IUM'V&#13;
o u s t/.ov.'-ie h e l.r! 1 Iter vasj b.. I ai:&#13;
a c u t e a t t a c k of iii?!at:n::ato'-y w - r h o s&#13;
i t v . "&#13;
"NVellV"&#13;
"-V )1..1 ro;'onii::t^:r.'.vi ai»&gt;&gt;.il • ^" i» q u i e t&#13;
uu t h e o n l y iiM-ao-- o t a . v n - ' i a u p a r o x -&#13;
y s m / oi* r a r a / ; ' ' ! . ' : •N"."! O. f i l e ' s&#13;
^oar-ad i!om!&gt;." I 'a '.:' &gt;• &lt;:•••' .\ i a - r i - a a .&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite* WMS oi strength,&#13;
new, headache, oonetipatlon, bad breeJeX&#13;
general doUUty, aour risings, and catanfll&#13;
of the stomach am ail due to lndlgisttoev&#13;
Kodol relieves Indigestion. This new dlsoe^&#13;
ery represents the natural juices of dlfee&gt;&#13;
tion as they exist in a healthy stomaofc,&#13;
combined with the greatest known toast&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol for&#13;
dyspepsia does sot only relieve indlgsetJoei&#13;
and dyspepsia, b«t this famoos rsmee&gt;&#13;
helps all stomach troubles by cleansinf,&#13;
purifying, sweetening and strengthenlBf&#13;
the mucous membranes lining the stomach.&#13;
Mr. S. S. Ball, of lUventwood, W, Va.. «*yat—&#13;
" I w*» troubled with sour atcmach for twaoty rears.&#13;
Kodot cured ma and w are now using It to mm&#13;
for baby."&#13;
Kodol Digests What Yoa t a t&#13;
Bottles only. RcUflvet Indleestton, sour stoaaaah,&#13;
belchlne of gas, etc.&#13;
P r e p a r e d by E. 0 . D.WITT &amp; OO., OHIOAOtt&#13;
Sold by F. A. Bigler, drNigglst&#13;
Lies L o w /&#13;
"Ot course she doesn't like discussions&#13;
about ages."&#13;
*No. Usually wheu she's queried&#13;
about hers she just says nothing, but&#13;
lies low."&#13;
"Yes, or if she says anything she&#13;
Ilea low." -Philadelphia Press.&#13;
H • ; ; . a&#13;
M:::d ' ;x&gt;-,[ •• a ...&#13;
a m . \Ii-a ••&gt;.•;* l&lt; ;;,&#13;
c o u s i n l!u' prtii'cssiM&#13;
d o e s n ' t lm&gt;'i ;ts c l e v i ' r&#13;
. :Y. : .IT. :V*.&#13;
' ! •-*•«' ,V&gt;*V1. i i a i i l -&#13;
i»y •!: i : : r r . i. -•&#13;
y. .: -so. 1,,&#13;
s tiiat. IJe looks&#13;
Convenient.&#13;
" S o y o u r a v e t h r e e p a i r s of g l a s s e s ,&#13;
p r o f e s s o r ? "&#13;
" Y e s . O n e p a i r t o r e a d w i t h , a n o t h e r&#13;
for n e a r s i g h t e d n e s s a u d a t h i r d p a n&#13;
t o look for t h e o t h e r t w o w i t h . " F l i e&#13;
g e n d e B l a t t e r .&#13;
I j n v s a r e m a d e by o l d p e o p l e a n d&#13;
b y m e n . Y o u t h s a n d w o m e n w a n t t h o&#13;
e x c e p t i o n s , j l d p e o p l e t h e r u l e s .&#13;
Gooth*&#13;
DeWitt's Ca*-uoliz"d Witch tia/.-i&#13;
Salve duea not &gt;rerely heal on the surface;&#13;
it peneUates the pores and&#13;
prompily releives pain, caused by&#13;
boils, burns, scalds, cuts and ,-kiu dis&#13;
eases. It is especially gocd tor pilws.&#13;
Beware ot imitations.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
more as tliough he might proiK)se t-»&#13;
jyou.— Fliegeude Blatter. Indigestion Stomach trouble ta but a symptom of, and not&#13;
In Itself a true disease. We think of DyHpepai*,&#13;
Heartburn, aud Indigestion as real diiwtuteii, yet&#13;
they art- symptoms only of a certain ipecino&#13;
Nerve sickness—nothing • lae.&#13;
It was this fact that Hr^t correctly led Dr. Shoos&#13;
In the i-reatiou uf that nor/ very popular 8tomjM)h&#13;
Bi'nu-dy—Dr. Shoop'h Kt'Storative. Going direct&#13;
to thi- s t o m a l iicrveh. alone brought that success&#13;
and favor Ui Dr. Shoop and his Restorative. Without&#13;
that original and highly viU:l principle, no&#13;
buch lasting arcomplishments werueverto be had.&#13;
For stoma eh distress, bloating, blliousrusas. bad&#13;
breath ami ?allu\v complexion, try Dr. Shoop'a&#13;
Restorative—TabKis or LiQuid—mad Me tor your«&#13;
«elf what it ran and will do. WSTell and CLOBA&#13;
fully rucommwud&#13;
Dr. Shoop'a&#13;
Restorative^&#13;
"ALL DEALERS." i&#13;
F R A N K L . A N D R E W S cS^ C O&#13;
tUitOhfc n u HKOPHItTUK*.&#13;
S-njocripuon 1'i'ice Jjl in Advance.&#13;
•Jut-ji'dJ ji tue t'uBtotfice at l'iaciiaey, Mit.-bi-ai&#13;
iu aecona-ciaBb uitiler&#13;
AdvertiHiu« rat«8 made known on applicatioi:.&#13;
BuuluesB Cards, ¢4.00 per year. '&#13;
r e a t h and marriage noticee puDliBhed t r e e .&#13;
Aunounceuiente ot entertaiumeuta may be pai&lt; '&#13;
tor, it ilesifed, Dy ^r r e n t i n g the office with tick&#13;
e te uf aduiiBBiun. i n caaeticketbare Kot t r . ' U f i j&#13;
to tiieoflice,regularrateBwillbeoharytu.&#13;
-All matter in local notice column wiliDech^r^c&#13;
ed ato cents per iine or fraction thereof, for eair. ,&#13;
insertion. Where no time ie specified, ail noticeo&#13;
will be inserted until ordered discontinued, ar. &lt;&#13;
will l»e charged for accordingly. U f A l l changes&#13;
of idYertiaemeata MUbT reacn this office ae earl}&#13;
as TUKBDAT morning to i n s u r e an insertion t.l."&#13;
uame week.&#13;
JOS T'KS.VIIA G !&#13;
i n all its branches, a specialty. We have all kino ^&#13;
and the latest atylee of Type, etc., which enable8&#13;
ua to execute all kinds of work, such as iiooktt&#13;
Painpleis, Fosters, Programmes, Bill Heads,.Nou&#13;
Heads, statements, L'ardB, Auction Bills, e t c . i i&#13;
superior styles, upon the shortest uotice. Pricetai&#13;
low as £Ood work can be aone.&#13;
A L L U1LI.8 1'AVABI.lj F l B H T OV EVKKY M O M U ,&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIRECTORY&#13;
VILLAGE OFFICERS.&#13;
PHKSIUENT J. C. Uunn&#13;
Trtt'STKitb S. .). Tt-eple, Kd. Farnuin.&#13;
James Smith, «)«mea itocne.&#13;
W. A. Mixou C'V. VauWinKle.&#13;
(,'l.KHK&#13;
T n K A S U H t K&#13;
•» Til hit: T L ' l l M M I c M t l N K K&#13;
a I-.A L. i ' u (.) Kt'i&#13;
ATTOKMKV&#13;
MAKSIULI.&#13;
K l l&#13;
iiuger Carr&#13;
!. \. Cad^ell&#13;
i). w . M u m&#13;
M. Lavey&#13;
b i . H , f. ^iyler&#13;
W. A. Carr&#13;
Chart. Kldert&#13;
PpilRMMIC AS IT IS GOOD&#13;
)&#13;
T H E G R E A T -&#13;
E S T O F A L L C E R E A L F O O D S .&#13;
N o f a d o r u n c e r t a i n m i x t u r e . A N a t u r a l F O O D&#13;
L A X A T I V E . A w h o l e k e r n e l of R y e t o e a c h flake.&#13;
A S K Y O U R G R O C E R F O R I T o r write, u s for o u r t h r s e s p e c i a l&#13;
Offffrt. A p o u n d p a c k a g e b y m a i l , p o s t p a i d , for 25 c e n t s . It will&#13;
p o s i t i v e l y c u r e t h e m o s t a g g r a v a t e d c a s e of c o n s t i p a t i o n . W r i t e t o - d a y .&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS CEREAL COMPANY,&#13;
H . H . D e p t . M I N N E A P O L I S , M I N N .&#13;
9&lt;ftt*tttoim Wmntttd £VarjnvAe&gt;i*«.&#13;
EXPERIENCE! Experience la one Af the greatest factors in almost&#13;
any walk in life. It is what gives tho Farmer, Doc*&#13;
tor, Merchant and Mechanic success. In mannfact.&#13;
uring it is an all important element. We arc carriage&#13;
manufacturers of over twenty-five years' experience&#13;
and we claim to know t h e buainem from A to Z. We&#13;
will stake our reputation t h a t wa make as good work&#13;
for t h e money an it Is possible to make. Our two&#13;
leaders are our No. SO Top Boggy at t h e popular&#13;
price of $50.00 a n d oar No. 60 Top&#13;
Buggy at SflO.00. Nothing but the heat&#13;
go Into these Jobs in order to make&#13;
them come u p t o onr standard. Write&#13;
for foil specifications, cut* and referenees.&#13;
Do it to-day and see what we&#13;
can offer yon for your cash and save&#13;
all dealer proflta, Write a t once a n d&#13;
A. HUNCERFORD ft SON.&#13;
get our great offer.&#13;
Lapoer, Michigan.&#13;
Mortgage Sale&#13;
VY IIEKI-.A* drffiiilt hah boon m(ido in ilu1 conditiniia&#13;
uf n rvrtiiin nmrtn:i^.i, when'liv the power&#13;
\ (if -aliMhrivin hns IUM'UIVIO operjitive, made by&#13;
j Ill'.NlO THIFRoI.T mid hi* wife CAROLINE&#13;
I T :) 1EIIOLT. of Iicorileld, I.i\ inu'Pton Conntv,&#13;
.Mirhii;:ui, to Ni:i,SON" LAMH of tho flHinc place&#13;
I ;ilurrs&gt;aid: iM-ari"&lt;_' dnte March emli, A. II. 1S8-J,&#13;
; aid ri'furdrd in th.' ortice of tlie lieiri?ter of&#13;
I Dei ii for Livinj^toii Cnuiily, M iiliii^an, in Liber&#13;
j ,'2 of Mortji^ff at pn^i' ."nil tliereot nil Murch .^th&#13;
A I). l&lt;i;,2 ivliich paid mort^stjo w,n duly usftifj' f&lt;l&#13;
l.yNil.SOX I.AMK untlio liUh day of August,&#13;
]&gt;&lt;:•&gt;&gt; to HKN'KY THII'.ROI.T ,11!.' which a-ei^niiii-&#13;
iit Win n-M'iinlfd in tho 1 ieuUtor r&gt;f Oood'^ othoo&#13;
I'or flu' County of Livingston on the 1-th day of&#13;
Ar.i;n-t. t&gt;'.'fi in Lihor s.*&gt; of Mnrtiiu'er" at pa^r 47.&#13;
,,!.: !iy HLNUY TITEir.OLT Il{. duly a-hipned&#13;
fu i-Ai!(iLl!SK THIsIHOLT on Xuvonih, r ^. '.SW&#13;
and recorded in the Ko£jif&gt;fe&lt;-'s Office, OtVico for&#13;
l.i\ inv;ston County on tho ISth day of May, lrtfl8&gt;&#13;
in I.ilier S"&gt; of Ttlortcai.;^ at pa^t* -&lt;",'. And iiy&#13;
.' \&gt;:OLlNC. TIIEinOLT duly as«ii*iuil t » Ill.Sl;&#13;
Y TllEIBOLT .11;. on March l'-\ W&gt;7 n,d n^cord&#13;
od in the Oftir e ot tlio Lo^istor of Poods for T.ivin^?&#13;
ton County on Mfrcli 10, \'^K in l.'.hcv (*o at&#13;
liajoi'11. Ami whereas tio1 anu ir-.r claim ni to&#13;
ho dm1 on r-aid MortiMce at fid? date is thepnm of&#13;
One hundred and eighty do larn and ••iduy tlve&#13;
rents ,S18».N*1 of principal and interest and no&#13;
«uit or proreMiiru: having heen institu:ed to recover&#13;
the debt secured by "aid mort«.:;-&lt;» or any&#13;
part thereof:&#13;
Tlievofore notice is hrrvby tiv'en rhat by virtu'1&#13;
olr&gt;aid power of sale and in pev-uanei uf the&#13;
-tatnes in such oa-.o made and presided the svAioi&#13;
mortgaL'e will be foreclosed by ealeof the premises&#13;
therein described at public auction to the highest&#13;
bidder at the W est front door of the Court House&#13;
i , the village of lowell in said County of Livin^-&#13;
sfor that beins the place ot holdini; the "'ircnit&#13;
Cniirt for the C.iiinfy of l.ivinvpton on Si'cialav&#13;
T)ie i:-.th day of July A. P. l'XT at lr &gt;&gt;'i lock in the&#13;
invenoon of said dav, or so much thereof as niav&#13;
be necessa :y to pav rh»« prtneipal ard inte-e~i&#13;
dio1 on saiu mm tyaco. the Attornov :o»^ provided&#13;
fhiTon and costs of said -»alo. of tho following&#13;
IOM ril&gt;ed premises, to wit; coiuniencin_' twenty&#13;
rod- Last of the Northwest rornev ot Section&#13;
twee.'y two i-Vi in township four i) North of&#13;
limine five \'A Kasi \'ichi-.:an, runmn&lt; thence&#13;
Sout ii ei^ht lods laeiue lasl sixty rods thence&#13;
&gt;orih oi&lt;.htvo(|p tlifPce West to be^inin^r ointainin&gt;;&#13;
three acres of land,.&#13;
ill-.NKY 1H1 lliOl.T, .T I!..&#13;
A?si^,nee of tlis Mori c:ti;eo.&#13;
Dated, Howell, April t, 1 -*.7.&#13;
\\*M. V. VANW 1NKI.K,&#13;
.Attorney for A s s u m e .&#13;
SJHUKCHtS.&#13;
» | H niOiJKS 1' Kl'ISCOl'AL C t l L K C U .&#13;
A.U. Kev. UA . i.uUeuua pastor. services eve;,&#13;
aunday Luortani: ut u»::!u, ana every suiuua;&#13;
evening .-it l a i i n n i u a , Ciayer lueelinti 1 nin&gt;&#13;
day evenings, sunuay scuuoi at close ot morij&#13;
in^.ieruce. M b ? .UAKV VASFLKKT, .nupt.&#13;
r&gt;ONuiihlGA 1'IUNAL CliL'iiC;&#13;
&lt;.' Kev. O. \\\ -Mylne paetor,&#13;
dumlay aoirain^ At l*&gt;:.id aa &gt;&#13;
evening »l 7 ;uC o'clock. I'rayer IKWUU&#13;
day evenings. Sunday echool at cli-ae oi ;.,ari.&#13;
in^tiervice, I'crcy Swarthout, sapt,, Mucc&gt;&#13;
1 eeple Sec.&#13;
- e T V l C r t : \ t - .&#13;
o via j .luiliij,&#13;
1 I.L.1-1&#13;
«JT. MA U 1""JS C A THOL.IC CHUKOU.&#13;
O Kev. M. ,1. Couimerlord, i'aator. '.service.&#13;
every Sunday. Low ruaas at 7:3uo'cloi t&#13;
hlhMi inasB wiihaernion at •'Jua. m. Catecniau&#13;
t i :0u p. m., veapersan . jdiction at T :tfij v&gt;...&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
flihe A.O. H. society of this place, meet* evoi..&#13;
X third Mundav inTie b"r. Matt new Hall.&#13;
John Tuomey and M. T. Kelly, County Delegates&#13;
A UK A'. C. T. V. meets the first Friday ot e.nh&#13;
month at ^:3t p. in. at t he home ot i»r. Ii. F.&#13;
lifter. Kveryone intcreeteil in temperance is&#13;
ooauuilly invited. &gt;irs. Leai Si^U'r, i'res; .Mr:.&#13;
till* Durfee,secretary.&#13;
I^he C. T. A. and b . Sucieuy of this place , n»*&#13;
. every third Saturday evening in the r r. Si-&lt;.&#13;
thew Hail. John Donohue, 1 resident.&#13;
L' Niiarrsof MACCABEBS.&#13;
HjLMeei every Friday evening on or butore ;,;..&#13;
of the moon at their h a l l i n the Swarthout h 1..1.&#13;
Visiting brothers arccordiallyinvited.&#13;
(.'HAS. L, i AMtMiL, Mi Knight Coirmc* 1&#13;
Livingston Lodge, No.70, F AiA. M. Kesj'i1*'&#13;
Conuuunication Tuosdav evening, on or heiort&#13;
the tnit of the moon. Kirk VanW'inkle. Yv . .M&#13;
0 ROKR OK EAsTEKJS STAR ua*»etaeach nxontt&#13;
V^ the Friday evening following the regular K&#13;
A A. M. meeting, MRS.&gt;.KTTK VACOHS, W. M.&#13;
Oiil ER OF MODERN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
first Thursday evening of each Month in : hi&#13;
Maccahe.T hall. C. L. txrimes V. C.&#13;
LADIKS Ot THE MACCABEUS. Meat every 1 f !&#13;
and ;Srd Saturday of each month at 2:30 p *m .&#13;
K. O. T. M. iiall. Visiting sisters cordially ni&#13;
vited. LII.A CoN'iww, Lailv Coin,&#13;
r N K T H T S OVTHK LOYAL UUARf)&#13;
V t'• E. Andrews P. .V, ^t&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F. SIQLER M . D- Z. L, SIGLER V . C&#13;
DRS. SIuLEK &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Phyalciana and Surgeons. All calls prompily&#13;
attended today or night. OfHof on Main street&#13;
I'mokney, Mich.&#13;
J&#13;
Lax-^5 C Sweet to Eat&#13;
ACaWyfcwtJUxitfrt.&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEAL&#13;
A.T ClSPATCH OFFICE&#13;
Health and Wealth.&#13;
ii.ti;i-d health to t h e average m a n wneans&#13;
jjrciit wealth.&#13;
DR. JOHNSON'S&#13;
^FTER DINNER PILL&#13;
INSURES HEALTH. TRY IT.&#13;
B IS PURELY VEGETABLE,&#13;
IS- JOHNSON(&#13;
iFTER-DlNNEf&#13;
PILL&#13;
•tadiBH^irii&#13;
rfrkr na UJi&#13;
iirrrpn 1: B-:&#13;
naKipj'.'aii.i&#13;
-iJii&#13;
and was used by t h e Doctor&#13;
for twenty years iu&#13;
active practice, and is&#13;
conceded by all having&#13;
ustd it to be the best&#13;
Little Stomach Pill&#13;
on t h e market. It is a&#13;
PREVENTATIVE of&#13;
S i c k H e a d a c h e ,&#13;
D y s p e p s i a , Dizzin&#13;
e s s , H e a r t b u r n ,&#13;
B a d T a s t e i n&#13;
. M o u t h , C o a t e d&#13;
U O H N S O N f T o n g u e , Loss of&#13;
A p p e t i t e&#13;
and all other m o r b i d&#13;
conditions arising from&#13;
a disordered stoma*.h.&#13;
P R E V E N T I O N&#13;
is the order of this dr.y and .age, ae it is much&#13;
1 lore scientific to prevent a diseased COIKLC&#13;
m than to cure it. You can secure this&#13;
LITTLE PILL of ANY FIRST-CLASS DRUGGIST&#13;
v. ho witt bepleaoed to -serve you, 35 do^es for&#13;
:J5 cents. D o n t t a k e M M otaer "juut as&#13;
Kood" for t h a n i s n t a n y other that will&#13;
pleave 70« at all after trying tsrisone.&#13;
L. lr^ J O f M t t O p , « ; H P r o p .&#13;
A t l a n t a , O a o n j i a .&#13;
' «SI .1&#13;
VALVELESS AUTOMTIC&#13;
Stock Fountain&#13;
PAY8 FOR ITSELF THE FIRST YEAR.&#13;
No Valves&#13;
o r floats t o&#13;
g e t o u t of&#13;
o r d e r .&#13;
Nov«rjafls%o&#13;
work. i&gt;oc«&#13;
n o t o r e r p o w .&#13;
N o rrmcl o r&#13;
filth. P u r e&#13;
c o o l w a t e r .&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
To do as&#13;
c l a i m e d .&#13;
Big Seller&#13;
Sotd on SO Omym' TmM.&#13;
MONEY BACK IF NOT SATISFIED.&#13;
GEDGE BROS. IRON ROOFING CO.&#13;
Fountain St.. Anderson, I n d .&#13;
- '•* 1 M&#13;
* . 1&#13;
6 0 YEARS*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
ATENTS&#13;
'Nl&#13;
Tfuoc 9Ai&#13;
COPYRIGHTS; sVt •H^&#13;
Anyone nmdlnc a sketch and dpscrlttt'.on triay&#13;
nniclclv a--•ertnn nr.r opinion free wnettMir a^i&#13;
inventi HI 1:; i&gt;ronib.v pr\tentah!«. Commnnlc*.&#13;
tlons^tnctly com;.ter.tial. HANDMOK on Patent*&#13;
sent tree. oMost agency for ae&lt;?urinfr patent*.&#13;
P:iteins taken through Mann &amp; Co. receive&#13;
tVffial notice, without cb.srco. in the Scientific American.&#13;
- ' "1&#13;
•&#13;
A linndsomely r.lustratfd wfteklr.&#13;
erUtion of nnv sciontltlo Journal. Terms,&#13;
f-cir: ionr month*, *L 8old byaU newurt&#13;
T unrestflfcv&#13;
y/&#13;
. ili newnrteaMBS. MUNN &amp; Co.36,B"»*^- New Yo«&#13;
Branch Office. « » F SU Waah'.paton D. c .&#13;
ILL HE COUCH&#13;
AND C U R E THE L U N G S w ™ Dr. King's&#13;
New Discovery&#13;
rnn /^ONSUMPTIOfH&#13;
FDR I OUGHSand&#13;
%J0LDS&#13;
Pries&#13;
50c 4 $1.00&#13;
Frss Trial.&#13;
Guaranteed for all TKBOAT and&#13;
LUNG TROUBLES, or M O M T&#13;
BAcac&#13;
ran&#13;
1L*&gt;&#13;
&gt; • &gt; • •rtiiS&#13;
^Sff" HSXlHIIIT » » • » » i,i n » "W lyUSPS""! H ^ . 7* Hf-11-"* ""w^mixp&#13;
.J8(P***fcX&#13;
' \&#13;
f&#13;
»A&gt; • • ^ -i-**&#13;
&amp;'&lt;¥^&#13;
S * ^&#13;
« * % / % - - •&#13;
w&#13;
k&gt; •*:- »'&#13;
%i'.&#13;
^&#13;
?&lt;"?&#13;
:V&#13;
N_ : / -Vi.iJ.'-y'-&#13;
y ibf - '&#13;
. _, s -v.&#13;
• ^ mm. « ST ' » »," mprmi&#13;
-Ni '.Tfc&#13;
S^&#13;
\&#13;
tPr??&#13;
X hear no shouts as the soldiers coma&#13;
To the mellow throb o f - t h e distant drum.&#13;
They come—A fragment of what they were;&#13;
T h e ranks are scattering year by year,&#13;
For one by one with his olden air&#13;
H a s answered the summons of Death with "Hera!"&#13;
I see them waver and falter on,&#13;
Their blue grown shadowy gray w i t h , d u s t -&#13;
Grown shadowy gray, as in years -agona&#13;
Their sabers fell Into s h a d o w y rust.&#13;
O, t h i s the vision that comes to rae;&#13;
I w a t c h them trudging adown the street,&#13;
The ready soldiers that used to be,&#13;
W i t h vibrant drumming to time their feet;&#13;
1 see them swinging along the w a y&#13;
With brave Old Giory above them ull;&#13;
And all the lines are complete t o - d a y -&#13;
Made su by the mystical trumpet call.&#13;
And quick and eager, erect and bold.&#13;
T h e y march triumphantly through my dream—&#13;
The soldier men of the day of old&#13;
With flags ablow and with swords agleum.&#13;
The cannons rumble their warring note,&#13;
The muskets blaze on the battle's marge,&#13;
And out of the^bugle's brazen throat&#13;
There shrills the terrible cry of "Charge!"&#13;
B u t hold. The mist that w a s In- my eyes&#13;
N o w drifts a w a y as a cloud is blown.&#13;
And the shadows fade, as across the skies&#13;
The silent arm of the wind is thrown.&#13;
And gray, and grizzled, and haU, and lama,&#13;
They falter on to the rounded graves&#13;
T h a t glow to-day in the grace of fame&#13;
B e n e a t h the flag that honor waves.&#13;
They go—A shadow of w h a t they were;&#13;
The ranks are vanishing y e a r by year,&#13;
For one by one with hla gallant air&#13;
H a s answered the summons of D e a t h with "Here!"&#13;
And so they waver and falter on.&#13;
Their blue made shadowy gray with dust—&#13;
The fading host that in years agone&#13;
Bore forth the grail of the nation's trust.&#13;
And into the shadows march they all&#13;
r o the sign of a far-off trumpet call.&#13;
STILL LIVE FOR US&#13;
Funeral March for Heroic&#13;
- Dead Has Meaning Beyond&#13;
Mere Honor to&#13;
the Fallen.&#13;
EVERY year, in the full tide of&#13;
spring, at the height of the symphony&#13;
of flowers and love and&#13;
1 life, there comes a solemn pause, and&#13;
(through the silence the nation hears&#13;
the lonely pipe of death.&#13;
Year after year lovers wandering&#13;
under the apple boughs and through&#13;
I the clover are surprised with sudden&#13;
[tears as they see black-veiled figures&#13;
(stealing through the morning to a soltdier's&#13;
grave.&#13;
! Year by year the comrades of the&#13;
.dead follow, with public honor, profession&#13;
and commemorative flags and&#13;
ftuneral march—tribute from us who&#13;
rhave inherited a nation's glory to the&#13;
^heroes who gave it.&#13;
As surely .as this day comes round&#13;
IN LABOR OF LOVE&#13;
Multitudes Gather to Aid&#13;
Veterans Decorate Graves&#13;
in Beautiful Arlington&#13;
Cemetery.&#13;
THE Coliseum in the national&#13;
cemetery at Arlington, in which&#13;
people gather annually for the&#13;
exercises, in indescribably beautiful.&#13;
The space is sorrounded by columns,&#13;
a light lattice work forming the roof.&#13;
Beside the columns have been planted&#13;
wistaria, rose*, clematis and other&#13;
early flowering vines, which form a&#13;
perfect bower overhead, while the majestic&#13;
trees make ample shade for the&#13;
multitude w h o come to join in the labor&#13;
of love.&#13;
DIED IN PRISON PENS&#13;
Record of Those Who Passed&#13;
Away in Military Confinements&#13;
Is an Appalling&#13;
One.&#13;
The largest confederate prison was&#13;
a t Anderson ville, Ga., where 45^-f3&#13;
union soldiers were imprisoned. The&#13;
prison had its maximum number on&#13;
August 8, 1H64, when the rolls ahow-t&#13;
«d the presence of 33,114. Death&#13;
claimed 12,912, or 28 per cent, of the&#13;
we are in the presence of the dead.&#13;
But not all the associations of this&#13;
day are sad; some of them are triumphant,&#13;
even joyful.&#13;
We seem to hear the funeral march&#13;
become a pean. Our heroic dead still&#13;
live for us, and bid us think of life,&#13;
not death—of life to which in their&#13;
youth they lent the passion and glory&#13;
of the spring.&#13;
Memorial day may and ought to&#13;
have a meaning beyond mere honor to&#13;
the dead. It celebrates and solemnly&#13;
reaffirms from year to year a national&#13;
act of enthusiasm and faith. It embodies&#13;
in the most impressive form •&#13;
our belief that to act with enthusiasm&#13;
and faith is the condition of acting&#13;
greatly.&#13;
Peace calls for its patriotic devotion,&#13;
no less than war. And, stripped&#13;
of the direct associations which gave&#13;
rise to it, this is a day when by common&#13;
consent we pause to become conscious&#13;
of our national honor and to rejoice&#13;
in it, to recall what our country&#13;
has done and ha doing for us, and to&#13;
ask ourselves what we can do for our&#13;
country in return.&#13;
The thousands of ex-union officers&#13;
and soldiers who have died during the&#13;
38 years since the'first Decoration&#13;
Say, and the hundreds that have fallen&#13;
since the Spanish-American war,&#13;
and whose bodies have been borne&#13;
across the sea to be buried in Arlington,&#13;
have made this the largest city of&#13;
patriotic dead on the globe. This 30th&#13;
of May, like all others, will see every&#13;
low green mound of the extensive field&#13;
covered with flowers and immortelles.&#13;
There will be a repetition of the annual&#13;
ceremonies, with probably additional&#13;
interesting features.&#13;
The patriotic organizations, sons and'&#13;
daughters of veterans,'and ttie loyaT&#13;
people have taken up the work&#13;
which older hands have had to lay&#13;
down. The spirit; of gratitude and devotion&#13;
to the memory of the country's&#13;
defenders inspires the whole nation&#13;
to-day as it did in 1868.&#13;
entire number. Every day the death&#13;
roll a7eraged 30. The greatest number&#13;
of deaths occurred on August 23,&#13;
1864, when 127 yielded up their lives.&#13;
The largest military prison in the&#13;
north was at Elmira where 11,916 prisoners&#13;
were confined in an open pen or&#13;
stockade. The death list reached 2,994,&#13;
about 25 per cent. In March, 1865, the&#13;
greatest mortality occurred—495—or&#13;
16.5 per cent, of all the deaths. AH&#13;
except six of the dead were buried in&#13;
a field which was afterward plowed up&#13;
and planted with wheat, and now&#13;
neither summer nor winter shows a&#13;
sign of where 3,000 hapless confederates&#13;
were laid away.&#13;
WORN TO A •KKLftTON.&#13;
A Wonderful Restoration C M M 4 •&#13;
~+~- •*--•^^^•^Jk M»^^mmMm^mkMmmm—M.Mm~- •*- Mmim*jm±mmmM.-±M t f c * ^ ^ 1 ^&#13;
^MTI^SIHfH III sr-s^nsrayi vents&#13;
Tovuri.&#13;
Mrs. QBaJtfe* N. Preston, of Elkland,&#13;
%P&amp;., s * j | : -V'Thre* years ago I found&#13;
that my houseworkwas&#13;
becoming a burden.&#13;
I Ured'efsUy,&#13;
bad no ambition and&#13;
was fading fast My&#13;
complexion g o t yel*&#13;
low and^I- lost over&#13;
-50 pounds; My thirst&#13;
was terrible, a n d&#13;
there was sugar In&#13;
the kidney secretions,&#13;
My doctor kept me on a strict diet, but&#13;
as his medicine was not helping me,&#13;
I began using Doan's Kidney Pills.&#13;
They helped me at once, and soon all&#13;
traces of sugar disappeared. I have&#13;
regained my former weight and am&#13;
perfectly well."&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.&#13;
Faatex-Milbum Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
.attars&#13;
The honor that is among&#13;
consists largely of fear.&#13;
thieves&#13;
PUTNA'&#13;
Ask your&#13;
is as easy as washing&#13;
FADELESS DYBS&#13;
druggist.'&#13;
whtn&#13;
are used.&#13;
-' Oi&#13;
Any woman can make a dollar gq.*o&#13;
far that her husband wilj never sty it&#13;
- • - - • * " ,&#13;
Don't ftneaaw Your Head Off.&#13;
Krause'a Cold Capsules will cure you simoat&#13;
instantly. At sll Druggista, 25c.&#13;
Bhowmaker's Last.&#13;
The following is taken from a handbill&#13;
issued by a provincial bootmaker:&#13;
"The shoemaker is a man of great&#13;
learning. He is a doctor as well as a&#13;
surgeon, for ho not only heels but&#13;
performs many cutting Operations, He&#13;
is a fishmonger, for he sells soles and&#13;
heels. He is a schoolmaster, for he&#13;
gives good understanding. He is a&#13;
good spealMpy. for he always- works&#13;
the. thresui of his argument, waxes&#13;
warm to his subject, and holds all to&#13;
\ t t a last." J X ' 4.&#13;
*J ,.,.¾ ,, A;,&#13;
F E C I A L TRAINS.&#13;
Some people), altar expressing the&#13;
wish to do unto other* as they would&#13;
have others do unto them, let It go at&#13;
that ...&#13;
To be on good tanas with human nature,&#13;
Be Well! Garfield Tea purines the blood,&#13;
eradicates disease, regulates the digestive&#13;
organs and brings Good Health 1 Manufactured&#13;
by Garfield Tea Co., Brooklyn,&#13;
N- Y. Sold by druggists.&#13;
Whan Yoo&#13;
Want Pure&#13;
Lead,&#13;
IQet It&#13;
Probably there&#13;
If no otajsr&#13;
article of com.&#13;
aotict subject&#13;
**«Y»o&#13;
The people of Colorado ar* so confident&#13;
that publicity pays large dividends&#13;
tbat they are going to spend&#13;
a fund in advertising the state's resources.&#13;
National Editorial Association and&#13;
Christian Endeavor Conventions.&#13;
Deafness Cannot Be Cured&#13;
bj local appUcatluaJ, a i toey osnoot raacb the &lt;a&gt;&#13;
saasdpurttan a t -thaaae. Taara ti oaJy oaa way U&#13;
our* deaf ntt*. and tbat ti by couUtutieasl rsmsaiaa.&#13;
Dssfnos* la cattssd by aa falsasa aoodlttaa of tha&#13;
B3ucoua Unto* of tbe Kustacblaa Take. WnsataJs&#13;
tube la loaamsd you bars a rumblia* sound or Imperfect&#13;
asarls*. wad w*em It la entirely otosad, Dealaeaa&#13;
la tba reeutt.aa* uale*a tbe laSaamatloeoaA ba&#13;
lakes e a t aad this tabe reitored to ha aortas! ooadl-&#13;
Una, hearts* will b« destroyed fore rex; niaa oaaaa&#13;
out of tea are caused by Catarrh, wbjeh la nethlac&#13;
bat an Interned coadltloaro* the maooae aurf sees.&#13;
We win ( i r e Oae Huadiad Oollastjor aa* &lt;&#13;
'isrrhi that caaoot%e&#13;
. Seed for ctrculsrarfn..&#13;
r. J. CHBN^Y a co., Toledo, o.&#13;
Dearaaaa (caused by oata&#13;
by UeU's GsterrtvCure. tea&#13;
~ T.CH1&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Personally conducted special trains&#13;
via the Chicago, Union Pacific &amp;&#13;
North-western Line leave early in&#13;
July for the Pacific Coast. Special&#13;
all-expense tours at very low rates&#13;
for round trip, Including sleeping car&#13;
accommodations, meals, etc. All the&#13;
advantages of a delightful and-«arefully&#13;
arranged tour in congenial company.&#13;
Write for itineraries and full&#13;
particulars. S. A. Hutchison, Manager&#13;
Tourist Department, 212 Clark Street,&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
Yale University Wealthy. &gt;&#13;
Accordng to the Yale Alumni jjfeekly,&#13;
the property of the untterntljy in&#13;
New Haven wbioh is exeiiliafrnffifrom&#13;
taxation, is apprafsed at f9,i$r\l*t), an&#13;
Increase of $255,000 over the'v'a1&gt;praised&#13;
tax exemption* of last yearrtsjough&#13;
this increase does not necesaai'Il^ represent&#13;
actual Additional values.. subtracted&#13;
from the New Haven .grand&#13;
list. Of tbe total exemptiona*&lt;about&#13;
11.370,000 belongs to the Shefft»rd&gt;Sciontiflc&#13;
School. The old camptjJS, as&#13;
Is^nd. |^,valued at^$ 1,033,400^' and the&#13;
bu.u4iOS*^, tfys sm&amp; at, $2JQ1500.&#13;
The appraisals, are high ou many of&#13;
the buildings, as compared to actual&#13;
cost. The valuations are placed, and&#13;
as they are exemptions, there has&#13;
been no occasion to appeal for their&#13;
reduction.&#13;
dul.&#13;
tenu&#13;
Uoa&#13;
and&#13;
mis.&#13;
repre&gt;&#13;
-J sentatioa as&#13;
While Lead.&#13;
Out of IS brands of "White Lead"&#13;
recently analyzed by tbe Govenuaeat&#13;
Agricultural Experiment Station of&#13;
North Dakota, 5 contained absolutely&#13;
no White Lead, 5 leas than 1$% of&#13;
White Lead, and only 3 over -90% of&#13;
White Lead. ft »&#13;
, There ia, however, a way^o he certain&#13;
of the purity and genuineness of&#13;
the White Lead you buy, g4d that is&#13;
to see that the keg&#13;
Dutch Boy trade,&#13;
mark is a positive&#13;
lutely P u r e W h i&#13;
by the Old Dutch&#13;
Process.&#13;
war&#13;
bears the&#13;
trade&#13;
ktee&gt;of aheoA&#13;
S E N D F O R&#13;
BOOK&#13;
"ATalkoaPMet,"&#13;
sAree Telaeble lafor.&#13;
Jaetloa o*. the paia*&#13;
•abject. Beet free&#13;
u»oa reQoeet,&#13;
^¢7 *•»"• *M* a w * .&#13;
NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY&#13;
i»g citUt it M«r«ff yoM :&#13;
New Tet*. Boetoa, Buffalo, Cleveland.&#13;
ClAolaAstl. Obteaao, 8t. LedU. f a l l * .&#13;
delehta {Joha T. Lewi, a proa. Co.] 1 ?Hte&gt;&#13;
bershOfattehal Lead * Oil &lt;\&gt;.]&#13;
&amp;%&amp; ELECTROTYPES &gt; Jfreea Tmrtoty far asla a* the loweatprlc**&#13;
rtaiisasaiwsraysacev.ww.ae»«asC^ia&#13;
Bold by D r o n t a U . ?So.&#13;
Tske Hsil'a Fsmlljr fllla for oonjUpaUgn,&#13;
Chilean Editor In America.&#13;
Senor Carlos Silva, of Santiago, edl*&#13;
tor of El Mercurio, the oldeat daily&#13;
newspaper in the republic of Chile,&#13;
Is visiting this country for the first&#13;
time, and is accompanied by his wife.&#13;
H e is at present in Washington.&#13;
Tired Nervous Women&#13;
Make Unhappy Homes&#13;
PES]&#13;
low by I&#13;
The Money Devil.&#13;
" I f ? my candid opinion," he said,&#13;
'that money Is infested with seven&#13;
devils, and I shouldn't wonder If 70&#13;
wouldn't be more correct. There is&#13;
trouble and a world of worry in the&#13;
very name of it! When I haven't got&#13;
It, I'm worrying as to where I'll get&#13;
it, and when I get it I worry about&#13;
what to do with it; if I put it in the&#13;
bank I worry because it don't grow&#13;
fast enough, and if I spend it I worry&#13;
because I got rid of it so soon; so&#13;
you see, it's a world full o' trouble&#13;
anyway you take it! The poor bless&#13;
and curse it; the rich don't know&#13;
what, to do with it; there Isn't a handful&#13;
of happiness in a ton of it. Here&#13;
comes a bill collector now, to get&#13;
what little I haven't got. Stay here&#13;
and entertain him while I climb toth^'&#13;
roof!"—Atlanta Constitution.&#13;
FIT THE GROCER&#13;
Wife Made the Suggestion.&#13;
A grocer has excellent opportunity&#13;
to know the effects of special foods on&#13;
his customers. A Cleveland grocer&#13;
has a long list of customers that have&#13;
been helped iri~"ftealth by leaving off&#13;
coffee and using Postum Food Coffee.&#13;
He says, regarding his own experience;&#13;
"Two years ago I had been&#13;
drinking coffee and must say that I&#13;
was almost wrecked in my nerves.&#13;
"Particularly in the morning I was&#13;
so irritable and upset that I could&#13;
hardly wait unt'i the coffee was&#13;
served, and then I had no appetite for&#13;
breakfast and did not. feel like attending&#13;
to my store duties.&#13;
"One day my wife suggested that&#13;
inasmuch as I was selling so much&#13;
Postum there must be some merit in&#13;
it and suggested that we try it. I took&#13;
home a package and she prepared it&#13;
according to directions. The result&#13;
was a very happy one. My nervous*&#13;
ness gradually disappeared and to-day&#13;
I am all right. I would advise every*&#13;
one affected la any way with nervous*&#13;
ness or stomach troubles, to leave off&#13;
coffee and use Postum Food Coffee."&#13;
"There's a Reason," Read, "The Road&#13;
to Wellvllle/' in pkgs.&#13;
t&gt;a.&#13;
MRS.NELLIE MAKHAM&#13;
A nervous irritable woman, often on&#13;
the verge of hysterics, is a source of&#13;
misery to everyone who comes under&#13;
her influence, and unhappy and miserable&#13;
herself.&#13;
Such women not only drive husbands&#13;
from home but are wholly unfit&#13;
to govern children.&#13;
The ills of women act like a fire&#13;
brand upon the nerves, consequently&#13;
seven-tenths of the nervous prostration,&#13;
nervous despondency, t h e&#13;
"blues", sleeplessness, and nervous&#13;
irritability of women arise from some&#13;
organic derangement.&#13;
Do you experience fits of depression&#13;
with restlessness alternating with extreme&#13;
irritability ? Do you suffer&#13;
from pains in the abdominal region,&#13;
backache, bearing-down pains,nervous&#13;
dyspepsia, sleeplessneas, and almost&#13;
continually cross and snappy? If so,&#13;
your nerves arc in a shattered condition&#13;
and you are threatened with&#13;
nervous prostration.&#13;
Proof is monumental that nothing&#13;
in the world is better for nervous&#13;
troubles of women than Lydia E.&#13;
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,&#13;
made from native roots and nerbs.&#13;
Thousands and thousands of women&#13;
can testify to this fact.&#13;
Mrs. Nellie Makham, of 151 Morgan&#13;
St., Buffalo, N. Y., writes:—&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—&#13;
"I was a wreck from nervous prostration.&#13;
MRS.GEO, A.JAMES&#13;
I suffered so I did not care what became of&#13;
me, and my family despaired of my recovery.&#13;
Physicians failed to help me. t&#13;
was urged to try Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound and I want to tell you&#13;
that it has entirely cured me. I think it&#13;
is the finest medicine on earth and I am&#13;
recommending it to all my friends and&#13;
acquaintances.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. A. James, a life long&#13;
resident of Fredonia, N. Y,, writes:&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:—&#13;
"I was in a terribly run down conditkm&#13;
and had nervous prostration caused or&#13;
female trouble, in fact I had not been wen&#13;
since my children were bora This condition&#13;
worked on my nerves and I was irritable&#13;
and miserable. I had tried many&#13;
remedies without getting much help but&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
brought me back to health and strength. It&#13;
has also carried me safely through the&#13;
Change of Life. I cannot too strongly&#13;
recommend your medicine."&#13;
Mrs. Plakham'a IovltattoQ to Women.&#13;
Women suffering from any form of&#13;
female weakness are invited to&#13;
communicate promptly with Mrs.&#13;
Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. From the&#13;
symptoms given, the trouble may be&#13;
located and the quickest and surest&#13;
way of recovery advised. Out of her&#13;
vast volume of experience in treating&#13;
female ills Mrs. Pinkham probably&#13;
has the very knowledge that will help&#13;
your case. Her advice ia free and&#13;
always helpful.&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native roota. and&#13;
herbs, contains no narcotics or harmful drugs and today holds the recotd for&#13;
the largest number of actual cures of female diseases of any medicine the&#13;
world has ever known, and thousands of voluntary testimonials are on&#13;
file in the laboratory at Lynn, Mass., which testify to its wonderful value.&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compoond; a Woman's Remedy for Women's life.&#13;
Mica&#13;
Axle&#13;
Grease&#13;
Helps the Wagon np&#13;
fceHffl&#13;
The load seems Ugbie&gt;»tf«gOtt&#13;
and team wear longer—Vcftt fe&amp;K*&#13;
mora money, and hate mole time&#13;
to suka money, when w2»eela a n&#13;
greaseoVwith&#13;
MicaAxk&#13;
—The longest wearing and moat&#13;
aa^huactotyrubxicantm&amp;aweOoV&#13;
m fTJifffllili »"&#13;
JOIN THE NAVY' Which enliitn for 4 yeai% young m«n of good oharsctsr&#13;
ana sound physical condition between the a«ea&#13;
of 17 and 25 a* appremios seamen; flnsopportaaiuss&#13;
for sd-raocemssn par tin to sm a mooiaV suae*&#13;
trlolaaa rascalnttu, toiaclumitni, coppsrmmith*.&#13;
oarpsnterm. »bip-fltt«rs, ooal-WM^rs, ifiamsn, mul&#13;
flails, cooks, ito.. bstwean M a n S * ysars, clirk*,&#13;
hoapltat appraatloss bstwean IB and t&amp;mr*. inlUtadlntpMlalratlnirswUh&#13;
saltabhi p»f Bstirsmsntonthrsarfoortbapay&#13;
and ailowaaoaa artsrSO&#13;
S??.!L., *4 w 0 M h i0 S?, o *h l 0 * tT— w learolts. Upon&#13;
disoaargs tr»T«la»lowanos 4 osnu par mils to plaae&#13;
ptsnli»unenu Bonn* foor months par sad inorsoss&#13;
dTsoaarit*11 ' • " • • " " • n * w H h l B *onrmonthsof&#13;
U. S. NAVY RECRUITING STATION*&#13;
Wa. 33 Ubyttts Avtaaa, DETI0IT. M I « M *&#13;
CaamWr si Csanaatta l»lUin|, . TftlBM, tl"*^*' rstt ones Uiisimc. - . iKCtun.m&#13;
to* Ofltea auUiias. . . SAftrtAW. M&#13;
^v&#13;
^..-¾&#13;
•"*•.' -fri&#13;
• ^ • * . #&#13;
• I * : •&#13;
sv*^..&#13;
1« oaacat te&#13;
DEFIANCE STM0MHt ba paekaga&#13;
-~2«B«T stanbas ooly t i s n a e w s a a a a priaa aad&#13;
PATENTS"!&#13;
^ &amp; t t * % r * a . Soak a of jafwsaaUsa saai&#13;
.Ai. ».•&#13;
,-1-0--&#13;
••A it* 2¾^&#13;
H awaaaaaaiaaai&#13;
&gt;r":~&#13;
aliaai&#13;
;, ™J£ *:£» ^ « U « ^ n a b i . ^ ^ •••&#13;
awjaawa*. tftSfcffi niliI • • 1'»'&#13;
' ; H ^&#13;
TO rHJLPiT.&#13;
Hassja Rough F ! i h « i r i ^ W M L i 4 tb&#13;
Become a FlahsiHff Men.&#13;
The lives, of many,.,91^ . mjsplonarlei&#13;
read like romance. Such a lli^&#13;
bs* been toat of&#13;
R«v. . W. H. Colllnaon,&#13;
evangelist&#13;
of t h e United&#13;
Christian Workers&#13;
City Mtssjon&#13;
church, Bronx, H.&#13;
Y. Left as a waif&#13;
at a London door,&#13;
some one toolt&#13;
h i m . In. Soon&#13;
homeless a g a i n ,&#13;
Evariflellat W. H. as a mere boy he&#13;
Collinson. was taken on a&#13;
fishing smack to the North sea fishing&#13;
grounds, and he helped bring the&#13;
harvests of the ocean to the famous&#13;
Billingsgate,market la London. Here&#13;
he heard J)&lt; L. Mooflj1 and was converted.&#13;
He na'd the aid and sympathy&#13;
of Rev. C. H&lt; Spurgeon, and ebon was&#13;
preaching the Word-to flahermen 1R&#13;
the market »Qd thoserv engaged l? I*&#13;
deep-sea fishing In the North sea. He&#13;
there witnessed tfte acjriuwa tranaforraation&#13;
of many lives. He had greater&#13;
influence with the men because he&#13;
had learned "to scrub the cabin, make&#13;
puddtjags, mend nets, splice the ropes,&#13;
steer the ship and command a vessel."&#13;
His first pulpit was a three-legged&#13;
table in a barn, where he spoke to 40&#13;
farmers on "Being Saved by Grace."&#13;
His best loved worfr waB among the&#13;
fisherman, and he' waB the*'first recipient&#13;
of a silk "Bethel Flag" from&#13;
the late Baronass Burdett Contta.&#13;
Like many seafaring, men, .the captain&#13;
likes change of scene, but is ever&#13;
ready to engage In hard service on sea&#13;
or land for the lost: l i e followed for&#13;
awhile John Sampson, the "Cornwall&#13;
preacher," and was a coworker with&#13;
Gipsy Smith. At Steelton, Pa., he&#13;
started a mission among 3,000 steel&#13;
workers and held "shop" meetings.&#13;
He recently held Gospel services at&#13;
the Union church, Corona, N. Y. His&#13;
earnest addresses abounded in nautical&#13;
terms and pictures, adding zest&#13;
to his exhortaJons, says the Christian&#13;
Herald.&#13;
At the City Mission church in the&#13;
Bronx the Gospel is preached, the&#13;
sick are visited and situations are&#13;
secured for the unemployed. Mrs.&#13;
Collinson, his 'first mate," helps in&#13;
his Gospel services and his daughter&#13;
Eva, the "second mate" of the Gospel&#13;
ship, is also the musician. Together&#13;
they hold meetings on board ship, in&#13;
saloons, barber shops and factories.&#13;
Their work has been supported by&#13;
voluntary gifts and has been a means&#13;
of blessing to many.&#13;
Successful Missionary Labor.&#13;
For several years the American&#13;
Board of Commissioners for Foreign&#13;
Missions has been doing a missionary&#13;
work in Naaru, an island separate&#13;
from ail other groups in the Pacific&#13;
ocean. Ita' people seem to be hardy&#13;
and vigorous, numbering somewhat&#13;
less than 2,090 souls at the present&#13;
time. A German missionary, Rev. De&#13;
la Porte, has labored there since 1899&#13;
under the American board with extraordinary&#13;
vigor and success. He&#13;
has gathered converts in numbers that&#13;
parallel, it is said, the earliest beginnings&#13;
at Jerusalem. From- the beginning&#13;
Mr. De la Porte labored at translation&#13;
work. In 1902 he translated&#13;
part of the New Testament; this was&#13;
printed on the missionary press at&#13;
Kusaie in the Caroline Islands, 500&#13;
copies in all. These were distributed&#13;
among the people in 1903, and Mr. De&#13;
Ja Porte writes: "The living Word of&#13;
God has since then worked mightily&#13;
in the hearts of this little nation."&#13;
Preacher Descended from a King.&#13;
W. M. Jackson, D. D., who is the&#13;
«rt«t?frtAfgrandson of a Madagascar&#13;
kiftf, SfftsY recently ordained in the&#13;
' A s W r l i * jSpiscqprt ctiurch. He wad&#13;
• o r * tftjfcrth Carolina in IS.'4. The&#13;
king from whom he descended was&#13;
Induced to send his two children, a&#13;
boy and a girl, to Europe to be educated,&#13;
but through treachery they&#13;
were brought to America and sold&#13;
into slavery. Dr. Jackson's father&#13;
was a free man, and moved with his&#13;
family to Oberlin, O. The son attended&#13;
the public schools and in September,&#13;
1S72, entered the freshman&#13;
class of Oherlin college, two of his&#13;
d i n » f J f l | A e i n g President Frost of&#13;
Illijpi J M W K ^ K e n t u c k y , and Rev. F.&#13;
"*• * * S P * i * P r o f S t - P a u r a church,&#13;
Ei«t &lt;?revelan»dl, O.&#13;
Received with Honor."&#13;
it is said that at f W l n d l a mission"-&#13;
ary jubilee no twp. ..persons were received&#13;
wftn" gtej»t6&amp; honm»Hhan D r / V /&#13;
H. Humphrey, ,wiTo'Wt)tite«*«tttes.aBit&#13;
native* converts, atf**tth!C "mnffctn Buf-J&#13;
ler, wife of the founder of Methodism&#13;
in India.&#13;
He Wt* Thicker fklmmee\ "&#13;
% Waiter Howard, the London dramatist,&#13;
was loaring the sUago door of •&#13;
theater o n * oveuinf when an aaemiotooklng&#13;
youth stepped np and said?!&#13;
"Are fon Mr. Howard?" The author&#13;
&lt;¥»pH*4 In the afirmatHre, whereupon&#13;
tb* Twmg fellow amid he wanted to go&#13;
on the stage. Noticing his evident&#13;
unfitness for such a life, Howard ad-&#13;
*laqd him to stick to hit present occupation,&#13;
whatever it was. "I am assistant&#13;
pawnbroker across the way,"&#13;
said the ambitious young man. "And&#13;
what do your people think of your&#13;
going on the stage?" asked Howard.&#13;
"Oh, they are right against It," was&#13;
the jaunty reply, "but I shouldn't mind&#13;
the disgrace myself."&#13;
ITCHING RASH 18 YEAR8.&#13;
Girl's Rash Spread and Grow Worse&#13;
Under Specialist'a Care—Perfect&#13;
Cure by Cuticura Remedies.&#13;
"When my daughter was a baby she&#13;
had a breaking out behind the ears.&#13;
The doctor said that she would outgrow&#13;
it, and It did get somewhat better&#13;
until she was , about fifteen years&#13;
old, and alter that she could get nothing&#13;
that would drive it away. She was&#13;
always applying something in the way&#13;
of salves., It troubled her behind the&#13;
knees, opposite the elbows, back of&#13;
the neck and ears, under the chin, and&#13;
then it got on,, the- face. That was&#13;
about tbrejg "years ag0. .She took treats&#13;
ment-with &amp; specialist and seemed to&#13;
get worse all the time.. We were then&#13;
advised to try the Cuticura Remedies,&#13;
and now I don't see any breaking out.&#13;
M. Curley, 11-19 Sixteenth St., Bay&#13;
City, Mich,, May 20, 1906."&#13;
An Oversight.&#13;
When Chappie got up the other&#13;
morning he wandered around his&#13;
apartment in his pretty pink pajamas,&#13;
the very picture of.woe.&#13;
"What's the matter, sir?" Inquired&#13;
his valet.&#13;
"I don't know, Alphonse," he groaned;&#13;
"I passed a most unhappy night."&#13;
Alphonse looked him over carefully.&#13;
"Oh, sir," he exclaimed, "I know&#13;
what was the matter. The trousers of&#13;
your pajamas were not creased. You&#13;
must be more careful, sir. Those I&#13;
had prepared for you were hanging&#13;
across the loot of the ^ed."—the Bohemian.&#13;
^ '„ 4 '&#13;
• »_i ' » "&#13;
18,000,000 Cattle Kilted by Inspection&#13;
Officer*&#13;
in an attempt to stamp out Bovine Tuberculosis,&#13;
and yet the disease is&#13;
spreading. A most sensible and Inexpensive&#13;
remedy is recently claimed in&#13;
a free booklet issued by The Mutual&#13;
Mercantile Co., Cleveland, 0., in simply&#13;
feeding small doses of Rasawa to&#13;
the cattle. It can be had at any Drug&#13;
or Feed Store, and costs but a few&#13;
cents per year for each cow. The remedy&#13;
Is claimed to be a positive germicide&#13;
and renders the cattle free from&#13;
the disease. Every reader should get&#13;
a free booklet from the Druggist and&#13;
read the statements made.&#13;
'-«.'«i. SJm . JkatSvjL ft j *&#13;
*y.&#13;
&gt;-i' •f*?r. ; - ' i * Don^JK)ison • ( .&#13;
His Classification.&#13;
"Oh, I don't intend to be scrupulous&#13;
About the way I get on," said the&#13;
young lawyer, who thought himself&#13;
the greatest ever. "I frankly intend&#13;
to rent out my head to anybody who&#13;
wants to make use of it." "Then, if&#13;
you advertise it," replied his cynical&#13;
friend, "they'll put you under the&#13;
heading of Empty Flats."&#13;
Famous Book Free.&#13;
( Every reader of this rmper can get free&#13;
of charge one of Dr. Coffee's famous books&#13;
which tells of a new method by which Remons afflicted with Deafness*, Head&#13;
[oisea, Sore Eyes, Failing Sight from any&#13;
cause, can cure themselves at home at&#13;
email expense.&#13;
Write a letter immediately to Dr. W. O.&#13;
Coffee, 360 Century Bldg., Des Moines, la.&#13;
Defined.&#13;
"Dad," inquired Freddy, "what is a&#13;
'figure of speech?' " "Where's your mother?"&#13;
asked "Dad." cautiously. 'She's&#13;
downstairs," answered the boy. "Well,&#13;
then," began "Dad," "a figure of&#13;
speech, my son, is a woman."—Harper's&#13;
Weekly.&#13;
To improve the pencrnl health, take&#13;
Garfield Tea daily for a time; it purities&#13;
the blood, eradicates rheumatism and&#13;
many chronic ailments, and keeps the&#13;
health good. Garfield Tea is made of&#13;
herbs; it &gt;* guaranteed under the Pure&#13;
Food and Dntg* Law. Garfield Tea Co.,&#13;
Brooklyn, N. f.&#13;
Most people seem to enjoy coming&#13;
out of a ehurch more than they do going&#13;
in*&#13;
D O D 1 V S '/,&#13;
KIDNEY'&#13;
\ PILLS J.&#13;
PBTT TMBS AftO almost ewrjr mother thought her chM nmrt hava&#13;
FABEaQftlfl or laudanum to make it tiaep"Thaw &amp;n&amp; will produce&#13;
Wwti IS KO |IAJ3NG. Many are the children who hare been kflled or&#13;
irhose heatth b a l e e n ruined for lifb by paregoric, landanmn and morphine, eac^&#13;
of whioh is a narootio product of opium. Druggists are prohibited from selling&#13;
either of the narcotics named to children at all, or to anybody without labelling&#13;
them U poison." The definition of " narootio " is S "A medicine which relieves pain,&#13;
and produces sleep, but which in poisonous doses produces stupor9 coma, convulsions&#13;
anddeath." The taste and smeU of medidnescontaiiiiiigopiu^&#13;
and sold under the names of "Drops,". "Cordials," "Soothing Syrups/1 etc.. Top.&#13;
should mot permit any medicine to be given to your children without fW -f *£&#13;
your physician know of what it is composed. CASTOEDL DOES HOT &lt;X»-&#13;
TAIN NAECOTICS, if it bears the signature of Cha&amp; E Hetcher.&#13;
Letters from Prominent Physicians&#13;
addressed to Chas* H. Fletcher.&#13;
Dr. J. W. Dinsdale, of .Chicago, 111., says: "I nee your Caatorla and&#13;
advise its use in-all families where there are children."&#13;
Dr. Alexander E. Mintie, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: "I have frequently&#13;
prescribed your Castoria and have found It a reliable anJ pleasant remedy&#13;
for children."&#13;
Dr. J. S. Alexander, of Omaha, Neb., says: "A medicine so valuable and&#13;
beneficial for children as your Caatorla is, deserves the highest praise. I&#13;
find it in use everywhere." &gt;&#13;
Dr. J. A. McClellan, of Buffalo, N. Y., says: "I have frequently prescribed&#13;
your Castoria for children and always got good results. In fact I use&#13;
Caatorla for my own children."&#13;
Dr. J. W. Allen, of S t Louis, Mo., says: "I heartily endorse your Caatorla.&#13;
I have frequently, prescribed ft In my medical practice, and have&#13;
always found it to do all that Is claimed for i t "&#13;
Dr^C. H. Glidden, of &amp;t Paul, Minn., says: "My experience as a practitioner&#13;
with your Castoria has been highly satisfactory, and I consider if&#13;
an excellent remedy for the young."&#13;
Dr. H. D. Benner, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: "I have used your Castoria&#13;
as a purgative in the cases of children for years past with the most&#13;
nappy effect, and fully endorse it as a safe remedy."&#13;
Dr. J. A. Boarman, of Kansas City, Mo., says: "Tour Castoria is a splendid&#13;
remedy for children, known the world over. I use it in my practice&#13;
and have no hesitancy in recommending it for the complaints of Infanta&#13;
and children."&#13;
Dr. J. J. Mackey, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: "I consider your Castoria an&#13;
excellent preparation for children, being composed of reliable medicines&#13;
and pleasant to the taste. A good remedy for all disturbances of the&#13;
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT&#13;
A^tetsirierYcptiHWiris&#13;
s£rnilatir)$tfcto ~&#13;
ttagtteSftnjttgtifiov&amp;ar&#13;
I N T E N T S - fi&lt;m&gt;Kr\&#13;
ness aadRratContainsuExBT&#13;
Opium.Morphinc norMoenlJ&#13;
N O T N A R C O T I C .&#13;
JbtpetfOUlkSSMBUn'aat&#13;
Aperfeet Remedy for&#13;
Hon,Sour Storadi,Dtarrtm&#13;
WofTO5X,onvai$kn»J*wnsinessiwiLoss&#13;
or SLEEP.&#13;
Fiesta* Stgaanrc of&#13;
&amp; # &amp; &amp;&#13;
NEW YORK.&#13;
digestive organs."&#13;
GENUINE C A S T O R I A ALWAYS&#13;
9 Bears the Signature of&#13;
« olit&#13;
O S l ' S&#13;
tedtmderi&#13;
Exact Copy of Wrapper.&#13;
The Kind Ton Have Always Bought&#13;
In Use For Over 3 0 Years.&#13;
TMI CCNTAUR COMPANY, TT M U I M V • T M I K T . N I W V « « K CITVSICK&#13;
HEADACHE Positively cure* by&#13;
tkese Little Pills,&#13;
They also relieve Dlar&#13;
tress trocn Dyspepsia, Indigestion&#13;
an&amp;TooBeaitr&#13;
RfttJrig. A perfect remedy&#13;
for Dizziness, Nausea,&#13;
Drowsiness. Bad Taste&#13;
in tha Month, Coated&#13;
Tongue, Pain la the Bids,&#13;
TORPID LZVXR. They&#13;
regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.&#13;
SHALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PfilCL&#13;
CARTERS Genuine Must Bear&#13;
Facsimile Signature&#13;
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.&#13;
• • • f e • • • • To e o n v i n e e any&#13;
• • • • • • woman t h a t P*x-&#13;
Wm Mm • • • • t i n * A n t i s e p t i c will I f " WW SJ" M~ Improve her health&#13;
• • • s s i a B B M a n m Bl«fJSSliBWf « d° all we claim o r u . w e will&#13;
send her absolutely free a large trial&#13;
box of Paxtine with book of Instructions&#13;
and genuine testimonial*. Send&#13;
your name and address on a postal card.&#13;
cleanses&#13;
and htMs&#13;
m u c o u s&#13;
m e m •&#13;
brana affections,&#13;
such as nanal catarrh. peWlo&#13;
catarrh and inflammation caused by feminine&#13;
Ills; sore eyes, sore throat and&#13;
mouth, by direct local treatment Its curative&#13;
power over these troubles is extraordinary&#13;
and gives immediate relief.&#13;
Thousands of women are using and recommending&#13;
it every day. CO cents at&#13;
druggists or by mail. Remember, however,&#13;
I I COSTS YOU NOTH UM TO TRY IT.&#13;
THJE H . P A X T O N C O . , B o s t o n , M a * * ,&#13;
PAXTINE&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, NO. 21, 1907.&#13;
ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE o J ^ S&#13;
AA CCeerrttaaiinn CCuurree ffoorr TTilrreesf'., HHoott, AAceWUssej Fset. V&gt;**&gt;**fc««—*-'&#13;
OO N O T A C C E P T A SUBSTITUTE.&#13;
We Cure Piles&#13;
AND TRUST TO TOUR HONOR&#13;
TO PAY WHEN YOU ARE C s s s D&#13;
, /v.saaa.&#13;
Pitet, ft&lt;m]a and til other 4is«uei ol tbe&#13;
by » new PATHLESS D t S S O L V&#13;
OD. Ooi own di»eo»«ry, »««cretproc*») '&#13;
ours«lvc». No h»z*rdons operation, knife, or cklorefbra-&#13;
B»*^. Miny bad caacs carei in cn« painlvtat treataacaf.&#13;
and few caaea require more ta»o-two wwktfwl a C««p)tw^&#13;
cuie. , j&#13;
A Tew Mickiaaa Rwlareaces&#13;
F. C- Rfleobottom. Union City; Mrs. A. L. Hurrelf,&#13;
OWOTMJ; Mr. Geo. W. Rupnjht. S. Frankfort; Albert C.&#13;
Batea. Benzonia; S. S. Atdrich, R. R. 17, BeldJnf; Mia*&#13;
Mae Focleson, St. Uwis; Georf* Staufler, Sparta; S. G.&#13;
Pierce. Alma; Richard Martini, Sebcwaioi; Mra. W. K.&#13;
Porr, Albion; A. J. Bradford, Baldwin.&#13;
Write a full description of your case aa TOO nn&lt;*»r»r»D«&#13;
it and we will tell ron jiKt what we can do for you and&#13;
the coit. Remember nothmj paid until cared. We bar*&#13;
treated over 4,000 ca«e» wiihoot a «in«!e tailor*.&#13;
Oiir free booklet explains cm treatment folly and con-;&#13;
tiins the names and addressea o4 people near yoo wkom&gt;&#13;
we would gladly hare yoo aee or write for raferencea.&#13;
DEFIANCE Gold Water Starch iD " B U S ^ 2 ^ S ? I X S O H&#13;
makes laundry work a pleasure. 16 oz. pks 10c RECTAI. SrCClAUSTS&#13;
- - - 1 0 3 Monro* S t , Grand Rapids, MScluJaar&#13;
FRO Canadian Government&#13;
on ever; box.&#13;
Trial Package,&#13;
Addrrw. Allea&#13;
S. Okmated,&#13;
Lc Roy, N. Y.&#13;
This man made&#13;
*83252 Clear Profit&#13;
from 7COWS on&#13;
a lOAcreFarm in&#13;
One&#13;
Year&#13;
. i&#13;
. *&#13;
$ 8 3 2 3 0 m year is blsjf p r o f i t from 7 i&#13;
[ AttiMst $ 1 2 0 a y e a r p e r c o w en an average*&#13;
Mors than many dairymen make on their w h o l e herd.&#13;
This man's own story, teffns fust how he did it,—and is&#13;
dome it today,—makes mighty interesting reading.&#13;
m it ho gives valuable advice regarding selection of&#13;
stock, feeding, hsndfing of product, e t c Every line is&#13;
chock fuf of interesting, practical, m o n e y * m o k i n g&#13;
[pointers to dairymen*&#13;
E v e r y o n e ntBUng cows should read ft.&#13;
| If you write today, soktag for " P r o f i t B o o l e -&#13;
t O Mi yooi wai goto copy fRCC. h y a ^ V f * ^&#13;
Free Farms&#13;
Ovtr 200,000 Araericmai&#13;
i farmers «eho have f e t -&#13;
tled in Canada d u r i a i |&#13;
t h e past few vcar*tesn#*&#13;
~^^^^^^^— fy to the fact "that CataO* 1 • i^iwa^aa^aw^awaw fim j g i beyond questiOaV&#13;
the Rreatest farming land i u the world.&#13;
OVER NINETY&#13;
MILLION BUSHELS of wheat from the harvest of 1906 m e a n s Rood&#13;
m o n e y to t h e farmers of "Western Canada w h e n&#13;
the world h a s to be fed. Cattle Raising, Dairying&#13;
and Mi.ved F a r m i n g are also profitable callings.&#13;
Coal, wood and w a t e r in a b u n d a n c e ;&#13;
churches and schools c o n r e u i e o t ; m a r k e t s e a s y&#13;
of access. Taxes low.&#13;
For advice and information address t h e Superintendent&#13;
of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or&#13;
nnr authorized Canadian Government Agent.&#13;
M V. McINNES, 6 Areas* Tkttre Black, Detroit,&#13;
Micai^ai; or C. A. LAURIER, Saalt Sit.&#13;
Marie, Micaif as.&#13;
T h i s f r e e&#13;
booklet&#13;
r.&#13;
VERMONT rARM MACHINE COJ&#13;
READERS of this paper desiring&#13;
to buy any-&#13;
•••••••i««iiw»»aBa«aia«a thing adwrtiasdIn&#13;
tts columns &lt;houkl Insist upon harms&#13;
v?hv tli«y ask for, rafusina all wimtutca&#13;
or imitations.&#13;
I *&#13;
;•' -y ,-v&#13;
^&#13;
,«*•.: • • ( » • •&#13;
i&amp;&#13;
' " Y . . - * * • •&#13;
•.4.&#13;
&lt;-vr*.&#13;
S &amp;^;&#13;
WJ&gt; • $ &gt; , - ««P»»*W«&#13;
• ^&#13;
•—t-&#13;
' A&#13;
- * .&#13;
X&#13;
lf«*"gPI|W 1 &lt; ! » &gt; » •&#13;
'.-''&#13;
&amp;.:&#13;
ft*"'&#13;
* • • &gt; -&#13;
A&#13;
K&#13;
.',*.&#13;
A4,&#13;
ft-&#13;
P*;?*&#13;
^&#13;
C W I K H Proceedings V&#13;
Of U» Tillage of Pinokaey&#13;
or-&#13;
Thursday, May 16, 1907&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Council convened and called to&#13;
der by President Dunn.&#13;
Present: Trustees Farnam, Smith,&#13;
Teeple, Van Winkle, Nixon&#13;
Absent: Roche.&#13;
The minutes of the last meeting&#13;
were read and approved.&#13;
Council adjourned.&#13;
R. J. CAKK, Clerk.&#13;
SPECIAL.&#13;
*riday, May 17, 1907.&#13;
Council convened and called to order&#13;
by Pres Dunn.&#13;
Pie&amp;ent: Trustees Farnam, Smith,&#13;
Tef&gt;;, Roche. Van Winkle, N ixon.&#13;
Moved by Farnam and Teeple that&#13;
an Ordinance for the suppression ot&#13;
saloons lor the *&gt;ale ot spiritous and&#13;
intoxicating liquors in the Village of&#13;
. Pinckney, be repealed.&#13;
V Aye: Farnam, Smith, Teeple.&#13;
\ No: Roche, VanWinkle, Nixon,&#13;
and Pre^. Dunn.&#13;
Moved by Nixon and&#13;
th&lt;? Clerk be authorized&#13;
$200.00 tor four months.&#13;
Aye: Farnam, Teeple,&#13;
Winkle, Nixon.&#13;
Roche that&#13;
to borrow&#13;
Roche, Van-&#13;
The folio win.; Hills were read:&#13;
Teeple Hdwe. Co. supiiliws&#13;
Perry Towle, lumber,&#13;
M. Sayles, repair work,&#13;
Steve Teeple, drawing trees,&#13;
Chae. Eldert, aettin.^ tre»*«.&#13;
J. Morte-Drfou, " ''&#13;
149.»&#13;
f2S.80&#13;
«.00&#13;
12.00&#13;
$1J88&#13;
$1.28&#13;
Total, 177.66&#13;
Moved bv Nixon and VanWinkle&#13;
bills be allowed.&#13;
Aye: Farnam. Smith, Teeple,&#13;
Roche, VanWinkle, Nixon.&#13;
Moved *&gt;y Nixon and Roche that&#13;
any persons having bills acfainst the&#13;
village present them within 30 days.&#13;
Aye: Farnam, Smith, Teeple,&#13;
Roche, VanWinkle, Nixon.&#13;
Moved by Nixon and Roche that&#13;
any person t uyini; supplies for the&#13;
village shall wive an itemized account&#13;
of same.&#13;
Aye; Farnam, Smith. Teeple,&#13;
Rocjre, VanWinkle, Nixon.&#13;
Upon motion Council adjourned.&#13;
I R. J. CARR, Clerk.&#13;
I Business Pointers. 1&#13;
r o a I A L I .&#13;
Two «ood fresh, Jersey cows.&#13;
.). .I. Teeple.&#13;
worn SAUL.&#13;
House and lot on Unadilla street,&#13;
Pinchnev.&#13;
Mrs. Carrie Wilson,&#13;
414 Fourth Ave. E. Flint, Mich.&#13;
Hoase to Rent.&#13;
Inquire at Dispatch Office.&#13;
• * • * § * 4. * * . * § * &gt; a I t • * • * « *&#13;
Among Oilr Correspoadcnte&#13;
w&#13;
HOWELL.&#13;
Howell claims eeveral miles of&#13;
cenieut walks. A few more miles&#13;
would be an improvement.&#13;
Howell will celebrate Decoration&#13;
day next T h u r s d a y , May 30,&#13;
with appropriate exercises.&#13;
Village attorney R o c h e baa&#13;
been ordered by t h e council to&#13;
b r i n g condemnation proceedings&#13;
against a certain piece of land in&#13;
order to open u p a new street&#13;
near the milk factory.&#13;
T h e Howell council talked&#13;
"sewer" uutil long after 12 o'clock&#13;
at their meeting last week. T h e y&#13;
finally decided to ass: engineer,&#13;
Riggs, to make estimates on t h e&#13;
actual cost of construction.&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG .&#13;
Mrs. J. Kice is visiting friends&#13;
in Detroit and Canada.&#13;
A memorial sermon will be&#13;
preached at t h e church next S u n -&#13;
day.&#13;
Little Thome boys of Howell&#13;
visited L a u r e n c e D u n n i n g over&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
M r and Mrs. Geo. Salmon of&#13;
Boynton, N. J., are guests of J. D.&#13;
V a n F l e e t ' s family.&#13;
T h e following is the p r o g r a m&#13;
for the F a r m e r s Club, S a t u r d a y to&#13;
be held at the h o m e of Mr. a n d&#13;
Mrs. H. G. B r i g g s :&#13;
Music Club.&#13;
Reading Mr. Hendricks&#13;
Recitation. . . .Albert Nesbitt&#13;
Music&#13;
Reading Adda Kice&#13;
Recitation (il^nn Smith&#13;
Music&#13;
Reading Wm, Cady&#13;
Question Box&#13;
Music Club&#13;
Bring Jap boards and dishes.&#13;
tf rand Trnak Railway System.&#13;
East Bonnd from Fincfcnej&#13;
No'28 Passenger Ex. Hunc.ay, 0:28 A. M&#13;
Ho. SOPaawenner Ex, SnncHy, 4:S5 p. X.&#13;
Weat Bonnd from Pinckney&#13;
No. 27 Pa«««nf?er Ex. Sunday, 10:01 A . M .&#13;
No. 29 Pataenger Ex, Sunday. 8:44 P. M*&#13;
UNADILLA.&#13;
Jno. Hasseuclml and family&#13;
spent Sunday at Mrs. H . C B u l -&#13;
lis\&#13;
Mibs Pearl Hartsuff spent last&#13;
S u n d a y with MisB Pearl Hadley&#13;
Lyndon.&#13;
Ray P a l m e r m a d e a rlyiug t r i p&#13;
to Pinckney last M o n d a y — h e was&#13;
looking for the dentist.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Coltou of&#13;
Chelsea and Mrs. Sadie R o b e r t s&#13;
of St. Louis, Mo., S u n d a y e d at A.&#13;
C. Watson's.&#13;
Mrs. E . A. McCollom of D e t r o i t&#13;
and Mrs. Chas. M a r a n t e t t e of&#13;
New Baltimore are visiting relatives&#13;
lie re this week.&#13;
The Gleaner Base Ball Team&#13;
played A very close game here last&#13;
Saturday with the G r e g o r y team.&#13;
Score 3 to 5 in favor of t h e&#13;
W I S T F i m U J L&#13;
H e l e n D u n u e is on t h e sick H i t .&#13;
Nellie G a r d u e r of Anu A r b o r&#13;
was home over Sunday.&#13;
E d w a r d S p e a r s aud wife visited&#13;
at W m . Doyle's Sunday.&#13;
J. C. Diukle is painting a n d&#13;
d e c o r a t i n g at H . B. G a r d n e r ' s .&#13;
Dr. W. J . M o u k s and Mr. Sawyer&#13;
spent S u n d a y at Maruellus&#13;
Monk's.&#13;
Miss Mabel Monks spent a few&#13;
d a y s last week with frieuds in&#13;
Dexter.&#13;
Will B . G a r d n e r a n d J a m e s&#13;
D o y l e were in D e x t e r Monday on&#13;
business.&#13;
E m m a G a r d n e r entertained h e r&#13;
friend, Miss Gaul of P i n c k n e y ,&#13;
last week.&#13;
F r e d Chapel a n d d a u g h t e r ,&#13;
Blanche of Fowlorville spent l a s t&#13;
S u n d a y with friends here.&#13;
Mrs. M u r p h y was moved to t h e&#13;
home of her d a u g h t e r , M r s J a m e s&#13;
Roche, Monday. We are glad t o&#13;
report she is much better.&#13;
ANDERSON F A B H E B S ' CLUB.&#13;
T h e May m e e t i n g 6*f the A n d -&#13;
erson F a r m e r ' s Club was held a t&#13;
the home af M r . a u d Mrs. G e o r g e&#13;
G r e i u e r , with a good attendance,&#13;
S a t u r d a y M a y 11.&#13;
T h e p r o g r a m consisted of recat&#13;
a t i o n s and music, both i n s t r u -&#13;
mental and vocal, which were&#13;
much appreciated. Pres. W e b b&#13;
appointed G. M. Greinec Vice&#13;
Pres. in place of Chas Hotf.&#13;
After s u p p e r was served to all&#13;
present t h e m e e t i n g adjourned to&#13;
meet with Mr. and Mrs. V. G.&#13;
D i u k l e , J u n e 8.&#13;
When Oregon Wat In the saranoe.&#13;
There is no boundary In the world&#13;
of greuter political Importance than&#13;
the forty-ninth parallel, which divides&#13;
Canada from the United States. When&#13;
this homulary was under discussion,&#13;
the Pacific coast was almost inaccessi&#13;
ble, and the ownership of Oregon, now&#13;
a state of vast wealth, with opulent&#13;
cities and a teeming population, was&#13;
In the balance. The matter was settled&#13;
by the report of Captain Temple,&#13;
a brother &lt;&gt;r Lord Palmerston, who&#13;
wrote to the admiralty "that the country&#13;
was not worth a cuss because the&#13;
aalnion would not take a fly."—Manchester&#13;
Chronicle.&#13;
" &gt; W ( « »&#13;
hit&#13;
The Only Way.&#13;
"I am writing an article," he said,&#13;
"on 'The Way to Manage a Woman/ "&#13;
"I suppose it will be a long one," she&#13;
replied in a slightly scornful tone.&#13;
"No," he answered, "it will be quite&#13;
Bhort. In fact, It will consist of only&#13;
Iwo words—'Don't try!' "•- Birmingham&#13;
Post.&#13;
my&#13;
Long Wait.&#13;
"Grandpn. how old are you?"&#13;
"I am eighty-seven years old,&#13;
dear."&#13;
"Then yo.i were born eighty years&#13;
before I was. What a long time you&#13;
had alone waiting for me!"&#13;
Ins&#13;
Solid wide vestibule train* of coaches and sleep ftlttonara&#13;
a cars are operated to New York (andPhiladel- u l C H I &lt; B l B '&#13;
phi*) via Niagara Palls by the Grand Trunk-L*-&#13;
ilgh Valley Koute.&#13;
W. H.Clark, Agent,&#13;
- " " ' I f "•"VW*&#13;
ft ,.r_ .•&#13;
R W. DANIELS,&#13;
OElfERAt AUCTIONEER.&#13;
Satistacucn Guaranteed. For information&#13;
call at DISPATCH Office or address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d, 2. Lyndilla phone&#13;
connection: Auctiori* bills and tita cups&#13;
-iafcnished free.&#13;
Expert Auctioneer&#13;
Over 20 Years Experience&#13;
DEXTER, MICH.&#13;
PHONE 3«, FREE BOX 6 8&#13;
&gt; * •&#13;
J. W. B I R D&#13;
' PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
For information, cnll at the Pinckney Din-&#13;
PATCU offiee. Auction Bills Free&#13;
Webster RuraTPhone&#13;
" Arrangement* made for sale by phone at&#13;
' my expense.&#13;
"'$•- A&lt;Mress, Dexter, tttchloan&#13;
' ' *,&#13;
SOUTH K A B I 0 * .&#13;
Lulu Abbott is in A n n Arbor&#13;
this week taking t r e a t m e n t for her&#13;
eyes.&#13;
Mrs. R. M. Glenn is nursing h e r&#13;
sic sister, Mrs. George Monroe of&#13;
of Howell.&#13;
Thomas Ross is laying t h e&#13;
foundation to the houses of W m .&#13;
Bland and C. B r o g a n .&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J o h n G a r d n e r a r e&#13;
entertaining t h e i r A u n t and Cousin&#13;
from Detroit this week.&#13;
About thirty of t h e pouug peo&#13;
pie of this place h u n g a May b a s -&#13;
ket at the homo of Mrs. T h o m a&#13;
F i t / s i m m o u s S a t u r d a y night. After&#13;
playing games aud tripping tn«&#13;
light fantastic toe to the music&#13;
rendered by Mrs. Albert Frost all&#13;
returned home declaring they had&#13;
a good time.&#13;
8nb*crtb**Dr the Pluekiar DUpatefc&#13;
All th« t*v* tor $1.00 MI&#13;
2 W C T 5 £ 2 5 WITCH HAZIX&#13;
S A L V E For P B M , B a n * .&#13;
Worse Still.&#13;
Griggs—The idea of your letting&#13;
your wife go round saying she made a&#13;
man of you! You don't hear my wife&#13;
saying that Briggs—No, but I heard&#13;
her telling my wife that she did her&#13;
best.&#13;
FARMERS!&#13;
We pay C A S H for your&#13;
Cream. We make&#13;
prices based on the&#13;
official N. Y. market&#13;
quotations for each&#13;
day so t h a t you know&#13;
exactly what you are&#13;
doing&#13;
We have n o t h i n g to&#13;
do with T h e G r e a t&#13;
B u t t e r Trust, T h e&#13;
American Farm P r o -&#13;
ducts Company, or&#13;
any trust whatever.&#13;
W r i t e us&#13;
Dudley Butter Co.&#13;
F. F. DUDLEY, THUS. AND GEft'L RNfi'R&#13;
OQI* r»in Wodawday.&#13;
O t a . Hicks of Jaokton viwUd&#13;
putfttft bare this week.&#13;
Mrs. E, R. Brows and daughter,&#13;
Uiadye are on the sick li»t:&#13;
Entertain meat at M. E. church next&#13;
Wednesday evening—coma.&#13;
G. W. dykes of Detroit ie spending&#13;
a few days with his brother and family&#13;
here.&#13;
SJra. E. M. Fobey and.two children&#13;
ol Wood more visited her mother, Mrs.&#13;
iSweeim tn bere this week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Reason have&#13;
moved into the Goodiicb bouse on&#13;
Pearl street for the summer.&#13;
Ice eream at the town hall, Saturday&#13;
evening, June 1, served by the&#13;
seniors ot the P. H. 8. Come.&#13;
Ice hiss froze qaite hard several&#13;
nights the past week. Overcoats and&#13;
mittens are stilt useful articles.&#13;
Read tke communication from an&#13;
old Pinckney boy on page 4. Others&#13;
are reque^twd to also send in suggestions.&#13;
Mr. and Jlrs. Chas. VanKeuren of&#13;
Howell were the guests of her parents&#13;
(x. W. Teeple and lainily, the past&#13;
week.&#13;
The Livingston county teachers association&#13;
meet at Howell Saturday at&#13;
10:30. A good program has been arranged.&#13;
The seniors will again serve ice&#13;
cream at the town hall Saturday&#13;
evening, June 1. Everyone should&#13;
give them a lift.&#13;
We are glad to inform our readers&#13;
that Mrs. Louis Boucher, nee Miss&#13;
Julia Brady, who has been at the sanitorium&#13;
here for the past three weeks,&#13;
is rapidly improving.&#13;
The State Sanitorium directors the&#13;
past week purchased of Cash Valentine&#13;
of Webster, Washtenaw county,&#13;
a fine span of horses for the sanitorium&#13;
farm. The price paid was $350.&#13;
6. J. Haetcke set out 10,000 young&#13;
locust trees on his farm in Genoa one&#13;
day last week. He set out 8,000 of&#13;
the same kind a few years ago and in&#13;
a few years more they will become&#13;
valuble timber.&#13;
Arrangements have been made with&#13;
the Grand Trunk Railroad company&#13;
so that notices of the local trains&#13;
will hereafter be published in the&#13;
DISPATCH as well as notices of specials,&#13;
excursions, ect.&#13;
The many friends of Mr. and Mrs&#13;
S G. Kin. of Breckenridge, will be&#13;
sorry to learn that their family has&#13;
been passing thiough a severe seige of&#13;
diptheria in which one son died and&#13;
one girl is still very ill but hopes are&#13;
entertained for ber recovery.&#13;
The seventh annual Bible conference&#13;
and Christian Workers institute&#13;
will be held at Lake Orion July 18 to&#13;
29. The program contains a list of&#13;
prominent speakers and Bible students.&#13;
This annual rreeting has become&#13;
very popular and is largely&#13;
attended. The lake and grounds is a&#13;
beautiful place and one can combine&#13;
pleasure with the work.&#13;
Wou'd it not be a good plan for the&#13;
committee of the old boys and girls&#13;
association to get together for|organization&#13;
this evening or Friday, while&#13;
the present president, G. W. Sykes is&#13;
with us to offer suggestions? The&#13;
following is the committee:&#13;
if. t Church Ikiu.&#13;
All iervioti war* wall atteided&#13;
Sunday. Sunday school 111, collection&#13;
1828.&#13;
Next Sunday morning the pMtor&#13;
will preach a memorial sermon and&#13;
all are invited, especially all old&#13;
soldiers. Come early as ail seats will&#13;
be filled. Seats reserved for soldiers&#13;
however. Tell yonr friends.&#13;
Sunday evening there will be a&#13;
union temperance meeting at the M.&#13;
E. cbnrcb to which all are most&#13;
cordially invited. Rev. Qates of the&#13;
Cong'l church will deliver the address&#13;
ut the evening followed by remarks by&#13;
others.&#13;
The teacher ot the Old Peoples&#13;
Bible class, (class No. 8) would like to&#13;
see a rally of not only the members of&#13;
the class next Sunday but ot alt old&#13;
people. Come to the memorial service&#13;
and remain for a short session of&#13;
the sehool.&#13;
Do not forget the entertainment by&#13;
the young people of tbe Sunday&#13;
school Wednesday, May 29, given by&#13;
Mrs. Lulu Belle Uodda, and impersonator.&#13;
Admission, 10 and 20 cents.&#13;
HOT1CB.&#13;
The people of Pinckney and others&#13;
are hereby ordered not to throw rubbish&#13;
in the highways. It is not only unsightly&#13;
but dangerous and there may be&#13;
an accident that the township would&#13;
be liable for.&#13;
FRED GBIEVK,&#13;
Highway Commissioner.&#13;
—i m m&#13;
Notice!&#13;
The board of Review of the township&#13;
of Putam will be in session at&#13;
the office of the township clerk on&#13;
Tuesdiy and Wednesday, May 21, 22,&#13;
27 and 28, 1907, for the purpose of&#13;
hearing any who desire to be heard.&#13;
Wm. Miller,&#13;
Supervisor.&#13;
^Casoasweet for babies is the best&#13;
remedy for colic, summer complaint,&#13;
diarrhoea and sour stomach. It is especially&#13;
good in cases of teething&#13;
when irritation affects the stomach&#13;
and intestines. Casasweet is a pleasant,&#13;
safe remedy, containing neither&#13;
opiates nor narcatics; all the ingredients&#13;
are painted plainly on the wrapper.&#13;
Endorsed by mothers because it&#13;
acts so quickly.&#13;
Sold by F. • . 81*ler, Drugglat.&#13;
Guy L. Teeple, chairman.&#13;
E. R. Brown.&#13;
Geo. Reason.&#13;
Mra. J. A. Cadwell.&#13;
Mrs. H. W. Crofoot. IT"&#13;
SAGINAW, MICHIGAN&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
You are invited to the memorial&#13;
address Sunday morning, May 26.&#13;
There will be Union Temperance&#13;
meeting in the M. E. church in the&#13;
evening.&#13;
The pastor delivered two very impressive&#13;
sermons last Sunday. The&#13;
male quartette was much enjoyed at&#13;
each service.&#13;
Rev. Gates, pastor of the Cong'l&#13;
church, will move his family into the&#13;
parsonage the last of the&#13;
week. Tbe pastor is making many&#13;
friends here and bin family will be&#13;
welcome.&#13;
The parsonage is being decorated&#13;
on tbe interior and made ready for the&#13;
pastor's family.&#13;
My&#13;
WALL PAPER&#13;
Stock&#13;
Has been moved to the late&#13;
Thomes Clinton building,&#13;
which I must close out at&#13;
once for ,&#13;
Less than one-half wholesale&#13;
cost&#13;
I have plenty left&#13;
W. B. DARR0W&#13;
.y.r&#13;
"X&#13;
\&#13;
. 1 - - ^&#13;
.V"&#13;
-iWfprtfM **•* • *&#13;
«. V&#13;
-4K •'r*»»»j* laqfttit** •&#13;
ja-*</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch May 23, 1907</text>
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                <text>May 23, 1907 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1907-05-23</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <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>
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            <elementText elementTextId="37062">
              <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>
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              <text>PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, MAY. 80. 1907.&#13;
Bowman's&#13;
£ • • &gt; •&#13;
iS!&#13;
# ' * • a&#13;
fe"-'''.v*'&#13;
For&#13;
P r I c e&#13;
For&#13;
Quality&#13;
Everything for Summer Needs&#13;
NHW Uibnons, Laue^, Emhroidiery, Hosiery, Underwear, Corse te,&#13;
India Linens, White (jonds, Art Denims, Silkaliues, Ladies" and Mens&#13;
Gloves Work Shirt.?, Overalls, duuall Hardware.&#13;
Our Notion Department is complete with item* at saving prices.&#13;
House Furnishing floo'H nt every description.&#13;
b n « m e l Dlah P « m 2 0 c E n a m e l W a s h D a t l n IOC&#13;
b n a m e l O l p p c n IOc 6 Q u a r t tin M i l k pans Sc&#13;
IOc Q u a l i t y D u s t Pans 9 c&#13;
The Cleveland "Hydro Carbenite" Roof Paint&#13;
The Best in the World&#13;
Our price, on this great Roof Paint is only 5 0 c per gallon&#13;
&amp;V*l*y day is bargain day&#13;
E. A. Bowman's&#13;
Howell's Busy Store&#13;
T e n d e r e d a R e c e p t i o n&#13;
Tuesday evening the people of this&#13;
village to toe number of about 100,&#13;
met at the pleasant home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs, J . A. Cadwell and tendered a&#13;
reception to Rev. and Bits. A. O. Gates&#13;
the new pad tor of the Oong'l church.&#13;
A program of songs and readings&#13;
was rendered and Rev. D. C. Littlejohn&#13;
pastor of the M. E. church spoke a few&#13;
words of welcome which was responded&#13;
to by Jftev. Gates.&#13;
There seems to be a spirit of unity&#13;
among the churches of this place such&#13;
as has not been evident in many years&#13;
and it is hoped that it may continue&#13;
as it is by litis alone that the most&#13;
good can be accomplished.&#13;
After the speeches the rattle of&#13;
dishes proclaimed that the ladies of&#13;
the society bad not been idle and a&#13;
bountiful lunch was served of coffee,&#13;
sandwiches, cake, etc. and the guests&#13;
returned home feeling that it had&#13;
been good to be there and that a new&#13;
fellowship had sprung up. May these&#13;
[social gatherings increase.&#13;
GASOLINE j&#13;
RED STAR BRAND,!&#13;
B«Ht By Test&#13;
DOES NOT SMOKE&#13;
LOCAL* N E W S .&#13;
ASK YOUR DEALER&#13;
t26&#13;
*5or "Nta^&#13;
On a c c o u n t of b a d weather in&#13;
April, have decided to make t h e&#13;
same offer in May. F o r only fifty&#13;
cents e x t r a&#13;
I Will Give&#13;
W i t h every dozen photos&#13;
at $2.00 o r more p e r&#13;
dozen, o n e $1.00 p o r t r a i t&#13;
for 16X20 frame.&#13;
D o n H f a i l to Get One&#13;
Photograph SWdio,&#13;
MI8Y B. CHIPELL, Stockbridge&#13;
Ice Cream Soda&#13;
C o m e in a n d oat&#13;
a p u r e , refreshing&#13;
dish of - - -&#13;
"Silk Floss" Ice Cream&#13;
either in the form of&#13;
a "Srmdae or Soda."&#13;
1., y W * ' m i I I&#13;
W a t e r s ,&#13;
• n fee.&#13;
NEVER CLOSED&#13;
]•• w&#13;
Xor\n «J "fcm ItoM&#13;
jfc. K L SVaVer,&#13;
"PT0».&#13;
Cecil Sigler was in Detroit the past&#13;
week.&#13;
We shall certainly have a short&#13;
summer.&#13;
S. Grimes and wife visited her&#13;
sister in Howell a few days the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Serena C. Flanigan of Erie,&#13;
Pa., is visiting her sister, Mrs. M.&#13;
Kearney.&#13;
Tne ice man has certainly been&#13;
handed the 'icy mitt" by the weather&#13;
man this season.&#13;
The Farnam residence, in the west&#13;
part of town, is haying improvements&#13;
made inside and out.&#13;
Somt of the teachers from this vicinity&#13;
took in the teachers association&#13;
at Howell Saturday.&#13;
Do not forget the Seniors serve ice&#13;
cream at the town haU Saturday&#13;
evening of this week.&#13;
Thos, Burchiel, who has been spending&#13;
a couple of weeks in Canada, returned&#13;
home Thursday.&#13;
In our item last week about, the&#13;
sanitorium team the amount should&#13;
have read $375 instead of $350.&#13;
Dr. Jeanette Hrighara was in town&#13;
last Friday to assist, Dr. Sigler in&#13;
some surgical cases at the Sanitarium-&#13;
Obas. Reason and wife are again&#13;
residents of Pinckney having moved&#13;
from Pontiac to their place in the&#13;
western part of the village.&#13;
Raymond Sigler of the [J. of M.&#13;
was home again Friday and Saturday.&#13;
His wife was called tc Northviile&#13;
to care for her mother who is itl.&#13;
Joe Kennedy, who has heen working&#13;
the past six months or more in a&#13;
printing office in Detroit, is visiting&#13;
his parents here a conple of week.&#13;
The storm that &gt;trnck tins section&#13;
Sunday must, have heen the tail end&#13;
as ot,h*r places in the state were&#13;
visited with severe storms which did&#13;
considerable damage. Snow to the&#13;
depth of several inches fell in some&#13;
parts of the state.&#13;
We had a variety of weather Sunday.&#13;
In the early morning a fire was&#13;
comfortable; by 10 a.m. the sun was&#13;
| shining and it, was warm to oppressiveness;&#13;
thunder storm about 11 and&#13;
| in the afternoon the weather became&#13;
| cold and one needed an overcoat to&#13;
ride in and fires were again needed.&#13;
Owing to the heavy rain last&#13;
Wednesday evening only ahout thirty&#13;
attended the reception given by the&#13;
Epwor*h League at the parsonage.&#13;
However the scarcity of numbers was&#13;
made in entknsiasm and a very pleasant&#13;
time was spent It is an intention&#13;
of this society to give mere of&#13;
this class of entertainment and thus&#13;
keep in touch with the people and&#13;
eaoh other.&#13;
No school today.&#13;
The mail carriers have a vacation&#13;
today.&#13;
Learn to say Murphy and Dolan&#13;
alter June 1st.&#13;
The chance club were entertained&#13;
by Marie Brogan Tuesday evening.&#13;
Some of our citizens are attending&#13;
the decoration day exercises at Howell&#13;
taday.&#13;
Decoration day will be observed at&#13;
Hamburg today with appropriate exercises.&#13;
Friday, May 31, is the date that&#13;
President Roosevelt is to speak at&#13;
Lansing.&#13;
G. W. Reasou is making a good recovery&#13;
Irom the recent removal of&#13;
a tumor of the neck.&#13;
Six cans of wall-eyed pike were&#13;
placed in Silver lake south of this village&#13;
Uie first of the week.&#13;
Members of the K. 0. T. M. M. will&#13;
please take note that assessment No.&#13;
139 is due and must be paid by June 1.&#13;
That fine exhibition of fishing tackle&#13;
at The Teeple Hardware Co's. store&#13;
attracts the sportsman ard draws&#13;
trade.&#13;
Many of the village schools have&#13;
their annual catalogues out tor 1907-8&#13;
It is a good thing to have the advertising&#13;
out early.&#13;
Mrs. Geo. Reason Jr, and children&#13;
ot Detroit were guests of her parents,&#13;
F. A. Sigler and wife and other relatives&#13;
here the past week.&#13;
W E. Murphy, our popnlar&#13;
tfroceryman, is to take F. E. Dolan,&#13;
his oltf clerk, as full partner&#13;
commencing June 1st.&#13;
J. W. Placeway is in Detroit taking&#13;
treatment at Harper hospital.&#13;
His remaining eye is troubling him&#13;
and fears are entertained that he may&#13;
lose the sight entirely.&#13;
The many friends of Dr. C. L. Sigler&#13;
will rejoice to know that he is&#13;
rapidly regaining his health. Mr.&#13;
Shehan reports him looking fine and&#13;
a recent picture received would indicate&#13;
that he will soon be a tit&#13;
candidate for the "fat man1' in some&#13;
show. He ha•( accepted a position on&#13;
the Sanitorium medical staff and will&#13;
remain a tew weeks longer. It, is&#13;
needless to say that Dr. H. F. is "go&#13;
ing some" these days but then he always&#13;
had a reputation for that.&#13;
Although we attended the Ham&#13;
burg Sunday, school convention last&#13;
week it slipped o u r mind and we failed&#13;
to mention it in our last issue.&#13;
The convention was largely attended&#13;
and very interesting paper* were i&gt;ad&#13;
although there was not time to dis*&#13;
cuss them. The music tnrnistod by&#13;
the Pinckney Male q u r t e t t e and the&#13;
North Hamburg Ladies quartette&#13;
was excellent and added to*the entertainment&#13;
Also the solos bv Mi sees&#13;
Kice and Rolieon.&#13;
Commencement pre?entS&#13;
We have a fine line of Books&#13;
Toilet Case*, Manicure Sew&#13;
and other Fancy Articles that&#13;
make ^ - / 1 *bv »L/&#13;
gradual).)&#13;
*S EYES.&#13;
n$&#13;
' • &amp;&#13;
ure&#13;
L)nig«—_P reecnJ^s e in the&#13;
the sevcurator&#13;
F. A. s r t eye&#13;
atch.&#13;
,ead,&#13;
a&#13;
\&#13;
&lt;* the&#13;
the absoiut^ •£;„.&#13;
ftdeaces will be V&#13;
world, and see If some betf*&#13;
nut be found to escape their present&#13;
misery than by seeking oblivion in th&#13;
icy waters or the North river. O.&#13;
course, like all new and startling innovations&#13;
the new bureau was considered&#13;
by mauy as doomed to failure—&#13;
that people who wished to kill themselves&#13;
would not stop to see if there&#13;
were hope and prospects of new life&#13;
in the little reception room of the Salvationists;&#13;
but all this was before the&#13;
first haggard, wild-eyed_creature had&#13;
knocked hesitatingly at the door of&#13;
Colonel Holland's office, or bad been&#13;
ushered, i n t f v ^ l motherly presence&#13;
"^S.Jlear. below. In&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
Read our "Special"&#13;
Adv. on page four of&#13;
this paper. No room&#13;
for it here&#13;
L. L. Holmes Clothing Co.&#13;
Pinckney, Mich. i&#13;
.._J&#13;
N O T I C E !&#13;
There will be a change in the firm of&#13;
W, E. MURPHY, on June 1, »907, after&#13;
which time the firm shall be known as&#13;
M u r p h y $c Dolan&#13;
It would be well for all having accounts&#13;
with the old firm, to call and look them&#13;
over before June 1, as a new set of&#13;
books will be opened on that date.&#13;
W. B. Murphy&#13;
Do You Fish?&#13;
if so, You surely should see our&#13;
fine and complete line c f Fishing&#13;
Tackel, casting rods, baits reels,&#13;
lines, minnow nets and pails. In&#13;
fact everything in the fishing fine&#13;
i&#13;
- . . - * * •&#13;
See our show case—it will&#13;
fairly make your mouth water i&#13;
r * i&#13;
:• • &gt;&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co.&#13;
•'""8&#13;
• • • I ' ¥• ' ; ' •&#13;
* , . &amp; * •&#13;
«V&lt;U&lt;: *',-».1tfilv&#13;
•ST.?"&#13;
-?—,«»«•' y ••w»——Hi&#13;
&lt; .•*;. - W .&#13;
? f &gt; &gt;&#13;
V (••-. ••; .,«*»•• • •&#13;
' • '.«1 • *.&#13;
:.-,. r ^ . ^ j , ,-^. ---^-.-¾^ ^-:^:, 1W" ,jr:'j.,' " M l&#13;
- 1 "&#13;
&lt; .&#13;
v . *&#13;
y&#13;
L***1ft«&#13;
&gt; -&#13;
&lt;-—..&#13;
1 ' t&#13;
ginctmyt fiispatrh.&#13;
FRANK L- AMJKKWB, i ' u b .&#13;
PINCKNEY, MICHIGAN&#13;
Trio Old Fashioned Scrap BooK.&#13;
And then there ia ih« setup book.&#13;
Do you remember your aunt's or your&#13;
mother's old scrap book? What a fas&#13;
cJuating volume it was in .your child-&#13;
Itsh eyes. There was no order to it;&#13;
just a thiiiK that had pleased its maker---&#13;
a sketch, a joke, u bit ul pathos,&#13;
a tunny picture, an elevating sentiment,&#13;
a short story of unusual interest,&#13;
something about some one whom&#13;
yon all knew. Every leaf had beeu&#13;
approved by the judgment of a reader&#13;
whose taste was very similar to your&#13;
own; and you read it greedily, and&#13;
yet with the feeling of the child "who&#13;
does not want to linish his piece of&#13;
cake too soon. 1 wonder how many&#13;
people of comparative leisure are&#13;
keeping scrap-books in this steam cugine&#13;
a#«, remarks * writer in National&#13;
Herald. The "comic supplement"&#13;
is no gutatitute for them to place in&#13;
t h e h a M * of children. If&#13;
,lhe very plethj&#13;
we see&#13;
re&#13;
)d&#13;
5«tbreak or o a e which the&#13;
Ish authorities, with t h e loyal nat&#13;
i v e force* a t their disposal cannot&#13;
^oppress. India is an enormous country,&#13;
with a dense population, with&#13;
many conflicting racial and religious&#13;
elements. While the Hindoos form&#13;
numerically probably the larger part&#13;
of the native population the Mohammedans&#13;
and others are many millions&#13;
in number, and anything like cohesion&#13;
in an attempt to drive out the foreigners&#13;
and to overcome British sovereignty&#13;
is wildly improbable, says the&#13;
Troy Times. The more intelligent and&#13;
progressive of the natives no doubt&#13;
realize that the protection afforded&#13;
by British rule is in reality their political&#13;
and material salvation.&#13;
Some Fast English Trains.&#13;
For. a really magnificent exhibit of&#13;
regularly maintained high-speed service—&#13;
one which provides a decided&#13;
public benefit—England leads us a few&#13;
points; for her populous cities afford a&#13;
dense passenger traffic to support such&#13;
a service which has no counterparts&#13;
in America, except in a few places, remarks&#13;
B. B. Adams in Scrihner's&#13;
Magazine. To take only one or two&#13;
from dozens of examples, the number&#13;
of daily trains between London and&#13;
Birmingham (11.1 miles) over the London&#13;
&amp; Northwestern, making over fifi&#13;
miles an hour, is seven; between London&#13;
and Exeter, over the Great Western&#13;
(1!M miles), the number running&#13;
at a rate -over .r&gt;.ri miles is four. One&#13;
of these later trains makes the 110&#13;
miles between London and Bristol in&#13;
120 minutes, in each direction, every&#13;
day, and does this with remarkable&#13;
regularity nnd punctuality.&#13;
President Roosevelt may find support&#13;
for his theory that under certain&#13;
conditions war may be more honorable&#13;
than peace and better for mankind&#13;
in the utterances of Dr. Kmil Reich,&#13;
the Hungarian historian and philosopher,&#13;
now lecturing in London. In a&#13;
letter to a, New York paper Br. Reich&#13;
snys he does not believe? in peace congresses,&#13;
and adds: "1 believe, after&#13;
.15 years of study of the past, and observation&#13;
of the present, that conflict&#13;
made us, conflict keeps us going, and&#13;
without conflict the groat, question of&#13;
nations can never be solved. Shake-&#13;
•spoares are made by the destruction&#13;
of armadas, and not by universities,&#13;
lecture rooms and public, libraries.&#13;
The father of Sophocles was Salamis.&#13;
General disarmament means stagnation&#13;
and degeneration." When Mr.&#13;
Carnegie hears this he will be greatly&#13;
displeased.&#13;
F ROTTEN.&#13;
T h t Gould Divorce Brings Out a Po&gt;&#13;
Pico Scandal.&#13;
Mrs. Catherine Clemmons Gould&#13;
spurned a $),000,000 bribe, dangled before&#13;
her by her husband, Howard&#13;
Gould, to induce her to get an absolute&#13;
divorce from him, according t o . a&#13;
story told by W. C. Woodward, alias&#13;
"Big" Hawley, who Is suing the millionaire&#13;
for $250,000.&#13;
"1 know positively that Howard&#13;
Gould, or his family, if he should back&#13;
down, will give Mr*. Gould $1,000,00«&#13;
lo get a divorce from her husband,"&#13;
suid Hawley.&#13;
Mrs. Could has seat word to Police&#13;
Commissioner Hingham that she is&#13;
ready lo appear at police headquarters&#13;
on his appointment and tell all she&#13;
knows of the alleged use of the de-&#13;
FR1CK REPORTED TO H A V E LOST&#13;
T H I R T Y M I L L I O N S IN&#13;
STOCKS.&#13;
BLEEDING THE GAMBLERS&#13;
Schwab Said to Be Hard P r e w e d —&#13;
Corey Selling Stock for Revenge on&#13;
I L S. Steel Co.&#13;
Millionaires Lose.&#13;
Henry C. Prick lost $30,000,000 In the&#13;
Wall fc-ireei. slump, according lo a reporl&#13;
current In New York banking j lectivo department in her divorce case,&#13;
circles. The head of a great iiank as- j On the authority of a high official In&#13;
sorted Mr. Friek was loaded with high- j the police department it is stated that&#13;
p-iced siocks when the turn of the j an unexpected turn lias been given the&#13;
market came, and was forced to dump j police end of the Gould case. While&#13;
large holdings at whatever they would investigating the manner in which&#13;
bring. Mr. Prick is said to have been Howard Gould secured the aid of the&#13;
carrying hundreds of thousands of j police department, Commissioner Biug-&#13;
8h*r«f, and when he was compelled to I bam struck the trail of widespread&#13;
unload this burden there was a devas- &lt; g r a I t among the detectives. He has&#13;
taring deluge on the New York Stock h e a r n e d l t j B aiu^ed, that for vears&#13;
" - - ^ , ^ . ¾ . ¾ ^ 1 ^ the detective deimrtment ha* been&#13;
h it. It Is said Mr. Frick was&#13;
teat stock plunger the world&#13;
r known, and that the story of&#13;
eratlons, If, it evt?r becomes&#13;
, will be one of the most amaznaiieial&#13;
deals on record. Mr.&#13;
1» something of a tuaa of my&amp;-&#13;
and he never lets the public into&#13;
confidence- It iaas been known,&#13;
ever, that he was piling up mlls&#13;
with great rapidity, and it was&#13;
pposed he was shrewd enough to&#13;
scape with hia gains. Now it appears&#13;
hat his fabulous winnings were "on&#13;
paper."&#13;
Rumor has it that Charles M.&#13;
Schwab has recently disposed of large&#13;
""holdings of the United States Steel&#13;
made use of by rich men to further&#13;
their wlahes and the detectives who&#13;
served these rich men were largely rewarded.&#13;
In some Instances it Is said&#13;
t h a t speculative accounts were carried&#13;
which have made certain officials of&#13;
the department rich men in return for&#13;
services rendered privately. A police&#13;
Investigation even more far reaching&#13;
than the Lexow affair may result, and&#13;
many very prominent men will be Involved.&#13;
To Die In the Chair.&#13;
"Revenge renews our happy love in&#13;
heaven," chiseled by him on the tombstone&#13;
of his wife, caused the conviction&#13;
corporation common stock, and to this j Qf John Bell for the murder of Dr.&#13;
Is attributed partly the recent heavi- ( Charles Wilmot Townsend, a Staten.&#13;
ness in that stock. The liquidation is i Island physician. Bell's motion for a&#13;
said to have been necessary with cer- j new trial was denied and Judge Abbott&#13;
tain banking interests who have be- | sentenced him to be electrocuted July&#13;
friended him financially to lift or pro- i i,&#13;
vide for certain underlying bonds of j Bell, who, during his trial, had di*-&#13;
l ^ e Bethlehem Steel Co., which were , charged one attornev for allowing his&#13;
generally supposed to have been pro- f half brother to testify- that Bell had&#13;
vided for some time ago. confessed killing Dr. Townsend for&#13;
It is also thought possible that thw . revenge, hired another attorney, but&#13;
report that Mr. Schwab has mortgaged [delivered the closing address to the&#13;
his palatial residence on Riverside ; j u r v himself. His speech was an imdrlve.&#13;
New York, for something like ( passioned one. He closed with:&#13;
$1000,000-, may also be connected with i »i iim n o t Harry K. Thaw—but plain&#13;
this situation. . J o n n B e ll. T n a v e n 0 wealth—b«t If I&#13;
Within the past few days a number bad T c o u i d produce witnesses whose&#13;
of brokers have been selling large testimony would acquit me."&#13;
T H E S T E A M K R NAOMI * U N N 8&#13;
M I O L A K E A N D F I V E&#13;
PERISH.&#13;
FLAMES ATTRACTED H E L P&#13;
blocks of stocks and bonds of the&#13;
United States Steel corporation&#13;
The jury waa out three hours, returning&#13;
a verdict of murder in the&#13;
Thursday it was declared that prac- ; ftrh: degree. Bell remained cool, bit'&#13;
tically all the securities unloaded ] h i a ; , | 8 t e r a n d stepmother fainted,&#13;
were holdings of William Ellis Corey.&#13;
This action is said to be in accordance&#13;
with a deal made with the corporation&#13;
at the time he was re-elected presl-&#13;
T w o Hundred Killed.&#13;
A dlspatoh from Sydney, N. S. W.,&#13;
dent, A Pittsburg report savs Cerey is ' s a &gt;'s a report has reached there that&#13;
dumping his stock into the market for a hurricane and tidal wave swept&#13;
the purpose of depressing values. j °ver the Caroline islands on April U0.&#13;
It Is understood that the officials j Immense damage was done to property&#13;
demanded his resignation, and Corey ' a n d - L&gt;0° Persons are reported killed,&#13;
is attempting tu retaliate by selling ] Th(&gt; Caroline archipelago is a German&#13;
his stock. I i\)ssession vomposed of about fi2."&#13;
islands, with a total area of abouter560&#13;
Manufacturers on Record. I square miles and an estimated popuThe&#13;
National Association of Manu- ation of about :!fi,0()0, including about&#13;
facturers went on record in New York&#13;
In favor of a revision of the tariff at&#13;
the earliest opportunity and the negotiation&#13;
of more reciprocity treaties. A&#13;
1,000 Europeans, They are mostly very&#13;
fertile and produce nil kinds of tropical&#13;
fruits and produce. The natives&#13;
are well developed and intelligent,&#13;
and a very extensive commerce is&#13;
mostly in the hands of&#13;
Three of the younger generation of&#13;
the Vanderbilt. family are serving the&#13;
New York Central. Alfred G. Vanderbilt&#13;
has his desk in the financial&#13;
department, Cornelius finds his ginfest&#13;
interest in the shop and construction&#13;
department, and is s;iid to know&#13;
a railroad from the roadbed r.p. His&#13;
cousin, William K. Vanderbilt, Jr.. has&#13;
combined both the financial and practical&#13;
training.&#13;
.iveiy debate preceded the vote which ; ( . a i T i e d on&#13;
was upon the acceptance of the report t h c ( ; o r m a n ^ , 7 C o " w h i c h ' h a r s t a -&#13;
1 itCv " " l a n a " d r e C l ' I , , o n s o n a11 f h 0 morv i m l ) o r t a n f&#13;
A " ' , . , , I islands. The group is on the equator,&#13;
A great number of resolutions were ; directly n o n h of the easterly coast&#13;
J ^ « ^ 1 "• ?* . l f ! ! l o r w 7 n p n t ; f,f t h e o f A„s ( r aiia and a little south of tho&#13;
open shop, industrial education, im-. r O H t o f r o m „ . n v a i i t o the Philippines.&#13;
provement of the consular service \&#13;
Z?Z^rli0n 0 V h 0 ' i V e r a ? d h a r ' : R ^ n i o n Was Prevented.&#13;
nor congress, and a. request that the&#13;
president withhold his approval of the '. T n e burning of the stamer Naomi&#13;
new German agreement until the prob- Tuesday morning interfered materially&#13;
ible effects on domestic labor and in- w l t n t n ° plans for the wedding of Miss&#13;
dustry can be learned. ; Mary Ruerger, daughter of Mr. and&#13;
Opposition was voted to all illegal : MJ'S- John Buerger, to Louis F. Hake,&#13;
combinations of either capital or of of Grand Rapids, Mich., in. Milwaukee&#13;
labor and it was decided to raise %\,- Tuesday.&#13;
)00,00(( in the next, three years to carry Four of the bridgegroom's brothers&#13;
m a campaign of education concerning , were on the boat, having intended to&#13;
dictatorial combinations. ° go there for the wedding. The party&#13;
— . : inobuled Dr. and Mrs. Wm. Hake, Mr.&#13;
a.nd Mrs. Edward Hake, Albert and&#13;
Paul Hake and Mrs. John Platte and&#13;
her small son.&#13;
They lost all their clothing, including&#13;
dress soils, some handsome gowns&#13;
and valuable jewelry. Tho wedding&#13;
was to have been been the occasion&#13;
for a reunion of six of the brothers.&#13;
A Woman Diplomat.&#13;
Michigan will be most creditably&#13;
represented at. the peace conference at&#13;
Tho Hague in Miss Margaret A. Hanna,&#13;
who has been appointed secretary&#13;
:o the assistant secretary of state, A.&#13;
A. Adee, and one of Ihe secretaries to&#13;
the delegation.&#13;
Miss Hanna is the elder of the two 77 j"" ~. ' .&#13;
laughters of Edwin P. Hanna, solid- U a r S i m P r i s o n e d -&#13;
or of the navy department. She was • -^ Hindu revolutionist, who aroused&#13;
born in Ann Arbor during the latter the fanatics of the Punjab into a state&#13;
part of her father's course as a stti- °f great excitement by circulating the&#13;
.lent In the university. She has been ; fantastic statement that the alleged&#13;
for several years in the state do- \ epidemic of plague did not exist and&#13;
partment, and has won by her discre- that the 100,000 deaths weekly a t t r i -&#13;
tion and cleverness the distinction of ' " f e ^ to it. were really caused by the&#13;
iieing known as the "woman dlplo- I poisoning of drinking wells by governmat."&#13;
She will sail for The Hague on ! rnenf emissaries, was sentenced to&#13;
June 5. - | two years' rigorous imprisonment. An&#13;
accomplice who dropped harmless&#13;
Would They Run7&#13;
In an interview in New York Gen.&#13;
Kuroki praised the United States, and&#13;
lec.lared that he never expects trouble&#13;
ictween Japan and the United States.&#13;
!n reply to a question as to a possible&#13;
A-ar over the Philippines, Kuroki is&#13;
•juoted as having laughingly replied:&#13;
balls into the wells, alleging that ho&#13;
did so by order of the government,&#13;
was condemned to IS months' impris&#13;
onment.&#13;
Why Wolves Are Numerous.&#13;
Tf Michigan authorities are to rid&#13;
the upper peninsula of wolves It will&#13;
"When you make war on us we will &lt; nnI&gt;r h e w*th the aid of Wisconsin, says&#13;
•iin away from you. Wherever I have K- ^ . Nelwon. He exnlains that, there&#13;
:&gt;eon T have found a genuine welcnm- J a r p r n t itifies in Wisconsin that, pay no&#13;
ng of friendliness among Americans \ bounty for wolf scalps and that the&#13;
'or Japan, and I can assure that, in $2 bounty offered by the state is no&#13;
Tapan there is the same genuine feel- ! inducement_ for men to hunt wolves,&#13;
ng of respect and admiration for ' Even If MiAigan should offer a houn-&#13;
\merica. We know what a great coun- fy aR high as $75 or $100 that, would&#13;
not depopulate the upper peninsula of&#13;
wolves when they are bred In hunrfrprta&#13;
arrr\»c fVio VVtcrrmsin U n a&#13;
Steamers Came In Time to Save Al&#13;
m But Five—Captain Traill Severe!)&#13;
Bu-ned.&#13;
t u r n e d to Water's Edge.&#13;
Four coal heavers, trapped like ratt&#13;
in the hold of the vessel, were bumec&#13;
to death, James M. Rhodes, of Detroit&#13;
was burned so badly that he died i&#13;
few hours later, dozens of passengers^&#13;
escaped in scant attire, their -bodies:*&#13;
covered with blisters from the heal&#13;
when the steamer Naomi, of the Cros&#13;
by line, Capt. Thomas Traill, bound&#13;
from Grand Haven to Milwaukee, wat&#13;
destroyed by fire In mldlake betweer&#13;
1:30 and 3 o'clock.&#13;
The glare of the flames that leaped&#13;
far into the glare of the inky sky attracted&#13;
vessels to the rejwiue frorr&#13;
miles around. The s t e a l e r Kausa«&#13;
twin" of the Naomi, was steaming&#13;
across the lake in the opposite direction,&#13;
bound from Milwaukee to Granc&#13;
Haven. The Kaunas' lookout saw the&#13;
red glare In the sky miles away, and&#13;
at his alarm the Kansas hastened with&#13;
all speed to the side of the burning&#13;
vessel.&#13;
The Kerr, a lumber barge plying between&#13;
between Chicago and Duluth&#13;
and the steamer Saxonia also sighted&#13;
the burning Naomi, and vied with&#13;
each other In reaching her side. As&#13;
the two boats plowed under full steam&#13;
down upon the Naomi, passengers and&#13;
sailors were seen standing on the&#13;
decks waving their hands and screaming.&#13;
As the Kerr ran past the stern ol&#13;
the Naomi a dozen passengers leaped&#13;
wildly onto her and were carried&#13;
away some distance before the Kerr&#13;
could be righted and returned to the&#13;
rescue. The Saxoula also got her first&#13;
consignment of passengers from the&#13;
ill-fated boat as in her misjudged&#13;
speed she slid past the flaming vessel.&#13;
The Kansas reached her sister ship&#13;
while the Kerr, a steel freighter,&#13;
stuck her'^lofcie into the Naomi's side.&#13;
The pa88*nsers and hands were trans&#13;
ferred in comparative order and with&#13;
extraordinary discipline on their part,&#13;
under all the circumstances,&#13;
Capt. Traill was the last to leave&#13;
his vessel. As he climbed to the Kerr&#13;
the flames were at his back. His&#13;
clothes were burning and huge swelling&#13;
blisters stood out on his face and&#13;
hands. As he walked along the deck&#13;
of the Kerr mourning the destruction&#13;
of hia craft, his clothes fell from his&#13;
body. He refused medical attention,&#13;
even though in agony, until after being&#13;
transferred to the Kansas along&#13;
with the other survivors and the Kansas&#13;
had got out of sight of his smoldering&#13;
craft on the trip to Grand&#13;
Haven.&#13;
Clergyman Locked Up.&#13;
Rev. George Donaldson was locked&#13;
(11) in the Kalamazoo jail Thursday on&#13;
complaint of his wife, who charges&#13;
that he committed a brutal assault&#13;
on their daughter, Edith, 25 \ears&#13;
old.&#13;
Rev. Dona bison, who is a retired&#13;
Methodist minister, (Hi years old, and&#13;
wears a white beard, looked like a&#13;
venerable patriarch as the jail door?&#13;
closed on him. His faithful Scotch collie&#13;
had followed him from his home&#13;
into the jail and is still with him,&#13;
Mr. Donaldson has had various&#13;
charges in this conference, some of&#13;
them in Kalamazoo county, one place&#13;
being Fulton. He retired some time&#13;
ago and purchased a fine farm located&#13;
just outside the city limits on the Gull&#13;
rc:-.d.&#13;
The Real Victims.&#13;
Tn a lonelv tumble-down shanty In&#13;
Henrietta township are living Mrs.&#13;
John Bouts, widow of the contractor&#13;
who was killed by Geo. Tuhhs in Fa ton&#13;
county. The family is quarantined&#13;
with measles, is in destitute circumstances,&#13;
and receiving relief.from the&#13;
poor commissioners of Jackson county.&#13;
They have only been there a few&#13;
weeks, coming from Faton county, and&#13;
the officials of the county have been&#13;
notified that they must pay the expense&#13;
of caring for the family.&#13;
W a r d Convalescent.&#13;
So rapid has been the improvement&#13;
of Representative Ward that his&#13;
physicians hope he will be able to&#13;
return to his home by the end of the&#13;
week. W7ard Is still at. the City hospital&#13;
in Lansing. The physicians have&#13;
removed the stitches from the wound&#13;
made when he was operated on for&#13;
appendicitis one week ago. Ward is&#13;
reported as cheerful and hopeful of&#13;
taking his seat in the legislature before&#13;
final adjunrnment.&#13;
ry America is and her fiiendship is&#13;
something we prize very much."&#13;
Butter Color Poison.&#13;
Butter color caused the death of tho.i&#13;
i-year-old son of Frank Frand, a farmer&#13;
living near Eaton Rapids. Mrs.&#13;
Frand was churning and while her attention&#13;
was diverted the child reached&#13;
the jar containing the butter color&#13;
ind drank the contents.&#13;
That the coloring matter contained&#13;
poisoning matter was demonstrated&#13;
hy the terrible sufferings of the child&#13;
before death relieved it. All efforts on&#13;
the part of physicians summoned from&#13;
town were futile.&#13;
JOHtf PATTQK 9&#13;
Ex&amp;fnator pr»e of Htftrt Disoate • '&#13;
• '}' I frr-and Raptdi.&#13;
H«a JVft^.i'a.tton, former U. S. sena&#13;
B, dfed l&amp;$ijtBy In M* residence, Gram&#13;
pWs, X/p^i organic heart disease&#13;
^ith wbliib ht had long suffered. Mr&#13;
Fatten left the city about a month&#13;
ago for Acorn, N.-C, where he seemed&#13;
t o be improving, and as the season u£&#13;
vanced it was thought safe for him tf&#13;
return home. On the return trip, however,&#13;
he took a severe cold, which s e t&#13;
tied at the seat of the diaeaae, an4&lt;&#13;
was the immediate cause of his death&#13;
Mr. Patton was born In Curw&#13;
ville, Pa., October 30, 1850. He&#13;
graduated from Yale in 1875 and 1&#13;
the Columbia law college in 1877 H f '&#13;
first engaged In the law practice In&#13;
Grand Rapids, where he had sinci&#13;
been a continuous resident. In US9d&#13;
upon the death of Senator Sr ckbridge,&#13;
be was appointed United S r u e s&#13;
senator by Gov. Rich.&#13;
Mr. Patton was a man of l e a n i n g .&#13;
.aid although he filled with disthuMou&#13;
&lt;iome of the highest political positions&#13;
within the gift of-the state, his friends,&#13;
!n recounting his career, refer with&#13;
greatest pride to }:'.:* xckchirly attainments.&#13;
Students Drink Some.&#13;
The Sociology club of the university&#13;
has gathered statistics to show that&#13;
from 50 to 75 per cent of the university&#13;
students indulge in intoxicating&#13;
liquors to some extent. Investigations&#13;
of the Ann Arbor saloon situation fe*v*&#13;
beeu going on for several week*, IK&#13;
charge of L. C. Brown, '07 law. It M *&#13;
been found that the saloons in tbftt&#13;
city are not typical of the dram *ho0&#13;
with all its evils. They are social centers.&#13;
Saloons are held to be better than&#13;
soda fountains, for they are more luxurious,&#13;
having leather cushions and all&#13;
the comforts of home. The saloons&#13;
which cater to the "campus trade" do&#13;
so exclusively, permit no excesses, are&#13;
well furnished and generally sanitary.&#13;
As to the legal regulation of the saloon&#13;
in the city the Sociology committee&#13;
thinks that if present laws were&#13;
enforced by the local authorities proper&#13;
bounds would be maintained. lt is.&#13;
pointed out, rather ironically, in. the&#13;
committee report that "the city now&#13;
has a police force large enough to enforce&#13;
all the citv ordinances."&#13;
TO Study Mars.&#13;
The Lowell astror.ohiical expedition&#13;
has arrived at Lima, Peru, from Colon.&#13;
The expedition is headed by Prof. David&#13;
P. Todd, the astronomer of Amherst&#13;
university. It proposes to make a&#13;
series of observations and photographs&#13;
of the planet Mars, and to MUl&#13;
end it will climb to a summit of t h t&#13;
Andes range, where the air is exceptionally&#13;
pure and the sky clear. Th«&#13;
expedition left New York citv May&#13;
11.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
D e t r o i t — K x t r a d r y - f e d .steers rind&#13;
Iieifers, $5 TiOCa f» Tu, s t e e r s ir.id li"lfej-s,&#13;
1,00(1 t o 1,200 IbB. IfiCr*^) :&gt;&lt;i; si e r r s a m i&#13;
h e i f e r s , M&gt;0 to 1,001) lbs, JN 7,". ft ', IT.;&#13;
s t e e r s a n d h e i f e r s t h a t u r e fat. r,iMl to&#13;
700 lbs, $4 Tiifafi lid; elioice fut euWs,&#13;
J 4 ^riCo-4 6T.; Koed fat r o w s , $ ?, ~:,f,t \ \ f,;&#13;
cnmitKiii r o w s , %\\(tr\\ fid; r u n n e r s , %'1CIO&#13;
2 1,'; c h o i c e h e a v y bulls, $4 .'," U \ fifl;&#13;
fhir to tfood b o h i ^ n a s . b u l l s , $:; 7T.'Jrl;&#13;
s t o c k h u l l s , $,'&lt; :'!i(i/.'l ,'i'i; c h o i c e feed l u g&#13;
steei-H, HOO to 1,000 )hn, $4 MKaf, Ih"., f a i r&#13;
feeding' s t e e l s , SdO to 1.0 00 lbs, $;i Tfifcp&#13;
4 J o ; c h o i c e s t o e k e r s , ft(H) to 700 His&#13;
$.1&#13;
$&#13;
ers, l a r ^ e , youtiK. m e d i u m a g e , $40ff:,0;&#13;
c o m m o n m i l k e r s , $lNtfi'2r&gt;,&#13;
Veal ealves— M a r k e t Strom*. ,".0c&#13;
h i R h e r ; best, $fi ,Mif?;7; best, $4,&#13;
MiJr-h c o w s a n d s p r i i i K e r s - S t e a d v .&#13;
S h e e p a n d l a m b s — M a r k e t st.eadv to&#13;
strong-, l a s t w e e k ' s p r i c e s , n e s t h u n b s ,&#13;
$7 7,ri; f a i r to p o o d l a m b s , ffi luf/f', fit);&#13;
liKht to c o m m o n l a m b s , $,"&gt; f)0ru'(&gt; ",0. fa.tr&#13;
to tfood b u t c h e r s h e e p , jn^.", "&gt;e; c u l l s&#13;
a n d c o m m o n , $2 ."0W4,&#13;
H O K S — M a r k e t r»e h i g h e r t h a n l a s t&#13;
T h u r s d a y . llaiiR-e of p r i c e s : L i ^ h r t o&#13;
Rood b u t c h e r s , $6 f&gt;0; p l ^ s , $f&gt; 7.0; l i ^ h t&#13;
y o r k e r s , *fi 7)0; r o u g h s , $7. 75 ^i «; s l u e s ,&#13;
1-3 off,&#13;
?, 77.((14 7.0; f a i r s t o e k e r s , 500 to 7't0 lbs,&#13;
:: Jnffrt: s t o c k h e i f e r s , $;( JfiffM; n i i l k -&#13;
K a s t B u f f a l o . - - K x p o r t a n d h e a v y&#13;
shipping- g r a d e s h a r e l y s t e a d y ; b u t c h e r&#13;
stuff \0Cd\itc l i l p h e r , e x p o r t s t e e r s&#13;
$5 f.OfriJfi; b e s t 1,200 to l,30ft-lb s h i p -&#13;
ping- s t e e r s , $f&gt; 3 0 ^ 5 60; b e s t 1,000 t o&#13;
1.100-lb do, tr-i&amp;r, 770, best f a t c o w s&#13;
$4 0)4 50; f a i r to pond, $3 TiOfrfi- t r i m -&#13;
m e r s . $2 2f.f?t2 60; best. f a t h e i f e r s&#13;
$5tf?r. 27; m e d i u m to g-ood. $4 2f&gt; fir i 7&gt;0:&#13;
b e s t feeding- s t e e r s , $4 40ffif4 67; y e a r -&#13;
l i n g s . $,1 5 0©'J; c o m m o n s t o r k s t e e r s&#13;
.? 2Sfp5 3 7,0; e x p o r t b u l l s , $4 50 &amp; 5 b o -&#13;
l o g n a b u l l s , |K 77&gt;(??4 25; s t o c k b u l l s&#13;
2 50(5)7! 7.0. T h e cow m a r k e t w a s&#13;
a b o u t t h e s a m e l g U » t w e e k ; giind to&#13;
e x t r a , $ 4 5 ( ^ 5 5 ; m e d i u m to *OOd. JooiQ)&#13;
40; c o m m o n , $20$)S&amp;; V&#13;
" I ? * - — M " r k &lt; , t «te«dy: JiWtvy, |6 «•&#13;
(ft fi -.&gt;; m e d i u m a n d m i * e d . I t ' ^ f i t « 9 ;&#13;
y o r k e r s . $6 R0; plgg, $« g e ^ g gf. W ^&#13;
m a r k e t , closed s t e a d y : S e * r s u n B O l d T "&#13;
S h e e p . — M a r k e t a c t i v e o n hrvndy&#13;
s h e e p a n d I s m h s , but on t h e h e a v y&#13;
k i n d s t h e r e a r e a b o u t 10 c a r s u n s o l d -&#13;
top I a m b s , $S&lt;frS 15; c u l l s , $*«•"•'&#13;
w e t h e r s , $f&gt; 25WB 5(1; e u l l s , $ 4 ^ 7 . -&#13;
y e a r l i n g s , \! (o 1 25; e w e s , |.r. 2«.fi)5 77.!&#13;
C a l v e s . — S t r o n g ; best. | 7 50 (ffi 7 75;&#13;
m e d i u m to good, $5 5dfu:7; h e a v y , $4(f|&#13;
&lt;irnln. K t r .&#13;
r ) p t r n l t - - - W h e a t - - ( , a s h Xn 2 red $1 •&#13;
May. 75,0(10 bn a t $1 ( t l ' 4 , 5,00 hu at.&#13;
$1 0 0 ¾ . 5,000 hi! a t $1. 2.000 b n a t :iO»*c&#13;
fl.000 bo at. $1 00V4, J.OdO 1UI a t $1 .Tulv&#13;
20,000 bu a t $t 02, 25,000 bu a t $1 01 \ ,&#13;
20.000 bu a t I I 0 1 ¾ . 15.000 bu a t $1 0 1 ½&#13;
| l 0 0 ¾ . 2 2 , f " " • - - - - - " • »&#13;
••••&gt;,.&#13;
10,000 bu a t&#13;
30,000 bu a t $1&#13;
,000 hi- a t $1 00«*,&#13;
OO14, Jn.llOO b n at I I .&#13;
ye low,&#13;
10,000 bu a t $1 0 0 ½ . 15,000 bu a t I I ©©*'&#13;
10,000 b u n t 11 01, 10,000 bu a t f l « l 2 l&#13;
10,000 b u a t $1 00¾ ; S p p t e m b &amp; l w I S . d&#13;
bu a t $1 04. 10,000 bu a t $1 0 3 ' ' ' '&#13;
hu at | 1 0 3 ½ . 20,000 bu a t I t &amp;S&#13;
bn a t | 1 0.1, 5,000 bu a t f l 02 %, t$jm&#13;
hu at. $1 0 2 ½ . 25.000 bu a t 11 02, 10 000&#13;
hu a t $1 0 2 ½ . 10,/)00 111 at U 0 2 ¾ 5,000&#13;
bu fit $1 03. 10,000 bu a t $1 03¼ 20 000&#13;
bu a t $1 0 2 ¾ ; No. 3 red, fi7e; No' 1&#13;
w h i t e , 9 8 ½ r .&#13;
C o r n — C a s h No. 3, S-P/fce; No,&#13;
" 7 1¾ c.&#13;
O a t s — C a R h No. 3 w h i t e , 40c; to a r -&#13;
rive. 1 e a r a t 4S«^e; No. 4 w h i t e 1 c a r&#13;
nt 4S 14c; s a m p l e , 1 c a r at 4,Sr.&#13;
R y e — C a s h Js'o. 2, 1 e a r at 8 7c&#13;
R e a r l * — C a s h , $1 70; J u n e . J ',-at&#13;
$1 72; J u l y . | 1 72.&#13;
O l o v e r s e r d — P r i m e spot, I P ; O r t o b e r&#13;
IS bfd; D e c e m b e r , | S 10; s a m p l e 5 h*K*&#13;
a t IS 50. 2 a t 17 50; p r i m e a U l k e , r. PRKR&#13;
i t $7 25.&#13;
T i m o t h y n*&gt;*d—Prime s p o t SO b a r s a t&#13;
$2 06&#13;
irs at.&#13;
1 • &lt; • .&#13;
. -lis&#13;
/&#13;
I •&amp;*"« •&#13;
' * ' -: • &amp; •&#13;
3S5338. » -''.ifrl&#13;
3&#13;
*&#13;
I&#13;
M*«&#13;
C H A P T E R 1.&#13;
"Friday, t h e 13th; I thought aa&#13;
much, if Bob hat* started, there will&#13;
he hell, but I will see what I can do."&#13;
The sound of my voice as I dropped&#13;
the receiver seemed to part the&#13;
miste of five years and usher me into&#13;
t h e world of Then as though it had&#13;
never" passed on.&#13;
I had been sitting in nay office, letting&#13;
the tape slide through m y lingers&#13;
while its every yard spelled "panic"&#13;
in a constantly risiug voice, when&#13;
they told m e that Brownley on the&#13;
floor of the exchange wanted me at&#13;
the 'phone, and "quick." Brownley was&#13;
our junior partner and floor man. He&#13;
talked with a rush. Stock exchange&#13;
floor men in panics never let their&#13;
speech hobble.&#13;
"Mr. Randolph, it's sizzling over&#13;
bmt, and it's getting hotter every sec-&#13;
9*&lt;L • It's Bob—that is evident to all.&#13;
If he keeps up this pace for 20 minutes&#13;
longer, the sulphur wiH overflow&#13;
'the street' and get into the banks and&#13;
into the country, and no man can&#13;
tell how much territory will be burned&#13;
over by to-morrow. The boys have&#13;
begged me to ask you to throw yourself&#13;
into the breach and stay him.&#13;
They agree you are the only hope&#13;
now."&#13;
"Are you sure, Fred, that this ts&#13;
Hob's work?" I asked. "Have you&#13;
seen him?" -&#13;
"Yes, I have Just come from his&#13;
office, and glad I was to get out.&#13;
He's on the war-path, Mr. Randolph—&#13;
uglier than I ever saw him. The last&#13;
time he broke loose was child's play&#13;
to &gt; his mood to-day. Mother sent me&#13;
word this morning that she saw last&#13;
night the spell was coming. He had&#13;
been up to see her and sisters, and&#13;
mother thought from his tone he&#13;
was about to disappear again. When&#13;
she told me of his mood, and I remembered&#13;
the day, I was afraid h e&#13;
might B*ek his vent here. Also I&#13;
Iwa'rd of his being about town tilt&#13;
long after midnight. The minute I&#13;
opened his office door he flew at me&#13;
like a panther. I told him I had only&#13;
dropped in on my rounds for an order,&#13;
as they were running off right&#13;
smart, and I didn't know but he might&#13;
like to pick up some bargains, 'barg&#13;
a i n s ' ' he roared, 'don't you know the&#13;
day? Don't you know it is Friday,&#13;
the l.'ltli? Go back to that hell-pit&#13;
and sell, sell.' 'Sell what and how&#13;
much?' I askeri. 'Anytiling, everything.&#13;
Give the thieves every share&#13;
they will take, and when they won't&#13;
take any more, ram as much again&#13;
down their crops until they spit up&#13;
all they have been buying for the&#13;
last three months!' Going out I met&#13;
Jim Holliday and Frank Swan rushing&#13;
in. They are evidently executing&#13;
Hob's orders, and have been pouring&#13;
Ami-People'*) out for an hour. They&#13;
will be on the floor again in a few&#13;
minutes, FO 1 thought it safer to&#13;
call you before I started to sell. Mr.&#13;
Randolph, they cannot, take much&#13;
more of anything in here, and if 1&#13;
begjn to throw stocks over, it will&#13;
bring the gavel inside of ten minutes,&#13;
and that, will be to announce a dozen&#13;
failures. J4's yet 20 minutes to one,&#13;
and God only knows what will happen&#13;
before three. It's up to you, Mr.&#13;
Randolph, to do something, and unless&#13;
1 am on a bad slant, you haven't&#13;
many minutes to lose."&#13;
It was then I dropped the receiver&#13;
with "i thought as much!" As T&#13;
had been fingering the tape, watching&#13;
five and ten u n i o n s crumbling from&#13;
price vajju#s every few minutes, T was&#13;
JLUre t h i s was the work of Hob Hrownley;&#13;
No one else in Wall street had&#13;
the power, the nerve, and the devilish&#13;
cruelty to rip things as they had&#13;
been ripped during the last 20 mi flutes.&#13;
The night, before I had parsed&#13;
Hob in the theater lobby. T gave&#13;
him close scrutiny and saw the look&#13;
of which I of all men best knew&#13;
the moaning. The big brown eyes&#13;
were se; on space; the enter corners&#13;
of the handsome mouth were drawn&#13;
hard and tense as though weighted.&#13;
As I had my wife with, me it was&#13;
i«ii*OB#ib4e to follow him, but when&#13;
I got borne I called up his house and&#13;
hit cltba, Intending to ask him to run&#13;
Ti|iTte4-aJBcke a cigar with me, but&#13;
eemlrt locate him nowhere. I tried&#13;
again in the mqming without success,&#13;
but when just before noon the tape&#13;
began to jump and flash and snarl, T&#13;
remembered Bob's ugly mood, and all&#13;
it portended.&#13;
Fred Brownley was Hob's youngest&#13;
brotlvT, 12 years hfs junior. He had&#13;
been with Randolph &amp; Randolph from&#13;
the day he left college, and for over&#13;
a .year had been our moat, trusted&#13;
stock exchange man. Bob Brown&#13;
ley, when himself, was as fond of his&#13;
"baby brother," as he called him, as&#13;
his beautiful southern mother was of&#13;
both; but when the devil had possession&#13;
of Bob—and his option during the&#13;
past five years had been exercised&#13;
many a time—mother and brother had&#13;
to take their place with all the rest&#13;
of the world, for then Bob knew no&#13;
kindred, no friends. All the wide&#13;
world was to him during those periods&#13;
a jungle peopled with savage&#13;
animals and reptiles to hunt and fight&#13;
and tear and kill.&#13;
It iu hardly necessary for me to&#13;
explain who Randolph &amp; Randolph are.&#13;
For more than 60 years the name has&#13;
spoken for itself in every part of&#13;
the world where dollar-making machines&#13;
are installed. No railroad Is&#13;
financed, no great "industrial" projected,&#13;
without by force of habit, hat-&#13;
In-handing a by-your-leave of Randolph&#13;
&amp; Randolph, and every nation&#13;
when entering the market for loans,&#13;
knows that the favor of the foremost&#13;
American bankers is something which&#13;
wherever women were fair an4 men's&#13;
mirrors in the bottom of their Julepglaases.&#13;
Bob's father, one of t h e big, white&#13;
pillars of southern aristocracy, bad&#13;
gone through congress and the senate&#13;
at bis country to t h e tune of "Spend&#13;
and Not Spare," which left his widow&#13;
and three younger daughters and a&#13;
small sou dependent upon Bob, his&#13;
eldest.&#13;
Many a warm summer afternoon,&#13;
as Bob and 1 paddled down the&#13;
Charles, and often dn a cold, crispy&#13;
night as we sat in my shooting-box on&#13;
the Cape Cod shore, bad we matched&#13;
up for our future. 1 was to have the&#13;
Inside run of the great banking buslnses&#13;
of Randolph &amp; Randolph, and&#13;
Bob was. eventually to represent my&#13;
father's firm on the floor of the stock&#13;
exchange. "I'd die In an office," Bob&#13;
used to say, "and the floor of the&#13;
stock exchange is just the chimneyplace&#13;
to roast my hoe-cake in." So&#13;
when our college days were over my&#13;
able old father stood us up against the&#13;
wall In bis office, and tried us by his&#13;
tests, and proud we both were when&#13;
dad said: "Jim, you and Bob have&#13;
choBen well. You, Jim, are just the&#13;
chap to step Into my Bhoes, and Bob is&#13;
cut to a thirty-second aud sixty-fourth&#13;
for the floor." Proud we were, not&#13;
so much because of what my father's&#13;
decision meant for our future, for&#13;
we knew we should get into tl/. business&#13;
all right, but because our Judgment&#13;
was Indorsed by one we both&#13;
thought as near Infallible as man&#13;
could be in anything pertaining to&#13;
business affairs.&#13;
Bob was then 22 and I a year older—&#13;
I one of your raw-boned New Engine&#13;
heavy responsibilities of husbanding&#13;
and directing his family's slim&#13;
finances that he took to business as a&#13;
swallow tp the air. We entered the&#13;
office 4 / Randolph &amp; Randolph on the&#13;
same day, and on Ms anniversary, a&#13;
year later, my father summoned us&#13;
into his office for a sort of tally-up&#13;
talk. Neither of us quite knew what&#13;
was coming, and we thrilled with&#13;
pleasure when he said:&#13;
"Jim, you and Bob have fairly outdone&#13;
my expectations. I have had my&#13;
eye on both of you and 1 want you&#13;
to know that the kind of industry and&#13;
business intelligence you have shown&#13;
here would have won you recognition&#13;
in any banking house on 'the street.'&#13;
1 want you both In the Arm—Jim to&#13;
learn his way round so be can step&#13;
into my shoes; you, Bob, to take one&#13;
of the firms seats on the stock exchange."&#13;
Bob's face went red and then pale&#13;
with happiness as he reached for my&#13;
father's hand.&#13;
"I'm very grateful to you, sir, far&#13;
more ao than words can say, but I&#13;
want to talk this proposition of yours&#13;
over with Jim here first. He knows&#13;
me better than anyone else In the&#13;
world, and I've some ideas I'd like to&#13;
thrash out with him."&#13;
"Speak up here, Bob," said my&#13;
father.&#13;
(TO BK CONTINUED.)&#13;
EVOLUTION OF GLASS EYES.&#13;
THE&#13;
CHRIS&#13;
WORLD *.&#13;
• ' ~ — I ~ I " - - — —i —i — i— i• II—i i-tf-K^B-g- i^"^rnr*T&lt;v*w~&gt;rify&gt;fM*i&lt;ssKnjvyw*U'%&#13;
A SUICIDE* BUREAU1. .&#13;
How the Salvation Army&#13;
People From Tricresol&#13;
iV*ng&#13;
Were First Brought Into Use in the&#13;
Seventeenth Century.&#13;
"Mr. Randolph, It's Sizzling Over He&#13;
must be reckoned with. I pride myself&#13;
that, at 42, at the end of ten&#13;
years I have had the helm of Randolph&#13;
&amp; Randolph, I have done nothing&#13;
to mar the great name my father&#13;
and uncle created, but. something&#13;
to add to its sterling reputation for&#13;
lion est. dealing, fearless, old-fashioned&#13;
methods, and all-round integrity.&#13;
Mradstreel's and other mercantile&#13;
agencies say in reporting Randolph&#13;
&amp;. Randolph: "Worth fifty millions&#13;
and upward, credit, unlimited." I&#13;
can take but small praise for this,&#13;
for the report, was about the same&#13;
the day I left, college and came to the&#13;
offire to "learn the business." But,&#13;
as (he survivor of my great, father&#13;
and uncle, I can say, my Maker as my&#13;
witness, that Randolph &amp;. Randolph&#13;
have never loaned a dollar of their&#13;
millions at over legal rates, six per&#13;
cent, per annum; have never added to&#13;
their hoard by any but fair, square&#13;
business methods; ;+rul lhat. blight of&#13;
blights, frenzied finance, has yet to&#13;
find a lodging place beneath the old&#13;
black-and-gokl sign that, father and&#13;
uncle nailed up with their own hands&#13;
over the entrance.&#13;
Nineteen years ago I was graduated&#13;
from Harvard. My classmate and&#13;
chum, Bob Brownley, of Richmond,&#13;
Va., was graduated with me. He was&#13;
class poet, I, yard marshal. We had&#13;
been four yeass together at St. Paul's&#13;
previous to entering Harvard. No&#13;
girl and lover were fonder than we of&#13;
each other.&#13;
My people had money and to spare,&#13;
and with it a hard-headed, northern&#13;
horse sense. The Brownleys were&#13;
poor as church mice, but they had the&#13;
brilliant, virile hloo.i of the old&#13;
southern oligarchy and she romantic,&#13;
"salaam-to-no-onc" Dixieland pride of&#13;
befnre-iho-war days, when southern&#13;
prodigality and hospitality were found&#13;
re and Getting Hotter Every Second."&#13;
land J a d s , not much for prettiness.&#13;
but willing to weigh in race-day with&#13;
any of them for steadiness and staying&#13;
qualities; Hob as handsome as&#13;
they made thorn, six feet, tall in his&#13;
I gym sandals straight as an arrow, with&#13;
I 1he form of an Indian, and one of&#13;
those clean, brave, all-for-heart-nothing-&#13;
for-policy, smiling^fares to which&#13;
j men yield willing friendliness, and&#13;
j women, idolatry. Hob's eyes were as&#13;
I big and rotmd and purple-brown as an&#13;
j English bulldog's, unfathomable, at&#13;
i once mild and stem, with a childish&#13;
j come-and-go perplexity; his nose as&#13;
straight as though chiseled by a masj&#13;
ter for a Greek medallion, with thin&#13;
curved lips to correspond, and a high,&#13;
broad forehead, whose whiteness was&#13;
set off by a luxuriance of hair that&#13;
seemed jet-black, but was of the same&#13;
| rare purple-brown as his eyes. But&#13;
it was the poise of Hob's head that&#13;
| gave his good looks their crown. Who-&#13;
| ever has seen a hunch of two-year old&#13;
: colts in a long-grass Kentucky pad-&#13;
I dock, when the darky hoy lets loose&#13;
j his shrill whistle at "taking-up time,"&#13;
j is sure to remember one that, threw&#13;
up its head and kept it poised to&#13;
j make sure it. had caught the call.&#13;
'. Grace, strngth and unharnessed way- !&#13;
[ ward leadership are there personified.&#13;
j Some such suggestion was ever in the !&#13;
carriage of Bob's shapely head and&#13;
' vigorous figure, aud dull indeed would&#13;
» be the man or woman who failed to&#13;
recognize the man's rare distinction&#13;
and masterfulness.&#13;
Indeed, as I said a bit back. Bob&#13;
Brownley was by all odds one of the&#13;
handsome-it men I have ever seen,&#13;
but besides that, he was a sterling,&#13;
manly, ur.,:ffoctal fellow, as true as&#13;
steel, as brave as a lion and the&#13;
host comrade friend ever had.&#13;
Perhaps it was because bis father's&#13;
derail had saddled Bob's youth with&#13;
"That is an artificial eye of the seventeenth&#13;
century," said the curator&#13;
of the medical museum. "It isn't very&#13;
deceptive, is it?" The ancient eye&#13;
resembled what is called a patch.&#13;
There was a band to encircle the head,&#13;
and a semi-circle of leather with a&#13;
human eye painted on it—a large, blue,&#13;
staring eye. It was, in fact, simply&#13;
a patch on which an eye was painted.&#13;
"Next came these silver shells," said&#13;
the curator. "They were inserted under&#13;
the lid in the empty socket. A&#13;
little moro deceptive, eh?" The&#13;
shells, in shape like halves of walnuts,&#13;
had eyes upon them, and were&#13;
not unsightly. They were so dull and&#13;
opaque, though, that no one would&#13;
ever have taken them for the real&#13;
thiag. "Next came eyes of porcelain,"&#13;
the curator went on, waving&#13;
his hand toward a case of fSirly presentable&#13;
porcelain eyes, "and finally&#13;
we got glass eyes—transparent, brilliant&#13;
eyes that will never be improved&#13;
on till a movable pupil is invented, a&#13;
pupil that, somehow, will work in&#13;
harmony with the other pupil. Many&#13;
an inventor is working on this movable&#13;
pupil idea. Of course, there's a&#13;
fortune in it for the successful man."&#13;
"Due thousand people, beaten in the&#13;
baitle of life, commit suicide iu New&#13;
York every year."&#13;
Such was the&#13;
startling a t a-t euueut&#13;
made by&#13;
Cuiouel Holland,&#13;
uf the Salvation&#13;
army, thre« days&#13;
after the new Anti-&#13;
Suicide Bureau&#13;
was established at&#13;
the army headquarters&#13;
on Fourteenth&#13;
street, New&#13;
York.&#13;
The Anti-Suicide bureau asks all&#13;
who have grown desperate and have&#13;
determined to take their own lives,&#13;
to come in and tell their troubles with&#13;
the absolute assurance that their con&#13;
ndeaces will be withheld from the&#13;
world, and see if some better way can*&#13;
not be found to escape their present&#13;
misery than by seeking oblivion in th&#13;
icy waters of the North river. O&#13;
course, like all new and startling innovations&#13;
the new bureau was considered&#13;
by many as doomed to failure—&#13;
that people who wished to kill themselves&#13;
would not stop to see if there&#13;
were hope and prospects of new life&#13;
iu the little reception room of the Salvationists;&#13;
but all this was before the&#13;
first haggard, wild-eyed_creature had&#13;
knocked hesitatingly at the door of&#13;
Colonel Holland's office, or had been&#13;
ushered into the motherly presence&#13;
of the brigadier on the floor below. In&#13;
three days 20 people la deep distress&#13;
had called "to talk it over." •-&#13;
"I am firmly convinced," said CoR&#13;
onel Holland, "that all of our caller*&#13;
were people who had had the idea of&#13;
committing suicide. There were no&#13;
fake cases.' They gave us their whole&#13;
life and heart history without r e&#13;
serve."&#13;
•j- •s-^.^m&#13;
X&#13;
W A T C H T H E LARGE AFFAIRS.&#13;
Business Man Makes Mistake in Be&#13;
ing Smothered in Detail.&#13;
When you are so buried in the detail&#13;
of your business that you cannot&#13;
get a clear, sharp view of your affairs&#13;
in all their relations, you are in dagger&#13;
of failure. No great general eve"&#13;
takes a gun and goes with his. s o l d i e r&#13;
into the thick of the fight, where 1:.&#13;
weu1 ' be so stunned by the noises&#13;
and so blinded by the smoke of bar&#13;
lie that he could not watcjj the move&#13;
ments of the enemy, could not see&#13;
where his own troops needed reinforcements,&#13;
or how to hurl his forcea&#13;
on the weakest place in the enemy's&#13;
ranks. He must ^) where he can&#13;
watch every movement of the armies.&#13;
If you are going to be a general iu&#13;
business, yon must keep where you&#13;
can get a clear view of your affairs&#13;
and know what is going on everywhere.&#13;
While you arc buried in detail,&#13;
your business may be in a dangerous&#13;
position, from which you could&#13;
extricate it if you knew the exact situation.&#13;
J[.ir y a man fails in trying ro&#13;
be a general and a private at tart&#13;
same time. —Success.&#13;
Milady's Bath.&#13;
It is said there is but one ear'i..riic&#13;
acid hath in New York, and ir is it;&#13;
t'ue home of a very i-jt-h widow. The.&#13;
apparatus .ts deseiibed i&gt; eoinniieated&#13;
and expensive. 'i" e acid is allowed&#13;
to eseap- fii.'.u stout metal cylinders*,&#13;
where !• ^- stored under pressure, and&#13;
mi&gt;'•:*! with the bath water. The, effect&#13;
upon the skin is highly stimulating.&#13;
-Such a bath leaves a feeling of&#13;
great freshness. The widow was advised&#13;
to visit Nanheim several years&#13;
age for a heart disorder, the waters&#13;
at that celebrated German village being&#13;
naturally effervescent and strongly&#13;
carbonated. She dared not. undertake&#13;
the ocean voyage, and the artificial&#13;
Nanheim was installed in her&#13;
home.&#13;
Weary of Abstractions.&#13;
"There is some satisfaction in knowing&#13;
you are right, even if the world&#13;
does not recognize it," remarked the&#13;
idealist. "Not much." answered young&#13;
Mrs. Torkins. "I can't help wishing&#13;
Charley would bet on the horse that&#13;
does win instead of the one that&#13;
ought to."&#13;
Love and Mar riage.&#13;
A good bit of love goes to wa&gt;t»?&#13;
before marriage that would help a lot&#13;
afterward.—Puck.&#13;
Religious Progress in Japan.&#13;
Bishop Harris of Japan writes:&#13;
The Greek and Roman Catholics in&#13;
Japan number about 100,000. The&#13;
Protestants are equally strong, and&#13;
I all won in less than a generation.&#13;
I Mosf of the Protestant churches have&#13;
| become independent national institu-&#13;
| tions. and' the Japan Methodist church&#13;
I is soon to be organized by the union&#13;
i of the Methodist Episcopal Church.&#13;
! 'he Methodist Episcopal church,&#13;
[south, and a Methodist church of Oam-&#13;
I ada, which will have over 12,000&#13;
members. 12$ organized churches, loi)&#13;
ministers, Hi* Bible women, 1 i boarding&#13;
schools for both sexes, with 2.7'i1.*&#13;
pupils, 'VI day schools, with H.TBl pupils,&#13;
two theological schools with 5:*&#13;
eieifu's. and churches and parson-&#13;
! ages worth over $100,000.&#13;
Chinese Women's Christian Confer-&#13;
&gt; ence. t&#13;
: A remarkable conference of Chris&#13;
- an women met recently in Wei&#13;
[ Hsien, the Holy I*and of China. There&#13;
were P&gt;uu women representing over -Oil&#13;
i villages, and 20b more came from the&#13;
, neighborhood. Here was a gathering&#13;
I of 'ft omen, some of them over 70, who&#13;
i had hobbled on their bound feet for&#13;
I ~&gt;" utiles or less, carrying bedding,&#13;
} hymn book and Bible. More remark-&#13;
, able still is the fact that their husbands&#13;
encouraged them to go, though&#13;
j many had never before been mo:v&#13;
: than two miles from home.&#13;
Boys' Work Grows.&#13;
T'ue Boys' department member-hip&#13;
\ ::: the Y. M. C. As. throughout ,rh&gt;&#13;
'country increased from L'a\40r&gt; to be,-&#13;
' oPi). and its qualified secretaries from&#13;
''!: to 17.-1. The number of students in&#13;
eihu'.i; ionai classes has reached :}.v&#13;
The Church Arraigned.&#13;
A Pnitarian clergyman writing on&#13;
;-&gt;uhoa;h observance, say.; that tiv&#13;
' rrea; meuaee to the Sabbath in this&#13;
. "-otintry is not ; he tendency of the&#13;
oeople to seek recreation on th;u&#13;
i lay, but the disposition of some t-&#13;
[run; the church itself into a nlace&#13;
1 )t recreation. lie charges that cer-&#13;
; ain ministers--oddly enough. he&#13;
! elaims there are no Pnitarians (n&#13;
he number he accuses.-—"am c'nang-&#13;
I n^ their services into half vaude-&#13;
1 •.-lite shows instead of dealing with&#13;
he basic principles of life." In such&#13;
j circumstances church-going becomes&#13;
: amply one item in "a choica of rec-&#13;
| reations."&#13;
t&#13;
i Mission Day Conference.&#13;
j At a meeting of representatives&#13;
j from Woman's Home Missionary soi&#13;
neties of several denominations recently&#13;
held in New York city, it was&#13;
' decked to institute interdenomina-&#13;
1 ional homo mission conferences at.&#13;
I N'-v, rhtleld. Mass.. ami probably one&#13;
| i nnt in the middle West, for the first&#13;
i v ear The committee contemplates&#13;
; . early conferences a: several points&#13;
1 'ventually.&#13;
* • «&#13;
+»•%.&#13;
&lt;.*'&#13;
m&#13;
m&#13;
P *!&#13;
^ &gt; # •&#13;
i"&gt;V-''i&#13;
&gt; i ' * &gt; • * &lt;&#13;
8tu fiucknrii fliopatch&#13;
~v-^&#13;
F. L. ANDREWS.. 4 CO. HHo^witto&#13;
rwrrKSDAY, MAY HO. IJ*&gt;;&#13;
I t c o s l « j | q r j i t e » c o u s i d e r n b l e&#13;
BOuietimeH t o s t a n d b y r i g h t p r i n -&#13;
c i p a l s , b u t t h e r e s u l t * p r o v e i t t o&#13;
b e a g o o d i n v e a t m e D t .&#13;
0*m^mm**^m^m*^m**w***mmm^m**m&#13;
A N a r r o w Escape.&#13;
ft W. Uloyd, a m e r c n i n t , of I'lunk,&#13;
Mo , hud a n a n ow escape t o u r y e a r s&#13;
ago, .vtiIJn be r-tri a junsori b u r into&#13;
brs t h u m b . Ha. s a y s : *•''1'IIH d o c t o r&#13;
wiuited to a m p u t a t e it b u t I would&#13;
not consent I b o u g h t a box ut B u r k -&#13;
1 jn's A r n i c a Salve a n d thai cured i h e&#13;
d a n g e r o u s w o u n d . " 25c at K. A. Sigler's,&#13;
D r u g g i s t .&#13;
A a i m i n e u c e c o n t r a c t f o r t h b&#13;
w i d e n i n g of £&gt;t. M a r y ' s r i v e r a t&#13;
t h e " S o o " IIHH b e e n b e g u n b y t h e&#13;
M a c A r t h u r B r o a . Uoi, o f C h i c a g o '&#13;
t h e p r i n c i p a l c o n t r a c t o r s o n t h e&#13;
A D D I T I O N A L L O C A L .&#13;
Mrs. Mch&gt;yiley died at hei h e m e m&#13;
Ca n t o u ,C&gt;liU*t S u n d a v&#13;
M i[«diH&gt;VuH Ptv-&gt; i x m u i n e d i&#13;
p i c t u i o i.t t h e Y, &gt;i latin N o r m a l Base&#13;
ball r«am, with C.ipt. Monks in t h e&#13;
cHuter. T h i s t e a m has wun victories&#13;
over ail-tlie oth"i colh-ge t e a m s ot t h e&#13;
. s l a t e aucTkave m a d e a gocd record.&#13;
; S«veia!~ wtfeks a.:«&gt; t h e DISPATCH&#13;
J m e n t i o n e d t h e tact t h a t t h e r e o u g h t&#13;
j to be a p o u l t r y o r g a n i z a t i o n in this&#13;
c o u n t y with a n occasional show or exhibit.&#13;
We k n e w t h e r e w e r e m a n y&#13;
tuncv p o u l t r y b r e e d e r s iti t h e c o u n t y&#13;
a n d t h o u g h t t h e t i m e was ripe for&#13;
such a n o r g a n i z a t i o n . As we w e r e&#13;
n u t in t h a t class ut people we did n o t&#13;
push t h e m a t t e r , but it seems' t h e idea&#13;
has found triends as such a u a&gt;sociawas&#13;
formed at Howell last week with&#13;
lt&gt; m e m b e r s .&#13;
New Road System.&#13;
MlfUAl/ FOR :••; i&#13;
Lust T h u r s d a y G o v . W a r n e r s i g n e d&#13;
t h e bill which does a w a y w i t h t h e old&#13;
system of road work w h e n f a r m e r s&#13;
paid t h e i r road taxes by w o r k i n g so&#13;
C h i c a g o . D r a i n a g e C H U H I . T h e nianv d t y s on t h e road each y e a r .&#13;
SATURDAY JUNE We have about Two Dozen&#13;
*Ss'&#13;
c o m e s o i m m e n c e t h a t c o n g e s t i o n&#13;
haB r e s u l t e d a n d a b o u t $ 6 , 0 0 0 , 0 0 0&#13;
of U n c l e H a m ' s m o n e y w i l l b e e x -&#13;
p e n d e d i n p r o v i d i n g m o r e a m p l e&#13;
c h a n n e l s .&#13;
X&#13;
l a k e traffic; w h i c h n o w p a s s e s j T h e system was n e v e r satisfactory as&#13;
t h r o u g h t h e S o o e a c h y e a r h a s b e - \ iu some p';i v s t h e work was well&#13;
d o n e while in o t h e r d i s t r i c t s little if&#13;
a n y would be done a n d m a n y t i m e s it&#13;
would have been b e t t e r if n o t L i n g&#13;
had been done as t h e r o a d s would he&#13;
lett as bad or w o r s e t h a n w h e n&#13;
c o m m e n c e d .&#13;
T h e n e w law abolishes i h e office ot&#13;
path m a s t e r a n d r e q u i r e s t h a t in every&#13;
o i g a m z e d t o w n s h i p all l o a d taxes&#13;
m u s t be paid ir m o n e y . E a c h t o w n -&#13;
s h i p is m a d e a s i n g l e r o a d district.&#13;
T w o funds a r e c r e a t e d , a road r e p a i r&#13;
fund a m i a p e r m a n a n t i m p r o v e m e n t&#13;
f u n d . All road w o r k shall be d o n e&#13;
u n d e r t h e s u p e r v i s o r ot o n e t o w n -&#13;
s h i p road inspector, w h o shall h a v e&#13;
one assistant. T h e t o w n m e e t i n g a n&#13;
n u a l l y shall d e s i g n a t e t h e a m o u n t to&#13;
be raised for t h e r o u d s , b u t it shall&#13;
n o t exceed 50 cents o n each $100 val&#13;
u a t i o n /&#13;
on&#13;
Y ,&#13;
My Hist F r i e n d .&#13;
A l e x a n d e r B»-nhvn, w h o lives&#13;
R u r a l Itoute 1, i \ . r f Ed ward, N.&#13;
s a y - : " D r . K i n d ' s N e w Discovery is&#13;
m y best e a r t h l y I, u-nd. it cured m e&#13;
of a s t h m a six y e a r s a g o . I t has also&#13;
p e r f o r m e d a w o n d e r f u l c u r e of incipient&#13;
c o n s u m p t i o n for : r y son's wile&#13;
T h e f m t bottle ended t h e t e r r i b l e&#13;
c o u g h , a n d this a c c o m p l i s h e d , t h e othe&#13;
r s y m p t o m s i»»ft o r e by one, until she&#13;
war perfect')' w e l ! . D r . K i n g ' s N e w&#13;
Discovery's power over c o u g h s a n d&#13;
colds is simply m a r v e l o u s . " No o t h e r&#13;
r e m e d y h a s e v t r e q u a l e d it. F u l l y&#13;
g u a r a n t e e d '•&gt; !•'. A. S i l l e r , d r u g g i s t .&#13;
50c a n d $1 00. T r a i l bottle free.&#13;
For Boys from 12 to 18 years old. These Suits&#13;
are worth from $5.00 to $10.00 each and we&#13;
Guarantee Them to be as good a quality as you&#13;
can buy anywhere in the State of Michigan for&#13;
the above prices. In order to sell them Quick we&#13;
will place them on sale on the above date at the&#13;
rediculously low price of&#13;
SS.OO&#13;
Japaji astonishes us quite ae&#13;
much \"ff her rapid progress in&#13;
civil and political affairs as she&#13;
does by her progress in the arts&#13;
and in war. She has been taking&#13;
note of the arts of peace as&#13;
well as the ari of war, and it is&#13;
resolved not to be exploited, played&#13;
for a sucker, Harrimanized or&#13;
Rockelellered by private enter- ^ ^ w ( &gt; u l d ^ [m m a c m s a t&#13;
prise. She hands those people ^ ^&#13;
A Good Move.&#13;
T h e bill passed by both houses at. |&#13;
L a n s i n g W e d n e s d a y afternoon with- j&#13;
d r a w i n g from -ale 40.()00 acres of|&#13;
a g r i c u l t u r a l land in Iosco a n d Alcona&#13;
c o u n t i e s with t h e view of t u r n i n g&#13;
t h e m i n t o a s t a t e forest reset ve. T h i s I&#13;
action was t a k e n , it is s t a t e d , to head&#13;
off l u m b e r m e n w h o w e r e a b o u t to&#13;
p u r c h a s e these t i m b e r l a n d s for a&#13;
s o n g . !t is s'ated t h a t w e r e t h e r e a n :&#13;
a v e r a g e of h u t t w o trees to t h e a c r e '&#13;
on t h e 40,000 acres, t h e s t u m page of&#13;
For your choice of any suit in the lot. Come&#13;
early if you want to secure a suit for your boys.&#13;
A b b LONG P A N T S&#13;
Sale Commences at 10 O'clock A. M. and continues until all are sold&#13;
L. L. Holmes Clothing C o&#13;
Pfnckney, Michigan&#13;
the "icy mitt" - it costs too much&#13;
for "graft investigations" in the&#13;
future.&#13;
per acre. j&#13;
T h e action is g o o d a n d t h e m o v e - |&#13;
m e n t should not stop with t h e s a v i n g [&#13;
to t h e t h e state ot these 4 0 . 0 0 0 . '&#13;
T h e r e a r e , no d o n o r , m a n y t h o u s a n d s&#13;
Don't P a y Alimony j o t ' a e i e s o i state l a n d , v a l u a b l e for&#13;
to tie divorced fi om y o u r a p p e n d i x , t i m b e r , still for sale for a song a n d&#13;
T h e r e A/ill be n o occasion for it. if y o u t h e r e c l a m a t i o n m o v e m e n t s h o u l d&#13;
k e e p y o u r bowels r e g u l a r with Dr . c o n t i n u e until these lands are&#13;
K i n g ' s N e w Life P i l l s . T h e i r action ! p r o p e r ! ) valued tor sale or placed in&#13;
is so g e n t l e t h a t t h e a p p e n d i x never s t a t e forest reserves tor t h e benefit of&#13;
h a s r a n - e to m a k e t h » least complaint A|) t h e people in t h e stare.&#13;
G u a r a n t e e d by K. A. S i g i e r , d r n g ^ i - 4&#13;
25c. T . y t h e m&#13;
1'ils get q u i c k a n d certain relief&#13;
from Dr. Snoop-, Magic O i n t m e n t ,&#13;
_ . I p ] p a s p n o | , , jj. j„ marjf&gt; a t o n e for Piles,&#13;
T h e n e w b i l l m a k i n g r o a d t a x e s ; a m j ] f s a c f ] n n ^ p o s l t i v r t a n d C H r t U1&gt;&#13;
p a y a b l e i n c a s h w h i c h wa s s i g n e d I t c h i n g , p a i n t u l . p r o t . u d i n g or blind&#13;
b y t h e G o v e n o r l a s t w e e k , w h i l e&#13;
p r e s e n t e d b y a f a r m e r , t h e r e a r e&#13;
o t h e r s w h o t h i n k t h e o l d w a y t h e&#13;
b e s t — a t l e a s t t h e e a s i e s t . I t w a s&#13;
t h i s c l a s s of f a r m e r s t h a t b r o u g h t&#13;
t h e " d i r e c t t a x " a b o u t a n d t h e y&#13;
h a v e n o k i c k c o m i n g . H a d t h e&#13;
w o r k o n a l l t h e r o a d a b e e n d o n e&#13;
t h e r e w o u l d h a v e b e e n n o n e e d of&#13;
a c h a n g e . A s i t w a s s o m a 11^ t h a t&#13;
piles d i s a p p e a r lik*» m a g i c by its u s e .&#13;
Lart;e n o k e i capped glass j a r s o" cts-&#13;
Sold by All Dealers.&#13;
G R A N D E X C U R S I O N S&#13;
T R U N K to&#13;
R a i l w a y N o r f o l k , V i r g i n i a .&#13;
S y s t e m " 1 : . : Q ' ' ' ' T: v."! TII S o •:&#13;
D a i l y u p t o Nov. 3 0 -&#13;
VARIOUS ROUTES&#13;
S A R A T O G A S P R I N G S , N. Y&#13;
t r i e d t o g e t off w i t h b u t l i t t l e if ' -lulv 3. 4, S n. and T - Kniohts Tempi.ir&#13;
a n y w o r k , t h a t s o m e t h i n g h a d t o&#13;
b e d o n e i n o r d e r t o k e e p t h e r o a d s&#13;
s a b l e .&#13;
it. ,'\sVn&#13;
0 .&#13;
W h e n y o n r bacK aches it is a l m o s t&#13;
i n v . m a h l e y a n i n d i c a t i o n t h a t some&#13;
t h i n g is w r o n g with y o u r kidneys.&#13;
W e a k , diseased k i d n e y s t r e q u e n t l y&#13;
cause a break d o w n ot t h e e n t i r e syst&#13;
e m . DeWitt's. Kidney «nd Bladder&#13;
P i l l s afford p r o m p t relief for weak . . . . , , . « .&#13;
. . - ^ ,• .• 4 . I Uouncl r.rip M u n n u - r [ o u n s t i n k e t s t o&#13;
kidneys, harrkarhe, intiamat inn ot t h e , P r i m , i [ M | c.madi.m .uxi Vcw t:nui.»nii&#13;
bladder a n d all u r i n a r y t r o u b l e s . j points o&lt;.\ •.&gt;aie ..uiv aft.t-r -lune 1st-&#13;
•Old b y F . A. SlglCr, D m « l « t Ktrturn limit. O c t o b e r 31s'.&#13;
A T L A N T I C C I T Y , N . J&#13;
A a v 0 ' t.o Tine S Atneriioui .^Veit&#13;
L O S A N G B L . L . S , CAL..&#13;
-luin' 10 t o 14 - - Notional ."Aeii. ACioiiuj&#13;
one rout.r, r v t u r n i n u anot.licr&#13;
P H I U A D t L - P H I A , P A&#13;
-lulv l-\ \?.. 14. 15 ar,d In - - P.. P . O. t;&#13;
B O S T O N . M A S S&#13;
-IVJIV :''-&gt;. 'Jo. LJT &lt;vnd "29 - \ I.- ()id I lonir&#13;
W e e k .&#13;
Special indueeincnt..^ in linv round trip&#13;
r a t e s t o ' he \A est. and Nor t . h w e s t .&#13;
AU tte n»wt for ILQO p*r jmr.&#13;
Liberal s t o p - o v e r s .&#13;
otfico.&#13;
H o t s e s with b l a n k e t s a n d men with&#13;
fur overcoats lias I een no u n c o m m o n (&#13;
s i ^ h t on o u r streets t h e past week&#13;
W o n d e r when t h e w e a t h e r will changt&#13;
tor good.&#13;
M i c h i g a n a n d h e r citizens h i v e&#13;
every r e a s / n to feel p m u d as tiie''t«|&#13;
probably never was so l a r g e an a g g r e - j&#13;
g a t i o n of d i s t i n g u i s h e d people within&#13;
her hoarders at a n y one t i m e as t t i s&#13;
week. W i t h t h e P r e s i d e n t of these&#13;
U n i t e d States, college p r e s i d e n t s from&#13;
different states a n d t h e a l u m n i ot t h e&#13;
a g r i c u l t u r a l college h o m e to help cele&#13;
b r a t e t h e fiftieth a n n i v e r s a r y ot t h e (&#13;
a g r i c u l t u r a l colleges in t h e U . 8., all j&#13;
m a k e it a t i m e l o n g to be r e m e m b e r e d . |&#13;
T h e r u b b i n g t o g e t h e r of t h e peoples&#13;
of t h e different states c o n n o t help b u t&#13;
he of benefit to a l l c o n c e r n e d .&#13;
Let nee mail y o u free, to p r o v e m e t&#13;
it, s a m p l e s ot D r . S n o o p ' s R e s t o r i t i v e ,&#13;
a n d my hook on e i t h e r D y s p e p s i a ,&#13;
The H e a r t , o r t h e K i d n e y s . Address&#13;
me. D r . S h o o p , R a c i n e , W i s . T r o u b -&#13;
les of t h e S t o m a c h , H e a r t or Kidneys,&#13;
a r e m e r e l y S y m p t o m s of a d e e p e r ailm&#13;
e n t . D o n ' t m a k e t h e c o m m o n e r r o r&#13;
of t r e a t i n g t h e r e s n . t of y o n r a i l m e n t&#13;
a n d not. t h e cause. W e a k S t o m a c h 1&#13;
J n e r v e s — t h e inside nerves- me; ns&#13;
S t o m a c h w e a k n e s s , a l w a y s . A n d t h e&#13;
H e a r t , a n d K i d n e y s as well, have &lt;&#13;
l their c o n t r o l l i n g or inside nerves.&#13;
I W e a k e n these n e r v e s , a n d y o u m e v i t -&#13;
! ,^hly h a v e weak vital o r g a n s . Here is&#13;
w h e r e Dr. Snoop's Kestoritive has&#13;
made its fame. X o o t h e r r e m e d y&#13;
j Hven claims to treat t h e " i n s i d e&#13;
1 n e r v e s . " Al^o for b l o a t i n g , bilious&#13;
! ness, bad b r e a t h or c o m p l e x i o n , use&#13;
; Dr. Shoop's R e s t o r a t i v e . W r i t e for&#13;
my free book n o w . D r . Sh..op's Restora&#13;
t i v e sold by all d e a l e r s .&#13;
SnbKrlbe (or tfe* Ptncknar Dispatch.&#13;
r-A-WAH ru r MAP* nt.-inrB&#13;
I am for MEN,&#13;
WOMEN and&#13;
The Pell able Ir.di in&#13;
B L O O D P U R I F I E R&#13;
Instant relief t o sufferers of&#13;
Rheumatism, Kidney Trouble,&#13;
Stomach Disorders.&#13;
Got a bottle t o d a y . Is purely a vegetable compound. Mild&#13;
in effect b u t t ) n e t h e most effectual remedies known for restoring&#13;
t h e entire system. It is derived from nature, not&#13;
compound of drugs ami chemicals that only allay t h e pain,&#13;
b u t cures to stay cured after alt so-called '«scientific " treatm&#13;
e n t s have failed.&#13;
For sale b y druggists. Send for circulars. Address,&#13;
INDIAN MEDICINE CO., Milford, Ohio.&#13;
Buy a"HYGEIA""d»fi,,aj"" The best Spring Bed on&#13;
Earth* Perfectly Noiseless*&#13;
For both Wood and&#13;
Iron Bedsteads*&#13;
Ninety per cent, of the Spring Beds made are not fit to sleep on&#13;
Pay just a little more and get a " HYGEIA," which is perfection fn&#13;
itself. Guaranteed for ten years. If your dealer does not I.andle :h*&#13;
Hygeia write direct to us giving his address.&#13;
ENTERPRISE BED CO., Mfrs., Hammor 4, Indiana.&#13;
}— - . _&#13;
i&#13;
More Money for Eggs under most any conditions. There fs a lot of money to be made&#13;
in the eg£ business if conditions are right. Th&lt;»rc is no* reason&#13;
why F a r m e r s and P o u l t r y R a i s e r s should not make just as good&#13;
profits on their investments as any otlnT line of business, and it is&#13;
possible for them to d o so, T h e price of eggs during the winter&#13;
months is double a n d sometimes more than double that paid&#13;
during the s u m m e r months. The only way t o take advantage of this* advance is&#13;
to hold summer fggs for winter prices. That fresh eggs can b e k e p t from six t o&#13;
nine months or more haa been proven b y careful testing with kii^ • y*.&#13;
HACER'S EGG PRESERVATIVE. '&#13;
and anyone twing this Preservative Beed never sell a dozen egga for anything out&#13;
the highest market price. Srtui for Sample and Circulars telling yitu all about it.&#13;
HACER ECC PRESERVING CO., - St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
&lt;v&#13;
*i&#13;
HV&#13;
fVatntorftttEesr nta Cure.&#13;
''Oar little boy tytd ecgpina for live&#13;
year*," writes N. A. (A4ft&lt;u0. Henrietta,&#13;
Pa.. ''Two of ooj^{ bonje dqptprti&#13;
said tbw caae was bop#&gt;w, bib ^Uuayb&#13;
being altered. We then emj^oyed&#13;
other loctois but no .beat-tit re»ulitd.&#13;
liy chunce we read about Eiwcirio Bit&#13;
tt-rt&gt;; I ouutti d iMiHir and boon noticed nsuT."&#13;
improvement. W*-&gt; lonimu^d this |&#13;
medicine, tuii'i Kevtial bortlt-M were j&#13;
' , T r&#13;
A 3 , i 9 h t Mistake. | | f W o m , n Couldn't Reas.&#13;
LhltW l l a i j j was-pleading in Waah Held Their Own. , ^ h e n y o u d o n . t thieve i n higher&#13;
lugto»v«toi' the .Indiums' right to roam A regiment of regulars was making ] ajjucation for women?"&#13;
In uiu^ad faalibn, ttfce their.fathiarH. a long, dusty march acroaa the rolling i "Certainly not. I think it'n a ahame&#13;
•"i"U«y mil up to truwt to fortune." j prulri© land of Montana during a re- '• to e v t m t e a e h . e u | n o w to r e u d [ f a&#13;
I'hUto tlarjo;Bflid.vr»n*l then we'll get. cent suinwer. It wa» a hot, Wintering woman c.ou|dn't read the bargain ad&#13;
. ^ . .... . .* ... , ^ y a &lt; u J i t L e m e n &lt; longiug for water r e r t l l J e m e n t e i 8 D e wouldn't be so un&#13;
and rent,'were impatient to reach the h a p p y o v c r toe ) o t s o f t h i u g 8 8 h e c a n &gt; r&#13;
next town. A rancher rode past "Hnv.&#13;
friend," culled out oue of the men.&#13;
uur rights. |iat vfe art' tired of trust&#13;
liitf to fortune. Fortune has uj*t|d uw&#13;
Judluus riM it ustri tha pule face Instruct&#13;
less at t h * Indian school in&#13;
fid win A;ii'r;;iy i-j wj ar'.'t-le pubilslii"!&#13;
lu t'i&lt;« Cl.t-ss Pl;i*i»7;*' Chronicle&#13;
computed approxiimitel." that tl , e&#13;
number of ways of placing only the"&#13;
first ten moves on each side is 169,518,-&#13;
82»a00.544.0UO,000,0UO,U00.00a&#13;
afford to buy."&#13;
'how far is it to the ueyt town?" "Ob,&#13;
t'bitto liiii j\&gt; Biuiied miJ wt'iu ou: ; a matter of two miles or so, I reckon,"&#13;
"This IL ructrcss fouui! a horseanoc j culled back tbe rancher. Another lou^&#13;
uud to ijel Kood fortune put it umie: hour drugged by, and another rancher&#13;
used, when imr boy was eomp.atHly jje r pUJov,-. uluus with her false teeth ! was encountered. "How far to the&#13;
Mrad'' medicine*) :iiiur hurrv i the men asked him eagergood&#13;
two miles." A weary&#13;
Hear if all hlood medicines [u the mm :IJUK in the hurry of dies- next town?" t&#13;
M.ily iiQihJinw h »-a 1 » h tonics. m±j, she tu ! stltuted the shoe tor the ' ly- "Oh, a go&#13;
.Guaranteed *r F. \. Shim' s Drutf&#13;
Htf&gt;re. 5Uc.&#13;
teeth uud till uot discover her mistake&#13;
till her altianced husband asked her in&#13;
tones of horror at breakfast what was&#13;
the matter with her mouth."&#13;
n&#13;
airtreei&#13;
triU*&#13;
pHOC A N O I&#13;
i'rt*j ad&gt;'u o, l.uw to (jij^.ui&#13;
c o p y r i g h t e d , , N ALL. C 6 * W T R ( C a .&#13;
Business direct with Washington *uves tim*A&#13;
money uud often the patent.&#13;
Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Writo ov cutiu&gt; to uu at&#13;
OSS KUUi titiwt, opp. United States rates* OAsa, |&#13;
WASHINGTON. D. C.&#13;
GA-SNOW&#13;
F&lt;eH samples o Prevention and a&#13;
In)"'' • t OD colds will b« gladly mailed&#13;
you, &gt;u request, by Dr. oboop," Racinw&#13;
Wi&gt;. simp)A&gt;to prove merit. I'reventi'&gt;&#13;
ar^ little Cindy Coid Cure tablets.&#13;
No quinine, no Laxative, nothing&#13;
kntnirul whatever, Preventic^s pre&#13;
ven' colds—as tbe name imply.*-&#13;
when taken early, or. at tbe "sn^ez^&#13;
sta«e " For a seated cold or LH&#13;
Oripiie, break it dp safely and quick&#13;
l\ with PrBventios. Sold by A I]&#13;
P e H ' e i H&#13;
WOtr&lt;^'-:- &lt;;*v&gt;"•v''-';&gt;-'/'"''''-.- '•'' mh&#13;
v&#13;
L«J&#13;
--.\;:-:-&#13;
5^¾&#13;
•^&lt;S'&#13;
&gt;yj&amp;; -zme*&#13;
\V&#13;
^&#13;
\, -.^&#13;
t ^ \&#13;
t&gt;^&#13;
^?&gt;&#13;
*-\Z&#13;
"rk^&#13;
\N&#13;
'•5^L^.'-.'&gt;-^'J&#13;
\X&#13;
^ ' • ^ @ ; # f.«.-&#13;
^&#13;
half hour longer of marching, and then&#13;
a third rancher. "Iley, how far's the&#13;
next town?" "Not far," was the encouraging&#13;
auswer— "only about two&#13;
miles." "Well," sighed an optimistic&#13;
aergeant, "we're holdln' our own anyhow."&#13;
Let r n e s e n J y o u free, l o r « 0 a t » n b ,&#13;
just to prove merit, a trial t*.z* bo"^ of&#13;
Ur. Sboop's Catarrh remedy. It is&#13;
a snow white creamy, healing antiseptic&#13;
balm. Con'amiutt such healing&#13;
ingredients as Oil Eucaiiptud, Thymol&#13;
Menthol, etc., it jiives instant and la*tiiiK&#13;
leiiet to Catarrh o&gt; tbe uus« and&#13;
throat. Make the free test and :«ee tor&#13;
yourself what this preparation can&#13;
and wili accomplish. Address Or,&#13;
Sboop, Racine, Wis. Lar^e jars hO&#13;
cents. Sold by AH Dealers.&#13;
Poll Parro': zr. ;. Gam:. Bku.&#13;
While the p:ir:\&gt;t is a bii-.! ol heautifill&#13;
ph'irpa'.ye. as a table iit'lic;u-y it is&#13;
not In l;e reeo::'ineii(!ed. as 1 know&#13;
from sad e:;p••rie:1 -e. ^ry li;.-t e - a y at&#13;
eating a parrot was atteiule i wit'i mo'l&#13;
ilie:l SiK-c;'ss. The liird niu '! !;;. v .J lieea&#13;
comparatively yonn.^r. and aller e\'er'il&#13;
hours' I&gt;t&gt;ili»i«-c became si;i'; ea'Mi'.vh t:&gt;&#13;
masticate1 and hnally swalla-.v. l-'aviui;&#13;
behind it an i:: ;n-cv -si;&gt;u tint v,v had&#13;
luni-hf'd on tin* s'lle nf a niMv:1 h v&gt;t.&#13;
Arthur 1 &gt; Ten!!»I:' in I-'Jehl ami Stream&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach&#13;
H«r Advantage.&#13;
"Your daughter has an angelic dis&#13;
poaitlon."&#13;
"Yes; we always let her have her&#13;
own way af&gt;out everything."&#13;
Nipped In the Bud.&#13;
Mudge Which is proper to say.&#13;
"I.eud me $10," or "Loan me $10?"&#13;
WWkwire—it won't do you any good&#13;
to #ty either.&#13;
DeWitt's CarboJi^d Witcb Haz-t&#13;
iSalve does not weieiy'lieal on tbe sur&#13;
face; »t penetiaies tbe pores and&#13;
promptly releives pain, caused b)&#13;
boils, burns, scalds, cuts and sktu dis&#13;
eases. It is especially gocd ior pile;-.&#13;
Beware of imitation*.&#13;
Bold by F. A. Slgler. Dru&amp;UL&#13;
Stop That Cold&#13;
To check early colds i&gt;r Urippo with "Preventtct"&#13;
means 8Uio defeat for Pneumonia. To stop a cold&#13;
with Preventics is «i ft'r than to It*t it run and be&#13;
obliged to cure it ufk-rwards. To be sure. Pre-&#13;
Tentlcs will i-ure even a dt&gt;«ply a-a ted cold, but&#13;
taken early—at the wtetstu atagu—thuy break, e r&#13;
head off theoe early colda. That's t&gt;uruly beUar.&#13;
That's why they are railed Preventic*.&#13;
Ty (Jo&#13;
lne. no physic, nothing sickening. Nice for the&#13;
Preventfoittiv little Candy Cold Curw». N o Q u i n .&#13;
children—and thoroughly aafu too. If you feel&#13;
chilly, if you gnct-zK, if y o o ache all over, think of&#13;
Preventics. Proinptaieai) m a r a l i o save half your&#13;
usual bickm as. And don't forget yoar child. 11&#13;
there la feverishiiesn. n i g h t or day. Mareln probably&#13;
lies Preventics' greatest efficiency. Sold in&#13;
fie boxe* for the pocket, also in -5c boxes of 41&#13;
Preventics. Insist un yudt druggists g i v i n g y o u Preventics •ALL DEALERS."&#13;
Use McLaughlin's XXXX&#13;
Coffee Every Day Because—&#13;
McLaughlin's XXXX Coffee is always&#13;
uniform in quality and properly blended&#13;
and roasted.&#13;
You do not get good coffee one day and&#13;
poor coffee the next&#13;
The handy air-tight package and the glazing&#13;
of pure sugar keeps this coffee clean and&#13;
fresh, protected from dust, dirt and foul odors.&#13;
Each package is one pound full weight.&#13;
McLaughlin's X X X X Coffee is Sold by&#13;
W . E M u r p h y *&#13;
W , W . B a ^ n a r i&#13;
H. M. W i l l i s t o ; : !: o&#13;
No appetite, toas of strength,&#13;
i, headache, constipation, bad&#13;
general debility, aour rising*, and catanfc&#13;
of the stomaoa a n all duo to Indigealloaw&#13;
Kodol relieves indigestion. This new dlsoovery&#13;
represents the natural juices of digestion&#13;
as they exist in a healthy stomaoa*&#13;
combined with the greatest known tonal&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol for&#13;
dyspepsia does not only relieve indicsstlos)&#13;
and dyspepsia, bejt this famous remaa&gt;&#13;
helps all stomacki troubles by cleansiof,&#13;
purifying, svectsaing end strength sal i f&#13;
the mucous membranes lining the stomach*&#13;
Mr. a S. Bel, of ftavenewood, W, Vs.. Hytt— M I was troubled with sour stomach for twenty yMr*&gt;&#13;
Kodol cared roe and w e are now using it la Rriej&#13;
lor baby."&#13;
Kodol Digests What Yon Eat,&#13;
Bottles only. Relieves Indigestion, soar •sosssaa,&#13;
belching of gas, etc.&#13;
Prepared by E. O. OeWITT &amp; OO., OHIOAOQs&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist.&#13;
fUBL.XaUSO KVMSI TUUKSDAX SO»M»»&gt; *&gt;*&gt;&#13;
F R A N K L.. A N D R E W S So CC&#13;
fcDITOM* A N D P K O f K I S T U H B .&#13;
_ aiiUBo.ripcion Price ( 1 i n A d v a n c e .&#13;
^uu&gt;reu fit cue Postuulce at P i n c t a e y , Michi^ai&#13;
at» secouU-class m«iter&#13;
Advorciaiax raiHH made known un a p p l i c a n t s&#13;
. Busiueae Cards, J4.00 pe»«year.&#13;
r e a i U and marriage uotlces p u b l i s h e d t r e e .&#13;
Anuuunceinents of e a t e r l a i a m e a t a may be \&gt;&amp;\-&#13;
fur, it desired, by ^r o e n t i u ^ i u e olfice with tick&#13;
Bt« of sdiuitisiun. i n case tickets are uot hrouvi t&#13;
to trie office, regular rates w i l l b e c h a r v &lt; - .&#13;
A i l m a t t e r l u l o c a l n o U c e c o l m n n w l l i o e c h ^ r ^ i&#13;
ed at 5 c e n t s per l i n e or fraction t h e r e o f , for ua&lt;. i&#13;
insertion. Where n o t i m e i s s p e c i f i e d , * ! ! notice*&#13;
will be inserted until ordered d i s c o n t i n u e d , ain&#13;
will be c h a m e d i o r a c c o r d i n g l y . £ » V A 1 1 cb&amp;n^et&#13;
uf sdvertlsementB ML'bT reach t b i s office as eari}&#13;
as TUISHUAY m o r n i n g t o i n s u r e an i n s e r t i o n n&#13;
• ti'ue week.&#13;
JOS *&gt;&amp;IJV IIJV G /&#13;
i n all its branches, a specialty. We haTeallkim.'*&#13;
and the latest styles oi Type, etc., welch e n a b l t 8&#13;
un to execute all kinds ut work, such a a B u o k ; ,&#13;
Pauiplets, Posters, Programmes, Bill H e s d t . N o t i&#13;
Heads, statements, Cards, Auction .Billa, e t c . u&#13;
Bupt-rier styles, upon the shortest notice. Pricen H&gt;&#13;
low UH good work can be n o n e .&#13;
ALLBiUaPAYABtK KIH«T OJT BVKBY HOHTU.&#13;
Trie ViLLnGt jJLKhU'UK\&#13;
Health and Wealth.&#13;
TnKTired health t o t h e average m a n n u m H&#13;
g r e a t wealth.&#13;
DR. JOHNSON'S&#13;
1FTER DINNER PILL&#13;
INSURES HEALTH. TRY IT.&#13;
!S PURELY VE6HABLE,&#13;
jfiHiM^ftNlB an^i w a s xae^ °y *^e v°?-&#13;
(5&#13;
PpilRHMIQ AS 1TIS GQO|&#13;
)&#13;
Mortjrajre Sale&#13;
WHKHKAS (lclault has bt^cn JURIIO in tho conditions&#13;
of a certain morlRag.), whereby tho power&#13;
of Hale (herein has litH-nmo operative, made by&#13;
I1KNUV T H I K B u I / r and his wife CAROLINE&#13;
T r l i n n O L T . of Deorneld, Livin^nton County,&#13;
MichiRan, to NELSON LAMB of the Brtnif place&#13;
n'orpfuui'l; boari"",' date March 29tb, A, I), lft&amp;J,&#13;
and rcrorded in thi&gt; oftlre of the HoL'iater of&#13;
Dood for Livingston (,'nunty, Michigan, in Liber&#13;
MJ. of Morta^oR at pa^e .V)l thereof on March .iOth&#13;
A i). ISSv? which Bnid raort^jaRfl \va.s duly aspif»re«l&#13;
hy NKLSON LAMB on the 10t.h dav of August,&#13;
ISOfi to HilNKY THIKBOLT ,TU. which iiwsiRnni'Mit&#13;
wan recorded in the He^i«teroi Deed's otfioe&#13;
for the County of Livingston on the 121 li day of&#13;
August, 1ST6 in Liber HT&gt; of Mortapen Hi pas;e 47,&#13;
and by•IIKNKY THKIBOLT fit. duly a-^ipned&#13;
;,. CAIIOL1NL TIIF.IBOLT on November .',. IKSfi&#13;
and rerorderl in the ReKiater's Dftlee, Dtliie for&#13;
Livingston County on the l?th day of May, 1S'.«S,&#13;
in Liber 85 of Mortgages at pa^a 2R7. And by&#13;
t C A W 0 L I N K T H E 1 B 0 L T duly assigned to UV.Si&#13;
UY TI1E1BOLT .IB on March V2, 1007 -md rerord&#13;
i ed in the Office ot'the Be^ister of Deeds for Liv-&#13;
, liit;?ton County on March 13, 1907 in i.il&gt;er !h&gt; at&#13;
VlLL^'Jt OFFICERb.&#13;
I'KSBiusNT J. C. Dunn&#13;
i ui.rtTKKB H. J. Teeple, Ed. Farnuui.&#13;
James ftinith, J a m e s Uuctie.&#13;
W. A. Nixou C. V. VauWinKle.&#13;
CLKMK Uo^er Carr&#13;
T U E A S U U K H J. A. Cadwell&#13;
ASSKSMOH D. W.Murti*&#13;
STIIKKT Uomii^sioNLH M.Lavey&#13;
a.-.vi l u m ^ i c K K I n . 1J . K . s i u i e r&#13;
A I T O K * * ; ^ W . A . U a r r&#13;
.MAiwiiALL i ha«. Jbldert&#13;
u r l U R C M L S .&#13;
$* 2 S Cent&#13;
bdini}&amp; irt rtftn&#13;
OJmma v.was*&#13;
• Jirectfons&#13;
JL JOHNS 0^&#13;
tor for t w e n t y years in R-niNIMFf8 active practice, and is&#13;
U l N N t r C Q i t 0 8 &lt; n a - »y all h a v i n g&#13;
P I L L § 0 S « 4 U e » k c t b e l &gt; e s t&#13;
UttltMtsiacbPill&#13;
cm the •artet. It is a&#13;
PBKVSHTAT1V£ of&#13;
Sick&#13;
Dyspepsia,&#13;
ness, HoatrtlRsrn.&#13;
Gad Taate In&#13;
M o u t h , Coated&#13;
Tongue, Loss of&#13;
Appetite *&#13;
and nil other m o r b i d&#13;
conditions arising from&#13;
a disordered stomach.&#13;
P R E V E N T I O N&#13;
is the order of t l m day and age, as it is m u c h&#13;
l .ore (scientific to pnr.^nt a diseased condi-&#13;
Kon than to cure it. Y o u can secure this&#13;
LITTLE PILL of ANY FIRST-CLASS DRUGGIST&#13;
u-ho will be pleased to serve you, 35 doses for&#13;
23 cents. Don't take .some other " j u s t as&#13;
jrood" for there isn't iuiy other t h a t will&#13;
please yon at all after trying this one.&#13;
L. L. JOHNSON, M . D. Prop.&#13;
Atlanta, Georgia.&#13;
YALVELESS MTTOIITM&#13;
Stock Fountain PAYS FOR ITSELF THE FIRST YEAR.&#13;
MitTliULUST E P I S C O P A L CUUKC1I.&#13;
Kev. u. C. Littloioba pastor, s e r v i c e s evter.&#13;
auuaa) uiuruiu^ »i iU:^o, aau every aunua}&#13;
evemut; at J :oo o'clock, i'rayer meeting 'i'hu it&#13;
UB&gt;'evening*, auudav ecuuoi at c l o s e o t u i o n .&#13;
i n - s e r v i c e . Alias AIAKY V A N F L K K T , bupi.&#13;
Ci O N U t t K G A r i O N A L CUlTrvCH.&#13;
' Kev. G. W. M.ylne paatoi, a e r v l c t e v e i j&#13;
riunaay m o r n i n g st iU:S(J nn l evory J U U U L J&#13;
evening at 7:0C o ' c l o c k . Piayor lueetin^ 1 n u n&#13;
day e v e n i n g s . S u n d a y school ui cloue oi morL&#13;
ing service. Percy Swarthout, aupl,, Alocco&#13;
l e e p l e bee.&#13;
C T . MA It kT'S 'J ATk£OL 1C 0 I I U KO U.&#13;
O riev. AI. J. Comuierford, 1'aStor. 'ierviee&#13;
every Sunday. Low mass at ?:3Uo'cloi..&#13;
higli oiass with sermon at * % a. m. Cstechiei.&#13;
l J :0U p. m „ vespers an &gt; •.. jdictlon at 7:3D p. o&#13;
S O C I E T I E S :&#13;
fl^he A. O. H. Society of this place, meet* eve:&#13;
i third Sunday intne t'r. Mattnaw a a i l .&#13;
Jonn Tuomey and M. T. Keliy.Couuty D^legau&#13;
r p U K W. C. T. U. meets the first Friday of each&#13;
X month at ^:,% p. in, at the home m Dr. i i . F.&#13;
M^ler. Uveryone interested in temperance i?&#13;
. uHdiiilLy invited. Mrs, U&gt;al Sij^lur, i'res; Air:.!&#13;
t-.ita Durfee,Secretary. i&#13;
I^he C. T. A. and li. Society of this p l a c e , m - ]&#13;
. evety third Saturaay evening in the Kr. Si*&#13;
No Valves&#13;
or floats to&#13;
3 get out ol&#13;
Automatio&#13;
Never iaiialo&#13;
work. Does&#13;
not overflow.&#13;
No mud or&#13;
filth. P u r s&#13;
cool water.&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
T o d o a a&#13;
claimed.&#13;
Big Seller&#13;
Sold on 30 Dmy*' T*l*l.&#13;
MONEY BACK IP NOT SATISFIED.&#13;
GEDGE BROS. IRON ROOFING CO.&#13;
fountain St.. Anderson, Ind.&#13;
thew H a l l . John Donohue, i T e e i i i t n t .&#13;
Kl&#13;
I • • i * aav^aat s jaeaasfjgajae^aa*- T H E GREATEST&#13;
OF ALL CEREAL FOODS.&#13;
No fad or uncertain mixture. A Natural FOOD&#13;
LAXATIVE. A whole kernel of Rye to each flake.&#13;
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT or write us for our t h r s * special&#13;
Offers. A pound package by mail, postpaid, for 25 cents. It will&#13;
positively dure the most aggravated case of constipation. Write to-day.&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS CEREAL COMPANY,&#13;
H. H. Dopt. M I N N E A P O L I S , M I N N .&#13;
Soifottomm Wmntrnd E*o+ywhomm.&#13;
I&#13;
C V B V C*A I p l\|4f^ E" f Experience is one of the greatest factors in almost&#13;
• • • ^ • T a e a i % l a e » l ^ \ # e S i a any walk in life. It Is what gives the Partner, Doctor,&#13;
Merchant and Mechanic success. In manufacturing:&#13;
it is an all Important elernent. We are carriage&#13;
manufaoturera of over twenty-five years' experience&#13;
and we claim to know the business from A to Z. We&#13;
will stake oar reputation that we make aa good work&#13;
for the money aa it is possible to make. Onr two&#13;
leaders a n onr No. SO Top Buggy at the popular&#13;
price of $60.00 and onr No. «0 Top&#13;
Buggy at S80.00. Nothing but the beat&#13;
go into these jobs in order to make&#13;
them come ap to our standard. Write&#13;
for full spedfloaUoua, cute and reference*.&#13;
Do ft to-day and ass what we&#13;
can offer you tor your cash and save&#13;
all dealer proflta. Writs at once and&#13;
get our great offer.&#13;
J. A. HUNCERFORD A SON, Lapeer, Michigan.&#13;
! s i o - t luif heins; the place ol holding ihe ''irrutt&#13;
i Cnurf, fi'T ttie Ceiinty of Livingston on Saturday&#13;
the Kith duv of.Tuly A. 1». 1 '.V7 Jit IT I.YI.-K k in the&#13;
i lurrnoon nl said day, or *n much thereof HS IIDIV&#13;
lit' I I P C I W H T tn|iBy th* principal Htiil in*t'i't--f&#13;
! due on ?Mu moifj/H^e, lh.&gt; Atforne\ tee providfNi&#13;
I thrrem suit costs of ~&lt;Hi11 sale, of tlie followinsj;&#13;
I i esrrthod premises, t&lt;i wit; t-nniPiencin_r t&gt;»»ntv&#13;
1&#13;
; rmls Fust of the Null nwept corner .&gt;t Section&#13;
f\veu*y two i-VM in township lour ii North of&#13;
K'niv^e Ave (') Hast Mtchiitaii, r u n n m t thence&#13;
Sout h eight tisls thence 1 ;isl sixty rods thence&#13;
Neriti eii. ht rods t h e i e e West to h*»i;inins; coninintccr&#13;
thre*' seres of land.&#13;
HLNHY Til F.I HOLT, JR.,&#13;
Afplgnee of the MenrHijee.&#13;
i Dated, Howell, April 4, 1M)7.&#13;
j \VM. P. VASWlSKLl,&#13;
I Attorney for Assl^iiro.&#13;
IL G9YA-"sv&gt;ltoc aQ CA fiaSAwfeifewt itiou aEdait&#13;
Livingston Lod^e, No.76, P A; A . M. Kejjuln&gt;&#13;
Communication Tu«tdav evening, on or hefort&#13;
the lull of the moon. Kirk Van Winkle, W, \&lt;&#13;
N I G H T S OF MACCABKKS.&#13;
e e t e v e r y Friday evening on or before :u.,&#13;
luiLretitl. And whereas ihe an,* u:;t claimed to j ol t a e moon at their h a l l i n the Swarthout hi.).&#13;
he due on said MortpaK* »t this date IH the aQm of Visiting hrothera a r e c o r d i a l l y i n v i t e d .&#13;
rt . ^ . . . J? J ,, • u. * I CHAS. L. (AsiKKLi., hit hnifihi Commc*i&#13;
One hundred and eighty dollara and eighty nve&#13;
Mit^ (?18ft,(W) nf principal and interest anrt no&#13;
j "nit ur proee?&lt;iin;» having been instituted to rej&#13;
cover the deht secured hy paiil mort^atje or any&#13;
j pflrl thereof:&#13;
Therefore notice is hereby yiven that by virtue&#13;
of pftid power of pale and in persnanre of the&#13;
! i-tafiu'B in purh CRSC made and provided the said&#13;
i titortn&amp;L'e will lie foreclosed hy pale of the premises&#13;
therein described at public a n c t i o n t o t h e hiirhest&#13;
Mdder fit the West front door of the Court House&#13;
ii. the village of Howell in said County of Living-&#13;
6 3 YEARS*&#13;
EXPEAIENCE&#13;
ATENIS&#13;
0 ROKR OF EASTERN STAR meet*each raontt A A. M. meeting, Mas&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F&#13;
.NKTTB V A U G H N , W. M.&#13;
OuL.KR OF MODKRN WOODMEN Meet t h e&#13;
first, Thursday evening of each MoDt.h in the&#13;
Maocabem hall. C. L. Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF T H E MACCABEKS. Meet every&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of each month at 2:8n p i&#13;
K.'O. T. M. hall. Visiting sisters cordially in&#13;
vited. LILA C O S I W A Y , Ladv Com.&#13;
m.&#13;
KNIGHTS OF-THK LOYAL GTIARU&#13;
r . L. Andrews F. Ai, 5V&#13;
T I T A D E M A R K S&#13;
O E ^ I C N O&#13;
OOPYRIOHTS Ac&#13;
Anvone ^enrltr-^ a sketch nnd dP*crir&gt;f'on mav&#13;
Quickly ascerT.'nii r.nr opinion free whether aii&#13;
invention M prohnh'.r patentable. Communica.&#13;
tlonsstnctiyroimdeiitlal. HAHDWOK °n Patents&#13;
sent, free, oldest ajceucy for securing patent*.&#13;
Patents t.iUen through Munn A Co. recatve&#13;
ttxtial not ice, without charge, in the Scientific American. A. handsomely 11 InntrajM wpe^tr. Lnrcrest n -&#13;
cclHtioii of anv scientific lonrnal. Terms. S.*i .&#13;
tiwr: fourmonC'.s, Ji. S&lt;/Id byaU newsdealer*. MUNN &amp; Co-36"8™-^ New York&#13;
Branch Offlee, ffif F St_ Wash'.nvtnn 7» C&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H. F.S'GLER M. D- C. L. SlGLtH M. C&#13;
DHS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
t'hyafciaaa and S u r g e o n s . All call* promptly&#13;
attended today or night. &lt;&gt;rnr« on M i m street&#13;
1'imkney, Mich.&#13;
ILL ME COUCH&#13;
AND CURE THE LUNGS&#13;
FRANK'L ANDREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEAL&#13;
AT DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
w TH BL King's&#13;
New Discovery *&#13;
r n n /^ONSUaPTlON&#13;
t u n I OUGHSand&#13;
/OLDS&#13;
PrJct&#13;
50c 4 $1.00&#13;
Frss Trial.&#13;
Guaranteed for all THKOAT and&#13;
LTJNG TKOTJBLES, or X O N S Y&#13;
B A C K&#13;
Nothing I Ate&#13;
Agreed With Me,&#13;
HOME TRADE FABLE&#13;
__ _ . ^&#13;
HOW T H E TRANSFORMATION OF&#13;
A TOWN WAS EFFECTED.&#13;
A STORY WITH A MORAL&#13;
MBS. LE50EA BODXNHAMEB.&#13;
Mrs. Lenora Bodenhamer, R. F. D. 1.&#13;
Box tt9, Keruersville, N. C , writes: 441 suffered with stomach trouble and&#13;
indigestion for some time, and nothing&#13;
t h a t 1 ate agreed with me. 1 was very&#13;
nervous and experienced a continual&#13;
feeling- of uneasiness and fear. 1 took&#13;
medicine from the doctor, but it did me&#13;
no tfood.&#13;
" I found in one of your Peruua books&#13;
a description of my symptoms. I then&#13;
wrote to Dr. Hartiuau for advice, lie&#13;
said I had catarrh of the stomach. 1&#13;
took Peruna and Manalin and followed&#13;
his directions and can now say t h a t I&#13;
feel as well a.s I ever did.&#13;
" I hope that all who are afflicted with&#13;
the same symptoms will take Peruna, as&#13;
it lias certainly cured me. "&#13;
Tiie above is only one of hundreds who&#13;
have written ^similar let tea's to Dr.&#13;
Uartiuan. Just one such ease as this&#13;
entitles Peruna to the candid consideration&#13;
Of every one similarly afflicted. If&#13;
t h i s be true of the testimony of one person&#13;
what ou^rht to be the testimony of&#13;
hundreds, yes thousands, of honest, sincere&#13;
people. We have in our tiles a yreat&#13;
nutfiy other testimonials.&#13;
One Public Spirited Citizen Who&#13;
Realized the Big Possibilities and&#13;
Cultivated the Field to Advantage.&#13;
Once upon a time there was a Man,&#13;
whu in his youth was reared upon a&#13;
farm located near a Small Town of&#13;
Great Promise. Two weeks in each&#13;
year when he was not sawing wood,&#13;
feeding thy stock or picking potatoes,&#13;
he was allowed to attend the little red&#13;
schoolhouse in. the town. By hard labor&#13;
during the -day, and persistently&#13;
reading a few old books which were&#13;
heirlooms in bis family, and each week&#13;
absorbing the intelligence contained&#13;
in the Weekly Mirror, he, by the time&#13;
he could mark down his age at 18&#13;
years, had accumulated sufficient&#13;
knowledge to run away from home.&#13;
He wandered to a large city and there&#13;
Strenuous busluess life and aiaidious&#13;
attention to the accumulation of&#13;
capital without vacation, caused him&#13;
to Buffer from what the doctors pronounced&#13;
neurasthenia, and advised&#13;
total rest from mental effort. The man&#13;
had labored too diligently in amassing&#13;
money. Residence in a quiet place&#13;
was recommended and retirement from&#13;
all commercial worries. The Great&#13;
Merchant sold his vast interests to a&#13;
combine, and after careful thought,&#13;
concluded that he would seek rest and&#13;
a renewal of health in the town where&#13;
he at one time Attended the little red&#13;
schoolhouse, and where in childish imagination&#13;
he would be powerful and&#13;
famous by becoming chairman of the&#13;
village board. Accordingly he retired&#13;
from the city, purchased the old homestead&#13;
where he was reared and picked&#13;
potatoes, and also built a residence&#13;
and became a lireat Factor in the&#13;
town. Time had made few chauges in&#13;
the landscape. Buildiugs and streets&#13;
were the same, only showing the ravages&#13;
of, decay. The old stores were in&#13;
l&gt;oesession of the descendants of the&#13;
owners who cunducted them when he&#13;
was a boy. They were not doing the&#13;
business that they should. One great&#13;
innovation was the town had a railroad.&#13;
All about was suggestive of&#13;
peace, it was an ideal place for a&#13;
man who desired to pass his declining&#13;
MffiiU.U,&#13;
I'I I i&#13;
i I ! 1 ]&#13;
' I t! 1 " .&#13;
1 l - II&#13;
A woman never forgives a man for&#13;
forgiving her for not forgiving him.&#13;
T o improve the general health, t a k e&#13;
fJartielil Tea daily lor a t i m e ; it purities&#13;
t h e blood, eradicates r h e u m a t i s m and&#13;
m a n y ehnmie ailments ami keeps the&#13;
h e a l t h jj.n&lt;&gt;d. (I.o'tield Tea is made of&#13;
h e r b s ; u is miaranl eed u n d e r the Pure&#13;
Food and Drugs h a w . Uarlield Ti\i t'o.,&#13;
J i r o o k h n , X. V.&#13;
An Artist.&#13;
"The man who painted that spurious&#13;
picture was an artist, at all events,"&#13;
said the connoisseur. "I don't know&#13;
about him," answered Mr. (himrox,&#13;
•ruefully, "but the de$Jef who sqld it to&#13;
mo way."&#13;
vertisement tor the new store, and to&#13;
get a new press for the printing of circulars&#13;
and pouters.&#13;
One month-after the opening of the&#13;
store the graveyard quietness of the&#13;
town had passed away. Streets were&#13;
lined with the teams and the wagons&#13;
of the farmers. A new elevator for&#13;
grain had been started. The railroad&#13;
placed a new switoh in t h e yard to accommodate&#13;
the increased business.&#13;
The son of the old town blacksmith&#13;
reopened the old Bhop closed for years&#13;
because of no trade. New life was&#13;
rapidly being injected Into the place.&#13;
There was an election. A lot of&#13;
newcomers selected the Public Spirited&#13;
Citizen for chairman of the town&#13;
board. He was elected. In six months&#13;
the streets were paved, an electric&#13;
lighting plant was in operation, along&#13;
with a water works. The Great Storekeeper&#13;
had a way of doing things, and&#13;
he did them. News of the activity of&#13;
the town reached near-by villages, and&#13;
the people came to see the Big Store&#13;
and to buy goods. A aaold storage&#13;
plant in connection with a new commission&#13;
house operated by friends of&#13;
the Storepeeker, caused Farmers to&#13;
bring in tons of butter and hundreds&#13;
of thousands of eggs, and chickens&#13;
and other produce. The transformation&#13;
was quick from a Dead Town to&#13;
a Lively Small City. A high school&#13;
was established, new churches built,&#13;
and some of the pious people were&#13;
shocked to see an opera house erected.&#13;
The Pau-Hawllo &amp; Skedunk railroad,&#13;
which for years had been running&#13;
20 miles from t h e town so&#13;
changed its route as to have it on the&#13;
main line, so the place had two railroads.&#13;
Enterprising men who wanted&#13;
to locate in a Live Town turned their&#13;
eyes toward the place. Soon there&#13;
was smoke from a half dozen big factories,&#13;
and in five years after the Publie-&#13;
spirited Citizen had started his&#13;
store his old home town has increased&#13;
its population 1,000 per cent. It was&#13;
no longer printed in little type on the&#13;
maps, but in capital letters.&#13;
MORAL—Do not underestimate the&#13;
possibilities of your community, or&#13;
fail to develop them. No city was&#13;
ever made great by its people buying&#13;
goods elsewhere.&#13;
D. M. CARR.&#13;
PUZZLED OVER CAT FfGHT.&#13;
The advertising magnate will d r a w trade to the stores of our community&#13;
just as the advertising of the catalogue houses is now drawing it away from&#13;
the home store. The people arc interested in the store news of this town.&#13;
Will you not give it to them?&#13;
Artist Couldn't Locate It Unfit He&#13;
Happened to T h i n k ,&#13;
PULE, WEAK PEOPLE i " " • ••!&#13;
M A D E S T R O N G A N D E N E R G E T I C&#13;
BY DR. W I L L I A M S ' P I N K PILLS.&#13;
General Breakdown Caused by Deficient&#13;
Blood Quickly Corrected by&#13;
This Tonic Remedy.&#13;
A feeling of general weakness, poor&#13;
appetite, loss of breath after the slightest&#13;
exercise and broken sleep am some&#13;
of the symptoms of general debility.&#13;
You may think that they have no relation&#13;
to eaeli other and that you will worry&#13;
along, hoping all the time to feel better&#13;
«oon. This is a mistake, for every one&#13;
&lt;of the symptoms is caused by bad blood,&#13;
"which must bo made pure and new&#13;
before health will be restored again. A&#13;
tonic treatment is necessary and for this&#13;
purpose therein no better remedy than&#13;
Dr. Williams1 Pink Pills.&#13;
Mr. J. (4. Havey, of M Willow St.,&#13;
Chelsea, Mass., says: " I -was sick for a&#13;
number of years from, general debility&#13;
and indigestion. I was never free from&#13;
stomach trouble and my nerves were so&#13;
shattered that, the least excitement unfitted&#13;
me for any serious w7ork. My&#13;
sleep was restless on account of tcrriblo&#13;
pains in the small of my bark. Those,&#13;
pains would sometimes last for a month&#13;
or two. My sight grew weak, there seaming&#13;
to bo a blur constantly before, my&#13;
eyes. I couldn't, concentrate my m i n i&#13;
on my work, and the attempt to do so&#13;
completely exhausted me,&#13;
" I wa*s finally forced to give up a&#13;
position I had held for twenty-eight&#13;
years. After trying several medicine*&#13;
without help, I "read of Dr. Williams'&#13;
Pink Pills and gave- them a trial. They&#13;
made me feel so much better and HO&#13;
much stronger that I started, in business&#13;
for myself hero in Chelsea. I have&#13;
never had a return of my former sickness&#13;
and cheerfully recommend Dr. Williams'&#13;
Pink Pills as an excellent nerve&#13;
and blond tonic."&#13;
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have long&#13;
been recognized as an excellent, tonic&#13;
remedy in cases of indigestion and general&#13;
debility, where the stomach and&#13;
other organs of the body are weakeued&#13;
and disordered simply through lack of&#13;
proper nourishment. They liftve alsobeen&#13;
specially successful in curing&#13;
aiifemia., rheumatism, after-effeeftppf the&#13;
grip and fevers.&#13;
A pamphlet, on "Diseases of the&#13;
Blood'' and a copy of our diet hook will&#13;
be sent f reo on request to anyone interest&#13;
erL&#13;
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by&#13;
all druggists, or sent, postpaid, on receipt,&#13;
of price, TJO rents per box, six boxes for&#13;
$^.50, by the Dr. Williams Medicine&#13;
i/OJapany, Schenectady, N. Y.&#13;
Ins great muscular power assisted to&#13;
tfain for himself a position as Chief&#13;
Scruhhrr in a largo store. He had not&#13;
) acquired the cigarette hahit, and his&#13;
: faithfulness to his scrubbing brush,&#13;
I and: his unwillingness to know all&#13;
I a'.xnU. his employer's business, soon at-&#13;
} t r a d e d the atiention of the Old Man,&#13;
1 and at the end of a year he was pro-&#13;
". moted to Head Rustler in the shipping&#13;
department at the large salary of eight&#13;
dollars a week.&#13;
His disregard for scooting when the&#13;
(dosing time came, and his total lack&#13;
of swelled head so pleased the Old&#13;
Alan that from time to time the ambiiions&#13;
youth was advanced until at the&#13;
'\id of six years he was drawing the&#13;
uiggest salary paid by the house, and&#13;
bi.on he was taken in as a member of&#13;
ths'firm. Age and hard knocks and&#13;
br ishe.s with the business world de-&#13;
/eioped in him marker! business acumen.&#13;
He forged to the front as a&#13;
financier and a public-spirited citizen.&#13;
As years passed he prospered, li-arly&#13;
and late he was ever looking after his&#13;
v'ast business interests. There were&#13;
times that lie longed to be again in&#13;
the small home town. Often in his&#13;
youth he dreamed of some day being&#13;
chairman of the village board. Only&#13;
once since parting from the old home&#13;
had bo returned, anrl"then to find the&#13;
town just the same only a little more&#13;
'. drb:pidatod, and in the weed-over&#13;
• grown kirkyanl the neglected graves&#13;
of his good parent s.&#13;
days in contemplation of the hereafter.&#13;
There, life was much like unto&#13;
death. There was fresh air in abundance,&#13;
All of nature lavishly spent its&#13;
beauty over the country and the town,&#13;
and even the Weeds on the s t r e e t s&#13;
were allowed to spring up, bloom and&#13;
reach maturity without interruption&#13;
by the scythe or the slide.&#13;
Within a year the Retired Husiness&#13;
Man had regained much of his oldtime&#13;
spirit and health. Habits of activity&#13;
and love of business impelled&#13;
him to once again seek work that&#13;
would keep his mind occupied. He&#13;
loved the old town. He saw that it&#13;
needed now life. He figured out that&#13;
there were GOO farmers in the neighborhood.&#13;
Kadi farmer surely spent&#13;
$ii0 a month somewhere for supplies.&#13;
This meant a total of $30,000 a month;&#13;
$31)0,000 a year. Then the few hundred&#13;
people in the town would add&#13;
other thousands to the volume of business.&#13;
Why not build a great store and&#13;
supply the wants of the people'.' He&#13;
would spend some money and build&#13;
up the town. He bought, half a block&#13;
on which three of the stores stood&#13;
He erected a large brick building, and&#13;
soon he had installed in it great, stocks&#13;
of goods. Other merchants in the&#13;
town shook their heads. The Public-&#13;
Spirited Man was certainly crazy.&#13;
Farmers when they came TO town&#13;
looked up the big building with won-&#13;
1 der. The Weekly Mirror had to send&#13;
away for type to set up the page ad-&#13;
Kverybody who is fond of pictures&#13;
of tigers listening to birds sing and&#13;
of cats sitting in the snow and looking&#13;
at the moon, and the like,&#13;
knows the artist of whom I am writing.&#13;
He is tall and broad of chest&#13;
that few, to look at him, would have&#13;
believed that he could have contracted&#13;
such a cold. It was one of those&#13;
colds which readied right down to&#13;
the intercostal spaces.&#13;
He awoke the other night in his&#13;
studio on the lop of Carnegie hall,&#13;
and he was sure that he heard far&#13;
out on the roofs below the caterwauling&#13;
of felines in nocturnal fray.&#13;
He had not seen a truly delectable&#13;
cat fight in years, and in a moment he&#13;
was at the window peering down upon&#13;
the roofs for inspiration. He scanned&#13;
the Ittttleground up and down and&#13;
there was not a cat in sight.&#13;
Hardly had he crept back into bed'&#13;
than he heard a long-drawn-out purr,&#13;
then a Bnarl and muffled meows. The&#13;
conflict had be^n shifted to beneath&#13;
his bed.&#13;
He was sure of it, and so certain&#13;
that he got up and peered beneath&#13;
it.&#13;
"It all came- over me like a flash,"&#13;
the artist said in telling of his experience&#13;
later. 'T was listening to&#13;
a cat fight in my own b r o n c h i a l I&#13;
had forgotten that I had a: cold."&#13;
Some of his friends isay that: he&#13;
is absent-minded.—X. Y. Her aid1.&#13;
Two Items Omitted..&#13;
World's commerce is now £21^000,-&#13;
OOH.OOO. However, this does not; include&#13;
dukes imported and heiresses&#13;
ox;&gt;ortod.&#13;
GOLD 13 NOT GOOD IN CHINA.&#13;
What Money Is Depends Upon trv&#13;
Locality, Says a Traveler.&#13;
"It is&#13;
h l l l U l ' V i. said&#13;
fo di'tme .in.-:, what&#13;
Reuresentaftve Julius&#13;
Kahn. of San Francisco, recently: "At.&#13;
b.'Td, it seems fo be a relative term--—&#13;
that is, what passes for uueic\ in one&#13;
part of t'ne world is regarded with suspicion&#13;
at some other place.&#13;
"Gold is supposed to be. the one circulating&#13;
medium that passes current&#13;
everywhere, but it is not true. In the&#13;
far east, for instance, the natives positively&#13;
refuse to take anything hut.&#13;
silver. Cold is not money to them and&#13;
in Washington or New York or any&#13;
of the cities along the Atlantic coast&#13;
when I hand a man a ten dollar or $20&#13;
gold piece to change ho looks upon&#13;
me with suspicion, lie almost, says&#13;
In so many words that he. would&#13;
rather net have it. Hut let me hand&#13;
out a worn end diii&gt; bill ami he accepts&#13;
it without looking at it.&#13;
"Out in California bills are still&#13;
more or \&gt; '•-• &lt;"&gt;f a curiosity and consoi[&#13;
uenl]y the people are not accustomed&#13;
to ihem. Co inro a bank In San •&#13;
Francisco and render a $oi) bill for&#13;
change. The chances are rha1" the&#13;
president of the bank and the entire&#13;
staff of officials would be called into&#13;
consultation as to its genuineness and&#13;
f doubt if there is a store in the town&#13;
where a bill would be accepted and&#13;
changed offhand. We are all creatures&#13;
of habit and custom rules the world&#13;
after ail.&#13;
"The silver coins in circulation in&#13;
China," Mr. Kahn. continued, "are objects&#13;
of curiosity to foreigners. In&#13;
China, the coinage of money is let. to&#13;
private •parties and the amount of silver&#13;
in a coin depends largely on the&#13;
personal honesty of the man in charge&#13;
of the particular mint. On this account&#13;
each coin as it passes around in&#13;
circulation has to be stamped with the&#13;
initials of the merchant last having&#13;
it. in his possession. The Inst man&#13;
stamoing the coin Is held responsible&#13;
for any shortage in weight In the&#13;
coin. The result is that ths coins&#13;
from repeated stampings, rcscmldr&#13;
small uaucers and each one fita into&#13;
, - i &gt; « ^ . ! ( « j'4'y • : * } • • •" •; . -&#13;
rke other wnen stacked up fn a pile.&#13;
f imagine that they might hw useful&#13;
for picnic purposes, hut they are certainly&#13;
inconvenient, to carry around,&#13;
as anyone can bear witness who h a s&#13;
traveled through the flowery kingdom."&#13;
World's Submarine Cables.&#13;
The total length of submarine&#13;
cables in the world is about. 450,000&#13;
kiloms— -279,622 miles, of which 00 per&#13;
cent, are Hritish, ten per cent. American,&#13;
a litt.le-'more than nine per cent.&#13;
French, and about, seven per cent.&#13;
German. A great advance in this domain&#13;
has been made during the last&#13;
few years by Germany, whose efforts&#13;
tend to constitute an Independent sya&lt;&#13;
tern.—Memorial Diplomatique.&#13;
Only Road to SucctM.&#13;
if you want to succeed in the world&#13;
you must make your own opportunities&#13;
as you go on. You cannot commit&#13;
greater folly than to sit by the&#13;
roadside until some one cornea along&#13;
and invites you to ride with him to&#13;
wealth or iufluiBce,—John, B. Qough.&#13;
BACKACHE I t KIDNCYACHC.&#13;
Cure the Kldneya and the Pain Will&#13;
Ntver Return.&#13;
Only one way to cure an aching&#13;
back. Cure the cause, the kidneys.&#13;
Thousands tell of&#13;
c u r e s made by&#13;
Doan'b Kidney PlUa.&#13;
John C. Coleman, a&#13;
prominent merchant&#13;
of Swainaboro, Ga.,&#13;
Bays: "Fof several&#13;
years my kidneys&#13;
were affected, and&#13;
my back ached day&#13;
and n i g h t I w a i&#13;
languid, nervous and lame in tha&gt;&#13;
morning. Doan'a Kidney Pills helpe4&#13;
me right away, and the great relief&#13;
that followed h a s been permanent."&#13;
Foster-Mil burn Co„ Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.&#13;
No Time for Extraa.&#13;
Tiny Sister (rushing I n t o ' big attter'a&#13;
room)—Please hurry, Lulu; Mr.&#13;
Wntte is dowuatafrs. Lulu (very&#13;
grandly, while she dabs her face with&#13;
the powder puff—Very well, dear; ITI&#13;
be down. Tiny Sister (nervously)—Oft,&#13;
please don't waft to shave!—Woma»'»&#13;
Home Companion.&#13;
Seven Billion Gallons of Mirk.&#13;
The 7,500,000,000 gallon* of commercial&#13;
milk annually oooeHsaaed represents&#13;
an enormous white river pouring&#13;
across t h e U. S. in every direction&#13;
yet few peopre realize that It is&#13;
becoming a veritable river Styx, tot ft&#13;
is so disease laden t h a t millions of&#13;
people a r e day-oy-day drinking disease&#13;
In various forma from this greatest o£&#13;
dTs'ease-apreadiug agents. Chietest&#13;
among these diseases ta Consumption-&#13;
Health office reports sixow that 25% of&#13;
t h e Dairy Cows have Bovine Tuberculosis&#13;
and through the milk and meat&#13;
a r e dealing out Consumption to the&#13;
people a t an alarming rate. An effective&#13;
remedy is recently claimed in the&#13;
simple feeding Rasawa in small doses&#13;
to the cattle. The- remedy is cheap&#13;
and a few cents worth procured' at airy&#13;
Drug Store will render a cow entirely&#13;
immune is the claim made in a free&#13;
booklet issued by The Mutual Mercantile&#13;
Co., Cleveland, O. Ask your Druggist&#13;
for a booklet.&#13;
On t h e Scent.&#13;
Crimson Rambler—-"Are you burning&#13;
gasoline in dat automobile, mister?"&#13;
Sparks—-"No, my friend; I'm&#13;
trying alcohol just for an experiment."&#13;
Crimson Rambler—"I thought so*&#13;
Would you mind me hangm' on behind"&#13;
fer a mile or s o / j e s t fex do smell?"-—&#13;
Puck.&#13;
S T A T E or OHIO, CITY OK T O L E D O , )&#13;
J.IH-AS I ' d l ' T V , f&#13;
FRANK J. CIIKNKY make* oath thtit he It aent-tf&#13;
partuer of tliu Orm of K. .J. OUBNKY- &amp; Co., dolutf&#13;
business In tho City of Toledo. County and Statu&#13;
aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the mini of&#13;
ONK HPN'OUKO DOLLAKS for each and every&#13;
i-aao of CATAURH that uauaot tie cured by the uuts of&#13;
U*LL..CAT*a»aCU«a. K K A N K ^ c n B M B T .&#13;
Sworn to before ma and nubacrHiod la my ijreieuoo,&#13;
tills Hth day of Decoiah.sr, A. IX, l^SfJ.&#13;
^ ^ Av W. OLEASOK,&#13;
j 3**L f NOTARY I'UDLII:.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cure U taUon Internally Md act*&#13;
directly on ihe IIIIKKJ and mucous surface* of tha&#13;
lyitem. Send for testimonial* free.&#13;
F..J. CHKNKV &amp; CO., Toledo, O.&#13;
ftold by all DrujtuUU, 7"&gt;e.&#13;
Take Hall'aFamlly IM1H for eoiistlpatloa.&#13;
When a woman la; unable to- get&#13;
What she wants she tries to convince1&#13;
herself that it wasn't wonth having,&#13;
anyway.&#13;
r~ DODDS '&#13;
K I D N E Y&#13;
&amp;, PILLS '&#13;
&gt; * * M M M M I M l l l « « « « M | ALLEN'S&#13;
FOOT EASE For Hot, T i r e d , A c h i n g ,&#13;
Swollen Feet.&#13;
SHAKE&#13;
INTO YOUg&#13;
SNOB&#13;
Allen's Font&gt;Ea*o, % jumn&amp;r. it curea&#13;
painful, smarter*, nervous feet, and ia*&#13;
growing uatls, and instantly take* tfc»&#13;
Atinpr out of cams and bunions. It*» %§&#13;
sreatest comfort discovery of tho&#13;
MakastiRht or new siboesoaay. Acs&#13;
cure for sweating, cations ami hoLI&#13;
rtchinff feft. :H),0Uu testimonials. Try *-&#13;
fo-rfrtj/. Mold by all DmppiRta and Rho* *v&#13;
stores. "iV.. Hcut't nrrcpf n nxhatitute, TriaL *&#13;
piukaga FREE. Address, ^ # * : .&#13;
% &lt; - ^ S C ^ A ^&#13;
" * * v&#13;
4&#13;
LoRoy,N. Y.,&#13;
U.S.&#13;
* ' •&#13;
Genuine bcara above iljraihire.&#13;
miammm^mmmtmm&#13;
WENT IN A HURRY&#13;
^&#13;
*;&lt;•&#13;
..~ . . 1 - ...&#13;
.. * *&#13;
MAN L I T E R A L L Y ROLLED OUT OF&#13;
T R O U P L e .&#13;
Old-Tlmer Tells of Toi^Jhi. Experience&#13;
In a Western T C X M Town Where&#13;
the Country Was Wide&#13;
Open.&#13;
&gt; * « •&#13;
The passiug of gambling la- Te*»8&#13;
Jwought out remiiilBcunoeB of the eftlly&#13;
4 | y s wheu the games \v*«tA.«U» wide&#13;
4p0n lu mauy of the tuwus of t h e&#13;
•tftte. Jess Fry of San Antonio, who&#13;
.Wis in the front during the construction&#13;
of the Southern Pacific through&#13;
the western part of Texas, tells this&#13;
story.&#13;
"in 1884 1 was railroad and express&#13;
it^eut at a new ntation, which w a s&#13;
then the end of the Hue of the Southern&#13;
Pacific. This experience of mine&#13;
happened on a monthly pay day.&#13;
Every workingman in camp had&#13;
money. Most of them had the gambling&#13;
fever, and leeches from all over&#13;
the west were on hand to get their&#13;
share of the dinero.&#13;
"On „this particular day the most&#13;
notorious of the professional gamblers&#13;
in camp was Ike Winters, who had&#13;
"come over from Tombstone, Ariz.&#13;
Along in the evening Winters and a&#13;
few others started a poker game in&#13;
* t t n t which was pitched just at the&#13;
6d0» of a steep hill. When T got&#13;
tferottgh with my duties a s agent I&#13;
v e n t up to take a look a t the game.&#13;
"I was invited to take a hand, and&#13;
that being about the only way to pass&#13;
away t h e time I sat in. The other&#13;
players were sitting upon empty powder&#13;
kegs and bo^es, and I went to the&#13;
commissary tent near by and got an&#13;
empty flour barrel, which I used for&#13;
a seat.&#13;
"The game progressed without incident&#13;
for an hour or two, and then&#13;
there occurred the biggest rumpus I&#13;
was ever in. There were live or&#13;
six players besides Winters. Among&#13;
them was a half-breed Mexican who&#13;
had come over from Mexico with a&#13;
reputation as a killer.&#13;
"He was, like Winters, a professional&#13;
gambler.&#13;
"The pot was a large one. The halfbreed&#13;
Mexican and Winters caught&#13;
match hands. Both men claimed the&#13;
pot. Each started to reach for It&#13;
about the same instant, each drawlug&#13;
his gun with his right hand. They&#13;
fired at each other simultaneously.&#13;
' T h a t was only the beginning of&#13;
the melee. The light was knocked out,&#13;
and in the darkness the flash of pistols&#13;
could be seen. I am old enough&#13;
now to admit that 1 was scared.&#13;
"The first thought that occurred to&#13;
me was that 1 must seek some place&#13;
of safety. Why not crawl into the&#13;
empty flour barrel? I ^ot into the barrel&#13;
all right, and was lying there&#13;
trembling when one of the gamblers&#13;
gave the barrel a kirk 1o get it out&#13;
of his way and sent it beneath tho&#13;
flap of the tent and away it went,&#13;
lolling down that steep hill, with mo&#13;
inside of it.&#13;
"That hill was nearly half a mile&#13;
long, and the barrel went, tumbling&#13;
down it. bumping over stones and&#13;
crushing through the desert vegetation.&#13;
Toward the end of the declivity&#13;
it was going at a terrific speed.&#13;
"I suffered untold awony during that&#13;
terrible ride. I could not. get out.&#13;
I was rolled over and over at the&#13;
ate of. a hundred times a second, it&#13;
seemed to me. It happened that there&#13;
were uo nails protruding through the&#13;
barrel. Had there been I would have&#13;
been punctured full of Holes.&#13;
The barrel finally came to a standstill&#13;
and I crawled out. I was bruised&#13;
all over, but managed to pull myself&#13;
up t h e steep hill to t h e railroad station.&#13;
I had escaped from_ the scene of&#13;
the shooting, but I felt "that I would&#13;
probably have fared better had I remained&#13;
there.&#13;
' The shooting affray resulted in the&#13;
killing of Winders, the half-fcreed Mexican&#13;
and an0$fc#"^ffsmbler.&gt; — x. Y.&#13;
Sun. , *&#13;
r.- - 5 r —&#13;
*^~" ^M«Xf*tfTne of Bamboo Sap.&#13;
Iff India the sap of the female bamboo&#13;
ia used for medicinal purposes.&#13;
•Tahasheer," or "banslochan," is sold&#13;
In all Indian bazars, as it h a s been&#13;
known from t h e earliest times as a&#13;
medicinal agent. It is also known in&#13;
Porneo and was on article of commerce,&#13;
with early Arab traders of the&#13;
east. I t s properties a r e said to be&#13;
strengthening, tonic and cooling. It&#13;
has been analyzed and has been&#13;
shown to consist almost entirely of&#13;
ellica, with traces of lime and potash.&#13;
From its remarkable occurrence&#13;
IB the bojjowt of hofcioii the eastern&#13;
' " i t with mir-&#13;
THE NEW INSURANCE AGENT.&#13;
He Cornea in With the New Law—Paul&#13;
Morton on His Opportunity.&#13;
The new Insurance law of the State&#13;
of New York has opened up a promising&#13;
field for both men and women&#13;
with braluB and energy In the sale of&#13;
life Insurance. The law now provideB&#13;
standard forms of policies, each of&#13;
which practically bears the hall mark&#13;
of the State of New York, and this new&#13;
order of things h a s established the&#13;
sale of life insurance on a correct&#13;
basis.&#13;
The prohibition against rebating and&#13;
extravagant allowances to agents has&#13;
driven out of the business the old&#13;
type of insurance agent, who In many&#13;
cases virtually bought business, with&#13;
large rebates, instead of selling It.&#13;
H4s place is being taken by professors,&#13;
lawyers, school teachers of both&#13;
sexes, and others, who 11 nd that being&#13;
a life insurance agent under the new&#13;
system offers greater reward than&#13;
their previous vocations. The law has&#13;
reduced commissions but all of the&#13;
commission now goes to t h e ageut.&#13;
Life insurance is something that&#13;
everyone needs and under the present&#13;
system its sale is being conducted&#13;
with becoming dignity and propriety.&#13;
Pan.! Morton, president of &amp; e i^quiiable&#13;
Life Assurance Society, has taken&#13;
the lead in building up an agency organization&#13;
that is in keeping with the&#13;
demands of public sentiment, and the&#13;
standard h e has set for his company.&#13;
He says: "We want new agents, both&#13;
men and women, but none except energetic,&#13;
able and truthful people need&#13;
apply. F o r such there Is a splendid&#13;
opportunity."&#13;
Mr. Morton's policy of injecting new&#13;
and vigorous blood into t h e agency&#13;
force of t h e Society Is meeting with&#13;
success in all parts of the country.&#13;
A Promise.&#13;
"sleglnald, what is this I hear about&#13;
yovfr having t e e n engaged in a tight&#13;
^rlflKour new neighbor's little boy?"&#13;
^ f e s ' m , I was." •&#13;
"Now, I wish you to promise that&#13;
you will never quarrel with him&#13;
"again; will you make me that promise?"&#13;
"Yes'm; he kin lick me."—Houston&#13;
Post.&#13;
"Tainted Money" No New Thing.&#13;
" ' N a y , nay, nay!' said t h e archbishop,&#13;
waving a white, jeweled hand&#13;
as the chief began to divulge some of&#13;
his larger plans. 'Tell me not of thy&#13;
wicked schemes! Thy methods I must&#13;
condemn utterly, but if thou brin:cest&#13;
me the money, well, I can at least see&#13;
to it that it be not used for bad purposes.&#13;
And speaking of money, we&#13;
need for the walls of the apse a hundred&#13;
bags of gold. Dost think thou&#13;
couldst manage it?'&#13;
" 'Ay,' said the Gentle Robber, and&#13;
that night he despoiled nine men,&#13;
killing three that resisted longest, for&#13;
he was a great lover of holy church,&#13;
and a devout believer, nor could she&#13;
ask of him any service that he would&#13;
not perform."—"The Gentle Robber,"&#13;
in McClure's.&#13;
Not 8o Long.&#13;
There was so much ceremony connected&#13;
with a church cornerstone laying&#13;
in New York city a few weeks ago&#13;
that the moving picture machine man&#13;
felt warranted to lake a couple of&#13;
miles of photographs.&#13;
These pictures proved to be very&#13;
good, and large crowds were delighted&#13;
with the exact reproduction of the&#13;
dedicatory exercises.&#13;
"I like the moving pictures better&#13;
than I did the original service," confessed&#13;
a prominent member of the&#13;
congregation.&#13;
"You do," gasped a devout elder.&#13;
"I'm surely pained to hear you say so.&#13;
Why should you prefer the pictures?"&#13;
"because the picture man," answered&#13;
the prominent member, pleasantly,&#13;
"cut out all the sermons."&#13;
All Misfortune.&#13;
"Pop," said Farmer Kornto;&gt;'s little&#13;
boy, "wh^t does it mean when you&#13;
say 'misfortunes never come singly?'"&#13;
"Wal," replied Farmer Korntop,&#13;
"thet's just about the truth. First&#13;
comes a wet spell that'll spile the tomatoes&#13;
an' then comes a dry spell that&#13;
spiles everything else."&#13;
DR. T A L K S OF FOOD&#13;
Pres. of Beard of Health.&#13;
'"What, sin1 . I oat?" is the daily inquiry&#13;
the phjsician is met with. I do&#13;
not hesitate to say that in my judgment,&#13;
a large percentage of disease is&#13;
caused by poorly selected and improperly&#13;
prepared food. My personal experience&#13;
with the fully-cooked food,&#13;
known a s Grape Nuts, enables me to&#13;
f.peak freely of its merits.&#13;
"From overwork, I suffered several&#13;
yea s with malnutriton, palpitation of&#13;
the heart, and loss of sleep. * Last&#13;
summer I was led to experiment personally&#13;
with the new food, which I&#13;
used in conjunction with good rich&#13;
cow's milk. In a short time after I&#13;
commenced its" use. t h e disagreeable&#13;
symptoms disappeared, my heart's action&#13;
became steady and normal, the&#13;
functions of the stomach were properly&#13;
carried out and I again slept as&#13;
soundly and as well as in my youth.&#13;
"I look upon Grape-Nuts a s a perfect&#13;
food, and no one can gainsay but&#13;
that It has a most, prominent, place in&#13;
a rational, scientific system of feeding.&#13;
Any one who uses this food will soon&#13;
be convinced of the soundness of the&#13;
principle npon which It Is manufactured&#13;
and may thereby know the facts&#13;
as to its true worth." Read. "The Road&#13;
to WellvilleV' in pkgs. "There's a&#13;
Reason."&#13;
Perfectly simple ancT" sfmply perfect Is&#13;
dyeing with PUTNAM FADELESS&#13;
DYES. 10c per package.&#13;
Never judge what a man knows by&#13;
his knowing iodic,&#13;
Mri. W i m l o w ' i Soothing Syrup.&#13;
Kor children usetblna;, *oiwn* tbaguroi, reaocea t »&#13;
tUnuukilon, allay • p«ln, curoi wlad colic. *&amp;c a bottla.&#13;
The quality of the life of every one&#13;
is the same as the quality ol his love.&#13;
SPECIAL TRAINS.&#13;
National Editorial Association and&#13;
Christian Endeavor Conventions.&#13;
Personally conducted special trains&#13;
via the Chicago, Union Pacific &amp;&#13;
N o r t h w e s t e r n Line leave early in&#13;
July for the Pacific Coast. Special&#13;
all-expense tours at very low rates&#13;
for round trip, including sleeping c a r&#13;
accommodations, meals, etc. All t h e&#13;
advantages of a delightful and carefully&#13;
arranged tour in congenial company.&#13;
Write* for itineraries and full&#13;
particulars. S. A. Hutchison, Manager&#13;
Tourist Department, 212 Clark Street,&#13;
Chicago.&#13;
"Whiskers."&#13;
"Whiskers" was a word formerly&#13;
used to designate the hair on the upper&#13;
lip. Scott more than once speaks&#13;
of "whiskers on the upper lip" and so&#13;
does Defoe in "Robinson Crusoe."&#13;
Johnson defined a "whisker" as the&#13;
hair growing on the upper li-p or cheek&#13;
unshaven; a mustachio." It seems to&#13;
have taken its name from a fancied&#13;
resemblance to a small brush, to&#13;
"whisk" properly meaning to sweep,&#13;
and a "whisker" having been a particular&#13;
kind of feather brush—also, in&#13;
the slang of a former time, a switch&#13;
or rod. In the seventeenth century a&#13;
"whisker" signified among other&#13;
things a brazen lie, a "whopper."&#13;
BABY ITCHED TERRIBLY.&#13;
Face and Neck Covered with Inflamed&#13;
Skin—Doctors No Avail—Cured&#13;
by Cuticura Remedies.&#13;
"My baby's face and neck were covered&#13;
with itching skin similar to eczema,&#13;
and she suffered terribly for over&#13;
a year. I took her to a number of doctors,&#13;
and also to different colleges, to&#13;
no avail. Then Cuticura Remedies&#13;
were recommended to me by Miss G—.&#13;
I did not use it at first, as I had tried&#13;
so many other remedies without any&#13;
favorable results. At last I tried Cuticura&#13;
Soap, Cuticura Ointment anrl&#13;
Cuticura Resolvent Pills, and to my&#13;
surprise noticed an improvement.&#13;
After using three boxes of the Cuticura&#13;
Ointment, together with the Soap&#13;
and Pills, I am pleased to say she is&#13;
iltogcther a different child and the&#13;
picture of health. Mrs. A. C. Prestlin.&#13;
171 N. Lincoln St., Chicago. 111., Oct.&#13;
20 and P&gt;0, IPOG."&#13;
As every thread of gold Is valuable,&#13;
so is every moment of time.—J. Mason.&#13;
Krause's Cold Cure.&#13;
For culd.in head, throat, chest or back.&#13;
lital remedy iur La. Grippe. Druggibtb, 2i3c\&#13;
The world ia a looking glass. Laugh&#13;
at it and it laughs back; fruwn, and&#13;
your own gloom ia recast.—George Eliot'&#13;
To he un good terms with human nature&#13;
He Well! (Jaiiield Tea purities t h e&#13;
blood, eradicates disease, regulates the digestive&#13;
organa and brings Good Health!&#13;
Manufactured by Gariield Tea Cu.; Uruoklyn,&#13;
N. V. .Sold by drug^ibtii.&#13;
Good Point About the Auto.&#13;
Prospective Purchaser- I like the I&#13;
looks of this automobile, but suppose }&#13;
1 should run over somebudy and—"&#13;
Salesman—"The springs are so easy, t&#13;
sir, you'd scarcely be jarred at all."&#13;
9oo DROPS&#13;
V i l l l l l l l i i , , . , ' . r r ; -&#13;
ALCOHOL 3 PEK CKNT.&#13;
AVegeUtWe PreparalionfijrAs&#13;
similaiing iis?FooaamiRKgda&#13;
ting the Stonocte andBwdsof&#13;
INFANTS/CHIIDREN&#13;
Promotes Di^uwO»erlUi&#13;
ness and fiesr.Contains neter&#13;
OpiumMorphiac norMinwaL&#13;
N O T N A R C O T I C .&#13;
AnycofOMDcSAMLUmwm&#13;
ihrnafkia Sttd-&#13;
.Jfrlima *&#13;
A&amp;lcSdlttMm.&#13;
Aperfect Remedy forCansfijfr&#13;
Hon. Sour Stonach, Diarrhea&#13;
Worms .Convuls'wnsJherisb&#13;
ness andLoss OF SlXEF&#13;
FacSinfe Signature of&#13;
NEW YORK.&#13;
CUSTOM For Infants and Children*&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Boui&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
A t b m o n t h s old&#13;
J 5 DOSES-35CKSTS&#13;
Exact Copy of Wrapper.&#13;
For Over&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORIA THE crr;7AUR COMPANY. N I « T M R omr.&#13;
I&#13;
fe ••'X&#13;
STRONG ami DURABI Compact, »11 the parts accurately made, finely adjusted&#13;
and working together btuocthly; and at the&#13;
same time, strong, well built, easy to keep in order and&#13;
light running —these are the features you want to&#13;
find in a cream separator before you buy one* And&#13;
when you see a U• CS.* CSERPEAARMA TOR&#13;
you wont have to lock any farther. It has them alL&#13;
That's why it outwears all other makes.&#13;
Durability is whet the "cheap " separator* lack,&#13;
yet it ia most important. We have received lettcri&#13;
from many usera of the t'. S. Separators who have run their ma*&#13;
Chines every dr.y for 10 years and more with entire satisfaction.&#13;
Our big, handsome, new catalogue nhows plainly all about the&#13;
construction and wonderful skimming records of the U. S. It&#13;
will interest yon. For free ropv and name of nearest local selling&#13;
agent, just write: "Send catalogue O,'1 Addressing&#13;
VERMONT FARM MACHINE COMPANY, Bellows Falls, Vt.&#13;
r«apt 4ell?*rW* of l'. S. Separators from warehouses i t Aurora, Me., BuSUo. N. Y.&#13;
Ti'ledo, 1)., Chicago. 111., L.uros-se, \Si*.. Minneapolis. Mmn., Sioui City, la-.&#13;
Kansas City. Mo., Omalia. Ned., San Iran, i .1 o, C»l„ Por.Un.l, Ore., Slwrlcooke&#13;
aaU Moutre^i, tjue., Hamilton, Ont., '.Vmuepe^, Man. aoU Canary, Aita.&#13;
Address all letters to Bellows Falls, Vt. 439&#13;
SICK HEADACHE We Cure P i l e s&#13;
regulate the Bowels.&#13;
Positively cured by&#13;
these Little Pills.&#13;
They also relieve Distress&#13;
from Dyspepsia, Indigestion&#13;
and Too Hearty&#13;
Eating. A perfect reined&#13;
y for Dizziness. Nausea,&#13;
Drowsiness, Bad Taste&#13;
in the Mouth, Coated&#13;
Tongue, Pain In tie Side,&#13;
TORPID LIVER. Taoy&#13;
Purely Vegetable.&#13;
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE, SHALL PRICE,&#13;
Genuine Must Bear&#13;
Fac-Simile Signature&#13;
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.&#13;
Un rbrrimAnlOt PEr. OQTi nAnRtriUn aetx*trecnhte *lo wcloortiace iw inthlc «»m«li&#13;
MISS JULIE FLORENCE WALSH&#13;
WOMEN SUFFER&#13;
Many women suffer in silence and&#13;
Jrift along from bad to worse, knowing1&#13;
well that they ought t o have&#13;
immediate assistance.&#13;
How many women do you know&#13;
who are perfectly well and strong?&#13;
The cause may "he easilv traced to&#13;
somt' feminine derangement which&#13;
manifests itself in depression of&#13;
spirits, reluctance t o go anywhere&#13;
or do anything, backache, dragging&#13;
sensations, flatulency, nervousness,&#13;
and sleeplessness.&#13;
These symptoms nre hnt warnings&#13;
that there is danger a.head, and unless&#13;
heeded, a life of suffering or a&#13;
serious operation is the inevitable&#13;
result. T h e best remedy for all&#13;
these symptoms is&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
made from native roots and herbs. No other medicine in the country has&#13;
received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine&#13;
has such a record of cures of female ills,&#13;
Miss .7. F. Walsh, of 328 W. sr.th St.. New York City, writes: —"Lydia&#13;
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been of inestimable value in&#13;
restoring my health. I suffered from female illness which caused&#13;
dreadful headaches, dizziness, and dull pains in my back, b u t your&#13;
medicine soon brought about a change in my general condition, built&#13;
me up and made me perfectly well.'*&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cures Female Complaints,&#13;
such as Backache, Falling and Displacements, Inflammation and Ulceration,&#13;
and organic diseases. It is invaluable in preparing for child-birth&#13;
and during the Change of Life. It cures Nervous Prostration, Headache,&#13;
tienerai L&gt;ebility, and invigorates the wfao^p system.&#13;
Mrs. Pinkhapi's Standing Invitation to Women&#13;
Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to&#13;
write Mrs. Pinkham. a t Lynn, Mass. H«r advice ia free.&#13;
AND TRDST TO YOUR HONOR&#13;
TO PAY WHEN YOU ARE CURED&#13;
Pile*, fistula and »11 oihrr di-ra*cs of the recR:;n rur»f!&#13;
by a new P AIM L E S S D I S S O L V E N T M E T H -&#13;
O D . Our own di»cti»f rv, a &gt;e^ rft pr&lt;K?s; k n i ' ^ a o r l f to.&#13;
ixjr&lt;etves. No hazardous c f f i a t u n . knife, or cflloKvAwjt&#13;
u-rd. Many bad ca&lt;«j cured in &lt;ne painless trralmer.t&#13;
anrl few cases requite more tban two weeks lot a i omj&gt;!e:e&#13;
c - r c _ • &lt;}&#13;
A Few Michigan References&#13;
F. C Rheobottom. I'r.mn City, Mr&lt;. A. 1.. HuiralL*.&#13;
Owo-iso; Mr. Qeh. W. Rupnght, S. Frankfort; Albert C .&#13;
Bate*. Benzonia; S. S. Aldmh. R. R. 17, BHdinf; MfcM&#13;
Mae Focle^nn, St. Louis George Stantfer, Sparta; S. G.&#13;
Pierce. Alma; Richard Maitiu;. t-ebtwaing; Mrs. W. E.&#13;
POTT, Alhinn; A. J. Bradford. Baldwin.&#13;
Write-a full de«cripiion of y&lt;'.:r case as yon undcratanj&#13;
it ar.d w e will tell v(,u jus-wr.at wc can do for ynu and&#13;
tht cc»t. Remember nrithinf paid until cured. V\'e hav*&#13;
treated over 4,000 casex wuhiur a s:.i;(r failure.&#13;
Our free boo&gt;,lrt expUirt; c ur tre^twei.t fully and contain*,&#13;
the names and acidrex^es of people near you whom,&#13;
we would tiadly have you see or write for references-&#13;
Drs. BURLESON &amp; BURLESON&#13;
RECTAL SPECIALISTS&#13;
1 0 3 Monroe St., tirand Rapids, Michigan&#13;
Canadian Government&#13;
r reel* arms&#13;
liver 2it0.i'iX) American&#13;
!;;riut;x who have sett'fil&#13;
'.n C.iiK'.itii &lt;li:rinff&#13;
tlif* pa^t ft w y e a r s t e s t i -&#13;
fy tu t h e fact t h a t t ' a n a -&#13;
&lt;ia f~, h ' v i i i n ! q t i t ' s t i o n ,&#13;
t h e g r e a t e s t f:trmitttj I.TIII; i n t h e w » r ! i l . OVER NINETY&#13;
MILLION BUSHELS of w h e n t f r o m t h e li.-uvtst i f 1^¾ m e n u s RIHHI&#13;
m o n e y t o tlie f a r m e r s c&gt;f W t - s t e r n I'aiiiula w h e n&#13;
t h e *rorUl h.ts t o lie ftil. C a t t ' e R a i s i n g . D a i r y -&#13;
i n g a n d M i x e d F a r m i n g are a l s o profiuih'.e c a l l -&#13;
i n g s . C o a l , w o i x l a n d w a t e r i n a b u n d a n c e ;&#13;
c h u r c h e s a n d s c h o o l s c o n v e n i e n t ; m a r k e t s e a s y&#13;
of n c c e s s . T a x e s l o w .&#13;
F o r a d v i c e a n d i n f o r m a t i o n a d d r e s s t h e S u p e r -&#13;
i n t e n d e n t o f I m m i g r a t i o n , O t t a w a , C a n a d a , o r&#13;
a n v a u t h o r i s e d C a n a d i a n (•"vrrnrtiriit A g e n t .&#13;
M. V. MclNNES, 6 Ate.tie Theatre Block, Detroit,&#13;
Mickifu; or C. A. LAURIER, Stilt St*.&#13;
Marie, Miridf aa.&#13;
T H E OAISY «\..&#13;
Af*;»&#13;
fori&#13;
fUaa *rixl alfnrdi&#13;
comfort to e»Bry&#13;
home. Itiftfliatbia-&#13;
• n t i r e M &amp; M H I .&#13;
H»rml*«s t o p«r~&#13;
non». Ctoae, nr»%.&#13;
»n&gt;l will not noil o r&#13;
Injur* a n y t h i n g .&#13;
Try t h a n one* *t&gt;dt&#13;
yon will never h»&#13;
without tb#m. I f&#13;
not k*pt fiy ri**lera,&#13;
«-»nt pV*rakttt&#13;
MJKUL. tMaiaa, i4*»*iaJ» A«ft.,BrMktra,B.l..&#13;
DEFIIRCESTlRCHaJ?^&#13;
" a ^ ^ l Tboaptiit Eye Wt*v&#13;
W. N. LI., DETROIT, N O 7 * 2 , ^ 9 0 7 7&#13;
N&#13;
•yppp^iiiii j urn in ^iipywi|^ww&gt;W"»WlWWPIfWWPP^W^^|t&#13;
. % :V\.;• •&#13;
'4 rtV.&#13;
-"**•&#13;
1.&#13;
•* - ''V.Wifc"&#13;
gSM*-^ -&#13;
• ^&#13;
&amp; *&#13;
" » •&#13;
&gt; &gt; • • * £ ' &gt;; ,S'&#13;
.-. A All ^ - ' - 1 , ^ ^ . 4&#13;
Xffloag OUr Correspondents I&#13;
I t f l f f f i l f W l f W • * ? • * * Tiff1*&#13;
UHABILLA.&#13;
T h e (jrleHuers will h o l d a n i c e&#13;
c r e a m social in t h e i r h a l l T u e s d a y&#13;
e v e u i n g J u n e 4. K v e r y o u e is i n -&#13;
vited U&gt; c o m e a m i h a v e a g o o d&#13;
t i m e , eat u j^ooii b u p p e r a n d enjoy&#13;
g o o d m u s i c .&#13;
b e e u&#13;
HOWEIL.&#13;
A t e n u i s c l u b ia ti&gt; be o r g a n i z e d&#13;
h e r e .&#13;
T h e H o w e l l buainessb c o l l e g e&#13;
close,! Inst w i e k at'te' a s u c c e s s f u l&#13;
y e n r .&#13;
C o u u t y c l e r k , Willis L y o n s iB | *'M»IH T o l e d o .&#13;
suffering w i t h an a t t a c k of e r y s i p - l M r s . ^- M a d e v i s i t e d&#13;
L A K E L A N D .&#13;
C. t i . Suiitti i« still v e r y aick.&#13;
M r s J . G o r d o n ha« r e t u r n e d&#13;
]KB. D e p u t y L u r a e n ia d o i n g t h e&#13;
work.&#13;
" U n c l e " L i u u a R e e d , HS y e a r a&#13;
old e m p l o y s hia a p a r e t i m e p o l i s h -&#13;
i n g atouew a n d haa a very Hue coll&#13;
e c t i o u .&#13;
F r a n k JVienlio, tlie efficient a n d&#13;
g e n i a l j a n i t o r of t h e c o u r t liouee&#13;
h a s so far r e c o v e r e d from hia illn&#13;
e s s aa t o b e abl ^ to be u p e v e r y&#13;
d a y a n d look after m a t t e r s . '&#13;
P r e p a r a t i o n s a r e b e i u g m a d e by&#13;
t h e c o m m o n c o u n c i l to s u b m i t t h e&#13;
• a n i t a r y Hewer s y s t e m for H o w e l l&#13;
t o i « o t e of t h e p e o p l e for t h e i r&#13;
•CceptftiU'e o r r e j e c t i o n , i t is&#13;
c e r t a i n l y b a d l y n e e d e d .&#13;
F r a n k O r a n d a l l sold t w o tine&#13;
H o l s t e i n c o w s t o t h e S t a t e I n d u s -&#13;
t r i a l s c h o o l a t L a n s i n g mn\- o n e&#13;
t i r e b u l l to t h e A g r i c u l t u r a l college.&#13;
H i s h e r d of H o l s t e i n s a r e&#13;
a m o n g t h e best in t h e s t a t e .&#13;
The cucumber vines at Chamberlain's&#13;
green bouses, are being&#13;
at W i n .&#13;
C a d y ' s last F r i d a y .&#13;
T h e s t o r m S u n d a y d i d q u i t e a&#13;
lot of d a m a g e h e r e .&#13;
P e t e r C o n i w a y a n d wife w e r e&#13;
at H o w e l l S a t u r d a y .&#13;
G. T. K . K. a r e m a k i n g i m -&#13;
provHiiients d o w n t h i s wny.&#13;
H i r a m S m i t h w a s h o m e from&#13;
t h e U. of M. o v e r S u n d a y .&#13;
Mrs. M a d i s o n of D e t r o i t will&#13;
s p e n d tiiis week at h e r c o t t a g e .&#13;
M r s . W i n . M e r c e r of P e t t v s v i l l e&#13;
W E S T P U 1 H A M .&#13;
M r s . W i l l i a m D o y l e h a s&#13;
ill tLe p a s t week.&#13;
Will G a r d n e r hud a h o r s e inj&#13;
u r e d by b a r b e d wire t h i s w e e k .&#13;
O t i s W. W e b b a n d f a m i l y of&#13;
U n a d i l l a s p e n t S u n d a y at H . B .&#13;
G a r d n e r ' s .&#13;
A boy was b o r n to T h o m a s&#13;
C o o p e r a n d wife of JacksJbn t h e&#13;
pa it week.&#13;
M i n n i e V a u B l a r i c u u i is a s s i s t -&#13;
i n g M r s . W i l l i a m G a r d n e r w i t h&#13;
h e r h o u s e h o l d d u t i e s .&#13;
D. W. M u r t a c l o s e d a very s u c -&#13;
cessful t e r m of s e h o o l at P o u d&#13;
V i e w A c a d e m y F r i d a y .&#13;
K i r k V a n W i n k l e is s p e n d i n g&#13;
t h e week in B a y C i t y , a t t e u d i u g&#13;
t h e G r a n d L o d g e , a n d M r s . V a n&#13;
W i n k l e a n d d a u g h t e r s a r e visit-&#13;
ADDITIOIAL LOCAL.&#13;
i n g in L a n s i n g .&#13;
Fur a cold or a cough take Kennedy's&#13;
Laxative l/ough Syrup. It is&#13;
HKTTKK than any other cough remedy&#13;
w a s c a l l i n g on o l d f r i e n d s S u n d a y ' I &gt;-e;.us^ its laxative principle assures&#13;
last.&#13;
C h a s . S a m p s o n a n d f a m i l y&#13;
s p e n t S u n d a y w i t h M r . a n d M r s .&#13;
R. T o m p k i n s .&#13;
A n u m b e r will g o f r o m t h i s&#13;
p l a c e t o L a n s i n g to see P r e s .&#13;
R o o s e v e l t M a y 30.&#13;
C h a s . C u u u i u g h a m lias r e s i g n -&#13;
as t o w e r m a n a n d D o n K e e d l e&#13;
h a s talieii his p l a c e .&#13;
M r s . A. S m i t h v i s i t e d h e r B r o .&#13;
a healdiy. copious action of thn bowels&#13;
ami .it the same it heals invitation of&#13;
the Throat, shorn.11hens the bronchial&#13;
tube-; and always intl unatiou of the&#13;
mucous uidinbraue. Contains Honey&#13;
and Tar, pleasant to t a k e . Children&#13;
like it. Conforms to the National&#13;
1'LUH Food and 1'ru^ L i w .&#13;
Sold by r . A. Slgler, Efrugglat&#13;
trained upon trelhses. The first | "ear Chilson last week&#13;
vinee,«fele (Jrowned out or there&#13;
f i n d i n g&#13;
w o o Id h a v e b e e n a c r o p of c u c u m -&#13;
b e r s t h e r e now. A s it is it will&#13;
b e b u t a s h o r t t i m e b e f o r e t h e&#13;
c r o p will be p l a c e d on t h e m a r k e t .&#13;
When yoar food has not been prop&#13;
erly digested the entire system is unpaired&#13;
in th^sanie proportion. Your&#13;
stomach needs help. Kndol for Indigestion&#13;
and Dyspepsea not only digests&#13;
what \\&gt;u eat, it tones the stom&#13;
i c b and adds strength to the whole&#13;
body,„, Makes rich, pure blood. Ko&#13;
dol conforms to the National P u r e&#13;
Food and l)ru^ Law.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggist&#13;
All the newe tor $1.00 per year.&#13;
J Business Pointers. i&#13;
F O R S A L B .&#13;
Two tfoiid fre.-h, Jer.-ey cows.&#13;
J . J . T e e p l e .&#13;
h i m o n t h e sick list.&#13;
B a n s T o m p k i n s is p a i n t i n g&#13;
M r s . P e t t e y ' s tenant h o u s e o c c u -&#13;
p i e d b y R a y T o m k i n s .&#13;
Mr*. D a v e V a n H o r n s p e n t l a s t | o r t e l n u l l y p l u l l l u , d i Broadway would&#13;
F r i d a y w i t h h e r g r a n d p a r e n t s M r . : Lave cut n slice off the luwn of liena&#13;
n d M r s . C. B . W e l l e r .&#13;
An Old Timo Alderman.&#13;
Several patrons of the restaurant at&#13;
Broadway and Tenth street were lunch&#13;
lng there a few days ago, seated a t a&#13;
table between the corner windows on&#13;
the second Moor which commanded a&#13;
flue view down Broadway, which&#13;
makes a sharp turn at Tenth street.&#13;
Said one of them: "Do you know that&#13;
this bend in Broadway was made In&#13;
order to save li tree? Well, It was. As&#13;
a t t r a c t i o n t h e r e is u p t h a t way.&#13;
! drik Brevoort, who ran a tavern in&#13;
the Mutch farmhouse which stooil&#13;
M i s s V i o l a B e r g e n s p e n t l a s t ; Whero &lt;;nico church uow is. He was&#13;
F r i d a y at H o w e l l . W o n d e r w h a t ] »u alderman, like many of his profos&#13;
sion today, and not only succeeded in&#13;
saving the magnificent tree In the&#13;
B e r t Mftlruy a n d wife of A n n shade of which his customers lingered&#13;
A r b o r s p e n t t ' . e last of t h e week ^ o r their pi],es to watch the tralhc on&#13;
. , . . if BloomuiKdale road, but about 1S4D alw&#13;
i t h t h e l a t t e r s i s t e r M r s . K a y M prevented the opening of Eleventh&#13;
T o i n k i n s . 'street from 1'ourth a\'enue to Broad&#13;
. . . ,» , TI • • 'way, which would have necessitated&#13;
M i s s B a r b a r a H o m i n g is again t h l , 1 ( , i n n . ( l o w n ()f h l s t t t V e r n . " - N e w&#13;
at t h e O a k G r o v e H o u s e , w i t h t York Sun.&#13;
M i s s B r o w n of H a m b u r g as h e l p&#13;
, , , The Madrigal,&#13;
for S u m m e r b o a r d e r s . | T l u , „.,„,, m i u l rl«nl sounds very&#13;
()f 1 formidable to a beginner in music.&#13;
More than once have I heard the ques-&#13;
FOR SALJt.&#13;
House a.i'l lot on HnadilJa street,&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. Carrie Wilson,&#13;
W h i l e M r s . W i n , H o o k e r&#13;
P e t t y s v i l l e was w a i t i n g for a&#13;
f r i e g h t t r a i n t o p a s s , s o m e o n e&#13;
took a b u n d l e of p i e p ^ u t o u t of&#13;
t h e b a c k ot h e r b u g g y last T h u r a -&#13;
tion. "What Is a madrigal?" Strictly&#13;
speaking, a madrigal Is an elalx&gt;rate&#13;
vocal ciunposlthtn In from three to six&#13;
parls, generally sung in chorus. The&#13;
melody should not be carried through&#13;
d a y a f t e r n o o n . Wi 11 h a v e to h a v e a single part, but should be dispersed&#13;
a p o l i c e m a n h e r e I g u e s s .&#13;
414 l'oui!l: Ave. E. Flint, Mich&#13;
tf rand Trunk Railway System.&#13;
Kiijt Rnnnil frnm Pinckney&#13;
No-08 Passenger Ex Snm.av, !i:0S A. M.&#13;
Nn. 30P:^*enjrer Ex. Sundiy, -lift.1) 1'. M.&#13;
West Bonn&lt;l from Pinrkury&#13;
No. 27 PMsenger Ex. Sunday, 10:1)1 A . M .&#13;
No. 09 Passenger EX.SUIKIHJ. »P:U P. M'&#13;
Solid wide vestibule trainR of roaches and Bleep&#13;
ing oars :iiv operated to New York (and Phihidntphta)&#13;
via Niagara F:ills hy the '&gt;rand Tt-inik-I.e-&#13;
Me&#13;
i "Here'-; to your health and happi-&#13;
! nes-i"'—Iiewitt's bittle Kmiv lii-ers&#13;
famous little pill&gt;. Na-tc, ^ck headache&#13;
or biliotisnes&gt; may rome on any&#13;
| tiu.e; the ( ore i-; an Early Riser.&#13;
I Sold by F. A. Slgler, Drngglit.&#13;
Mr.&#13;
a g a i n .&#13;
SOUTH M A R I O N .&#13;
W i l l i a m L v n e is h o m e&#13;
fgh Valley Koute.&#13;
E.w-"&#13;
w H. Clark, A p e n t .&#13;
)ANIELS,&#13;
ftKNKRAl, A I O T I O N K K K .&#13;
Satistnctic n Uunranteed. For information&#13;
call at DISPATCH Office or iddreHs&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. Lyndilla phone&#13;
connection. Auction billn and tin cups&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
C.S.C\v&amp;\vvbfcT\\w&#13;
Expert Auctioneer&#13;
Over 20 Years Eiperience&#13;
DEXTER, MICH.&#13;
PHONE 38. FREE BOX 68&#13;
J. W. BIRD&#13;
PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
swsFicTioN GUIRMTES . " ^ j ;&#13;
For information, call at the.Pincknty%hieATCir&#13;
i-fStv. Auction Bills Fre»&#13;
\\'ebst.er Mural "Phone&#13;
Arrsn^emeuts uiaile for »ale by plume Ht&#13;
my expense.&#13;
Address, D e x t e r , ^ i c h i q a t i&#13;
M r . find M r s . Wtu. B u l l a n d&#13;
d a u g h t e r , L i l l i a n , v i s a e d R\ CTCO.&#13;
B l a n d S u n d a y .&#13;
M r . a n d M r s . ( ' h a s . L o v e of&#13;
P i n c k n e y c a l l e d on M r s , - 1). 1).&#13;
C a r r last F r i d a y a f t e r n o o n .&#13;
G e o r g e M a i b i n of G r e g o r y&#13;
Preefed a M a u d S. w i n d m i l l for&#13;
C h r i s B r o g a n lasf T h u r s d a y .&#13;
A b o u t t w e n t y five of t h e y o u n g&#13;
p e o p l e of t h i s p l a c e g a v e a s u r -&#13;
p r i s e at t h e h o m e of Mr a n d ^l-re.&#13;
S h a c k e l t o n F r i d a y e v e n i n g .&#13;
A f t e r p l a y i n g g a m e s a n d d a n c i n g&#13;
till t h e wee h o u r s , all w e n t&#13;
h o m e s a y i n g t h e y e n j o y e d t h e m -&#13;
selves.&#13;
N O R T H H A M B U R G .&#13;
T'.ie Y o u n / I'eopies Social and&#13;
Literary Club will maet at the home&#13;
)\ Mr. and Mrs. Fred (irieves&#13;
Saturday evening, .Inne 1,1907&#13;
Rev. liav-, will he pvc-ent and mve&#13;
a Memorial addre-*. also other&#13;
interesting thmfif&gt; will li1 on the&#13;
program.&#13;
Evervone cordially invited.&#13;
In plirases thi-ou^'li the (HITerenl vole(»s&#13;
In the cmivorsatiun.'tl manner iieculiar&#13;
to the music of the sixteenth anrl seveutoenlh'centurie'-&#13;
i. The true madrigal&#13;
has no nccompanlmenl. This form of&#13;
soup; is considered Knulish, bur. isthoiiu'ht&#13;
to have had lis origin In the&#13;
Netherlands. The exact derivation of&#13;
the word Is not known. The tirsl&#13;
madri.n-;ils me believed to hnvo lteen&#13;
morninu' sonjjs, shejilierds' lays or&#13;
sotiffs in ]»rais&lt;» of the Virgin.—Circle&#13;
Magazine.&#13;
F A R M E R S !&#13;
We&#13;
Buy&#13;
Cream&#13;
Write Us&#13;
Dudley Butter Co.&#13;
£. F. DUDLEY. TREtS. AND GEh- . MK'R&#13;
SAGINAW, MICHIGAN&#13;
Orville N&amp;nh is yiaitiug in Detroit.&#13;
iliss Lillisn Boyle was' in Detroit&#13;
the firat of tbo week,&#13;
i Miss Erea Mulrim is visiting Mrs.&#13;
M. Kearney and other tr: euds &lt;n this&#13;
p a c e .&#13;
j N. Knuoihuiz-n, cuuimisKioner of&#13;
suboolb was m this place the first of&#13;
the week.&#13;
Miss Mabel Winder was in Detroit&#13;
the Hist of the .veek buying stock for&#13;
ecmmememeuT.&#13;
| Members ot the K. (.). T. M. M. will&#13;
i please rak« note that assessment No.&#13;
i '&#13;
139 is due and must im paid by J u n e 1.&#13;
I The tea .'hers in the sehool h^re have&#13;
jail been tendered tlitir position* tot&#13;
1 another year but as yet not all have&#13;
j accepted.&#13;
| Fosket Broo. commenced work on&#13;
the Honey (Jreek drain west of this&#13;
plac^ the past week. They have&#13;
rented the b1 VV. Hemminyway tenant&#13;
house an ' aie boHrdinjf themselves.&#13;
j David Howen aud Miss Sadie d o i n g&#13;
| were uiarned at I'ontiac S u n d a y , May&#13;
119. They are n &gt;w keeping house in&#13;
the residence rtcoritly vacated by Jas.&#13;
(Jreer, c:rner 'JnadiHa and Pearl&#13;
streeta.&#13;
I&#13;
i Tile is being drawn for a drain from&#13;
I in front of the E .1. Brings residence&#13;
on P u t n a m street, east to the bill east&#13;
of Pearl street. This is needed to&#13;
drain off the water in fronf of the&#13;
Brigtfs and Reason property and&#13;
adjoining lots.&#13;
Tbe first excursion of the season to&#13;
•Jackson over the M. A. L. occurs&#13;
Sunday, J u n e 9, train leaving Detroit&#13;
at 7:30 a.m , Pinckney 10:10, arriving&#13;
at Jackson at 11:15. F a r e from&#13;
Pinckney, round trip, 50 cents,&#13;
tteturuing train leaves Jackson 7 p.m.&#13;
The P u t n a m and H a m b u r g farmers&#13;
club met at I be home of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
11. G. Briggs Saturday aft 'rnoon last.&#13;
Owin^ to the weather but tew weie&#13;
present out enjoyed them selves with&#13;
a social visit. The mext meeting will&#13;
be a picnic J.uly 4, at Island Lake,&#13;
Lakeland.&#13;
Congregational Church.&#13;
The morning service will be a memorial&#13;
to Mrs. Win, Me Kin ley, Ln&#13;
the evening, ''The Simple Lite." You&#13;
are all welcome to these services,&#13;
I Granite, the Bedrock of the Earth,&#13;
i Ornnite is the bedrock of the .world,&#13;
| It Is Die lowest rock in the earth's&#13;
j :niHt and shows no signs of animal&#13;
life. It is from two to ten' times as&#13;
thick as all 1 Tie other layer* of rocks&#13;
combined. No evidences of life of either&#13;
,'inimnl or vegetable are apparent&#13;
In granite. The presence of lime is&#13;
due to animal life. Some scientists assert&#13;
that all the lime ln the world has&#13;
• at some time been a part of some anj&#13;
mal. This includes human beings.&#13;
_ — ' -, i i i i i n m^n. i r&#13;
The coal barons b a y t been happy&#13;
this Mason.&#13;
Cyras B t a n e t t had another alight&#13;
strode of paralysis the past week but&#13;
is feeling much better and is able to&#13;
be around.&#13;
Bert Nash bay sold six horses this&#13;
season and all tor good prices. Bert&#13;
keeps a ucod grade of horses and mobt&#13;
people have found it out.&#13;
Alter 50 years of existence the&#13;
Presbyterian Female seminary at&#13;
Kalan azoo will be closed after t b * f&#13;
year. Want of funds the cause.&#13;
E. J. BriKW informs us that tbtUft&#13;
iu a dumpiiiR ground for ashes a o 4&#13;
other rubbish at tha foot ot Livingston&#13;
street, near his land by the pond.&#13;
The school board of the Penton&#13;
h i g h school will purchase a large&#13;
tract ot laud adjgininw the school&#13;
building for an athletic field aud other&#13;
pu*rpo«es.&#13;
Ann Arbor sportsmen have planted&#13;
oO.OOO wall eyed pike in Zuke and the&#13;
chain ot lakes. Well we do not% kno*&#13;
ot any class of men who catch mora&#13;
fish out ot this string of lakes than&#13;
these aame Ann Arbor fell avs.&#13;
T h e U.of M. will in the future look&#13;
after the literary education of her&#13;
medics as well as their ability to&#13;
carve the human anatomy. Begin;-&#13;
ning with 1909 that department of the&#13;
University will require six years'&#13;
work for graduation, two years' in&#13;
the Literary Department and four :n&#13;
the Medical School.&#13;
M. E. Church Notes.&#13;
The memorial service was attended&#13;
by a full house of interested people&#13;
Sunday morning and the pastor gave&#13;
as stirring and address as will be listened&#13;
to anywhere in the state, There&#13;
were fifteen old soldieis present and&#13;
each was presented with a button-holb&#13;
boquet a i r a n g e d by M^sdaraes C. E.&#13;
Henry and H. M. Wiltiston The&#13;
music was very appropriate and was&#13;
furnished by the W. 1. (J.&#13;
The Sunday school report showed&#13;
an attendance of 120 and collection of'&#13;
$2 90,&#13;
The church wjy|| crowded in the&#13;
evening to attentFtVe ' u n i o n temperance&#13;
meeting, Tbe music was lurnisued&#13;
by Miss Hazel Johnson, pianist&#13;
M i s s . Lola Moran and Miss Ida&#13;
Bnrchiel. each singing solos, and the&#13;
male q u a r t e t t e , Messrs. (iates, Swarthout,&#13;
Nixon and Gaul. The addre«s«3&#13;
by Revs. Gates and Littlejohn were&#13;
stirring and to the point. A severe&#13;
storm threatened d u r i n g the meeting&#13;
which frightened the pec pie and several&#13;
lelt the room to look after tt-ams&#13;
and open windows.&#13;
&gt;tect&#13;
No Apology Needed.&#13;
"I hope our running the grnnliophone&#13;
Inst night didn't annoy you," said the&#13;
renter of I he third floor Hat.&#13;
"What?" responded the new renter of&#13;
the fourth tloor Mat, producing an em&#13;
trumpet.&#13;
"I say It's a tine morning!" mellower!&#13;
the other into the trumpet.---Chicago&#13;
Tribune.&#13;
A Portrait of Wordsworth.&#13;
One of Charles Lamb's frlenda said&#13;
to him that he had; never seen Wordsworth.&#13;
"Why, you'vo seen an old horse,&#13;
haven't you?" asked Charles Lamb.&#13;
"Yes, I suppose so."&#13;
"Then you've seen Wordsworth"&#13;
Pall Mall Cazette.&#13;
H e r D e a r F r i e n d .&#13;
Clara 1 wish 1 could believe wha*&#13;
lie says, but Maud--What doe? he&#13;
lay? Clara Why. ho says he loves&#13;
me. and he has known me only two&#13;
days. Maud Well, perhaps that's the&#13;
reason. Philadelphia Inquirer.&#13;
Passed Both Houses.&#13;
Bill number 538, "A bill to prot&#13;
fish in that part ot Big Portage Lake&#13;
lying in Washtenaw county and to&#13;
protect fish in Little Portage Lake in&#13;
Washtenaw county, and to regulate&#13;
the spearing of cisi,os and carp in said&#13;
Little P o r t a g e L a k e " : has passed&#13;
both houses and will take immediate&#13;
effWt. Rep. Farmer succeeded in&#13;
havinur (IK part of the big lake lying&#13;
in Livingston e m n t y exempt from&#13;
above.&#13;
Oascasweet. lor bsCoK-. »*v tbe best&#13;
remedy for colir, summer cOfffpiadnt,&#13;
diarrhoea and sour -fomach It i t '&#13;
peeially good in rases r i f t # e t h i l _&#13;
when irritation afferts I he stomach&#13;
and intestines. Ca&gt;asweet is a pleasant,&#13;
sate remedv. containing neither&#13;
opiates nor n a r r a t n s ; a'l the ingredients&#13;
are painted plainly on the wrapper.&#13;
Endorsed by mothers because it&#13;
acts so quickly.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Druggiat.&#13;
Bubaerlbe for&#13;
All tbe ne&#13;
i&#13;
«7 DUpatch.&#13;
per yeardewrrrs&#13;
s a a WITCH HAZEL&#13;
9 A L V E : For Pile*, Borna, Som.&#13;
Your Good Wheat&#13;
Is what wo want and it will l&gt;e -•"*"*' * _ ,&#13;
Money in Your P o c k e t&#13;
T o sec us before you sell&#13;
Pinckney Flouring Alills&#13;
FOR SALE:—Open Buggy, used hut little. Will be sold&#13;
at a bargain.&#13;
• * * " • ... i&#13;
'if&#13;
ih...&#13;
:t*&#13;
k'Tt' V **+rr- alt**&#13;
*&gt;r*</text>
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                <text>May 30, 1907 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1907-05-30</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="9077">
                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <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>
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      <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>
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              <text>._.II i "'i.Ji) &lt;xx^ttic^rV«iri^47t'JaNs^-;i907i&#13;
ss "*!&gt;* &gt;*^» ss&#13;
"V?*, •*&gt;&#13;
if*0JP&#13;
.**&#13;
# - • •&#13;
a i s s • \ -1&#13;
| jjy^»«&gt;«V»»fM*W*V*»**»*»*«N*&gt;^»*MM^'»'-&#13;
#?&lt;•*.&#13;
'-*£•&#13;
" ^ „ ,;/•"&#13;
Bakar'i Ooeoav&#13;
Standard Cura, par&#13;
Yeast Foam, onjy £Hrcb Light maUhas, 3 boaet&#13;
ir-O-Ket or Toatod Corn Ftahes, C P H H t f a r&#13;
Good Siirkb« tobaoao, full pound pacictge oaly&#13;
Good flae cut tobaaco, 1lb.&#13;
AU 10c pin* tooaeoivfoor cot* tor&#13;
oajf&#13;
30c&#13;
8s&#13;
.We&#13;
25c&#13;
15c&#13;
25c&#13;
30c&#13;
. .*; -M&#13;
A &gt;••&#13;
mo-* •'-&#13;
Kajftoae plof tobaooo, re^o ar fie cats oaly ^ foil strip of 6 eats, 17c&#13;
ft rtrt to irlilt ils mri tins p i eame to Htvtll.&#13;
fivsury d » v Is bsir|siln d a y v&#13;
B; A* Bowman's&#13;
Howeirs Busy Stare&#13;
* * • ' . &lt; . l*OCAb NEWS.&#13;
.«&amp;:&#13;
^: , Wanted at oofe~irtn7m«r,&#13;
6. Glean of Detroit&#13;
waek at his farm, tin* Glen&#13;
Matt Jeffries is RiTioff&#13;
latyie's,&#13;
POJPt;&#13;
Mis •.'/•' * ' • ? « :&#13;
P-«*T«!;^&#13;
rs^pi&#13;
(}. Fish&#13;
^&#13;
. . *&#13;
"AiilKSf^&#13;
Stillwater,&#13;
, Teeplt's.&#13;
tina&#13;
Minn.,&#13;
Mre.&#13;
,«• i t&#13;
A lliliEM:-!. &gt;...&#13;
Rev./jil a'MitfWVonth bnt wraps&#13;
bava J/coaki are 8WI in evidence. A&#13;
isbentrain has (aUan erery day tbiaj[|is ha wishtog him saeeess,&#13;
ovflj^K ant as we ^o to. press We^dMif&#13;
atternooa it is warming up&#13;
jw»&#13;
1&#13;
a&#13;
I&#13;
"J2^SX '' jMMlSs'&#13;
everyone was talking at once&#13;
the tableaux. One or two old&#13;
saw..ma_and-came l o welcome&#13;
it was several minutes befor/ i p&#13;
make my way to my aunt. ^&#13;
"Aunt Elizabeth," I demanded',&#13;
sent me, 1 beg, to the lady ot&#13;
manor. Where did you find her?&#13;
ehp step down from the frame t&#13;
.Jfim€**M bap pen?" 1 MJ— aa I Spoke Marlaane caj&#13;
A. B. Green has been on the sick&#13;
list the past weak.&#13;
Be?. A. G. Gates and wife are now&#13;
nieely settled in the Con«'l paraoaage.&#13;
Hiss Calistia ParsbaH of Ho well | as toast master&#13;
was tba ffnest of Miss Maa Reason&#13;
over Sanday.&#13;
Mil* Hat 1 of Ann Arbor was the&#13;
gOest of Miss Le.a Monks a few days&#13;
tba past week.&#13;
Boy Csverly, foreman of the Livingston&#13;
Republican, visited his parent!&#13;
here dnnday.&#13;
James Smith lett Tuesday for Detroit,&#13;
and from tbete he goes to Cobalt&#13;
Canada. His many friends join with&#13;
&lt; • . : •&#13;
.^ . * . , . * »&#13;
f:" f&gt;&#13;
tm IP- STi j*,r&#13;
ASK YOUft DEALER&#13;
$ $ W . H. Crofoot, Will Dnnning, C. E.&#13;
n. John White and Fred Teeptbis&#13;
section went to Lansing&#13;
riday and saw Pree. Roosevelt.&#13;
Mack, one of Howell's popneys,&#13;
was spending Sunday in&#13;
JPatnam^--Wonder what was&#13;
Ifc attract ion—must hare been a snit&#13;
a^aasatAkmd. (?)&#13;
i I I * item in toe Lakeland cor res*&#13;
last weak in regard to Mrs.&#13;
baving pieplant etollen from&#13;
UtaMgjlpy mast have been a mistake.&#13;
in&amp;Mm she either lost it or gave it&#13;
she does not know or card&#13;
as she has given away bushels.&#13;
TV* elocutionary entertainment at&#13;
the M. E. Church last Wednesday&#13;
gvening under the auspices of the W.&#13;
C. ws* an exceptionally good one&#13;
d sbonld have been better attended.&#13;
e show in town that evening took&#13;
some of the crowd bnt those who&#13;
missed bearing Mrs. Rodda missed a&#13;
treat. Should she aver visit the village&#13;
again bbe would be greeted by a&#13;
foil bonse. The music rendered by&#13;
the ponng people was much appreciated.&#13;
Tbe society took in over $10.&#13;
'Hi i&#13;
'V: 1 ^ ^&#13;
• P - - * « H B )&#13;
^^^ai&#13;
HI&#13;
— w - ^ mmmmmmm&#13;
*'W&lt;I"IJH I I P&#13;
* f ' &gt; * * - • *.• f • r • • t: i • f • • ' # &gt; t r. •- * ^rw&#13;
"A.&#13;
a&#13;
Do You Fish?&#13;
^s If so, You surety should set out&#13;
fm and complete tm$ of Fishing&#13;
Tackef, costing rods, baits rook,&#13;
tiros, minnow oofs and /mils. In&#13;
fact etwything in the fishing lino&#13;
"•'if?*&#13;
5tt our show oas4:ti will&#13;
fauty maHj^mouth mrtor&#13;
# •&#13;
Teeple Hardware G&lt;&#13;
'•ir-.ii.&#13;
U n d , would arrife&#13;
ingf Jan4 8, tba mambe&#13;
and the citiaeas of the n l&#13;
in hand to see that he was&#13;
reception and welcome that bo&#13;
net sooa forfet. People began, a&#13;
ing early and by eight o'clock&#13;
town was fall.&#13;
Several priests bad also coma in&#13;
from all over the diocese, and as tbey&#13;
were sitting on tbe spacious porch of&#13;
tbe rectory about 100 men marched in&#13;
on them and ail went to the opera&#13;
hoo.se which was already crowded.&#13;
Over thirty priests were present by&#13;
this time aud all were seated on the&#13;
platform, Rev. Commerford beintr given&#13;
tbe seat of honor in the center.&#13;
J. 0. Dnnn, chairman, made a few&#13;
very appropriate remarks and then&#13;
to toed tbe meeting over to Rev. Fr.&#13;
Jamas Uabalaa of Hillsdale, who acted&#13;
and introduced tbe&#13;
speakers. Rev. Fr. Hally ot Wyandotte&#13;
gave the address of welcome&#13;
from the diocese, and spoke of the&#13;
bi?b esteem in which Fr. Commerford&#13;
is held among the clergy. Hon. G&#13;
W. Teeple gave the address of wel&#13;
come from the citizens in a tew well&#13;
chosen words and Rev. Fr. T. E.&#13;
Slattery, who has had charge of the&#13;
parish dnnng the absence of Fr. Commerford,&#13;
gave the welcome in behalf&#13;
of (he parish. He had been in close&#13;
touch witb tbe members and knew&#13;
well how to extend bis welcome.&#13;
At this time Rev. Fr. Command of&#13;
Trenton was introdnced and in bis&#13;
usual eleqnent and polished manner&#13;
spoke of the expressions of welcome&#13;
that had already been given and also&#13;
that the presence ot so many people&#13;
showed they were glad to welcome&#13;
back one whom they must love and&#13;
respect. Thes* expressions were all \&#13;
good bnt be bad one expression of welcome&#13;
to extend that might last evenafter&#13;
the words have been forgotten.&#13;
He hereupon tendered Fr. Commerford&#13;
with a package containing 500&#13;
$1.00 bills, crisp and new.&#13;
This, of coarse, called for a speech&#13;
from the pastor and, as usual, he was&#13;
ready for be never lacks for something&#13;
to say. After thanking the&#13;
people not only for their gift, but tbe&#13;
words ot welcome and tbeir presence&#13;
there to welcome bim be gave a very&#13;
interesting description of bis trip to&#13;
the differest places of interest in the&#13;
old country, especially to Jerusalem&#13;
and Bethany. His manner of bring&#13;
ittg ont tbe tbe different scenes is ex&#13;
cellent and one almost thins: they can&#13;
see tbe things described. Of course&#13;
he kissed the Blarney Stone and bis&#13;
description of tbe feat was worth&#13;
listening to. We have listened to&#13;
many lectures on the same sights and&#13;
seines bnt nothing better than this&#13;
one by Rev. Commerford.&#13;
At tbe close of bis remarks he came&#13;
down in front of the stage and every,&#13;
oae in the house was given a chance&#13;
to shake his band and in this&#13;
be was assisted by Rev. Fr. Command&#13;
and nearly 600 people avai.led them&#13;
salves of the opportunity.&#13;
CommencemciT!| ^m^ei?t|&#13;
We have a fine line of Books&#13;
Toilet Caser, Manicure Sets&#13;
and other Fancy Article* ttaft&#13;
make glad the heart of the&#13;
graduate. See our line. . . .&#13;
•A'&#13;
••1iHV.i&gt; -&#13;
*»&gt;r-:.&lt; ?*•«*;&#13;
Drag4h*Pre»criplion8 Carefully Compounded at&#13;
^^P^&#13;
***r "*wrn-&#13;
£fc"&#13;
?rsv';-'*&#13;
ITS&#13;
i.Te?.^k^&#13;
£ariato*H»&amp;&amp;&#13;
&gt;*&#13;
No time to change Adv.&#13;
this week, am to busy selling&#13;
goods advertised before&#13;
• &amp; • '&#13;
L. L. Holmes Clothing Co.&#13;
Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
The Hamburg and Putnam farmers&#13;
club will not meet the last Saturday&#13;
in June bnt will meet July 4 at Island&#13;
lake aooat a quarter of a mile from&#13;
Lakeland stitton, for a picnic Wttl&#13;
have the earn* prograsn we was tot&#13;
M e had-at Mr. Brit**' May 25 and&#13;
aa many mow at will, to help' tit! ont&#13;
the program. Everyone invited, bat&#13;
bring laash and dishes. If • cold d a j&#13;
J too Cady hooaait open to all^-Praa, f M » reqots&#13;
Will Harris was called to Dexter&#13;
last Thursday on , account of tbe&#13;
serious illness of his father.&#13;
Rev. D. C. Littleiohn visited the&#13;
book rooms in Detroit Monday making&#13;
some additions to his library.&#13;
Glenn Richards of Grand Rapids&#13;
was the guest of his parents. Dan&#13;
Richards and wife, the past week.&#13;
We are obliged to i$soe a large&#13;
number of halt-sheets this week to&#13;
supply tbe demand for extra papers.&#13;
Geo. Colj was called to Hamburg&#13;
Wednesday to attend the funeral of&#13;
Henry Hetcheler, who bas been ill |&#13;
this winter. j&#13;
Emil Lambert8on lett Monday to |&#13;
attend a business college at Lansing, j&#13;
Emil is a graduate of the P. H. S. and I&#13;
here's hoping for his success. 1&#13;
iliss Florence Cook of Brighton is |&#13;
one of the graduates of tbe high&#13;
school there this year. Miss Florence&#13;
spent her first school days here.&#13;
C. ?. Sykes returned home last Friand&#13;
was taken siek. For a time it&#13;
seemed as if he was in for another&#13;
run of illness bnt we are glad to state&#13;
that he is on tbe way to recovery.&#13;
Rev. and Mrs. K. H. Craet of Hartland&#13;
are visiting their many friends&#13;
here. They were for years residents&#13;
of our village moving away about a&#13;
year ago on account of Mr. C s health.&#13;
5'gler Bros, have their ice cream&#13;
parlors in fine shape and bava a&#13;
a new fountain. So 4ar this se&#13;
hot cofee would till the bill&#13;
than ice cream although tbeir&#13;
it excellent being home mad*. '-&#13;
Tbe Alnmni of the P. H. V *itl&#13;
meat at fee ackoat baihtiai Fffd«y&#13;
evening of tuw week, to make *rr*n*&gt;&#13;
Decree Rendered&#13;
The Supreme contt has rendered a&#13;
decree in the Reason vs Peteis, case&#13;
but tbe written decrte has not been&#13;
received here as we g.v to press it it&#13;
bnt little understood and there art&#13;
several stot ies.&#13;
Upon tefephoning *for information&#13;
we find that it can be interpreted in&#13;
two ways. As we understand it Mr.&#13;
Peters can leave the water at its present&#13;
height and ask tbe court to 4ecid&gt;&#13;
on the amount of damage it is to Mr.&#13;
Reason's property w h i c h ^ ^ i i w».J&#13;
to pay together with all&#13;
must lower tbe water 2(&#13;
time and pay all costs.&#13;
ing has be*n done either wayT&#13;
.feet awi&#13;
Ms and sent&#13;
coveted lee Cream S&#13;
. »&#13;
po&amp;alWe,&#13;
ed the outside&#13;
its course aa far&#13;
»st it came to the&#13;
its course, jand I t&#13;
er, the inside sewer&#13;
tight.&#13;
^her side of the wall&#13;
Its double casing con-&#13;
Us eucalypt&#13;
t$w to get&#13;
'eet high&#13;
S " ^ 1&#13;
Carboruted VVafors,&#13;
~ II Kinds ow ice*-&#13;
meats for&#13;
format f n&#13;
knsl meeting. All&#13;
the high school&#13;
&gt;resenvat7*30»&#13;
BVEp CLOSED&#13;
• * « • '&#13;
N 4L"-£*&gt;':-^, .^-¾&#13;
6&amp;TJ-! .^0/&#13;
2 : ' " ' •„• fc» '&#13;
• * ' . A*. c¥&#13;
. + ^ &lt;£&#13;
., .-»'H'&#13;
I* Aw&gt;Ba*t, P*b.&#13;
[ 1 ¾ -:- MICHIGAN&#13;
"T#&#13;
**nttj&gt;tnl Would Block PrQgrea*1&#13;
Wfce* the project of building a rail*&#13;
war to MM top of the Matterhorn * a s&#13;
Qrat 'toAftttnceO, a few months ago.&#13;
there wan considerable opposition to&#13;
U^ Zencatt and the district of Visp&#13;
ju^teatea, and the Swiss Alpine club&#13;
*aa antagonistic. The "Verein fur&#13;
Heimatscbuts," the aim of which Is to&#13;
protect tba Alps against vandalism, refused/&#13;
on the other hand, to vote&#13;
st the railway, but left the matthe&#13;
judgment of Individual mem-&#13;
The Alpine club finally withits&#13;
objections when attention&#13;
was called to the. fact that it had not&#13;
withstood the Jungfrau railway (about&#13;
two-thirds ofwhich is now completed).&#13;
The ' originator of the Matterhorn&#13;
project, the eminent engineer, H. Inv&#13;
feld, has written for the Alpina an&#13;
article in which he reviews the objections.&#13;
The chief ones are that the&#13;
w&#13;
railway would disfigure the mountain,&#13;
would desecrate it, and injure the&#13;
guides at Zermatt. His answer Is&#13;
that, in the first place, the aspect of&#13;
the mountain will not be changed in&#13;
the least, as the railway will be subterranean&#13;
all the way up. The station&#13;
will not impede the view on top, and&#13;
will hardly be visible to the naked&#13;
eye from Zermatt The charge of&#13;
desecration was also brought at first&#13;
against the Jungfrau project, and even&#13;
against the Rigi railway, nearly 40"&#13;
years ago; it was soon found to be&#13;
foolish. As for the guides, they will&#13;
probably have as much employment&#13;
as ever. There are now four routes&#13;
for ascCBuThg the Matterhorn, and&#13;
they'"wiH be used as before by those&#13;
/whose main object is the sport of&#13;
climbing. The railway will be a&#13;
blessing to the thousands who cannot&#13;
climb.&#13;
Wing Shooting.&#13;
Wing shooting can no more be&#13;
theoretically taught than can riding,&#13;
skating, sailing a boat, milking a cow&#13;
or playing the violin. Practice and&#13;
perseverance in this, as in all field&#13;
sports, can alone make perfect, while&#13;
the most persistent effort, even then,&#13;
often falls to make a "crack shot."&#13;
Certain rules, however, must govern&#13;
the beginner, which, if observed, will&#13;
materially aid him in becoming an expert.&#13;
When a novice takes the field&#13;
for game, says James W. Dixon in&#13;
Recreation, he Is very apt to become&#13;
flustered, or "rattled," at the critical&#13;
moment when the bird is flushed, and&#13;
then he will stare, open-mouthed, and&#13;
wonder how it happened. This often&#13;
occurs in the field, and the tyro invariably&#13;
has some plausible excuse to&#13;
offer. His "gun was not cocked," he&#13;
"stubbed his toe just as the bird&#13;
rose," or some equally weak explanation&#13;
is made; or else he lays all the&#13;
blame on his dogs, whose thoughts,&#13;
could they but express them, it would&#13;
be interesting to interpret. The best&#13;
wing-shooters do not close one eye in&#13;
aiming, nor do they follow the bird in&#13;
its flights with the muzzle of the gun;&#13;
but closing one eye is admittedly better&#13;
than tightly shutting both, as&#13;
many young would-be sportsmen have&#13;
been known to do.&#13;
SBQSJ&#13;
• -.'tin •'!—* •••"•••' ^•jilmfJt r ^ ^ p s s ^ ^ ^ t ? ; ' ^ . r "&#13;
y*'-^-**.*} m&#13;
Waa HataWa, *&#13;
v&#13;
IOAO DCAUft&#13;
I MENTIS&#13;
w )F VIEWS.&#13;
Will the.Great Railroad Financier Be&#13;
Criminally Prosecuted or Escape&#13;
Scott Free?&#13;
The Record Made Up.&#13;
A conference of great importance&#13;
bearing upon the Harriman case will&#13;
be held in Washington this week. It&#13;
will then be known whether the. administration&#13;
intends to go after Mr.&#13;
Harrimap and hfc railroads through&#13;
the medium of the Sherman anti-trust&#13;
act, or intends- to let the railroad&#13;
magnate and his associates continue&#13;
on their way rejoicing.&#13;
President 'Roosevelt's Indianapolis&#13;
speech, in its bearing upon the Harriman&#13;
consolidation, is open to two interpretations.&#13;
Some people declare&#13;
that it was conservative in tone and&#13;
that the president's assertion that&#13;
railroads should be permitted in law&#13;
as well as in practice to acquire the&#13;
Stock or bonds' of connecting'but not&#13;
parallel lines, was tantamount to a&#13;
notice that the government would not&#13;
proceed against Harriman.&#13;
Others are equally emphatic in&#13;
their statements that the president at&#13;
Indianapolis showed that he was still&#13;
on the firing line and that it was his&#13;
purpose to use the "Big Stick" on Mr.&#13;
Harriman.&#13;
The record in the Harriman case is&#13;
made up, and at the conference that&#13;
will be held at the White House a decision&#13;
will be reached showing the&#13;
intentions of the administration&#13;
toward Harriman and the men associated&#13;
with him. Opinions vary as to&#13;
what the president will do In this&#13;
matter, and when Mr. Roosevelt gathers&#13;
his advisors around him he will&#13;
find that they are divided on the question&#13;
as to the advisability of proceeding&#13;
against Harriman in the courts.&#13;
There are members of the interstate&#13;
commerce commission who are&#13;
insistent that nothing except criminal&#13;
prosecution and the imposition of&#13;
sentences of imprisonment will put an&#13;
end to such flagrant violations of the&#13;
anti-trust laws as was disclosed in&#13;
the inquiry into the operations of the&#13;
Harriman railroads. Other members of&#13;
the commission will tell the president&#13;
that the evidence in hand is not strong&#13;
enough to justify the administration&#13;
in embarking upon a project to&#13;
"smash" Harriman.&#13;
The moat. dUttagirtpM man in&#13;
nation attended, tt* - funeral of Mr*}&#13;
id* Gaston MeKifttey &amp; Cairtom^Oo,}&#13;
and stood at tha gray* aide in the&#13;
cemetery where tb&gt; body waa. laJ4 ba»&#13;
side the remains of her martyrad h u *&#13;
band, gimpfe* *r-waajh&amp;fua*ral ceift,&#13;
mony, there was mnc% that ^waa impressive,&#13;
for the woman who laydea4&#13;
and the open and women gathered&#13;
around her. coffin recalled scenes and&#13;
incident* that have formed the Matoty&#13;
of the nation for the last. decade. •&#13;
The service wave held at the North&#13;
Market street residence of the McKlnleys.&#13;
Not araoe the funeral- of Mrs.&#13;
Benjamin Harrison has so large a&#13;
number of men eminent ra toe affairs&#13;
of the nation been gathered at the&#13;
funerai of any woman. .&#13;
Among the number who paid a last&#13;
tribute to the memory of Mrs. McKinley&#13;
were President Roosevelt and&#13;
Vice-President Fairbanks, four members&#13;
of the cabinet, two of whom also&#13;
were ministers of the late President&#13;
McKinley; Senator Knox, of Pennsyl-J&#13;
vania, attorney general in the McKln*&#13;
ley cabinet; former Postmaster Gea«&#13;
eral Gary; Supreme Court Justice and&#13;
former Secretary of State W. R. Day;&#13;
Gov. Harris, of Ohio, Senator Dick,&#13;
and many other distinguished persons.&#13;
The cabinet members present were&#13;
Secretary of State Root, Secretary of&#13;
the Treasury Cortelyou, Secretary of&#13;
the Interior Garfield, and Secretary of&#13;
Agriculture Wilson.&#13;
Feed Babies to Serpent.&#13;
In spite of the fact that a similar&#13;
charge was investigated and dismissed&#13;
by a grand jury some time ago, another&#13;
complaint has been filed with United&#13;
States District Attorney Llewellyn,&#13;
of New Mexico, that a tribe of Indians&#13;
in that territory are given to the worship&#13;
of an enormous serpent to which&#13;
is fed the new-born babies of a puebla&#13;
in which It is housed and carefully&#13;
tended and guarded.&#13;
The complaint was filed by a Catholic&#13;
priest, who alleges that a dozen&#13;
families were segregated from several&#13;
pueblas two years ago and formed&#13;
into a puebla by themselves. Although&#13;
it is known that many children have&#13;
been born to these families not a child&#13;
is to be found in the puebla. Thjs led&#13;
the priest to press his investigations,&#13;
with the result that he discovered&#13;
in an adobe house, isolated, and closely&#13;
guarded, the serpent which is worshiped&#13;
by the Indians of the pueblas&#13;
around and that every babe born in&#13;
the small puebla, and, It is suspected,&#13;
in many others, is fed to the serpent.&#13;
Mr. Llewellyn, having no jurisdiction&#13;
has filed an affidavit of the priest and&#13;
other evidence with the territorial authorities.&#13;
•TOR* TOLD » * A j j t l&#13;
MURftlRKjl Td Trtt&#13;
..*. .&#13;
LATEST DETROIT CRIME.&#13;
after Mutilating His Victim He Started&#13;
Ao. Commit Suicide But Was tot&#13;
Froxen Out.&#13;
Hundreds of old soldiers are leaving&#13;
Richmond, going home to escape the&#13;
rigors of searching cold and steady&#13;
rain unprecedented in that city.&#13;
Thousands of delegates to the seventeenth&#13;
grand camp and reunion of the&#13;
Fnited Confederate Veterans are lingering,&#13;
however, to participate with the&#13;
Sons of Veterans and their sponsors,&#13;
Maids- of Honor, and many friends in&#13;
the parade and unveiling of the heroic&#13;
statue of President Davis.&#13;
The United Confederate Veterans&#13;
decided to meet next year in Birmingham,&#13;
Ala., and elected Gen. Stephen&#13;
D. Lee, of Georgia, grand commander.&#13;
A Wholesome Philosophy.&#13;
Absolute honesty and a definite will&#13;
often produce better results without&#13;
unuauiil intellectual gifts or opportun-&#13;
* Jt&gt; than the keenest intellect can attea*&#13;
wUbeut these moral qualities. It&#13;
! « • • # - # • , alp easy thing, says Laura&#13;
r'-'3Pfe«Bt'4lnt in Delineator, to quote&#13;
',^B»este# ,*Oted men and women in&#13;
&lt;H character have prac-&#13;
SatiSfe *tttt*Bad "the most conspicuous&#13;
tion cull" *?&amp;0*t**A philosophy of life&#13;
Gregory, M i l * * ' ^ &lt;**&amp;* about life, but&#13;
connection. £** **&amp; govern our aci&#13;
« wet! Baen called the&#13;
Of life." Since&#13;
oaaar ie tJee measure of&#13;
of every&#13;
IT ytmr part well—&#13;
f i. a a1*'"'"*1*^ despair will&#13;
E x p e r t Ale aoratae mist be&#13;
r part la not to ex-&#13;
Over 20 Ymcgr£££:&#13;
on of confurniNlu'd&#13;
free.3&#13;
Shaken Up.&#13;
Three earth shocks at about 3:20&#13;
Saturday morning caused the inhabitants&#13;
of Guayaquil, Ecuador, to jump&#13;
from their beds and run, panicstricken,&#13;
into the streets. The first&#13;
and last, of the shocks were slight,&#13;
hut the second was heavy and lasted&#13;
about 40 seconds, causing the bells in&#13;
the churches to ring and stopping the&#13;
clocks in the church towers. No news&#13;
has yet. been roceived from the interior,&#13;
but it is considered probable&#13;
that damage was done in the country.&#13;
Owing to the peculiar construction&#13;
of the buildings the disturbance&#13;
rlid not cause any damage in that&#13;
city.&#13;
Husband Was a Woman.&#13;
The body of Nicholal de Raylan,&#13;
whose sex has been the subject of dispute&#13;
and litigation since last December,&#13;
was exhumed on the arrival in&#13;
Phoenix, Ariz., of Baron Sehlippenbacb,&#13;
Russian consul in Chicago. The&#13;
body was in a good state of'preservation&#13;
and the face unchanged. Baron&#13;
Schlippenbach said:&#13;
"This is the body of Nicolai de Raylan,&#13;
who was for 12 years my secretary."&#13;
..,,, ---^-.- ---&#13;
Later the proof of sex was made,&#13;
i he coroner and a physician who had&#13;
attended the dead person making affidavits&#13;
that De Raylan was a female.&#13;
De Raylan, as a man, was twice married.&#13;
His "widow" in Chicago denied&#13;
that De Raylan was a woman and&#13;
claimed his estate. She cannot get it&#13;
now ns a widow's heritage.&#13;
_ # • __ . WWaf ti » e me&#13;
OEXT^,&#13;
tli I AW*&#13;
,v r.'&lt;- • ' i^t&#13;
;•«*»"- %5&lt;(jv-v&#13;
y&#13;
at one&#13;
rch which&#13;
is now&#13;
Tie"Standard Oil magnate,&#13;
and has' reduced that gentleman's&#13;
charities to iaayatem.» Always attired&#13;
in an up*to-date business anlt, of manner&#13;
Mlffc a n i fttcisfve, Mr. Gates is&#13;
cIOBe^mouthed regarding such of hla&#13;
employer's hevefactiont as do not ap*&#13;
t_ne*a#ap«rf.&#13;
•v :i,&#13;
-*&lt;U,&#13;
fc- ' •v'fc'W,-&#13;
J., • * » » *&#13;
" V -&#13;
Trust "Busting."&#13;
That the federal grand jury in Denver&#13;
is secretly investigating some of&#13;
the largest corporations in America&#13;
and that indictments will be returned&#13;
against men who are rated as multimillionaires&#13;
and captains of industry,&#13;
known as well in Wall street as in&#13;
Colorado, is reported.&#13;
Fully 120 secret service men now&#13;
make their headquarters in Denver,&#13;
this small army of government sleuths&#13;
having rented a large portion of the&#13;
fifth floor of an office building, from&#13;
where they are spreading the net that&#13;
is tightening about victims in high&#13;
places.&#13;
L. C. Wheeler, In the service of the&#13;
department of Justice, fs in charge&#13;
of the secret service men and says&#13;
there will be some startling revelations&#13;
in the near future.&#13;
Predicts War.&#13;
That in three or five years at the&#13;
outside there will be a war between&#13;
Japan and the United States, is the&#13;
opinion expressed by J. A. Elliott, of&#13;
Manchester, N. H. The strained feelings&#13;
between the Japanese and the&#13;
Americans, he says, cannot be&#13;
imagined by those who have not seen&#13;
the two nationalities clash. The Japanese&#13;
along the Pacific coast, he says,&#13;
are very aggressive and are going into&#13;
all kinds of business with success.&#13;
They are particularly strong in transportation,&#13;
and now control a large&#13;
part of the Pacific trade. Their success&#13;
against the Russians has made them&#13;
chesty, domineering in fact, and the&#13;
feeling against, them is intense,&#13;
Americans are hoping that therfc&#13;
will be no« outbreak till the Panama&#13;
canal is built.&#13;
-&lt;^&#13;
.Waitera' ttery. " • .&#13;
Because be hr'cursedJ&#13;
t with ~;the&#13;
cowardice oMbe lowest form 1of brute&#13;
creation,' which revels in brutality to&#13;
a helpless victim weaker than himself,&#13;
but whines and snivefs with any&#13;
pain or Buffering inflicted upon him&#13;
self, David C. Walters, wife slayer, ir&#13;
steadily recovering in a Detroit hoe&#13;
prtal and probably will be almost we&#13;
within a short space of tinTe.&#13;
When his poor little wife. lay in a&#13;
weltering heap on the floor Waiters&#13;
picked up a bottle of carbolic add,&#13;
which he had brought with him, with&#13;
the purpose of ending his murderous&#13;
existence. He presssed the bottle tc&#13;
his lips and poured out &amp; mouthful ol&#13;
the fiery liquid. It burned -his month.&#13;
He spit it out upon the floor without&#13;
swallowing a drop, for hla throat waa&#13;
not burned.&#13;
This was the "desperate" man who&#13;
had only a few seconds before fairly&#13;
hacked to pieces the body of a frail&#13;
little woman.&#13;
Walters' own story of the crime is&#13;
a brutal tale of a most detestable&#13;
crime. The only effort he makes&#13;
toward a defense is that he knew that&#13;
his wife loved Kirkpatrick more than&#13;
she loved him; that she refused to&#13;
forget Kirkpatrick^and go back to&#13;
live with him. That is all.&#13;
The detectives sat around his cot&#13;
in the hospital, and he told the story&#13;
of his life, leading up to the crime.&#13;
He told of waiting in the house for his&#13;
wife's return. "When she came in I&#13;
begged her to go back and five with&#13;
me again," be said. "Mamma," I said&#13;
to her, 'you must come back "to me&#13;
and live with me and love me.' She&#13;
refused, and then I said, 'Mamma,&#13;
you have nearly killed me, and I'm go&#13;
ing to kill you now.' Then I grabbed&#13;
the hammer and struck her over the&#13;
head with it three times. God! when&#13;
she fell I saw that she was dead; but&#13;
I picked up the knife and slashed and&#13;
slashed at her. Then I tried to kill&#13;
myself, but I failed."&#13;
$ $ 4 Qp&amp;afatla&#13;
tna &lt;fcarl#T oir diaJHot, who i» vol&#13;
Bnaafair of any of the iaeocporated.&#13;
aort aaaoctatlona there, iA in Lans;&#13;
fWllhf ^videocei ef discriminaUoa&#13;
passenger rates on the Pere Mar&#13;
against himself, he may appeal-ttbu|»iij(r&#13;
loteratate commerce- commisflion. •&#13;
There are resort aaaociatkuw a t Harbor&#13;
Springe, Roaring B r ^ , W^&amp;uf&#13;
ton-amg and two at Charlevoix, 4ncor&gt;&#13;
«w*ted ^a^eraUev laws of the eaate.&#13;
All of the resorte are reached by tne&#13;
Pere Marquetie&gt; People living In&#13;
:&gt;art* of Om state belong to&#13;
sther-jjf the five as&#13;
Pere Marquette has^l&#13;
% special rate&#13;
;n the Det&#13;
Horribly Mangled.&#13;
Edward Martin was instantly killed&#13;
by a Pere Marquette train, a short ais&#13;
tance north of Muskegon Saturday.&#13;
He was not identified until a piece of&#13;
paper, on which his name had beep&#13;
written four timeB, was found in&#13;
lining of his coat by Coroner Ba&#13;
nie. The body was terribly mangled.&#13;
It is thought that Martin had etaft*&#13;
ed out on a hobo trip, and while rl#&gt;&#13;
ing on the train fell between the&#13;
trucks of the baggage car. The body&#13;
was dragged the entire length of the&#13;
train. lie was unmarried.&#13;
Smallest in the State.&#13;
What is probably the smallest&#13;
school in point of attendance in the&#13;
entire state of Michigan, and one of&#13;
the smallest in the entire United&#13;
States, had its ending several weeks&#13;
ago, when District No. 2 in Muskegon&#13;
township closed for the season. The&#13;
two punlls who were under the tutelage&#13;
of Miss Edith Hale, of Muski&#13;
left slates, blackboards and arit&#13;
tics and romped away to follow&#13;
plows and pick berries at tfyeir home&#13;
oh the farm.&#13;
Miss Hale thinks that the number&#13;
of her pupils compares favorably to&#13;
any school in Michigan. The pupils&#13;
were both young and were very orderly.&#13;
One was a boy and the other&#13;
a girl. They were both in the same&#13;
grade in school.&#13;
District No. 2 hasn't always been&#13;
so light in attendance, but early this&#13;
spring many of the pupils left school&#13;
to work at home.&#13;
After Nine Years.&#13;
Peter Coman, an Indian, wan arrested&#13;
near Eagle River, on the charge of&#13;
murdering Henry Taresh, of CryBtal&#13;
Falls, Mich., nine years ago. District&#13;
Attorney O'Connor, accompanied by&#13;
Sheriff Murphy, found the body of&#13;
Taresh burled at a depth of two feet&#13;
in a swamp near Lac Du Flambeau.&#13;
Taresh was a woodsman with relatives&#13;
at Crystal Falls, and the authorities&#13;
searched for year3 to locate the murderer.&#13;
The Hermit's Estate.&#13;
Archimedes Galbraith, the swrinp&#13;
I'lermit who passed away in the St.&#13;
Clair county poor house a supposedly&#13;
rich man, did not have enough of his&#13;
estate left to make it worth while&#13;
probating. The appraisers find thai&#13;
the aged hermit left real estate valued&#13;
at $1,200, but. this being highly !r:ort&#13;
g;ij;ed, there will not be a quarter ol&#13;
the valuation, when a final settlement&#13;
is made. He left farm implements&#13;
vali:ed at $45 and held 27,000 shares&#13;
in seventeen different corporations.&#13;
The value of the shares Is iilacod at&#13;
about $£ or less.&#13;
-li:&#13;
Mr. Winters Disappears-.&#13;
Byron Winters, aged 56; is missing.&#13;
Last Wednesday he dyed his hair and&#13;
mustache black and left This is his&#13;
second disappearance. »&#13;
He dropped out o f sight In Lake&#13;
City four years ago and went to his&#13;
mother-in-law's in Blanchard. His sister-&#13;
in-law did not know him, he was&#13;
so changed* and sent him away; but&#13;
she recognized him by his walk before&#13;
he got to the.gate and called him&#13;
back.&#13;
Mine Worked Out.&#13;
The Caledonia Co., the only co-operative&#13;
concern to engage In coal mining&#13;
in Michigan, has worked ont its first&#13;
Bshaayf tC iwtyh. iTchh ew maisn es uwnaks ojpuesrt atseodu tthh reoef [eludes an estimate of the realty value&#13;
years and was owned, officered and&#13;
worked by the miners themselves. The&#13;
miners realized large profits, cleaning&#13;
up $28,000 from the three years. The&#13;
company holds leases adjoining and&#13;
has already sunk a shaft in a thick&#13;
vein and is taking out coal.&#13;
Bernardo Powers, aged 60, waa cnt&#13;
in twain by a freight train at'Powera.&#13;
Qstrait Valuation.&#13;
Surprising even to the assesors&#13;
themselves is the increase of $21,000,-&#13;
000 in the assessed valuation of land&#13;
and buildings in Detroit, as figured&#13;
out at the assessors' office. This in&#13;
$7.25 _ _ _&#13;
iation members&#13;
5 raie, ticket* to oe&#13;
e 1 on.&#13;
owners in the Charlevoix&#13;
who do not belong to any of&#13;
ttia resort associations have been notified&#13;
by ^tue Pere Marquette that by&#13;
strict instruction from the interstate&#13;
commerce commission the company&#13;
cannot sell them round trip tickets for&#13;
less than $9.55.&#13;
Just how the company figures that&#13;
it can discriminate this way against&#13;
aon-aasociation members is what the&#13;
latter would like to learn.&#13;
M •i- -.*•••&#13;
The Walker*.&#13;
The Overland Walking club, organized&#13;
in Jackson, April I, 1904, has&#13;
planned Borne extensive* trips for the&#13;
summer. James M. Hutchinson, of&#13;
Jackson, and Sdward T. Buckley, of&#13;
Bay City, will take their vacations together&#13;
thn year and will leave by train&#13;
for Pittsburg from which place they&#13;
will start overland on their tramp, taking&#13;
in Philadelphia and the Jamestown&#13;
exposition en route. For the year 190S&#13;
the tramp will be through the west,&#13;
taking in the Dakotas, Yellowstone&#13;
park, Colorado, and other western&#13;
points.&#13;
la etdeff to join the society it is&#13;
nedtedafry to walk 200 miles outside of&#13;
budBjea* walks the first year, and each&#13;
suoeeesttaf year 400 miles is the minimuifc&#13;
U m is not covered the member&#13;
1a efe&amp;ed u*i#*e aw a*r«e»-to walk&#13;
400 mtajjhett-'&#13;
AlthcaVBVevtt ttwT ^&#13;
40 per cent proposition&#13;
and the origlaal Dlckk(&#13;
h*^ collection of&#13;
bill as it paavttf the • ^ o r t ^ 0 ^&#13;
ported and&#13;
the senate cweanmee o* .&#13;
there is little bee* for t»elr K. ti.„&#13;
It is regarded aa pialanMly i u e&#13;
that Gov. Warner irtU e*B a ^ P e r -&#13;
Bession, but not eajfUar taan -(ur-&#13;
1908. If the railroad smailsiln&#13;
fails, this, it is exyeete*. «Jft,te 1«&#13;
•Juded in the call". . v *&amp;&#13;
^ h a t if the primary bill fails ti&#13;
*" Gov. Warner was asked, la*'&#13;
. , ... &lt;,„v&gt;,o. v m i r s , ciWartu-&#13;
4tv, Nixon and Gau&#13;
*f Kevs. Gates and&#13;
The addre«sea&#13;
Littlejuhn were&#13;
^rrintf and to the point, A severe&#13;
ovin threatened during the meeting&#13;
(luoh frightened the people and sev-&#13;
'aI lelt t be room to look after r&lt;-ams&#13;
* d open windows,&#13;
ti&#13;
P a s s e d Both Houses&#13;
otroit—TJood srarios of butchers*&#13;
t a t t l e brought full stoady priu«e with&#13;
t h o s e of a week afeo, b u t common&#13;
and cow strife were about fie&#13;
Gold'milch cows aold wall, but&#13;
e scarce. Common g r a d e s dull.&#13;
• X t r a dry-fed steers and heifers, $5 fi0;&#13;
steers a n d heifers, 1,000 to 1,:21)0. $5&lt;B&gt;&#13;
$:-, 2f&gt;; do, 800 to 1,000, $4 TfifoFi L'0; steers&#13;
and heifers, fat, 500 to 700, $4 2'i1?i4 60;&#13;
choice fat cows, $4 2 5 ^ 4 50; jjood {at&#13;
cows, $3 75@4 15; common, $8(^:) ;&gt;0;&#13;
canners, $1 7 5 ^ 2 ir&gt;: choice heaTA- *uMs»&#13;
14 25(8)4 5«; rajr to ffood-'tflNKtfaVtl "&#13;
»3 75rtf4; etock bulls, $3 25®3 40; o£&#13;
feedincr steers, 800 to 1,000. ^4fi»&#13;
fair feeding utwers, tS00 to 1.000. '^'&#13;
4 2.1; cho"ice atockers, !"&gt;00 to TQ0.&#13;
4: choice «tockers, r&gt;on to "Od.-lj ^ , ,&#13;
stock heJfers, $3 2n«M; mifkers. Idrg'ri,&#13;
young1, medium age, J40(¾)50; common&#13;
milkers, $18025.&#13;
The veal calf trade w a s active jind&#13;
strong, 25c per hundred higher t h a n it&#13;
was a week ago, quite a large proportion&#13;
of the receipts b r i n g i n g $7 per&#13;
hundred and 8ome choice g r a d e s&#13;
high a s $7 75. Best grades, $7(^7&#13;
others, | 4 f t 6 SO.&#13;
The sheep and lamb t r a d e w a s «itrong&#13;
and 2r»c h i g h e r than' lant week, top&#13;
lambs b r i n g i n g a s high as $8 per hundred.&#13;
Best lambs, $8; fair to good&#13;
lamba. $7®7 50; light to common lambs, {5 50@6 76; fair to good butcher s h e e p /&#13;
5@.' 75; culls and commoit, $3 50©4;&#13;
s p r i n g lambs, $8^10.&#13;
In the hog d e p a r t m e n t t h e trade was&#13;
very dull and prices pai4 were frorrv 2!i&amp;&#13;
to 3*c £ e r hurrared lower t h a n last&#13;
week. P a c k e r s s t a r t e d In to buv them&#13;
at |G 1-6, b u t raised their m o r n i n g bids&#13;
a nickel and paid commission- men&#13;
$fl 20. RAjige of prices: L i g h t to good&#13;
butchers, »8 2 0 # « 26: pigs. $6 20; light&#13;
yorkers, $6 1R@6 20; roughs, | 5 75;&#13;
s t a g s one-third off.&#13;
Kast Buffalo.—Market generally 10c&#13;
higher on all desirable g r a d e s ; best&#13;
export steers, |o.7S©S,10; bea^ 120ft to&#13;
l,3lMMb steers, $5.5006."R; besl 1,000 to&#13;
1.100-Ib do, $5.26®5.Sfl; best fat cows,&#13;
$4@4.50; fair to good, $3.5ft®4: t r i m -&#13;
tfr&gt;.&#13;
as&#13;
75;&#13;
\&#13;
of tho,eleventh ward, which is placed&#13;
at a little over 88,000,000, and cf the&#13;
recent Ullage of Fairviev* at $4,000,-&#13;
¢00.&#13;
Whil&#13;
Louis&#13;
pioneer&#13;
instanfl&#13;
him. He&#13;
VYCiitiiig about an&#13;
aged 56&#13;
I-MX&#13;
".'V • ^&#13;
¢ -&#13;
fe.\&gt;/2&#13;
• * * , . •&#13;
• ^ - = i U -&#13;
±:m** •'**•'.&#13;
old tree&#13;
years, a&#13;
ay the traa falling on&#13;
a»aiarpled -&#13;
mers, $2,2B@2.50; best heifer»T$5Ah'ii'6•&#13;
era, $4.60©4.^5^ yearlings. ff»VAAJ* -&#13;
.common stock steers. $ s . t ; , © 3 . R 0 * T i S J t ' -&#13;
hulls, $2.60^3.50:-fresh cow« rVniiiVwi&#13;
1 ^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ t0 • - ^ • f * ; 3 » r.&#13;
?tt*rfrA?-&lt;^ ***** i.Ma«J«.53r-- "-'*• -&#13;
h i g h e r :&#13;
$^ r.ft«l&#13;
4&#13;
• \&#13;
IMttMir. •' — - ^ . ° « « "Tro"u«J«;&#13;
of i&gt;»Ua joounty, wa*jb*st iambi, ts.4.o$8ilo: culls&#13;
, 7.5«: vathsW; (M.iH&gt;0$7fi&#13;
VHP"'' *°*'' *•••*•*"'!&#13;
CllVrff&#13;
•a.:**&#13;
.Atj^fs&#13;
» ;-&#13;
jj^i.&#13;
. . . }•&#13;
li! **fK&gt;\ - • * -&#13;
&lt; _ii&gt;SS¾e»«¾^lt.IT•.,,..^" -:i f S r j a ^ ^ b M I .&#13;
t i t - T L .'&#13;
a«M**K&#13;
at-&#13;
* • * »&#13;
l'-w&#13;
''•WT,'. &lt;V&#13;
•-'Si. :•:''&#13;
v*q&#13;
«ae f &gt; • &gt;•*-. ' • • - &gt; &lt; » • • • . • &gt; * '&#13;
* f r ii^ttJMX'i&#13;
WBeV ll^DplM^Bitf^ .„ Ihtf&#13;
dltcoarafsd; I aa* tared ) * *&#13;
ttvi 1» fee* thMtOPM: dijr I&#13;
..•&gt;•&#13;
OHt •U*-, '***'&#13;
••:, &lt;V.&#13;
It stood o*er the joftjrtel in the oal-&#13;
By EMe Ctfrntfchael&#13;
•Copyrifbt, bjt JoMOb '9, Bo*\mJ&#13;
- • * . " * " - ' ' . &gt; { * '&#13;
l * .X&#13;
1 waftletf d*BUs»r»in, • portrait by tired her rosea, We fttwg bread&#13;
^f&amp;-&#13;
if&#13;
'&gt;?&#13;
to do in the old days, and I gsthy&#13;
*~&#13;
kJainahorongh of * slender dark-eyed&#13;
girt ia a white satin fawn, with a&#13;
neekiaoe of rallk^ifce pearl* **Hit&#13;
faei softly rounded throat. She was&#13;
p i l i n g the petal* front* red rose and&#13;
Isbly out of the frame.&#13;
bejfc.in love with her&#13;
i e * * r * » i . i o spend my&#13;
le manor until,&#13;
£ f » »*wn to Hermy&#13;
Aunt E U &amp; i i i f E j y g j f l * ! 1 , j » y e n d&#13;
most of the time ^ * % P y i f * ^ ***",&#13;
filace In the d l n l n g - r o o s T l j M ^ ^ l M V&#13;
toward the celling and iffHMNJfc** •&#13;
watched Marianne droeftaf tfcft • * » * •&#13;
&lt;of her crimson rose. 1-^.&#13;
"I am going to h a v e , *&#13;
o n the 25th of June," w r e * \ m m&#13;
""and you muat not fall me; ejflf&#13;
Reginald. I shall refuse to t a W f p '&#13;
for an answer."&#13;
This was of the nature of a summons&#13;
to Windsor castle, and I dared&#13;
not disobey. Resides, I did not altogether&#13;
object to a house party at&#13;
Kersey manor in rose time. However,&#13;
At the last minute I was delayed, and&#13;
It was not until the evening of the&#13;
•26th that I drove up the oak-lined avenue&#13;
in the soft moonlight. My aunt&#13;
met me In the great hall.&#13;
"They are having tableaux in the&#13;
music-room," she said. "Will you come&#13;
there as soon as you have changed?"&#13;
The light was turned low as I&#13;
softly entered and stood unobserved&#13;
in the back of the music-room. There&#13;
was a hush over the audience as the&#13;
• curtain was drawn to reveal a lovely&#13;
picture. My cousin, Jeanne, smiled&#13;
winsomely out of the frame as the&#13;
Oountess Potoeka in the fajnaw ftortrait&#13;
that is familiar to, everr-one.&#13;
of hands flrowaed the&#13;
of admkatto* as the&#13;
o*e*U*-/sll*'«ousin.&#13;
'tot eJWure the&#13;
ed at&#13;
away and&#13;
eoa*«re*tioii was&#13;
.¼ conversation ceased;&#13;
n«fl* about to be drawn for&#13;
A mewNiuve, and I turned perdoiiy&#13;
toward the little stage,&#13;
de^ve a great start and clasped&#13;
trtftck of the chair in front of me.&#13;
r n/jld see the sheeu of her white&#13;
0VfiJfe,"^n gown, the long necklace of&#13;
.yf "brails about her snowy throat. It was&#13;
_ J a z U m r t f t ^ t , hilt a ttTia* * w * * i n « * w&#13;
_ JUaie. .&#13;
Use HBkla Haiti MI the&#13;
MMMMMe*-. ,AWMf W**r »&#13;
everyone was talking at once *jt«*t&#13;
the tableaux. One or two aid t r i v i a&#13;
saw me and came to welcome Jjfjjl'J*&#13;
it was several minutes before I^tW»d&#13;
make my way to my aunt. 1*&#13;
"Aunt Elizabeth," I demanded/ present&#13;
me, I beg, to the lady of Kersey&#13;
manor. Where did you find her? !OHl&#13;
ehe step down from the frame to^eef T&#13;
4 1 4 ¼ ^ happen?! - 4 - ^ - -&#13;
| v i p o k e Marianne came by,&#13;
iaf-her white satin WWM,&#13;
ehtpo^ating pearls And the red&#13;
rose atflfin her hand.&#13;
"Marian," cried my aunt. "Stop a&#13;
moment while I present your cousin.,&#13;
Reginald."&#13;
I bowed low. I felt that I ought&#13;
rte-fcaf*. a plumed hat to sw*»ep the&#13;
this lady of an olden&#13;
tMM down from&#13;
crumbs to the trout that rose greedily&#13;
W snatch t h e n , and we pelted the&#13;
cross old peacock with flowers, and&#13;
then w e leaned on the sun-dial, and&#13;
Marianne's taper finger traced the&#13;
letters of the carved inscription just&#13;
as I had dreamed of her doing. Her&#13;
hair curled riotously, bewitchingly&#13;
about her face that was flushed like&#13;
the petals of a pink rose, a s she bent&#13;
over the letters.&#13;
"Do you know, Marianne;" I said,&#13;
"that this is not the first time you&#13;
and I have leaned on this sun-dial.&#13;
•fttMitlmes it has been ia the pale&#13;
e when the garden w a s&#13;
to silver and the rosea, dewed,&#13;
filled the air wUb their&#13;
me, and sometimes we have been&#13;
ere in the wintertime when t h e snow&#13;
lay deep on the terraces and the&#13;
quaint bay trees and hedges were all&#13;
carved from purest Parian marbles. Always&#13;
we have been here together, and&#13;
always we will lean together on thivold&#13;
dial watching the sunny hours go by,&#13;
Marianne, lady of Kersey manor."&#13;
She blushed ravishingly. "But I smt&#13;
not Marianne, lady of Kersey manor,&#13;
stupid," she pouted. "You are te-&#13;
Thc r-hijipiug&#13;
Utile&#13;
• * » * * • # - ;&#13;
ed&#13;
PretidenV*&#13;
brmdon of F&#13;
ricultural&#13;
\ United&#13;
TRUE D16N1TY OF LABOR&#13;
larit O M day I found&#13;
her aiooe to t h * Mbrary and boidly&#13;
l v a s t t o apeak to you about a Ht«&#13;
matter of bosmeea, i f you will&#13;
to l i s t e n e r said,'stimy t o her&#13;
as she sat at the deek^ writing.&#13;
buainess," e h e acfd, '* coMItf&#13;
er lipe trembled a bit at the&#13;
as though a smile were&#13;
through. "Well, be quick&#13;
1 am immensely busy." A&#13;
ed her delicately pencil*&#13;
pe ahe leaned her head on&#13;
h e r h ^ l ^ l U t e n .&#13;
"It's "•*••» Ifte soocesslon and the&#13;
property,". %:V**, sitting down comfortably&#13;
t * M iow chair beside&#13;
her. • \ '&#13;
"Is this atrtalr 'Jwtoess?" she&#13;
asked ausplcleaaiy-&#13;
"StricUy/* I an»*a*aC **It is very&#13;
important Yom.Jaf I «(p my aunt's&#13;
heir and some darJK*r»W manor will&#13;
belong to me, and # ^ * * * know it&#13;
doesn't seem to me fjdtfi^iki'* You&#13;
have always been t h * lJ*Sy^li*rianne&#13;
of the manor, and you lepafj' 1; feel&#13;
as though I were doing fWi'-SMt of&#13;
It."&#13;
"Oh, not at all," said M a i t y m * f t v&#13;
Iitely, half turning back to fta? f/0*&#13;
ter, as though she wished mw let&#13;
hasten. "I have no claim in any way,&#13;
you know."&#13;
"Well," I said, reflectively, "somehem&#13;
I feel that it's not fair and I&#13;
have a proposition to make. I want&#13;
you to keep on being the lady of Kersey&#13;
manor."&#13;
"Oh, no, March hare," she 3aid.&#13;
"That would be doing you out of&#13;
it No, thanks very much, but I&#13;
couldn't think of accepting such a&#13;
present from you." She laughed.&#13;
""KThat does Mme. Grundy say? 'A&#13;
young lady should never accept any *iencCyUntriCS ° f s r i * a t e s t i n d u a t r i l i l v&#13;
Calling* o f the Skilled Tiller of the&#13;
Soil antf tft« Skilled Mechanic Have&#13;
Right t * Be Recognized as Profession*—&#13;
N«*d of Skillful T r a i n i n g -&#13;
Plea for tliv Too Often Overworked&#13;
Farmer's Wife.&#13;
We Leaned on the Sun-Dial.&#13;
than the maddest&#13;
;.•&amp;**»&#13;
waited for-, y o » J w -ypjwf&#13;
aeons, and I h a v ^ ^ i a j » ' so lonely,&#13;
though I knew you would come at&#13;
last, Marianne, lady of Kersey manor."&#13;
She smiled ravishingly and looked&#13;
at my aunt questioningly.&#13;
"He is our court jester," the latter&#13;
replied with a smile.&#13;
"Rut, I am not jesting." I cried,&#13;
with mock solemnity. "She is Marianne,&#13;
Marianne of the portrait," I insisted.&#13;
"Deny it if you dare."&#13;
"Yes, she 1« Marian," my aunt acknowledged.&#13;
"But, Marian, thegreatgreat-&#13;
grandniece of the lady of Kersey&#13;
manor and your distant cousin."&#13;
"Not at all," I begged to differ.&#13;
"She is Marianne herself, Marianne&#13;
who sat to Gainsborough, Marianne&#13;
who pulled a red rose and flung the&#13;
deed mad, madder&#13;
March hare."&#13;
"You may say you are not, but&#13;
you are goiag to be,"" I said emphatically.&#13;
"You have got to be. 1 have&#13;
been in love with Marianne, lady of&#13;
Kersey manor, since I went to Rugby,&#13;
a little chap in knickerbockers,&#13;
jnd 1 am in love with you and two&#13;
things equaling the same thing equal&#13;
each other."&#13;
"Not at all," she said. "It only&#13;
proves you are a fickle creature.&#13;
Fancy what a change of heart to admire&#13;
my great-great-aunt one minute&#13;
and the next to tell a girl whom you&#13;
have known only 15 hours that you&#13;
care for her. How could I ever&#13;
trust you, Cousin Reggie?"&#13;
"As I said before you interrupted&#13;
me," I went on tranquilly, "I love&#13;
Marianne, lady of Kersey manor, and&#13;
I love you, and two things equaling&#13;
the same—"&#13;
"Ah, you are getting too mathematical&#13;
tor me," she said, and ran swiftgift&#13;
from a young man, except bowks,&#13;
flowers and bonbons, unless—' "&#13;
. She stopped suddenly and blushed&#13;
adorably up to the little curls on her&#13;
forehead and down to the collar of her&#13;
frock.&#13;
"Unless what?" I demanded, but&#13;
she laughed and blushed still more.&#13;
"Unless?"&#13;
"Oh, never mind," she saich&#13;
'*! know," I cried triumphantly.&#13;
"•Haven't I studied Mme. Grundy's&#13;
rules of etiquette? Unless they are&#13;
engaged or married. Isa't that it,&#13;
word for word, Marianne? That's the&#13;
only way out of it," I said. "Come,&#13;
Marianne, sweet. I have never loved&#13;
anyone else but you. I have been&#13;
faithful to my dream Marianne- for so&#13;
long and I waited for you^ oft, ages&#13;
and ages. Pray keep on being the&#13;
lady of Kersey."&#13;
The pink stole up into her face&#13;
again, her eyes were soft and winsome&#13;
as she held out both hands to&#13;
me in sweet surrender.&#13;
"Well, I suppose I shall have to,&#13;
March hare," she said, "since you insist&#13;
upon it."&#13;
Lansing, Mich.—At the sem**entennial&#13;
celebration of the founding of&#13;
agricultural colleges in the^ United&#13;
States, President Roosevelt deiivwasd&#13;
the address. In part he sadd:&#13;
fiftieth anniveruary of th.** found-&#13;
Of this college is an event, of i u -&#13;
•kfiiiflcante, for Michigan was the&#13;
in the Union to found thia, the&#13;
•Rural college in America. As&#13;
tber* is nothing in which we&#13;
talce a jetter pride than our KUu^tional&#13;
system* Nevertheless, for at leastt a generation&#13;
We have toeen waking, to the&#13;
knowledge tbaV there muat be additional&#13;
education beyond that provided in the&#13;
public school as it i' .jnaaaged. to-day.&#13;
We hear a great dear-el th** n««U of&#13;
protecting our worklngwen iMf* competition&#13;
with pauper labor. 1 IMH"» * w y&#13;
tittle fear of the competition* Of- &gt;&gt;•&gt;•&gt;&#13;
labor. The nations with p+UWHfitm&amp;m at*|&#13;
not the formidable industrial nownpitHsiS&#13;
of tliis country. What ths Antrteaa&#13;
workingmun has to fear Is tlu&gt; competition&#13;
of the highly skilled worfclngman&lt;0f.&#13;
the countries of greatest industrial effi-&#13;
5E5&#13;
41¾¾&#13;
14-Jf-i whte&#13;
.to nattoaat&#13;
and by :tjto .afrlcuUe&#13;
The P«opl4 «f our Xarmfo-r&#13;
bo able to combtni amonc in&#13;
the enost ejRcfent m«*«ur- of&#13;
their. Industry Jhtom th« higftlr&#13;
inUrestd which now sttrrouad&#13;
every atfie. A vaaf fl»W Is open&#13;
by co-oooraUye awwcUtioe* a f __&#13;
In dealln* with the relation or the&#13;
to transportation aed to &lt;*lr* diati "&#13;
and manufacture of raw maft&#13;
34: &lt;&#13;
'.&lt;#*jt"&#13;
American tarmcrt ean QmfHtm to^^tha.&#13;
social ppo wer.&#13;
Advice for the Workers.&#13;
la' only through au«h combi&#13;
Am&#13;
full their economic and&#13;
Practicsi Education.&#13;
Sooir learning is very important, but f t&#13;
is by no means everytning; and we shaft&#13;
never get the right Idea of educattore&#13;
untU w e definitely understand that -is&#13;
man may be weD trained la book learn'&#13;
ing and yet, in the proper sense of theword,&#13;
and for oil practical purposes, be&#13;
utterly nneducatfft; while a man of com'&#13;
paratitfrly little beok learning may, mrvertheless,&#13;
in essentials, have a good education.&#13;
It is t*u* that agriculture in the Unlte4&#13;
States lias: reached a very high level of&#13;
prosperity; but w&lt;r cannot afford to disregard&#13;
trte signs which teach us that&#13;
there are lnflu«ft;es- operating against&#13;
the establishment or retention - of our&#13;
country life upon; a really sound basis.&#13;
The overextenslve* aunf wasteful cultivation&#13;
of pioneer dfejy* m«st stop and give&#13;
place to a more* economical system. In&#13;
our countrv life there* most be social and&#13;
intellectual advantages' a s well as a fair&#13;
standard of physical eowrfort. There&#13;
must be in the couoCvy, aw i s the town, a&#13;
multiplication o f mo-ffemearts for intellectual&#13;
advancement and" social betterment.&#13;
We must ttty to caisrr the average&#13;
of farm life, and' we must afso try to develop&#13;
It so that It shall' offer exceptional&#13;
chances for the exceoti'omrS ssan.&#13;
Labor on Hbm Fawss,&#13;
All over the country tliere- is a constant&#13;
complaint of paucity &amp;£ farm labor.&#13;
Without attempting to go. into all the&#13;
f e a t u r e of this question I would like to&#13;
point out that vou can never get the&#13;
right kind, the best kind; of labor If you&#13;
offer employment only for" a few months,&#13;
for no man worth anything Trill permanently&#13;
accept a system which leaves him&#13;
• in idleness for half the year; And most&#13;
important of all, I want to s a y a special&#13;
word on behalf of the one who is too&#13;
often the hardest worked laborer on the&#13;
farm—the farmer's wife. T emphatically&#13;
believe that for the great majority of&#13;
WSttiien the really indispensable Industry&#13;
&amp;. which thtf should engage is the industty'ef&#13;
tUe horn* As no other learniWt&#13;
U &amp;&amp; important for the average man&#13;
as the lsa.ra|aF which will teach him how&#13;
to make ass IrVetthood, so a» other learning&#13;
Is a s important tor-the swvsugi- wornas&#13;
the !r nroia« W i s * * * 1 * —&#13;
- ^ -&#13;
..'»v&#13;
• /&#13;
'i&#13;
KAISER'S PHONOGRAPH CLOCK.&#13;
Novel Timepiece Ramlnda Him&#13;
Day's Ervgaflements.&#13;
of&#13;
h e f h t e r I e»h#eV ^ a w e l*t *way 4own the garden path and I&#13;
•flat her.&#13;
• * « d then began days of uncertainty.&#13;
Marianne teased me and tormented&#13;
me and avoided me, choosing any&#13;
littfe insignificant creature that was&#13;
Berlin.—It is not generally known&#13;
the kaiser possesses the most unique&#13;
clock in the world, a so-called phonograph&#13;
clock made by a German inventor.&#13;
The clock reminds the emperor&#13;
of business and other engagements.&#13;
When the kaiser, for example, wishes&#13;
to be at the chancellor's house at ten&#13;
o'clock in the morning, he speaks into&#13;
the phonograph the night before,&#13;
which moves a pointer and is called at&#13;
the hour indicated. The phonograph&#13;
graciously announces: "Your majesty,&#13;
it is now time to call a carriage and&#13;
go to Chancellor von Buelow's." Moreover,&#13;
when the kaiser is at breakfast&#13;
tlva d o c £ lefts him a dozen or more&#13;
things which he spoke into the phonograph&#13;
the night before so as not tn&#13;
forget them. * *&#13;
American cities have no troubles—&#13;
at leasu:, none worth mentioning.&#13;
Drives Away Neuralgia.&#13;
an ^&#13;
[ a good housewlfn_ass|.&#13;
The calling of the skilled tiller or the does not ™ean thaCJga.&#13;
soil, like the calling of the s k i l l s me- overworked drudge. 1 Mj*a_&#13;
chanlc, should alike be recognized its professions,&#13;
just as emphatically as&gt;tile callings&#13;
of lawyer, of doctor!- of tinker,&#13;
merchant of clerk. The printer, the electrical&#13;
worker, the house painttn\ the&#13;
foundry man, should be trained just as&#13;
carefully as the stenographer! or the drug&#13;
clerk. They should be trained, alike in&#13;
head and" hand. They should get ovrr&#13;
the idea that to earn $1'J a week and call&#13;
it "salary" Is better than to e},rn fc!5 a&#13;
week and call it "wages." Thtf young&#13;
man who has the courage- and tin- ability&#13;
to refuse to enter the crowded field of&#13;
the so-called professions and to- take to&#13;
constructive industry is almost sure of&#13;
an ample reward in earnings, ia health.&#13;
In opportunity to marry earlj/, and to&#13;
establish a home with reasonable freedom&#13;
from worry.&#13;
There is but one person' whos*- welfare&#13;
is as vital to the wolf at** of the v.hoh'&#13;
country as is that of the wage-worker&#13;
who doeu manual labor.-, and that is the&#13;
tiller of the soil—tin- fttrm*!t. If there&#13;
1¾ one lesson taught h&gt;&gt; his tony it is that&#13;
the permanent giyatn^ss of any state&#13;
must ultimately depend mt»re upon the&#13;
character of its countny. population than&#13;
upon anything else. No growth of cities,&#13;
no growth of wealth can make up for a&#13;
lyss in either the numbvr iwr the character&#13;
of the farming uoyuJutlon. In the&#13;
United States more th-an in almost any&#13;
other country we shouBd realize this and&#13;
should prize our couj»rty population. In&#13;
every great crisis of th*- past a peculiar&#13;
dependence has ha** tu be placed upon&#13;
the farming populati*»»: and this dependence&#13;
has hitherto be^a justified. But it&#13;
cannot be justified to the future if agriculture&#13;
is permitted to sink in the scate&#13;
as compare*? with other employments.&#13;
We eanm** afford to lose that pr.•-•**»-&#13;
inently ty^caT American, the farmer *dveowns&#13;
ht* own farm.&#13;
Social Side of Country Lifo&gt;&#13;
Everything should be done to wK-o.irage&#13;
the growth in the open farming&#13;
country of such institutional ami social&#13;
movements as will meet the demand rw&#13;
tho best typo of farmers. There shi»uM&#13;
bk» libraries, assembly halls, social organlaations&#13;
of all kinds. The school&#13;
building and the teacher i» the school&#13;
building should, throughout the country&#13;
districts, be of the very highest type, able&#13;
to fit the boys and girls not merely to&#13;
live in, but thoroughly to enjoy and to&#13;
make the most of the country. The&#13;
country church must b* revived. All kinds&#13;
of agencies, from rural fre^ delivery to&#13;
the bicycle and the telephone, should be&#13;
utlllxed to the utmost; j?ood roads should&#13;
be favored; everything should be done to&#13;
make it easier fnr the farmer to lead the&#13;
most active nnd effective intellectual, political&#13;
and economic life.&#13;
But UlUch has been accomplished by&#13;
the growth of what is broadly designated&#13;
as agricultural science. This has been&#13;
developed with remarkable rapidity during&#13;
the last quarter of a centurv •&#13;
the benefit to agricult"— ' . , „..«&#13;
"" -'•»•- **** t ", r n ElVat.&#13;
* &lt;ie cornprstuT.r* Gi. our unexampled&#13;
prosperity are, on the .one hand, the&#13;
production of raw material, and its manufacture&#13;
and distribution on the other.&#13;
The production of raw ro^teriftl from the&#13;
surface of the earth j a t^e sphere in&#13;
which the departmeh* *f agriculture has&#13;
hitherto achi—-u s)|i&gt;hv. n c * M , k results.&#13;
o v e is hard and rough and'&#13;
tiie necessary work of act&#13;
umU-r the best circumstances.'&#13;
matter how tender and coost'd^ral&#13;
husband, the wife will' h a w at least&#13;
full sliat" of work and' worrr and anxl-&#13;
•ety; but if tlie man is worth Ms salt he&#13;
will trv to take as much as possible oC&#13;
the burden off the ahoulbTeim of his helpmate,&#13;
Scores Women- Wtte Shir* Outy.&#13;
Try not misunderstand' me. I have not&#13;
the slightest sympathy with those hysterical&#13;
and foolish creatures who wish&#13;
women to attain to easy lives by shirking&#13;
their duties. I have-as hearty a contempt&#13;
for the woman who shirk* her duty of&#13;
bearing and rearing- the children, of doing&#13;
her full housewife'** work, as I have&#13;
for the man who.is an- ifdler, who shirks&#13;
his duty of .-timing a hvfng for himselt&#13;
and for his household, or who is selfish&#13;
or hruta.1 toward his wife anfl children.&#13;
I belir\&lt;.- in the happtfm»SB that comes&#13;
from the performance of duty, not from&#13;
the avoidance of duty. But I believe&#13;
also in trvinw. each of us, as strength is&#13;
given a*, to lv«r one another's burdens;&#13;
and tliis especially in our own homes.&#13;
Nil outside training, no co-operation, no&#13;
government aid or direction can take the&#13;
pi;\re of a srrong and upright character;&#13;
of goudr.-vs* of heart combined with clearness&#13;
of head, and that Htrerigth and&#13;
toughm-ss of liber noc«*sary to wring.&#13;
sucoes.* from a rough work-a-day -world.&#13;
Nothiajc outside of home can take tho&#13;
piaco of home. The school is an invaluable&#13;
adjunct to the home, but it&#13;
wretehed substitute for It. The U&#13;
relation Is tke most fundamental*&#13;
roost Important of all relations. No.&#13;
. r in church or state, in science or&#13;
or Industry, however great his avef&#13;
ment. does work which compare* if&#13;
portam-e with that of the father an&lt;&#13;
mother, "who are the first of sovereigna&#13;
;i:id the most divine of priests."&#13;
. &amp; . * •&#13;
•vV&#13;
is a&#13;
4 . V -&#13;
^&#13;
J O U R N E Y OF A T R E 1 ROOT. • Hi&#13;
Eucalyptus Sends Shoots Up Over a&#13;
Wall to a Sewer.&#13;
•here hs&#13;
^&lt;ch&#13;
Man Declares That Nutmeg la a Sovereign&#13;
Specific.&#13;
The superstitious man thrust two&#13;
fingers down his collar and brought&#13;
forth a string which was around his&#13;
neck. Attached to the string was a&#13;
little round dark ball.&#13;
"A nutmeg," he explained. "I wear&#13;
it for neuralgia. Never heard of that&#13;
cure for neuralgia? Best ever. I&#13;
petals at her feet—you are, aren't you, j found it out from an old negresa in&#13;
Marianne?" South Carolina. I was suffering a&#13;
Aunt Elizabeth smiled indulgently.&#13;
"You roust not mind your cousin," she&#13;
said. "He is harmless, but I am convinced&#13;
he Is quite mad."&#13;
Then some young upstart bore off&#13;
ray Marianne for the cotillon. If I&#13;
couid- not danee it with her I show,&#13;
ered her with favors and danced with&#13;
no one else. When she tnisohieveusly&#13;
brought me a jester's oap and I strung a ltttle&#13;
bells in one figure, I put it on re-&#13;
Juctantty. -&#13;
Th*. ne^ct morning w e walked !n&#13;
the garden together ju«t: as w e . used&#13;
thousand deaths with neuralgia. The&#13;
old woman went to my wife and&#13;
said:&#13;
" 'Why don't you get a nutmeg and&#13;
put it around hi3 neck?'&#13;
"My wife laughed, but &gt;ame and&#13;
told me about it. I was suffering so&#13;
terribly I was willing to try anything,&#13;
so the old woman got tha n*tmeg!&#13;
blus ribUMl thr.'mgh it,&#13;
and gave-it to nie. 1 imtjt around mv&#13;
neck and in a Mule whJi«v-tlft tfenraigin&#13;
\va3 gone. I left t f a *utmeg&#13;
around my neck for r ' fee wMle,&#13;
you trv&#13;
thinking perhaps that particular ono&#13;
given me by the negress had some special&#13;
virtue. Then the ribbon split and&#13;
I lost it.&#13;
"This happened years ago in the&#13;
south. Last week I got neuralgia&#13;
again, worse than before, if that,&#13;
could be. I nearly went wild until&#13;
my wife said: Why don't&#13;
another nutmeg?'&#13;
"And I did. With the same result.&#13;
It wasn't an hour before the pain was&#13;
gone.&#13;
"I can't explain i t I have asked&#13;
doctors and they say they can't ex^&#13;
plain it, but they say also that because&#13;
they can't explain it is no rea^&#13;
son they should disbelieve in its ef.&#13;
flcacy."&#13;
Too Much So.&#13;
"How did you like that cometist&#13;
sent to you?" asked the agent.&#13;
"Well, as you said," replied the orchestra&#13;
leader, "he certainly does play&#13;
the cornet to beat the band "&#13;
"All right, eh?"&#13;
"No, he couldn't keep tima,*&#13;
!r* "... me executive departments&#13;
no other, not even the postofflce, w&#13;
comes info more direct and beneficent&#13;
contact with the daily life of the people&#13;
than t l v department of agriculture, and&#13;
none wilv^e yield of practical benefit-* is&#13;
greater irt proportion to the public money&#13;
Cvpended.&#13;
Field a / Usefulness Ahead.&#13;
F.nt great a«^ i t s services have 1 n in&#13;
(he past, the" iff, 'virtment of agriculture&#13;
lias a still larg* " field of usefulness&#13;
ah.end. It has btvtt l i M l i n '-' w i t '" sr.ndng&#13;
crop.,. Tt must her»Vf t o r (lt'111 a I s o w l t h&#13;
living men. The troveV m , l ' : u n i u s t recognize&#13;
iho far-reaching- importance of the&#13;
study and treatment of V ' 1 ' P r o h , , i m &gt; °f&#13;
farm life alike from f&gt;, ' social ;ind&#13;
economic standpoints; and tlu* federal&#13;
r»i&gt;d state ilepMrtments of agriculture&#13;
should co-operate at everv prtls'11, ., .&#13;
How can the life of the 'farm t v &gt; m i l y . h o&#13;
made loss solitary, fuller of oppot/"1 1 '1 /'&#13;
froei- from drudgery, more comforv H b l °-&#13;
happier, and more attractive'' Sue!. ,11&#13;
result Is most earnestly to be d«iirev '•&#13;
How ca»i a compelling desire to live "on&#13;
the farm be aroused in the children that&#13;
are born on the farm? All these questions&#13;
are of vital importance not onlv to&#13;
the farmer, but to the whole nation; and&#13;
the department of agriculture must do&#13;
it* share in answering them. We 1HVD/»&#13;
ultimately to double the average yiflfl&#13;
-&gt;t wheat and corn per acre; it will be a&#13;
great achievement; but it is even more&#13;
important to double the desirability, comfort,&#13;
and standing of the farmer's life.&#13;
Need of Co-Operation.&#13;
Farmers must !enm the vital nefd of&#13;
"O-operation with one another. Next to&#13;
ihis comes co-op^ratlon with the trovcrnment.&#13;
and the government can best give&#13;
its aid through associations of farmers&#13;
rather thiin t&amp;rettgh the Individual farmer,&#13;
for Uiara fetjao Kreater agricultural&#13;
From Santa Barbara, Cal., there.&#13;
comes a story of a most interesting&#13;
freak of vegetable life which is strictly&#13;
vouched for.&#13;
Through a certain garden there ran,&#13;
some years ago, a sewer made of redwood&#13;
timber. This sewer was again&#13;
eased by an outside sewer .,-••*&#13;
the sewer there w - * „* "* • ^ c r o s . ^&#13;
Wn,~- ..-" D U 'lt a brick wall&#13;
_., ieet high, and in such a way&#13;
that it was pierced by the inner sewer&#13;
which it closed tlgatly, while the outer&#13;
sewer ended a*T«pt!)r * * • * * tfk*&#13;
wall. *• _£* ;M'- " '&#13;
The outside S » w ^ r _ ^ ¾ ^ * » | . ^&#13;
course of time decayed atftHt&#13;
tus tree, standing some 60 feet aw,&#13;
had taken advantage p£ this and sent&#13;
one of its fu*;s to the coveted spoT&#13;
in as direct a iine as possible.&#13;
KCLV Ilie root entered the outside&#13;
sewer and followed its course as fax&#13;
as it could. At last it came to the&#13;
wall, which shut off its course, and I t&#13;
could so no farther, the Inside sewer&#13;
linns perfectly tight.&#13;
But on the other side of the wall&#13;
the sower and its double casing continned,&#13;
and this eucalyptus .treariently&#13;
knew how to get ttMfe-J't&#13;
Some three feet high ItjM&#13;
wall taora was a iiqjp*&#13;
or two in 4\%mU&#13;
caimus tra» WJM M R H M K l s its&#13;
wot bafa&amp;«»&#13;
/ a c e the stm and wlnrt'unffl yjj|&#13;
th*." n o I e - through which it&#13;
•&lt;4&lt;&#13;
M*&#13;
'•~&gt;t&#13;
i&#13;
%1&#13;
M&#13;
•^Sft^nN,'!. t-&gt;-.&#13;
u&#13;
s e other side and enti on&#13;
sewer »^"am a ^d followed it aJon|f a s&#13;
formerly. *. -&#13;
How did t u G t r e « know of t l » h&#13;
in the wall? KT°W ^ ^ it know tb,&#13;
the sewer was on u**e other aidaT H o&#13;
could it direct the roVj to f o aikf&#13;
•ae place with such precision?&#13;
roots of any plaat grow always ai&#13;
unerringly in the direction of Its&#13;
just as the eucalyptus tree did*&#13;
" • n i ( K » + •—&#13;
~:+v-&lt;. •t ' - . „ . , . * - % • * • : iJ&#13;
S5**«W«&#13;
-, .-*KiS&lt; iA&amp;-, .»•*&amp; J&#13;
*-••• ••;•• ' : * • * : V&#13;
•r: \ m&amp;* \*'&#13;
BW&#13;
In*,*1'-'''&#13;
• ' * • ' •&#13;
* • • • • • - .&#13;
*:r#:£; . ^ :&#13;
«&#13;
. . 7 ; &lt;'•„&#13;
V'..' •&#13;
%,&#13;
:l&amp; :*&gt;*&#13;
A , ' • &amp; Vf .&#13;
• i n . . . WH&gt; Jul H ' M I j i«ii j» • iij.il'I fif &gt;»i "*r* 32 *4»&#13;
I i i»m&gt; n"ii&#13;
' • • &lt; * • • -f y §i*r*&#13;
i»»»»i'&#13;
F. V. ANOHtWa A 00. pnow«rro&#13;
fRTTRSDAY, JUNE*, 1907.&#13;
as&#13;
:f&#13;
• '&#13;
I&#13;
Everybody in Ohio wants "harmony"&#13;
but every one wants MB&#13;
own"bra,hcl of the article.&#13;
Fraok P«V&#13;
Ann Arbor t&#13;
ML»S Mas $&#13;
friends'I i ere tb&#13;
Miss Martha*.&#13;
Dunn spent tbe&#13;
and Jackson.&#13;
Jfcckeoa and&#13;
JS^febocUh viaitod&#13;
and Helen&#13;
k in taneing&#13;
•"!•* »"&#13;
•Sfc.&#13;
Karrnington i s to soon have a sewer&#13;
a m o u n t&#13;
Remarkable Kescu».&#13;
The truth is' stranger than fiction,&#13;
bas once more been demonstrated in&#13;
tbe little tmvn of fedora, T e n n , tbe&#13;
residence of C V. Pepper. He writes:&#13;
"I was in bed, entirely disabled with&#13;
hemorrhages of tbe lungs and throat.&#13;
Doctors failed to help me, and all bope&#13;
had fled v h e n I began t a k i n g D r .&#13;
Kinu's N e ^ ' D i s c o v e r y . Then i r s t a n t&#13;
relief oaoae. The . cough iatf soon&#13;
ceased; the Mee i o g diminished rapidly,&#13;
and in t t r e e weeks 1 was,able to&#13;
g o t o work." Guarant ed cure for&#13;
coughs and colds, o O c a n d $ 1 . . a t F.&#13;
A. S i l l e r ' s D r u g store. Trial bottle&#13;
free.&#13;
"Money is a drug" on the market"&#13;
says ft New York daily. But&#13;
unfortunately the drug trust has&#13;
not been busted.&#13;
Accordiug to his friends Taft&#13;
has every state but Oklahoma.&#13;
Afld if a certain set of irwrlToak&#13;
prevent it Oklahoma will tM)t gft&#13;
into the Uuion in tuatf to &lt;JGunt&#13;
either way.&#13;
According to an exchange Secpy&#13;
Taft is interested in every&#13;
•^':;m0tfat remedy he hears about.&#13;
^ 4 ^ W w e are not mistaken he will&#13;
have found a sure one before the&#13;
*TI Presidential nomination comes off.&#13;
« $&#13;
EH*'*,:*,&#13;
The Magle Wo. 3 .&#13;
N u m b e r three is a wonderful mascot&#13;
for Geo. H. Tarns, ot Cedar Grove,&#13;
Me., according to a letter which reads:&#13;
•'At+er suffering much with liver and&#13;
kidney trouble, and becoming greatly&#13;
discouraged by tbe failure to find relief,&#13;
I tiied Ele-t.ic Bitters, and as a&#13;
result 1 am a well man to-day. Tbe&#13;
first bottle relieved and three bottles&#13;
completed the cure." Guaranteed&#13;
best on earth tor fctomach, liver and&#13;
kidney troubles, by l«\ A. ' Sigler,&#13;
.JJtarspgist. 50. \&#13;
" £ &gt; '; A b A u t o m o b i l e , m a g a z i n e a s -&#13;
^t'; g g f t l t h a t " t h e p o s s e s s i o n o f a m o -&#13;
' t t f r c a r i s n o t n e c e s s a r i l y t h e&#13;
, - n ' • • o o f of g r e a t w e a l t h . " A n d t h e&#13;
^ ^ f c c t i s t h a t t h e p o s s e s s i o n of o n e&#13;
i s s o m e t i m e s t h e c a u s e of g r e a t&#13;
p o v e r t y .&#13;
E m i l y Lambert son closed a successful&#13;
years school in the Hick;&#13;
district last Friday. This is hia SPR&#13;
and vear in the same school. One ot&#13;
his pupils, Glenn Fisk, has neither&#13;
been absent or tardy d u r i n g the en&#13;
tire vear.&#13;
system—$6,000 being the&#13;
voted to start with.&#13;
After b-iug closed a few weeks, the&#13;
So. Lyon hotel will again be opened to&#13;
the public tbifl week.&#13;
Mrs. Leal Sigler is visiting friends&#13;
and relatives in L a n s i n g . She attended&#13;
the jubilee there.&#13;
Paul B r o g a n , who has been spendi&#13;
n g several months in N e b r a s k a , returned&#13;
home the past week.&#13;
Here's the latest c o n u n d r u m : " W h y&#13;
is the year 1907 like a lumber way&#13;
o n ? T N o spring to it.—Milford&#13;
Times.&#13;
Miss Florence Andrews attended&#13;
the closing day of school in the Uady&#13;
district last Friday, visiting her former&#13;
pupils&#13;
Conger, tbe Detroit weather man.&#13;
predicts warm weather from now on&#13;
If his predictions prove f t i t t bs wants&#13;
to go into hiding,&#13;
E d w i n H e w i t t , j a c t f t a foreman on&#13;
tbe A a a A r W r % E . at H a m b u r g , has&#13;
r t e i t t a ^ t a aflOjtptyjl similar position&#13;
4 6 Utt A k Lfcn at a higher salary —&#13;
TMiaffS.&#13;
T h e DISPATCH does not make much&#13;
blow but when you are in a hurry for&#13;
k job, stationery, cards, books, briets,&#13;
or anything remember we make a&#13;
{specialty of " r u b jobs."&#13;
The v. eatber man broke the record&#13;
again this year in g i v i n y us a fair&#13;
day May 80. However tbe spring&#13;
had been so backward that there were&#13;
few flowers to decorate with.&#13;
Tbe officers in Ypsilanti took out a&#13;
slot machine the other pay and&#13;
dumped the thing into the river and&#13;
never even took out tbe lead of nickels.&#13;
U still lays there in 20 feet ol&#13;
water.&#13;
T b e supretm court holds that&#13;
marriage license records in the&#13;
county clerk's office are public&#13;
documents and as such must be open&#13;
to inspection of a^ny one who asks to&#13;
see then.; they cannot he surpressed.&#13;
F o w U r v i l l e people are not taking&#13;
much interest in the lecture course&#13;
and there is a chance that that village&#13;
goes without this season. They&#13;
should not drop tbe course if it is&#13;
possible to keep it up. They are a&#13;
good thing tor a town.&#13;
Many purely agricultural towns&#13;
make the mistake of thinking they&#13;
a&#13;
have a great future before them along&#13;
m a n u f a c t u r i n g lines, when if they&#13;
would devote their entire energies to&#13;
tbe betterment of the produce market&#13;
of the town and in every .vay possible&#13;
make the farmer see that it was to his&#13;
interest to come to that town to l.uy&#13;
and sell, there would be no necessity&#13;
for factories, the town would be one of&#13;
the most prosperous in the state.&#13;
| &gt; i w i i i ' » ' i i i i i i m i i i i » » * » » '&#13;
Two Sides of a Stpcl&#13;
jabbing Operatioi&#13;
[Ordinal. ]&#13;
Oue afternoon a gentleman left tu&gt;&#13;
jfflee uear the N W York Stock&#13;
c h a n g e stepped iuto a cab and dl&#13;
the cabman to drive to hia h o n ^ , ^, ,&#13;
tuwu. Having started, He puUed d o ^ k&#13;
Uie curtains, took a revolver from Uti&#13;
eocket and placed tbe muazle against&#13;
aia temple.&#13;
Albert MeBereau had followed a continued&#13;
"bulling" of the N. Y. and 1».&#13;
railway and bad thereby been ruined.&#13;
The published statements of the road&#13;
showed that their earnings would enable&#13;
them to pay a 10 per cent annual&#13;
dividend on their common stock,&#13;
though they paid nothing. They were&#13;
•pending their profits ;&gt;u the betterment&#13;
of the road. M e ^ r e a u bud kept&#13;
"long" on the stock with a view to&#13;
reaping a rich har-veBt when the directors&#13;
should cease this outlay and&#13;
begin to give tlje' surplus earnings to&#13;
the stockholders. But year after year&#13;
passed with no change in the fluancial&#13;
policy of tlie company. Mesereau's margins&#13;
were finally absorbed, and on tbe&#13;
afternoon mentioned a slump iu tbe&#13;
market bad placed him heavily in debt.&#13;
A s he w a s about to pull the trigger&#13;
the face of his wife came up before&#13;
hia mental vision- a face that bud alop&#13;
without&#13;
Pol&#13;
; • • ' *&#13;
.hmtfa&#13;
m^ w* *a&amp;&#13;
« w&#13;
^aotftfc&#13;
its* T w b 4»y» late* t * e aland&#13;
p u t tiki a t * * e n a 7&#13;
' bajrti.&#13;
.jreau, alias p e n t f s&#13;
lng W e n let out of b.'s&#13;
m by the maid nad caacood&#13;
r Jy telephone^ leat his flight&#13;
_ j a t : ' g e ' t b e plaos of tbe N. Y.&#13;
r R a i l w n y company, returned to&#13;
i d w a s only released from it a&#13;
hours after the announcement of&#13;
dividend. The next morning be appeared&#13;
again In Wall s t r e e t Meanwhile&#13;
the price of the stock went ur&gt;&#13;
by jumps, and his profits were enor&#13;
n o u s . E D W A R D COLEMAN.&#13;
. A century the selectmeti of Boston llke-&#13;
A piompt, pleasant, eood remedy ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ , ^ ^ 1 . duty.&#13;
for coughs and colds, is K e n n e d y s J t ^ jnteresUng, however, toja^&#13;
Laxative Cough S y r u p . It is especial survival or perhaps a revival'©1&#13;
ren, out noud for every member o r , ^ ^ w&amp;nwte history is mark&#13;
tb*' family. It contains no opiates m a n y peculiar features. After nftyaad&#13;
dons not consHpate. Contains ^ t w o years of French, seventeen years&#13;
h o n - v H i u i H r a D d lasles nearly as of English and thirty-three years of&#13;
hon^y HII.1 a t u , i k i BpaniA rule Mobile came under the&#13;
good u&gt; map^-l syrup. Lbildren u s e • t r o J Q r ^ U u l t e d s t a t e a g 0 v e r n -&#13;
it. meut in April, 1813, uud w a s b-cluded&#13;
! iu the Mississippi territory- On Jan.&#13;
20, 1814, by au act of the territorial&#13;
'AW ASSIZE or&#13;
M^it^a KefMteMoi •t •**** « ^ t&#13;
"in the La* «a***«y«&#13;
* la the latter half of tot saranteantband&#13;
the early part of tha eifhteanth&#13;
oantaries the regnla^on of tbe prica of&#13;
bread by public authority was ajamlliar&#13;
principle 1» the English cotontof **&#13;
America. In New Haven, for instance,&#13;
the weight of the penny loaf waa regulated&#13;
by law about 1660, and in 16W&#13;
the Massachusetts general court also&#13;
provided a regular assise, fixing the&#13;
weight of the loaf according to the&#13;
price of flqur. At various ttaw aur-_A&#13;
lug the first quarter of the eighteenth&#13;
syrup.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
Paid In Full.&#13;
T w o young ladles, evidently stenographers,&#13;
were having an animated discussion&#13;
while on their w a y to work&#13;
tbe other morning in a Market street&#13;
w a y s been cheery, helping him to bear | i-ar. The discussion revolved around&#13;
his continued disappointment, his per the question as to the best method to&#13;
petual sinking to ruin. Now it was iu-1 impress their respective employers as&#13;
expressibly sad. His braiu, temporarily&#13;
unbalanced, righted itself, and he&#13;
resolved to live for the sake of the&#13;
w o m a n whit loved him and w h o m he&#13;
loved.&#13;
Nevertheless that night some of his&#13;
clothes were found on the deck of a&#13;
Hudson river ferryboat, and Mesereau&#13;
had disappeared.&#13;
Meanwhile there were rumors in the&#13;
•treet that N. Y. and P. railway com&#13;
to the value of their services.&#13;
"Do you know," said the smaller of&#13;
the two, "my former employer w a s&#13;
the worst old granny. H e could not&#13;
spell the simplest words correctly, and&#13;
he couldn't pronounce them. One day&#13;
i thought I would impress him with&#13;
the value of my services. H e gave&#13;
me a letter to typewrite, and I just&#13;
went along and copied It as he handed&#13;
It to me. Then I made a second copy&#13;
mon stock w a s shortly to be put on a [with all the misspelled words correct&#13;
e rumors ed. With beaming countenance I haud-&#13;
A Very Practical Christian.&#13;
A benevolent old man who lived on&#13;
his farm In Iowa never refused shelter&#13;
to any w h o might ask it of him. His&#13;
many friends remonstrated with him&#13;
&gt;ut tbSfl characteristic, knowing that&#13;
uastiapal "ii hoboes would avail&#13;
e H e a o f the opportunity and that&#13;
H«a great danger of the obi&#13;
i n befar'tobbed. To these remon&#13;
„ j n c e s the old man replied that h'&#13;
S i e v e d in "practical Christianity."&#13;
"But," said one of his friends, "this&#13;
t e e m s very impractical. Suppose one&#13;
of these men took it Into his head tr.&#13;
lob you one night?"&#13;
"My dear young friend," was the reply,&#13;
"I bid nil enter In the name of&#13;
God, but I prove my belief in practical&#13;
Christianity by locking up their pants&#13;
during the n i g h t "&#13;
When you feel tbe need of a pill&#13;
take a DeWitts Little early Risei.&#13;
Small pill, safe pi 11. sure pill. Easy&#13;
t o take—pVasant a n d effective.&#13;
Drives away headaches&#13;
Sold by r . A. 8 i g l « ' Drugci«t&#13;
Jp a a a a i e . o f indigestion, no&#13;
irtttatte or how obstinate&#13;
t W l j p n r i i l j releived by&#13;
the use of Kodol. The main factor&#13;
in curing the stomach of any disorder&#13;
is re.'t, and the only way to get&#13;
re&gt;t is to actually diaest t h e food for&#13;
the stomach itself. Kodol will do it.&#13;
It i8 a scientific preparation of vegetable&#13;
acids c o n t a i n g the very same juice*&#13;
found in a healthy stomach. It&#13;
• i n f o r m s to the P u r e Food and D r u g s&#13;
i*w.&#13;
- laid by F. A. Sigler, Druggist&#13;
GRAND EXCURSIONS&#13;
T R U N K ; to&#13;
R a i l w a y N o r f o l k , V i r g i n i a .&#13;
S V t e m hi) D.M :-v! 3--v.:vi T.:&gt; :t .*-, S :' J&#13;
D a i l y up t o N o v . 3 0&#13;
VARIOUS ROUTES&#13;
S A R A T O G A S P K I N G S . N , Y.&#13;
-Iu!v 3, 4. ?. 6. and 7 - Knights Templar-&#13;
A T L A N T I C C I T V , N . J&#13;
,nay 30 to -hiuc 3 American ,*\et.t. Ass'n&#13;
l , O S A N G B L B S . CAL..&#13;
-June 10 to 14 - - National .Heci. Ass'n.&#13;
doing one route, returning, another&#13;
P H I L A D E L P H I A , PA.&#13;
cJulv l".\ 13,14. 15 and 16 - - r&gt;. P. O. I:&#13;
B O S T O N . M A S S&#13;
-luly \1?. - 6 . L27 and 29 - N-fJ. Old Home&#13;
V\ e e k .&#13;
Special inducements in low round trip&#13;
r a t ^ s to the W e s t and N o r t h w e s t .&#13;
Round trip S u m m e r Tourist, t i c k e t s to&#13;
Principal Canadian and New England&#13;
points on sale -laily a f t e r -June 1st-&#13;
Return limit* October 31s'.&#13;
Liberal s t o p - o v e r s .&#13;
Full particulars, i t 'ooal tn.kaf office.&#13;
Subscribe tor the Plnekugf IWgfgfrh&#13;
dividend basis; but, since these&#13;
had been rife for several years, no one&#13;
paid any attention to them. The stock&#13;
fluctuated as usual and, though rather&#13;
high for si nondividend paying stock.&#13;
w a s considerably below par.&#13;
One day a director of the road called&#13;
hte valet into his private room at home&#13;
and said to him:&#13;
"Dennis, some one has been open'uK&#13;
my letters." "&#13;
"I hope ye don't mane to accuse me&#13;
o' doin' sfch a thing, sir," replied the&#13;
man.&#13;
"1 do, and I'm going to hand yon&#13;
over to the officers of the law on a&#13;
charge of theft."&#13;
"I steal, sir!"&#13;
"It is to my interest to shut you up&#13;
for a week. If you will consent to be&#13;
made n prisoner in my house under&#13;
lock and key for that time, I will make&#13;
no charge. Otherwise I will put you&#13;
behind bars perhaps for years."&#13;
i "I inn innocent of anything tbe law&#13;
will punish in that way."&#13;
"Tbe law is money. 1, having money,&#13;
am the law. Which do you choose, a&#13;
voluntary imprisonment for a week or&#13;
to go to jail?"&#13;
The gentleman stepped to the telephone&#13;
;tml took down tbe receiver.&#13;
"Don't call tbe police. You may shut&#13;
me IU) here."&#13;
"Very well. Follow me."&#13;
H e led the way to a back room in an&#13;
upper story. There were two windows,&#13;
but they were small and ne.ir&#13;
the ceiling. Tbe valet entered, ami&#13;
his masler. locking the door, took the&#13;
key.&#13;
Several days later a maid in the hall&#13;
made sufficient noise with her buckets&#13;
and brooms for the prisoner to hear&#13;
her.&#13;
"Knte," he called, "in that you?"&#13;
"Good gracious! Where do tbe voice&#13;
be com in' from?"&#13;
"Come here, Kate-- to the door. I'm&#13;
Dennis. I want to speak with you.&#13;
Don't make a fuss."&#13;
The girl approached the door, and&#13;
Dennis whispered to her through the&#13;
keyhole. Then she went away.&#13;
Mrs. Mesereau, lying awake -- she&#13;
slept but little since her husband's disappearance—&#13;
thought she heard the&#13;
telephone hell ringing on the floor be&#13;
low. She listened and heard it again,&#13;
.this time surely. Getting out of bed&#13;
and pulling on a wrapper, she went&#13;
down and answered the call.&#13;
"Is that you, sweetheart?"&#13;
"Great heavens, It's Bert's voice!"&#13;
"I must be quick. Go to Bunker's&#13;
office in the morning. Tell him I'm&#13;
alive; have lie en In the service of&#13;
a director of the N. Y. ami P. railroad.&#13;
At the stockholders' meeting&#13;
In a few days a 7 iter cent dividend&#13;
will be dec a red. First make contract&#13;
for half his profits, then give the Information.&#13;
Goodby."&#13;
The next morning the supposed widow&#13;
w a s in the office of her husband's&#13;
former broker, was closeted with him&#13;
and when she emerged had a written&#13;
contract signed by him that he should&#13;
form a syndicate to buy 100.000 shares&#13;
of N. Y. and P. common stock to be&#13;
held at least sixty days, half the prof-&#13;
Its (on condition the information proved&#13;
correct anil the stock advanced) to&#13;
go to Albert Mesereau. Within two&#13;
hours the iyndicate had been formed,&#13;
and during the aft*rnoon * n d the next&#13;
morning i00,000 shares had been pirked&#13;
him both copies."&#13;
"What did he do?" breathlessly ask&#13;
ed her friend, forcing the conductor to&#13;
hold his car so that she might alight&#13;
at her corner and at the same time&#13;
hear the answer.&#13;
"He fired me," w a s the reply.—Philadelphia&#13;
Record.&#13;
He Flreil the Stick.&#13;
"I have fired tbe walking-stick I've&#13;
carried over 40 ,\ears, on account of a&#13;
sore that v e s t e d every kind of lfeat&#13;
ment, until 1 tried Buckien'* Arnica&#13;
Salve; that has healed the sore and&#13;
made me a bappj man," writes John&#13;
Garrett, .:1 North Mills, N. 0 . Guaranteed&#13;
for Piles, Hums, eK:., by K. A .&#13;
S i g l e r , druggist. 2 5 c&#13;
The Tip Randolph Wanted.&#13;
Can you put me in no way to become&#13;
a successful rogue to an amount&#13;
that may throw an air of dignity over&#13;
the transaction and divert the attention&#13;
of the gaping public from the&#13;
enormity of the offense to that of tbe&#13;
sum? From a Letter of John Kan&#13;
dolph of Roanoke to Dr. John Brocktmbroutt'h.&#13;
legislature the towu received u charter&#13;
of incorporation, and at t w o meeting*&#13;
of the Inhabitants, on March 11 and&#13;
14, the municipal .government w a s organized&#13;
and the charter publicly read&#13;
in English and in French. JL'b,e population&#13;
at this time w a s composed of&#13;
French, English and Irish elements.&#13;
On April 4 following, three w e e k s after&#13;
tne organisation of the municipal government,&#13;
a "tariff for bakers," or assize&#13;
of bread, w a s drawn up by tbe&#13;
commissioners (the governing body of&#13;
the town) aud proclaimed in English&#13;
and in French. This fixed the weight&#13;
of the loaf for the ensuing month In&#13;
accordance with the price of flour. Instead&#13;
of changing the price of bread&#13;
it waa more convenient to make the&#13;
loaves lighter or heavier a s the price of&#13;
flour rosa «r fell. On May 2, 1814, the&#13;
weight of the bit loaf (the bit being a&#13;
coin worth 15¼ cents) Was fixed at&#13;
twenty-eigBt aances, and the weight of&#13;
the half bit loaf w a s fixed at fourteeu&#13;
ounces.&#13;
On July 8, 1818, Mr. Martin, the baker,&#13;
appear** btfore the board t s i paM&#13;
the sum o! tlO, a fkua&#13;
for having u|ktaapi&#13;
of which s u ^ W f f s p&#13;
oiflcer. On Jan. 24,&#13;
scale of weights for the bit loaf&#13;
! f t d « P t r \ M „ * &lt; * m i 7 t ^ ^ t i o n of&#13;
, Beginning May &lt;$, 1817, f »&#13;
; bread was proclaimed w e e &gt; .&#13;
' of monthly, as before, and this^jj, the&#13;
! w a s continued for a little more t~&#13;
j two years. The records do not Shi&#13;
that the assize was proclaimed afl1&#13;
1819, but the town continued to exer&#13;
else a control over the business of baking.&#13;
Every baker was required to&#13;
procure a license and to register-Ma&#13;
trademark, width was stamped OB Ma&#13;
loaves. A public bakehouse w a s alsx»&#13;
estabjisbed and seems io luive been&#13;
managed In the same way that muntclpafftres-&#13;
control public markets, the&#13;
bakers renting'the stalls from the town&#13;
and being sul) .-et to inspection. As&#13;
late a» 182* in the annual statement of&#13;
the«dty clerk the following entry os-&#13;
'•urs ill the statement of receipts during&#13;
the year: "Sales of condemned&#13;
bread. gl.S7." -(Quarterly Jo*»r»al of&#13;
Economics.&#13;
th-&#13;
A Fortunate l Y x a n .&#13;
Mr. E. W. Goo,:bn ot 107 :&#13;
St„ Dalla*. Tex. says: 4 In&#13;
year I have lie-omn aeqiia'&gt;-t»'d&#13;
D r . King's N»w Lit. Pi,!-,&#13;
ative I ever K*'i.o»- n \ -d &gt;•&#13;
disposes ol malaria ami '&#13;
They don't grin 1 &gt; »&#13;
F ^. Sigler's d •&gt; .- -'• -.&#13;
liC.ncpast&#13;
W i t h&#13;
\ *&#13;
and no !a\-&#13;
• i) . - h i IMK&#13;
i 11..'', - n • • - - '&#13;
For scratches, burns, c u t s , insect&#13;
bites and the m a a y little hurts common&#13;
to every fainiIf, D e W i t t ' . (Jarbolizerl&#13;
Witch Ka.ael 8alv»i is the best&#13;
ren edy. It is s o - t h i o g , eon'intf. fJtaa&#13;
•••&gt; r\ healing, lie sure ta pet ftoWirta,&#13;
&gt;rld by F. A.&#13;
."V&#13;
• y d jwA•iv&#13;
&gt;&lt;&lt;?•'&#13;
r-ArWAH&#13;
m o o n r\ rm it i?&#13;
# tun far MEN,&#13;
Instant relief to sufferers of&#13;
Rheumatism, Kidnty Troubli,&#13;
Stomach Disorders.&#13;
Get a bottte to-day. Is purely a vegetable compound. Mild&#13;
in effect but one the most eifectual remedies known for restoring&#13;
the entire system. It is derived from nature, not&#13;
compound of drugs and chemicals that only allay the pain,&#13;
but cures to stay cured after all so-called *' scientific " treat*&#13;
ments have failed.&#13;
For sale by druggists. Send for drculare. Address,&#13;
INDIAN MEDICINE CO., Milford, Ohio,&#13;
More Money for Eggs r undrr most any conditions. There is a lot of money to be made&#13;
» in the egg business if conditions are rij;ht. There is no reason&#13;
§ why F a r m e r s and P o u l t r y Rnlscra'should not make just as good&#13;
H profits on their investments as any other linoof business, and it is&#13;
possible for them to do so. The price of eggs during the winter&#13;
months is double and sometimes more thwi doublr^that paid&#13;
during the lummer months. T-he only way to take advantage of this advance is&#13;
to hold summer eggs for winter prices. That fresh e g g s can be kept from six to&#13;
nine m » or wore has been proven by careful testing with&#13;
HACER'S ECC PRESERVATIVE&#13;
and anMAa arfag this Preservative need never sell a dozen eggs for anything but&#13;
the h i g M f JMgket price. Send for Sampl* mud Ckatftrs ttlUng you *ti cbtut &amp;&#13;
* C C PRBSOViNC CO., - St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
'\f&#13;
• • * 4 ^&#13;
•V5l, •&#13;
t *&#13;
-i m&#13;
'.•Vi ,&#13;
• • • &gt; • JbmJm M^&#13;
"•W&#13;
H'.&#13;
--.1-&#13;
•how you ftr**Ww1*% o f Purt $ M B&#13;
Table^-Mw dt&gt; t wiila&amp;iU yon JGrao,&#13;
i "Trill f a e ^ a At ««al»-irO*. Stoop*&#13;
H«a4a^. i;*W*t&gt;• Neu^al«ia„ H**d.;&#13;
tthe, ro/Hhit'H Period paoft, t t e ,&#13;
a Ion* &lt; a bUxd coog6*ti&lt;Mk&#13;
'a Jimdxche Tablets simply&#13;
~by coaxing *nrtiy the unulood&#13;
pressuiH, Thtft is all.&#13;
A d d r e s s Dr. Shoop, Uactne,&#13;
Wis. bold by All Dealers&#13;
H«&#13;
As t f l m n o t o i » t « r&#13;
waa « M p H N v to even!&#13;
£o«»t a rising yormfl trian&#13;
whom }ie wu« mixkuiB to ni&#13;
annctjve member of the cbul&#13;
"O/xxi evening, my- young frf*&#13;
satd solemnly: "Do you'ever ft*&#13;
place cif AvorshlpT&#13;
"Ye*, in !eed. sir. regularly&#13;
jSmuluy til.,'\U" J'eptied th:* ytwojr.&#13;
IQW. with&#13;
to e&lt;n« he&#13;
mil.&#13;
BUI!'L\ ' T c i on my waj&#13;
, : J W . " - L a d l e d H&lt;»n&lt;? Jouri**.&#13;
Sobaeribe tor t b * PinekMy Di»P«tofc&#13;
AU tae newt tor 11.00 p«r year.&#13;
Tha c'yatte Numbwr Five,&#13;
Five Is i: i* ureat sacred Chine**?&#13;
immlier. Ttit'iv tire five virtues, five&#13;
roJors (y&lt;»lk&gt;w, white, green, fed • •)&#13;
hlai'ls). five household gods, five planet*&#13;
(Saturn. Venus. Jupiter. Mare and Mer&#13;
tury), five ranks of nobility, five tastes,&#13;
five cardinal points (the middle, east,&#13;
west, south and north respectively)&#13;
and five tones.&#13;
' I'Jes net quick and cwrtaia i\*liel&#13;
from [)r. Sboou's Magic Ointment.&#13;
ftmm note i t ib made alone for Piles,&#13;
| ifb&amp;4ft|-action is positive and certain.&#13;
^'$)ri*ir, painful, protruding or blind&#13;
|ii'#f d i s a p p e a r like mayic by its use.&#13;
i Lit ye hickle-capped glass jar 50een1s&#13;
I tfold by All Dealers&#13;
mm&#13;
w.VJ&#13;
Good&#13;
Coffee&#13;
m&#13;
'Mi?&#13;
CXXX Coffee Chums at work • i —,(^,- , , , , . i —&#13;
••&amp;*• i f « * L V 3 F *&#13;
F hr?o*iy One Cup of This Coffee&#13;
have I d e ^ ' — — ™* You won't pay any more for M o&#13;
Revi&#13;
" h i « ^&#13;
razl&#13;
Laughlin XXXX Coffee, but you'll get&#13;
the very best grade of coffee at a reasonable&#13;
price, because McLaughlin's XXXX&#13;
Coffee is always clean — a1 ways freshalways&#13;
good—always the same quality&#13;
— in fact, the Standard Coffee.&#13;
Sold in full 16-oz. packages.&#13;
The handy air-tight package and the glazing&#13;
of pure sugar keeps this coffee clean and&#13;
fresh, protected from dust, dirt and foul odors.&#13;
Each package is one pound full weight.&#13;
McLaughlin's XXXX Coffee is Sold by&#13;
w &gt;I Ul'plly&#13;
l i a i n m d&#13;
A V i 11 i rs l o 11 &lt;V &lt; o&#13;
lis.&#13;
ptlMUUS&#13;
''•ft-;.'&#13;
•&gt;s*&#13;
W&#13;
-&gt;&#13;
i i i 'i ii"« mm 7S!mH &lt;mmmmm&#13;
or U u » a , . jaitu to pro?*&#13;
rial size ttoi qi JDr. Shoots&#13;
•iy. Lei oU send it&#13;
is a stow white, creamy,&#13;
utiteptic balm. Containing&#13;
en I eaiing inaredientu a* 0}1&#13;
c&amp;lipttii), Tbymol, Menthol, etc, it&#13;
\Dbtant and iaalinK relief to&#13;
rrh of the oobe and throat.&#13;
a'ite the free teat and see for yoar-&#13;
&amp;el),H|tlii£{*18 preparation can and&#13;
wii)||wMljpM^b Addi ess Or. Shoop,&#13;
11^,.¾1¾¾ Lar^e jars 50 ienl8&#13;
\-msmr&#13;
«ve merilt&#13;
aj ,T^^^^^^*W ^&#13;
•jtber Dy#r&#13;
Le? Kidaeyg.&#13;
eh, Heart or&#13;
to&#13;
'""" ^ W,&gt;». ii ••' i H I&#13;
Bdwiw/Aatiwu; ^ a « urt&#13;
compated hpprvxteiate^ tit&#13;
nnujber *»f • way a of iVaytt^&#13;
fir*tt*o woree on each nice i&#13;
ilpow.ooo.ooo.ooo.ooo.i&#13;
ft«en Drunk.&#13;
H e evtiteatif V U i i ' t used to t h e w a y s&#13;
of big hotefft. H o JaokeU a s though he&#13;
might have- .**•* t»»na some Kansas&#13;
farm and \v«a'A» * NM"fere city for the&#13;
first time. SomfJjP*"fce h f t d beard that&#13;
"the next mornrhg m e j ^ w h o had been&#13;
absorbing i n t o x i c « t # : ^ l * » k l o t s ot i c e&#13;
water. &gt;: i&#13;
"Say," he said t » C- T. K e w t o n behind&#13;
t h e desk at t h e **»&gt;*•* *»tel about&#13;
8 o'clock in the m n m U f . * * e other&#13;
clerk lust night told « ^ ; t»~-«ak fer&#13;
things over the little t a H | i i W *» ^ y&#13;
room when I wanted 'em.*&#13;
"Yes," said Xewtou. *, '•&#13;
"Well, this morning, about a hatC t »&#13;
hour ago, I asked fer a glass,-«f fcO&#13;
water. Some girl answered t h e&#13;
phone."&#13;
"Yes."&#13;
"Well, I don't like to be took fer a \&#13;
.fleavy drinker. I wasn't drunk last&#13;
night."&#13;
"What do you menu?"&#13;
"Jes' this: I didn't get no glas« of ice&#13;
wateiv That girl sent me up n whole&#13;
pitcher. It loukcd mighty much to me&#13;
!:ke she thought 1 w a s full of liquor&#13;
List night and would need a whole&#13;
pitchi'!-. A glass would 'a' been&#13;
enou; h." And as he'turned aud strode&#13;
away he wore oue of those "Guess I&#13;
didn't call him down, eh?" l o o k s -&#13;
Denver Post.&#13;
'Iwi&amp;otatt jo&#13;
uuqsplaaaf m/&#13;
live, aad&#13;
pepaia. th&#13;
TrooWee&#13;
Kidneys, a&#13;
deeper ail men&#13;
mon error of trea&#13;
Symptom treatraen^jft&#13;
result not the cause. %Weak Slouaeb&#13;
nerves—the inbide nerves—mean cfiomach&#13;
weakoess, always. And the g g g ^ g j ^ ^ J S S ^ S ^ \ s S % S k&#13;
Heart and Kidneys as well, have their S ^ S ^ ^ j ^ ^ ^ S o o f f i ^ S i S m J f c&#13;
controlling or inside nerves. Weaken a mdHefne spuetAcallr prepared to^kAthem&#13;
. . , , . eoDtrollina Dorvtit. To doctor the KMnejrt alooa,&#13;
these nerves, and you inevitably havj u ta&amp;eTlt is a mute ol tine, and of moaer as&#13;
weak vital organs. Here is where Dr.; if'your bmck act** or Is w«*k. If tl» aria*&#13;
Bhoop'f Bestontive has mad, its fame. 8 ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ d ^ S S &amp; T S ? S S g S S S&#13;
No ot.er remedy even claims to. treat j g r d t a a a j i ^ ^&#13;
the "inside nerves'. Also for bloat- do'oryou.&#13;
: . ^ : - 1 •&#13;
Jqoid—an&#13;
Drugglit reconunand sad MD&#13;
ing, bilioasoess, bad breath or complexion,&#13;
age Or. Snoop's Restorative.&#13;
Write me today for sample and true&#13;
Book. Dr. Sbooo, Racine, Wis. The&#13;
Restontive is sold by All Dealers.&#13;
All tao newa for I1.M par year.&#13;
Subscribe for too Plneaney Dispatch&#13;
Dr. Shoop'*&#13;
Restorativo "ALL DEALERS."&#13;
;, «•&#13;
|E|P|ANK.l_. A N D R E W S So C O -&#13;
a&amp;lTOHB A»D PKOPRIETOK*.&#13;
e^Hflfiplhin P r i c e $1 i n A d v a u c e&#13;
S a t e r a d a t - t a * f o a t o S c e tit F i a c k o e y , Micbi^t*.&#13;
* • Mtiift* l&gt;W m a t t e r&#13;
t .1 jiiint ratat aair kaawn on appiicxtiuu.&#13;
T H E GREATEST&#13;
OF ALL CEREAL FOODS.&#13;
N o fad or uncertain mixture. A Natural FOOD&#13;
LAXATIVE. A whole kernel of Rye to each flake.&#13;
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT or write us for our t h r e e Special&#13;
Offer** A pound package by mail, postpaid, for 25 cents. It will&#13;
positively cure the most aggravated case of constipation. Write to-day.&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS CEREAL COMPANY,&#13;
H. H. D e p t . M I N N E A P O L I S , M I N N .&#13;
Satkshor-m WMntcd £v0rywhwm.&#13;
^ • « t -&#13;
\\&#13;
p y p p wm I p R J ^ p f E x p e r i e n c e is o n e of t h e g r e a t e s t factors in a l m o s t&#13;
B i ^ W • K B I m I • • rm %JT mm u a n v w a l k in life. I t is w h a t g i v e s t h o F a r m e r , D o c '&#13;
!&#13;
tor, Merchant and Mechanic success. In manufacturing"&#13;
it la an all important element. We are carriage&#13;
manufacturers of over twenty-five years* experience&#13;
and # e claim to know the business from A to Z. We&#13;
will stake onr reputation that we make as good work&#13;
for the money as it la possible to make. Onr two&#13;
leader* are our No. 30 Top Buggy at the popular&#13;
price o f $50.00 and our No. SO Top&#13;
Buggy at 180.00. Nothing bnt the best&#13;
go into these jobs in order to make&#13;
them come up to our standard. Write&#13;
for full specifications, cuts and references.&#13;
Do it to-day and see what we&#13;
can offer yon for your cash and save&#13;
all dealer profits. Write a t a t t * and&#13;
get oar grin* offer.&#13;
All the newe for 11.00 per year.&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, lots of strength, 1&#13;
seas, headadhe, constipation, bad&#13;
general debiUty, aour risings, and catarrh&#13;
of the stomach am all due to indigestioa,&#13;
Kodol reHeree indigestion. This new dJscov*&#13;
ery represents the natural Juices of dtgea*&#13;
tlon as they exlet In a healthy stomas!*&#13;
combined with the greatest known tease&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol fer&#13;
dyspepsia does not only relieve IndigeaHoa&#13;
and dyspepsia, b«t this famous remee&gt;&#13;
helps all stomach trouble* by cleanslnf,&#13;
purifying, sweetening and strengthening&#13;
the mucous membranes lining the stomach.&#13;
Mr. S. S. Baa, of Rarenswood, W. Vs.. ssysr—&#13;
" I was troubled wttk soar stomach for twenty years.&#13;
Kodol eared me and we are now uatnc it In msa&#13;
for baby."&#13;
Kodol Digests What Y o n E a t&#13;
Bottles only. RaHeves indigestion, soar stoBseeK&#13;
belchlnf of gas, etc.&#13;
Prepared by E. O. DeWITT A OO., OHIOAOO*&#13;
Sold by F. A. 8igler, Dnigglat&#13;
Morten so Salo&#13;
\A" nKiiKA? ilrfanlt biif liocn mftile in tlio oonditioiis&#13;
ot'u cfi'fiiin tnnrtpa^o, w h e r e b y tho powor&#13;
of PH)« tlicrciu h;is lu'ininn tr,u&gt;r(itivt&gt;, made by&#13;
HKNKY T H I M B u l . T and his wife ( W K O U N E&#13;
T-Hl^HOF.T, of Deertleld, l.ivin^pton i'Nmnty,&#13;
Miclugivn, to NT.LSON I.AMH of the same, place&#13;
aforo.-aid; lienrivi; date March 'Jinb, A, IV 188^,&#13;
nnd recorded in the office of tiie KeLri?ter of&#13;
i Deed- for L i v i n g ! o n Oumt.v, Miehi^an, in l.iher&#13;
.'•J of Mortage? at pn^e jOi thereof on March It.th&#13;
A. IV l*SJ which paid mortgage was duly as3i;;red&#13;
j by NI'LSON LAMB on the 10th day of August,&#13;
: ISOii t o IIF-NKY T t i l K R O I . T J U. which a^i.sjnnu'iit&#13;
was recorded in the Meiri^ter of Deed's odice&#13;
, for t h e County of Livingston on t lie 10th day of&#13;
j o i i g u s t , 1 &lt; 6 in Lil&gt;ev N"&gt; of Mortage* at pa^e \7,&#13;
a id by Hl-NUV r H K i r s o l . T H i . duly a^MRned&#13;
' to C A l l O L I N H T H K I H O L T &lt; n X o \ e n i t \ - r ' . iSOfi&#13;
and rr-corde.i in t h e la"_rister'&gt; (Ml'ee, I)trice for&#13;
1 Livin^uton County on tho lfih day of Mav, 1 S'.-S,&#13;
in Liber S'i of Mortgages at p a s ? 067. And by&#13;
C Ab'OI.IXM TITKIROLT duly assigned to HKNHY&#13;
T H K I R O L T . J K . &lt;m March 10, 15)07 and record&#13;
ed in flie Office ot the Ko^istor of Deeds for Liv-&#13;
;!ii;.-!on County on March 10, l!*o7 in Liber !H) ar&#13;
| i ; i ^ r h l 1 . And whereas i h e a n i i i n ! claini.'d to&#13;
be d u e on said Moitjra^e Rt this- date is theenini of&#13;
One h u n d r e d and eighty do lars ami ei^lity live&#13;
cents j$i80.8M nf principal a n a interest and no&#13;
• nit or proce^flin^ b a v i n s been instituted to recover&#13;
t h e debt secured by said mortsraue or any&#13;
part t h e r e o f :&#13;
Therefore notice is hereby v;iven that by virtu1 '&#13;
o: said power of sale a n d in p e r s n a n c c of the&#13;
«tatnef&gt; in such ease made and p r . o i d e d the said&#13;
ii oit^'fiire will be foreclosed by pa'eof t h e jiremises&#13;
therein described at public auction to t h e highest&#13;
bidder at t h e West front door of the C o u r t H o u s e&#13;
, i- the village of flowell in said County of I.ivinjstov&#13;
t h a t lieinu the place ot h o l d i n g tho •"ironit&#13;
• "c-nrt fi r t h e County of I . i v i r : ^ r o n on Saturdav i&#13;
r h e i : h h davof.Tuly A. V&gt;. P.V7 at H o ' d o r k m the&#13;
tor-noon of said djiy, or so much thereof as mav&#13;
be necei&gt;s.i :v to pay t h * principal nnd interest&#13;
• In- on sain mo» t^age, tlio Afio-ncv 'ee provided&#13;
t herein and costs nf *Hid s'jle. cf tho following&#13;
• esrribod premises, t &gt; wit iumtiienci'iii: twenty&#13;
rods Hast of the Nui'h«*est corne r of Section&#13;
t w e i i ' y l w o i0*01 in tn\*' ship four i P Nortli of&#13;
1'aiikf' Ave ('} Knst Michigan, vtinrini: tlienee&#13;
.•^o'lI ii elijht iods thence Kast sixty rods thence&#13;
North e u h t i o r l s t b e r e e ^"ost. to h e j i i u n ^ con-&#13;
: linini: t h r e e acres of land.&#13;
IIKNKV T H R H O I . T . . T R . ,&#13;
A?»l&lt;nee of t! e Mort .-a^t e.&#13;
DRted. Howell. v nril i. 1^7.&#13;
W M Y V A N W I N K I . ' ,&#13;
Attornev for Afsicni**.&#13;
Buelnests C a r d e , $*M p e i t**1 •&#13;
T e a i h a u d uitirria#e»)Otteeiieei#li8ried t r t n . .&#13;
A n n o u n c e m e n t s of e a t e r t a l a A e n t e m*y b e y a n&#13;
Eor, it deairtxi, lij .ir r i e a t l s a t a e tuslrn vrith full&#13;
eta of a d m i s s i o n . I n c a e e t i e a a t a a r e a o t broukfi t&#13;
to tUe office, r e g u l a r r a t e s w l l i a e e a » ' » « ^ .&#13;
A l l inntfiiT in I n r i i l n n t i r i s e s B S i a a fi&gt;t i h T J r&#13;
e&lt;J at, 5 c e n t s p e r l i n e o r f r a c t t e s i a v e n o ^ , t«i etn i i&#13;
i n s e r t i o n . W n e r e n o tImeissawaaB%aiml%e(lce&lt;&#13;
will b e i n s e r t e d u n t i l o r d e r e d i l l e w r t a t W l . n m ,&#13;
will b e c b a i g a d f o r a c c o r d i n g l y . fl**alleiaaaei *&#13;
o l a d T e r t i B e m e n t B M U S T r e a c h t h i a e a ^ e e e e a r s j&#13;
as T U B H D A V m o r n i n g t o i n s u r e mi l e e e t l l O L T t i&#13;
aatue w e e k .&#13;
JOB rsrx7ixGr&#13;
i n a i l ita b r a n c h e s , a e p e c i a l t y . We h a T e s U k i u L ^&#13;
aod i h e latest s t y l e s ol T y p e , e t c . , which e n a b l t *&#13;
u» t o . execute a l l k i n d s of w o r k , s u c h as B o o k c ,&#13;
P a m p l e t s , f o s t e r s , Prograjniues. b i l l H e a d s , N Q U&#13;
Heads, b t a t e i u e n t s , C a r d s , A u c t i o n B i l l s , e t c . , i L&#13;
s u p e r i o r styles, upon t h e s h o r t e s t n o t i c e . P r j c e s a i&#13;
low as yood w o r k can be a o n e .&#13;
ALL B I L L S - P A Y A B L K XIUHT OK E V K H Y MO.NTU.&#13;
IS SI&#13;
Health and Wealth.&#13;
Insnred health to the average man means&#13;
g r e a t w e a l t h .&#13;
DR. JOHNSON'S&#13;
AFTERDINNERPIU&#13;
INSURES HEALTH. TRY IT.&#13;
IS PURELY VEGETABLE,&#13;
and waa need by the Doctor&#13;
for twenty years in&#13;
active practice, and is&#13;
conceded by all having&#13;
used ft to be the beet&#13;
Little Stomach Pill&#13;
on the market. It is a&#13;
PKLVENi'A'nvE of&#13;
Slcit&#13;
THE VILLAGF DIRElTuKY&#13;
VlLLAGt OFFICER^.&#13;
l'uEhiuBNT J . C. Dunn&#13;
I H I B T K H S •?. J . ' i ' t e p i e , Ed. F a r u u m ,&#13;
J a m e a S m i t h , J a m e s Koclie.&#13;
\V. A. Xi.vuu C. V. VanWitiKle.&#13;
CLEHK. Roger O a r r&#13;
TKUA&amp;UUKH .1. ,v. Cadwell&#13;
ASBKSBOU 1». W . M u r t d&#13;
-•TKEKT CoMMibBioNJLi. M, Lavey&#13;
'iii.'.i.Tii U J T I C E H . i t , 11. r'. ^ i y l e r&#13;
ArroK.N )L\ \\ . A. (JanclAi.&#13;
siiAi.L &lt;. hae. h l d e r t&#13;
LrtURCHLa.&#13;
\A h i UUUIS I L t ' i S C ' O l ' A L c a u K C l l ,&#13;
i l l Kev. O. c , i . m i o i o h a p a s t o r , s e r v i c e s ever}&#13;
aunilay l u u r u m j ; ai iu;3u, a u u e v e r ; aunu6&gt;&#13;
eveuin^ fit 7:011 o ' c l o c k . Crayer m e e t i u u I ' h u i t "&#13;
daj' es t j u i ^ i a . aauiia^- st:uuoi a t c l o s e o t tuori_&#13;
i n ^ s e r u c e . MIMJ M \ K I V'AMI-'LKKT, S u p t .&#13;
ongue, Loss&#13;
Appetite&#13;
and all other moTbid&#13;
conditions arisinif from&#13;
a disordered stomach.&#13;
P R E V E N T I O N&#13;
is t h e o r d e r of t h i s d a y a n d a g e , a s i t i s m n c h&#13;
m o r e scientific to p r e v e n t a d i s e a s e d c o n d i -&#13;
tion t h a n t o c u r e it. Y o u can s e c u r e t h i s&#13;
. . i T T I . E P I L L o f AN'i FIRST-CLASS DRUGGIST&#13;
w h o will be pleased to .-&gt;erve y o u , 35 doses for&#13;
•Z~t c e n t s . D o n ' t tf-;e s o m e o t h e r ' " j u s t a *&#13;
e;&lt;&gt;od " tor t h e r e i-:i't i;".y o t h e r t h a t will&#13;
please v o n at all aft.-v t r y i n g t h i s o n e .&#13;
L . L. JOHNSON, M . D. Prop.&#13;
Atlanta, Georgia.&#13;
'-&gt;&gt;' .*' 'MM&#13;
VALVELESS AUTOMATIC&#13;
Stock Fountain&#13;
PAYS FOR ITSELF THE FIRST YEAR.&#13;
cO - V M U U A I'ld.NAi, Ci i , JHOi f .&#13;
Uuv. 'r. SV. .Uyiue p a o t o r . .^ervic. &lt;\i.&#13;
.•Sunaay l u o r u i a ^ %t IVJ:JG .tail e v e r y ouiie i;&#13;
evening at T :L»C o ' c i j e k . I ' r a y e i n . e e i i u ^ ii,&#13;
day e v e a i a ^ s . . s u a d a y a c u o o l .»( c l o s e m i : , n i .&#13;
i n g s e r v i L e . Corey s w a r t t i o u i , .^upi,, ..luci.i&#13;
Tee pie Sec.&#13;
c'i'. MAia"&gt; c v r a o b i c c u u u c u .&#13;
O Hev. SI. .1. CouiLuerford, 1'aBtor. S e r v l o .&#13;
every S u n d a y . Low&#13;
high mass w i t u s e r m o u at "&#13;
t ,i:UO p . m . , v e s p e r s a n -&#13;
m a s s a t 7:3oo'clo,&#13;
3 0 a . m. Catechis.;&#13;
. i d i c t i o n a t 7;d0 p . t.&#13;
SOCIETIES.&#13;
n i h e A. O. H . Society of ttiia p l a c e , m e e ' s e v e :&#13;
i . t h i r d S u n d a y intrie F r . .Haltnew xlall.&#13;
.tohn T u o m e y a n d M. T. Kelly, County DoiegHte&#13;
i j ,HL \V, C. 1. I". meetft the tirrt F r i d a y ot each&#13;
JL m o n t h at 0 : ¾ p, in, at t n e home o: b r . i i . 1•'.&#13;
.•Sigler. Kveryone liitereeteri in t e i o p e r a n o e is&#13;
cortUijtlly invited. &gt;irs. Le;ii M^'ier, cros; .Mir.&#13;
Ktra D u r t e e , S e c r e t a r y .&#13;
i^he C. T . A. a n d B. S o c i e i y of t h i s p l a c e , i r e j&#13;
ev'ery t h i r d S a t u r o a y e v e n i n g i n t t i e F r . &gt; ^ i&#13;
thew H a l l . ,]oiiu Donohue, I r e s i o e n t , i&#13;
No Valves&#13;
or floats t o&#13;
get out of&#13;
order.&#13;
Automatic&#13;
Never fails to&#13;
work. Doe3&#13;
not overflow.&#13;
No mud or&#13;
tilth. P u r e&#13;
cool water.&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
T o d o a s&#13;
' claimed.&#13;
Big Sailer&#13;
Sold on 30 Dm**' Tmlml.&#13;
MONEY BACK IP NOT SATISFIED.&#13;
GEDGE BROS. IRON ROOFING CO.&#13;
Fountain St.. Anderson, Ind.&#13;
6 0 YEARS'&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
KZ NII GHT S OF MACCABEES .&#13;
eer.e\erv Friday e v e n i n g o n or heii re ;&#13;
o l t h e m o o n a t their Uail in t h e S w a r t h o u * i&gt;&#13;
Vi^itin^ hrotliers ar« c o r d i a l h i n v i t e e ' .&#13;
I H A S . 1 , CAM rift, LI., M I h r A l . K ' i rr.n i .&#13;
Li f i n ^ t on Lodge, No. 7':', ?"&#13;
C o m m u n i c a t i o n Tuesday e v e n i n g , on or b e U r&#13;
the in 11 of t h e moon.&#13;
it; A . M. K f ^ r *&#13;
r bef&#13;
Kirk Van Winkle, W. &gt;;&#13;
OR D E R CC EASTERN S T A K meetp each m o m i&#13;
t h e F r i d a y e v e n i n s following t h e r e g u l a r F&#13;
.¾ A . M. m e e t i n g , M K S . N K T T E V A T O H N , W. M.&#13;
*4&#13;
0W. KK OF MODERN W O O D M E N Meet t h e&#13;
first T h u r s d a y evening of each M o n t h in the&#13;
-NUccabe^ hall. C. L. Orimes V. C.&#13;
At: vor'p «nr " &lt;• ;\ ••). t :&#13;
f}u;c\lv iis.'oi i:. i ovj- c,&#13;
iuv.Miti.'.n l;! pr-.c :11:..- rvneiif-aht*.- •&lt;&lt;&#13;
tionsstrirttjrcontiLioNfml. HANDBOOK o n f a t W J t t .&#13;
. for secoivur fcate«t«.&#13;
n. ttirouah J!unn A Co. recalve&#13;
LA D I E S O F T H E MACCABEfctS. Meat e v e o u&#13;
a n d 3rd S a t u r d a y of each m o n t h at :2::30 p "m.&#13;
(v.O. T . M. hall. Visiting *.sters v u r d i a l i v in&#13;
v i t e d . L U . A C O N U V A Y . L.idy C o m .&#13;
r N I G H T S OK T H K L O Y A L G U A R D&#13;
\ F . L. A n d r e w * P. &gt;s.&#13;
"Oo^rftiGhTs ffc&#13;
•"'1 ; a n d des or'p» • or,-tfj.^&#13;
•-non free whether u.i&#13;
pntent-&lt;'onlmui)iC5a.&#13;
«*T,t fr«. .in f ^i-,HAMD800f qn Patent&#13;
Patents t.tkon. t h n i u a h M u n n C&#13;
tpfrml notice, wr»'iout c h a r w , i n t b « Scientific Hmrm; A hRnrlsomely lUurtrafed wtteklT. Lnnrert e t ^&#13;
crlHtiori of any snjientiao JoornaL Torros. S3 a&#13;
MUNN SCo,3 8 '8 ^^. New York&#13;
Branch Office. K» F StL, Wash'.nston D. C.&#13;
&gt;-*i-aLi&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H . F . S ' G L E R M . D . C. L. SIQCER M. r.&#13;
DKS. SIGILEH &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
^ n y s i c i f t n a a n d S u r ^ n o n s . A l l c a h s prouij&gt;tly&#13;
mtenrted t o d a y o r t u K h ; . Orrlra on -Msn. street&#13;
l u i c k n o y , Mich.&#13;
J. A. HUHCBRFORD m SOIt, Lapeer, M I c H ^ t i a X - C t S 5 S f i S i T S l C«t4yl UuDvc&#13;
F R A N K L A N D R E W S&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEIL&#13;
VT CiSF.ATCM OFFICE&#13;
.•*-'&#13;
*• *i!l&#13;
J'fM&#13;
^&amp;xL&gt;&#13;
.&gt;'t.;j&gt;'1*»"&#13;
3 V&#13;
i- :: &gt; \ ^ i f ,«v ** J'tf&#13;
- ^ 7 5 -&#13;
ftV^a^rjpHirv'&#13;
* if..&#13;
1 -r&gt; « r- I ** ;:&#13;
*&#13;
K p ; * * ^&#13;
• - . ; • ' * • * " *&#13;
" ( , . • * ) . &lt; • - „ it.&#13;
VVA.&#13;
• M J ^ ^ W p » # ^ l ^ a ejPPvlpa^BBeap^P^#^iW f»-^ -,.&lt;v--&#13;
*•**&#13;
- • . V - -&lt;v •&#13;
:• ';'&gt;C'r *&#13;
1^ : r-&#13;
1 v.'i.&#13;
I • ••*• ' ' ** -*&#13;
Wvbl*;&#13;
m&#13;
&amp; &gt; • •&#13;
• &amp;&#13;
W&#13;
:^: o/&#13;
: « £&#13;
1 - • - • • • ' " , . * - • '&#13;
Sfc&#13;
Itfe.***'*-&#13;
?1 CHAPTCR I.—Continued.&#13;
"Well sir, I should feel much better&#13;
U I could go over there into the swirl&#13;
eyed Mueeh it out for myself.. -Yon MM&#13;
If I could win out alone and pay hack&#13;
the seat price, and then, make a pile&#13;
fox myself, If you felt later nice giving&#13;
um another .chance to come Into the&#13;
A t e , then I should not be laying myself&#13;
open to the charge of being a&#13;
mere pensioner on your friendship.&#13;
You know what I mean, air, and won't&#13;
thjlnk I am filled with any low-down&#13;
pride, but if you will let me have the&#13;
price of a stock exchange seat on my&#13;
note, and will give me the chance,&#13;
when I get the hang of the ropes, to&#13;
handle some of the firm's orders, I&#13;
fihaJl be just as mudi beholden to you&#13;
and Jim, sir, and shall feel a lot better&#13;
ttyVel!:~T'' r'*-' ir '&#13;
\ I knew what Bob, meant; so did&#13;
father, and we were glad'enough to do&#13;
what he asked, father insisting on&#13;
making the seat price In the form of&#13;
a present, after explaining to us that&#13;
a foundation stock exchanger rule prohibited&#13;
an applicants fro^ borrowing&#13;
4he seat price. Fourv^e*rs after 60¾&#13;
flBrownley entered the stock exchange&#13;
fee had paid back the flMty thousand,&#13;
with interest, and not oary had a snug&#13;
thousand to hit Credit 0% Rani's&#13;
iMfca. ait was&#13;
a year&#13;
'rat&#13;
'i*y in&#13;
-man's notch would make&#13;
thousand yearly earnings cast an uncertain&#13;
shadow at Christmas time.&#13;
Bob was the favorite of the exchange,&#13;
as he had been the pet at school and&#13;
at college, and had his hands full of&#13;
(business 300 days in the year. Besides&#13;
Randolph &amp; Randolph's choicest&#13;
commissions, he had the confident**!&#13;
orders of two of the heavy plunging&#13;
cliques. - '•* '&#13;
'I had Just pissed my thirty-second&#13;
birthday when my kind old dad suddenly&#13;
died. For the previous six years&#13;
1 had been getting, ready, for such an&#13;
-event; that is, I had grown accustomed&#13;
to hearing my father Bay: "Jim, don't&#13;
let any grass grow in getting the hang&#13;
•of every branch of our business, so&#13;
that when anything happens to me&#13;
there will be no disturbance In 'the&#13;
Street' in regard to Randolph &amp; Rando.&#13;
l^ph's affairs. I want to let the world&#13;
soon as possible that after I&#13;
pan* our business will run as it al-&#13;
So I wHl work you into my&#13;
lips in those companies where&#13;
the *oor that the southern gambling&#13;
blood that made by grandfather, on&#13;
one of his trips back from New York*&#13;
thqugh bo had more land and slave*&#13;
than he could use, stake his land aad&#13;
slaves—yes, and grandmother's too**-&#13;
on a card game, and—lose,'and change&#13;
the whole face of the Brownley dea&gt;&#13;
tiny—those same gambling microbe*&#13;
are in my blood, and when they begin&#13;
to claw and gnaw I want to do something;&#13;
and, Jim"— and the big brown&#13;
eyes suddenly shot sparks—"if those&#13;
microbes ever get unleashed, therell&#13;
be mischief to pay on the floor—SUM&#13;
there will!"&#13;
»i *c&lt;ft t*iee to ***&#13;
* * &amp; &lt;*• of t*o«&#13;
at Tetroepeettvaly, ara&#13;
% was a baaotitttl&#13;
nopa anl Bob and I mad&#13;
u*" for the day urtnaratorT to .&#13;
Mrf. Randolph oa my jvSkkT9m% 1¾¾&#13;
down to o « ^ U c « &gt; t Wtwpon.- « « w *&#13;
st^ppad out pf lain office one a^tha&#13;
derks announoad that a lad^r h j ^ - ^ ^ ^&#13;
in and had narUpalariy&#13;
UrVBrowaley.&#13;
11 Who the deuce can&#13;
in at this time on Sat&#13;
all alive men are In&#13;
the heat aad dirt of&#13;
and the good&#13;
growled Bob.&#13;
her ln.M&#13;
Another minuet/&#13;
swer.&#13;
A lady entqrteV&#13;
"Mr. Browrftastf'&#13;
stant to maJkl&#13;
glnian. .,1 ^ , *&#13;
Bob bowedr*^^*&#13;
"I amt^eujah Sands, of Sands Landln^'&#13;
V^jMlla. Y o u r neople knew our&#13;
paojto jt^^rownley, probably well&#13;
eaoa^h tsBiffeu to place me."&#13;
"O* tt»&gt; Judge Lee Sands'?" asked&#13;
-.•*%&lt;•##« h e l d o u t bia hand,&#13;
Bob's handsome head was thrwwml "t,*in Judge Lee Sands' oldest&#13;
back; his thin nostrils dilated m daphter," said the sweetest voice I&#13;
though there was in them the afBj»%lJJBB ever heard, one of those mellow,&#13;
of conflict. The lips wert ,4%am rippling voices that start the imaginaacrosa&#13;
the'white teeth with" 3 « | ^ 5 t tion on a chase for a mocking bird,&#13;
enough to show their edgft, and In only to bring it up at the pool, bethe&#13;
depths of the eyes was a dark-red neath the brook-fall in quest of the&#13;
blaze that somehow gave the impres* harp of moss and watercresses that&#13;
sion one gets in looking down some sends a bubbling cadence into its&#13;
long avenue-Of JWack at the instant a [eddies and swirls. Perhaps it was the&#13;
•:VJr*'^.&#13;
e*e waited an inhe&#13;
was the Vir-&#13;
' &lt;tf &gt;:;-:*T :&#13;
" '*:•?••&#13;
trv*?"&#13;
h^"&#13;
l'*Xr&#13;
W« Ss)js|r interests and gradually put&#13;
. you into my different trusteeships."&#13;
1 Thus at father's death there was not&#13;
: a. ripple in our affairs and none of the&#13;
:. stocks known as "The Randolph's"&#13;
^fluttered a point because of that, to the&#13;
financial world, momentous event 1&#13;
.Inherited all of father's fortune other&#13;
&lt;than four millions, which he divided&#13;
1* up among relatives and charities, and&#13;
look command of a business that gave&#13;
'me an income of two millions and a&#13;
Joaif a year.&#13;
f vOnce more I begged Bob to come&#13;
Into the firm,&#13;
1 "Not yet, Jim," he replied. "I've got&#13;
my seat and about a hundred thousand&#13;
^capital, and I want to feel that I'm&#13;
t* kick my heels until I have&#13;
together an even million all of&#13;
making; then I'll settle down&#13;
,ye», old man, and hold my handle&#13;
low, and if some good girl hap-&#13;
Ing about that time—well, then&#13;
i*&lt;«jfl|} be 'An ivy-colored cot' for&#13;
that «WJL j|e*0e*. iuejMJ&amp;y I&#13;
, -S«b l a « f » q e l * d , *jg» -1&#13;
^ew^a^H*'^*^P ^ • W a ^ ffl^ea#&lt;^B^Vejr '^^P|PK l^BflpVweW^W^^f&#13;
tjMU hroMjMlajighjrty 4ew|&gt;^lw aaxatya,&#13;
r«f a aatattf too U i t » IMKftapa far&#13;
beauty. If the coral a a n a of the Una&#13;
h»d bee*, law exqaiaxtaly perfect The&#13;
straight thtn-afi#t?Ua&lt;t nose, the broad&#13;
forehead, the equate,.fait jaw, almost-&#13;
'' !^i»^C-&#13;
•»W' ?r :.T*%'1 &amp;&amp;&amp; •";•'&#13;
aa low at t U polnta where they come # ^ ^ •.*!« Anout^tae Awfai «a«afft#&#13;
beneath the amnTa; at the OWR. atw ^ ^ ^ ^ 5 5 ^ ^ 2 ^ H T ^ S&#13;
geeted dignity aad high resolve ccoouu-- *•$. • :• .^ ^ n ^ f ^ - ^ ^ , ^ : ;&#13;
pled wj^h a nower of n^rpijee, r*ie lat&#13;
womaa. Tta eomhinatlBa 61 fjarehaad,&#13;
Jaw, aad aoee wae jeldom aaaa. Had&#13;
It bean poaseesed by 9, man Utfw.otUd&#13;
avrelir hay# driven hln\ to the tented.&#13;
Held for hit profession. But the great*&#13;
eat glory of Beulah Sands waa ber&#13;
eyes—large, tulU Tary gray, vary blue,&#13;
vivid with all the glamour of her pay*&#13;
sonality, full of smiles aad tears and;&#13;
spirituality and paaalos; one tnjtant,&#13;
frankly innocent, they illuminated the&#13;
face of a blonde Madonna; the next,&#13;
seen through the extraordinary, long,'&#13;
jet-black eyelashes underneath pie.&#13;
finely penciled black brows, they caressed,&#13;
coquetted, allured. I afterward&#13;
found much of this girl's purely physical&#13;
fascination lay in this strange&#13;
blending of EagUsh fairnses wi^h Andalusiaa&#13;
tints, though, the abiding&#13;
quality of her charm, was surely in an&#13;
exaltation of spirit of wbjeh *ha&lt;mUm&#13;
make the dullest consoioua. As the&#13;
stood looking at ^ V i h , my^offee that&#13;
long-ago noon, gracefuflj.at.eaae in a&#13;
suit of gray, with a gray-feathered&#13;
turban on her b.ejut: tpd, }tiny^lacfe&#13;
bands at neck anjt wrist, she waa'very&#13;
exquisite, exceedingly dainty, and,&#13;
though southerner of southerners, very&#13;
unlike the typical brunette girl who&#13;
comeB out of Dixie land.&#13;
(TO BE CONTINUED.)&#13;
_. • — — — — : / '&#13;
CHURN FOR A HEAD PIECE. '&#13;
-^«r&#13;
:V^'l ^ wHtHA* &gt;Af^l«i ^-^-^&#13;
• r o » ^ W » j a ^ ha* alreaoy •'befe'sent&#13;
frroum« Amu*ar»t*a»a to relie_v_e_ _t_h e fa^a¢st0o^e .&#13;
Piece of Mischief That Might&#13;
Had Fatal Results.&#13;
Have&#13;
"Jim If Those Microbes Ever Get Unleashed,&#13;
en the Floor.**&#13;
There'll be Mischief te Pay&#13;
» - * • - .&#13;
\y&#13;
:^.-.)-½^&#13;
laughed, and I laughed, too. Bob&#13;
was looked upon by all his friends as&#13;
a bad case of woman-shy. No woman,&#13;
young or old, who had in any way&#13;
crossed Bob's orbit but had felt that&#13;
fascination, delicious to all&#13;
*tjae. presence of:&#13;
A soul by honor JchooWd,&#13;
A heurt by passiof ruled— •&#13;
l&gt;ttt he never seemed to see it. As my&#13;
wife—for I had been three years married&#13;
and had two little Randolphs to&#13;
show that both Katherine Blair and I&#13;
ew what marriage was for—never&#13;
red of saying, "Pooi* Bob! He's&#13;
maa-o&amp;»fi. and it looks as though&#13;
wijisf ee&gt;cr get his sight in that&#13;
dlr ~""~&#13;
:&amp;U6&#13;
.&lt;•*,&#13;
r$S|sie*.&#13;
:•:" %a fonensa) g*na&gt;&#13;
y little seer&#13;
4 ^ 4 into.- Tbe v" ' r i n o t fafe-to s&#13;
he continued in&#13;
ess, "there's a&#13;
ftttiff let even you&#13;
not safe f a t -&#13;
old hou** «1&#13;
Randolph 4b Randolph. Yea, yotf&#13;
llaugh—you who are, and alway&#13;
"beea, aa staunch and steady as t!&#13;
^hronse John Harvard in the yard, you&#13;
•who know Monday morstngs^uat what&#13;
7&lt;JU are going" t'i do Saturday nights&#13;
'aad i l the day3 aad nights in; b&gt;&#13;
iweea, and w1»b always do it Jim, I&#13;
&lt;h*ve toa«d since feoave been over on I&#13;
locomotive headlight roaads a carve at&#13;
night.&#13;
Twice before, wey back In owr college&#13;
days. I bjtd had a -peep at this&#13;
gambling temper of Bob's. Qaee in a&#13;
poker game lit our. rooms, when a&#13;
crowd of New York classmates tried&#13;
to run him out of a hand by the sheer&#13;
weight of eeisK Aed again at the&#13;
Pequot house at New London on the&#13;
eve of a varsity boat racev when a&#13;
Yale crowd shook a big wed of money&#13;
and taunts at Bob until with a yelkhe&#13;
left his usually welHeeded feet and&#13;
frightened me. whose allowance was&#13;
dollars to Bob's cents, at the sum total&#13;
of the bet cards he signed before he&#13;
cleared the room of Yale money and&#13;
came to with a white face streaming&#13;
with cold perspiratloj*. These events&#13;
had passed out of my memory as the&#13;
ordinary student breaks that any hotblooded&#13;
youth is liable to make in like&#13;
circumstances. As I looked at Bob&#13;
omen, in \ that day, while he tried to tell me that&#13;
the business of Randolph &amp; Randolph&#13;
would not be safe In his keeping, I had&#13;
to admit to myself that I was puzzled.&#13;
I had regarded my old college chum&#13;
not only as the best mentally harnessed&#13;
man I had ever met, but I knew&#13;
him as the soul of honor, that honor of&#13;
the old story-books, and I could not&#13;
credit his being tempted to jeopardize&#13;
unfairly the rights of property of another.&#13;
But it was habit with me to&#13;
let Bob have his way, and I did not&#13;
press him to come into our firm as a&#13;
full partner.&#13;
Five years later, during which time&#13;
affair*, business and social, .had been&#13;
tapping along as well as either Bob&#13;
at I-could have asked, I was preparing&#13;
1ST another sit-down to show my chum&#13;
giat the time had now come for him&#13;
to help me in earnest, when a &lt;Jueer&#13;
thing.-happened—one of those ttfeaecountable&#13;
incidents that ~&lt;Jod sometimes&#13;
sect fit to drop across the llfeejsjti&#13;
s heretofore&#13;
vlsiWe aa&#13;
Nearly everyone has heard of the&#13;
man whose dog got his head caught&#13;
ta a pitcher into which he had thrust&#13;
l£ after a taste of the milk at the&#13;
bottom. The man cut the dog's head&#13;
off te save the pitcher and then broke&#13;
the pitcher to get the dog's head 0UVieel»1sA^ea*^Blfc;&#13;
An incident with almost similar features&#13;
occurred in the little village of&#13;
Stanton, Nv €., the other day. The&#13;
children at Mft. Uriah Bumgarner&#13;
were playing oa the porch of their&#13;
home when' a small daughter picked&#13;
up a churat one- of the old-fashioned&#13;
kind with a large bottom and a small&#13;
opening, and; in- a spirit of mischief&#13;
placed it upside down over the head&#13;
of her two-ye»»-«iid brother, who was&#13;
sitting on the floor. The little girl accidentally&#13;
dropped the churn and&#13;
down it went over the head of the&#13;
child, who begatt to yell. The father&#13;
and several neighbors ran up and&#13;
found that the boy had turned his chin&#13;
upward and the churn could not be&#13;
removed. The- upturned bottom of&#13;
the churn finally had to be sawed off&#13;
before the child ccotld be released, and&#13;
the little chap emerged from his&#13;
unique head covering almost dead&#13;
from fright&#13;
pethilot His chil&#13;
aa atraigbt a»dj4e**Nsw&#13;
southern accent that nibbled! off&#13;
corners and edges of certain weed*&#13;
and languidly let others mist themselves&#13;
together, that gave' U. tts&#13;
luscious penetration — however that&#13;
may be, it was the most n&amp;yeatetdayno-&#13;
to-morrow voice I had ever heard.&#13;
Before I grew fully consoiom of tone&#13;
exquisite beauty of the girij thifc vtoiee&#13;
of hers spelled its way into my brain&#13;
like the breath of soma- bewitohitafj&#13;
oriental essence. Nature, envious*&#13;
ment, the security of an perfect marriage&#13;
have ever combined: to eonetl^&#13;
tute me loyal to my chosen, one,, yet&#13;
as I stood silent, like one dundh absorbing&#13;
the details of the loveliness of&#13;
this young stranger who had so, suddenly&#13;
swept into my office; ft came&#13;
over me that here was aa woman intended&#13;
to enlighten men who- could not&#13;
understand that s&amp;aft which in all&#13;
ages has without warning, pierced&#13;
men's hearts and! souls—love at first&#13;
sight. Had there not been, Katherine&#13;
Blair, wife and mother—Katharine&#13;
Blair Randolph,, who filled: my love-,&#13;
world as the noenday August' sun fills,&#13;
the old-fashioned well with ueetling&#13;
warmth and restful shade—after this&#13;
interval, looking back at the past, I&#13;
dare ask the questio*-—who knows&#13;
but that 1 too might have drifted from&#13;
the secU're anchorage of my slow Yankee&#13;
blood and floated: Into the deep&#13;
waters?&#13;
Beauty, the cynics scoff, is in the&#13;
eye of the beholder,, or in an angle of&#13;
vision—mere product «»f lime-light,&#13;
point of view, desire^—but Beulah&#13;
Sands' was beauty beyend cavil, superior&#13;
to all analysis, as definite aa&#13;
the evening star against the twilight&#13;
sky. In height medium, girlish, but&#13;
with a. figure maturely modeled,&#13;
charmingly full and rounded, yet by&#13;
very perfection of proportion escaping&#13;
suggestion of "plumpness." The head,&#13;
surrounded and crowned with a wealth&#13;
of,dark golden hair, rested.on,a neck&#13;
that would have seemed ahort had Iti&#13;
The Fox ae a Decoy.&#13;
Some 30 years ago a tame fox was&#13;
kept at the Berkeley Castle duck decoy&#13;
in Gloucestershire, England. This&#13;
animal understood^ the whole art of&#13;
decoying wild-fowty, and, showing himself&#13;
to the duck, wfdgwn, and teal&#13;
on the decoy lake* need, by waving&#13;
his tall and moving gently to aad fro,&#13;
to attract the attdlffae of the curious&#13;
fowl. The blrrta*&#13;
the fag'a ««**&lt;&gt;•••&#13;
a* the&#13;
* * * * *&#13;
M F W i &amp; &amp; ' ' # tney&#13;
a red dog, as npar in cqfor to » fox&#13;
as possible, fofj- the difficult part'of&#13;
decoying duck.: from the pool to the&#13;
netted pipe.&#13;
Forreat'e Principle.&#13;
Here is a brief summing up-of Gen.&#13;
N. R. Forres**: •• "He was a man of&#13;
humble birthi and little education, a&#13;
trader in slases and mules,, grave,&#13;
silent, unobtrusive, but possessed of&#13;
military gesfcus of a high order. As a&#13;
leader of cavalry he was unequaled&#13;
and knew mo fear. During- his service&#13;
he was detained to take part in 129 actions,&#13;
audi to have 2? horses shot under&#13;
him&gt;. la one terse sentence he&#13;
summedi up his art of war: 'To git&#13;
thar fiirat with the most men.' "—Prom&#13;
the "Appeal to Arms and the Civil&#13;
War.'* -&#13;
fundey&#13;
duration&#13;
and rt# geological&#13;
extent The worst&#13;
is -not' yet Fitf&#13;
month* of utter&#13;
^ want is the lot of&#13;
a third of. the&#13;
inhabitants of aa&#13;
?iree almost aa&#13;
&lt;£ large aa the state&#13;
Vofc' New York.&#13;
Thaa far" v i a e /^dlsthg •" from&#13;
few—only a mAtter of a few thousand&#13;
at the 4**e1de e*t*mate. Host&#13;
of these have been complicated by&#13;
disease or cold. J^rqto the standpoint&#13;
of the native, the ^.mortality has not&#13;
been great. The grim* reaper's greatest&#13;
harvest is still to corned • — -&#13;
Writimj f rom one of the greatfamine&#13;
campB, a correspondent of the&#13;
North China Herald eaye that some of&#13;
those who die of starvation Are so&#13;
emaciated that the Whs literally protrude&#13;
through the skin, which Is&#13;
cracked, and the body la practically&#13;
fleshless. Of the multitudes congregated&#13;
la theBe campsi a very large&#13;
rroaerOew 1iave been either" compelled&#13;
o r persuaded to return to the&#13;
vlflagesT wwence they came, and there&#13;
the *aei tragedy must be wqjked out.&#13;
Tbooa who remain are hous&#13;
hat*&#13;
tt-&#13;
; . ~ i *&#13;
and "through the crowds&#13;
barrows leeenr "wit&#13;
coins. As eooa eav&amp;ction&#13;
made the peep.. ^&#13;
grain market, Where vtK&#13;
corn and o4fce*4e0dst&#13;
the ShanghfJ&#13;
at the lowest possible&#13;
Every speck of&#13;
eagerly with hungry;&#13;
lest it spill on the&#13;
Student Recruits&#13;
Every year&#13;
holidays the. ^ee*g (&#13;
associations in ^tfce •&#13;
colleges of Calileeirtt;flfctte4ito ktgf *&#13;
religious, conference Tor~atudepta~' at&#13;
Pacific Grove. At the laBt holiday&#13;
season the conference developed a&#13;
new movement very analogous in its&#13;
origin and its purpose to the student&#13;
volunteer movement which cajjje out&#13;
of a like conference of eastena tpf.&#13;
veraities at Northfteld in 181$^ lllsr&#13;
students at Pacific Grove, a&#13;
er, formed the "Student&#13;
Movement" Those present subscribed&#13;
a pledge form reading: "I&#13;
purpoee, if God permits, to become a&#13;
minister of the gospel." They bound&#13;
themselves to solicit other "recruits."&#13;
' * • » •&#13;
-%« &gt;U :-'5a&gt;&#13;
Long eastern Trip.&#13;
Dean Bosworth* t&gt;. D„ of Obet4in.&#13;
Theological seminary, has-sailed' from&#13;
San Francisco for an eastern, trip of&#13;
about'four months, mainly under&gt;the*&#13;
auspices ef the World'* Studjmt ted.,&#13;
eratlon. .J ,&#13;
'•'•j-v'v^K-^.1-.&#13;
"•Hlorlm's ProgreaeM on SUge.&#13;
A dramatic version of Bunyan's&#13;
"Pilgrim's Prog*ees" has been pr»-&#13;
aeated at the Imperial theater, London.&#13;
The teA scenes, which are said&#13;
to have boee ffoely staged, were accompanied&#13;
by ol&lt; English music, and&#13;
the&#13;
cesa&gt;&#13;
jroducUon was a great auo/&#13;
x*w I&#13;
'U-&#13;
1 — ' 1 * " - • . &lt; * : • ' • . ' foolish Question.&#13;
e writer aakai *'Why do&#13;
fuapeadeaaf t Well, in oda.&#13;
a»&gt; they ftei a who* Jot&#13;
a ro^e, ;•-;.. ,&#13;
New French Bible..&#13;
There has. recently been ,pu£ upoa&#13;
ihe market In France a new translation&#13;
of the Bible "pafTAbbe N.' Qramr&#13;
pon. Edition revtsee par dee Peres de&#13;
la Cle de Jesus." The pubHsn^ra art*&#13;
the well-known firm, I^febrre e( CJe&#13;
who, are the pope's own pnatera in&#13;
Paris. The work,, revised, aa will he&#13;
seen, by the Jesuits, waa pat. upon&#13;
sale simultaneously 1¾ Piw$L Rome&#13;
and Tournay. One bookseller^ in Paris&#13;
in the first few days dfcpoaeo: of lO.dOO,&#13;
copies. The version ts so thoroughly&#13;
satisfactory (hat the French Protest-kk&#13;
ants accept the volume with eager* %&#13;
ness. m&#13;
Extending Rail road Work.&#13;
The progressive men of the railwaydepartment&#13;
of the Young Men's Chris*&#13;
Uan association! are turning their'attention&#13;
to the needs of the met employed&#13;
on electric railways? "At;,&#13;
Rochesterft|t Y,, aadiheeveral Si|utb&gt;:&#13;
etfj slatOA local aftspci at ion e have'been&#13;
fdrbVetl and: work" hagun. Every man;-&#13;
who, M dlspdilfrd to.be decent} jniethet'&#13;
h* be Jew or GeVttlle, atod ha*' a belief&#13;
' itC ^relitle||8 ^things W otherwise, ta&#13;
w^kfcme, to memberstifp "^- '&#13;
.-= ,-i&gt;&#13;
, . ,-4".»'-&#13;
,'C&#13;
r, •it:&#13;
*mw*^&#13;
5¾¾¾¾..&#13;
« $ $ - . .&#13;
" ! * ? • • • • • * , 3&#13;
'r-i-,.fl»fv&#13;
^v»-:v-^'&#13;
• • • * * * * • - ' - - ' -&#13;
i. ^&#13;
* . . * • &lt;&#13;
, , * • •&#13;
'wittse*.&#13;
TOM*&#13;
smwafflij aWaii&#13;
itaatthe&#13;
eryJrur*TVaa*l«ed&#13;
\^is^jtie*# i *!*#* funit*&#13;
SEND FOR BOOK&#13;
«BBBB*a*BBi*aT^BwaBBBW4Bai ^r»» M P i ' V ^ f ^ wa*a*a^BjsB^BBBB\_ t^^*Fv.&#13;
UL\D COldJANY&#13;
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. " # ...r-&#13;
^ . Browning, 1 « 1 IW « ^ 0*&amp;e*&#13;
BTft •':•?* '' v ••' '&#13;
M/, •&gt;' ' - , '&#13;
Wr ,:"V~Z ";*" •&#13;
'-'-^: .-:¾ •""^ M\ , J-:&#13;
•%•*&gt;&lt;'•''*•?;'&#13;
;'i &gt; ' ' ' • ' " ' , • ' . "'.&#13;
f-*-•- ••, - v : . " '&#13;
? j ^ v ; •;•&#13;
-.*;£- -isv" •'-.-&#13;
C-*''"'"v --&#13;
JS - ,&#13;
*s V '.l^-*-.- .&#13;
* v " v "I.""&#13;
: vnrj7,;v. .... ..•«',.?. •&#13;
,-, ."H ...;•:. "*-„ * i O " T - r - ; ,&#13;
: 3 ^&#13;
: .%- V;&#13;
•• . .-.. '&#13;
•* -?V -&#13;
* ' •r- • .&#13;
,.-^-. . .^.,- *&#13;
•-.v'Y.;&#13;
.- ~*' -..-^&#13;
,. . - i - •'•&#13;
* • . , ' . . - ' • ,&#13;
, r&#13;
Aa&#13;
*-*4mirt« for H « U f * « t * l |&#13;
I V * 1 "&#13;
[Hrf^&#13;
A'vMd *•*&amp;* BMtoo «1 Oi«ok»t&#13;
otfonty; &amp;r 0&gt;e' iwnatahi* c^^ North&#13;
4roftken ^ « w i ki»«« Bit ©wa bKitb#K.:&#13;
fEccipMK toii»l»# *h* jw»i»tei«a«[ of;&#13;
tAe^Ww,- w i w t iHf*n~9v*t to ^Hk.&#13;
b«pror ft* whM *» J»d done aad ftpm&#13;
h"W4own mind wf«r« tor JbtomM #&#13;
tful pua«»»im«Bt J H« ^beUeve*&#13;
. . ^ • i a e r t e d ' w i 1 a «l?t- *kat w w&#13;
'aSpitf * h**r wat dwwn fio*r Mi I M *&#13;
byhlff alattviirotli«f, earning tliwuafe&#13;
m knight liiHO Uxe nwieea region* of&#13;
the * hereafter for that porpoae. tt 1»&#13;
?i tttbwh factthjrt Shettoa di* become&#13;
i|iaWr ltttte toMm nnUV not^a,Mr « „ « - , . — -&#13;
w»» lettj and aomf ot.Wa;wlt*-orf; m ^ tf ^ tent?^S&#13;
belWved In too mtghlly ttfUatlon of . ¾ ¾ ¾ .&#13;
I) : ¾ ¼ ^ jnaa at trmlt at the *!ay«rl . W « w f ? a«. « » «&#13;
^¾&#13;
HSR TOKEN OP THE PAST.&#13;
Huateml AMI |H»r4 But&#13;
Long Departed*&#13;
Hair Had&#13;
A weiteru man, who plumes himself&#13;
on hja ^fascination for the other aex»&#13;
wan not long; ago. presented to aa attractive&#13;
New York woman-&#13;
-UL.conrae.iOf their first-t«t»a4ete&#13;
tha man witfc wlnnfng ways at vnce&#13;
topi; oceaatBB to turn the r~yriis,Uatj)&#13;
lato his favorite c h a « 4 | |&#13;
that yon are we&amp;rii&#13;
fine locket," said be.&#13;
it contain some tofiem&#13;
weakness,&#13;
Yorke^tflioiight to&#13;
smiled she,&#13;
«ff the past,&#13;
lis fcair."&#13;
mean tko tteli me that&#13;
Bevj^oowr' &lt;qicmtaned the west*&#13;
have f delighted surprise, ae he&#13;
trifle nearer. 'U understood&#13;
nusbaml waa alive." 0AL^fe," answered the beautiful crea-&#13;
"but ibis ibair Is gone."—Sunday&#13;
»tea.&#13;
pjRsp.4'^&#13;
(Martfto Realize.&#13;
"MoOwr," tfcld a college studeot&#13;
who "hafl'brooglrt his chum home for&#13;
the lioHdiiye, '•permit m* to present&#13;
my Srieiid, Br. Specknoodle."&#13;
I^T»other7,wmTwIl a mtleliard uf&#13;
heartBg, plwoedlieT hand to her ear.&#13;
"I'm Horry, Oeorge, but I didn't quite&#13;
cafes* Tourtfriend's name. You'H havt&#13;
to spedkVmtte louder, I'm afraid."&#13;
U •sajr, mother;" ehonted Oeorge, "1&#13;
Mr. Specknoodle."&#13;
but Mr. —&#13;
e again?'&#13;
ieT' George fairly&#13;
yellefl.&#13;
Thec»ld:iady shook her head sadly.&#13;
"I'm -sorry. -George, =. but I'm afraid&#13;
I f e n o u s e . at-Bomrite ; j « t like Specknoodle&#13;
&amp;&gt; rme:'^-£verybody's- Maga&gt;&#13;
cine.&#13;
Winaclf; No explaaatioii was offered&#13;
aid no deductions were made. That&#13;
nightly comlog, the silent orocatng of&#13;
the hair, -and the departure were accepted&#13;
stoically as a thing actually&#13;
land, undoubtedly happening and part&#13;
ot* the* nam's regular life and e»perV&#13;
epceV Shelton died recently after havleg&#13;
allowed himself irlth bit grotesquely&#13;
bared bead to be etbiblted&#13;
in a teat through mountain hamlett&#13;
as "The Modern Cain," and the local&#13;
newspapers recall bis story.&#13;
, ft; was. anotaer mountaineer, living&#13;
many miles from Shelton and debarred&#13;
of any postibiltty of knowing&#13;
about htm, who told the mountain&#13;
girl he was about to marry that she&#13;
must reconcile herself to a nightty&#13;
visit from a man he had killed, who,&#13;
he said, walked to his bedside and&#13;
sat with him an hoot after midnight.&#13;
The stouthearted bride married&#13;
in firm expectation of the ghostly&#13;
vigil at her couch And, according to&#13;
her sworn evidence in court, elicited&#13;
Incidentally in the trial of another&#13;
case and lb the presence of an audiof&#13;
horrified, stiffened and breath-&#13;
Hat mountain people, she was not dinted.&#13;
She swore that regularly&#13;
:.nigbt the murdered man kept&#13;
tryst, and that she and her groom&#13;
ray awake and looked at aim. It was&#13;
another man of this same neighborhood&#13;
who committed a murder and&#13;
undertook to dismember and hide the&#13;
body of his vkttin. He *old his friend&#13;
that while be waB carrying the severed&#13;
head in a bag over his shoulder&#13;
across a certain wide TiiU where the&#13;
broom hedge was growing In the late&#13;
autumn, the "head snddenly began to&#13;
whistle a tsme whicli was a favorite&#13;
with the dead irmtn.&#13;
What morbid poet or romancer&#13;
could conceive ^ "more ghastly thought&#13;
than this—«** severed head emitting&#13;
suddenly the whistling of a lively&#13;
tune, on a "b'leak broom hedge hillside&#13;
in the solitude of an autumn midnight&#13;
with the moon looking coldly down?&#13;
p«^&#13;
"X year ago I was a \wrreck from&#13;
coffee drinkmj; asfts was &lt;sn .tee point&#13;
©a* glrtBg up war jaoaltion to Hbe school&#13;
rouse because &lt;stf aervausness.&#13;
"1 eras tellteg * Iriend aismt itt and&#13;
&amp;b« said, We drfjjk nothing »t meal&#13;
ttsae but Posttmi Fteod Coffee, and it is&#13;
n n a comfort to i * v e sometw** we&#13;
caa eejoy driakfa* -with the Childi^n.'&#13;
1 v a t astonished that she wwald Allow&#13;
tlse children to drink any Had «tf&#13;
coffee, tat she said Poatum waa Q»&#13;
most healthful drink in the world for&#13;
childrem a t well as for older ones, tad&#13;
that the condition of bath the chUdrefj&#13;
and adults showed that to be a fact&#13;
"My firsi trial was a failure. The&#13;
cook: boiled it four or live minutes and&#13;
It tasted so flat that I was in despair&#13;
but determined to give It one more&#13;
trial. This time we foUowed the direction*&#13;
and~boiled it fifteen minutes&#13;
after the boiling began. It was a decided&#13;
^access- and I was comuletely&#13;
von by its rich delicious flavour^ to athort&#13;
th5M I noticed a decided fat:&#13;
provemat in my conditio^ and kept&#13;
growing b e ^ r a&amp;A better month after&#13;
mofitfe, untlf now I am perfectly&#13;
healthy, and fa Jay work in the school&#13;
room with ease *ad, pleajure. I wottif&#13;
not return to the-nerv Mtafroying.^¾&#13;
a » r e o i r e a | t w w * y &gt; i « e y ^ » ' ^&#13;
Travel &lt;ot a Pennsylvania Teacher.&#13;
Milan Walker, son of or-Sherlff&#13;
Miles Walker of Center county, wht&gt;&#13;
last Jeoe graduated from the Bellefonte&#13;
Wgk «ebool, Just closed his first&#13;
term of teaching school, and with it&#13;
he hat marde quite a record.&#13;
His echool v/as at Rock Forg*s,&#13;
which is seven miles from Bellefonte;&#13;
preferrtng to board at home, he walk&#13;
ed these 14 miles each day, with the&#13;
exception trf 14 trips which he made&#13;
on a bicycle. The distance covered&#13;
during tne term was 2,156 miles, and,&#13;
taking* from that the 560 miles which&#13;
he traveled'on his "bike," leaves 1,5¾¾&#13;
t Belted&#13;
quite&#13;
iSeli^iBefKBTmometer registered 10 tr&#13;
14 degree* fcelow zero. In addition be&#13;
broke hie way through the snow to&#13;
the school "house and made fire, having&#13;
the room warm before school was&#13;
called at asae o'clock.—Philadelphia&#13;
Record.&#13;
apeUr of&#13;
Doan's Kk&#13;
th.ea»Jtrc&#13;
for a, year&#13;
I am in good hi&#13;
Sold by all d&lt;&#13;
Fostex-Milbum&#13;
wb« creeeed tfe*&#13;
pla4a#mi*48*tays:&#13;
wFtve yearaafotb*&#13;
doctors said J bad :&#13;
dUbete*: . My kidiSeyf:&#13;
»e&gt;e|sf-illv,^Bt'&#13;
of order, I bad to&#13;
rise often at night*'&#13;
looked sallow, fetf&#13;
doll sad tiatlett&#13;
and b # ; felt *Q&#13;
uadC. 14? baok&#13;
ached and I ha4&#13;
and disalne&amp;t,&#13;
relieved me of&#13;
e kept me".wti&#13;
75 yeart old.&#13;
cents a box&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
Out of&#13;
Knlcke&#13;
dinners or I wP.uidn't&#13;
for my Easter clothes.&#13;
SORES A9 BIQ AS PC&#13;
fiftjssy&#13;
^p^.s^ai*fhjr.y&#13;
• . J: ' • r » '&#13;
" t ' l&#13;
Whols Head and Neek Cover&#13;
All Cams Out—Cured in Thi&#13;
Weeks by Cutipur*.&#13;
"After having the measles my whole&#13;
head and neck were covered with scaly 1 B&lt;&#13;
seres about aa large as a penny. They \ user in&#13;
were just as thick as they could be.&#13;
My hair all came out I let the trouble&#13;
run along, taking the doctor's blood&#13;
remedies and rubbing.oa salve, but It&#13;
did not seem to get-any better. It&#13;
stayed that way fox.about six months;&#13;
then I got a ^ j p ^ t h ^ ^&#13;
edies, and fa about a week I noticed&#13;
a big difference, add i s three week*&#13;
it was well eatireiy end I h*re not had&#13;
the trouWe any more, and a*,this was&#13;
seve^i' years; ago, ^ consider myself&#13;
cure&amp;^jMr^jiann-t Porter, Albion^&#13;
Neb., Aujg. ^^906.*»&#13;
aV^li*h;4«np#rt* of Grain.&#13;
It;would take; 10,5Q0,0«0 acres to produce&#13;
the amount of grain which England&#13;
yefctyitifr^pltm abiWl.&#13;
i tjf.&#13;
National €ditor^al A**oclation and*&#13;
Christ ran Endeavor Conventions, "\&#13;
ftpnitltiiitliai. "' " . _j3--&#13;
FreparaUon^ for hoaltay mea*r*&#13;
fttty is aeaoa^Uahed *f%crM:-fJH,&#13;
Vfaakaama Vegetable Ge«np«mnd.&#13;
'which 1» made from nativeiwrta and&#13;
herb*, mart ataeaeasfully than by any&#13;
other medietni becanee it give* tone&#13;
and strenfth to the entire feminine&#13;
organlam. earing displacement*, nl- ^ L , O * aaaat- a fu* «ww *»'&#13;
cer*tioa and infT.mmaaon, and the " ^ W ^ r * c j R M t T * J |&#13;
reault it leat sufferiaf aod more children healthy at Wrth. For more/&#13;
thafi thirty yeare&#13;
Lydia E.Pinkham'sVegetable Compound&#13;
)»a*J&gt;een the standby of American mothers la meaeringr for childbirth,&#13;
NotewhatWr* JamesChe»ter.of437 W. Sith S t , New York saya la tbl*&#13;
letter:—Dear Mra&gt;iQkham:-"I wJbsh every eapeetaat mother knew about&#13;
Lydia E. PInkham'a Vegetable Compound. A neighbor who nad learned&#13;
of ita great value at this trying period of a woman's life urged me to try&#13;
it and I did so, and I cannot say enough in regard to the good it did me.&#13;
I recovered quickly and am in the bestof health BOW.1*&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound ia eertafaary a aveceasfal&#13;
remedy for the peculiar weaknesses and ailments of women, .&#13;
It ha* cured almost every form of Female Gc^aalamta, Dragging Sens*.&#13;
tiona, Weak Back, Falling and Displacements, Inflammation, Dloeration*&#13;
and Organic Diseasea of Women and la mvalnabk in preparing for&#13;
Childbirth and during the Change of Life.&#13;
Mf«. Pinkham's Standing Invttation to Women&#13;
Women suffering from any form of female weakaea* are iavited, to&#13;
write Mr*. Pmkham, at Lynn, Mass.* Her advice is free.&#13;
P5^ &lt;*SH&#13;
, "* - ~ J\ |i&#13;
X y V J I&#13;
s*^K^ -^-%&#13;
ge^gejn.. ,f/.. , &gt;^-v*5&#13;
1 1 ' * • - ;•*&gt; '.•&gt;:&gt;• :l.&#13;
&amp;.*;*&#13;
: * ! • !&#13;
'•*?&#13;
':*•••?&#13;
-;. 'M&#13;
es In Boston.&#13;
greatest telephone&#13;
4tavording to the andta&#13;
J«BW England Teleny.&#13;
Every&#13;
It an avereessvaraations.&#13;
w«ery&#13;
nualjepo&#13;
phone ft T&#13;
day in New&#13;
age of 935,858 tel&#13;
In Boston there' it a&#13;
l l p e i f m v ,&#13;
AHen'p7F«)t-EMe\ : It cureV painful,!&#13;
smartingv tweaking feet. -. Makes new*s*&gt;&#13;
easf SoW brift^rugeistf«ftd Shoe Stor&#13;
Dofc7t#(^t«ny.fub«Titute. SatnpleFKJ&#13;
AddreSTA. ST (Mmsted, Le^Roy, N.&#13;
^ Atuatralla, although la aiea 2«_ti&#13;
as targe aejhe whole of the&#13;
Indies, has a population smaller than&#13;
that of London.&#13;
Don't Sneeze Your Head Off.&#13;
'^'KrauBe's Cold Capsule* will "cure you al-&#13;
-meet instantly. At all Druggists,, 25c.&#13;
MEW WHEAT U I K M *&#13;
H E CAWOIU WEST&#13;
tf,W»of railway tfeis-&#13;
•e*r bar* oprocU i f f&#13;
TaryMy i«er«*«ed t e n v&#13;
tory to t*e p*o*re—i^W&#13;
famt«ni of w e » t e n *&#13;
Cauada And the Gorernaent&#13;
of the Dotoiav&#13;
ion co tit Hi Wa W f W e -&#13;
OXK HLTNl&gt;KKDAjt»&#13;
tJgj;T\ 4 £ &amp; « i . FRjt*;to^a*ttT^«ttler.&#13;
t h e wise man looks before he leaps&#13;
—then instead of jumping Into the&#13;
.fire he remains In the frying pan.&#13;
Personally conducted apodal trains&#13;
da the1 cahiadoi'Caie^oPswfi^- 4». yorehl&#13;
North-Western Hue leave; ^arjy ' In tamnia&#13;
MuJy for the-r^a«J|C;;.goafi.\\^pei&#13;
altexpeace msara tat *»&amp;*• Vtm ^a*4et4(. "W e m k&#13;
for roasd trip, tacludin# ^tlee^reji^t^ ^"J*?&#13;
acconwrndaHrms, meals, eto. '"Aft4¾¾ ^ ¾ ^ 1 ^&#13;
mrrantage* ^ ^ a qeHahtfal, and^sai*. ^ = = 8&#13;
M n . Wlnaaow'a Saothlna* t r m p .&#13;
It4r*a teethla*, aoft«a« U&gt;« gont, redaeaa toincav.&#13;
aUa&gt;tpate,car«awta4oolh;. SScabotU*.&#13;
men tremble at the world's&#13;
alon, fools defy it, wise men judge&#13;
La Rochefoucald.&#13;
fuTTy *TraTi?ed tour in confeateAconvr&#13;
pany. ^Wrtte for itinerariee^and iuifcparth?&#13;
TflaTB. S. A. Hutchlsop, Manager&#13;
Tourist Department, 212 01 ark Street&#13;
Chicago. "&gt; *&gt;. •••&#13;
The acme of goodness IS to:love the&#13;
•pu'b'Iic, to study universaTgoTbd, and to&#13;
•promote the interests oX.-the whole&#13;
•worlcl, aa far as lies in our povrer.—&#13;
"Rusktn.&#13;
t"!Wr S&#13;
v x \ v&#13;
DODDS&#13;
KIDNEY&#13;
/ PILLS — 0&#13;
Sha'n Wt Allow Our Cattle to Be&#13;
Slaughtered&#13;
in an effort to stamp out Bovine Tuber-&#13;
(CUlosis? Thousands of our best Dairy&#13;
Cows are being killed in the effort and&#13;
•yet the disease spreads. Recently a&#13;
booklet Issued to all readers free by&#13;
The Mutual Mercantile Co., Cleveland,&#13;
0., claims that a few cents worth of&#13;
Rasawa procured at any Drug Store&#13;
and fed to the cow will render her&#13;
absolutely immune to the disease, and&#13;
it is surely a sensible move in the right&#13;
way if the claim is true. At any rate&#13;
te it not worth while to get the booklet&#13;
free from your druggists and read&#13;
what they say? It is especially so&#13;
when so many thousands of cases of&#13;
Consumption in the human family are&#13;
now easily traced direct to the Dairy&#13;
as the cause.&#13;
• &lt;•*&#13;
• - • v&#13;
'••«1.&#13;
Ataaka Need* Railroads.&#13;
The thing that to folding,back Alaskan&#13;
mining and trade is the inade^&#13;
quate railroad faculties bf the country&#13;
—an insurporable &lt;o*wtacle to trade beyond&#13;
the merest aeeaasities of existence.&#13;
At the present time there is only&#13;
one- railroad that penetrate*-to the Interior&#13;
of Alaska and of that only 30&#13;
miles are on American soil This road&#13;
runt from Skagway, at the head of&#13;
Lynn canal, and connects the tidewater&#13;
with the Yukon river. Except&#13;
during the four months that navigation&#13;
Is open—from June to October—&#13;
this railroad controls the trade of the&#13;
Yukon vaRey. It la at if the only railroad&#13;
between the Atlantic and the&#13;
Mississippi were from Albany to Troy.&#13;
—Syetemv -^ *-v ••••&gt;&#13;
• ^ Selection. •&#13;
. "A great deal depends on the meaner&#13;
in which a man selects hit&#13;
friends," said the wise politician.&#13;
"Yea" answered Senator&#13;
"but the thlBft you attack&#13;
th* fttJ***? *fce PiWIe &gt;atarettec&#13;
tf*M£ J^patti^ poin*UJh# —&#13;
ft is motive alone that gives character&#13;
to the actions of men, and pure&#13;
motive is in the deed not in the event./&#13;
Be not one whose eye regardeth reward.—&#13;
Kraeshna.&#13;
SICK HEADACHE Positively eanvd by&#13;
these Little Pills.&#13;
They also rettev* 1/U -&#13;
tress tram Dyspepsia, Xndlcestton&#13;
and Too Hearty&#13;
lattag, A perfect rem*&#13;
edy tor Dimness. Kausct*&#13;
DroTrstness, Bad Taste&#13;
In the Mooth, Cteted&#13;
Tongue, Pain in tae Side,&#13;
TORPID XJYEB. They&#13;
teguats the Bowels. Purely Vefcttahie.&#13;
SMALLPILL SsULLOOSL SgULLPfUCL&#13;
inteL , . . . . _&#13;
For adTtce and iatormtkm a d d m * Vbm&#13;
SUPERINTENDENT OP IMMIGRATlOU*&#13;
Ottawa, Canada, or any aotboriaed Canadia*&#13;
Govemraent Agent.&#13;
tL V. HcINNES, t A«*aat TteaWe sts&lt;|» 1 ½&#13;
trait, MkUfaa; a r C A LAUIIOL Soil Ha&gt;&#13;
We Cure Piles&#13;
AMD TRUST BOKOK&#13;
TO PAT&#13;
TO TOOK&#13;
TOD&#13;
OD. Our ova dbcowfr. a ««cr«t pracaai kaowa omty a»-&#13;
oanclvts. No auartfeoi eptmtlaa, kaifi, ar dktaaalafBft&#13;
met afaar aadcat** rara4 ia oa* palates&#13;
and few caat* m a i n BM&gt;it taaa twa watts far • .&#13;
cart.&#13;
A F*w Mkki*aa K«f araacaa&#13;
P. C- Rbeabottom, Uak&gt;a City; Mrs. A. JL&#13;
OWOSMI Mr. G«o. W. SioviBbV S. Praakfort; Alaatt C.&#13;
atias, aeaaoaia; S. &amp; AWikb. a. R. 17, ttlalaci ICtaa&#13;
MM Foclesoi. St. Looit; George StaaSer, Spina; S. O.&#13;
Pierct. Alps; Richard Martial, Sebewala*; Mrs, W. K.&#13;
Porr, Albion; A. J. Bradford, Baldwin.&#13;
Write a full description of your cas« as&#13;
it and we will tell you jtKt what we can&#13;
the cost. Remember Dcthlnj paid ootU i&#13;
treated over 4.000 caet without a siagta&#13;
Our free boaklet explains car treat&#13;
tains the names and addresses of aeoata aeai yoa&#13;
we wuihtxladhraaTe jouieec&#13;
Drs. BURLESON &amp; BURIXSOH&#13;
RECTAL SPCdAUSTS&#13;
103 Monroe St, Graad RMJs;aficti&gt;»&#13;
FREE sbeonxd ofh ePr axabtlsnoeh itw«hit ytioounra naamnde agnendu ainded ress on ajx PAXTINE&#13;
Twoom caonn tvhinatc e Pi*,. itminper oAvne ttheeerp thlee awltitkt and do all we elaua&#13;
s~e nd* h^e r ab^s ol^u te*ly* °f1re e* '•a l^arTg*e wtriianl tbiooxn so fa nPda xgtalnmei nwe itthe stbimoookn iaolf* .T aSsternned*1&#13;
your name and address on apostal card,&#13;
eanleda bnessel** mm ueeomtra* fections, such as natal catarrbhr,a npee rarss*t ncainuer rihll sa;n ds otroef laemyebsa, iksomree atahsreo^abt yaYnedn i* amtiovuet hp,o bwye dr iorvecetr ltch«easle t rteraotumbelenst la ietzst resu&gt;m 1or btionuasrayn dsa nodf wgoimvee*n aimrem ueadtioagt* a nrde lrieett&gt; ommendittg It every day. so cent* at&#13;
5 ^ ^ ^ 2 ^ ^ 1 0 1 1 1 1 Remember, however rrCOSTS YOU NOTHIKO TO T B Y 1¾&#13;
T H E JR. P A X T O N COw, B M t o n ,&#13;
1¾&#13;
I&#13;
SELLING&#13;
Catarrh Cannot Bo Cured&#13;
•ft* LOCAL APPLICATIONS, aa they eaaoot reach&#13;
toe seat of tba dl^aao. Caurrb fa a blood or con»Ututlonal&#13;
dtseasa aad la order to c a n It yoa nnattaka&#13;
tataraal rrmedlea, UaM'iCaurro Curaia takea ta-&#13;
(e&gt;aanv,*M aeu &amp;t*&lt;V.j on tha blood and mucoas&#13;
•orfaaea. Baira Caaarrtj Cure )• aot aqaack medt&gt;&#13;
8ettB. II WM ptwasrtb«i t y OMof tba aaat phyitelana&#13;
t*Jt«omntrrfor years and a a N*vrar praaerf ptioa.&#13;
ft c o a w i J of tba b*u tonlct Jaowa. oonblaad&#13;
with tba M M bluodpitri San. actio* drreatty oa tb«&#13;
• &gt; « « • wrfaaaa. The parfeet eonMaatloa of t*a lw5JB1T**'*Bt* h * * • ' P*«d»caa age* woa*&gt;rfa» ve&gt;&#13;
Mlta a cturtM catanh. Sa«d tor taottmonUJa. rraa.&#13;
TaJta BaU'sTaally plUa lorooaaUpaUoo.&#13;
No matter how hungry a man may&#13;
be a tingle taste of defeat satis Sea&#13;
him. .&#13;
Important to Mothere.&#13;
JCtsmloe cairfuliy every bmtta of CASTOnlA,&#13;
a aaie aod «r* ra*Mdy Ice iaraats aad ebUdrca,&#13;
*ai •**«*** it&#13;
BearpUM&#13;
QUEEN WASHERS In new territory is like&#13;
selling stiver dollars as&#13;
ooc. They go slow at&#13;
first But there's no&#13;
trouble to prove they&#13;
are worth more than&#13;
the price asked for&#13;
them. Get introductory&#13;
plan today.&#13;
TtirdarMaaaatti&#13;
JAS. H. KNOLL, affr.&#13;
* &amp; . •&#13;
«%:.&#13;
* • • • . . ^ '&#13;
•-•; - '• v »&#13;
SV; --1 • • *&#13;
vt*«ir,\&#13;
Of&#13;
tl Off Fa* o m aa Y«*ra.&#13;
.4..., ^ &amp;^.a^aAtaa.aa*aAlaam&#13;
Invention it the .mother ot trusts&#13;
iftd. ttvaottoa 1* the stepfathar.&#13;
S• towhlr iinntmcga adto T' s„a par 1*r, rifatituaatt OufsaeJoi&#13;
«Aof»nf«maatlon»ai»tKBBIa«Vtv —»»»«•&#13;
* ' • ; •-&#13;
'++r&#13;
0&#13;
i; •3&#13;
&gt;&amp;*&#13;
k&#13;
[saves so much;&#13;
horsepower. Nexttime&#13;
try MICA A*LB GaRAti.&#13;
O i l Co*&#13;
DEFIANCE STUWK&#13;
rghataioreba* **1* u oajaaa aaa&#13;
1ft&#13;
'ta*&#13;
w.^N. u^ ©ernoiT, KO^tt\&#13;
&amp;N*.,i&#13;
rr. -&gt;'iMLJ J%-'&#13;
. . V, , ' • •!•&#13;
«t&gt;. ^*M: • &lt; * .&#13;
% • ! • ! ,&#13;
•*:•&amp;-i;;' ft&#13;
^*&lt;L&#13;
. &lt;•' •' '*.?+'&#13;
$r.A;i4'f 1»-.,&#13;
" T M ^&#13;
'^li*--**^&#13;
&amp;&#13;
FV»&#13;
i«ea&#13;
•• v&#13;
'.&gt; Ja»e»&#13;
: T&#13;
•7-";&#13;
*&#13;
V U T&#13;
• $ *&#13;
;,*•.&#13;
S$&#13;
• • &gt; • .&#13;
AS H;&#13;
.,*'&#13;
. ' : • •&#13;
&gt; * "*&#13;
v - . ' j -&#13;
i^V' Kt«S.&#13;
&gt;&amp;*-.•&#13;
«.&#13;
.&gt;.&#13;
' • * ' • ,&#13;
'4&#13;
• £ • • &lt;&#13;
M\&#13;
"•&lt;fv'm&#13;
:&amp;&#13;
Ely*&#13;
Summer Normal at Ypsilanti.&#13;
Harvey White and wife of Pingree&#13;
attended the funeral of a&#13;
friend at Williametoo Sunday.&#13;
There will be a school picnic at&#13;
at Cedar £ake Friday, Jane 7 for&#13;
the flohoola of Miss Well man,&#13;
Miss Wood and Mr. Reed.&#13;
A number of friends and neighbors&#13;
gave Mrs. A. M. Boockwood&#13;
a pleasant surprise last Friday&#13;
afternoon, as a birthday. Many&#13;
presents were given her, after partaking&#13;
of refreshment* of cake&#13;
and ioe cream they returned home,&#13;
wishing her many happy returns&#13;
of the day.&#13;
0. G.-Sontif i* macb&#13;
^ 1 ^ w f i t i n # v -r&gt;r&#13;
Blva Blank is a little&#13;
this writing. ~&#13;
n Chelsea Th* Bpe^oer *t*ow at,&#13;
•ai*was4»vfaksk .&#13;
u . . ----^ t&amp;ott WIS a guest at Frank Wallaoo has ret*&#13;
/ .. * n f l , M ^ J M j r o o XightbarTe in Chelsea laat'from a viait at Owosso.&#13;
witt attend t h e j ^ l ^&#13;
5 o i e Harris completed her&#13;
school duties in the Bause Diet&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
go. number of'youug people enjoyed&#13;
a may party at John Dunn's&#13;
Friday evening.&#13;
Miss Magie Connor has returned&#13;
from a three weeks visit with&#13;
friends in White Oak.&#13;
Bert Vanfilaricuui was called to&#13;
Green Oak Sunday, by the serious&#13;
illness of his sister, Mrs. Avis.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Van Winkle&#13;
prnounced themselves well pleased&#13;
with the countenance and the ore*,&#13;
tonal qualities of Preside*!&#13;
Roosevelt.&#13;
Wm- Blade and family*&#13;
at C. B. Wellei's Sunday&#13;
Mrs. Kay Tompkj&#13;
friends at Pinckney,&#13;
the week. J j&#13;
Onas. Samson at&#13;
tertaiuing their cousin?&#13;
and wife of Howe]1&#13;
_ j s w *&#13;
fesweitaV T V ^ r ^ .&#13;
SNNlfessute«1leMe&gt; «s v&#13;
| § s &gt; , ^ t t e t l s ^ M&#13;
•meats till s p f t w * * e u « e&#13;
wa# bfotsjht into ejosn* aid&#13;
wave gwt tojpSber, the&#13;
tor lb* detent w*a sjffprieetr&#13;
among to* Jetter facat of his&#13;
In tfia country. fcs* what&#13;
bis aatoniahmeot when the areaioa&#13;
brought &lt;»t tba is*fc /that the&#13;
robbery haJ been jmmm* f* « • 4W*&#13;
\ p&#13;
'...?&#13;
| Avery's trends war* watching him,&#13;
an* when this fact pawned upon his*&#13;
tb^-mickerad. Tha young atteraaj&#13;
ssiiifcwjtu afr. a ^ lltai&#13;
$eturdar Hw*&#13;
0*i*« totJs*ia*Mtttfol&#13;
****&gt; U&gt; «Xim tbe&#13;
dress OBi the date sat, |t&#13;
cban*i*Uo Monday evening, Ju&#13;
ThaoarthwiUbai»iMdthi.*aat.&#13;
Toeed*ysTenia#*as ajbttiram •**&#13;
«rand*hiWren of M. tad at". John&#13;
IK.-&#13;
' i ' f . T ' ' - * .&#13;
- w j r , — — .--- • - - , _ . - , - i Biortaafoa^ watt to tfc*»r hoaw ana1&#13;
o?,( i|ir at one* that they bad placed D'R» *k«m a aarnviM to rtaaaai than&#13;
robbing him; Bat n* was ga»#. N«* ^ " ^ f w « aaj"&#13;
en ' the allffhteit caang* aC couatanance In- aeoala wara in- b#:^&#13;
Bex Bennett&#13;
the latters&#13;
John Bergis&gt;&#13;
Clyd»&#13;
the&#13;
eoSaMr.&#13;
visited&#13;
'and Mrs,&#13;
HOWELL.&#13;
The 9og poisoner and the burglar&#13;
are working here. One is as&#13;
bad aa the other.&#13;
The Abmni of the Howell high&#13;
school is to be awakiajifl after a&#13;
sleep of several fa&amp; '*&amp;*';&#13;
Coal ought to be wJaartf here&#13;
n*ttt winter— there *l*?fr ^e four&#13;
i n \ | k h t l J i i g i i i | ^ v&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG. &gt; ' * - . &gt; • • «&#13;
14&#13;
r%&#13;
ty^afc'&#13;
^ • © • ^ * * ^ * s&#13;
y&#13;
The North Hambsjlf J ^ T e e&#13;
Aid Society will&#13;
meeting with&#13;
Twitchel ou&#13;
Exeryon* v^»t&#13;
Owing&#13;
Tout%&#13;
their&#13;
«atu&#13;
•^^next&#13;
or timer&#13;
June Id.&#13;
y invited.&#13;
y weather the&#13;
Club will hold&#13;
at Mr. Grieves next&#13;
evening June 8th. The&#13;
and&#13;
la any&#13;
er medicine has ever done. I am still&#13;
taking the pilib as I want a perfect&#13;
cure." Mr. Barber refers to DeWitts&#13;
Kidney and Bladder Pills, which are&#13;
aaequaled for Backache, weak kidney*,&#13;
intimation of the bladder and.&#13;
urinary troubles, A weeks treatment&#13;
for 25 cents.&#13;
Hold by F. A.&#13;
pqngjliyrt will be similar to the&#13;
**i*-prepared for last meeting.&#13;
they J Everyone cordially invited,&#13;
oth&#13;
nn Arbor spent&#13;
eek witb his par-&#13;
A Smith.&#13;
nnie Peters of Ypailanti&#13;
er parents, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
eters part of laat week ^&gt;-&#13;
rMesdames James Henry^ Jesse&#13;
fiitka located that hU pr*feail*na!w»aaimtty&#13;
had b*an disturbed. He ffllajird&#13;
calmly to the evident* against ais client,&#13;
while the expreeatea of hla faceaad&#13;
quick flaanings tn bis eyas toJ&lt;T&#13;
mat h* was atraining his brain to flud&#13;
aom* weak spot in the-proaecuU&#13;
aom* technicaiity by which he&#13;
tacnre the acquittal.of hla die&#13;
The burglar bad beef*&#13;
down a trellia from aa upper&#13;
a man with whom Avery waa w&lt;&#13;
quatnted. H* had been chased, bar on&#13;
the way had contrived to get rid of&#13;
seme valuable articles. When apprehended,&#13;
he had nothing on him to convict&#13;
him of theft. Of courae the jury&#13;
got up, had 8DPI&#13;
ri*&#13;
enryJ and Wm. CadJy l PpT« .t )ast |i waro entirely ignoraat of J ^ t f * * * " . t h a t l M l d been brought about by Av-&#13;
AB t i e aawa for $LQS par year.&#13;
« BiMinM* Pointers, 4 f&#13;
^9 *^*flj*&#13;
•.1^4*«/»".&#13;
pStatoes.&#13;
Mac kinder.&#13;
Two good fresh, Jertey cows.&#13;
J. J.Teeple.&#13;
rom uuk&#13;
House and lot on Unadilla street,&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
Mrf». Carrie Wilson,&#13;
414 Fourth Ave. £. Flint, Mich.&#13;
Brand Traak Railway Systeai.&#13;
Ea*t Boand^rom Pinckney&#13;
Ko'SSPftMexigsrEz.Sancay, 9:«SA. M&#13;
Ho. SOPtuw»ng«r Ex. Sund%y, 4^5 P. M.&#13;
West Bonnd from PlDckney&#13;
Wo. 27 Pa»«a(wr Ex. Sunday, 10:01 A. M.&#13;
Ko. » Pa»a*nger E s , Sandty, 8:44 P. M •&#13;
ichea an&lt;&#13;
taftcart M»opar»tMA&gt; Kew York (andPiiladel&#13;
rnaa*&#13;
Solid wide vdgtibaie rr&amp;ins of comchea and sleep&#13;
Afc&gt;KewYor&gt;t(andPl" * "&#13;
tt'VallejXav&#13;
«ife* *m&gt;&#13;
\i&gt;j the Grand Trunk-L«-&#13;
'a|, KfcClark, A««nt,&#13;
SaAX AUCTIONEER.&#13;
icticn Guaranteed. For informacall&#13;
at DISPATCH Office or address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. Lyndilla phone&#13;
•onaection. Auction bills and tin cups&#13;
farafehed tree.&#13;
CS.C\vambeT\,vxv I Auctioneer&#13;
Years Experience&#13;
• i Expert&#13;
EAST PUTVAX.&#13;
K. W. Lake was at Lansing last&#13;
week.&#13;
Miss Myrta Hall was home for&#13;
a short visit the last of last week.&#13;
Mr. aud Mrs. Henry Eddy visited&#13;
relative at Plymouth a part of&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mr. aud Mrs. Henry Johnson&#13;
spent Sunday with their son in&#13;
Marion.&#13;
Master Carter Brown had the&#13;
misfortune to injure one of his&#13;
eyes quite badly last week.&#13;
Einil Lambertaon cloaed his&#13;
second year of school at this place&#13;
last Friday with an entertainment&#13;
which did great credit to both&#13;
teacher and pupils. Mr. Lambertson&#13;
left the first of the week&#13;
for the Lansing Business University.&#13;
His friends all wish him&#13;
success.&#13;
PIAIHFIEID.&#13;
Maccabee ice cream sale at their&#13;
Hall Saturday evening June 8 th.&#13;
Will Foster and son, Howard,&#13;
spent part of last week in Lansing.&#13;
Miss Agnes Sayles of Stockbridge&#13;
visited friends here Friday&#13;
and Saturday.&#13;
Rev. Ostrander and daughters&#13;
attended Decoration Day exercises&#13;
at Stockbridge.&#13;
The Sunday schools of this&#13;
place hold Childrens Day at the&#13;
Presbt. church Sunday morning&#13;
June 9.&#13;
Among those who went to Lansing&#13;
to see Roosevelt last Friday&#13;
were 8. G. Topping, E. T. Bush,&#13;
and Gus Moule of this place.&#13;
MICH.&#13;
&gt; — T"**»&#13;
Thursday at Howell visiting relatives.&#13;
Mrs. Eugene Wines of Ann Arbor&#13;
spent the last of the week&#13;
visiting her mother, Mrs. George&#13;
Blade.&#13;
O. Toncray of Durand was visiting&#13;
his daughter, Mrs. C. Sampson&#13;
and shaking hands with old&#13;
friends last week.&#13;
Next Friday being the laat day&#13;
of school Miss Beatrice Lamborn,&#13;
teacher, will have a picnic at Van-&#13;
^lorn's grove for the little folks.&#13;
^ » ^ — • • • K i l l ! » ^ » » » ^ . | I » I I I I&#13;
A STORY OF&#13;
. . . T H E LAW.&#13;
« • • » « • • &gt; » » » * • a&#13;
PRACTICAL&#13;
SITWACTIOH&#13;
informattoo, call at the Pinckney Dis&#13;
fAXCHo&amp;ee. Auction Bills Free&#13;
Webster Rural*phone&#13;
lento made tot sale by j&gt;hone at&#13;
aoy expense,&#13;
rets. Dexter, ftlchlflari&#13;
4 'This iittle pi^ went to market11,&#13;
doesr.'r amuse tonipht. Baby's not&#13;
well; wba'/s tbe matter, her dear little&#13;
cheek9 are so white; Poor littfe tummy&#13;
is aching, nauphty old pain no&#13;
away, Cascasweet mother mast give&#13;
her, then she'll be bright as the day&#13;
t i* here&#13;
-» $pld by F. A. 81*1«,&#13;
^wrnr^^rax WITCH HAZtt&#13;
S A L V C tor Mas,&#13;
&amp;n.V&#13;
»;V'.«vV,'i.".&#13;
•NMi&#13;
[Original.]&#13;
Among the many advantages of concentratlon&#13;
of thought is one disadvantage.&#13;
Snch concentration leads the&#13;
thinker to place an undue relative&#13;
value upon the subject of his thought.&#13;
A specialist in throat diseases Is apt to&#13;
•tfer all the Ills man is heir to to the&#13;
throat The professor of ancient languages&#13;
cannot understand how a man&#13;
can be properly equipped for any profession&#13;
without a knowledge of Greek&#13;
and Latin. To the merchant the chief&#13;
and of man is to buy cheap and sell&#13;
dear.&#13;
In tbe legal profession this species of&#13;
monomania tends to make the courtroom&#13;
a tournament of lawyers. -The&#13;
real object of a court, to do Justice, Is&#13;
burled under a rank professionalism&#13;
that has grown up like weeds in a&#13;
flower garden.&#13;
Edward Avery, a brilliant young&#13;
lawyer, wns especially under the Influence&#13;
of this professionalism. Having&#13;
been elected state attorney, he considered&#13;
It his duty to convict alike the&#13;
innocent and the jruilty. As soon as&#13;
his duty to the state hud ended and he&#13;
beeamo an independent attorney be&#13;
considered it his duty to secure the&#13;
acquittal of any client, whether innocent&#13;
or guilty. His friends used to remonstrate&#13;
with him on the want of&#13;
elasticity of his principles, but without&#13;
avail. He was intensely logical&#13;
and could give the best of reasons for&#13;
his deductions. He forgot that logic&#13;
Is but a machine which will grind out&#13;
anything that is put into It.&#13;
One day while Avery was practicing&#13;
on hiu own account a man whose trial&#13;
for burglary waa to come off immediately&#13;
sent for him and asked him to&#13;
make'his defense.&#13;
"But I know nothing about the case."&#13;
ery*i friends. When the prosecutor's&#13;
evidence was all in, Avery took the witness&#13;
who had seen the burglar descend&#13;
the trellis and asked him how h**aew&#13;
the prisoner was the sameM«S.sn. The&#13;
Witness could not awear that he waa.&#13;
Be had seen him run, and be bad been&#13;
followed by a policeman and several&#13;
citizens, but the witness had merely&#13;
seen a man descend the trellis. What&#13;
knan he did not know. Avery trapped&#13;
him Into saying what threv doubt on&#13;
the fact of the Identity between the&#13;
man who had descended the trellis and&#13;
the prisoner, then snowed how easy it&#13;
would be for the one to be mistaken&#13;
for the other. He closed by a powerful&#13;
argument against ruining a man's &gt; life&#13;
by evidence that was defective and a&#13;
pathetic appeal for the prisoner. The&#13;
Jury brought in a verdict of not guilty.&#13;
There was a dinner served that night&#13;
at the bar association club rooms, given&#13;
by those who had played the joke&#13;
on Avery. He revealed the fact that&#13;
he had lost articles that bad been In&#13;
his family for 200 years by securing&#13;
tbe acquittal of his client, but that he&#13;
would rather have suffered the loss than&#13;
do so unprofessional an act as to turn&#13;
against a client. He thanked them oue&#13;
and all for having given him an opportunity&#13;
to prove that even under the&#13;
severest temptation he could not be&#13;
recreant to his duties as an attorney.&#13;
All of which is very fine, but it does&#13;
not add to securing the- object for&#13;
I-hloh courts are organized—Justice.&#13;
P. B. ANDERSON.&#13;
Clevnr With the Card*&#13;
Some years ago a certain county Jail&#13;
waa undergoing extensive alterations,&#13;
during which time a gang of pickpockets,&#13;
four in number, were arrested one&#13;
market day. Owing to the alterations&#13;
the lot were confined for a time In one&#13;
cell, but were placed under strict surveillance,&#13;
the care of them being specially&#13;
Intrusted to the sergeant. The&#13;
day after during his rounds he spied&#13;
them playing cards, when he promptly&#13;
opened the door and summoned a fellow&#13;
constable, on whose arrival the&#13;
cell and the prisoners were most carefully&#13;
searched, but no enrds were&#13;
found. However, the card playing still&#13;
continued until the diiy on which th^&#13;
pickpockets were to be sent to the a&gt;s- .&#13;
sizes for trial. Then the superttttSftsV I&#13;
ent, a very kind mnn nntl a great-^.&#13;
vorlte with every one, asked thdav-aSs'&#13;
a favor to tell him where they ha&amp;lii* '&#13;
den the cards. They told him that as&#13;
soon as the sergeant and his comrade&#13;
entered their cell they stuck the pac?t&#13;
In his pocket and picked It again before&#13;
he left, as a proof of which they&#13;
presented him with the much uael&#13;
pack.—Pearson's Weekly.&#13;
rticeof Ura. Mo?&#13;
ay morning. w « vary&#13;
Bar. K- H. Craae was&#13;
t and of ered prayer A trio •/&#13;
ale voices sang Lead Kiadry Light&#13;
Tbe pastor watered the life of Mrs.&#13;
MoKinley briefly bet oeaatfally to e.&#13;
largB and appreciative audiencs.&#13;
"Beantitni Isle of Sewewnere" s a l ;&#13;
snd 4Nearar Hf Ofctd ta Tfcee* were&#13;
sung, as these W««i favorite hymns of&#13;
President and Ufa. Ifo&amp;valey. Tha&#13;
pi eta res of tn* Martyred **re«ideat&#13;
and bi* bdoved wrle were Jnst back of&#13;
tbe pulpit The evening service was&#13;
vsry intsresttng.&#13;
The inerssaed attendance each Sun*&#13;
day is very noticeable and helpful as&#13;
tbe pastor.&#13;
Next Sunday is Childrens Day. la&#13;
tbs evening the topic will be "Payins;&#13;
the price." Everybody welcome.&#13;
;f/&#13;
3 P&#13;
,±«-&#13;
. •, - • »&#13;
'J- •&#13;
-^ \&#13;
"i&#13;
• * * 4&#13;
* ,"'*&#13;
$&#13;
' : - % •&#13;
- &gt; * ; • • •&#13;
v - * - "3 I&#13;
c.t&#13;
••r • ft £. Church Motes.&#13;
* v '&#13;
r&#13;
:-1¾&#13;
•srrkes Sunday were largely&#13;
atteWsysai tbe pastor gave two&#13;
Tb*&#13;
Sundt&#13;
Owing&#13;
Sunday school, ti&#13;
cises will be held,£&#13;
. ,T be Epw.o rtb. L. e»aTg neveo*ll*e0c^ti!o n&#13;
to be growing in UWS&gt;a%T&#13;
yoing people, ffcs easjsjfcigs&#13;
at 7 o'clock every^#4% a%an&#13;
All chairs are&#13;
and you are welcome&#13;
if yen are not already a&#13;
some oburcb come witb&#13;
all of us good. O f&#13;
Do noj forget the prayer&#13;
this evening.&#13;
FARMERS!&#13;
We&#13;
Buy ^:¾&#13;
tt".&#13;
Tbe fir*»t excursion of the season to&#13;
"Don't want y' to know nothin' about j Jackson over tbe II. A. L. occurs&#13;
the case. The more you know about (Sunday. Jane 9, train-leaving Detroit&#13;
it the wo'so for me." at 7:30 am , Pinckney 10:10, arriving&#13;
Avery's fancy was tickled at going&#13;
into court to conduct a case he didn't&#13;
know anything about. He prided himself&#13;
on his readiness and resource. He&#13;
would add another to his already large&#13;
number of stories thaf he was used to&#13;
telling his friends illustrative of these&#13;
faculties. The accused man had but&#13;
$5 to give him for a retainer, but&#13;
Avery wns not after money. His object&#13;
was to have an opportunity to&#13;
show wliat be could do impromptu.&#13;
Tbe case came off the same afternoon.&#13;
Avery was somewhat surprised&#13;
to see In tbe courtroom several of his&#13;
chums, mostly of the legal profession,&#13;
and asked why they ware there. He&#13;
was told that they had heard he had&#13;
taken a case be didn't know anything&#13;
about end they were curious to see&#13;
hew he would handle i t Avery was&#13;
pjeaaed. TUJa meant; that they were&#13;
at Jackson at 11:15. Fare from&#13;
Pinckrey, round trip, 50 cent?.&#13;
Returning train leaves Jackson 7 p.ra&#13;
:M ••'#!&gt;&gt;{'•&#13;
• • W ^ rife Us&#13;
Dudley Butter Co.&#13;
E. F. DUDLEY. TREK. IID GEa'i. IM'ft&#13;
SASINJW, MICHIGM&#13;
W.T.WRIGHT&#13;
D E N T I S T&#13;
Clark B l o c k P i n c k n e y , Mich,&#13;
rain lea* Extraction&#13;
Your Good Wheat&#13;
Is what we want and it will be&#13;
Money in Your Pocket&#13;
To see us before you sell&#13;
Mills&#13;
.~-&gt; *.&#13;
FOR a&#13;
:1 ^U&lt;^o*A^**iX J£ i AtJu^r^HfiH&#13;
little. JSrill be said&#13;
SBk-r--1&#13;
•*&amp;M&amp;z&#13;
\***mmmmmKm&amp;&#13;
:*k-.:j&amp;*?'&#13;
*&amp;^mrfr*$^***k.&gt; •****,V/*H^%v</text>
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                <text>June 06, 1907 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                  <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>
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              <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>
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              <text>PINOKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, JUNE 13. 1907. No. 24&#13;
n&#13;
Quality Bowman's&#13;
••»•»•*•»«*• •*****« '»«M •**»#**&#13;
15c&#13;
20c&#13;
5c&#13;
3c&#13;
10c&#13;
25c&#13;
15c&#13;
25c&#13;
30c&#13;
Baker's Premium unsweetened Chocolate, J lb. pkg. only&#13;
BakerV Cocoa, J i b can only&#13;
Standard Cur a, per can only&#13;
Yeast Foam, only&#13;
Search Light matches, 3 boxes for&#13;
EggO-See or Tnttted Corn brakes, 3 packages for&#13;
Good Sm^ hint/ Tobacco, full pound package only&#13;
Good fine rut tobacco, l i b .&#13;
AH 10c pi ax tobacco, four cuts tor&#13;
» Keystone plug tobacco, regu ar 5c cuts only 3c; full strip of 6 cuts, 17c&#13;
Be silre io visit lis every time pil come to Howell,&#13;
[ f i v e r y d a y I s b a r g a i n d a y&#13;
B. A. Bowman's&#13;
Howell's Busy Store&#13;
Commencement Week.&#13;
LOCAL NEWS.&#13;
Stockbridge will celebrate July 4.&#13;
Tomorrow, June 14, is Flag day.&#13;
Everybody get out your flag.&#13;
The excursion trcm Detroit to Jackson,&#13;
brought many visitors to this village.&#13;
July 2 is the date set for the dedi&#13;
itmn of the Bunkerhill Catholic&#13;
W\&amp; ot Fen ton&#13;
iv with E.&#13;
G. Fish and family.&#13;
\&#13;
Rev. D. C. Littlejobn and family&#13;
have been enjoying lettuce and radishes&#13;
fiom their own garden for *yer&#13;
over a week.&#13;
JACKSON &amp; FORD&#13;
Automobiles&#13;
L_ We bave the exclusive agency or&#13;
Livrngvslon county for the&#13;
Jacfcson Car price, $1,250 and 11,500&#13;
Ford Runabout " 600 and 750&#13;
it J « Q are a prospect, see us before&#13;
ARMSTRONG &amp; BARON,&#13;
Howell, Mich.&#13;
GASOLINE&#13;
RED STAR BRAND,&#13;
Host By Test&#13;
9mmSM0KE&#13;
Mr. Kerwin of Preston, Iowa, is&#13;
visihng relatives here.&#13;
C. A. Pars! all and wife of Howell&#13;
were the guests of their daughter,&#13;
Mrs. H. Uilette over Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. John Schenk and daughter,&#13;
Alma, of Chelsea weje guests of her&#13;
sister Mrs. J . A. Oadwell over Sunday.&#13;
Teachers examinations at Howell&#13;
next week Thursday and Friday, June&#13;
20-21. Many from here are to attend.&#13;
The Church workers of the Cong'l&#13;
ootircb will serve supper in the Macosbee&#13;
dioin hall Wednesday, June&#13;
19tb, from 5 until all a r j served.&#13;
TEreryone invited.&#13;
Tlie Chelsea stove company are&#13;
erecting a water tower to be 120 feet&#13;
high for their own protection. In&#13;
the tower will be placed a tine clock&#13;
that can be seen all over the town.&#13;
Workmen while driving a well for&#13;
the water works plant ot Chelsea&#13;
struck a flowing well at 21 feet deep&#13;
and flows 300 barrels per hour. It&#13;
comes through 15 feet of gravel, &gt;o is&#13;
pure.&#13;
Miss Ida Btircbiel gavv a party to&#13;
several of her young lady friends&#13;
Thursday evening last, the occasion&#13;
being her eighteenth birthday. The&#13;
evening was spent in games and&#13;
a dainty lunch was served.&#13;
Walter and Clair Reason have been&#13;
doing a good busine&gt;s in the fishing&#13;
business the past week, having cancht&#13;
and sold several hundred small sunfish&#13;
and roach. They seem to have&#13;
the knack ot catching 'em.&#13;
Next week is commencement week&#13;
in the school here and the week will&#13;
be well taken up. The following are&#13;
the dates of these different days:&#13;
Sunday evening at the M. E.&#13;
Church the baccalaureate address will&#13;
be given bs Rev. D. C, Littlejobn.&#13;
Monday evening, June 17, occurs&#13;
the annual exercises at the opera&#13;
house and of coarse everyone for miles&#13;
around will attend. The program&#13;
will be found in another place in this&#13;
issue.&#13;
Tuesday the annual exhibit will&#13;
take place in the upper rooms. This&#13;
part of commencement week ha,- been&#13;
very interesting tor several years and&#13;
this year it will evidently be the best&#13;
ever held. Be sure you take the time&#13;
to go and see wh^t has been accojnplisbed&#13;
by the pupils in the grade the&#13;
past year. •&#13;
Friday will be promotion day and&#13;
of course tl.e pupils will be interested&#13;
in that.&#13;
Friday evening the Alumni will&#13;
have a social gathering at the High&#13;
school rooms. Invitations have been&#13;
sent out and it is hoped that there may&#13;
be a good attendance. There will be&#13;
a program of music, toasts, etc.&#13;
This will close a very successful&#13;
school year and the teachers and pupils&#13;
have worked hard. Encourage&#13;
them in their endeavors by attending&#13;
their different exercises.&#13;
Take your overcoat.&#13;
Cbas. Eldert was in Detroit last&#13;
Wednesday ,&#13;
A. little more like spring for a day&#13;
or two this week.&#13;
Quite a thunder storm visited this&#13;
place Monday evening.&#13;
Mrs. Louis Boucher returned to her&#13;
home en Grosse isle, Saturday.&#13;
Willie Jones of Detroit spent Sunday&#13;
with his uncle, Perry Blunt.&#13;
Circuit court is in ression at Howell&#13;
this week but no jury was drawn.&#13;
John Mortenson of Toledo spent&#13;
Sunday with his parents and other&#13;
relatives here.&#13;
Ann Arbor is to have a cement&#13;
brick factory that will turn out 12,000&#13;
brick per day,&#13;
Miss Hazel Johnson has oeen engaged&#13;
as organist in the Cong'l church&#13;
for the coming year.&#13;
F. M Peters has been at the sanitarium&#13;
the past week. We are g&#13;
to state that he is on the gain.&#13;
Prosecuting attorney, James A.&#13;
* ' &gt; &gt; £ &gt; £ ^ ^&#13;
'•':ii&#13;
Commencement prepent§&#13;
We have a fine line of Books&#13;
Toilet Cases, Manicure Sets&#13;
and other Fancy Articles that&#13;
make glad the heart of the&#13;
graduate. See our line. . . . *. Vt,&#13;
-' J^l»l]l.&#13;
Puw Draft—Presc-rii&gt;cioii«Cf»»feHj&#13;
• \ i&#13;
P. A. SIGLBR'S&#13;
$m&#13;
Summer Underwear&#13;
Mens' B a l b r i g g a n U n i o n S u i t e&#13;
Mens' B a l b r i g g a n U n d e r s h i r t *&#13;
Mens' B a l b r i g g a n D r a w e r s&#13;
Mens' B a l b r i g g a n U n d e r s h i r t s&#13;
M e n s ' B a l b r i g g a n D r a w e r s v&#13;
Mens' Med. wt D r a w e r s and S h i r t s 25c each&#13;
Boys B a l b r i g g a n U u d e r s h i r t s and D r a w e r s 25c each&#13;
Mens' Xittht S h i r t s 50c a n d 75c&#13;
^-¾¾&#13;
&lt;•*,&lt;••&#13;
Wi±&#13;
.25&#13;
.25:&#13;
ft:'&#13;
A Fine Assortment of Straw&#13;
i •' ' ' • . ,sJJ';| ALL TOO BEFOWIOAT&#13;
L. L. Holmes Clothing Co.&#13;
P i n c k n e y , ltUCkh.' Zai£4&#13;
We are sorry to state that Carter,, f^ £ CffUfCft&#13;
the little six year old son of Mr. and '&#13;
Chas. Brown, east ot this -. iilage, will W'lumuh there wa*&#13;
lose the eight ot one eye a&lt; the ifsu't ,r(nK(\ p i ^ c n t as 9§m^J0m^0f&#13;
of being struck with the end ot a wire ' [n^ there was OffV MB-*&lt;wW&#13;
ago. All has been t,&gt;^n W ( f ifat.&gt; n f m v n ^ T ' .&#13;
.~ i ••&#13;
over two weeks&#13;
done that could be to save the Msjht&#13;
but no hopes are held out.&#13;
The spring term of school at&#13;
ja(j | Chublis Corners taught by V&gt;&#13;
and 10* rero»i»c44e Sunday s c t o o l . ^&#13;
IhftM&amp;ool ft making arrangmei&#13;
for their nsnal big t i m e 6n Children's&#13;
Mi&gt; day. next Sunday. A e celleot pro-&#13;
I ronica Fohey. closed last week. Ice £ r a m H being arranged by tbe childcream&#13;
and candy was given the runils ren and all HIM invited to come oat&#13;
n j -"1 7 M J,\ ""'"""" ""; and prizes for correct spelling to Mis&#13;
Green and wife ot Howell were guests j . ^ _ 411:.__ „_j ", : _„: . t i&#13;
•efrt*&#13;
*^&gt;40k:*tW?R- DEALER&#13;
t-x&#13;
Through the kindness of Miss&#13;
of her parents here the first&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs W. G.-Stephens of&#13;
of the es Kitsey Allison and Lizzie Harri;&#13;
and r-njoy the entertainment.&#13;
In rlu evening the i&gt;astor will de&#13;
Xorman Pcole carried otf tl.e prize eerr tttt.&gt;c; 1 a'-cah.ireate address be&#13;
._ , I for attendarce and pnnctnalitv. ^b« graduate ng class.&#13;
Northvillei •&#13;
Mildred Anna Knhn, we have an invi-jand sister, Miss Dunbar, of Canada, j ^ u e D ' " b.v ^enat n r Tnt.ie ot fng- ^01116 a n r f l*v &gt;*&gt;nr presence assist in&#13;
tation to attend the commencement | were guests of Mrs. F. G. Jackson | n a m c o n n ' y if it becomes a law will *nR g/^-'d work.&#13;
*&lt;&#13;
exercises of St. Miry's school of Monroe,&#13;
Michigan, which o:curs on rh«-&#13;
atternoon of Thursday, Jnne 20.&#13;
! over Sunday.&#13;
I Mrs. E. W. Mann and son Erwin,;&#13;
make it easy for country&#13;
attend the high school.&#13;
students to&#13;
It has i l -&#13;
BE^tf.&#13;
fop Fish?&#13;
Airs. S. P. Young and daughter,, ready passed i he house and provides&#13;
that school districts in which there&#13;
are no high schools shall pay the tui&#13;
tion of pnpils from that district while ,&#13;
completing tneir education in the&#13;
high school of another district. It is&#13;
also provided that the district m a y '&#13;
; arrange to furnish transportation t o '&#13;
w i l l , a n d from&#13;
vk^.J^^.fiiubt^&#13;
iftfei&#13;
,&gt;'&#13;
If so, You surely should see our&#13;
ftne and complete line of Fishing&#13;
Tackel, casting rods, baits reels,&#13;
lines, minnow nets and pat Is. In&#13;
fact everything in the fishing line&#13;
schools and spread&#13;
amount of expence on the tax roll&#13;
the&#13;
mn&#13;
Stt our show case—ft mil&#13;
\fmriy make your mouth water&#13;
Teeple Hardware £ Q ,&#13;
Grace ot Detroit, were guests of rela- j&#13;
tives here Sundav. I&#13;
Miss Maine Brady closed a very sue&#13;
cessful term of school Friday in the !&#13;
Harris District. The pupils present-!&#13;
ed her with a beautiful gift j&#13;
Small fruits, strawberries, etc&#13;
be from fifteen to twenty days late&#13;
this season, and we do not expect to&#13;
hear man^ crowing over their eatin'&#13;
iiew potatoes from their own garden&#13;
before the Fourth.&#13;
, . , , , I Last Sunday was on ideal «iav lor&#13;
Raymond Mgler and faimly, who , c n i l ( W 8 K e r e i i M . Everyone ^ m e d&#13;
have been in Ann A. bor the pa&lt;t year f t Q ^ fa a n d d j d t h f t i f ^ r o m a | f a&#13;
where Mr. S. has been attending col | i t a ! ; n c c e s s . One conid not claim more&#13;
le«e, have returned for the " « » « 1 ^ ^ t h a n M O t b „ . , a l | d i d M w l L&#13;
and he w.ll have charge of the ice I T h e c b n r c h w a $ b e a a t l f o l l y d e c 0 r a t e d .&#13;
cream parlors. » Jhft T h n r s d a v eveninjf meetings ar*.&#13;
Word was received here Tuesday of Swell attended and much interest is&#13;
tbe death ot Miss Euphemia E Tor-; shown.&#13;
Cong'l Church Notes&#13;
Ice Cream Soda&#13;
Come in a n d e a t&#13;
a p u r e , refreshi&#13;
n g dish of - - -&#13;
"Silk Floss" Ice Cream&#13;
e i t h e r in t h e form oX&#13;
a " S u n d a e o r&#13;
W e a r e ^ . ¾ ^&#13;
please y o o ,,-,§ltX.&#13;
have all t h e l a t e s t&#13;
flavors.&#13;
«1&#13;
Cirbo rutcd W a t e r y&#13;
All Kinds on Ice*&#13;
i -mL&#13;
ner, daughter ot Tbos. Tnmer, of&#13;
Stirling, Neb Sh* passed away J a n e&#13;
5,1907. Tbe taneral was held from&#13;
the home of Mr. and Mr»._J. F . Alha,&#13;
of Stirling. •c:.&#13;
The missionary meeting al Mrs J&#13;
Read's w u h u h plea-ant and profit 1 .&#13;
ble *&#13;
Tcpic for Sunday morning: " I s !&#13;
AiQ«rt«aa Christianity i t Earnest. :&#13;
lws\,ft««iV«*«k«f&#13;
S'^Vet&#13;
. * * •&#13;
^ K&#13;
^Hr ^ ^ H K ,;&#13;
^ ^ • f i i l r &gt; BSBBBBssrT' %&#13;
• U J | , ; ''&#13;
•WfV tlit^ih 1!$^' Kv ^'&#13;
R.iK&#13;
(¾&#13;
M A ,&#13;
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s&#13;
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y&#13;
1^^,¾^.¾-V • 't.:^fm.i&#13;
I*' 1^&#13;
^.¾¾ ^- •* ••&#13;
^•(,«;«-^fc(^JJ&#13;
*&#13;
•••-^-.-4^:-,&#13;
rv , W '-&lt;*•&#13;
»mmmmmmmmmmmmmW^i^PiffiPW|laTB^^&#13;
' ^ " • " • ' - . . , «&#13;
if- . »*"&#13;
• ' • . i v .,-- +&#13;
', V , ' i t . - ' . ' " - ' , ,&#13;
• ' • &gt; . - , . . 1 « . ' ' . *&#13;
HARRY ORCHARD CONF&#13;
TO CHAIN OF AWFUL CRIMES .i .. . .&#13;
m&gt; i • • i H ^ I I • • • • i • « • • ••—&#13;
,r&#13;
^Slayer of Gov* Steunenberg Takes Stand In&#13;
Haywood Trial and Relates Bloody Tale&#13;
—Alleges Miners' Leaders Were&#13;
Instigators.&#13;
n\&#13;
&lt;&#13;
' w /&#13;
•x -&#13;
J". ^-&#13;
f&gt;'&#13;
St?-&#13;
PH.-"&#13;
I T ' .•;.* •&#13;
SDMsr-&#13;
"J-*-&#13;
VICTIMS MARKED FOR DEATH AT ORCHARD'S HANDS.&#13;
FRED BRADLEY, retired mine official, San Francisco; blown half&#13;
way across street and maimed for life by bomb concealed by Orchard&#13;
under dooratep; also object of poison plot. Motive, revenge.&#13;
SHERMAN BELL, adjutant-general of Colorado national guard,&#13;
Denver; waylaid by Orchard and other assassins who sought his life;&#13;
escaped. Motive, revenge for activity in putting down strike lawlessness.&#13;
JUSTICE GABBERT of Supreme court of Colorado, Denver; bomb&#13;
placed in his pathway exploded by another man, who was blown to&#13;
pieces. Motive, decisions against Moyer.&#13;
GOV. PEA80DY of Colorado, Denver; bomb placed in front of his&#13;
home to kill him by Orchard failed to explode by accident. Motive, u &gt;&#13;
holding law in strikes.&#13;
DAVID MOFFATT, president of First National bank of Deliver;&#13;
Adams and Orchard tracked him with guns, but he escaped. Motivt,&#13;
supposed activity on side of mine owners.&#13;
JUDGE GODDARD, Denver. Motive, declared eight-hour bill unconstitutional.&#13;
FRANK STEUNENBERG, former governor of Idaho; Caldwell.&#13;
Blown to pieces by bomb placed at gate of home by Orchard.&#13;
Boise, Idaho!—Alfred Horsley, alias&#13;
Harry Orchard, the actual assassin of&#13;
Frank Steunenberg, went on the stand&#13;
Wednesday as a witness against William&#13;
D. Haywood, and made public&#13;
confession of a long chain of brutal,&#13;
revolting crimes, done, he said, at the&#13;
Inspiration and for the pay of the&#13;
leaders of the Western Federation of&#13;
Miners*.&#13;
An undertaking by the special prosecutors&#13;
for the state that they would,&#13;
by later proof and connection, legitimatize&#13;
his testimony opened the way&#13;
like a floodgate to the whole diabolical&#13;
story and throughout the entire&#13;
day Orchard went on from crime recital&#13;
to crime recital, each succeeding&#13;
one seemingly more revolting than&#13;
those that had come before.&#13;
Tells of Revolting Crimes.&#13;
Orchard confessed that as a member&#13;
of the mob that wrecked the&#13;
Bunker Hill and Sullivan mili in the&#13;
Coeur d'Alenes he lighted one of the&#13;
fuses that carried fire to the giant&#13;
explosion; confessed that he set the&#13;
death trap in the Vindicator mine at&#13;
Cripple Creek that blew out the lives&#13;
of Superintendent McCormick and&#13;
J f e r e m n Beck; confessed that be-&#13;
&lt;€&amp;tt*e lie had not been paid for his&#13;
stoat attempt at violence in the Vindicator&#13;
Kiine he had been treacherous&#13;
to his associates by warning the man&#13;
agcrs of the Florence &amp; Cripple Creek&#13;
railway that there was a 'plot to&#13;
blow up their trains; confessed that&#13;
he cruelly fired t h w e charges of&#13;
buckshot into the body of Djttective&#13;
Lyte Gregory, of Denver! killing him&#13;
instantly; confessed that for days he&#13;
*UUt«4 Gov. Peabody about Denver,&#13;
W&amp;ltlag a chance to kill him; conl&#13;
e s s i t tkftt he and Steve Adams set&#13;
a a i discharged the mine under the&#13;
ot a t Independence that Instantly&#13;
14 B W , and confessed that, fail-&#13;
Jtag la «9 attempt to poison Fred&#13;
mtsmtf, of Baa Francisco, he blew&#13;
\ l m and Ala hooaa op with a bomb of&#13;
gelatin. —&#13;
And he has more brutal crimes to&#13;
.tell that will bring his bloody career&#13;
down to its end at Caldwell, where&#13;
with a great bomb he killed Gov&#13;
Steunenberg. These will come Thurs&#13;
day, for he is to resume the stand&#13;
when the district court sits a^ain.&#13;
Crowd 8icken«d by Recital.&#13;
The story was told to a tensenerved,&#13;
rigid crowd that watched&#13;
with staring eyes for every move and&#13;
word of the confessing witness; a&#13;
crowd that was sickened and weary&#13;
of its disgusting details lone; before&#13;
James H. Hawley, pleading illness of&#13;
himself at three o'clock in the after&#13;
noon, secured adjournment for the&#13;
day.&#13;
Orchard retained control of himself&#13;
almost from the moment, he look the&#13;
stand, and if he suffered much he did&#13;
not show it. His eyes met those of&#13;
Haywood several times and the two&#13;
gazed fixedly at each oth*r.&#13;
There v&gt;-re a few preliminaries a?&#13;
to Horsley'.- birthplace and real name&#13;
and IIIH firsi days fa the North Idaho&#13;
cessfnl attempt, at the Vindicator mine&#13;
country, and then Hawley led him&#13;
down to the destruction of the Bunker&#13;
H11i and Sullivan mine. Horsley said&#13;
that. W. F. Davis, later the president&#13;
Of the union of the Western Federation&#13;
of Miners at Cripple Creek, had&#13;
- ConiMand of the mob He told of the&#13;
-Seizure of the train, the theft of the&#13;
giant, powder, the attack upon the&#13;
mines, and concluding, said: "J lit&#13;
one en the fuses myself."&#13;
Destruction of Vindicator Mine.&#13;
Horsley then told of his flight into&#13;
Montana and of various journeys in&#13;
the Wfiaiern country until ho turned&#13;
up in Cripple Creek in 1902, went tu&#13;
work ia the mines and Joined the&#13;
Western Federation of Miners asaln.&#13;
The witness told of the plot to blow&#13;
41* the Vindicator mice. He con&#13;
• feaacd that after the strike began he&#13;
t down into the mine "high grading,"&#13;
and there discovered a quantity&#13;
of powder. He reported this to Davis,&#13;
and there, he said, began the plot to&#13;
do violence in the mine. He said the&#13;
first attempt was a failure because&#13;
the cage man discovered him and his&#13;
pal and drew their fire, but later a&#13;
contrivance was successfully fixed by&#13;
which a discharged pistol set off a&#13;
bomb and killed Superintendent Mc-&#13;
Cormick and Foreman Beck. Five&#13;
hundred dollars, he said, was the reward&#13;
for the murderer.&#13;
Then came the journey to Denver,&#13;
where the witness said he met Moyer,&#13;
Haywood and Pettibone and entered&#13;
their employ as assassin. He swore&#13;
that Haywood paid bim'|300 for blowing&#13;
up the Vindicator mine. Next&#13;
came the making of two bombs that&#13;
were tossed into the coal heap at the&#13;
Vindicator mine, but were never&#13;
heard from again, and then a digression&#13;
to confess that before the suche&#13;
had informed the railway management&#13;
of a plot to blow up its trains&#13;
carrying nonunion men. Next the&#13;
prisoner related how he journeyed to&#13;
southern Colorado as a guard to&#13;
Moyer.&#13;
After the noon recess the witness&#13;
told of his journey with Moyer and&#13;
his return to Denver, where it was&#13;
suggested, he said, that he kill Gov.&#13;
Peabody. He said he picked Steve&#13;
Adams to aid him, and together they&#13;
stalked the governor between the capitol&#13;
building and his home, trying for&#13;
a shot at him with cut-off shotguns.&#13;
Next came a plot to dynamite Peabody,&#13;
and Horsley said they made a&#13;
bomb, but gave the plan up at the&#13;
sua^estlon of Haywood, who was in&#13;
fear that they would all be arrested.&#13;
He said he and Adams were told to&#13;
lay off for a time, but meantime Pettibone&#13;
suggested that they kill Lyte&#13;
Gregory, who had been a deputy&#13;
sheriff and had given testimony&#13;
against sorrm of the members of the&#13;
federation&#13;
Orchard Ends Gory Tale.&#13;
Boise, Idaho. —- Harry Orchard&#13;
crowned his admissions of grave&#13;
crimes Thursday when, continuing his&#13;
testimony against William D. Haywood,&#13;
he made an expicitly detailed&#13;
INTERESTING POINTS OF&#13;
ORCHARD'S STORY.&#13;
Haywood told me the blowing&#13;
up of the (Vindicator) mine was&#13;
a-fine piece of work. Moyer&#13;
gave me J200 and Haywood paid,&#13;
me |300 for blowing up the&#13;
mine.&#13;
Haywood and Moyer both told&#13;
me I could not get too fierce to&#13;
suit them—to go ahead and&#13;
blow up everything I could&#13;
think of—to get some of the&#13;
soldiers if possible.&#13;
Moyer and Pettibone wanted&#13;
to know if I could,not work up&#13;
some scheme to assassinate&#13;
Governor Peabody of Colorado.&#13;
Haywood thought Steve&#13;
Adams was the best man for&#13;
the work. Pettibone gave us&#13;
some sawed-off shotguns and&#13;
shells loaded with buckshot.&#13;
We kept after Peabody for three&#13;
weeks, when Haywood told me&#13;
to lay off for awhile.&#13;
Haywood, Pettibone and Simp&#13;
kins then wanted something&#13;
pulled off at Cripple Creek. We&#13;
planned to blow up the Independence&#13;
depot. The depot was&#13;
wrecked and twelve or fourteen&#13;
men killed. The next day Pettibone&#13;
gave me 1300. Adams&#13;
told me he got $200.&#13;
" S I * '&#13;
WON FURLOUGH FOU J t l M S .&#13;
confession of the murder of Frank&#13;
Steunenberg by an infernal machine&#13;
that directly opens the way for his&#13;
own conviction and execution.&#13;
He swore that the assassination of&#13;
Steunenberg was first suggested by&#13;
Haywood, was jointly plotted by Haywood,&#13;
Moyer, Pettibone and himself,&#13;
was financed by Haywood and was executed&#13;
by himself after the failure of&#13;
an attempt in which Jack Slmpkins&#13;
had participated.&#13;
Orchard lifted the total of his own&#13;
murdered victims to IS, and detailed&#13;
the clrcumstauces under which he&#13;
tried to murder former Gov. Peabody,&#13;
Judge Goddard, Judge Gabbert, Gen.&#13;
Sherman Bell, Dave Moffat and Frank&#13;
Heme. Incidentally, he confessed to&#13;
a plan to kidnap the child of one of&#13;
his former associates.&#13;
Under cross-examination by the defense&#13;
Orchard confessed guilt of the&#13;
sordid social crimes of deserting his&#13;
young child and wife in Ontario, fleeing&#13;
to British Columbia with Hattie&#13;
Simpson, the wife of another man, and&#13;
committing bigamy by marrying a&#13;
third woman at Cripple Creek.&#13;
Orchard's Story Unshaken.&#13;
Boise, Idaho.—Counsel for William&#13;
D. Haywood continued their attack on&#13;
the testimony of Harry Orchard at&#13;
both sessions of the trial Friday, and&#13;
centered their strongest assault cm the&#13;
events beginning with the explosion&#13;
in the Vindicator mine and ending&#13;
with the earlier meetings between&#13;
tiie witness and the leaders ot* the&#13;
Federation of Miners iu Denver. To&#13;
tl;»&gt; - xtent. that traffic with "the other&#13;
tide" in the war of labor and capital&#13;
in Colorado was discreditable they&#13;
Hucoeeded in discrediting the witness.&#13;
Orchard stood the tent and strain&#13;
very well and held tenaciously to the&#13;
story he related Wednesday and&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
More crimes, great and small, were&#13;
adf'eri to Orchard's record Friday. The&#13;
Crimle Creek woman with whom he&#13;
committed bigamy, had three sons;&#13;
Orchard stole high-grade ore from a&#13;
m e s ' m a t e ; he stole two cases of powder&#13;
from the Vindicator mine; he&#13;
.4tole powder to make one of the&#13;
t-ombs thrown into the Vindicator coal&#13;
p'.i'\ and he told a lie.&#13;
Artists Appeal That Touched tha&#13;
Heart of Jefferson Davit.&#13;
Humor lightens ererytbLng, a^en&#13;
grim war. Jefferson Davis, with all&#13;
, the weight of a losing cause on his&#13;
shoulders, could yet spare time to appreciate&#13;
and respond to an artless appeal.&#13;
The Incident is related by Oapt.&#13;
Sutherland. Among the numerous1;-pa*&#13;
pers received by the confederate president,&#13;
the following turned up one&#13;
day:&#13;
"Dear Mr. President—I want jfoti .tolet&#13;
Jeems C. of Co. onta, J5{h Bpiith&#13;
Carolina Regiment, come h"ome and&#13;
get married. Jeems is wilMn', but&#13;
Jeems Capt'ln he ain't willin'. Now&#13;
when we all are willin' 'cept Jeems&#13;
Capt'ln, I think you might let up and&#13;
let Jeems come. I'll make him go&#13;
straight back when he's done got married&#13;
and fight hard as ever.&#13;
"Your affectionate friend," and so&#13;
forth.&#13;
Mrs. DaviB, telling the story, adds&#13;
that Mr. Davis wrote his directions in&#13;
regard to the matter on the back of&#13;
the letter. They were:&#13;
"Let Jeems go,"—Youth's Companion.&#13;
Corporations Oust Miners.&#13;
The Klondike proper—that !», that&#13;
portion of the Yukon territory in the&#13;
vicinity of Dawson—as far a s the Individual&#13;
miner is concerned, la on a&#13;
rapid decline owing to the Immense&#13;
area of ground being acquired by&#13;
dredging companies. One company&#13;
alone has purchased nearly all the&#13;
placer ground on t h e three prfneipal&#13;
creeks, namely: Bonanza, Eldorado&#13;
and Hunker, and has bonded considerably&#13;
more on Dominion and other&#13;
creeks for rarious reasons-. Where&#13;
formerly hundreds of minora were&#13;
working for wages or working their&#13;
own ground, thus creating a demand&#13;
for provisions, clothing, machinery,&#13;
hardware, etc., and the transportation&#13;
from Dawson to the different mining&#13;
operations, now dredges are either operating&#13;
or in course of construction.—&#13;
Consular Reports.&#13;
1 .*/. "cTK^'ti&#13;
A N I R V O U a 8 U F F 1 F I E * O U M O&#13;
* . eW B I M f f U L U A M * PINK F l U f t .&#13;
The World's Dairy the Parent of Consumption.&#13;
This iw the argument put forward by&#13;
scientists to-day, and is causing no little&#13;
alarm, because1 practically all the&#13;
leading men who have made the subject&#13;
a careful study and test are united&#13;
on the .statement and agree that a&#13;
great per cent, of all cattle in the V. S.&#13;
have- Bobine Tuberculosis. In Denmark&#13;
50';; of all Cattle are infected.&#13;
Recently The Mutual Mercantile Co.,&#13;
Cleveland, O., have issued a free booklet&#13;
showing bow it is wrong to kill so j&#13;
many thousands of our Dairy Cowt&#13;
when a few cents worth of Rasawa&#13;
purchaseefat any Drug Store will positively&#13;
prevent. Tuberculosis. The claim,&#13;
is made that it is a germicide and renters&#13;
the cow immune. Ask your dealer&#13;
!&gt;r the above company for a free book.&#13;
. Amendment Not Accepted.&#13;
Mrs. Jagaway—I wish l kaew where&#13;
my husband was.&#13;
Mrs. Kawler—Yoit moan, I presume,&#13;
that yoa wlah yoa knew where your&#13;
husband is?&#13;
Mrs. Jagaway—No, r don't. I know&#13;
where he is. He's up In hi* room,&#13;
sleeping off a headache.&#13;
The Maallolne That Makes Rich, * • #&#13;
Moo* and Performs Wonder* as «&#13;
Tofllo fofttb* Msrvaa. -,.-,&#13;
W h y are tterveu people i a r a r i a t f j&#13;
pale people?&#13;
The answer t o that question explain*&#13;
why a remedy that acts on the oloo4&#13;
can oure nervous trouble*.&#13;
I t explains w h y Dr. Williams' Pink&#13;
Pilla for Paie People are alaoXox mnooM&#13;
people.&#13;
I t ia beoanse of the intimate relation&#13;
between the red corpuscles in the blooA&#13;
and the health of t h e nerrea. T h e&#13;
nervous system receives its nourishment&#13;
through t h e blood. Let the blood become&#13;
thin, weak and. colorless and t h e&#13;
nerves are starved—the victim is started&#13;
on the road t h a t leads t o nervous wnsok.&#13;
Nervous people are pale people—but t h e&#13;
pallor comes first Enrich t h e blood&#13;
and t h e nerves are stimulated and toned&#13;
u p t o d o their part of the work of the)&#13;
body. Dr. Williams' P i n k FtUs m a k e&#13;
red blood s a d transform nervous, irritable;&#13;
ailing people into strong, energetic,&#13;
forceful men. and women.&#13;
Mrs. Harriet E . Porter, of 90 Liberty,&#13;
avenue, Booth Medfoxd, Mass., says:&#13;
" I had never been well from child*:&#13;
Iiood a n d » few yeans ago I began t o&#13;
have diazy spells. A t such time*Ieoold&#13;
not w a l k straight. I w a s afraid of&#13;
p u a l y s i a and w a s o n t h o verge of&#13;
nervou* prostration. T h e n neuralgia&#13;
set is* a n a affected the* side of m y face.&#13;
T h e pains i a m v forehead were- espm*&#13;
eiating a n d m y heart pained m e so t h a t •'&#13;
m y doctor feared neusalgftftof the heart.&#13;
1 tried several different k i n d * * i treat -&#13;
ment b u t they did me uaaoodL&#13;
""Que d a y m y sou biougbfcnwsotneof&#13;
Dfc. Williams' Pink Pill* a n d I found&#13;
that" t h e y strengthened m y nerves; t&#13;
took several boxes and! felt better in&#13;
every way. There were n o more* dizzy&#13;
attacks, the neuralgia left me a n d I havebeen&#13;
a well woman ever 'since."'&#13;
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are invaluable&#13;
in anaemia, rheumatism, after-effects of&#13;
the grip and fevers a n d in sick headaches,&#13;
nervousness, neuralgia, and* even&#13;
partial paralysis and locomotor ataxia.&#13;
Our booklet "Nervous Disorders, a&#13;
Method of Home T r e a t m e n t ' ' will be&#13;
sent free on request to anyone interested.&#13;
Write for it today.&#13;
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by&#13;
all druggists, or will be sent, postpaid,&#13;
on receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six&#13;
boxen for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams&#13;
Mediciue Company, Sclienectady, N . Y&#13;
We should do everything we can for&#13;
otherB, if only to dissipate the thought&#13;
of what they o o a t . . . | t 4 ^ . •»*&gt;-*»••• ^ .&#13;
Madame aWeUeias •••...^ zjr^&#13;
ft&#13;
- . • • * • *&#13;
I&#13;
4&#13;
it&#13;
•.,4-»..: *&#13;
LYDIAE.PINKHAM'S&#13;
VEGETABLE&#13;
COMPOUND&#13;
l a acknowledged! to* he tft^raost successful&#13;
remedy in the country for&#13;
those painful ailment3 peculiar to&#13;
women.&#13;
For more than 3f&gt; yeara it has&#13;
been curing Female Complaints,&#13;
auch as Inflammation, and Ulceration,&#13;
Falling- and Displacements,&#13;
and consequent Spinal Weaknens,&#13;
Backache, and ia peculiarly adapted&#13;
to the Change of Life.&#13;
Records show t h a t it has. cured&#13;
more cases of Female 111A t h a n any&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable&#13;
Tumors at nn early stage of development. D r a w i n g Sensations causing&#13;
pain, weight, and headache arc. relieved and peTmanentry«tn»d"by its use.&#13;
I t corrects Irregularities or Painful Fnrwrfcirms. Weakness erf t h e&#13;
Stomach, Indigestion, Wonting, Nerrom* Prostration. Headache, General&#13;
Debility: also. Dizziness, Faintnens. Extreme Lassitude, "Don't care&#13;
andwnnUobeleftftlone" feeling, Irritability. Nerrrrnsness,Sleeplessness,&#13;
Flatulency. Melancholia or the. ;• Blues." t h e s e are sure indication** of&#13;
female, n'eakness or some organic derangement.&#13;
For Kidney Complaints *&gt;f either sex Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound id a most excellent remedy.&#13;
Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women&#13;
Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to&#13;
write Mrs Pinkham. Lynn. Mass. for advice. She is the Mrs. Plnkham&#13;
who has Wen advising siek women free of charge for more than twenty&#13;
p a r s , and before t h a t she assisted h e r mother-in-law Lydia E. Plnkham&#13;
In advising. Thus she is well qualified to guide sick women back to&#13;
health. Her advice is free and always helpful.&#13;
LYDIA E /&#13;
o t h e r om* remedy ktwrwrnw&#13;
Compcmnd dissolves and expels&#13;
t&#13;
."jifci^fc*&#13;
HARRY ORCHARD.&#13;
(Confessed Murdtrcr of Gov. SteunenberQ and Many Others.)&#13;
SELLING&#13;
JA5. IWVS^MJJI* Mfr,&#13;
QUEEN WASHERS&#13;
In ne-w territory ia like*&#13;
scliins? silver dollars at&#13;
ooc. They go slow at&#13;
first. But there's no \&#13;
trouble to prove they ;&#13;
are worth more than&#13;
the price asked for ',&#13;
them. Get introductory [&#13;
plan today.&#13;
TlfTttlfW IfMtt Wtt&gt;l.&#13;
Rsadiaf Pa.&#13;
DAISY FLY £ H *&#13;
i c k d t&#13;
tai«»&#13;
IWtb *i«*fntttl rm* 4 0 t 4 * f&#13;
I&gt; ofo*t dh«T«fncHt dbwt &gt;M»«fMf,&#13;
DEFUME m i M - i l ua •wsPVa^a^^^B^ss***&#13;
•U*tt*tO* i&#13;
—o«b«T M«TOh*S oat* t i M l "Dtr-IARCf I t&#13;
2*\.&#13;
iri^Mtfs^!;'-,'",-;&#13;
V3 REFORM&#13;
CLEAN* « t f W ( ^ A * X U I I I U * A T i * N a&#13;
OF YEARS,&#13;
«&#13;
J | ( r - ^ •, v ^&#13;
II,)"&#13;
FA&#13;
• ; # * s .&#13;
f""&#13;
• • ' ' *&#13;
• , . ' ' .&#13;
•1 «v *.#v;&#13;
1 - ' ^ . . . '..&#13;
• * • *&#13;
: ; . r ' :&#13;
Reaches t h t Maturi Age Whan Ht&#13;
JJm&lt;*» Away Os*d Matter end&#13;
H Ready to Begin Ufa *&#13;
Again.&#13;
* m beginning to throw away&#13;
.wild Mr, FUttinpy; "going&#13;
.my paper*, ami tWngi and&#13;
things away.&#13;
among them newspaper cllput&#13;
things that I would never&#13;
have thought of again but for this&#13;
reminder, and some things I have&#13;
forgotten so completely that even the&#13;
sight of the clippings does not recall&#13;
to me why I cut them out and saved&#13;
t h e m ; BO important, really, a r e many&#13;
of t h e things about which we bother&#13;
ourselves or which at some time we&#13;
found of interest.&#13;
" t h e r e are letters from men long&#13;
since dead, and old bills that recall&#13;
forgotten perlodB of our life, that now&#13;
seem strange to us, we live so much&#13;
in t h e present. And why keep these&#13;
old receipts? The men that gave them&#13;
are dead now or moved away and&#13;
these accounts will never be Bent in&#13;
again, and if they were they have&#13;
long since been outlawed by the lapse&#13;
of time. Throw them away.&#13;
. "Here a r e old birthday cards, with&#13;
pretty, with, affectionate, with loving&#13;
greetings; bringing most pleasant&#13;
memories, though they do remind us&#13;
of t h e years that have gone since first&#13;
they came to us. And why should we&#13;
preserve (hem? We can remember,&#13;
we can cherish those who sent them,&#13;
without them to remind us, and they&#13;
would only be there with the old papers&#13;
in the drawer. To t h e basket&#13;
gently with them.&#13;
"And here, as I live, are some old&#13;
valentines! Well, well. This does&#13;
make us young again. But dear, dear;&#13;
that was long ago. Why should we&#13;
keep them longer? To the basket,&#13;
gently. We have the valentine herself&#13;
now.&#13;
"There are so many things that we&#13;
put away to save, to treasure, life&#13;
seems to stretch interminably before&#13;
us when we are young, and we are&#13;
going to keep these things always.&#13;
And it takes us, happily, a long, long&#13;
Base bo get to where we can see&#13;
Ihl Sigtuilot nf t i l n I Youth en-&#13;
" W l $ | J f " Vwtajrancy and&#13;
*$fHB*Mm M*» seem a joy&#13;
that It t * # ) wfc1Mpv*t7&gt;**4 In sturdy&#13;
middle age, indeed, we toko HtUo account&#13;
of the years, but tfeen&lt; c o n s *&#13;
a time when we begin to reaHeo that&#13;
two and two make four and no more.&#13;
"Now I kavn arrtoed at that time&#13;
of life when I begin to know. Don't&#13;
for heaven's sake think that I am taking&#13;
a mournful T*fw. F a r from it,&#13;
"Life never seamed to me so full&#13;
of joy a s now, and I'm good for a&#13;
good long stretch of it yet, with&#13;
senses keen and, understanding broadening,&#13;
finding enjoyment in everything;&#13;
and taking this broader view&#13;
of things, no^t occupied too much by&#13;
detail, this stored up accumulation of&#13;
long gathering truck seems superfluous&#13;
and useless, and so I'm just going&#13;
through it and throwing things away.&#13;
""This lot that I've been goins&#13;
JkfQftgh to-day is just atnff that has&#13;
accumulated In the cubby holes in my&#13;
desk; but I've got boxes and bundles&#13;
of such stuff stored away, and 1&#13;
must get it out, a box or bundle at&#13;
a time and g o through it, and throw&#13;
it away. !9§T ot what use Will it ever&#13;
be to anylfcdy? VVrrtft becomes of&#13;
this sort, of stuff, anyway, when people—&#13;
er-r—-I mean why shouldn't I&#13;
sort this stuff out now myself, and not&#13;
leave it to cumber things up for somebody&#13;
else to .throw away?&#13;
•t, 1UT PERFECTLY WELL.&#13;
'V-'W^uy&#13;
• # • . ' . - • ' • ;&#13;
; * * &amp; • « •Vl"&#13;
• V"" ''&#13;
.'«SW&#13;
' H 1&#13;
The Happy Experience of n N«w Castle,&#13;
Pa* Woman.&#13;
Mrs. John Mans ell, 614 So. Jefferson&#13;
8L,N«w Castle, Pa,, says: "For years&#13;
I was running down&#13;
with kidney trouble&#13;
without knowing&#13;
what it was,&#13;
and finally got so&#13;
bad I was given up.&#13;
The urinary passages&#13;
were painful,&#13;
sometimes scanty&#13;
and again very profuse.&#13;
My limbs, feet and ankles bloated&#13;
dreadfully, * and sometimes my&#13;
whole body. My heart palpitated and&#13;
I had smothering spells. A week's&#13;
treatment with Doan's Kidney Pills&#13;
helped m e and a few boxea cured me.&#13;
At 68 I am Btrong and well."&#13;
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.&#13;
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
PAT 8ET ONLY ONE LIMIT.&#13;
Would Quit When He Was Done With&#13;
All Things Earthly.&#13;
CHOICE OF TWO EVILS.&#13;
Request That Was by No Mean* jt»&#13;
Compliment for Papa.&#13;
A rich man out In the suburbs who&#13;
owns a large place has among the&#13;
many people employed to keep it in&#13;
shape an Irishman of whom he is particularly&#13;
fond on account of his unconscious&#13;
wit, says Harper's Weekly.&#13;
This Irishman 1B something of a hard&#13;
drinker, and, as his income is limited,&#13;
he Is more particular as regards the&#13;
quantity than t h e quality of his&#13;
liquids. The other day the employer,&#13;
who had been awaiting a good opportunity,&#13;
remarked in a kind tone, as&#13;
the closing sentence of a friendly lecture:&#13;
"Now, Pat, how long do you think&#13;
you can keep on drinking this cheap&#13;
whiskey?"&#13;
To which Pat Instantly replied:&#13;
"All my life, if it doesn't kill me."&#13;
The Human Shield.&#13;
The advent of Decoration day caused&#13;
Admiral Dewey, at a recent dinner,&#13;
to praise the bravery of the American&#13;
troops during the civil war.&#13;
"Both sides alike were brave," he&#13;
said. "North and south, soldiers and&#13;
sailors. And the bravery of the raw&#13;
recruit was a thing to be seen to be&#13;
believed.&#13;
"There used to be circulated,&#13;
though, a good story about a Connecticut&#13;
recruit. This young man, after he&#13;
had gotten initiated, fought heroically;&#13;
but in his first engagement he was&#13;
very nervous.&#13;
"A chum of his was in the line&#13;
ahead of him, and when the bullets&#13;
began to fly, the chum began to dogde.&#13;
"Thereupon the recruit shouted excitedly:&#13;
" 'Hey, Jim, don't duck. I'm behind&#13;
ye.' "_&#13;
Senator Morgan a Model.&#13;
Senator .John T. Morgan, of Ma&#13;
bama, occasionally writes magazine&#13;
articles which involve a great dent of&#13;
research, but. he uniformly refuses t&lt;&#13;
accept pay for them. In the course&#13;
of his career many railroad pas^e:-&#13;
have been offered him, but he never&#13;
accepted any either for himself or any&#13;
* * • :&#13;
A New York scientist, the father of&#13;
a large and growing family, b a t his&#13;
troubles. One evening his youngest&#13;
was holding forth in her best style.&#13;
The mother could do nothing with t h e&#13;
child, so t h e m a n of science went to&#13;
the rescue.&#13;
T think I can quiet little Floja," he&#13;
said. "There's no use humming to her&#13;
In that silly way. What she wants Is&#13;
real music. T h e fact that 1 used to&#13;
sing in the Glee club at Yale and sang&#13;
well, too, may make a difference."&#13;
Accordingly, the professor took the&#13;
child and, striding up and down the&#13;
room, sang in his best manner. He&#13;
had not finished the second verse of&#13;
his song, when a ring was heard. The&#13;
door waB opened, and there'stood a&#13;
girl of 14, who said:&#13;
"I'm one of the family that's jifst&#13;
moved into the flat next to yours.&#13;
There's a sick person with us, and he&#13;
says, if it's all the same to ycra, would&#13;
you mind letting the baby cry 'nstead&#13;
of singing to it?"—Success.&#13;
ECZEMA COVERED BABY.&#13;
5 « «•»*• fife.*&#13;
Wax.&#13;
pressive cere*&#13;
esldeni Diaz was presented&#13;
mrHtary painting portraying&#13;
action of hfs command In the battle&#13;
of Puebla against t h e French&#13;
forces in the war of the Invasion.&#13;
The painting, which was the work of&#13;
the artist Francisco de P. Mendooa, a&#13;
professor in the national school of fine&#13;
arts and of the military college, was&#13;
executed at t h e request of the governors&#13;
of 12 Mexican states, an&lt; was&#13;
presented as a personal gift tc the&#13;
chief magistrate. The painting represents&#13;
Gen. Diaz in action in the glorious&#13;
battle which won fame for the&#13;
Mexican forces, and a t t h e moment&#13;
when the forces under the direct&#13;
command of Gen. Diaz saved the day.&#13;
—Mexican Herald.&#13;
Worst Case Doctors Ever Saw—Suffered&#13;
Untold Misery—Perfect&#13;
Cure by Cuticura Remedies.&#13;
"My son, who is now twenty-two&#13;
years of age, when four monjths old&#13;
began to have eczema on his face,&#13;
spreading- quite rapidly until he was&#13;
nearly covered. T h e eczema was something&#13;
terrible, and t h e doctors said it&#13;
was the worst case they ever saw. At&#13;
times his whole body and face were&#13;
covered, all but his feet. I used many&#13;
kinds of patent medicines, to no avail.&#13;
A friend teased me to try Cuticura.&#13;
At last I decided to try Cuticura when&#13;
my boy was three years and four&#13;
months old, having had eczema all that&#13;
time and suffering untold misery. I&#13;
began to use all three of the Cuticura&#13;
Remedies. He was better in two&#13;
months; in six months he was well.&#13;
Mrs. R. L. Risleyr Piermont, N. H.,&#13;
Oct. 21, 1905."'&#13;
Wants t h e Rod Restored.&#13;
The Shanghai Times editor says:&#13;
The jail has been well administered,&#13;
but is fuller than it should be, due, I&#13;
fear, to the abolition of the cangue&#13;
and bamboo. The ordinary criminal&#13;
has no great objection to repeated&#13;
shgrt visits to the jail, but shrldks&#13;
from a repetition of corporal punishment.&#13;
Punishment with the bamboo&#13;
is in vogue throughout China, and&#13;
here only has it by special edict been&#13;
abolished. We deprecate the Chinese&#13;
authorities making this settlement a&#13;
tield for experiment, and will p r e s s&#13;
for the relntroductioa of this- salutary&#13;
method of pusMEfttst&#13;
. i.» ii « n —mm+mmm. n i&#13;
Haw*§ TktflF&#13;
tbeare nOs af •t•e•eS*f e••t• nMotf ltben« Bcuartendr fb yfo Hr ariarsj Can.&#13;
T. J. CHENEY 4 CO., Toledo, O.&#13;
W«. (ft* tmdertlcned, have known ¥. J. Cheney&#13;
for tfce Uat 15 rears, and tellers lilm perfectly BODormbla&#13;
tn «11 LuiiueM traosactions and financially&#13;
able to carry out any obligations made, by his firm.&#13;
W i u x x o , KINJTAX &amp; MAKVIX,&#13;
Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O.&#13;
Hall's Catarrh Cur* Is taken Internally, acting&#13;
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the&#13;
system. Testimonials eent free. Price 75 cent* per&#13;
bottle. Sold by all Druggtiu.&#13;
Take Hall's Family rills for constlpaUoa&#13;
FARMS THAT SHOW&#13;
" NO. I HARD " WHEAT&#13;
(Sixty-three Pounds tothe&#13;
Bushel). Arc situated&#13;
in the Canadian&#13;
West where Home*&#13;
steeds of 160 acres cambe&#13;
obtained free by&#13;
ererjr settler willing,&#13;
and able to comply&#13;
with the Homestead&#13;
Kesrolatioas. During&#13;
the present year a large portion of&#13;
New Wheat Growing Territory&#13;
HAS BEEN MADE ACCESSIBLE TO MAR*&#13;
KKTS BY THK RAILWAY CONSTRUCTION&#13;
that has been pushed forward so rigorously by&#13;
the three great railway companies.&#13;
For literature aud particulars address SUPERINTENDENT&#13;
OP IMMIGRATION, Ottawa,&#13;
Canada, or the following authorised Canadiaik&#13;
Government Agent :&#13;
M. V. MdNNES, 6 Areas* Tkeetre BUck, Detroit,&#13;
Mkkifaa; or C. A. LAURIER, SaaJt Ste.&#13;
Marie, Micaigaa.&#13;
Mention this paper.&#13;
We Cure Piles&#13;
AMD TRUST TO YQDR HONOR&#13;
T O P A T WMM TO* A*Z CORED*&#13;
The Business Instinct.&#13;
_. . . _ _.taa&#13;
_ awas^FAamJsMMnssfLVClfT&#13;
OB. eXn* own dbcos ery, a secret process kaown&#13;
ounelves. No hazardous ope tali on. knife, or ct&#13;
uses. Maay baa' cases cored in oast psittlett treatskratand&#13;
lew esses requite more than two weeJu (or a cossptsis&#13;
cure.&#13;
A Tew MtchitsH References)&#13;
F. C Rhesbottom, Union City; Mrs. A. L. Hurrell.&#13;
OWOTU; Mr. Geo. W. Ruprifkt, S. Frankfort; Albert C&#13;
Bats*, Beazooia; S. S. Aldrica, R. R. 17, Beltfina; atlas&#13;
Mae Foglesen. St. Lods; Geoize Starter, Sparu; ft- G.&#13;
Pierce, Alma; Richard Martini, Sebewaio*; Mrs. W. X.&#13;
Porr, Albion; A. J. Bradford, Baldwin.&#13;
Write a full description of your case as you understand&#13;
It and we will tell you just what we can do for you and&#13;
ihecsit. Remember nothing paid until cured. We have&#13;
treated over 4,000 cases without a sincte failure.&#13;
Our free booklet explains our treatment fully and con-&#13;
Made for Fat Men.&#13;
One of the narrow arches In the&#13;
gallery of the chapel at Columbia university&#13;
is not exactly symmetrical, although&#13;
the defect is not noticeable to&#13;
the casual observer, says the New&#13;
York Globe. The reason for the wid&#13;
ening of the arch after its original construction&#13;
had rise in a somewhat&#13;
humorous occurrence. One of the&#13;
early visitors was a remarkably fat&#13;
man, who found himself wedged into&#13;
the arch when he tried to squeeze&#13;
through and was extricated with difficulty.&#13;
The builders, recognizing the&#13;
possibility of other fat people being&#13;
numbered among the future visitors,&#13;
decided to widen the arch, sacrificing&#13;
symmetry and harmony to practical&#13;
A p a r t y Of t o u r i s t s Were Visiting t h e i tains tie names and addresses of people near you who&#13;
. , , _, , * T - I , J j we would gladly have yoo see or write for references,&#13;
ancient landmarks of England, according&#13;
to a writer in t h e New Orleans&#13;
Times-Democrat, and their guide was&#13;
supplying them with valuable historic&#13;
facts.&#13;
"This tower," he remarked, "goes&#13;
back to William the Conqueror."&#13;
"Why, what's the matter?" Inquired&#13;
one of his listeners. "Isn't It satisfactory?"&#13;
Drs. BURLESON &amp; BURLESON&#13;
RECTAL SPECIALISTS&#13;
1 0 3 Monroe S t , Grand Rapids, MtchisJ:&#13;
SICK HEADACHE ^ ' . r t i ]&#13;
It Cures While You Walk.&#13;
Allen's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for&#13;
licit, sweating, callous, and swollen, aching&#13;
fret. Sold by all Druggists. Price 2.5c. Don't&#13;
accept anv nubstitute. Trial package FREE.&#13;
Addreea Allen S. Olmsted, Ix; Roy, X. V.&#13;
• • - - - • - j&#13;
The problem of life is to make the&#13;
Ideal real and convert the divine at&#13;
the summit of the mountain Into the&#13;
human at its base.—Charles H. Parkhurst.&#13;
Krause's Cold Cure.&#13;
For cold in head, throat, chest or back.&#13;
PosiUrelr eared M r&#13;
these) Little P i l l s *&#13;
TiiPTa^orelieroDsSl&#13;
tress from Dyspepsia* Zav*&#13;
digestion and Too Hoaxer&#13;
Eatlxig. A perfect woe-;&#13;
ed y for Dtolness. Kaona,&#13;
Prowslness, Bod Taste&#13;
in the Mouth. Coated ~&#13;
aiLLWL mum.mum*fr. \ ?fo&amp;&#13;
need, as the pier was so constructed j J*p*t remedy for I^uOnppc. Druggists, 25c.&#13;
as to bear no loss of width on one of&#13;
its sides.&#13;
Australia to Have Own Navy.&#13;
It is stated officially in London that&#13;
the government has acceded to the&#13;
wish of A ustralia to rescind her annual&#13;
contribution of $1,000,000 to-&#13;
"There may U&gt;&#13;
surd, Usetir j cam&#13;
' &lt; &amp; : « &amp; - * ' •&#13;
"things, to be&#13;
Ke, things that&#13;
to keep, and&#13;
but as to&#13;
'why,. It's just so&#13;
HHtcft TllrSlftrtUg useless baggage, and&#13;
this I'll throw away, and with the&#13;
decks cleared start life anew."&#13;
&amp; •&#13;
Beaten.&#13;
An old Irishman who kept, a fruit&#13;
itall had some watermelons given to&#13;
him by a friendly dealer and exposed&#13;
them for sale among his other goods.&#13;
A smart American student who was&#13;
DOWiaf tfcl Emerald isle,.wishing to&#13;
•l$tf Isti WW TO t h e old man, took up&#13;
jffimM list melons and said:&#13;
4,,.$toB0 -aire small apples you grow&#13;
over here, my friend. In America we&#13;
have them at least twice the size."&#13;
The Irishman slowly removed the&#13;
pipe he w a s smoking from between&#13;
his lips, and coolly surveyed the speaker&#13;
from head to foot for a second or&#13;
two. Then, in a tone of mingled pity&#13;
staas ngK&gt;&amp;cfrti$ etfcTkimed:&#13;
sorr, you must be a stranger&#13;
, and know very little about&#13;
av;p^F oa&gt;unthry, whin yem&#13;
»pptes from gooseberries!"&#13;
—Chums. 5 " *&#13;
World's Largest Frop.&#13;
The largest fcog-toBow .taUd Urf t e&#13;
the new R&amp;nftf golfath, from the Camer-&#13;
•lapis, with a hjessi and body measuring&#13;
less thao ten Inches. HULerto the&#13;
it fcnfWrji has been a specie*- UTtat&#13;
Solomon Hand*&#13;
Wonderful Engineering Work.&#13;
The admirable accuracy of the work&#13;
ot civil engineers of the best class Is&#13;
shown In the wonderfully slight deviation&#13;
of the great Sim"plon tunnel from&#13;
the calculations of the men who&#13;
planned it and executed the work.&#13;
The tunnel is 12½ miles long. It.&#13;
proved 31 inches longer than it was&#13;
expected to be. When the two head*&#13;
Ings came together in the depths of&#13;
the mountain their levels were less&#13;
than 3¼ inches apart.&#13;
AN O L D EDITOR&#13;
asia. The commonwealth will maintain&#13;
its own navy.&#13;
member of his family. Though over i ward a naval squadron for Austral-&#13;
80 years old, he thinks nothing of&#13;
working half the night. The sena&#13;
tor never haunts the departments&#13;
looking for jobs for constituents. Of&#13;
moderate means when he entered the&#13;
senate, he is now a poor man, having&#13;
little or nothing hut. his salary.&#13;
Glass minors were known In A. D&#13;
23, but the art of making them was&#13;
lost and not recovered until 1300 In&#13;
Venice.&#13;
Mr*. WUtilcm'B Koothlos; S y m p .&#13;
For children teething, softens the gums, reduces la-&#13;
(lamination, allays pain, cures wind colic. 2Sca bottle.&#13;
All men are equal—till they arc&#13;
found o u t&#13;
Gemma Must Bear&#13;
Fac-Simila Signature&#13;
* &lt; u - &gt; : •••-...»&#13;
. L . ' l *&#13;
REFUSE SU1STITUTES.&#13;
l| fOi AU A (a'nIaG H*poun{isph« Wl uiU NnodlFdiKfrEs.K toOid Soidlaf&#13;
AddrrssA. W.liiffin, Koll.OkUk.&#13;
t aSllctedwItb&#13;
•ore eye*, U N 1 Ttonpson's Eye Water&#13;
0EF1ANCE STARCH •£•« t. * « * wim iUrckM dothea »1&lt;&#13;
W. N. U., DETROIT, JKVT*,&#13;
till&#13;
Found $2000 Worth of Food.&#13;
The editor of a paper out in Okla.,&#13;
said: "Yes, it is true when I got hold&#13;
of Grape-Nuts food, it was worth&#13;
more than a $2000 doctor bill to me,&#13;
for it made me a well man. \ have&#13;
gained 25 pounds in weight, my&#13;
strength has returned tenfold, my&#13;
brain power has been given hack to&#13;
me, and that is an absolute essential,&#13;
for I am an editor and have been for&#13;
35 years.&#13;
"My pen shall always be ready to&#13;
speak a good word for this powerful&#13;
nutritive food. I had of course often&#13;
toad, the advertisements regarding&#13;
Grape-Nuts, but never thought to apply&#13;
the food to my own use, until, in&#13;
my extremity and sickness the thought&#13;
came to me that it might fit my case.&#13;
The statements in regard to the food&#13;
are absolutely correct, a s I have proven&#13;
in my own case. One very fortunate&#13;
thing about the food is that, while it is&#13;
the most, scientifically made and highly&#13;
nourishing, concentrated food I have&#13;
ever known, it h a s so delicious a taste&#13;
that It wins and holds friends."&#13;
"Thero's a Reason." Read. ?The Road&#13;
to WeJlville," in pk*&amp; -* V&#13;
9OODROP&#13;
ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT.&#13;
simtlaii^iJKr^fajfjRp^&#13;
ting UK StomadB andBoweLstf&#13;
iftomotes&#13;
DigretfonJChttrr*&#13;
ness and ffe&amp;CoiMsneter&#13;
OpiitnuMorprune nor&gt;faeraL&#13;
N O T NARCOTIC.&#13;
JtepeefOMBtSBtBXnnBR&#13;
JUrftfiafr-&#13;
?%&amp;**.&#13;
"«sMa&lt;«MeaaeasBj)aj SJBBBBBBSJSJ&#13;
Apcrftct ftmedy forCoreflat-&#13;
Hon, Swiir StonKft.D!arrtwa&#13;
WoriTtsjComTilsiBTisJRfwndr&#13;
ness andLoss O F SLEEP.&#13;
TteSfc* S$**mt ef&#13;
The Kind You Have Always Bought* and which has been&#13;
In use for over 3 0 years, has borne the signature of&#13;
and has been made under his personal&#13;
supervision since its infancy*.&#13;
Allow no one to deceive yon in this*&#13;
AH Counterfeits, Imitations and" Just-as-good"are but&#13;
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of&#13;
Infants ang. Children—Experience against Experiment*&#13;
What is CASTOR IA&#13;
Castoria is a harmless snbstitnte for Castor Oil, Paregoric,&#13;
Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It&#13;
contains neither Opium* Morphine nor other Narcotic&#13;
substance* Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms&#13;
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind&#13;
Colic* It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation&#13;
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the&#13;
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep*&#13;
The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend*&#13;
&amp;&#13;
4** .¾1&#13;
' * S ^&#13;
• * . « T |&#13;
GENUINE CASTOR IA Atwav*&#13;
Bears the Signature of&#13;
Exact Copy of Wrapper.&#13;
Tie Kind Yon Have Always Bought&#13;
In Use For Over 3 0 Years&#13;
TMK ecirrauR oeaiHNT, rr M U M U V t r a t n . SJCWTOS&#13;
• * * •&#13;
.-¾•*. v*£&#13;
Sail ii&#13;
&lt;• .-ft'.' w:&amp;m *'*•: '••?f . * . . .&#13;
«•??&#13;
V.;&#13;
' , , ^ '&#13;
*&amp;"'&#13;
£«$*&#13;
• &gt; * *&#13;
flit-&#13;
• in »i iy&#13;
i l l fiwknejj Jbpatch&#13;
F. L ANDREWS A CO. PROPRIETO&#13;
T H U R S D A Y , J U N E 18, 1907.&#13;
We are told that milk coutaining&#13;
more than one-half million of&#13;
bacteria to trie gallon is not safe.&#13;
Well, w# should say nut, unless&#13;
bacteria in milk, like microbes in&#13;
cheese, are necessary to excellence.&#13;
Jackson Cha&#13;
&amp;r&#13;
m *3*&#13;
• »!• I III I —« &gt; » M I • ' &lt; » &gt; !&#13;
ttenmrkable Rescue.&#13;
The troth is ..banger than fiction,&#13;
has once more been demonstrated in&#13;
the little to\vn of Fedora, Tenn , die&#13;
reaidTeocH of C" V, Pepper He writes*:&#13;
"I was in bed, entirely disabled with&#13;
hemorrhages of tire lun^s and t h r o a t .&#13;
Doctors failed to help me, and all hope&#13;
had tied when I began, taking Dr.&#13;
JCin«'s New Discovery. Tben instant&#13;
relief came. The cousrhint? soon&#13;
ceased; the b l a d i n g diminished rapidly,&#13;
and in t t r e e weeks i was able to&#13;
iK to .vork." Guarant ed cure lor&#13;
coughs and colds. 50o. and $1. at b\&#13;
&amp;. tiller's D r u g star*,. Trial bottls&#13;
tm^ '" . ...&#13;
- Only • ahort time ago the Thaw&#13;
trial in New York drew the eyes&#13;
of the world that way and kept&#13;
the newspaper" reporters busy.&#13;
Now there is fully as great a trial&#13;
going on at Boise, Idaho, and the&#13;
world is looking that way aud will&#13;
for some time to come.&#13;
The Magic No. 3.&#13;
Number three is a wonderful mascot&#13;
for Geo H. 1'arris, of Cedar Grove,&#13;
Me., accord.nu, to a letter which reads:&#13;
•*Atfer suffering much with liver and&#13;
kidney trouble, and becoming greatly&#13;
discouraged by the failure to rind relief,&#13;
I tiied Elejt.ic Bitters, and as a&#13;
result 1 am a we.H man to-day. The&#13;
Erst bottle relieved and three bottles&#13;
completed the cure.1' Guaranteed&#13;
best on earth lor stomach, liver and&#13;
kidney troubles, by F. A. JSigler,&#13;
Druggist. 50c.&#13;
It looks as if Rev Dr. Long,&#13;
the Nature writer, may keep on&#13;
insisting on furthur remirlt*&#13;
from Mr. Roosevelt until he&#13;
brings down on himself something&#13;
like that letter to the Labor&#13;
delegation. Mr. Roosevelt takes&#13;
plenty of time in which to make&#13;
his replies but when he does they&#13;
are usually all that was asked for.&#13;
However, Mr. Long is a literary&#13;
Dot ft political jarae.&#13;
II BO caff of f\idigestion, no&#13;
matter how irritable or how obstinate&#13;
tbat will not be speedily releived by&#13;
the use of Kodol. The main fac&#13;
tor in curing the stomach of any dis&#13;
order is re??, and the only way to get&#13;
rest is. to actually .digest the food lor&#13;
the stomach itself. Kodol will do it.&#13;
U i i a scientiric preparation of vegetarfteids&#13;
containg'the very same juicfottnd&#13;
in a healthy stomach. It&#13;
ton forms to the P u r e Food and Drugs&#13;
Law.&#13;
Sold by F . A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
wm&#13;
Excellent provision has been made&#13;
at the State Fair for dining halls and&#13;
-lunch booths right near the main&#13;
buildings, where the many thousands&#13;
may And ample facilities for luncheon.&#13;
Two large and airy dining&#13;
halls provided by the society will ho&#13;
Operated by experienced parties who&#13;
have leased the buildings. Several&#13;
religious orders will maintain restaur-&#13;
'ants, so if M i l be on the whole inconvenient&#13;
and unnecessary for visitors&#13;
to bring their lunches with them.&#13;
m&#13;
..if ';•'&#13;
a-&#13;
The Agricultural college will present&#13;
an interesting exhibit showing&#13;
the different methods of packing ap-&#13;
.frle-.v and pears. This demonstration&#13;
Will pro-^K helpful an4-instructive, to&#13;
many Michigan farmers and fruit&#13;
growers.&#13;
A. Fortunate Texan.&#13;
Mr. E. VV. Goodloe. of 107 St. Louis&#13;
Bt„ Dallas. Tex. says': ' I n the past&#13;
year I have become acquainted with&#13;
Dr. King's New Life Pills, and no lax&#13;
ative I ever before triad so effectually&#13;
disposes of malaria and billinusness/&#13;
They do-aft grind or gripe. 25c. at,&#13;
P . A.-Sffller'a drug store.&#13;
Jackson is to bave a&#13;
Assembly '.his season, .luue 27 to J^$p&#13;
7, and it ( r o u n d s to be a big a A i r&#13;
and on* uf u n u s u a l interest to peop e&#13;
in this section. The program is one&#13;
of exceptional strength and is certainly&#13;
one of the bent ever pre&gt;enttd by&#13;
any Assembly. It is well balanced,&#13;
instruction and entertainment bbiug&#13;
s'j arranged as to produce a most&#13;
harmouious effect. It is broad in its&#13;
scope, embracing science, histoiy, literature,&#13;
nit music and popular events&#13;
and live questions of the day. Interspersed&#13;
throughout the program are&#13;
features of entertainment of an especially&#13;
high character that furnish a&#13;
delightful relaxation and an agreeable&#13;
res.pite from the heavier numbers. It&#13;
would be difficult to pick out any one&#13;
day as being superior to all the rest.&#13;
There is nut a dull moment; the program&#13;
is continuous from 9:80 a . m .&#13;
until 10:00 p. ru. There is realy not a&#13;
feature on the program that anyone&#13;
can afford to miss.&#13;
The talent includes many persons&#13;
of national and international reputation.&#13;
Amouy tue most prominent&#13;
speakers, educators and entertainers&#13;
oa tbe pro/:!am a r e : J u d g e Brown ot&#13;
tbe Juvenile court of Salt Lake City,&#13;
8 l i t e r Dolliver of Iowa, Sen Tillman&#13;
of South Carolina, F r . L. J . Vaugban,&#13;
Mrs. Florence May brick, Dr, Wm. A.&#13;
l/olled^e, Gibeon Carl, c h a r a c t e r ^ ;&#13;
Charles Pierce B u r t o n , Rounds' Ladies'&#13;
Orchestra, the Harmonia Ladies'&#13;
Quartet, D r . Benjamin F. Aldrich(&#13;
Belle and Waiter Squire, Mrs. Eleanor&#13;
Bingham, lectures on a r t ; Dr.&#13;
Stanley L. Kerbs, psycholgyist; Ralph&#13;
Bingham, humorist; aianison C. Peters,&#13;
Herbert Leon Cope, humorous&#13;
lecturer; Dixie Colored Jubilee Singers&#13;
with plantaiion melodies and oldtime&#13;
jubilee songs, Rev. Fred V.&#13;
Hawley, I). M. Hazlett, stereoptican&#13;
lecturer and Miss Eda McCollister&#13;
with her Seton Indian Games tor boys&#13;
and girls.&#13;
There are many ^ther splendid attractions&#13;
and the wonder is how so&#13;
much as the Jack-on Chautauque offers&#13;
can be furnished for so little cost&#13;
to patrons.&#13;
Season tickets lor adults, which per&#13;
mits the owner to go in and out of the&#13;
grounds at will any time during he&#13;
session of eleven days, may he had, if&#13;
Purchased prior to the opening day, at&#13;
$1 50 each for aUults and 75 cents for&#13;
•children, Later, season tickets will&#13;
cost. $2.00 for adults and |1.00 for&#13;
children. Single adrr.ission tickets&#13;
are 25 cents for adults and 15 cents tor&#13;
children eight, to fouiteen. Children&#13;
under eight free. Season tickets may&#13;
be reserved by mail or telephone.&#13;
July 4th "s to be made a special&#13;
patriotic day and celebrated in a man&#13;
ner entirely different than the usual&#13;
custom.&#13;
Secial ratps will be made on tlu&#13;
raihoads, with an extra special raie&#13;
for parties of ten or more and a grand&#13;
special rate for J u l y 4, The auent&#13;
&gt;hould be consulted fcr particulars&#13;
A very neat little booklet containing&#13;
the program, complete, and detailed&#13;
information has been issued by&#13;
the management, which may be had&#13;
l.y addressing C h a u t a u q u a "Assembly,&#13;
Jackson, Michigan.&#13;
When ynu feel thf&gt; need of a. pill&#13;
take a DeWitts Little early Risei,&#13;
Small pill, sale pill, sure pill. Easy&#13;
t o take—p'easant a n d effective.&#13;
Drives away headaches. •&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler Drugtfat&#13;
G R A N D&#13;
T R U N K&#13;
R a M w a y&#13;
S y s t e m '&#13;
E X C U R S I O N S&#13;
to&#13;
N o r f o l k , V i r g i n i a .&#13;
D a i l y up to Nov. 3 0&#13;
VARIOUS ROUTES&#13;
S A R A T O G A S P R I N G S . N. Yrlulv&#13;
3. 4, 5. n, and 7 - Knights Templar.&#13;
L O S ANGBL.ES, C A L .&#13;
.-bine 10 to 14 - - National .Hed. /Vss'n,&#13;
(ioimjone r o u t e , returning another&#13;
P H I L . A D E L . P H I A , PA&#13;
13, 14. 15 and iwi v hi - - R. P. (&gt;. 1:.&#13;
l u l y&#13;
B O S T O N . M A S S&#13;
27 and 29 •&#13;
Week.&#13;
N [;• Old Home&#13;
Special inducements in low round trip&#13;
r a t e s to the West, and Nor thwe'st.&#13;
Wound trip S u m m e r Tourist t i c k e t s to&#13;
Principal Canadian and New Cngland&#13;
points on sale -aily a f t e r J u n e 1st-&#13;
Return limit* &lt; ictober 31s'.&#13;
Liberal stop-overs.&#13;
Ku'l &gt;r&lt;t otfr.&lt;&#13;
MICHIGAN STATE FAIR&#13;
I * J » Held iH Detroit Aog. 2* to S:pt. 4&#13;
MM ADDED 10 PREMIUMS&#13;
Determined Effort to Make It the Best&#13;
Ever Held in Michigan and in Many&#13;
Respects Superior to the Great Toronto&#13;
Exposition.&#13;
Visitors to the State Fair, held under&#13;
the auspices of the Michigan&#13;
State Agricultural -society at Detroit,&#13;
August 29 to fc- jptember 6, will witness&#13;
an Industrial exhibition that will&#13;
surpass In many respects the famous&#13;
Toronto exposition. As a matter of&#13;
fact both iu attendance, the value of&#13;
the exhibits, and the premium* offered,&#13;
the State Kuir has grown into an&#13;
annual exposition that has attained&#13;
no little fame far beyond the boundaries&#13;
of the -state.&#13;
One of the most Important factors&#13;
that has entered into the upbuilding&#13;
of the fair is the perfect harmony&#13;
existing between the officers of the&#13;
Agricultural society. President Fred&#13;
Postal, former senator, A. J. Doherty,&#13;
Secretary I. H. Butterfleld, Treasurer&#13;
Johu MoKay, and Business Manager&#13;
Chas. A. Floyd, have worked early&#13;
and late for the success of the 1907&#13;
exhibition, and the wonderful improvements&#13;
made in the buildings, grounds,&#13;
transportation facilities, premium&#13;
lists, and extra attractions are mute&#13;
i testimonials to their efforts.. The experience&#13;
Mr. Doherty gained as chairman&#13;
of the finance committee last&#13;
year has proved Invaluable to him as&#13;
general superintendent. He knows&#13;
! the fair's shortcomings and has&#13;
I evolved plans that will overcome&#13;
I them as rapidly as possible..&#13;
j It has been determined to add. $10,-&#13;
I 000 of the appropriation made by the&#13;
state legislature to aid the fair to&#13;
the premium lists. This will make&#13;
the awards given exhibitors by far&#13;
the most liberal in the history of the&#13;
state. In addition new classes have&#13;
been added In the cattle, horse, sheep,&#13;
and swine departments. Secretary&#13;
Butterfleld will begin the work of&#13;
mailing the premium lists to farmers,&#13;
stock growers, and former exhibitors&#13;
•about June 1.&#13;
An improvement this year that will&#13;
appeal to every exhibitor Is the adding&#13;
of three sidetracks to the railroad&#13;
facilities within the grounds. Negotiations&#13;
are now on with the Grand&#13;
Trunk railroad for the installation of&#13;
the new sidings, and the Improvement&#13;
will almost triple the capacity of the&#13;
fair yards.&#13;
The fair of 190(5 was handicapped&#13;
to a meat extent through several&#13;
buildings being completed only a day&#13;
or two before the gates were opened.&#13;
In many instances unfinished sidewalks,&#13;
and rough interiors greeted&#13;
the visitor, but this has all been&#13;
changed nnd the grounds undergone&#13;
a complete transformation. Under&#13;
the direction of L. R. Taft, of the&#13;
Michigan Agricultural college, a laudscape&#13;
gardener has laid out new&#13;
walks, and arranged to turn the north&#13;
end of the grounds into a rest spot.&#13;
Heretofore it lias been used by the&#13;
horsemen and contained turnuie down&#13;
shacks. The beautifying of this spot&#13;
will remove the only unsightly feature&#13;
on the many acres devoted to&#13;
State Fair pu.'poses. By mid-summer&#13;
a superb collection of shrubs will be&#13;
at their best while lawns that were&#13;
seeded a year ago will be covered&#13;
with a carpet of heavy grass.&#13;
"Something doing every minute,"&#13;
has been the motto of Business Manager&#13;
Floyd in arranging the attractions&#13;
to bo seen from the grand stand&#13;
at night and between races during&#13;
the afternoon program. Mr. Floyd&#13;
has contracted for almost every form&#13;
of entertainment known to the amusement&#13;
world, and also for several special&#13;
features that have never been seeii&#13;
outside of New York and Chicago. His&#13;
program as arranged Includes: High&#13;
living, deep sea diving, gymnastic&#13;
work on aparatus, tumbling, tight&#13;
rope walking, trained animals, exciting&#13;
cowboy races, and wild west&#13;
aoenes. He Is at present endeavoring&#13;
to arrange for a genuine western village&#13;
to be shown on the grounds. If&#13;
he Is successful in completing arrangements&#13;
tiny Indian papooses can&#13;
be seen as they stare unblinkingly&#13;
from the narrow framework strapped&#13;
to their mother's back. War dances&#13;
will be given in full Indian regalia&#13;
ivery afternoon and evening, and&#13;
among the relics of the old western&#13;
flays shown will he a stage coach&#13;
that has been riddled with bullets&#13;
time and again while crossing the&#13;
plains. A special feature will he made&#13;
3f the Indian museum, lecturers being&#13;
present to explain the history and&#13;
ligniflcance of every article shown.&#13;
Every visitor will be interested in&#13;
the ostrich farm. Between liu and&#13;
SO birds will be shown, in addition to&#13;
&gt;vp.r a score of "chicks" that are far&#13;
arger than a good-sized hen. The dev&#13;
i l s of ostrich farming will be gone&#13;
;nto thoroughly while a collection of&#13;
Ttagnificent. feathers will be on exhibition.&#13;
Several of the mammoth birds&#13;
aave been trained to draw sulkies and&#13;
will he seen upon the race track.&#13;
The fair management has determined&#13;
that no criticism oan be made&#13;
this year of the various entertainments&#13;
granted the privileges of the&#13;
fair grounds. Every show must he&#13;
absolutely moral in tone, and fulfill&#13;
every representation of what is to be&#13;
leen inside the tents.&#13;
Dairymen who vls't the state fair&#13;
tvlll have an opportunity of seeing a&#13;
milking machine in actual operation.&#13;
Gov. Warner is the owner of the only&#13;
milking machine in the state In addition&#13;
to the ono that will be shown at&#13;
&amp;e faif. They a r e mechanical ccn&#13;
trtvancei that show the constant ef&#13;
fort Inventors are making to reduce&#13;
the o u t of production In the dairy and&#13;
butter buBlnesB.&#13;
The educational department of the&#13;
fair la under the personal supervision&#13;
of George B. Horton, of Fruit Ridge,&#13;
president of the Michigan State&#13;
Grange. Mr. Horton has placed a&#13;
large share of t h e detail work in the&#13;
bauds of Thomas M. Sattler, superintendent&#13;
of the Jackson county schools.&#13;
The work has become one of Mr. Battler's&#13;
hobbies, and in a letter to President&#13;
Postal he recently declared,&#13;
•that he would fill every inch of exlIMtion&#13;
space allowed him."&#13;
Liberal prizes will be given for th&lt;&#13;
beet examples of graded school work&#13;
Specimens will be shown embracing&#13;
what is accomplished throughout tht&#13;
state by classes in manual training&#13;
forestry, domestic science, drawing&#13;
clay modeling and painting. Mrs&#13;
Belle F. Clark, of Denton, will havt&#13;
active charge of the needlework de&#13;
partment, and has already asked thai&#13;
she be allowed twice the amount ol&#13;
space given to the needlework exhibition&#13;
la^'t year.&#13;
C. A. Tyler, of Nottawa, secretarytreasurer&#13;
of the American Hampshire&#13;
Sheep Association, and also secretary&#13;
of the State Livestock Sanitary Com&#13;
mission, will again superintend the&#13;
exhibit of cattle. In furtherance oi&#13;
the determination of the state fair officials&#13;
to increase the premiums palu&#13;
to Michigan bred cattle from time to&#13;
time, the "home bred" classes will be&#13;
treated with unusual liberality this&#13;
year. A class has been added foi&#13;
Ayrshire cattle, and a special prize&#13;
will be offered for dairy short horns.&#13;
The American Short Horn Breeders'&#13;
Association prize of $200 will be increased&#13;
to $400 by the society. This&#13;
amount will be given in addition to&#13;
the regular premiums offered for&#13;
American short horns.&#13;
The special dairy prize or $100 given&#13;
last year for economical dairy production&#13;
will be continued this year. This&#13;
prize is open to all breeds. Tests will&#13;
be made for three days by the State&#13;
Dairy and Food Department based on&#13;
cost per unit of the total product.&#13;
The horse department has been&#13;
greatly improved. The classifications&#13;
have been enlarged covering standard&#13;
bred, coach and saddle horses. A new&#13;
class has been added for the American&#13;
coach horse while the Clydesdale&#13;
and Englishshlre horses have been&#13;
placed in separate classes. A champion&#13;
oup will be offered for the best&#13;
stallion shown with a colt of his get.&#13;
This department Is in charge of L. C.&#13;
Holden, of Sault Ste. Marie. Mr. Holden&#13;
Is the owner of a large stock farm&#13;
situated In Chippewa county, and is&#13;
known to every horse breeder in Michigan.&#13;
The largest premiums in the history&#13;
of the fair will be offered this year&#13;
for Michigan bred sheep. The classification&#13;
ami the number of breeds represented&#13;
will be larger than those&#13;
shown at any fair In the United States.&#13;
W. K. Boyden, of Bay City, who will supervise&#13;
this department, is an experienced&#13;
sbeep breeder and is known&#13;
personally to every stockman in the&#13;
lower peninsula.&#13;
Rep. W. J. Galbraith, of Calumet,&#13;
has "been gradually adding to the mineral&#13;
collection that will be shown at&#13;
the fair this year. Not only will&#13;
every metal that is taken from the&#13;
ground in Michigan be displayed, both&#13;
in its natural and manufactured state.&#13;
but the method of mining, the machin&#13;
ery used, and the history of the mining&#13;
discoveries will also be gone into.&#13;
The mineral collection will be featured&#13;
in a way that will be of the&#13;
greatest value as an educational fartor&#13;
Tn the poultry department, Supevi'itendant&#13;
Daniel Thomas, of Pontine.&#13;
has prepared good lists and liberal&#13;
premiums. A, 11. (Griffith, of Detroif,&#13;
director or the Detroit Museum of&#13;
Art, who will superintend the art. exhibit,&#13;
has arranged for an elaborate&#13;
display of costly pnininys. In the&#13;
fruit and flower ilararra'.ont many premiums&#13;
h :ve '• •&gt;. / '&lt;• '. Pe&gt;i. 1,. w .&#13;
Snell, « | . a i g h b t t d Park, l a * *t*t«4&#13;
t h a t tha dairy exhibit, ol wkkfe hav&#13;
will have chart*, will he one of tha&#13;
moat c o m p e t e a r e r saan l a Mtofelsaft..&#13;
8oma idea of t h e growftaf ( M M of&#13;
the State Fair oven beyond the confines&#13;
of the state can ha gained by&#13;
the fact that Secretary Butterfleld&#13;
haa received over 50 applications&#13;
from Implement dealers all over t h e&#13;
country for space to display their&#13;
wares. Hardware dealers and mariu-&#13;
1 facturers throughout the state have&#13;
. awakened to the opportunity offered&#13;
by the State Fair for the-exhibltlon&#13;
' ot their wares, and It is thought that&#13;
the booths in the Industrial building&#13;
this year will be both numerous aud&#13;
costly.&#13;
While the fair will be closed oa&#13;
Sundays this year, it will be open&#13;
every night. The gates will swing for&#13;
visitors the first thing every morning&#13;
and will not be locked until the last .&#13;
visitor has wended his way home-&#13;
I ward.&#13;
1 The executive committee of the&#13;
Michigan Agricultural society an •&#13;
nounces that all entries must be made&#13;
in the various classes before the fol-&#13;
; lowing dates:&#13;
All live stock entries close on Augi&#13;
ust 2'2.&#13;
i All spied entries close on August 22.&#13;
Entries in fruits and flowers close&#13;
• August 30.&#13;
! In all other divisions on August 28.&#13;
f i&#13;
\ A prompt, pleasant, good remedy&#13;
for coughs aud colds, is Kennedy's&#13;
LaxativeCouarb S y r u p . I H s E s p e c i a l -&#13;
ly recommended fo»* babies and children,&#13;
hut poor] for p*VHty member* of&#13;
the laiuilv. It contains no opiates&#13;
and does not constipate. Contains&#13;
honey and tar and tastes nearly as&#13;
good as rnapel syrup. Children like&#13;
V -:•:•'&#13;
it.&#13;
Sold by F . A. Sigler, Draggi**L&#13;
No 8eoret.&#13;
"Well, well:' exclaimed Mlaa Paesay,&#13;
"so she's twenty-five today. 1 gueea It&#13;
would surprise her if I should tell her&#13;
I was the same age."&#13;
"Oh, uo," replied Miss Knox; "ahe&#13;
knows that, of course."&#13;
"She knows that I'm twenty-five'"&#13;
! "No: that you were."—Philadelphia&#13;
. Press.&#13;
Diligence lncreaseth the fruit of toll.&#13;
A dilatory man wrestles with loaaee.—&#13;
j H e 8 l o d * .. *«•«-£• f l •&#13;
, H e F l r e d t h f t M ) * ' ' - ^&#13;
" I have fired the w a I siafHtfirf^T***&#13;
earned over 40 years, on account of a&#13;
.-ore that resisted every kind of treat-&#13;
| inent, uttMl 1 tried Bucklen's Arnica&#13;
; Salve; that bas healed the sore and&#13;
made me a happy man," writes J o h n&#13;
Garrett, ol North Mills, N. C. Guaranteed&#13;
far Piles, Hums, etc., by F. A .&#13;
Siller, druugiht. 25c.&#13;
&gt;&lt;F*&#13;
A Fighting State.&#13;
\Vhene\e.- y-&gt;! .(iTiiiHi Kansas history&#13;
you I'.n.l ;\ ligln. No territory'of&#13;
equal -a/.e has bad so much war over&#13;
so many different muses. Her story In&#13;
Indian lighting, gambler fighting, outlaw&#13;
lighting, town she lighting and political&#13;
lighting is not approached by&#13;
any olher port inn of tho west.—Outing&#13;
Magazine.&#13;
For scratches, burns*, cuts, insect&#13;
lutes and the many little hurts common&#13;
to every l u n i l v , DeWitr'- Carjlmlized&#13;
Witch Hazel Salve is the best&#13;
remedy. It is so^thintf, rno'int?, clean&#13;
i HI d healing. Me sure to pet f)eWitts,&#13;
-'old by F. A. Sigler, D r u m * .&#13;
[I-ArWAH " W &gt;M»K U0TMK&#13;
I ' d ' Rt-I&gt;&lt;il&gt;l&lt; t t M l i . m&#13;
B L O O D pi m m R&#13;
Instant relief to sufferers of&#13;
# mm tor MEN.&#13;
WOMEN and&#13;
Rheumatism, Kidney Trouble,&#13;
Stomach Disorders.&#13;
Got a bottle to-day/ Is purely a vegetable compound. Mild&#13;
in effect but one the most effectual remedies known for restoring&#13;
the entire system. It is derived from natu-e, not&#13;
compound ofdrujp and chemicals that only allay the -pain,&#13;
but cures to stay cured after all so-called "scientific" treatments&#13;
have failed.&#13;
For sale by druggists. Send for circulara. Address,&#13;
INDIAN MEDICINE CO., Milford. Ohio.&#13;
i*** i&#13;
\&#13;
~i&amp;i;h^.h&#13;
More Money for Eggs under most any conditions. There is a lot of money to be made&#13;
in the rtrjr business if conditions are right. There is no reason&#13;
why F a r m e r s and P o u l t r y Kalserashould not mnk.-justas good&#13;
profits on their investments as any other line of business, and it is&#13;
possible for them to do so. The price of egga during the winter&#13;
, months is double and sometimes more than double that paid&#13;
during the summer months. The only way to take advantage of this advance is&#13;
to hold summer eggs for winter prices. That fresh eggs can be kept from six to&#13;
nine months or more has been proven by careful testing with&#13;
HACEI-TS ECC PRESERVATIVE&#13;
and anyone using this Preservative need never sell a dozen eggs for anything but&#13;
the h.ghest market price. Set, J for Sample and Circulars ttlting you all about it&#13;
HACER ECC PRESERVINC CO.,&#13;
• i ii ' i St. Louis, Mo.,&#13;
. - • * *&#13;
-• s:--.&#13;
* 1&#13;
•V *&#13;
riltlop *pur y.uor j*tft Ire*. To&#13;
•bow yob trsfc—ifhat tny Pink Pain&#13;
Tablets can du. [ wiiI mail yuo free,&#13;
a Trial Packag« 0} tbatov»Dr. 8 hoop's&#13;
Headache Tablets. Neuralgia, Headache,&#13;
Toothache, Period \&lt;&amp; ns, eti:.,&#13;
art due alone to. blood coogeotion.&#13;
'•"":&gt;?;^:^^1-. bboop'B Headache Tablbtb simply&#13;
P ^ i ^ l l pain by coaxing awny the uiv&#13;
ituial olood jae^suie, That is all.&#13;
d d r b SM Ur. Shoop, Itarine,&#13;
jold by AIL Dealers&#13;
-*tf*^&#13;
:*?R" * V -&#13;
*^v&#13;
^*&lt;"'&#13;
. - ^&#13;
* • • •&#13;
' • ' • ' v j ^ * : ' . **,&#13;
be Cor UM Pfeekuj Diepatcta.&#13;
newt for 11.00 per year.&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
Sawing Qut a Segment.&#13;
This rule Is given by the Woodworker&#13;
for sawing out a segment—a&#13;
piece straight on om&gt; edge and curved&#13;
uu the other. Suppose the segment in&#13;
to be 4S in hes loiij; and 4 Inches wide&#13;
at the cenii'u! or widest place. Square&#13;
one-liiilf the length (.24 inches), which&#13;
.Ivem r,7&lt;&gt;: sniture the whltta (4 inches),&#13;
\\ liKli ;,i\c; Hi; mid .rj7G untl Hi, obluiuiii.-&#13;
."i!J2; -M.Me :-:&gt;- by iwi&lt; • the width&#13;
I , . . ! Si. i k h i-,ives 71 i'lfhes, the&#13;
radius, 'i '-: rote will iipi'ly to any&#13;
VVIx.i Sttvjnson Was Poor.&#13;
H'jlu'ii !. nis SleveiiKun was in poor&#13;
ruvuinslniu i s in San, Fianeiseo before&#13;
lie ujuiie his Idl with tlie wnrM. Uur&#13;
iuj4 the time that he usi'd In loaf, penniless,&#13;
upon the lawn where afterward&#13;
they put up a bronze and marble slat J«&#13;
to him, he'picked up a few quarters&#13;
acting as super In the old California&#13;
theater. In Hush street.&#13;
Free, for Uatarrbl jaat to pr&#13;
merit, a Trial size Box of Dr.&#13;
Catarrh Remedy. Let me seja|&#13;
now. it is a snow white, c&#13;
healing, antiseptic balm. CoatainJBK&#13;
such l eaiing ingredients as Oil&#13;
EucaliptUb, Tbymol, Menthol, etc., u&#13;
.4¾ " V p* H&#13;
•ft&#13;
you tree, to prove merit,&#13;
mt Dr. Sbcpp's Beatoraand&#13;
my Book on either Dyspaia.&#13;
the Heart or ibe Kidneys.&#13;
Troubles of the Stomaeb, Heart or&#13;
Kidneys, are merely symptoms of a&#13;
deeper ailment. Don't make the corn-&#13;
Here Is a ivti rt which « "dntt atif&#13;
dent" otico uuuli•: I»iv&gt;fe;j.-K&gt;r—Yon&#13;
to be very dgll. When A^xander. t h e&#13;
Great w a s your age. he litid already&#13;
conquered the world. Student—Well,&#13;
fva see, h e bad Aristotle for a taa«a*».&#13;
• C l a m b e r s ' Journal.&#13;
gives inbtant a n d laetiutf relief to mon error of treating tymptotns o n l y .&#13;
raw&lt; i,;rm ; . , i . a o . i ' u r c . o ••• - f . • •&gt; &lt; -:i ianl TT-I-L1 I cport. |&#13;
11(1 inc&#13;
•i'i' r c j&#13;
lb iLUkrku., I&#13;
M o o "J ft r.ra A* nr&gt;r. •&#13;
ii-awd.;:'). ;,,i,&gt;;.t.iuri-.ii •&#13;
F r e e HUOIV, how to ynua.1 l i . t ' u t s , tun,&#13;
copyright*, e t c , ) N A L L C O U N T R I E S .&#13;
J?jt»i«&lt;"..s- direct ivitk Washington savus timt^&#13;
money and often the put cut.&#13;
Piteirt ind'lnf ringemertt Practice ExclutWuly.&#13;
Write or come to ua at e n nata strwi, vn VUXUA S M « HIM» WU«,&#13;
WASHINGTON. D. C. GASNOW&#13;
l \ l e s y e t quick and L'urtaia l i l i e l&#13;
troin Dr. Shoou's Magic Ointment.&#13;
Please note it is made alone for Piles,&#13;
and its action is positive and reitain.&#13;
PcbiiiK, painful, protruding or blind&#13;
[)i.fs disappear like mapic by its use.&#13;
Liitifcje niukle-capped glass jar 50cents&#13;
Sold by All Dealers.&#13;
Catarrh of t h e nose and throat.&#13;
Make the tree test and see for your- j&#13;
hell what this preparation can and&#13;
will accomplish A d d r e s s Dr. Sboop&#13;
Uacme, W i s . L a r g e jat'o 50 itsuts&#13;
Special prizes have been offered&#13;
during ihe l a s t five years for ex-&#13;
Whits of grains, fruits and vegetables&#13;
from the upper peninsula.&#13;
When first offered they m e t with little&#13;
response bui the exhibit has grown&#13;
to be one of the largest and most Important&#13;
seen at the fair. The Upper&#13;
Peninsula Agricultural college will&#13;
: be represented this year with a com-&#13;
I plete display of agricultural products.&#13;
i The exhibit will be in charge of Prof&#13;
j Leo M. Ceismar, Chatham, Mioii., w h o&#13;
' is the secretary.&#13;
Rheumatism I h.re found m tried « * ^ c u r e t o I t t a *&#13;
tomtom I Not a remedy that wffl ™g**£*&#13;
S y m p t o m treatment is treating the&#13;
result not the cause. Weak Jatoujach&#13;
nerves—the inside n e r v e s — m e a n Stomach&#13;
weakness:, a l w a y s . A n d the&#13;
Heart and A i d n e y s as well, have th*i&#13;
controlling or inside nerves&#13;
B , , , , i In Germany—witn a w » m » m"** ^ • • ' . s ;&#13;
t h e . e nervts, and y o u mevjlably hava rj^nnstadj-l iou«l the \**t ^ ¾ ^&#13;
ii L o which Dr. 8hoop'»Rheumatic Itemed* w»*,™*»&#13;
weak vital organs. Here is where Dr. ^ r f e c t e d . dependable prescription..J*"^»&#13;
thit bust injrredient, 1 succeaafully treated "-"••&#13;
Weaken this deplorable disease. .&#13;
- - 7ith a Chemitt in the City pt&#13;
All the news tor 11.00 per year.&#13;
bboop's R e s t o n t i v e h a s made its fame.&#13;
N o o t e r remedy e v e n claims to treat&#13;
the "inside n e r v e s ' . Also for bloati&#13;
n g , biliousoesa, bad breath or complexion,&#13;
use Dr. Sboop's Restorative.&#13;
Write me today for sample and lree&#13;
Book. Dr. iShoo:j, Racine, Wis. The&#13;
R e s t o n t i v e is sold by All Dealers.&#13;
- $ •&#13;
All tfca a e w a tor | X M p«r year.&#13;
Subscribe for t h e Plncknejr Dispatch&#13;
^i^H tfw&#13;
imi£} m&#13;
m: W: ^«ft«ffi s*s&#13;
xxxx&#13;
ICofFeel&#13;
Ghums&#13;
•r^ip&#13;
! i ^&#13;
5¾¾¾&#13;
^ » 5&#13;
feSSV; w. ",«S m '.-f.V tas&#13;
;%"/-;&#13;
:S*&#13;
F R A N K U . A M O R l W t «V C O&#13;
dtbacrtpttoa Prtee f t in Aitaaaa&#13;
^ a t a t M a t i a « r © « t a i i l c e a t P i n c k a e y , M i c b t ^ b :&#13;
uu deiA&gt;uU-ciaan m a t t e r&#13;
AdvurcieiuK rutea m a d e k n o w n u u Hpplkatiui..&#13;
iM&amp;i ^¾W¾ fr&#13;
rntsu CLEAN&#13;
¥&#13;
A&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach&#13;
No appetite, loss of strength,&#13;
ness, headache, constipation, bad&#13;
general debility, sour risings, and&#13;
of the stomach are ail due to lndlgeelleav&#13;
Kodol relieves Indigestion. This newdlsoo»&gt;&#13;
•ry represents the natural Juices of dlgea&gt;&#13;
tion as they exist in s healthy stoinaeib&#13;
oombtned with tho greatest known tones&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol for&#13;
dyspepsia does not only relieve indlgeatiea&#13;
W .; -wepsla. but this famous remee&gt;&#13;
? T d y T " ' * m c w doubles by cleanaiaf,&#13;
helps all stoflfreir- .Jr &lt;t^ ^rengthentaf&#13;
MTifying, sweetening and *. ^ m s c h . s i U B B r t io n . wnereaociuxeiaipeciiied.aiinuticcc&#13;
tte muCOUS memoranes lining the an... [ pl t t iu beiuBerted until udered discontinued, »u&#13;
Mr. &amp; S. BaU, of FUTenswood, W. Va.. sayat—&#13;
** I « u troubled with aour stomach for twenty years.&#13;
Kodol cured me and we are now using tt 1a mm&#13;
for baby."&#13;
Kodol Digests W h a t Y o n E a t&#13;
many caae» i» auBum.w«». ~—-riili. u^^t^J^rm&#13;
lormly cures all curable &lt;*»» of tWa hewtotore&#13;
much dreaded disease. P g ^ J K ^ ^ i S S S S&#13;
wastes, found in Bhiwn»tic Blood teem * o * 2 » 2&#13;
S d W away uno'eTthe actio/.^of **™"f*£&#13;
freely as does suirar when added t o p a w wsasr.&#13;
And then, when di«tolved. these PO*"**00* ™ f l&#13;
freely pass from the system, and the cause of&#13;
S e u U t l a m is gone ^ 0 ^ ¾ ^ ¾ ^ ^ . ^ ¾&#13;
real need-no actual excuse t o / J * » l o **e ' ^ ¾&#13;
out help. We &amp;eU. and to ponfldenffs recomuwafl&#13;
Dr. Shootfs&#13;
Rheumatic Remedy&#13;
i "ALL DEALERS."&#13;
Buaiuttos Curdia, $4.00 p e r y e a r .&#13;
T e n t h a n d m a r r i a g e uoticeB puDlietiea t r e e .&#13;
A u n u u n c e u i e u t a u t e n t e r t a i n m e n t s m a y be ;.ai&#13;
tor, it d t s i r t d , oy t&gt;r s e a t i n g t h e uilice with t i c t&#13;
e t e of adruJBBiun. i u c a s e t i c k e t s a r e c u t i r u u u t&#13;
to tUeoiiiLe, r e g u l a r rateB w i l l b e c a a r j / t d.&#13;
A l l m a t t e r i u local n o t i c e c o l u m n w i i i o e c h .rt&lt;&#13;
cd a t 5 c e n t s p e r line u r f r a c t i o n t n e r e o t , t o . em i.&#13;
&gt;u*e&#13;
•ottles only. Relieves indigestion, sour&#13;
belchlnc of gas, etc.&#13;
Prepared by E. O. DeWITT &amp; OO., OHIOAOO.&#13;
Sold by F. A. SIgler, Druggiat.&#13;
i - „ P i ^ i a r g e d f o r a i ; - o r d l o g l y . . i 3 # ~ A l l c h a n n e l&#13;
l wiii bfl*. " • B n t s ML'ST r e a c h t h i s office a e e a r l j&#13;
j o t a d r e r t i B e ^ v e l j i . ~ *.o i n e u r e a n i n a e r i i ' n tb.-&#13;
: as T U E S U A I m u r m u r - ^ i r a i n&#13;
| bame w e e k . " ^ •'&#13;
• l i k i n * . '&#13;
Health and Wealth,&#13;
I n s u r e d h o a l t h t o t h e&#13;
great weaitav DltJQH&#13;
"AFTERilN&#13;
INSURES HEALTH. TRY IT. ,&#13;
IS PURELY VEGETABLE,&#13;
m u M c n W O and waa used by the DociJUnlNi'JfV^&#13;
tor for twenty years in&#13;
active practice, and is&#13;
conceded by all having |&#13;
used it to be the best&#13;
Little Stomach Pill&#13;
on the market. It is a&#13;
PREVENTATIVE of&#13;
S i c k H e a d a c h e ,&#13;
D y s p e p s i a , Dizzin&#13;
e s s , H e a r t b u r n ,&#13;
B a d T a s t e in&#13;
M o u t h , C o a t e d&#13;
or&#13;
fTER-DuNNEf&#13;
PILL&#13;
2 5 Cerf&#13;
^kuliiiflt) \A n2M&#13;
rftei no u&#13;
,-jxmmw r. s'., __&#13;
i auitu.iuua • aW&#13;
E r e c t i o n s&#13;
Good Coffee&#13;
Reasonable A M%»^~»&#13;
McLaughlin's X X X X comes to you in&#13;
clean, sanitary packages; always fresh and&#13;
sweet. Each package contains one full&#13;
pound of coffee,and it's a good, satisfactory&#13;
drink every time, for it is always the same.&#13;
In fact, it can be called the Standard&#13;
Coffee.&#13;
Do not confuse X X X X with inferior&#13;
coffees put up in packages.&#13;
McLaughlin's XXXX Coffee is Sold by&#13;
STATE of MicmuAS; Tin' PrnbiiU" Ootirt for I h e&#13;
C o u m y of L i v i n g s t o n . AT a s^ssi'iu iM' a a i d&#13;
court, l.i'ld :it the p r o l u t e nit'ic.) in t h e vilhi^e of&#13;
Howell, in said county, on the eih il;iy i&gt;f J u n e&#13;
\ n li&lt;07. lVeneut, .1 rtluir A, Montague, Jaiiu'e&#13;
of Prohate. I n t n e mutter of the estate of&#13;
K n u . u i L. S M I T H , deceased&#13;
Sihip M S m i t h having tiled in said court I'.is&#13;
jii'tit ion ]ir;iyinL' t!i;it ;i certain iii^trninent in writinL'.&#13;
juirjMirting to l&gt;e the hint will aufl testament&#13;
of said dfceasrd, imw on file i a Hiiid court h e&#13;
adiunted to iirohatp. an 1 that the artniiniptration&#13;
of said estate be granted to Klorii .T. Smith or to&#13;
some other mutable person&#13;
It is- o r d e r e d , that t h e 51 h day of J u l y&#13;
A. I), lilflV, attf»n o'clock in the forenoon, at said&#13;
[ I'rohate Office, he and is hereby a p p o i n t e d for&#13;
\ hearing paid petition;&#13;
A n i it is further ordered that ])ublic mdicp&#13;
thereof be [,'ivcn by publication of a copy oi t h i s&#13;
order for % emeeessivo weeks previoue to said day&#13;
of hefirinK, in i h e P i t i e k n e y P I S I ' A I ' C H , a u e w s -&#13;
I'aper, p r i n t e d and circulated in said county&#13;
A m u r K A, M O S T A I . I ' K ,&#13;
t L'7 JudL'e of I'rohate&#13;
I n a l i i t B UrancheB, a bpecialty. We h a i r e ^ r e u 'vU^&#13;
and t h e latest btyleB oi I ' y p e , e t c . , which enaul 7 , . -&#13;
ua io execute ail kindB of work, aucn as B o o k c V r A L ^ u - J&#13;
Bill H e a d i , &gt; o n • W: ] nt^s* I / »3 a n c&#13;
on Bills, e t c . , I L : e W , . " •. J c o ?&#13;
n o t i c e . P n c e t a i ; P * l &lt; l » ^ / » 4&#13;
***^_ ^wwriJT&#13;
PainpletB, Peters, Prograuiuiea,&#13;
Heads, sitateinentb, Cardu, Aucti&#13;
s u p e r i o r Btyles, upon t h e shortest&#13;
low as good w o r k c a n be n o n e .&#13;
ALL B I L L S P A Y A B L E KIHHT O F EVKHY MU.NIH.&#13;
THE VILLAGF DIRECTORY&#13;
J diues&#13;
W . A. N;&#13;
VlLLAGitL OFFICERS.&#13;
1'HEsiuKNl .1. ('. Dunn&#13;
I'utsTtiiiB - . i • l i e p i e , Ld. l ' a r n u n i .&#13;
l o i i h , JameB Kocue.&#13;
.\o:. ('. V. VauWiuKle.&#13;
C L K H K llo^er C a r r&#13;
THKARL'IIIIII l. A. l a d w e l l&#13;
As.»t»sou .), W'.Murta&#13;
' , n a t , r i o M M i &gt; M O M : i i M. Lave/&#13;
( i u i . i i i u r i ' i u : i &gt; ur. 11. r'. v-&gt;ii&lt;ler&#13;
A I T O K N i.'i ;V . A. Carr&#13;
M A R S H A L L \ ..,!-, j . , d e r t&#13;
l ) t J 0 H N S O N i T o n g u e , t o s s&#13;
1 A p p e t i t e&#13;
a n d a l l o t h e r m o r l t t&#13;
c o n d i t i o n s a r i s i n g tH&#13;
d i s o r d e r e d s t o m a c h *&#13;
J i T I O N&#13;
PREVfcTl. '^^e. as it Is&#13;
is the order of this d»7 and ^rrl^S^nre'this&#13;
:-jore scientific to prevent a du —^icyGGIST&#13;
t;ou than to cure i.. You can «e*r«p f _&#13;
LITTLE PILL of ANY FIRST-CLASS Dho^\ir^&#13;
who will be pleaded to serve yon, 86 dose;.,. *-?&#13;
J5 cents. Don't Like some other "just a^&#13;
g^ood" for there i^n't any other that will&#13;
please you at all after trying this One.&#13;
L. L. J O H N S O N , M . D. P r o p .&#13;
A t l a n t a , G e o r g i a .&#13;
' # » ' #&lt;•&#13;
•^&#13;
VILKLEtS MJUMiTM&#13;
Stock Fiiitiil PAY8 FOR ITSELF THE FIRST YEAft.&#13;
&lt; J * •&#13;
M&lt;ir(}rairc Sal«'&#13;
W IIKKKA9 l i e f a n l r h a s b e e n m a d e in t h e c o n d i -&#13;
t i o n * of a c e r t a i n m o r t p a ^ ' . i , w h e r e b y t h e p o w e r&#13;
M&#13;
wl-IURCHLb.&#13;
J t r i l U O L V i ' C L I S I ' U I ' A I , L U l U l l i&#13;
of sale therein has become operative, m a d e by&#13;
Sunday l u e i a u i } ; at 10:,:1), a u u every &gt;ljm..i.)&#13;
e\eiuu&gt;, ;ii I Luiu'cuikii, t'r») er m e e l j u i 1 u u : t&#13;
J a y uU'iiUii^B. D.uioay s c h o o l at clode ot 11101:1&#13;
d i s s e r v i c e . . \ L I S S . M A K \ \ ' A N 1-LKK.T, s u p i .&#13;
/ ' O . M . I t ^ i . V n O A A u c ' t l L ' i i O U .&#13;
*&lt;.' Kev. Cr.W, . n y l u e p a a t o : . . - e i \ u . "\v&#13;
."&gt;uuuay m o r u l a s i t U):;io ;m.&#13;
evening at '&lt; :uij o ' c l o c k . P r a j e r u i e e i m&#13;
-y day e v e n i n y a . .-juaday s c h o o l ;»i ; lose •&#13;
i n g s e r v i c e .&#13;
1 eeplu Sec.&#13;
Percy Swartliou: •upi..&#13;
. 1 i.&#13;
lot&#13;
&lt; T . .MAUI" S&#13;
O Uev. SI. J.&#13;
W. I&#13;
Vr. W. Bnriuir a&#13;
U &gt;f Willi^toii aV Oo&#13;
mnc; ASITISGQOI&#13;
1ILKKV T H 1 1 : B O L T and his wife C A R O L I N E&#13;
T HIl'.HOL l\ of Deei'tiold, Livingston r o u n t y ,&#13;
Michigan, to NMLSOX LAM15 of tho SKIIIC place&#13;
aforesaid: b c a r i " i : date .March -JlUh, A, I&gt;, l * J ,&#13;
and recorded iiv the ollice of t h e Kes/iater of&#13;
, Deed- for Livingston r o u n t y , Michigan, in Liber&#13;
! r.'J of Morta&lt;;es at n.iu'e.MH fhereofon March ofith&#13;
! A IV 1SSJ which said mortgage was duly n s s i ^ r e d&#13;
[ In NLLSOX LAMH on t h e 10th day of August,&#13;
IK'.h to Hi:Nl{Y TIIIKHOLT .IK. which assignment&#13;
was recorded in t h e Register of Deed's otfice&#13;
for t h e P o n n t y of Livingston o n t h e tOth day ^if&#13;
.•\ugu.st, lSliiin Liber S"i of Morlngee at p.a^e 47,&#13;
and by MKNKY THKIP.OLT JK. duly a - s i g n e d&#13;
to TAL'OLINK TIIKIl^OLT on Xovemb,.r 1,, ! S » 6 | M K l p r . Everyone -.ntereste.: in t t i n n e r a n c e&#13;
and reconU"! in t h e Ke^istc-'s office, Ollice for I t'oudially invited. Airs. Leal st^-ier, Pres; M&#13;
Livingston I'ounty on t h e l i t h day of May, 1S&lt;»S, j ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
in Liber S,"&gt; of Mortgages »t p;ijje-J6T. A n d by ' p h e C T . A. a n d 1L&#13;
c".\ b'OLIN !•'. T I I l ' I B O L T duly nsaigned t o H E X - ; X every t h i r d S a t u r u a y e v e n i n g h Fr. .\i:&#13;
AraoLiic ciiuucLi.&#13;
C o m i u e r t o r d , P a s t o r , s e r v i c e&#13;
every S u n d a y . L o w m a s s a t L S o o c l o . &gt;&#13;
hiyn uiasa with d e r m o n a t ' . 3 0 a. m. Catechian&#13;
t a:0O p , m . , v e s p e r s an J . •• &gt;dictlonat 7:3U ;&gt;. 1&#13;
aUClETieS;&#13;
Illie A. 0 . II. Society of t h i s place, meerg e v e r ;&#13;
. t h i r d S u n d a y i n t n e Kr. Mati new d a i l .&#13;
Jotin T u o m s y a n d M. T. Kelly, Pounty D "legat&lt;&#13;
M U i t . ^ • L-. I . U. meets t h e tirst F r i d a y ot e a c h&#13;
BifStllir&#13;
HK iei&gt; of t h i s place , n.&#13;
ig in t n e 1&#13;
lour. Ponot-.ue, Vresiuent&#13;
Sold on 30 Day** Tmlml.&#13;
MOXEY BACK IP NOT SATISFI^BW&#13;
GEDGE BROS. IRON ROOFINg Ct»&#13;
Fountain St., Anrierson, l o i . X '&#13;
Ami&#13;
.¾&#13;
KX i O U T S O F M A P P A H t . KS.&#13;
M e e t e v e r v Friday e v e n i n g o n or li. :ore :&#13;
ont 1&#13;
T H E GREATEST&#13;
OF ALL CEREAL FOODS.&#13;
No fad or uncertain mixture. A Natural FOOD&#13;
LAXATIVE. A whole kernel of Rye to rach flake.&#13;
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT or write us for our t h r e e s p e c i a l&#13;
O f t e n . A pound package by mail, postpaid, for 25 cents. It will&#13;
positively cure the most aggravated case of constipation. Write to-day.&#13;
Ill MINNEAPOLIS CEREAL COMPANY,&#13;
H . H . D e p t . M I N N E A P O L I S , M I N N .&#13;
Soltottor* Wmntad Everymhmr:&#13;
KY T i l E I B O L T ,!!!, o n M a r c h 10, 1007 a n d r e c o r d&#13;
n l in t h e Office* o t t h e L e g i s t e r of l ' e e d s f o r Livi&#13;
n g s t o n C o u m y o n M a r c h IP, P*07 in L i b e r !&gt;o a t&#13;
l&gt;a.;ei'it1. A r . d w h e r e a s t h e a m i i r i t c l a i m . &gt;d to I of t :IR m o o n a t t h e i r b a l l i n t h e S w a r : :&#13;
be d u e o n s a i d M o r n n u c o v.X t l i i s d a r c is t h e f o i m o f i ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ n r o t h e i s a r t c o r o i a l U i n v i t e d .&#13;
1&#13;
1 ine hundred ami eighty do hvrs ;\nd oiu'ht&gt;" tlve 1&#13;
cents .Stalls.') of principal and interest ami no r i v i n g s t o n Lodge, Xo. 7^, F A; A. M. UP^U'.H-&#13;
1 J I'omniunication Tuesdav- e\cni:ig, on or hetor&#13;
A I'cn.m«&#13;
j uit or pmce Mlino bavin:.' been instituted to re-&#13;
Titred by ^ aid mortgat or anv t h e t u l l ot t h e iniK&gt;n. Kirk V a n W i n k l e . \V. y.&#13;
LA D I E S O F T H E M A i V A R E K S . J»leat every irand&#13;
;lrd S a t u r d a y of each r.:ontft at 0::50 p " m .&#13;
K. 1), T. M. hall. Visiting listers Lordi.iliv in&#13;
viled. L t L \ O O N I W A V , Lady Coin.&#13;
-A&#13;
EXPERIENCE! Experience is one of the greatest fnctora in almost.&#13;
any walk in life. It is what jrives tho Farmer, Doc*&#13;
tor, Merchant and Mechanic success. In maunfacturth"&#13;
f it is an all Important element. We are carriage&#13;
raanuiacturers of over twenty-five years' experience&#13;
and we claim to know the business from A to Z. We&#13;
will stake our reputation that we make as jjood work&#13;
for the money as. it is possible to make. Our two&#13;
leaders are our No. 30 Top Buggy nt the popular&#13;
price of 150.00 and our No. fiO Top&#13;
Buggy at fftO.00. Nothing bnt the best&#13;
go into these jobs in order to make&#13;
them come up to our standard. Write&#13;
for foil specifications, cuts and- reference*.&#13;
Do it to-day and see what we&#13;
can offer 70a for your cash and save&#13;
all dealer profits. Write at once and&#13;
get our great offer.&#13;
J. A. HUNCERFORD- A SON. L a » ~ , , Mlchl g »r,.| l ^ X ^ t S 5 ? c i X ^ J ° u S l&#13;
cover the debt&#13;
part thereof: , ^ K 1 ) E K OF EASTERN S T A R meets each m o n o&#13;
Therefore notice is hereby given that by virtue • \J t h e Friday evening following t h e r e g u l a r F&#13;
ol sHid power of sale and in per.snanee of t h e j A A - M - m e e t i n g , M R S . N K T T K YAIV.HN, W . M.&#13;
statues in such ease made and provided t h e said j ~ " fc.R 0 F l [ o r \ E R N WOODM~EX Heet t h e&#13;
u'.oitgft«jowi]l he foreclosed h\ Pa'eof t h e p r e m i s e s j V/flrst T u u r s d a y evening of each Month in Ho&#13;
therein described at public auction to the highest . Muccabe t hall. 0 , L, t , r i m e s Y. C.&#13;
bidder at t h e West front door of the Court H o u s e 1&#13;
ii. t h e village of ;Io\vell in said Conntx of Living1- i&#13;
s t o " that being t h e place id holding' t h e &lt;';rcnir&#13;
fi'iirt for t h e Oi-unty of l.ivinLrston on S a t u r d a y ,&#13;
the Kith day of duly A. IV p.X"7 at 1&gt; o'( lo, k in t h e I&#13;
'orcnooTi iif saiil day, ur so much i hereof as i n i v&#13;
be neees-^a ?y to pay Ml* principal an-i inter^si '&#13;
d !:•' on s a b ' mo- tgage, the Attorne\ tee provided ;&#13;
therein anil cost &lt; of said sale, o'" t i e following!&#13;
('escribed premise-; f&gt;&lt; wit l o i n m e n c i u " twenty i&#13;
rods East of the N i n t h * est cornr',' of e'ection&#13;
tw'cn'ytwo I'J'J'! in t o w n s h i p U&lt;\i\ V North of&#13;
li'.iiiKi' Ibt; i,."i'i liasl Michigan, i n n p i u g thence&#13;
Soutn ei^ht rods thence East sixty roils thence&#13;
North eh-lit rods tliertee West, to begining/ ci^n-&#13;
'.lining three ncre- of bind,&#13;
HEN KY T t l K l R O L T . JW.,&#13;
A s - i fi. e of 11.0 M o r : i' igce.&#13;
Dated, H o w e E , \ p r i . J. I '. 7.&#13;
\ \ M . 1'. Y VN W tNKl.E, I&#13;
A I I orney fi&lt;r A--.ig i',ee. . i&#13;
v O j » Y R r . &gt; T S - i f&#13;
, ' rh nnrl t'eseri"*-. m&#13;
.•(••.moil f r s e *lu^\.&gt;&gt;r'**,«**•»&#13;
piiteutii^te., O^ninyuiWB** , . f hth HA11DB00K on'Patenta , *iV ,&#13;
_ cy for seciK-mK patent*. , *&#13;
Parents taken through Munn A Co. r e e a t r e VjAswiat&#13;
noti-,'., \. ,;hout charge, i n t h e '&#13;
\ r - c : ~ •- — '&#13;
rpp'o:.!'.- :;&gt; •(-.•:&#13;
m v e u : i"'i -,^ \,r&#13;
tlOUsst r i e f l v C;&#13;
s e n t tree, i Y,i&#13;
, m 'iVKf!:&#13;
ll.Il-&#13;
't ac&gt;&#13;
K r Nil.ILL'S I F T H K L O Y A L t . u A l .&#13;
F. L, A n d r e w s V. \\,&#13;
Scientific Hmerican. A h « n d « o t r r l y illr.str^ted Wfreklv. L n r c e s t elf.&#13;
eclati.iii o f ntiv si-:e';vtic l o n r n a l . T e r m * . | 3 »&#13;
v e a r : t u i i r c o r ;,.s, | i . Soldt&gt;/aU ni-iv^.teniern..&#13;
MUNN &amp;Cc.3Gi8«'*"&gt; New York Branch o m c e . te V S t - W.i«h'.nefov; r» C,&#13;
•9T/ it&#13;
BUSINEv36 CARDS.&#13;
H. F. S'GLEH M. D- C. L. SIGLEM M. L'&#13;
DKS. SlaLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
I ' h y s u - l a n s a n a S u r k e in;-. A l l cuto* p r o m p i l y '&#13;
a : t e n d e d t o d n y o r . . . ^ h t o - f . - « o n M&gt;:i', -t oet i&#13;
L L i c k i i e y , M i c h .&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
i\ m UuthPt.&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH St»L&#13;
«&gt;T C ^ P A I C H OFFiCE&#13;
KILL HtQi&#13;
AM» C U T S turn • ^•*nik-&lt;i*-- -\&#13;
TH Drt ling's&#13;
New Oiicovery&#13;
TOR f SSSsffS&#13;
^ 0 LOS&#13;
i&#13;
KPTI0K Price&#13;
and S0c|i$1.00&#13;
FrW Trial.&#13;
%&#13;
UW&#13;
Gt;a.'-i£.leod :or all T H R O A T a n d&#13;
L U N G T R O X T B L B S , o r K o i n n r&#13;
B A C K .&#13;
rvx?«e\usi&#13;
aUS&gt;&gt;&#13;
r,-„ -,v-« *"*"•**&#13;
• • * . * . m&#13;
' • « • ' *&#13;
.»•&gt;••.&#13;
••&gt;&gt;;*,•.&#13;
SF\&lt;1&#13;
K / *•&#13;
; t n " i&#13;
ft '*•'' A&#13;
; &amp;&#13;
(»N&#13;
• * * :&#13;
- ^&#13;
E*!&lt;&#13;
fSV,&#13;
BBS&#13;
is "5 m *?#&#13;
*•*.&lt;•&#13;
i ; ' . J , + ' ' • • ' . , '•••••&#13;
•1-: '•" - A ' . ' . . • • : ; . t ' * " •p- •*,••&gt; ' ' • , . . 1&#13;
, * • •• &gt; . • : ,&#13;
- / • • i - - - . . i&#13;
• * • • •. • • , . ' - S ' . .&#13;
* •&#13;
FBAXK L. A*X&gt;BEWf, Pub.&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
u • i • A u =&#13;
ingenious But Not Inventive,&#13;
Women have great Ingenuity . in&#13;
adapting old contrivance* to new ends,&#13;
but little power for lnv«ntionb. The&#13;
patent office at Washington contains,&#13;
to be sure, many models from feminine&#13;
bands, some useful and some fantastic.&#13;
For example, one woman who&#13;
wished to combine gardening and poultry-&#13;
raising invented an anti-scratching&#13;
uppliance for the feet of her hens; but&#13;
It is to be feared the condition of ths&#13;
feathered flock suffered from lack of&#13;
their customary relish of worms. Most&#13;
of the popular and effective convent,&#13;
ences of personal and; domestic life&#13;
have been made by men. A woman&#13;
can do more things with a hairpin&#13;
than a man could ever accomplish. She&#13;
will pick a lock, extract a bean from&#13;
a baby's ear or nose, run a string into&#13;
a curtain, hang a picture or button her&#13;
boots with the useful hairpin. But in&#13;
spite of the frantic demand for a practicable&#13;
pocket, she has not invented&#13;
one; and she still washes and wipes&#13;
by hand the family dinner dishes. A&#13;
woman's ability to make the beBt of&#13;
tfei&amp;f s as they are Is a «Uatte6t&#13;
ic of the aaayaajr* Yaatk'a&#13;
jftikan. it woul0 1» wUW Mfcoai K ft&#13;
were to be suppuHMei t ? r r e n a high&#13;
order of original inventiveness. For&#13;
this easy, rapid adaptation of inadequate&#13;
means to desired ends is applied&#13;
by a woman not only to the machinery&#13;
of the household, but to the human&#13;
forces among which she lives. The ingenious&#13;
wife adapts even a clumsy&#13;
husband and an inexperienced cook to&#13;
the production of domestic harmony.&#13;
EVENTS NOTED&#13;
LONG »£96lON OF THE STATE&#13;
LEGISLATURE TO END&#13;
JUNE 29.&#13;
LONGEST SESSION EVER.&#13;
Grand Rapids Home Ready to Be&#13;
Probed—Fished the Girl O u t — A&#13;
Physician on the Down Grade.&#13;
Preparing to Go Home.&#13;
The senate has passed the house&#13;
resolution providing lor ceasing legislative&#13;
work on June 19, making it one&#13;
of the longest sessions of the Mlchrgan&#13;
legislature ever held. Among the&#13;
important measures awaiting final action&#13;
in the few remaining days a r e&#13;
the railway commission bill, primary&#13;
election bill, insurance code and bill&#13;
to provide for establishing a binding&#13;
twine plant at the state prisuu.&#13;
A Reasonable Explanation&#13;
Henry James is credited with the&#13;
remark that he "never heard an £^\ju$&#13;
lean woman say 'thank you.' ".'.' '-uer-&#13;
,lecture, says Chicago Tri&gt;*'(^ '''We con-&#13;
*• OM or more o c c a s i " * " ^ ^ ' . t h a t o n&#13;
'"rtitn in a cro1**^&gt; K'^ns Mr. James has&#13;
•eat to soOv Mwded .car and offered a&#13;
"thanked 'me woman who did not say&#13;
re{t J •- v o u " *n r * n e reason that she&#13;
e ' » vOgnized him by his printed portraits&#13;
and knew she would not have&#13;
time to say: "Sensible in a high degree,&#13;
although it should be observed,&#13;
perhaps, that in the domain of the intellectual&#13;
there should not be needed&#13;
t b a anoptttaive effect of a motive as a&#13;
lUmalua to the process of realisation&#13;
Jfe the abstract ajiart from an implied&#13;
obligation willingly assumed, and not&#13;
wholly conventional, even though it&#13;
may be the result of unconscious volittaa,&#13;
or, to express the thought in&#13;
terms less vague and elusive, and&#13;
frankly recognizing, in the background&#13;
of consciousness, the simulacrum of&#13;
an anticipated quid" pro quo—dismissing&#13;
all this, 1 say, as shadowy and unreal,&#13;
and subjecting the ponderable&#13;
residuum to such analysis as wo may,&#13;
with such cra#a materials as we have&#13;
a t hauLJtor (ft-the realm of the imathare&#13;
fcUkbe found the cruelbjla&#13;
of the alch«a»il£, quite as real and&#13;
substantial, albeit composed of substances&#13;
not existent on the materia]&#13;
plane," etc.&#13;
Soldiers' Home Ready.&#13;
The board of managers of the soldiers'&#13;
home have issued a formal&#13;
statement in response to the resolution&#13;
passed in the legislature providing&#13;
for « committee to investigate t h e&#13;
expenditure of veterans' money at the&#13;
hoaae. The board explains that, ampsurerad&#13;
to make ralee aoearalBf the&#13;
receiving of inmates, it exacted that&#13;
no old soldier receiving a pension exceeding&#13;
$12 a month should be received,&#13;
modifying this rule to read&#13;
that in case the veteran's income from&#13;
the government exceeded $12 and it&#13;
was still shown that he needed the&#13;
care of the home, that all his pension&#13;
money in excess of $12 should be&#13;
turned into a distinct fund. From this&#13;
fund, the board&#13;
money to use for the betterment, f&#13;
the home. The board invites- *\%S - ot&#13;
lative committee to&gt;"'%*"'-'™^"lDe legisj^^&#13;
i\ V Lome and have a&#13;
^Jr4V^' Saved the Girl.&#13;
Because she had been punished In&#13;
school, y-year-old Lena Constantino,&#13;
daughter of a Bay City saloonkeeper,&#13;
induced her little brother to run away&#13;
with her to spend the afternoon on&#13;
the docks. The little girl fell into the&#13;
river. Harry Colby, who was fishing&#13;
nearby, cast his heavily weighted line&#13;
at the spot where the lad said his&#13;
sister had gone down. The next moment&#13;
Colby had the unconscious child&#13;
within reach, having caught her dress&#13;
with the first cast.&#13;
Conditio* of CrofW.&#13;
f h a average condition of wheat U&#13;
v according to the June crop reiaaued&#13;
by the state department.&#13;
This is 4 per cent lower than oae&#13;
month ago, but it shows that the entire&#13;
crop will not be lost an was&#13;
feared. It is estimated that 8 per cent&#13;
of the wheat sown last fall waa winter&#13;
killed, and that 4 per cent has&#13;
been destroyed by the Hessian fiy.&#13;
The condition of rye Is reported at&#13;
81 per..cent, corn a t 63, oats a t 75,&#13;
meadows at 69 and potatoes at 2. The&#13;
acreage of potatoes 1B estimated at&#13;
91 per cent, sugar beets at 83 per cent&#13;
barley at 86 per cent and corn at 9 per&#13;
cent.&#13;
Early strawberries are hurt by frosts&#13;
and will be a light crop and late; late&#13;
strawberries look good; raspberries&#13;
and blackberries, not over one-fourth&#13;
of a crop; sour cherries will be a fair&#13;
crop near the lake; apparently no&#13;
sweet cherries; peaches, very light,&#13;
injured by frost and San Jose scale;&#13;
plums, a iight crop; early apples set&#13;
very full; late apples will be a good&#13;
crop; pears will be a fair crop where&#13;
trees were not frozen last October;&#13;
muskmelons will have probably re&#13;
ductd acreage.&#13;
*"WJ• gMtm T •if* SH / T W O ? * * nmcE^^—.^&#13;
talk* far -Hama Cweumption ;Tv*MjM)lna #»«&lt;**• ^'M* •"* '*•*?&#13;
•m, •&gt; tAfllae* U0it#4 State*. •*' ,: *» « *J Injure*. *&#13;
;$DtiM O k u m i ^ aid 40&#13;
and hostility to fte tyritft* fttates afT B » W t e $ r e 4 institute thr lttt of&#13;
regarded by Japanese, lealio* tatathV |^^alttja#v«aaulting .from storms of&#13;
In&#13;
"Call of the Wild."&#13;
a wild and almost impregnable&#13;
swamp one and one-half miles south&#13;
of the village of Buttons Bay, .Leelanau&#13;
county, in the midst of a thickly&#13;
populated section dotted with welltilled&#13;
farms and only twelve miles&#13;
from a city of 12,000 inhabitants, Jack&#13;
London's "Call of the Wild" has been&#13;
duplicated. In this case, however, the&#13;
dog Is a female, the mother of six puppies&#13;
and ail have "reverted to type."&#13;
How long ago this dog left the&#13;
hjaunts of man and took up her abode&#13;
in the wilds of the the swamp is not&#13;
known, but it must have been over a&#13;
year. Four months ago she was noticed,&#13;
and with her were seven puppies&#13;
that were several months old.&#13;
Since then the pack has been ^*^ix&#13;
ly seen,-and on * » ; t - ^ - V , « q i i ! L&#13;
have Biv~*r t J m ^ r a l occasions they&#13;
0niv'..*t» eri battle to men, and it was&#13;
S a y S ' C ^ r i ^ r ™ ^ - * ^ ' ^ by strenuous efforts t h a t , they&#13;
esc'aped being torn to pieces by the&#13;
sharp teeth.&#13;
men as principally fdr home consumption,&#13;
and part of the progressive&#13;
party's efforts to overthrow the pres*&#13;
ent ministry In the interest of Ad-;&#13;
miral Yamamoto, the navy minister&#13;
in the last cabinet, who is now traveling&#13;
in Europe.&#13;
The recall of Viscount Aoki, ambassador&#13;
to the United States, is also&#13;
one of the progressive plans. They&#13;
desire a "more aggressive" representative&#13;
at Washington and Baron Kaneko&#13;
is mentioned as his successor.&#13;
"Count Okuma is otlt pf politics and&#13;
is regarded as a Japanese* Tolstoi." ,&#13;
Count Itagakl. one of the foremost&#13;
of the elder statesmen and a leader in&#13;
the former Okuma cabinet, hits written&#13;
an open letter to the president of&#13;
The Hague conference, urging international&#13;
consideration of the exclus&#13;
ion question. He says race differences&#13;
often cause war, and that exclusion is&#13;
entirely contrary to the principle of&#13;
mutual intercourse.&#13;
look.&#13;
' • &gt; : * &amp; *&#13;
Liang Tung Yen, the new Chinese&#13;
minister to the United States, is a&#13;
pretty good business man, according&#13;
to ihe stories of some of his old classmates&#13;
at Yale. When he was in cole&#13;
he was closely associated with a&#13;
aat of young fellows, ten in all, who&#13;
had about the same allowance each&#13;
month, $100. All the checks came at&#13;
once, and after a day or so every member&#13;
of the set was "strapped." Liang&#13;
finally solved the difficulty. The&#13;
checks were all pooled, and each $100&#13;
was to last, the coterie three days.&#13;
For exactly three days one man had to&#13;
pay all the expenses of the ten.&#13;
Thereafter, every one was able to get&#13;
- t h r o u g h the month without being in&#13;
h a ^ n g e r of starvation.&#13;
re'&#13;
Going Down.&#13;
Henry Pippin, of Leland, the son of&#13;
an ex-mayor of Montreal, a graduate&#13;
of the University of Vermont, former&#13;
student in Paris medical schools and&#13;
once a wealthy physician in South&#13;
Haven, was taken to Detroit in company&#13;
with four tramps to spend 90&#13;
days in the house of correction. He&#13;
was convicted of practicing medicine&#13;
without being registered. Six years&#13;
ago Pippin had trouble with his wife&#13;
and took to drink. He neglected to&#13;
register when the state law went into&#13;
effect and came to northern Michigan,&#13;
locating in Leland, His father is a&#13;
wealthy hanker in Montreal.&#13;
A Fair SHee.&#13;
Attorney-General Bird expects, now f&#13;
that the legislature hgs given him&#13;
full authority to do so; to begin suit&#13;
to rearrange the boundary line between&#13;
Wisconsin and Michigan. As&#13;
fixed back in the '30s, the boundary&#13;
is declared on the part of Michigan&#13;
to be incorrect through an error by&#13;
the engineer in charge, detailed by&#13;
the war department to make the survey.&#13;
Because of the error, Wisconsin&#13;
now holds a few hundred square&#13;
miles said to rightfully belong to.&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
If documentary information that has&#13;
come to the attorney-general's department&#13;
is correct, then the attorneygeneral&#13;
feels that Michigan has a&#13;
good case. It is probable that the&#13;
proceedings will be by suit in the&#13;
United States supreme court and that&#13;
preliminary to the trial of it the&#13;
state will have a survey made under&#13;
the instructions laid down for the original&#13;
survey.&#13;
Arkansas is one of the states that&#13;
entered upon a vigorous crusade&#13;
linst the use of concealed weapons,&#13;
the fact, is much to her credit. The&#13;
governor has just signed a bill enacted&#13;
b j the legJalature which imposes a&#13;
j £ f c of f i t * to $1,0*9 and imprison-&#13;
^:! 4Mnt for oae ^aar on aftyonc guilty of&#13;
drawing a knife or pistol. St. Joseph,&#13;
Mo., is a town which is also determined&#13;
to put a stop to such practices.&#13;
The commissioner of police offers liberal&#13;
rewards to men who make the&#13;
most arrests and who secure the&#13;
greatest number of convictions of&#13;
"gun toters." These are wholesome&#13;
Now Comes Divorce.&#13;
Wm. V. Pack, former Michigan legislator&#13;
and member of a Michigan&#13;
regiment, in the war with Spain, seeing&#13;
service in Cuba and afterward going&#13;
to the Philippines in the regular&#13;
service and becoming governor of the&#13;
province of Benguet, is defendant in&#13;
a suit for divorce brought by his wife&#13;
in Centerville. Au attempt was made&#13;
to keep the case quiet, but it is learned&#13;
that the charges are cruelty. Pack&#13;
will not contest the case, as he is&#13;
now in 'Frisco on his way back to the&#13;
Philippines, after spending three&#13;
months at home recovering from a&#13;
.serious illness.&#13;
Gov. Pack's headquarters are at&#13;
Paguio, In the heart of the Igorrote&#13;
head hunters' country. He expressed&#13;
a high regard for the Igorrotes, saying&#13;
that they are easily governed if&#13;
treated generously. They are prosperous&#13;
and contented with American rule&#13;
and many of them are rich farmers.&#13;
Not So Bad Weather.&#13;
Contrary to the opinions of most&#13;
people this weather is not so bad&#13;
after all. Many can recall that, in&#13;
1S97 Michigan experienced a killing&#13;
frost on May M. While crops In the&#13;
vicinity of Detroit, did not suffer to&#13;
a great extent further north there&#13;
was serious damage. Ephriam Abbott,&#13;
a resident of River Rouge, who&#13;
has seen 93 winters, springs, summers&#13;
and falls go by, sayR that, he&#13;
has never yet. seen the time when&#13;
the people of Michigan did not have&#13;
ample time in which to gather their&#13;
crops before the frosts set in in the&#13;
fall, no matter how lafe the spring.&#13;
Doctor Suicides.&#13;
Edwin F. Kressler, formerly of&#13;
Scottvllle, Mich., hanged himself in&#13;
his room in Milwaukee after writing&#13;
the following letter to Senator S. M.&#13;
Marsh, who is pushing a medical&#13;
registration bill in the legislature:&#13;
"May my untimely death be revenged&#13;
on those who drove me to it; I have&#13;
been persecuted by the attorney for&#13;
the state hoard of medical examiners,&#13;
robbed of my certificates of registration&#13;
and not. being financially able to&#13;
fight, in the courts, nothing remains&#13;
for me but the clothesline.&#13;
"I have practiced medicine honestly&#13;
for nearly 23 years.&#13;
"There has never been a complaint,&#13;
against me for malpractice, but now&#13;
I am deprived of my right to make&#13;
an honest living and being ashamed&#13;
to become a. county charge I will do&#13;
away with my life."&#13;
Kressler's hody has been sent to&#13;
Scottville.&#13;
Wedding and Death.&#13;
Within ir&gt; hours after her marriage,&#13;
Mrs. Homer Decker died at her homo&#13;
in Lansing. Mrs. Decker, who was 41&#13;
years of age and a widow, was married&#13;
Monday night. There was a merry&#13;
wedding. The excitemeift of the occasion&#13;
and the preparations for the&#13;
wedding had undermined the eonsti-&#13;
A T r u s t y Escapes.&#13;
William W. Hawley, alias William&#13;
Smith, the trusty who escaped from&#13;
the Jackson prison farm Sunday night,&#13;
has not. yet been located. His defection&#13;
caused the prison officials tr lose&#13;
faith in "trusty" human nature. Hawley&#13;
has worked outslfle for some&#13;
years, and as he had but a short time&#13;
to serve, it. was thought, that he would&#13;
be found in some saloon and all were&#13;
searched, but nothing was found of&#13;
Hawley. He made good his escape, apparently.&#13;
He had about $150 to his&#13;
credit on the prison ledgers, and&#13;
draws a pension of $40 a month. Now&#13;
he will experience difficulty in giving&#13;
an address to which Uncle Sam's dollars&#13;
may be sent.&#13;
W h i t e Plague Victims.&#13;
Ellen Clark, aged 14 years, of Haltie&#13;
Creek, died Friday of tuberculosis.&#13;
During the past year her mother, Mrs.&#13;
Elizabeth Clark, has silently watched&#13;
the entire family pass away from this&#13;
disease. First the father died, then&#13;
his son Robert; a daughter, then son,&#13;
William, and finally Ellen.&#13;
Wrecked the City.&#13;
A destructive. cyclone swept over&#13;
Kurrachi, India. Several steamers&#13;
were driven ashore and hardly a building&#13;
remains unwrecked. The casualties&#13;
have not been reported.&#13;
Kurrachi, also spelled Kurrachee&#13;
and Karachi, is one of the principal&#13;
seaports of British India, capital ot&#13;
the Sindh division of the Bombay&#13;
Presidency, and of the district of Kurrachi.&#13;
It is situated on the Arabian&#13;
sea, twelve miles northwest of the&#13;
westernmost outlet of the Indus. Kurrachi,&#13;
when it passed into the hands&#13;
of the British in 1842, was but a stragvillage.&#13;
It is now a modern city,&#13;
noted for its nTWUl'aetaieii U i ^ a r P W&#13;
arid fine silverware and has a population&#13;
of over 120,000.&#13;
Japs Are Wearisome.&#13;
A Washington correspondent says&#13;
United States officials at the capital&#13;
are becoming extremely weary over&#13;
the constant complaints of the Japanese&#13;
and hint that if the policy of&#13;
trying to magnify a quarrel among&#13;
strikers into an International incident&#13;
is not given up a few plain&#13;
truths will be handed to the "little&#13;
brown men." The fact that Japs continue&#13;
to&gt;"pour into America in spite of&#13;
the exclusion treaty also helps to exhaust&#13;
the patience of Uncle Sam. The&#13;
Japs were treated with such courtesy&#13;
in t h e San Francisco school "Incident"&#13;
that they seem to have the idea that&#13;
America fears them and can be bullied&#13;
at will.&#13;
H a r r i m a n Must T a l k .&#13;
E. H. Harriman will have to answer&#13;
the questions concerning the Alton&#13;
deal at which he balked in the recent&#13;
inter-state commerce inquiry, if there&#13;
is any way to make him. President&#13;
Roosevelt and Commissioner Lane&#13;
have reached the decision to start&#13;
suit to compel Harriman to talk.&#13;
The suit will be filed in New York&#13;
before July 1. A conference will be&#13;
held between the president and all&#13;
the members of the inter-state commerce&#13;
commission, as well as the government&#13;
attorneys, and the filing of&#13;
the suit will follow. It may take a&#13;
year to get. a decision.&#13;
Bad Rails.&#13;
The railroads of the country,&#13;
aroused by the unusual number of&#13;
wrecks attended by great loss of life,&#13;
have declared war on the United&#13;
States Steel corporation to compel&#13;
a better grade of steel rails, the&#13;
breaking of which has been the principal&#13;
cause of the catastrophies. The&#13;
steel trust, supplies nearly all the rails&#13;
used in this country, and the roads&#13;
want, better and more reliable ones.&#13;
The American Railway association,&#13;
composed of the executive heads and&#13;
operating officials of all the great systems,&#13;
has appointed a committee to&#13;
consider the problem.&#13;
For Dollar W h e a t .&#13;
The 200 delegates to the convention&#13;
of the American Society of Equity&#13;
in Nebraska practically completed the&#13;
organization of the "dollar wheat combine,"&#13;
the most formidable ever attempted&#13;
to control the prices of grain.&#13;
It is to be known as the Grain Growers'&#13;
department of the American Society&#13;
of Equity.&#13;
The organization will control distribution&#13;
and name a minimum price at&#13;
which Its members may dispose of&#13;
their farm products. Over 500 hanks&#13;
have agreed to furnish the farmers&#13;
money.&#13;
STATE NEWS BRIEFS.&#13;
tution of the bride, who was taken&#13;
examples, savs Trov Times, and might! K i r k shortly after the ceremony and&#13;
be widely imitated to the advantage ! ^ ^ / ^ - ****** ,h t 'r Juaband,&#13;
. . . ... j . .v , J M r 8 ' Hfc-kcr is survived by a daughter&#13;
of the public and to the lessening of ; year-i old&#13;
crime. *|&#13;
Harry Darling's dog bit Miss Hanna&#13;
Granger, aged GO, of Saginaw, just&#13;
above the ankle, and she has recovered&#13;
$.'»00 damages.&#13;
At a. special election Dowagiac voted&#13;
$2,^,000 bonds for public improvements,&#13;
the amount to be used to induce&#13;
factories to locate there.&#13;
A Reign of Terror.&#13;
There has been a reip.n of terror and&#13;
violence in Lodz, Russian Poland,&#13;
since June 2. Eleven persons have&#13;
been killed, including two mill owners,&#13;
and H7 have been wounded. The&#13;
workmen have formed a secret, vigilance&#13;
committee, which every night&#13;
executes one or more bandits ov terrorists.&#13;
The corpses are left, in the street,&#13;
and to Ihe lips of the dead men are&#13;
pinned pieces of paper setting forth&#13;
the exact, reasons for the execution.&#13;
Circuit Judge Peter F. Dodds has&#13;
granted a temporary injunction to&#13;
prevent the. board of supervisors&#13;
building the new Midland county&#13;
building pending a recount of the ballots&#13;
on the bonding proposition. Fraud&#13;
is charged.&#13;
i.wixwi and rain whiefc swept over&#13;
; t o o them Illinois and {Indiana ao4 Central&#13;
Kentucky Friday night and Saturday.&#13;
These fatal visitations came in&#13;
the shape of cloudbursts, j i g h winda&#13;
and electrical disturbances. The property&#13;
damage is many thousands of dollars.&#13;
Houses were swept away,-&#13;
demolished and thousands of "&#13;
growing crops destroyed.&#13;
Gradyville, Ky., w a s the&#13;
ferer. A cloudburst caused&#13;
to deluge That village of 17&amp;- personslast&#13;
night, and 21 persons were&#13;
drowned or crushed by falling houses.&#13;
In New Minden, 111., a tornado thia&#13;
morning killed five persons and injured&#13;
Bix others.&#13;
In York, 111., three were killed and.&#13;
20 injured by a tornado.&#13;
In Duouoin, 111., many houses were&#13;
blown down in the outskirts of tho&#13;
town and four persons were Injared,&#13;
.•'v.- •».&#13;
:»,. .'l»«f&#13;
;?k • \ \&#13;
••?.•**.&#13;
• • * . 'JAB'.&#13;
A Mighty Conflict&#13;
A mighty conflict has just begun in&#13;
San Francisco. It is a war between&#13;
capital and labor. Conditions resemble&#13;
those in the nation about the time&#13;
of the firing on Fort Sumter. A great&#13;
issue has been dallied with and temporised&#13;
with until the battle has been&#13;
joined.&#13;
San Francisco is suffering from&#13;
over-capitalization in every line. Labor&#13;
has' formed itself Into a trust,&#13;
which is over-capitalized. The cost of&#13;
rebuilding the fallen city has been altogether&#13;
excessive. Material dealers.&#13;
have been forced to lower prices within&#13;
the last two days.&#13;
The next step is to squeeze the&#13;
water out of the stock of the labor&#13;
^ Theje J s _ n o Lnfl 1 f-alinn that labor&#13;
will yield peacefully. Even with&#13;
the strike of 12,000 iron workers settled,&#13;
there are now 8,000 men on strike&#13;
in San Francisco. Indications are&#13;
there will be many thousands more&#13;
idle, with violence and bloodshed as&#13;
an incident, and that the progress of&#13;
the city will be stopped until thtagreat&#13;
issue has been settled. Building&#13;
is practically at a standstill.&#13;
1 . &gt;&#13;
%&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
a n a iic11L ii )s. ft U04&#13;
ru UUJH I&#13;
i t ' O M W Ifcj&#13;
D e t r o i t — K x t r u d r y - f e d s t e e r s a n d&#13;
h e i f e r s , $5 5(J5i6; Bteeia a n d l i t l f e r s ,&#13;
1,000 to 1,200 lbs, $5 2!J@6 GO; s t e e r s&#13;
a n d h e l f o r s . 800 to 1,000 lbs, $!"•.&amp; 5 £»&lt;K&#13;
g r a n s uteern a n d hcifi ru ttMt * r * £•&amp;-'&#13;
800 fb 1,000 l b s ,&#13;
heifei'H t h a t hi&#13;
4 75; elioiee fa&#13;
c o w s , $4(1)4 C5; OMQIOll"&#13;
c a n r u t s , f * # X &amp;•?&#13;
14 25(&amp;)1 i l ; . fab* ** g o o d b o l o g n a s ,&#13;
b u l l s , M t » # 4 t l ; Rtook b u l l s . )3 bO&lt;S4;&#13;
c h o l c « f«e4Ua&lt; atoei'H, 800 to l,0ii» lba,&#13;
$4@4 &lt; 5 ; f a i r feedintc Hirers, 800 t o&#13;
1,00« l b s ' f l 4«&lt;g&gt;4; c h o l e e BtOekera. f\00&#13;
t o 7 M Ik*, t 3 f&gt;0ft&gt;4 60; f a i r B t o c k e r i ,&#13;
S»# to TM lbs. $a ndv:\ 7I\; utoek heifer*,&#13;
f t 7 6 # U T&gt;0; m i l k e r s , larK*. young-,&#13;
m * 4 i u r o *K(\ J l&lt;-• r^ .',0; c o m m o n m i l k e r B ,&#13;
$!••&gt;«.&#13;
V e a l c a l v e s — M a r k e t s t e a d y . l a s t&#13;
T h u r s d a y ' s p r i c e s . Best, $7&lt;?r 7 75;&#13;
others, $4 (f?6 :.0.&#13;
Mlleli e n w s a n d H p r l i i K e r s — S t e a d y .&#13;
S h e e p a n d l a m b s — M a r k e t , b e s t l a m b s .&#13;
ir»e h i g h e r , o t h e r s s t e a d y . Hest !nnibn,&#13;
$S(f»K 1T&gt;; f a i r to Rood J a m b s , $~ 25*J)&#13;
7 r,0; light to c o m m o n l a m b s , $ 6 f o 7 ;&#13;
s p r i n g l a m b s . $!• OTifrlO: f a i r to good"&#13;
b u t c h e r s h e e p , jfj^frf) 7f»; c u l l s a n d c o m -&#13;
m o n , $,1 :v0«4.&#13;
H o g s — M a r k e t .r»r h i g h e r t h a n l a s t&#13;
T h u r s d a y . l U n g e of p r i c e s : U g r t t to&#13;
good b u t c h e r s . $ti 2',(fi^ .10; pigs, $fi 25&#13;
&lt;SMt 30; l i g h t y n r k e r s . $« li'^VG .10;&#13;
rough.'', $ii 7S; s t a g s , 1-3 off.&#13;
Kast. B u f f a l o , — C a t t l e of all d e s i r a b l e ,&#13;
k i n d s , b o t h h e a v y a n d l i g h t , s o l d&#13;
s t r o n g 20 fir 10 p e r h u n d r e d h i g h e r t h a n&#13;
Inst w e e k ; B l o c k e r s a n d f e e d e r s s o l d&#13;
i.'5c l o w e r . W e q u o t e ; Hest e x p o r t&#13;
s t e e r s . $6 0 6,:.0: best 1,200 to l.OOO-lb&#13;
$5,fmff?ti.2r&gt;; b e s t 1.000&#13;
$:..:.0^5.85: b e s t f a t&#13;
;&#13;
f a i r to good, $.1.75(8)&#13;
$2.2:.^2.50-, b e s t f a t&#13;
5 0; m e d i u m to crood,&#13;
f e e d e r s , $4.2,"(?( 4.50;&#13;
* f .-&#13;
, ^&#13;
s h i p p i n g s t e e r s ,&#13;
to 1.100-lh do,&#13;
c o w s , $4.75 (ft:5.25 4,25; t r i m m e r s ,&#13;
h e i f e r s , $ 5.25 ft"&#13;
$4.25rtr4.no; best&#13;
y e a r l i n g s , $:&lt;25 (ff :!75 ; c o m m o n s t o c k&#13;
s t e e r s , $.1ffr;l,25; e x p o r t b u l l s , $4.50®&#13;
5,25; b o l o g n a b u l l s , $.1.75^4.25: s t o c k&#13;
b u l l s , $2.50(8)3.50: f r e s h c o w s v e r y d u l l ;&#13;
g o o d to e x t r a , $40(ff 50; m e d i u m to grood,&#13;
$.11((r4S; c o m m o n , $20(5 2.1.&#13;
H o g s . — M a r k e t a c t i v e : h e a v y , m e d i u m&#13;
a n d y o r k e r s , $8.55 «?J)fi.60; p i g s , $0.60®&#13;
6.70; r o u g h s , $5.60; c l o s e d s t e a d v ; 5 c a r s&#13;
u n s o l d .&#13;
S h e e p . — M a r k e t s t r o n g ; b e s t l a m b s ,&#13;
$S.80rr?9; o n e l o a d v e r y f a n c y , Ab.2g;&#13;
culls, $fi.5057)7,50&#13;
c u l l s , $4rtJ&gt;n.2fi;&#13;
e w e s , $5.50(9)6.&#13;
C a l v e s . — S t r o n g&#13;
d i u m t o good, $6&#13;
4,50.&#13;
wethers&gt;&#13;
yearflAiwr&#13;
h e !&#13;
no®. 7,&#13;
* W SKzi:&#13;
,000&#13;
D e t r o i t&#13;
f&gt;S\fec; J u l v&#13;
10,000&#13;
bu a t&#13;
Ornln, Rfe.&#13;
W h e a t — C a s h No. 2 red&#13;
5,000 bu a t 98c, 8,000 bu a t&#13;
b u a t ftSiic, 10,000 bu a t&#13;
20.000 b u at 0 9&gt;. 10.000 bu a t&#13;
5,000 bu a t flS?ic. 5.000 bu a t 99e,&#13;
bu s t 9n i,£c; S e p t e m b e r . 25,000&#13;
$1 0 0 ¼ . 15,000 bu a t $1 0 0 ¾ . 15.-&#13;
000 bu a t $1 01. 20,000&#13;
25,1100 bu a t $1 0 1 ¾ .&#13;
bu a t $1 OI14,&#13;
10,000 b u a t&#13;
$1 01 U , 5.000 h u a t $1 01. 10.000 b «&#13;
$1 01 V», 10,000 b u a t $1 01¾. r&gt;,000 b u&#13;
$1 02; D e c e m b e r , 15.000 bu a t $1 02&#13;
10,000 bu a t $1 03, 25.000 bu a t $1 0.1&#13;
20,000 bu a t $1 03ifrr5,000 hu a t $1 03&#13;
5,000 bu a t $1 0 3 ½ . 15.000 hu a t | 1 &lt;&gt;3&#13;
22.000 bu a t $1 0 3 ½ . 15.000 bu a t $1&#13;
10,000 bu a t $1 04¼ : No. 2 r e d , 1)5½&#13;
No. 1 w h i t e , 07c. ^&#13;
C o r n — C a s h No. 3, 1 e a r a t Rfir, 1 a t&#13;
;ft&gt;« :&lt;£&gt; ';tl^.tftVW&#13;
5 5 « i r ; No.&#13;
4 y e l l o w , 1&#13;
5 fie, 1 a t&#13;
5 fie.&#13;
O a t s — C a s h No. 3 w h i t e , 1 c a r a t 50e-&#13;
No. 4. 1 c a r a t 4 9 \ b c ; s a m p l e , 2 e a r s a t&#13;
4Or: S e p t e m b e r No. .1 w h i t e , 39c&#13;
•Rye—Cash No. 2, SSo.&#13;
R c a n s — C a s h a n d .Tune $1&#13;
$1 70 bid.&#13;
C l o v e r s c e d — P r i m e ppot, $0;&#13;
JS; D e c e m b e r , $S 10: s a m p l e ,&#13;
$S 50; p r i m e a l « i k e . $7 50.&#13;
T i m o t h y seed — P r i m e spot&#13;
at $2-15. '&#13;
y e l l o w , 4 c a r s a t 57i£o; No&#13;
e a r a t r.fl'ir, 1 a t 56V4c, 4 a t&#13;
: . % c ; No. 3 w h i t e , 1 e a r At&#13;
«S; .Tidy,&#13;
O c t o b e r .&#13;
4 h a g s a t&#13;
10 b a g *&#13;
W*:, * €}•&#13;
'$"'&gt;&amp;&#13;
S'*-!***1&#13;
A W r S E M K X T H IN D K T R O l T&#13;
Week Kn&lt;ilnsc J u n e 15, 1007.&#13;
Lvrr.rM—Prices-always 1&#13;
Matinees Wednpsd.tv&#13;
" T h e Cowboy a n d t h e&#13;
V-, Tifl.Mc, r»0. » 0 .&#13;
a n d - S a t u r d a y .&#13;
r.idy,"&#13;
T K M P L K T J I K A T K K A N D W o v m e i n A x o -&#13;
Afternoona '2:15. 10e. to iV; KvenliuN K\K&#13;
li;cto6Uc. A . l v a n c . d \ a u d e v l l l e .&#13;
W o m a n ' s Fftd^tte orchf*tT4&#13;
. 1&#13;
: • . * • ; • *&#13;
' * « r T &lt; * , . - , . A-C-^ , , ^^•xjj:!*'**. •••••• \ *&amp;•&#13;
7* _ ',&lt; * " • ' iiW,&#13;
. . • . &gt; / ' \ « »?&#13;
' ' r i ' J . ;,.'•; . .»•.'' r;/:»; !i'4-a w'•* -•••-&gt;•.&#13;
% ' - ' - • -&#13;
•&gt;ff#*&#13;
' v&#13;
, ^&#13;
A'.&#13;
:;M*&#13;
PTEA I,-.Continued,&#13;
who came *• into our office&#13;
y Saturday, Just in time to inwlth&#13;
the outing Bob Brownley&#13;
had laid out, and who was&#13;
destined to divert my chum's heretofore&#13;
smooth-flowing river of existence&#13;
and turn it into an alternation of roaring&#13;
rushes and deadly calms, was truly&#13;
the most exquisite creature one could&#13;
• conceive of. I know my thought must&#13;
have been Bob's, too, for his eyes were&#13;
riveted on her face. She dropped the&#13;
black lashes like a veil as she went&#13;
on:&#13;
"Mr. Brownley, i hav# just came&#13;
from Sands Landing. I am very anxious&#13;
to talk with you on a business&#13;
matter. I have brought a letter to you&#13;
from my father. If you have other&#13;
engagements I can wait until Monday,&#13;
although," and the black veiling lashes&#13;
lifted, showing the half-laughing, halfpathetic&#13;
eyes, "I wanted much to lay&#13;
my business before you at the earliest&#13;
minute possible."&#13;
There was a faint touch of appeal&#13;
in the charming voice as she spoke&#13;
that was irresistible, and we were both&#13;
willing to forget we had lunch waiting&#13;
us on the Tribesman.&#13;
• "Step into my office, Miss Sands,&#13;
and all my time is yours," said Bob, as&#13;
he opened the door between his office&#13;
and mine. After I had sent a note to&#13;
ray wife, saying we might be delayed&#13;
for an hour or two, I settled down to&#13;
wait for Bob in the general office, and&#13;
it was a long wait. Thirty minutes&#13;
went into an hour and an hour into&#13;
two before Bob and Miss Sands came&#13;
out. After he had put her in a cab for&#13;
her hotel, he said in a tone curiously&#13;
intent: "Jim, I have got to talk with&#13;
you, got to get some of your good advice.&#13;
Suppose we hustle along to the&#13;
yacht and after lunch you tell Kate we&#13;
•;v;j»vttamm Easiness to go over. I don't&#13;
; W a t . ! * . k M t that f t * waiting any&#13;
^mKWiat&amp;M^n ideas."&#13;
After luncn; * # ' 4 | | % l p t ' e n d of the&#13;
upper deck Bob relieved hlmaelf. Relieved&#13;
is the word, for from the minute&#13;
he had put Miss Sands into the carriage&#13;
until then, it was evident *)ven&#13;
to my wife that his thoughts Wefa unywhere&#13;
but upon out outing.&#13;
"Jim," he began in a voice that&#13;
shook in spite of his efforts to make it&#13;
sound calm, "there is no disguising the&#13;
fact that I am mightily worked up&#13;
about this matter, and I want to do&#13;
• everything possible for this girl. No&#13;
need of my telling you how sacred we&#13;
have got to keep what she has just let&#13;
me into. You'll see as I go along that&#13;
it is sacred, and I know you will look&#13;
at it as I do. Miss Sands must be&#13;
helped out of her trouble.&#13;
Lee Sands, her father, is the&#13;
fjf-the old Sands family of Virgt*&#13;
U.••I'he Virginia Sands don't take&#13;
uS Unlr bonnets to another family in&#13;
this country, or elsewhere, for that&#13;
matter, for anything that really counts.&#13;
They have had brains, learning, money&#13;
and fixed position since Virginia was&#13;
first settled. They are the best people&#13;
of our state. It is a cross-road saying&#13;
in Virginia that a Sands of Sands&#13;
Landing can go to the bench, the&#13;
United States senate, the house, or the&#13;
governor's chair for the starting, and&#13;
nearly all of the men folks have held&#13;
one or all of these honors for generations&#13;
Toe present judge has held&#13;
tfetm; t f t f i ^ » * t know him personally,&#13;
sftfcS^gfcjMT/pSjeple and his have been&#13;
Wit j j f f w f t b a c k . Sands Landing&#13;
on"the James is some 50 miles above&#13;
our home. The judge, Beulah Sands'&#13;
father, is close on to 70, and I have&#13;
heard mother and father say is a stalwart,&#13;
a Virginia stalwart. Being rich&#13;
—that is, what we Virginians call rich,&#13;
a million or so—he has been very active&#13;
in affairs, and I knew before his&#13;
daughter told me, that he was the&#13;
trustee for about all the best estates&#13;
fat ear part of the country. It seems&#13;
t w » # h * t Jhe tells, that of late he has&#13;
* active in developing our&#13;
fcnd railroads, and that particularly&#13;
he took a prominent hand in&#13;
the Seaboard Air Line. You know the&#13;
road, for your father was' a director,&#13;
and I think the house has been prominent&#13;
in its banking affairs. Now, Jim,&#13;
this' poor girl, who, it seems, has recently&#13;
been acting as the judge's secretary,&#13;
has just learned that that, coup&#13;
of Reinhart and his crowd has completely&#13;
ruined her father. The decline&#13;
has swamped his own fortune, and,&#13;
what is worse, a million to a million&#13;
and a half of his trust funds as well,&#13;
and the old Judge—well, yon and I can&#13;
understand his position. Yet I do not&#13;
know that you just can, either, for&#13;
you do not Quite understand our Virginia&#13;
life and the kind of revered position&#13;
a man like Judge Sanda occupies.&#13;
You would have to know that to understand&#13;
fully his present purgatory&#13;
and the terrible position of this daughter,&#13;
for It seems that since he began&#13;
to get into deep water he has been&#13;
relying upon her for courage and ideas.&#13;
From our talk I gather she has a wonderful&#13;
store of up-to-date business notions,&#13;
and I am convinced from what&#13;
she lays out that the judge's affairs&#13;
are hopeless, and, Jim, when that old&#13;
man goes down it will be a smash that&#13;
will shake our state in more ways than&#13;
one.&#13;
"Up to now the girl has stood up to&#13;
the blow like a man and has been able&#13;
to steady the judge until he presents&#13;
an exterior that holds down suspicion&#13;
as to his real financial condition, although&#13;
she sayB Reinhart and his Baltimore&#13;
lawyer, from the ruthless way&#13;
they put on the screws to shake out&#13;
his holdings in the Air Line, must&#13;
have a line on it that the judge is&#13;
overboard. The old gentleman can&#13;
keep things going for six months&#13;
-Uateeed t e U r t ^ l l i p p p t r of the tor*&#13;
•rtble cruelty 1 4 * defiialr treachery&#13;
practiced by the, human hyenas yon&#13;
and I associate with, human hyena*&#13;
who; when in search of dirty dollar*?*&#13;
the only thing they know anything&#13;
about—put to shame the r«§J beasts&#13;
of the wilds—when 1 listened, I tell&#13;
you that I felt it would not give, me a&#13;
twinge of conscience t o put a ball&#13;
through that slick scoundrel Relnhatt&#13;
Yes, and that hired cur of his, too,&#13;
who prostitutes a good family name&#13;
and position, and an Inherited ability&#13;
the Almighty Intended for roo;e honest&#13;
uses than the trapping of victims&#13;
on whose purses his gutter-born master&#13;
has set lecherous eyes. And, Jim,&#13;
as I listened, a troop of old friends&#13;
Invaded my memory—friends whom I&#13;
have not seen since before I went to&#13;
Harvard, friends with whom I spent&#13;
many a happy hour in my old Virginia&#13;
home, friends born of my imagination,&#13;
stalwart, rugged crusaders, who carried&#13;
the sword and the cross and the&#13;
banner inscribed 'For Honor and for&#13;
God.' Old friends who would troop&#13;
into my boyhood and trumpet, 'Bob,&#13;
don't forget, when you're a man, that&#13;
the goal is honor, and the code: Do&#13;
unto your neighbor as you would have&#13;
your neighbor do unto you. Don't forget&#13;
that millions is the crest of the&#13;
groundlings.' And, Jim, I thought my&#13;
friends looked at me with reproachful&#13;
eyes, as they said, 'You are well on the&#13;
road, Bob Brownley, and in time your&#13;
heart and soul will bear the hall-mark&#13;
of the snaky S on the two upright&#13;
bars, and you will be but a frenzied&#13;
fellow in the Dirty Dollar army.' Jim,&#13;
Jim Randolph, as I listened to that&#13;
agonizing tale of the changing of that&#13;
f**t&#13;
a qnaation&#13;
b* his clea ^^&#13;
"Now. w h a t P r U aha want* you to&#13;
do?" I persisted. "Is it a case of&#13;
money, Qf our trying to. tide her father&#13;
&lt;3fc# ••'••}&#13;
"Nothing ot the • kind, Jim. Yon&#13;
don't know the proud Virginia blood.&#13;
Neither that girl nor her father would&#13;
accept money help from any one. They&#13;
would go to smash and the grave&#13;
first"&#13;
He paused and then continued impressively:&#13;
"This is how she puts it. She and&#13;
her father have raked together her&#13;
different legacies and turned them&#13;
into cash, a matter of 160,000, and&#13;
she got him to consent to let her&#13;
come up here to see if during the next&#13;
six months she might not, in a few&#13;
desperate plunges in the market, run&#13;
it up to enough to at least regain the&#13;
trust funds. Yes, I know it la a wild&#13;
idea. I told her so at the beginning,&#13;
but there was no need; she knew It,&#13;
for she is not only bright, but she&#13;
has the best Idea of business 1 ever&#13;
knew a woman to have. But it is&#13;
their only chance, Jim, and while I&#13;
listened to her argument I came&#13;
around to her way of thinking."&#13;
"But how did she happen to come&#13;
to you with this extraordinary&#13;
scheme?" I interrupted.&#13;
(TO .v-s CONTINUED.)&#13;
HAS HELPED CHINA UP.&#13;
Remarkable Educational Work Which&#13;
Rev. Cornaby Has Done. X&#13;
Bob was slipping the shackles of that fiery, romantic, southern passion.&#13;
longer without jeopardizing any of the&#13;
remaining trust funds, of which he has&#13;
some two millions, and while his wife,&#13;
who is an Invalid, knows the judge is&#13;
in some trouble, she does not suspect&#13;
his real position. His daughter says&#13;
that when the blow came, that, day of&#13;
the panic, when Reinhart jammed the&#13;
stock out of sight and scuttled her&#13;
father's bankers and partners in the&#13;
road, the Wilsons of Baltimore, she&#13;
had a frightful struggle to keep her&#13;
father from going insane. She told&#13;
me that, for three clays and nights she&#13;
kept him locked in their rooms at their&#13;
hotel in Baltimore, to prevent him&#13;
from hunting Reinhart. and his lawyer&#13;
Rettybone and killing them both, but&#13;
that at last, she got him calmed down&#13;
and together they have been planning.&#13;
'Mim. it. was tough to sit there and&#13;
listen to the schemes to recoup that&#13;
this old gentleman and this girl, for&#13;
she is only 21, have tried to hatch up.&#13;
The tears actually rolled down my&#13;
cheeks as I listened; I couldn't help&#13;
it; you couldn't either, Jim. Hut at&#13;
last out of all the plans considered,&#13;
they found only one that had a tint of&#13;
hope in it, and the serious mention of&#13;
even that one, .Tim, in any but present&#13;
circumstances, would make you&#13;
think we were dealing with lunatics.&#13;
Rut the girl has succeeded in making&#13;
me think it worth trying. Yes, Jim,&#13;
she has, and 1 have toll her so, and I&#13;
hope to God that that hard-headed&#13;
horse-sense of yours will not mak*» you&#13;
sit down on it."&#13;
Bob Brownley hnd got to his feet;&#13;
he was slipping the shackles of that&#13;
fiery, romantic, southern passion that&#13;
years in college and Wall street had&#13;
taught him to keep prisoner. His eyes&#13;
were Hashing sparks. His nostrils&#13;
vibrated like a deer buck's in the autumn&#13;
woods. He faced me with his&#13;
hands clinched.&#13;
"Jim Randolph." he went on. "as T&#13;
girl's heaven to hell, I did not see that&#13;
halo you and I have thought surrounded&#13;
the sign of Randolph &amp; Randolph.&#13;
I did not see it, Jim, but 1 did see myself,&#13;
and I didn't feel proud of the&#13;
picture. My God, Jim, is it. possible&#13;
you and I have joined the nobility of&#13;
Dirty Dollars? Ts it possible we are&#13;
leaving trails along our life's path like&#13;
that Reinhart left through the home&#13;
of these Virginians, such trails as this&#13;
girl has shown me?"&#13;
Bob had worked himself into a state&#13;
of frenzy. I had never seen him so excited&#13;
as when he stood in front of me&#13;
and almost shouted this fierce selfdenunciation.&#13;
"For heaven's sake. Bob. pull yourself&#13;
together," I urged. "The captain&#13;
on the bridge there is staring at you&#13;
wild-eyed, and Katherine will be up&#13;
here to see what has happened. Now,&#13;
be a goid fellow, and let. us talk this&#13;
thing over in a sensible way. At the&#13;
gait, you are going we can do nothing&#13;
to help out your friends. .Besides,&#13;
what is there for you and me to take&#13;
ourselves to task for? We are no&#13;
wreckers and none of our dollars is&#13;
stained with Frenzied Finance. My&#13;
father, as you know, despised Reinhart&#13;
and his sort as much as we do. Be&#13;
yourself. What does this girl want&#13;
you to do? If it is anything in reason,&#13;
call it done, for you know there is&#13;
nothing 1 won't, do for you at the asking."&#13;
Rob's hysteria oozed. He dropped&#13;
on the rail seat at my side.&#13;
"I know it, Jim, T know it, and you&#13;
must forgive me. The fact, is, Beulah&#13;
Sands' story has aroused a lot of&#13;
thoughts I have been a-sticking down&#13;
cellar late years, for. to tell the truth.&#13;
I have some nasty twinges of conscience&#13;
every now and then when I&#13;
get to thinking of this dollar game of&#13;
ours."&#13;
I saw that the impulsive blood was.&#13;
REV.&#13;
WHY BOB WA3 ANNOYSO.&#13;
Cmfjtyfnej ef fleif Set atasta Cmber*&#13;
Young Harwood's Cousin Evelyn&#13;
had Invited him down to her country&#13;
place to stop over the holidays. He&#13;
arrived just before dinner, to find that&#13;
he had left his golf clubs behind him.&#13;
It was most exasperating; but his&#13;
cousin comforted him somewhat by&#13;
promptly offering the use of her clubs.&#13;
The next day he started early for the&#13;
links with Evelyn's husband, but in an&#13;
hour he was back again. "Were the&#13;
clubs so bad?" she inquired; "couldn't&#13;
you finish the game?" He answered&#13;
shortly that he had not cared to finish&#13;
the game—of course there was nothing&#13;
the matter with the clubs. When&#13;
Evelyn's husband came home for&#13;
luncheon at noon she questioned him.&#13;
"What's wrong with Bob, Henry?" she&#13;
asked; "didn't the game go smoothly?"&#13;
Her husband chuckled. "It was&#13;
your clubs," he explained. "I don't&#13;
wonder he isn't happy. He was preparing&#13;
to 'tee off' at the hole in front&#13;
of the clubhouse, with a lot of girls on&#13;
the veranda watching him. He picked&#13;
up your bag of clubs to take &lt;jut the&#13;
'driver,' but it was caught in some&#13;
way, and he turned the bag upside&#13;
down to shake it loose. The driver&#13;
tumbled out then, and with it came&#13;
your false fringe, your powder puff,&#13;
your green veil, and that little ivory&#13;
handglass you carry around. Do you&#13;
wonder his feelings are somewhat&#13;
bruised?"—Harper's Hagazine.&#13;
A. W. CORNABY/.&#13;
MADE HIS RECORD CLEAN.&#13;
Driver Had Missed One Rock and Had&#13;
to Go Back.&#13;
Some years ago Gen. Miles started&#13;
to drive from Red Lodge, Mont., to&#13;
Cody, Wyo., to see his friend, Buffalo&#13;
Bill. The road was rough, and the&#13;
reckless driving of the man holding&#13;
the lines made it seem rougher, but&#13;
the Indian fighter compressed his&#13;
lips and clung to the seat without&#13;
complaint. When near Cody the general&#13;
suddenly prodded the driver in&#13;
the back with his walking stick and&#13;
said curtly: "Driver, turn around."&#13;
"What?" exclaimed the astonished&#13;
driver. "Do as I tell you," commanded&#13;
Miles. So the man turned the&#13;
horses about and started back to Red&#13;
Lodge. "Now turn here," ordered&#13;
Miles, after they had driven a few&#13;
yards. Convinced that his distinguished&#13;
passenger had suddenly lost&#13;
his mind, the driver turned about&#13;
once more and started for Cody.&#13;
"There!" exclaimed Miles, in a tone&#13;
of satisfaction, as the side wheels&#13;
struck a stone and he bounded into&#13;
the air. "Yon hit it! Now, driver,&#13;
you can go back to Red Lodge and&#13;
tell them that you drove ?."&gt; miles and&#13;
never missed a rock. You've hi&#13;
them, every one."&#13;
Concrete Work in Mines,&#13;
The newest innovation that has&#13;
taken place in the method of working&#13;
a coal mine is the substitution of concrete&#13;
for the mine timbering. The ex&#13;
periments along this line are being&#13;
piade by the Reading Coal company&#13;
at Shamokin, Pa. A plant for the&#13;
manufacture of these cement props&#13;
will be erected at the North Franklin&#13;
coiliery, Trevorton, from which place&#13;
the new style of "timbering" will be&#13;
sent to all the other collieries. The&#13;
Reading company has spent considerable&#13;
time and money in determining&#13;
the best method for preserving mine&#13;
timbers, and the present step seems&#13;
to indicate that in the future cement&#13;
will replace wooden props.&#13;
Women have all the virtues of&#13;
priests and all the vices of tyrants.—&#13;
G. K. Chesterton in the London News,&#13;
One of the most famous and useful&#13;
of living missionary pioneers in China&#13;
is just now on&#13;
_ furlough in Bng*&#13;
^ ^ % land. Mr. A. W.&#13;
W' j | Cornaby belongs&#13;
Tyj» m 7 to the same cate-&#13;
A'jb xk gory of accomplished&#13;
litterateurs&#13;
in the missionary&#13;
field as Dr. Timothy&#13;
Richard and&#13;
Dr. Griffith John.&#13;
These' three won*&#13;
derful experts in&#13;
the language and&#13;
literature of the great oriental em*&#13;
pire are achieving extraordinary re*&#13;
suits 1» transforming the mind of the&#13;
culture* section of the native com*&#13;
uiusuty Uw&gt;ogh«s* th» UuiL Mr. Corn- rtyii sdittng t w w w a tt»&#13;
Jir. CornahV f i v e the&#13;
cotat of the social system in China:&#13;
"The government rests on a purely&#13;
patriarchal foundation, with the em*&#13;
peror as patriarch or priest-king, aa&#13;
in the case of Job or Melchizedek,&#13;
the people being his little children, or&#13;
'pink babies,' as the Chinese call&#13;
themselves to this day in' relation to&#13;
the emperor as their head. The mandarins&#13;
are regarded as the 'deputy&#13;
parents of the people/ These latter&#13;
dignitaries are supposed to be above&#13;
the need of any salary. They are un-^** --'\&#13;
paid magistrates. , The arrangement; 't(&#13;
seems to have worked well in the ^&#13;
idea; days of certain early rulers of&#13;
China, but its working now is a proverb&#13;
and a byword of contempt, and il&#13;
is the great drawback to any rijsj|?k &gt;&#13;
progress or real reform. '* •&#13;
"I said that these mandarins w e j s i ^ * '&#13;
unsalaried," Mr. Cornaby remarked^&#13;
"but, to be precise, a governor of a&#13;
province (as large, say, as New York&#13;
state) gets about $5,000 a year, while&#13;
a county magistrate gets not more&#13;
than $100 a year. This being utterly&#13;
inadequate, the rest Is aaade ** tioai&#13;
taxes, public mosiays. pwsjsjrtt* ftcsji&#13;
parties a t law, and '«&#13;
ly. Huge snms «f&#13;
many cases amassed&#13;
" 4 change must come over t h e&#13;
whole mandarin system," continued&#13;
Mr. Cornaby, "before China can really&#13;
proaper. It will not matter how far&#13;
the nation may adopt western&#13;
ods; there will be no progress w&lt;&#13;
regarding unless such a radical ch&#13;
is effected. Two things are essenlsH&#13;
before the world can look on a regenerated&#13;
China. One Is a new system,&#13;
the other is moral force to work it;&#13;
This is only another way of sa&#13;
that the case of Chia* Is&#13;
without a conquest of the trey 1 re by&#13;
Christian principle*. Bet ft* *ae «•»&#13;
right here that the&#13;
are marveloesly eaoeeraging Hi'&#13;
far east. ChrtatlaaHty is steadily&#13;
honeycombing the whole fabric of Chinese&#13;
ciTilixatkm and heathenism. The&#13;
missionaries are regarded to-day with&#13;
quite another spirit than that displayed&#13;
before the Boxer outbreak. A few&#13;
years ago it was very difficult for a&#13;
missionary to gain any contact with&#13;
a viceroy, but for the last three years&#13;
I have had the privilege of sayi&amp;ff&#13;
3,000 words to the various 'Prinoae Of.&#13;
the Provinces'—viceroys, governors^&#13;
treasurers, judges—over 50 of&#13;
seeing and talking with some of&#13;
week by week, on subjects connected&#13;
with Christian civilization, International&#13;
harmony and the supreme lord*&#13;
ship of Jesus Christ." *&#13;
• &gt;&#13;
:*'*:&#13;
: : * •&#13;
' - ? ' • • %&#13;
" • • * V &gt;**#&gt;&#13;
•**,/&#13;
«•""•.5&#13;
$,H ".%?!•.&#13;
%-M'ri&#13;
•tt&#13;
..*'&gt;.m&#13;
An Encouraging Outl&#13;
The Rev. S. R. Smith, of the Niger&#13;
mission of the English Chutfth MJa&gt;&#13;
sionary society, writes from Onitsbay&#13;
West Africa: "The posaibilties of worjst&#13;
in this district, are enormous, &amp;a4-:&#13;
•very week I am receiving deputations^&#13;
asking for teachers from towns whic%&#13;
were once a terror to their neighbor*&#13;
hood. 1 am sure that the millions d£-&#13;
lbo-speaking ^people have a great' flsjr&#13;
ture before them, especially if&#13;
can be induced to turn their atte&#13;
to the development of the soul. Durfasy&#13;
the past four months there have&#13;
over 150 adult baptism and there&#13;
manv more ready to b&#13;
1 *- -y.&gt;&#13;
l i t&#13;
Million of&#13;
One million two hundred and fifttj,"&#13;
thousand Bibles are contained in the&#13;
new warehouse of the British and&#13;
Foreign Bible society, in Queen Victoria&#13;
street, London.&#13;
. ^ • - A ' 3 *&#13;
Missionary Forces.&#13;
The United States maintain* 3,776&#13;
missionaries in Japan, China, Corea,&#13;
the Philippines, Burmah, Siam, India,&#13;
Tibet, Persia, Turkey, Egypt and the&#13;
South American- countries.&#13;
d.&#13;
._l*9V.n»-' Z ********-^'• 'id.?'/. -u-J^ riJfcN'k &gt;*»-•« •'&#13;
.*'• &gt;W&#13;
'&lt;ilHtp.-^;«fWW. -j«V&#13;
K1^&#13;
'.-/&lt;?*,.&#13;
.* der by Pr&#13;
Piesent:&#13;
-Jtv i, ' ^&#13;
J ' v " ^ . j \ M - •• J '&#13;
Farnam,&#13;
Teeple, V a a W r n l c p ^ | ^ ; &gt;&#13;
Clerk being »1«««*» ft^GfJf w*«&#13;
appointed to fill t©mpor*ry&gt;g|8a*^&#13;
Minutes of last meeting ret&lt;i and&#13;
&amp;%'.**-'&#13;
approved.&#13;
Street commissioner's report pre&#13;
stnted and it ad and upon motion was&#13;
accepted.&#13;
The following bills were presented&#13;
and read:&#13;
&lt;JhM. Elriret, work; uu atrwt. S5.W&#13;
JoboMortenson, " " " 4&amp;0&#13;
W. A. Nixon, " " ', 5.25&#13;
Cb«*. Eldert, mareball uervkva 7 50&#13;
Chaa. Campbell, i&lt;bu of roller .50&#13;
Eugene Campbell, use of harrow .50&#13;
J£. R. Brown, r«f)iur on eurapei', .50&#13;
3, G. Teeple, i days if'd Keview, 4.00&#13;
J, L. Roche, 2 •" " " 4.00&#13;
fiiiM&#13;
WEST MAR10K.&#13;
G. D. Bullis aud family called&#13;
of friends at Stoekbridge Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Merrills entertained&#13;
Mis. Hall of Handy, Sunday.&#13;
R. D. Rockwood of Williaiuston&#13;
is to be the guest of his Aunt,&#13;
)&amp;r*. W. B. Miller this week.&#13;
The picnic at Cedar lake was&#13;
a Buccess aud all had a very pleasand&#13;
time. One hundred and&#13;
twenty five were fed.&#13;
There will be an Ice cream social&#13;
at the home of Mr. aud Mrs.&#13;
W. B. Miller Friday evening,&#13;
J u n e 14. A cordial invitation is&#13;
extended to all.&#13;
m&#13;
Upon motion tbe foregoing accounts&#13;
were allowed.&#13;
Aye: Farnam, Nixon, Teeple,„ V&amp;£ ,&#13;
m morion Council adj9*l«e4. )&#13;
^ ^ * W.A. CARK.GUI*,&#13;
L a w T e r m Explained.&#13;
"Well, pnK.'t»L'd," «aid tbe lawyer.&#13;
"The plaiutiil' resorted to an ingenious&#13;
list' of circumstantial evidence,"&#13;
said tbe witness. -&#13;
"For the lituu'tit of tbe jury, state hj&#13;
plainer language exactly what you&#13;
mean by tbat." Interrupted tbe judge.&#13;
''Well, my meaning is that be lied."&#13;
10800.&#13;
isdon's are now settled in&#13;
fcotne. | ^&#13;
Duttou has been in&#13;
h for some time but is&#13;
better now.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Greening&#13;
entertained two cousins from&#13;
Lausiug last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm, Wright of&#13;
Stock bridge visited her people&#13;
Mr. aud Mrs. Chas. Mapes the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Erwin Hotson and family attended&#13;
the golden wedding of her&#13;
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sharp&#13;
of Unadilla, Monday, June 10.&#13;
.'*...&#13;
One more week of school—fintl&#13;
aminatuna.&#13;
Bernard Glenn of Ann Arbor&#13;
home for tbe summer vacation.&#13;
L. L. Holmes of Belden WM bere&#13;
tbis week visiting bis partner in tbe&#13;
Clothing business, Mr. PrebUy.&#13;
The MiB&amp;es Jennie Haze and Florence&#13;
King of Adrian are visiting relatives&#13;
ani friends bere a counle of&#13;
weeks.&#13;
The Michigan Historical and Pio*&#13;
neer society will meet in tbe Senate&#13;
chamber at Lansing, June 26 and 27.&#13;
A pood program has been arranged.&#13;
Harold Brown of tbe U. of M.&#13;
Charlotte B. tb»e/deit daughter ^&#13;
Wnf *Rd Mary Moon, mf?- J w * if&#13;
Hooeoye-FalU, New Twk&gt; Sept. ^ ,&#13;
1818. At tbe age of 15 she canie fc&#13;
Michigan with friendf, totleiag^»e*t&#13;
Ann Arbor. ^ ' '&#13;
Attir teaching school for tC namber&#13;
, . . «, . , , , the guest of G, W. Teeple and family.&#13;
Mr. aud Mrs. € b a s . Mapes who H e w i l l s p e n d the summer vacation&#13;
? • ' &gt; • &lt; * • •&#13;
Bert Barber, of Elton, Wis., says "1&#13;
have only taken fotfr doses ot your&#13;
Ki'dney ynd Bidder Pills and they&#13;
Ave oonn for me more than any oth-&#13;
*C medicine has ev6r done. I am still&#13;
liking the pills as 1 want a perfect&#13;
Jure." Mr. Barber refers to DeWitt's&#13;
Kidney and Bladder Pills, which . re&#13;
unequaltd for Backache, weak kidneys,&#13;
intimation of the bladder ati'.i&#13;
urinary troubles, A weeks treairaiut&#13;
for 25cent.*.'&#13;
tfoM by P. A. Slfler, Druggist&#13;
„**•*"JM^tic news for 11.00 per year.&#13;
u'iy t Business Pointers. 4 f&#13;
:5^ TOR SAL*.&#13;
armen No. 3 seed potatoes.&#13;
J. O. Afackinder.&#13;
•*r&#13;
r-&#13;
• * . • •&#13;
,;.( (&gt;&lt;;&#13;
iv&#13;
ejiand Trunk Ballwav System.&#13;
„- East Donnd from Pinckney&#13;
||&gt;'28 PMeenger Ex. Mnnray, 9:-28 • . M&#13;
ffo. SOPasgenRer Ex. Sunday, 4:55 P. M.&#13;
,&gt;££&#13;
Weet Bopnd from Plncknev&#13;
'iJ'fWteattfat-.px. Snndav, 10:01 A.M.&#13;
•e&amp;Paseenger i!^, Sunday. 8:44 P. M'&#13;
• H e vestibule t^sioe of coachca and s)«er&gt;&#13;
r u » operated to INew York (and PhiladelvtelHagara&#13;
Palls by the &lt;rrand Tr»nk-L#-&#13;
Vaa«r Koi:ti5-&#13;
W. H. Clark, Agent.&#13;
"'^T."WRfGHT~&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
C U r J c B l o c k P i n c k n e y , M i c h&#13;
painless Extraction&#13;
!W. DANIELS,&#13;
,, OBNERAJ. AUCTIONEEK.&#13;
Satistacticn Guaranteed. For information&#13;
call at DISPATCH Office ofr address&#13;
|r Gregory, Mich, r. f. d. 2. Lynrtilla phone&#13;
j«Qtion. Auction bills and tin cups&#13;
led free.&#13;
ft..&#13;
.CVvaTwV)eT\\xv&#13;
Expert Auctioneer&#13;
Hver 20 Years Experience&#13;
DEXTER, MICH.&#13;
8¾ •m&#13;
• : &gt; . " " ' .&#13;
3B, FREE BOX 68&#13;
J. 7w.BIRD&#13;
CTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
StTISFICTION GUIRMTEED&#13;
For information, call at the Pinckney Drs-&#13;
PATCH offiee. Auction Rillx Free&#13;
Webster Rural'Phone&#13;
Arrangements made for sale by phone at&#13;
fny expense.&#13;
; „ Address. Dexter, Michigan&#13;
^ 2 £ £ S WITCH HAZEL&#13;
r V C $m Ptlea, Burns, Sores.&#13;
EAST PUTSAM.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs Dell Hall and son&#13;
spent Sunday at Guy Hall's&#13;
Chat* Biowu and son, Carter,&#13;
Tiftited in Stockbridga ^tmday.&#13;
Tbos. Clark, and wile were&#13;
guests of friends in thw vicinity&#13;
Sunday,&#13;
James Fitch and wife and Koy&#13;
Hicks were Jackson visitors the&#13;
first of the week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Winter of&#13;
Fenton visited their sister, Mrs.&#13;
E. G. Fish the last of last week.&#13;
The remains of Mrs. Charlotte&#13;
Kolison of North Hamburg were&#13;
placed in the cemetery at this&#13;
place Saturday last.&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG.&#13;
Henry Kice had sheep bitten&#13;
by dogs last week.&#13;
Children's Day will he observed&#13;
J u n e 23rd at the N. H. church.&#13;
Mrs. John Sweeney has beeu&#13;
under tbe Dr's. enre the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. S. J. Kennedy and son&#13;
visited at Jno. VauFIeets Thursday&#13;
of last week.&#13;
The funeral of Valentine&#13;
Weigand was largely attended&#13;
Sunday at the church.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rolison,&#13;
Mrs. H. Drouillard, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Louis Rolison of Detroit attended&#13;
the funeral of Mrs. Charlotte Roli&#13;
ison Saturday.&#13;
. ^ p i&#13;
C H I L S O N |&#13;
Will Benhatn was in Ann Ar-1&#13;
bor Saturday. j&#13;
Several in w phones have been j&#13;
put in west of here. j&#13;
Julius Dammau took in the [&#13;
show at Howel! Thursday.&#13;
Amelia Damman is home from •&#13;
Fowlerville for a few weeks.&#13;
Miss Lela Osgerby of Howell j&#13;
spent Sunday with Luiu Benhatn.&#13;
John Sweeney is able to be,&#13;
about again after n few days ill-(&#13;
ness. ;&#13;
C. D. Croope of Webberville '&#13;
w n s a g u e s t a t H. Damman over j&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
The funeral of Mr. Weigand&#13;
was held at the Cong'l church&#13;
Sunday p. m.&#13;
Harold and Glenn Lewis and&#13;
Arthur Damman have just recovered&#13;
from the measels.&#13;
were very sick in Chelsea last&#13;
month where they went to visit&#13;
iheir sou, have so far recovered as&#13;
to return home.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ball and&#13;
son Edwin of Webster and Mr.&#13;
aud Mrs. Geo. Bennett of Fowler.-&#13;
ville visited their Aunt, Mrs. F .&#13;
A. Gardner over Sunday aud attended&#13;
children's day exercises at&#13;
Plainfield.&#13;
WEST PUTHAM.&#13;
The Misses Sadie and Joie Harris&#13;
were in Howell Thursday.&#13;
Miss Johaunah Gaul of Piuck&#13;
ney spent Saturday and Sunday&#13;
with Emma Gardner.&#13;
wirh his parents in Brooklyn, N. Y.&#13;
Waiter Dinkel of Detroit, bas been&#13;
spending tbe past week with Wis parents&#13;
near here. He rennwed bis subscription&#13;
to the DISPATCH while home.&#13;
Mr and Mrs. E W. Kennedy enter&#13;
tained tbe following people last&#13;
Wednesday: Mr. and Mrs. S. 1_&#13;
tSargant, Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Sargent,&#13;
Mrs. Harriet Soule*, Mr. pad Airs. J.&#13;
W. Warner, all of Howell. This&#13;
party with Mr. and Mrs. Kennedy&#13;
spent the winter of 1905 6 in Florida.&#13;
While the weather Wednesday did&#13;
not compare favorably with the sunny&#13;
south, never the less, they spent a&#13;
very pleasant day. One year ago the&#13;
party was entertained at the bome of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Warner.&#13;
of years sbe was unit&#13;
Lewis M, Kolison m&#13;
Sept, 28, 1872 deatb&#13;
pan ion leaving ber&#13;
en children; all of f$$m are Hying,&#13;
and were present at the funeral, eje-1&#13;
cept the eldest son—who d i e d ^ t n . 4,&#13;
j 1899, She also l e a r e * | * # r ^ childis&#13;
ren and one ^reat grand daughter.&#13;
At the a«e of 20 sbe united with&#13;
the Medothist Episcopal Cbnroh and&#13;
was a faithful worker in tbe church&#13;
and Sunday school untif\£er failing&#13;
health.&#13;
She died June 6, 1907 after a lingering&#13;
illness o; over 15 years. She&#13;
was one of tbe few surviving pioneers&#13;
ol Hamburg.&#13;
The funeral wa&lt;* held at tbe bome&#13;
Saturday, June 8, Rev. D. C. Little*&#13;
John officiating, assisted by Rev. A. G,&#13;
Gates. ;•'&#13;
—, i&#13;
Valentine Wiegand was born in&#13;
Saxony, German v Oct. 18, 1822* and&#13;
died June 6, 1907, aged 84 years, 7&#13;
*&#13;
YvTvctotwa ^Cv^Vv Sc\voo\&#13;
Monday Evening June 17&#13;
Hf/ss Uazril Johnsot:&#13;
F(eu, tf, G. Gates&#13;
Itfuudc rf, hforterjsen&#13;
't.d'' ns Reput'jiijt}," /h.triat] Laucy&#13;
Miss Kuta R'/er&#13;
Norma E, I'aughn&#13;
a" a Success," Urj //, fifonks&#13;
Cd!! Sykes&#13;
Florence I/, tyam's&#13;
// /,-/&gt;J Jotjiiscs} and Kate Rutin&#13;
' School Daijv" Mahr,! !•, Castor&#13;
Prof, IS, B, Laird&#13;
fies, M, J. Comerford&#13;
Sad is Mauls&#13;
L*J .'*.;'&#13;
months and 18 days.&#13;
He came to this country in 1842&#13;
landing in New York City, where he&#13;
worked at tbe Cabinet maker's trade&#13;
for eleven years then he decided to&#13;
come to Michigan, arriving at Pettysville&#13;
in 1853, where he bas since resided.&#13;
He married Kittie Warren May&#13;
4, 1987, who with one son, Volla, survive&#13;
him.&#13;
Funeral services were held at the&#13;
North Hcmburg church Sunday afternoon&#13;
Rev. A. G Gates officiating.-&#13;
Burial in cemetery by church".&#13;
¢:,4^ -srt _,. _ k&#13;
»Mfl&#13;
rajK"'&#13;
_^iyMA.&#13;
. . . : • - • *&#13;
•••,&lt;!&#13;
f • -n&#13;
* , • • , .&#13;
- . - • * ' : •.."..i -,• M - :..\-&#13;
" ^ ":a&#13;
• -¾&#13;
. -a&#13;
Ok&#13;
&lt;*&#13;
: : / ;&#13;
• \&#13;
'-1 s&#13;
o&gt; 'itior oj Diplomas, Com&#13;
SSQlOtlO!&#13;
Admission 15 Cents&#13;
RESERVED SEATS - 10 CENTS&#13;
AT SIGLERS DRUG STORE&#13;
"Ibis little pig wfr.t to market"&#13;
doesn't amuse tonight. B»tyfe&#13;
well; what's U* mattet, |»rj&#13;
cheeks are ao whit*; ft0 Hilie&#13;
my is acbia^-naujlJWy o4d -petti go&#13;
away, Caeeteweet mother must give&#13;
her, tt^n she'll he bright as the day.&#13;
Ibis her*&#13;
•otf %* F. A. Bigler, DrnggUt&#13;
- 1L1_» . . . _ . .&#13;
FARMERS!&#13;
Do you know that by&#13;
use np hand seporators,&#13;
taking better care of&#13;
your milk and shipping&#13;
the cream promptly to&#13;
the DUDLEY BUTTEK&#13;
CO. at Saginaw, Mioh ,&#13;
you a^e «oing to s/er an&#13;
actual tfain in dollars&#13;
and rer.ts this year of&#13;
over 20 per cent above&#13;
any year yet?&#13;
Prices SIR hifch, take&#13;
good care of your cows,&#13;
measure them and ship&#13;
your cream to&#13;
i*\&#13;
wm&#13;
vi m&gt;&#13;
Mrs.Wm Gardner is on the&#13;
sick list.&#13;
Owen Kerwiu of Iowa is visiting&#13;
at D. M. Monks.&#13;
Will Kennedy of Missouri&#13;
spent the past week with relatives&#13;
here.&#13;
Mrs. Wm, Doyle who has been&#13;
ill the past two weeks, ii some&#13;
better.&#13;
HOWELL. Kirk Van Winkle amWamily&#13;
The village will be full 0 f spent Sunday at A. Oemerest of&#13;
school teachers next week—exam- Anderson.&#13;
i nation.&#13;
T i , . v f T1 „ « „ " i ^ 0 H e o i a n s Need A p p l y .&#13;
The M. E. society are arrang-.| A u n t S a i ! v L l n n e k ] n w n 9 *£*lng a&lt;1&#13;
for an excursion to Detroit the j nalrlngly n; a collection of souvenir&#13;
last of the month. postal cards brought back from Buropo&#13;
by one of her summer boarders.&#13;
Twenty four graduate from the j "Now, this one." said he, showing a&#13;
high school this year and J u n e 17 handsome mrd. "is from Hesse, where&#13;
is the date of the exercises, ^ . ^ 6 8 8 1 ° 1 1 ^ ^ 3 C a m * f r 0 n °' y ° U&#13;
There will be a special election ^o°t Sally put down the carda and&#13;
here July 15, for the purpose of : 1 ^ ? » lu '," ^ Indignation.&#13;
j . j . ' . . ' Land sa^es!" she exclaimed In bor&#13;
deciding the sewer proposition, ror. "Did you go there?"&#13;
They w3l vote to bond for $25000.&#13;
&amp;U</text>
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                  <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>
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      <name>Text</name>
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            <elementText elementTextId="40332">
              <text>PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, JUNE SO, 1907. mm&#13;
m&#13;
3.T • - . ! 1 - . . - • . Si Quality&#13;
%&#13;
' ^&#13;
Bowman's P*&#13;
lHiK,)mi«Hiv&gt;i&gt;vmNm&lt;ui&lt;lii^iiHiiiAiiM«^&#13;
For&#13;
Ice'&#13;
. . , • ; * •&#13;
i&#13;
Baker's Premium unsweetened Chocolate, $ lb. pkg. only 15c&#13;
Biker's Uocoa, I Itt cf*$tff ' 20c&#13;
Standard Curo, u*f «»i#ontj\ 5s&#13;
Yeast Foam, onl^v-V: : \ ^ 3c&#13;
Search Lifrht matches,J? boxes for 10c&#13;
Egg-O-Kee or Toated Corn Fiakes, 3 packages for 25c&#13;
Good Smoking Tobacco, fall pound package only 15c&#13;
Good fine cat tobacco, 1 lb. 25c&#13;
All 10c ping tobacco, four cats tor 30c&#13;
Key 6t one plug tobacco, regular 5c cuts only 3c; fall strip "f 6 cats, 17c&#13;
Be siire to visit lis every time pii oome to Howell,&#13;
£ v e r y d a y Is b a r g a i n d a y&#13;
B. v\. Bowman's&#13;
Howell's Busy Store&#13;
Graduated With&#13;
Honors.&#13;
P. H, S. Class of 1907.&#13;
L O C A b N E W S .&#13;
•*&#13;
\:&#13;
Mrs. C. P. Syke* \n •isitincr in Detroit.&#13;
A few flags in this town were out&#13;
on Flag Day.&#13;
Deacon L, Colby is quite poorly at&#13;
this writing,&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Moran were in&#13;
'qeaday.&#13;
uen of Detroit is visiting&#13;
ts M. Ruen and wife here.&#13;
Mra. Lyman Peck of Chelsea is visiting&#13;
old friends in this village and&#13;
vicinity.&#13;
There were many visitors in the village&#13;
from Jackson Sunday coming in&#13;
oo the excursion.&#13;
W. A. Richards and wife of Howell&#13;
were guests of H. G. Briggs and wife&#13;
Saturday and Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Josie Harland and son of Marquette&#13;
are the guests of her parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Reason.&#13;
Rev. Fr. Commerfoid will deliver&#13;
tbe oration at Stockbridge the Fourth.&#13;
The citizens of that place will hear&#13;
something worth listening to.&#13;
fc&#13;
GASOLINE&#13;
RED STAR BRAND,&#13;
Best By Test&#13;
DOES NOT SMOKE&#13;
ASK YOUR DEALER&#13;
t*6&#13;
Three weeks from today is the&#13;
glorious Fourth.&#13;
Clyde Thomas and bride of Howell&#13;
called on friends in town last Friday.&#13;
The vote to bond Chelsea for $30000&#13;
for a new school building carried at&#13;
special election.&#13;
Joe Kennedy, who has been spending&#13;
tbe past two weeks here, returned&#13;
to Detroit Sunday. *&#13;
Mart Clinton, ot tbe U. of M., is&#13;
spending the summer vacation with&#13;
his parents here.&#13;
Mrs, L. H. Sigler returned home&#13;
Friday after spending two weeks with&#13;
friends in Lansing.&#13;
Thirty one tickets were sold Irom&#13;
this place to Jackson last Saturday—&#13;
Barnam &amp; Bailies show,&#13;
Mrs. W. A. Hastam and daughter of&#13;
Detroit are the guests of her parents,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Kennedy.&#13;
Elmer Glenn of Detroit is putting&#13;
in considerable time on his Glennbrook&#13;
farm, near toere these days.&#13;
Messrs. Edward and Agustus&#13;
Schmidt and Miss Mae Ratz, of Howell&#13;
were guests ot Miss Andrews Sunday.&#13;
The legislature closed its business&#13;
Wednesday, hut the formal adjournment&#13;
will not take place until June&#13;
29.&#13;
Several from fiowell, North Lake,&#13;
Gregory and Plainfield attended the&#13;
childrens day exercises at the M. E.&#13;
church Sunday.&#13;
Miss Cora Deveraux closed her second&#13;
year of school in Dist. No. 4, Unadilla.&#13;
Friday. She has been offered&#13;
the school for next year. Her pupib&#13;
gave her a silver butter knife and&#13;
sugar shell. Ice cream and cake was&#13;
served and the afternoon spent in&#13;
playing croquet and ball. Hazel&#13;
Hinchey received the prize for spelling&#13;
and was present ever/ day.&#13;
Monday evening marked another&#13;
milestone in the Pinukney Jjilgh&#13;
school, when the class of 1907 consisting&#13;
of six young people, graduated&#13;
with honors and are now launched on&#13;
the busy sea of life. It would be impossible&#13;
for us to speak of each number&#13;
on the program as each was so&#13;
good that there seemed there could oo&#13;
no choice. Each part was rendered&#13;
in excellent manner and showed thai&#13;
tbe pupils had not only worked hard&#13;
themselves bat their instructors mast&#13;
have been doing things as well. The&#13;
music was furnished by the -Misses&#13;
Hazel Johnson, Sadie Harris and Kate&#13;
Ruen and was excellent. Carl Sykes&#13;
sang a soL and received an encore.&#13;
The itcture by Prof. Laird of the&#13;
State Normal at Ypsilanti was a masterly&#13;
effort and lull of sound doctrine&#13;
and education, but the entertainment&#13;
had been pienty long belore he commenced&#13;
so that it was bard fur him to&#13;
hold tbe interest of the audience. Mr.&#13;
Laird is one of tne foremost educators&#13;
in the state and is called the "Tne&#13;
Little Giant." He was introduced by&#13;
Daniel Murta, President of school&#13;
board, whe&gt;was a college mate of&#13;
Prof. Laird years ago and played on&#13;
the first college ball team together.&#13;
Rev. Fr. Commerford made a few&#13;
brief remarks which were much to the&#13;
point and were inspiring. County&#13;
school commissioner, N. C. Knooihuizeh&#13;
was present and in a few well selected&#13;
words addressed the class and&#13;
presented them with their diplomas in&#13;
behalf of the school board.&#13;
This ended the commencement of&#13;
another class in tbe P. H. S. and it&#13;
was a credit to board, tbe instructors&#13;
and the pupils. The school is reaching&#13;
a higher level each year and it the&#13;
people of tbe village desire to see the&#13;
education of the young progress it is&#13;
for their interest to see that the same&#13;
officers are again elected in July.&#13;
"H to You Fish?&#13;
If so, You surely should see our&#13;
fine and complete line of fishing&#13;
Tackel, casting rods, baits reefs,&#13;
lines, minnow nets and pails. In&#13;
fact everything in the fishing line&#13;
See our show case—it will&#13;
fairly make your mouth water&#13;
Teeple Hardware Go.&#13;
Born to Mr, and Mrs. C. L. Finlan&#13;
of Fowleryille a 9$ pound girl, June&#13;
11. Mrs. Finlan was formerly Miss&#13;
Mae Commiskey.&#13;
H. R. Wilkinson is in this village&#13;
doing some upholstering and repairing.&#13;
He is a good workman and&#13;
thinks some of locating here.'&#13;
The first annual commencement exercises&#13;
of St. Mary's school at Cbelsea&#13;
will be held in St. Mary's hail at that&#13;
place on Tuesday evening, June 25.&#13;
Miss Eliza R. Shier, a former resident&#13;
of this place and prominent in&#13;
church and tenperance work, died at&#13;
her home in Landrum, S. C, June 10.&#13;
We neglected last week to»call attention&#13;
to the ady of H. M. Williston&#13;
&amp; Co. Thay have put a soda fountain&#13;
l their grocery and are serving sundaes&#13;
and sodas.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, Frank Wolfer, who&#13;
have been visiting her parents, G. W.&#13;
Teeple and family the past two weeks,&#13;
returned to their home in Stillwater,&#13;
Minn., Friday last.&#13;
The Millingtoa Gazette says that&#13;
the people there are too bu3y talking&#13;
grist mill to think about celebrating&#13;
the Fourth. Tt will be remembered&#13;
their grist mill burned down the past&#13;
year and the citizens of that village&#13;
begin to appreciate what a good mill&#13;
meant to tbe town.&#13;
CAM Of THANKS.&#13;
We wish to tbank our friends and&#13;
neighbors for their kind assistance&#13;
during the illness and deatl. of our&#13;
husband and father. We also wish to&#13;
express our thaaks to those who so&#13;
sympathetioaliy rendered tbe music&#13;
and lor the floral tributes sent.&#13;
MRS. V. WIKOAND&#13;
VoiAA W ISO AND&#13;
GBOBG* WA&amp;RKN.&#13;
\W&amp;;\*;+K:&gt;:K\*&amp;^ •- &gt;.•• '. '&#13;
If you want any thing in our lim&#13;
We will gladly show it to you&#13;
Our prices will make you buy&#13;
We have a fine line of Books&#13;
Toilet Cases, Manicure Sets&#13;
and other Fancy Articles&#13;
Pure Drugs—PretstriptioDB Carefully Compounded at&#13;
- '-\&#13;
F. A. SlGbBR'S&#13;
» - » .*-* m"-* ** ^ A" - ' . * . - ' J * , J * . » ' j ' ' . - ' l ' &gt; . - ' v . J , # * . - ' / &gt; . - , l * . « , J * . - ' 4 l ^ l * . - ) l * , l ' ' j * . - ' l * . - ' j " - ' . " . -' A~ -' . ' x ' *'&#13;
Summer Underwear&#13;
Mens* Balbriggan Union Suits&#13;
Mens' Balbriggan Undershirts&#13;
Mens' Balbriggan Drawers&#13;
Mens' Balbriggan Undershirts&#13;
Mens' Balbriggan Drawers&#13;
Mens* Med. wt Drawers and Shirts 25c each&#13;
Boys Balbriggan Uudershirts and Drawers 25c each •&#13;
Mens' Night Shirts 50c and 75c&#13;
•1.00&#13;
.259&#13;
. 2 5 *&#13;
^aa^V&#13;
-*l&#13;
A Fine Assortment of Straw Hats&#13;
ALL TOO BE FOUND&#13;
L. L. Holmes Clothing Co&#13;
Pinckney. Mich.&#13;
Mrs. Estella Graham is visiting her&#13;
parents, A. 13. Green and wife.&#13;
Pinckney hive has accepted an in&#13;
vitation to meet with Dexter hiva on&#13;
Thursday, June 27. All members&#13;
take notice. R. K.&#13;
M. C, Ruen has fiaished his work in&#13;
the dental department of the IT. of M.&#13;
and is now a full fledged dentist. He&#13;
went to Ann Arbor apain this week to&#13;
receive his "sheepskin,"&#13;
Sipler Bros, icecream parlors pre&#13;
sent an attractive appearance these&#13;
days and judging from the crowd that&#13;
visits there they are giving satisfaction.&#13;
They are certainly bound to&#13;
please their patrons.&#13;
The Chance Club met w th Mise&#13;
Lillian Hoyle Thursday evening laat,&#13;
the girls dressittnin costume. There&#13;
were soma fiat oMt ajMl flMB* *f&#13;
girls were * "* «+*i&gt;n&#13;
W or4 rnrnydv* d W *&#13;
that Uj*. Elbe! f immins of Port Ar&#13;
tour T**a«, has been caring for a little&#13;
daughter for a couple of weeks. Mrs,&#13;
Timmins was formerly Miss Ethel&#13;
Durfee of this place.&#13;
Died in Howell June 17, 1907^&lt;||&#13;
the home of his daughter Mrs.&#13;
Davis, Mr. William Hemmingway&#13;
aged 93 years, 11 monrb* and 17 days.&#13;
Funeral will be neld at the Cong'l&#13;
church Thursday at 11 o'clock.&#13;
;._M&#13;
it*,;&#13;
WHAT iSTHE W.C.T.U&#13;
DOING?&#13;
"Through their influence&#13;
in Lansing&#13;
the free lunch was&#13;
abolished m saloons&#13;
and the curfew ordinance&#13;
was passed''.&#13;
So says city attorney Hood.&#13;
Ice Cream Soda&#13;
Come in and eat&#13;
a pure, refreshing&#13;
dish of - - -&#13;
"Silk Floss" Ice Cream&#13;
either in the form of&#13;
a "Sundae or Soda.'*&#13;
We are sure t o&#13;
please you as we&#13;
have all the latest&#13;
flavors.&#13;
-¾... .*„&#13;
• * *&amp;;'•&#13;
• A&#13;
Carboruted Watei&#13;
A l l Kind* on lce«&#13;
*S$r&#13;
-,*r&#13;
3Vn\ T&gt;w» XortK of &lt;&amp;«* Km&#13;
S\$VfcT 1&amp;Y0&amp;. * &gt; • • ; .&#13;
' ~::v&#13;
'• - ^ 1&#13;
: « * • ' • •&#13;
- ' ; ; , • • . ' , , ,&#13;
• '1 ••' -\&#13;
V&#13;
• » •&#13;
• 'i" a *&#13;
'-**«&#13;
', ,f"'jVI&#13;
i':-' *£jfe'-~ ^^-1&#13;
J B i " - ' * * : i '&#13;
- C " ! - . ^ j * * v . , - «,u. - ^ ^ - 1&#13;
"St&#13;
•£•;&lt;• &gt; -\-'-•&lt;-' -i&amp;&#13;
;:J*I&#13;
^ ^ 1 ^ .^,;- . , ^ :&#13;
'4.'«i^-'(ilill«lr-#i*» '&#13;
&gt; V W . . '&#13;
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/.fe.H!B'S." .w&#13;
• y * *&#13;
nr(MMM«r* |/ ffts^atrh.&#13;
F&amp;UU L. Avxuucws, Pub,&#13;
PINOKHBY, MICHIGAN&#13;
fat:*-&#13;
"••XI.'&#13;
# •&#13;
* f *&#13;
&gt; "&#13;
we.&#13;
Y * v&#13;
'if* •&#13;
Th« Leveling Crowd.&#13;
'!. B«rt quite apart from one's private&#13;
feeling, there is also the undoubted&#13;
tact which meets one on every Bide,&#13;
that people in the company of others&#13;
are almost invariably less interesting,&#13;
less Individual, less tolerant, mere&#13;
conventional, more tiresome, less Bincere,&#13;
less unaffected than when they&#13;
are alone; they are less themselves,&#13;
la fact. The serious, quiet, suggestive&#13;
person, who Is delightful when he la&#13;
by himself, when he talks easily and&#13;
simply of all that is in his mind, becomes&#13;
feebly jocular, mildly cynical,&#13;
given to anecdote, given to reminiscence,&#13;
in company. The bluff man becomes&#13;
rude, the laughing philosopher&#13;
fhecomes a screeching platitudinarian,&#13;
•&lt;?the weeping philosopher becomes a&#13;
..gloomy poseur, the shy man becomes&#13;
vjtoe«t or, still worse,. voluble, the&#13;
iaUber becomes a chatterer, the sym-&#13;
SAtlUiUc man becomes unctuous. It is&#13;
Jfce Mtural result of an audience, says&#13;
ja; ©. Benson, i» Atlantic. In a tete-atete&#13;
one has only one person to think&#13;
of; but when tMB listeners are multiplied,&#13;
one feels obliged conscientiously&#13;
to try and hit the taste, not of the&#13;
individual, but of the type; and the&#13;
type is always duller, and generally&#13;
lower, than the individual. And in any&#13;
case prudence warns one to abstain&#13;
from any originality and not to commit&#13;
oneself.&#13;
Medical Inspection of Schools.&#13;
The cordial bearing and the loving&#13;
care of children will always be woman's&#13;
supreme work. Our darkest sociological&#13;
prophets to the contrary&#13;
notwithstanding, she will never emancipate&#13;
herself from those tender duties.&#13;
Not very long ago the home prepared&#13;
the children for schools. Now, in the&#13;
somersault of conditions, the school&#13;
stands in loco parentis to the children.&#13;
With the children of the very poor and&#13;
illiterate this is peculiarly the fact.&#13;
The training, the care, the instruction,&#13;
the play, which cannot be had in the&#13;
home, the public school supplies. The&#13;
strong manhood and efflcfent womanhood&#13;
so vital to our material security&#13;
depend to-day, declares Herbert D.&#13;
-,Warb;, in Woman's Home Companion,&#13;
upon the quality of oversight in the&#13;
school rather than upon direction and&#13;
solicitude in the home. Hotel and fiat&#13;
Hfe, the tenement house and conges&#13;
tion in our cities, the public school sys&#13;
tern and curfew law—these illustrate&#13;
the decadence of the home. Our worn&#13;
en must rush to the rescue. The first&#13;
requisite of a balanced mind will al&#13;
ways be a healthy body. . . . New&#13;
York city now employs 150 physicians&#13;
who-visit each public school once a&#13;
day, shortly after nine o'clock, to examine&#13;
those children set aside by the&#13;
teachers as requiring attention.&#13;
an article in Scribner's Magazine&#13;
"Americanisms," Henry Cabot&#13;
Ledge will bring joy to many readers&#13;
by his remarks on the word "guess,"&#13;
whose use in the sense of think or&#13;
suppose is so derided by British&#13;
critics. Mr. Lodge quotes Chaucer,&#13;
Shakespeare, Gray, Coleridge, Wordswnrth&#13;
and Carlyle as using the word&#13;
in this sense, and says: "Seriously&#13;
speaking, the word 'guess' is a good&#13;
old English word, and the American&#13;
usage is both excellent and correct, as&#13;
well as far truer to the tradition and&#13;
spirit of the language than the British&#13;
-substitutes of 'fancy,' 'imagine,' or 'expect,&#13;
1 which last is grotesquely wrong&#13;
because it can properly apply only to&#13;
the future." With this authority behind&#13;
him even the fastidious one anxious&#13;
to display culture need not lament&#13;
when his tongue slips and he&#13;
says "I guess" instead of "I fawncy."&#13;
f &amp; *&#13;
John Burroughs, who lives near to&#13;
nature's heart in a picturesque home&#13;
on the Esopus hills, overlooking the&#13;
noble Hudson, has been Interviewed&#13;
on the subject of "nature fakers" and&#13;
shows that many of the writers on the&#13;
habits of birds and animals are rank&#13;
humbugs and know little about the&#13;
subjects regarding which they profess&#13;
to speak with authority. In many&#13;
matters regarding outdoor life he is&#13;
thoroughly in accord with President&#13;
Roosevelt, of whom he says: "The&#13;
president, is as competent in natural&#13;
fry as he is in politics. He knows&#13;
wild life like a book, and whatever&#13;
he says on the subject you can&#13;
take without discount." That, sayp&#13;
Troy Times, comes straight from a&#13;
man who never conceals his own opinions,&#13;
and whose love for the simple&#13;
JUM) natural! life cannot be exceeded.&#13;
in •**&gt; , , &gt; ' , '&#13;
*&#13;
Roosevelt Delivers a Notable Address&#13;
at Jamestown, Va.&#13;
Speaks Before the Delegates to the National&#13;
Editorial Association—Touches Upon&#13;
Important National Questions.&#13;
Jamestov/n, Va.—The following is the&#13;
»ddresa of President Roosevelt before&#13;
the National Editorial association at the&#13;
cxpositiou here:&#13;
It in of course H mere truism to say that&#13;
no other body of our coun.rymen wield as&#13;
sxtensive an influence us those who write&#13;
for the daily press and for the periodicals.&#13;
It iB also a truism to buy thut&#13;
such power implies the gravest responsibility,&#13;
and the man exercising it should&#13;
hold himself accountable, and should be&#13;
held by others accountable, precisely as&#13;
,f he occupied any other position of pubtic&#13;
trust. I do not intend to dwell upon&#13;
your duties to-day, save that I shall&#13;
permit myself to point out one matter&#13;
where it seems to me that the need of&#13;
aur people Is vital." It is essential that&#13;
the man In public life and the man who&#13;
writes in the public press shall both Of&#13;
them, if they are really good servants&#13;
jf, the people, be prompt to assail wrongdoing&#13;
and wickedness. But In thus assailing&#13;
wrongdoing and wickedness, there&#13;
fire two conditions to be fulfilled, because&#13;
If unfulfilled, harm and not good wilt&#13;
result. In the hrst place, be sure of&#13;
your facts and avoid everything like&#13;
hysteria or exaggeration; for to assail&#13;
a decent man for something of which he&#13;
ts innocent is to give aid and comfort to&#13;
every scoundrel, while indulgence in hysterical&#13;
exaggeration serves to weaken,&#13;
not strengthen, the statement of truth.&#13;
In the second place, be sure that you&#13;
ba.se your judgment on conduct and not&#13;
on the social or economic position of the&#13;
Individual with whom you are denting.&#13;
J?o much fur what 1 have to say to&#13;
you in your capacity of molders and&#13;
guides ot public thought. In addition&#13;
I want to speak to you on two great&#13;
movements in our public life which I&#13;
feel must necessarily occupy no inconsiderable&#13;
part of the time of our public&#13;
men in the near future. One of these is&#13;
the question of, in certain ways, reshaping&#13;
our system of taxation so as to&#13;
make it bear most heavily on those most&#13;
capable of supporting the strain. The&#13;
other Is the question of utilizing the&#13;
natural resources of the imtion in the&#13;
way that will be of most beneilt to the&#13;
nation as a whole.&#13;
Need of Foresight.&#13;
In utilizing and conserving the natural&#13;
resources of the nation the otv characteristic&#13;
more essential than dny other is&#13;
foresight. 1'nfortiinately, foresight is&#13;
not usually characteristic of a young and&#13;
vigorous people, and it is obviously not&#13;
a marked characteristic of ux In the&#13;
United States. Yet assuredly it should be&#13;
the growing nation with a future which&#13;
takes the long look ahead; and no other&#13;
nation is growing so rapidly as ours or&#13;
has a future so full of promise. No other&#13;
nation enjoys so wonderful a measure of&#13;
present prosperity which can of right&#13;
be treated as an earnest of future success,&#13;
and for no other are the rewards&#13;
of foresight so great, so certain, and so&#13;
easily foretold.&#13;
The conservation of our natural resources&#13;
and their proper use constitute&#13;
the fundamental problem which underlies&#13;
almost every other problem of our na»&#13;
tional life. Unless we maintain an adequate&#13;
material basis for our civilization,&#13;
wr can not maintain the institutions in&#13;
which wo take so great and just a pride;&#13;
and to waste and destroy our natural&#13;
resources means to undermine this material&#13;
basis. During the last Ave years&#13;
efforts have been made In several new&#13;
directions in the government service to&#13;
g?.\ our people to look ahead, to exercise&#13;
foresight, and to substitute a planned and&#13;
orderly development nf our resources In&#13;
the place of a haphazard striving for&#13;
immediate profit. The effort has been&#13;
made through several agencies.&#13;
In 1902 the reclamation service began&#13;
to develop the larger opportunities of the&#13;
western half of our country for irrigation.&#13;
The work Includes all the states&#13;
from the great plains through the Rocky&#13;
mountains to the Pacific slope. It has&#13;
been conducted with the clear and definite&#13;
purpose of using the valuable water&#13;
resources of the public land for the&#13;
greatest good for the greatest, number in&#13;
the long run; In other words, for the&#13;
purpose of putting upon the land permanent&#13;
home makers who will use and&#13;
develop It for Ihemselves and for their&#13;
children and children's children. There&#13;
has been opposition, of course, to this&#13;
work of the reclamation service; for we&#13;
have been obliged to antagonize certain&#13;
men whose Interest It was to exhaust for&#13;
their own temporary personal profit natural&#13;
resources which ought tn be developed&#13;
through HBP, so as to be conserved&#13;
for the permanent common advantage of&#13;
the people as a whole. But there will he&#13;
no halt in the work of preserving the&#13;
waters which head in the Rocky mountain&#13;
region so ns to make them of most&#13;
use to the people as a whole; for the&#13;
policy Is essential to our national welfare.&#13;
Operation! of Land Laws.&#13;
The public lands of the United States&#13;
Bhould be utilized In similar fanhion. Our&#13;
present public land laws were pasned&#13;
when there was a vast surplus of vacant&#13;
public land. The chief desira was to&#13;
secure settlerR thereon, and comparatively&#13;
Blight attention was paid as to exactly&#13;
how the land* were disposed of In detail.&#13;
In connerjuencp, lax execution of&#13;
the laws became the rule both In the land&#13;
office and In the public mind, and land&#13;
frauds were common and little noted.&#13;
This wan especially true when a system&#13;
originally designed for the fertile and&#13;
well-watered region* of the middle west&#13;
was applied to the dryer region* of the&#13;
great plains and to the mountains and&#13;
the Pacific coast. In these regions the&#13;
system lent itself to fraud, and much&#13;
land passed out. of the hands of the government&#13;
without passing into the hnnds&#13;
of the home maker. The department of&#13;
the Interior and the department of justice&#13;
joined In prosecuting the offenders&#13;
against the law; but both the law and&#13;
its administration were defective and&#13;
needed to be chunked. Three years ago&#13;
a public lands commission was appoint&#13;
amination specifically showed the existence&#13;
of great frauds upojfrthc public&#13;
domain, and their recommendation* -f°r&#13;
changes in the law were made with the&#13;
design of conserving the natural resources&#13;
of every part of the public land&#13;
by putting it to its best use. Attention&#13;
was especially called to the prevention of&#13;
settlement by the passage of great areas&#13;
of public lands into the hands of a few&#13;
men, and to the enormous waste cuubed&#13;
by unrestricted grazing on the open&#13;
ra,nge; a system of ueing the natural&#13;
forage on the public domain which&#13;
amounts to putting a premium on its&#13;
destruction The recommendations of the&#13;
public lands commission were aound, for&#13;
they were especially in the interest of&#13;
the actual home maker; and where the&#13;
small home maker could nut utilize the&#13;
land, It was provided that the government&#13;
should keep control of it so that&#13;
it could not be monopolized by a few&#13;
wealthy men. Congress has not yet&#13;
acted upon these recommendations, except&#13;
for the repeal of the iniquitous&#13;
lieu-land law. But the recommendations&#13;
are so 'just and proper, so essential to our&#13;
national welfare, that I believe they will&#13;
surely ultimately be adopted.&#13;
In 1WU coMSrviw authorised the president&#13;
to create national forests In the&#13;
public domain. These forests reserves re- t&#13;
mained for &amp; long time in charge of&#13;
the general )and office, which had no&#13;
men properly trained in forestry. But.&#13;
another department, that of agriculture,&#13;
possessed the trained men. In otl*er&#13;
words, the government forests were without&#13;
foresters and the government, foresters&#13;
without 'Wrests. Waste of effort&#13;
and waste of forests inevitably followed,&#13;
finally the situation was ended ,lh 1906&#13;
by the creation of the United State*&#13;
forest service, ' which has stopped th.e&#13;
waste, consery*^ the resources of t h e&#13;
national forests, and made them useful;&#13;
so that %ur forests are now be.ing managed&#13;
on a coherent plan, *nd in a way&#13;
that augurs well for this' future.&#13;
Preserve Mineral Remrrees.&#13;
The mineral fuels of the eastern United&#13;
States have already p a s s e d ' i n t o the&#13;
hands of large private owners, and those&#13;
of the west are rapidly following. This&#13;
should not be, for such mineral resources&#13;
belong in a peculiar degree to the W^61e&#13;
people. Under private control there' 1«&#13;
much waste from the shortsighted&#13;
methods of working, and- the complete&#13;
utilization is often aarriftee* for-a greater&#13;
immediate profit, The mineral fuels un«&#13;
der our present conditions are as esaen*&#13;
tial to our prosperity as the forests will&#13;
always be. The difference is that the&#13;
supply Is definitely limited, for coal doe«&#13;
not grow* and trees do. It is obvious&#13;
that the mineral fuels should be conserved,&#13;
not wasted, and that enough of&#13;
them should remain in the hands of&#13;
the government to protect the people&#13;
against unjust or extortionate prices, so&#13;
far as that can still be done. What .has&#13;
been accomplished In the regulation of&#13;
the great oil fields of the Indian territory&#13;
offers a striking example of the&#13;
good results of such a policy. I^aat&#13;
summer, accordingly, I withdrew moat&#13;
of the coal-bearing public lands temporarily&#13;
from disposal, and asked for the&#13;
legislation necessary to protect the pub*&#13;
He interest by the conservation of the&#13;
mineral fuels; that Is, for the power to&#13;
keep the foe In the government and to&#13;
lease the coal, nil, and gas lights under&#13;
proper regulation. No such legislation&#13;
was passer!, but 1 still hope that we. shall&#13;
ultimately get it.&#13;
Prevention of Frauds.&#13;
For several yesrs we have been doing&#13;
everything in our power to prevent&#13;
fraud upon the public land, What can&#13;
be done under the present laws is now&#13;
being iki;!f through the joint action of&#13;
the intciior department and the department&#13;
of justice, Rut fully to accomplish&#13;
the prevention of fraud there is need of&#13;
further legislation and especially of a&#13;
sufficient ;:;-;":r! ;-r':.::c:i to permit the department&#13;
of the interior to examine certain&#13;
classes of entries mi the ground&#13;
before they pass into .private, ownership.&#13;
The appropriation asked for last&#13;
winter, if granted, would have put an&#13;
end to the squandering of the puhlir&#13;
domain, while it would have prevented&#13;
any need of causing hardship to individual&#13;
settlers by holding up their claims.&#13;
Howevc¥| the appropriation was not&#13;
given us, nnd in consequence it la not&#13;
possible to secure, as I would like to&#13;
secure, the natural resources of the public&#13;
land from fraud, waste and encroachment.&#13;
So much for what we are trying to do&#13;
in uillzlng our public lands for the public;&#13;
In securing the use of the water, the&#13;
forage, the coal and the timber for the&#13;
public. In all four movements my chief&#13;
adviser, and the man first to suggest&#13;
to me the courses which have actually&#13;
proved so beneficial, was Mr. GifTord&#13;
Plnchot, the chief of the national forest&#13;
service. Mr. Plnchot also suggested to&#13;
me a movement supplementary to all of&#13;
these movements; one which will itself&#13;
lead the way in the general movement&#13;
which he represents and with which he&#13;
Is actively Identified, for the conservation&#13;
of nil our natural resource*. This&#13;
wan the appointment of the inland&#13;
waterways commission.&#13;
The inability of the railroads of t h e&#13;
United States to meet the d e m a n d s&#13;
upon them h a s d r a w n public a t t e n t i o n&#13;
forcibly to t h e use of our w a t e r w a y s&#13;
for t r a s p o r t a t l o n . Rut it Is obvious&#13;
t h a t this ts only one of their m a n y&#13;
uses, and t h a t a planned and orderly&#13;
development Is Impossible except by&#13;
taking into account all the sen-ices&#13;
Iney are capable of rendering. It was&#13;
upon this ground t h a t the inland w a -&#13;
t e r w a y s commission was recently a p -&#13;
pointed. Their d u t y is to propose a&#13;
comprehensive plan for the Improvement&#13;
and utilization of those g r e a t&#13;
w a t e r w a y s which a r e the great potential&#13;
h i g h w a y s of the country. Their&#13;
duty is also to brlngf t o g e t h e r t h e&#13;
points of view of all users of s t r e a m s ,&#13;
ed to scrutinize the law and the facts l and to submit a general plan for tha .. ,.., „&#13;
and to recommend ,% remedy. Their ex- development and conservation of tha t a i n " m a t f a urn.&#13;
'•£*«* Clear** it&#13;
tiphm fe*-*fc« waterways mm*&#13;
to »e#fato»ft* its «Teat t»»fc&#13;
lartnjr ths&#13;
I J' H I " '&#13;
'i- '?-&#13;
y been undartaien. 0»e py ©n%* «ht#f Witnttfr fort tfc« J»mioeut!oi&gt;&#13;
it&#13;
(t time; tha 0&#13;
p l a n n e d conser&#13;
n a t u r a l rssourosV&#13;
s i n g l e problem. Qne b y oo* t h e lad.&#13;
y a u a i tasks tn this f*e*t.problem h a t s -&#13;
alMWPy been u n d e r t a k e n . One by on*: '&#13;
in p r a c t i c a l fashion t h e methods &lt;if&#13;
d*fcU&amp;# w i t h thero w e r e wbrlted * « t .&#13;
National i r r i g a t i o n lvas p r o v e d Itself&#13;
a, Sttccesa by its actual w o r k i n g . Again,&#13;
a c t u a l experience has s h o w n t h a t t h e&#13;
R a t i o n a l . for&lt;#ta will fulfill t h e l a r g e r&#13;
purpose for w h i c h they were created.&#13;
Alt' w h o h a v e - t h o u g h t f u l l y ntudied t h a&#13;
subject have come to see t h a t the »olutidn&#13;
of the public Janda question Ilea&#13;
w i t h t h e home m a k e r , w i t h the s e t t l e r&#13;
who lives on his land a n d t h a t gov*&#13;
e r n m e n t control of the rnineral fu&gt;l»&#13;
a n d t h e public, g r a z i n g lands is necess&#13;
a r y and Inevitable. Bach of theSe&#13;
conclusions r e p r e s e n t e d - a&gt; movement&#13;
of vujst Importance which would confer&#13;
l a r g e benefits upon t h e nation, b u t&#13;
which stood by Itself. They a r e connected&#13;
t o g e t h e r into one g r e a t fundam&#13;
e n t a l p r o b l e m — t h a t of" the conservation&#13;
of all our n a t u r a l resources.&#13;
Upon the wise solution of this, much&#13;
of o u r future obviously depends. Kv*n&#13;
such (luestions as the regulation of&#13;
r a i l w a y r a t e s and the control of corp&#13;
o r a t i o n s ure in reality subsidiary to&#13;
the primal problem of t h e p r e s e r v a t i o n&#13;
in t h e interests of the whole people of&#13;
the resources t h a t n a t u r e has given us.&#13;
If we fail to solve t h i s problem, no&#13;
skill in solving the o t h e r s will in t h e&#13;
end avail us very greatly.&#13;
Now a s to t h e m a t t e r of taxation.&#13;
Most g r e a t civilised countries have a n&#13;
income tax and an i n h e r i t a n c e t a x .&#13;
In my j u d g m e n t both should be p a r t&#13;
of o u r system of federal taxation. I&#13;
s p e a k diffidently a b o u t t h e Income t a x&#13;
because one scheme for an income t a x&#13;
w a s declared u n c o n s t i t u t i o n a l by t h e&#13;
supreme court by a five to four vote;&#13;
und in addition it is a difficult tax to&#13;
a d m i n t i t e r in its practical w o r k i n g s ,&#13;
a n d g r e a t care would h a v e to be exercised&#13;
t o . see t h a t it w a s not evaded&#13;
by t h e very m a n whom it is most d e -&#13;
s i r a b l e to have taxed, for if so evaded&#13;
v^t would of course be w o r s e t h a n no&#13;
t a x a t alt, aa t h e least desirable of a l l&#13;
t a x e s is the t a x "which bears heavily&#13;
upon tKa bonest"'aVfibmpared with the&#13;
dishonest man. Nevertheless, a g r a d u -&#13;
a t e d income t a x of t h e proper t y p e&#13;
.would be a desirable p e r a m n e n t feat&#13;
u r e of federal taxation, and I still&#13;
hope that one may be devised which the&#13;
s u p r e m e court will declare c o n s t i t u -&#13;
tional.&#13;
Inheritance Tax.&#13;
In my j u d g m e n t , however, the inheritance&#13;
tax is both a far better method&#13;
of taxation, and far more Important&#13;
for t h e purpose I have In view—the&#13;
purpose of h a v i n g the swollen f o r t u n e s&#13;
of the c o u n t r y bear in proportion to&#13;
their size a c o n s t a n t l y increasing b u r -&#13;
den of taxation. These fortunes exist&#13;
solely because of the protection given&#13;
t h e owners by the public. They a r e a&#13;
c o n s t a n t source of care and a n x i e t y&#13;
to the public and It is eminently just&#13;
t h a t they should be forced to pay h e a v -&#13;
ily for th^r protection given them. It&#13;
is, of course, e l e m e n t a r y that the nation&#13;
has the absolute right to decide as&#13;
to t h e terras upon which any m a n&#13;
shall receive a bequest or devise from&#13;
a n o t h e r . We h a v e repeatedly placed&#13;
such l a w s on our own s t a t u t e books,&#13;
a n d they have repeatedly been declared&#13;
constitutional by the courts. I believe&#13;
t h a t the t a x should contain- the p r o -&#13;
g r e s s i v e principle. W h a t e v e r any individual&#13;
receives, w h e t h e r by gift, bequest,&#13;
or devise, in life or in death,&#13;
should, after a certain a m o u n t is&#13;
reached, be Increasingly burdened; a n d&#13;
t h e ru_te of t a x a t i o n should be increased&#13;
In proportion to the r e m o t e -&#13;
ness of blood of the man receiving&#13;
from tire m a n glvl^Mp-^r devising, Tha&#13;
principle of this progressive t a x a t i o n&#13;
of i n h e r i t a n c e has not only been authorlafively&#13;
recognized by the legislation&#13;
of .congress, but it is now u n -&#13;
equivocally adopted in the leading civilized&#13;
nations of the world—in, for instance,&#13;
Great Britain, F r a n c e and Germany.&#13;
Switzerland led off with t h e&#13;
imposition of high progressive r a t e s .&#13;
Great Rrltain w a s the first of the g r e a t&#13;
nations to follow suit, and within the&#13;
last few years both F r a n c e and Gera&#13;
m n y have adopted the principle. In&#13;
Great Britain all estates worth $5,000&#13;
or less a r e practically exempt from&#13;
death duties, while the Increase is&#13;
sueh t h a t when an estate exceeds&#13;
jTi,000,000 in value and passes to a d i s -&#13;
t a n t k i n s m a n or s t r a n g e r In blood t h e&#13;
g o v e r n m e n t receives nearly 18 per&#13;
cent. In France, under the p r o g r e s s i v e&#13;
system, so much of an Inheritance a s&#13;
exceeds $10,000,000 p a y s over 20 per&#13;
cent, to the s t a t e if it passes to a d i s -&#13;
t a n t relative, and five per cent, if it&#13;
passes to a direct heir. In G e r m a n y&#13;
very small inheritance a r e exempt, b u t&#13;
t h e tax Is so s h a r p l y progressive t h a t&#13;
an Inheritance not In a g r i c u l t u r a l or&#13;
forest lands w h i c h exceeds $250,000,&#13;
if It goes to d i s t a n t relatives, Is&#13;
taxed at the. r a t e of a b o u t ^a per cent.&#13;
The German lav,- Is of special Interest,&#13;
because It m a k e s t h e inheritance t a x&#13;
an imperial m e a s u r e , while a l l o t t i n g&#13;
to the Individual s t a t e s of the empire&#13;
a portion of the proceeds and p e r m i t -&#13;
t i n g them to impose taxes In addition&#13;
to those Imposed by the Imperial g o v -&#13;
ernment. In the United States the n a -&#13;
tional government has more t h a n once&#13;
imposed inheritance taxes in addition&#13;
to those imposed by t h e states, a n d&#13;
in t h e last Instance a b o u t one-half of&#13;
t h e s t a t e s levied such taxes concurr&#13;
e n t l y with t h e national g o v e r n m e n t ,&#13;
making a combined maximum rate, In&#13;
some cases as high as 26 per cent.;&#13;
and&gt;, as a m a t t e r of fact, several s t a t e s&#13;
adopted inheritance, t a x lawg for t h e&#13;
first time while the national law WHS&#13;
still in force and unrepealed. T h e&#13;
French law has one feature which is to&#13;
be heartily commended.. The p r o g r e s -&#13;
sive principle is so applied t h a t each&#13;
h i g h e r r a t e Is Imposed only on t h e excess&#13;
above the. amount subject to&#13;
the. next lower rate. This plain la&#13;
peculiarly adapted to the working out&#13;
of the" theory of using tho inheritance&#13;
tax for the purpose of limiting&#13;
tho sixe of inheritable fortunes, since&#13;
the progressive increase in the rates,&#13;
according to this mode, may be carried&#13;
to its logical conclusion In a&#13;
maximum rate of nearly 100 per&#13;
cent, for the amount In excess of&#13;
a specified sum. w i t h o u t being confiscatory&#13;
as to t h e rcat of the inheritance;&#13;
for each Increase In rate would'&#13;
apply only to t h e a m o u n t above a cer«&#13;
- •*- W ' i f , "&#13;
. • * : . * . I&#13;
Telia of Wholesale^ ^flur4tr&#13;
Schemes Jn W^ifih H%&#13;
Waa Involved,&#13;
Sv&#13;
" * . &gt; v&#13;
•w,&#13;
&lt;•' r&#13;
... '«&#13;
• *.&#13;
''S*: ' -J,-1.1 • ,*.'' • • m&#13;
• * . ' • # • i " !&#13;
• &lt; J&#13;
• . • &gt; • ' • :&#13;
B|i&#13;
Bolae, Idaho.—Alfred-Howie**--a;&#13;
Harry Orchard, the,actual aaaassl&#13;
Frank Steunenberg, w«nt on ihebi&#13;
as a witness against William&#13;
Haywood, attfl- made public &lt;JOBfessioa&#13;
cf a long Chain of*'brutal,&#13;
revolting crimes, done, he »aid, at tHfc&#13;
Inspiration and for 'the pay of ta«/&#13;
leaders of the Western "Federation of&#13;
Miners. The victims marked for deatk&#13;
at his hands, according.to his testimony&#13;
wsret&#13;
Frad a^a^lay, retired mine of-&#13;
Qciai, San FraiKiBCo; blown half way&#13;
across street and maimed for life tyr&#13;
bomb concealed by Orchard under&#13;
doorstep; also object of poison plot&#13;
Motive, revenge.&#13;
Sherman Bell, adjutant-general ol&#13;
Colorado national guard, Denver;&#13;
waylaid by Orchard and other assassins&#13;
who sought his life; escaped.&#13;
Motive, revenge for activity in putting&#13;
down strike lawlessness.&#13;
Justice Qmbbcrt of supreme, court&#13;
of Colorado, Denver; bomb placed ia&#13;
his pathway exploded by another man,.&#13;
who. was blown to pieces. Motive, decisions&#13;
against Moyer.&#13;
Gov. Pesbody of Colorado, Denver;&#13;
bomb placed in front of his home to&#13;
kill him by Orchard failed to explode&#13;
by accident. Motive, upholding law&#13;
in strikes.&#13;
David Moffatt, president of First&#13;
National bank of Denver; AdamB and&#13;
Orchard tracked him with guns, but&#13;
he escaped. Motive, supposed activity&#13;
on side of mine owners.&#13;
Judge Goddard, Denver. Motive,&#13;
declared eight-hour bill unconstitutional.&#13;
Frank Steunenberg, former governor&#13;
of Idaho; Caldwell. Blown to&#13;
pieces by" bomb placed at "gate of&#13;
home by Orchard.&#13;
An undertaking by the spajcJtat.prqiN't&#13;
ecutors for the state that thejr'ar6u|&amp;';*&#13;
by later proof and connection, leglt^&#13;
mntize his testimony opened the wfjfe&#13;
like a floodgate to the whole diabolical&#13;
story and Orchard went on fromcrime&#13;
recital to crime recital, each&#13;
succeeding one seemingly more revolting&#13;
than those that had come before.&#13;
Here are a few of the interesting&#13;
points from his story:&#13;
"Haywood told me the blowing up&#13;
of the (Vindicator) mine was a fine&#13;
piece of work. Moyer gave me $200&#13;
and Haywood paid me $300 for blowing&#13;
up the mine.&#13;
"Haywood and Moyer both told me&#13;
I could not get too fierce to suit thero&#13;
—to go ahead and blow up everything&#13;
I could think of—to get some of th&lt;&#13;
soldiers If possible."&#13;
Moyer and Pettihone wanted tc&#13;
know if I could not work up som«&#13;
scheme to assassinate Gov. Peabody&#13;
of Colorado."&#13;
"Haywood thought Steve Adams&#13;
was the best man for the work. Pet&#13;
tibone gave us some sawed-off shotguns&#13;
and shells loaded with buckshot.&#13;
We kept after Penbody for three&#13;
weeks, when Haywood told me to lay&#13;
off for awhile."&#13;
"Haywood, Pettihone nnd Simpkins&#13;
then wanted something pulled off at&#13;
Cripple Creek. We planned to blow&#13;
up the Independence depot. The&#13;
depot was wrecked and 12 or 14 men&#13;
killed. The next day Pettihone gave&#13;
me $300. Adams told me he got $200."&#13;
He swore that the assassination ol .&#13;
Steunenberg was first suggested by&#13;
Haywood, was jointly plotted by Hay&#13;
wood, Moyer, Pettibone and himself&#13;
was financed by Haywood and was ex&#13;
ecuted by himself after the failure oi&#13;
an attempt in which Jack Siflrpkins&#13;
had participated.&#13;
Orchard lifted the total of his own&#13;
murdered victims to 18, and detailed&#13;
the circumstances under which he&#13;
'tried to murder former Gov. Peabody&#13;
Judge Goddard, Judge Gabbert. Gen&#13;
Sherman Bell, Dave Moffat and Frank&#13;
Heme. Incidentally, he confessed tc&#13;
a plan to kidnap the child of one ol&#13;
his former associates.&#13;
Orchard's 8tory Unshaken.&#13;
Boise, Idaho.—Counsel for William&#13;
D. Haywood continued their attack on&#13;
the testimony of Harry Orchard at&#13;
both sessions of the trial Friday, and&#13;
centered their strongest assault on the&#13;
events beginning with the explosion&#13;
in the Vindicator mine and ending&#13;
with the earlier meetings between&#13;
the witness and the leaders of the&#13;
Federation of Miners in Denver. To&#13;
the extent that traffic with "the other&#13;
tide" in the war of labor and capital&#13;
in Colorado was discreditable they&#13;
succeeded in discrediting the witness.&#13;
Orchard stood the test and strain&#13;
very well and held tenaciously to the&#13;
story he related Wednesday and&#13;
Thursday.&#13;
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{CHAPTER l&lt;—Gentinued.&#13;
tills way-rher father, who&#13;
S l F R t Q d o l p t a ft Randolph through&#13;
your father's handling" of the Seaboard's&#13;
affairs, learaed of my connection&#13;
with the house, and gave her a&#13;
litter, asking me to do what I could&#13;
to help bis daughter carry out her&#13;
plans. She wants to get a position&#13;
with UB, if possible, in some sort of&#13;
capacity, secretary, confidential clerk,&#13;
or, as she puts it, any sort of place&#13;
that will justify her being in the office.&#13;
She tells me she is good at&#13;
shorthand, on the maehine, or at correspondence,&#13;
also that she has been&#13;
a contributor to the magazines. If&#13;
this can be arranged, she says she&#13;
will on her OWQ responsibility select&#13;
the time and the stock, and hurl the&#13;
last of the Sands fortune at the market,&#13;
and, Jim, she is game. The blow&#13;
seems to have turned this child into&#13;
a wonderfully nervy creature, and, old&#13;
man, I am beginning to have a feeling&#13;
that perhaps the cards may oome so&#13;
she will win the judge out. You and&#13;
I know where less than sixty thousand&#13;
had been run up to millions more than&#13;
once, and that, too, without the aid&#13;
she will have, for I'll surely do all I&#13;
can to help her steer this last chance&#13;
into spongy places."&#13;
Dob in his enthusiasm had completely&#13;
lost sight of the fact that he was&#13;
indorsing a project that but a moment&#13;
previous he had pronounced insane,&#13;
and with a start I realized what this&#13;
sudden transformation betokened. Inevitably,&#13;
if the project he outlined&#13;
wero carried out, Bob and the beautiful&#13;
southern girl would be thrown into&#13;
close association with each other, and&#13;
further acquaintance could only deepen&#13;
the stajtHng influence Beulah&#13;
Sands had already won over my or-&#13;
&lt;4jUMrily sane and cooLheaded com-&#13;
Jftfje. As I looked at my friend, burntag&#13;
with an ardor as unaccustomed&#13;
« i it was impulsive, I felt a tug at&#13;
my heart-strings at thought of the&#13;
sudden cross-roading of his life's highway.&#13;
But I, too, was filled with the&#13;
glamour of this girl's wondrous beauty,&#13;
and her terrible predicament appealed&#13;
to me almost as strongly as it&#13;
had to Bob. So, although I knew it&#13;
would be fatal to any chance of his&#13;
weighing the matter by common sense,&#13;
I burst out;&#13;
"Bob, I don't blame you for falling&#13;
In with the girl's plana. If I were&#13;
in your shoes t should, too."&#13;
Tears came to BOb's eyes as he&#13;
grabbed my hand aid said:&#13;
"Jim, how can I ever repay you for&#13;
all the good things you have done for&#13;
me—how can II"&#13;
It was no time to give way to emotional&#13;
outbursts, and while Bob was&#13;
getting his grip on himself, I went&#13;
on:&#13;
"Come along down to earth now,&#13;
Bob; let us look at this thing squarely.&#13;
You and I, with our position in&#13;
the market, can do lots of things to&#13;
help run that sixty thousand to higher&#13;
figures, but six months is a short time&#13;
and a million or two a world of&#13;
money."&#13;
"She knows that," he safd, "and the&#13;
time is much shorter and the road to&#13;
go much longer than you figure,'' he&#13;
replied. "This girl is as high-tensioned&#13;
as the E string on a Stradivariifs,,&#13;
and she declares she will have&#13;
no charity tips or unusual favors&#13;
from us or anyone else. But let us&#13;
not talk about that %QW, orA we'll get&#13;
discouraged. Let's do as*sh£ says&#13;
and trust to God for £bev outcome.&#13;
Are you willing, Jim. ta^akt fcer Into&#13;
the office as a sort of cooftiential secretary?&#13;
If, you wft^i'41 t i k e charge&#13;
of her account, and-together we will i&#13;
do all that two men can for her and ;&#13;
her father .&#13;
ventional young literary woman whose.&#13;
high social connections had gained her&#13;
this opportunity of getting at the secrets&#13;
of finance, from actual experience,&#13;
for use in forthcoming novels. It&#13;
had got abroad that she was the writer&#13;
of great distinction who, under a nom&#13;
de plume, had recently made quite a&#13;
dent in the world's literary shell—a&#13;
suggestion that I rightly guessed was&#13;
one of Bob's delicate wayB of smoothing&#13;
out her path. I had tried in every&#13;
way to make things easy for her, but&#13;
it was impossible for me to draw her&#13;
out in talk, and finally I gave it up.&#13;
Had it not been that every time 1&#13;
passed her office door I was compelled&#13;
by the fascination which I had first&#13;
felt, and which, instead of diminishing,&#13;
had Increased with her reticence, to&#13;
look In at the quiet figure with the&#13;
downcast eyes, working away at her&#13;
desk as though her life depended on&#13;
never missing a second, I should not&#13;
have known she was In the building.&#13;
If tiled bis prfettf w1&lt;h a•ey wm uch Jo-t*t•y•&#13;
go#fnaftu-e;;aa^-&gt;Lfariouf botfterow- ,&#13;
n * £ ^ J h * troinft*e day ah* Ylrglaiaa :&#13;
ttri-ortaae* «1» path, Bob- Brownty&#13;
t r * t 4 taKwJ* wee thialtfn*. thin*,&#13;
thi. thinking all the time. 'It W M only&#13;
with an effort that he would keep his&#13;
eyes on whomever he was talking with&#13;
long enosfh to take in what, was*said,&#13;
and if the saying occupied much time&#13;
it would be apparent to the talker that&#13;
Bob was oft in the clouds. All his&#13;
friends and associates remarked the&#13;
change, but I alone, except perhaps&#13;
Kate, -had any idea of the cause. I&#13;
knew that two million dollars and the&#13;
coming New Year Were hurdling like&#13;
kangaroos over Bob's mental rails and&#13;
ditches, though I did not know it from&#13;
anything he told me, for after that&#13;
talk on the upper deck of the Tribesman&#13;
he had shut up like a clam.&#13;
He did not exactly shun me, but&#13;
showed me in many ways that he&#13;
had entered into a new world, in&#13;
which he desired to be alone. That&#13;
Beulah Sands' plight had roused into&#13;
intense activity all the latent romance&#13;
of my friend's nature, did not surprise&#13;
me. I foresaw from the first&#13;
that Bob would fall head over heels&#13;
in love1 with thlB beautiful, sorrowladen&#13;
girl, and it was soon obvious&#13;
that the longdelayed shaft had planted&#13;
its point in the innermost depths&#13;
of his being. His was more than love;&#13;
a fervid idolatry now had possession&#13;
of his soul, mind and body. Yet its&#13;
outward manifestations were the opposite&#13;
of what one would have looked&#13;
for in this gay and optimistic southerner.&#13;
It was rather priest-like worship,&#13;
a calm Imperturbability that&#13;
1 Kin . qn»ifM' ' 1&#13;
" J i m that tittle lady can give us a handicap and beat us to a standstill at our&#13;
own game."&#13;
My wife, at my suggestion, had tried&#13;
to induce her to visit us; in fact, after&#13;
I let her into just enough of Beulah&#13;
Sands' story so that she could see&#13;
things on a true slant, she had decided&#13;
to try to bring her to our house&#13;
to live. But though the girl was sweetly&#13;
gentle in her appreciation of Kate's&#13;
thoughtful attentions, in her simple&#13;
way*she made us both feel that our&#13;
efforts would be for naught, that her&#13;
position must be the same as that of&#13;
any other clerk in the office. We both&#13;
finally left her to herself. Bob explained&#13;
to me, some three weeks after&#13;
she cam.-; to the office, that she renothing&#13;
seemed to distract, or unset,&#13;
at least in the presence of the goddess&#13;
who was its object. Every morning&#13;
he would pass through my office headed&#13;
straight for the little room she occupied&#13;
as if tt wore his one objective&#13;
point of the day, but once he heard&#13;
his own "Good morning, Miss Sands,"&#13;
he seemed to round to, and while in&#13;
her presence was the Bob Brownley of&#13;
old. He would be in and out all&#13;
day on any and every pretext, always&#13;
entering with an undisguised&#13;
eagerness, leaving with a alow, dreamy&#13;
reluctance. That he never saw her&#13;
outside the office, I am sure, for she&#13;
and did not area auk ray opinion. In&#13;
tboujfcOb* operations&#13;
' *)w, reflet of fr jcafcefp!&#13;
an f*must-do-somethin#: deisjuafrthipg&#13;
else, and, I taskw*&#13;
W e-silver r but when she&#13;
told me to sell them out at a time I&#13;
thought they looked like going higher,&#13;
Synd pxe next day they slumped, I&#13;
could not help thinking about the destiny&#13;
that shapes our ends."&#13;
On my part I tried to help. On one&#13;
occasion, without consulting her, I&#13;
p u t ' h e r account in on a sure thing&#13;
underwriting, wherein she ,stood; to&#13;
make a profit of a quarter of a million,&#13;
bat when Bob told her what I&#13;
had Bone she. insisted with great dignity&#13;
that her name be withdrawn.&#13;
After that neither of us dared help&#13;
her to any short cuts. Bob was deeply&#13;
impressed by her principles, and,&#13;
commenting on them, said: "Jim, if&#13;
all Wall street had a code similar to&#13;
Beulah Sands' to hew to in their gambles,&#13;
ours would be a fairer and more&#13;
manly game, and many of the multimillionaires&#13;
would be clerking, while&#13;
a lot of the hand-to-mouth traders&#13;
would come down town in a new auto&#13;
every day in the week. She does not&#13;
believe in stock gambling. She has&#13;
worked It out that every dollar one&#13;
man makes, another loses; that the&#13;
one who makes gives nothing in&#13;
return for what he gets away with;&#13;
and that the other fellow's loss makes&#13;
him and hia as miserable as would&#13;
robbery to the same amount. Yet&#13;
she realizes that she must get back&#13;
those millions stolen from her father,&#13;
and Is willing to smother her conscience&#13;
to attempt It, provided she&#13;
takes no unfair advantage of the other&#13;
players. The other day she said&#13;
to me: 'I have decided, because of&#13;
my duty to my father, to put away my&#13;
prejudice against gambling, but no&#13;
duty to him or to any one else can&#13;
justify we in playing with marked&#13;
cards.' Jim, there is food for reflection&#13;
for you and me, don't you think?"&#13;
(TO B E C O N T I N U E D . )&#13;
PONCE DE LEON'S SPRING.&#13;
Woman Has Refused to Sell the Property&#13;
for $45,000.&#13;
There are ten acres of ground surrounding&#13;
the spot where Ponce de&#13;
Leon, on his second visit to what is&#13;
now St. Augustine, discovered youth.&#13;
Hi&amp;tory tells that he failed to locate&#13;
it on his first visit from Spain to thi3&#13;
section, but that on a second trip, in&#13;
1513, he was more successful. The&#13;
property, called Neptune springs, is&#13;
owned by a widow, who, wfth her&#13;
daughter, stands at the old-fashioned&#13;
well affair, and sells the water to tourists&#13;
who visit her in great numbers.&#13;
The water is tie purest kind of lithia,&#13;
cool and pleasant to the taste. Recently&#13;
she was offered $45,000 for Neptune&#13;
springs, which has other good&#13;
springs aside from Ponce on it. It is&#13;
located a short distance from the&#13;
ruinw of the old stone wall and gates&#13;
of the city of St. Augustine, used&#13;
whea this was a province of Spain and&#13;
when a Spanish governor general occupied&#13;
as a residence the building&#13;
now used by Uncle Sam as a post office.&#13;
Not far away are the ruins of&#13;
the old Spanish Fort Marion, wrecked&#13;
and ruined by shell from the gunners&#13;
who fought under the stars and&#13;
stripes. Ponce de Leon's find is now&#13;
well within the confAes of the city.&#13;
The widow thought it too valuable to&#13;
dispose of. S-o she refused the offer&#13;
of $4 5,000 and goes on ladling out&#13;
water from Ponce's well as though&#13;
she had not tossed aside a small for&#13;
time.&#13;
t pur .mi _ M •• • i. m&gt;&#13;
/ Mlehtgan Grand, ^&#13;
Knights Tempi**, tfflie* fte&#13;
conclave in Saginaw Thursday, selecting&#13;
Grand Rapids, a s gext elaos of&#13;
meeting and electing the foilowing ot&gt;&#13;
ttcers; Grand commander. Charles A,&#13;
Warren, QetrqiU wry w n t a j p de****&#13;
grand commander, Hntson fT Coleman,&#13;
Kalamazoo; grand ' gj&amp;ttereUesimo*&#13;
Howard T. Taylor, Adrian! grand cantain&#13;
general, Charles O Q r e h a n v&#13;
Ithaea; grand senior warden, 43eorfe&#13;
T. Campbell, Owoaso; grand Juntor&#13;
warden, Charles A. Uppineptt* f l l a t ;&#13;
grand prelate, WUliaw HL l&amp;s*#4ert&#13;
Detroit; grand treasurer, Qbarfea IE*&#13;
Pomeroy, Saginaw; grand recorder,&#13;
Henry U Anthony, Sturgls; grand&#13;
sword bearer, Charles Htseock, Ana&#13;
Arbor; grand standard bearer, Qordoa&#13;
R. Campbell, Calumet; grand warder,&#13;
George L. Harvey, Port Hurra; grand&#13;
captain of the* guards, John Fr&gt;, De&gt;&#13;
troit.&#13;
*&#13;
Rabies in Cheese.&#13;
Martin Sebel, of Saginaw, proprietor&#13;
of a cheese factory in Standtah, has&#13;
decided to destroy the entire output&#13;
of his factory now in stock. Some&#13;
time ago a dog with rabies attacked&#13;
a cow whose milk waa being s e n t t o&#13;
this factory. In due course tho «*w&#13;
developed hydrophobia and the whey*&#13;
which is sold to farmers tor pigs, la&#13;
turn infected the swine, a number o*&#13;
severe cases developing. All the animals&#13;
evincing symptoms of the malady&#13;
have been destroyed and, fearing lets&#13;
people who should eat the ens ale&#13;
might be infected, Mr. Sebel will act&#13;
on the advice of Health Officer D a r e r&#13;
and destroy the whole stock now on&#13;
hand. '&#13;
^'^h^'"'^^&#13;
. - ^ •&#13;
• " ' - .&#13;
, J•i" '&#13;
'&lt; \&#13;
V •rr*^"*&#13;
-. «." "**M&#13;
^j^-iEj&#13;
-„ VJ.1&#13;
!&gt;&amp;/«&#13;
'jjgi «#3&#13;
}0f&#13;
••-• ? *&#13;
~'r .&#13;
V J&#13;
•A4&#13;
% • : *&#13;
Wants Both.&#13;
Plans to raise a fund of $150,000 to&#13;
seure for Chicago two national political&#13;
conventions next year will be&#13;
laid at once by a Joint executive committee&#13;
representing both Republicans&#13;
and Democrats. At a conference in&#13;
which the special committees from&#13;
the Hamilton club, the Iroquois" club,&#13;
the city council and representatives of&#13;
the Chicago Commercial association&#13;
participated, reports were made that&#13;
Chicago has a good chance of landing&#13;
the big meetings, if a hall of sufficient&#13;
seating capacity can be guar*&#13;
anteed.&#13;
•m&#13;
THE MARKETS. '•VM'&#13;
ceived no visitors at her home, a hotel said good-night to him when ho or&#13;
on 4¾ quiet uptown street, and that j she left for the day. with the same&#13;
even he had never had permission to I don't-come-with-me dignity that, she&#13;
ctU upon hvr there.&#13;
But from the day she came to occupy&#13;
he:- desk in our office, Bob w:\s a&#13;
«- j ehanged man, whether for hotter or&#13;
I \:,x worse neither Kate nor I eoul.l de-&#13;
CHAPTER II. ! ei.le. His old bounding olasticiry way&#13;
The following week saw Miss. Sands, ] sane, and with it his rollicking laugh&#13;
Of Virginia, private secretary to the&#13;
head of Randolph &amp; Randolph, established&#13;
In la' little office between mine&#13;
and Bob's. She had not been there a&#13;
day before we knew she was a worker.&#13;
She spent the hours going over reports&#13;
and analyzing financial statements,&#13;
showing a sagacity extraordinary&#13;
In so young a person. She explained&#13;
her knowledge of figures by&#13;
the hand-work she had done for the&#13;
Judge, all of whose accounts she had&#13;
kept. Bob and I saw that she was&#13;
bent on smothering her memory in&#13;
that antidote for all ills of heart and&#13;
soul—work. Her office life waa simplicity&#13;
itself. She spoke to no oae ex&#13;
cept Bob, save in connection with such&#13;
business matters of the firm's as I&#13;
might send her by one of the clerks&#13;
to attend to. To the others in the&#13;
banking he use she was Just an uacon-&#13;
He was now a man where before lm&#13;
had been a hoy, a man with a burden.&#13;
Even if I had not heard Beulah Sands'&#13;
story, I should have guessed that Boh&#13;
was staggering under a strange load&#13;
While before, from the close of the&#13;
stock exchange until its opening the&#13;
next morning, he was, as Kate was&#13;
fond of putting it, always ready to fill&#13;
in .for anything from chaperon to&#13;
nurse, always open for any lark we&#13;
planned from a Bohemian dinner to&#13;
the opera, now weeks went by without&#13;
our seeing him at our house. In the&#13;
office It used to be a saying that outstde&#13;
gong-strikes, Rob Rrownlej did&#13;
not know he was in the s*ock business.&#13;
Formerly every clerk kt»w when P.ub&#13;
came or went, for it was with .T. rpsh,&#13;
a shout, a laugh, and a bang of doors;&#13;
and on the floor of the stock exchange&#13;
no man played so many pranks, or&#13;
exhibited to all the rest, of us. I&#13;
had not attempted to say a word to&#13;
Bob about his feeling for Beulah&#13;
Sands, nor had he ever' brought up&#13;
the subject to me. On the contrary,&#13;
he studiously avoided it.&#13;
Three months of the six had now&#13;
passed, and with each day I thought. I&#13;
noted an increasing anxiety in Bob.&#13;
He had opened a special account for&#13;
Miss Sands on the books of the house&#13;
in his name as agent, with a credit of&#13;
$60,000. and we both watched It with&#13;
a painful tenseness of scrutiny. It&#13;
had grown by uneven jerks, until the&#13;
balance on October 1 was almost&#13;
$400,000. On some of the trades Bob&#13;
C .pita! "Society" Busy.&#13;
Washington society people are&#13;
plumed into a mad struggle for pleasure.&#13;
Even Sundays are overworked.&#13;
Admiral Dewey gives things at the&#13;
Country club on Sundays—the best in&#13;
days and everything else is good&#13;
enough for the admiral—and the John&#13;
M. McLeans have turned on their&#13;
brilliant Sunday luncheons to society&#13;
in edition de luxe, at their fascinating&#13;
'Friendship." But even the unexpurgated&#13;
and the great unwashed are&#13;
welcome every day to the splendid&#13;
grounds of "Friendship." Unless you&#13;
are an automobile or a dog, against&#13;
which there is special discrimination,&#13;
the McLeans place no restrictions&#13;
upon the public enjoyment of their&#13;
vast acres, the most beautiful sweep&#13;
of land near Washington, baronial in&#13;
its extent. The quaint old house itself,&#13;
once a monastery, is surrounded&#13;
by a "monk's walk," outlined in box&#13;
bushes. There is a long pergola,&#13;
wistaria laden, an ancient fountain&#13;
and other poetic accessories that in*&#13;
spire.&#13;
D e t r o i t — T h e c a t t l e t r a d e w a a d&#13;
and d r y - f e d s t u l t w a a s c a r c e a n d 1&#13;
15c lower. T h e r e c e i p t s w e r e m a d e&#13;
l a r g e l y of g r a s s c a t t l e a n d t h e p r i c e&#13;
on t h e m were f r o m 25c to 50c p e r hun--&#13;
dr*d lower t h a n t h e y w e r e a w e e k &amp;s*o.&#13;
and at the c l o s e e v e n " more. O o o d&#13;
g r a d e s of milch c o w s b r o u g h t uteadjr&#13;
prices, but c o m m o n w e r e d u l l a n d&#13;
d r a g g y and it had to be a g o o d o n e t »&#13;
b r i n g over $ « . E x t r a d r y - f e d s t e e r *&#13;
ami heifers. $5 25@5 50; s t e e r s anp;;&#13;
heifers, 1.000 to 1,200, $4 ? 5 © 5 85;.&#13;
^ r a s s s t e e r s a n d h e i f e r s , 800 tag&#13;
1,000. $4 5 0 ® 5 25; g r a s s s t e e r s a n a&#13;
lieif .T3 t h a t are fat. 800 t o 1,000,&#13;
$-»•#1 25; g r a s s s t e e r s and h e i f e r s&#13;
t h a t are fat, 500 to 700, $3 2 5 0 S 75;&#13;
c h o i c e fat c o w s , t i @ 4 25; g o o d f a t c o w s , {;! 75; c o m m o n c o w s . $ 3 ® i 2B; c a o n e r s ,&#13;
1 501i&gt;2', c h o i c e ' h e a v y bulls, M&lt;94 5&amp;;&#13;
fair to g o o d b o l o g n a b u l l s , $3 5 0 0 4 ;&#13;
s t o c k bulls, $ 3 ® 3 25; c h o i c e f e e d i n g&#13;
s t e e r s , 800 to 1,000. $4@4 7B; fair f e e d -&#13;
ing steers, S00 to 1,000, $3 50&lt;9 4; c h o i c e&#13;
s t o e k e r s . 500 to 700, $3 50@3 75; f a i r&#13;
stookora. 500 to 700 $3 8SOS 50; s t o c k&#13;
heifers. $3 25@3 75; m i l k e r s , l a r g e .&#13;
young, m e d i u m a g e , $40@50, c o m m o n&#13;
m i l k e r s , $ 1 8 ^ 2 5 .&#13;
The veal calf trade o p e n e d f r o m 25c&#13;
to 5 0c l o w e r t h a n l a s t w e e k a n d c l o s e d&#13;
very dull a n d s t r o n g , 76c l o w e r t h a n&#13;
t h e y w e r e a w e e k a g o . One e x t r a b u n c h&#13;
of p r i m e stuff b r o u g h t $7 25, but m o s t&#13;
of tho s a l e s w e r a at. |f&gt; 75 a n d under.&#13;
We quote; B e s t g r a d e s , | 8 25@7 25;&#13;
o t h e r s . $:5 50@4.&#13;
S h e e p and l a m b s — R a n g e of p r i c e * :&#13;
Best lambs. $7 25: fair to g o o d rambs,&#13;
$t&gt;@7; light t o c o m m o n l a m b s , $ 5 0 8 ; spring lambs, * ? * &amp; fair to §»**&#13;
butcher she** | 4 « 4 Tf; c«Ua u * « M * '&#13;
mon. $ 3 # 4 \ &lt;•• ^-,- . .-. -&#13;
H o g s — A f e w of t h e obekre, * e « t t e&#13;
s p e c u l a t o r * a t M .&#13;
Uffhj; to e * o 4 b a t c h a r a . i t • § £ £ • fttflifc&#13;
l i g h t y o r k e r s . $5 95; r o u g h i .&#13;
o n e - t h i r d off.&#13;
4&#13;
* i&#13;
U g h t tc&#13;
$5 25;' s&#13;
. : &amp;&#13;
Rast Buffalo.—Export steers, $6© 1.25; f e w&#13;
lb do&#13;
0 5 ;&#13;
I2.2S&#13;
5.50;&#13;
f e e d e r s&#13;
JW.S5; b e s t 1.000 t o l.lOf-&#13;
9 5 . 7 6 : best f a t c o w s , $4.25&#13;
good, $ 3 . 5 0 0 4 ; t r i m m e r s .&#13;
b e s t f a t h e i f e r s , $5,35 9&#13;
m s t o g o o d , $ 4 . 2 6 0 4 . 5 0 : b e a t&#13;
$4.25@ 4.50; y e a r l l i&#13;
3.75; c o m m o n s t o c k s t e e r s ,&#13;
port bulls. $ 4 . 5 0 « 5 . 2 5 : bolt&#13;
$ 3 . 7 5 ® 4 : s t o c k b u l l s , $2.50(&#13;
c o w s s t e a d y ; g o o d to e x t r a ,&#13;
m e d i u m s to good, $ 3 3 0 4 $ ;&#13;
$ 2 0 0 2 3 .&#13;
H o g s — M a r k e t 5 0 1 0 c l o w * r ; all&#13;
g r a d e s . $ 6 . 4 0 0 8 . 4 5 : r o u g h s , $5.45; c l o s e d&#13;
w e a k : 10 cars unsold.&#13;
Sheeri—Market dull and loweT; b e s t&#13;
l a m b s , $ 7 . 5 0 0 7 . 7 5 ; f e w c h o i c e , $8; c u l l s .&#13;
$ 6 0 0 . 5 0 * w e t h e r s . $ 6 . 5 0 0 7 ; culls, $ 4 0&#13;
5.25; e w e s . $ 5 . 5 0 0 6; c l o s e d slow.&#13;
C a l v e s — S t e a d y for best, $8 © 8 . 4 6 ;&#13;
m e d i u m , $ 6 . 5 0 0 7 . 7 5 ; h e a v y , $ 4 0 4 . 5 0 .&#13;
Graia, Etc.&#13;
D e t r o i t — W h e a t — C a s h No.&#13;
OSUc; July. 5.000 bu a t 92^40. 3&#13;
a t 92c, R.000 bu at 9 1 \ c , 2,000&#13;
! U U c , 10.000 hu at 91%c. 5.000&#13;
91 \rt 10.000 bu at 92c. 10.000&#13;
92 H e 5,000 bu a t 92VjC 3,000 hu&#13;
2.000 bu at 93»4c, 5,000 bu at 93&gt;4e;&#13;
t e m h e r 20.000 bu a t 94¾ c, 20.000 b |&#13;
94&lt;4c. 35.000 bu a t 94c, 10.000 b«T&#13;
9 3 ^ c . 5,000 bu a t 94c, 25.000 bu a t §1}&#13;
20,000 bu at 94%c, 10.000 bu at »$c,&#13;
OOO bu at 95V»c, 15.000 bu at 95%c, 18,-&#13;
000 bu at 9Sc; D e c e m b e r , 6.000 bu a t&#13;
98 «4c. 25.000 b u a t 9«c. 10.000 bui&#13;
95 \c, 5.000 bu at 96HC, 20,000 bu&#13;
96 34c, 25,000 bu at 9?o. 10.000 bu&#13;
9 ? H c . 10.000 hu at 9" * c , 20-.000 bu&#13;
98c; No. 3 red, 9 0 % c ; No. 1 w h i t e . 91 \ c&#13;
Corn—Cash No. 3. 5 4 H e : No. 3 y e l -&#13;
No. 4 y e l l o w , 2 c a r *&#13;
No. 3 w h i t e . 2 c a r *&#13;
W;&#13;
-ll&#13;
a t&#13;
a t&#13;
a t&#13;
a t JVJ.'.&#13;
a t&#13;
at&#13;
The Beautiful Soul.&#13;
The colored sunsets and the starry&#13;
heavens, the beautiful mountains and&#13;
had consulted me, and on others, two j the shining sea. the fragrant woods&#13;
in particular where he closed up after j and the painted flowers—they are not&#13;
a few days' operations with nearly j half so beautiful as a aoul that, la&#13;
$200,000 profit, I did not even know i serving Jesus out of love in the wear&#13;
what the trading was baaed on until and tear of common, unpoetlc life.—&#13;
ific:&#13;
5^c;&#13;
No.&#13;
S e p t e m b e r ,&#13;
l o w . 3 cars&#13;
at 54 4 c 3&#13;
at 55c.&#13;
O a t s — C a s h w h i t e ,&#13;
4 . VJ C 3fi%c bid&#13;
Rye—Cash No. 2, &amp;7c.&#13;
B e a n s — C a s h a n d June&#13;
p,ir a t $1 7«.&#13;
C l o v e r s e e d — P r i m e spot, $9&#13;
200 haft's at $7 75; D e c e m h e r ,&#13;
at IT 75; p r i m e a l s i k e , $7 50.&#13;
T i m o t h y seed—-Prime spot. 20&#13;
$2 15.&#13;
1 car a t&#13;
$1 74; July, 1&#13;
Oct&#13;
100&#13;
ha«*V.4*..&#13;
the stocks had been sold. Then he&#13;
said:&#13;
"Jim, that little lady from Virginia&#13;
can give us a big handicap and play&#13;
us to a standstill at our own game.&#13;
She told me to buy all the Burlington&#13;
and Sugar her account would atand,&#13;
Exchange.&#13;
Japan Take* to Horse-Racing.&#13;
Seventy-two horse-racing clubs&#13;
have been organized In Japan. Most&#13;
of them, the Japan Mail says, were established&#13;
for gambliot purposes only.&#13;
AXtrftKMKXTS n t D R T R O I T&#13;
Week Endln* June 22, 1907. '&#13;
LYCKtrM—Prices always lfie,*Jo. 508,78*. 2Bc&#13;
Mailaee* Wednesday a n d Saturday. 41 Her Own Way."&#13;
TBMPT.B THRATKK A.KD WoiTMaXAWD—&#13;
AJternoont 2:1,1. loo to SOo: Kv*ntng* &amp;UV&#13;
, too t o cue Advanced VkudvrUl*. A a&#13;
All-Star BUI.&#13;
r&#13;
"*•• »*ii»;'t ,\&#13;
ft$gi*?«ttk&#13;
K U A f t O M W e *'OQ. moHnrro&#13;
TfffJft&amp;DAf, JUNE 2*. .1907.&#13;
Atjfckottfrh oongreae has closed,&#13;
PrudentRooeeveU is still cut-&#13;
:.1&#13;
Seaarkaeie Rescue.&#13;
The truth is .»traa«rer tban fiction,&#13;
baa once m/&gt;i*e been demonstrated in&#13;
the little town of Fedora, Tonn., tlte&#13;
rasidaaoa^l-G V. Pepper. #He writes:&#13;
"I was in.bed, entirely disabled witb&#13;
hemorrhages of the lungsand tbroat.&#13;
Doctors failed-to help we, and all hope&#13;
had fled wben f. ha^an taking Dr.&#13;
King's New Disco very. Than instant&#13;
relief came? The couching soon&#13;
ceased; the blae ing dlmiuisbed rapidly,&#13;
and in three week's I wag abTe to&#13;
^o to work." Gaarant ed onre for&#13;
coagrbs and colds. 50c: and $1. at F.&#13;
A. Signer's Drutr store. Trial bottle&#13;
free.&#13;
'ii.^it'4&#13;
;E«U*ed tojr the Piackoey W. U T . 17&#13;
FAIR CLOSED S&#13;
"&gt;&#13;
* f AttiwapasHa WeJ§w*t&#13;
Ai*%»aa l e r e V ^ the toftueter&#13;
•m nmm UST w&#13;
maraW *&gt; tea*** W the ,tlwnww. [ . ¾ I2£ft&amp;*%2%?&#13;
§b» *eigbt of a eutte f oot of w«tvr jg*g™t3Z£2L™ZZZrJZ?*m UMZ&#13;
vapor nader the sape eruditions *» fianTTtoii U* of anoars haebee* •&#13;
only 868 train* Whan vtpor f* mixed [ ^ ¾ ^ for u d attreettaas may ha&#13;
asatt tanging from tna Mas* aan*&#13;
dlvere tp the emaJlest maa te the&#13;
world.&#13;
the enteruinmeata that&#13;
V&#13;
The state VT. O...J; .U. which&#13;
convened in the the Central M. E.&#13;
c*burcU at Lansing June4 was one - - - comment of' ito»9 weather'tba air la Hgbtar than I Among the entartainmants ^thaj&#13;
of the most suocessrul convention* p ^ i f w h o ^ n o t ut JEE&amp; ft * * * '^weather and uoTbfWler, j k m been p g r i M for roung aadrtd&#13;
ever held by the society. Thirty1 * w — •--*- « . - - - * - » ^ - - «*•» •• *•«» «-««" « n n M " Whs* I will, ha, Trained annsais. a raai&#13;
three yea18 ago this . month the&#13;
Michigan Union was organized JO ixed the exhibitions held by the Mich than ine amove, wnen uw air v ury, ; fiWt-,„ a . ^ ^ ^ . . oth«r&amp;&#13;
Igan Agricultural society in the past it 1« heafier than the smoke, and the £ ! ? % * "Jf charge of the"Q&#13;
Jvery attractipn on the grounds will utter therefore ascends. The weight ^ n N T O k e th% p«i£iltof afiy *J&#13;
have to come up to the high standard of t n e eaj.th.g atmoepbere, or, In other (tion -that- dees aet come jip to toe&#13;
words, the pressure everted upon the , high standard of mora} tone that tfyj&#13;
President Roosevelt says the&#13;
"best crop of all is a crop of&#13;
children." That depends o n&#13;
whether they are your owu or&#13;
your neighbors' children.&#13;
The Magic tf&gt;. 3. -&#13;
Number threw i&lt; a wonderful masoot&#13;
for Geo H. ravns. of Cedar Grove,&#13;
Me., according to a totter wbicb reads:&#13;
•'At'er suffering much with liver and&#13;
kidney trouble, and becoming greatly&#13;
discouraged by the failure to find relief,&#13;
I tiied Elrtjtric Bitters, and as a&#13;
IplMIt 1 am a well man to-day. The&#13;
i'JlfcH bottle relieved add three bottles&#13;
fpleted the cure." Guaranteed&#13;
tit^ on earth lor stomach, liver and&#13;
kidney troubles, by F. A. Sigler,&#13;
Druggist'" 50r«.&#13;
^Ir. Bryan is very outspoken&#13;
mist the third term idea and&#13;
says even two terms are two&#13;
much, but it is difficult to pry&#13;
him away from the one termidea.&#13;
the Capitol City. Only 2 delegates&#13;
represented the- 9 unions&#13;
t h e n i n existanoe, n o w&#13;
n e a r l y 5 0 0 representatives&#13;
were present from the 10,000&#13;
women who belong to the unions,&#13;
in the state.&#13;
Tuesday evening the conveutiou&#13;
was welcomed by City Attorney&#13;
O. J. Hood in behalf of the city,&#13;
by Supt E. P. Cummings for the&#13;
schools and the churches were&#13;
represented by Rev. W. A. Minty,&#13;
pastor of the Cong'l church&#13;
Then there were speeches of welcome&#13;
from the Y. M. C. A, the&#13;
Missionary societies and the local&#13;
Unions. B. B. Johnson of the Y.&#13;
M. C. A. said, "While you ladies&#13;
are iu prayers, we are down&#13;
town trying to answer those prayers.&#13;
With our fine new building&#13;
there is no excuse for any young&#13;
man to go to the the saloon for&#13;
entertainment."&#13;
It is the custom for the convention&#13;
to leave a memorial of the&#13;
meeting in the city in which the&#13;
convention was held. A picture&#13;
of Frances E. Willard late national&#13;
president, was presented to&#13;
the Y. M. C. A.&#13;
[Continued next week J&#13;
The State Republican says that&#13;
twelve years ago Mr. Theodore&#13;
Roosevelt spoke in Lansing and&#13;
it required a fife and drum to&#13;
draw a crowd to hear him. The&#13;
same man came again and it required&#13;
soldiers and policemen to&#13;
keep the crowds back.&#13;
the true facts, the State Pair of 1907 M «*»* P«won» suppose. When . tortuna to&#13;
will be conducted on -the same order smoka hangi about the surface of the | 2 S y J £ ° £ JSESUSL &amp; ? ? ? « £&#13;
ly and broad basis that has character, earth, •• -1 -™ «»-*'*•»- -«- «• "«*•«- • "** o a a De °°M,UIWI* « •&#13;
the smoke. When the is dry, , electriCt gpo and maay&#13;
aet by the executive committee or the&#13;
permit under which It will be given&#13;
access to the grounds will be revoked. earth by the atmosphere, is about tb" have aet&#13;
It is the aim of the society to make, " m * Rs w « ? d j £ exerJ*l ^ • ^0 the great Michigaavfair an event to be of water tblrty-three feet In heig¾ht&#13;
looked forward to by those enjoying1 over the globe. At the sea level the&#13;
keen and exciting contests of speed, | pressure of the atmosphere la about&#13;
the opportunity to study the products fifteen pounds to the sqaure inch. A&#13;
wr&#13;
and natural resources of the Wolverine&#13;
state, and higa-claas entertainments.&#13;
In 1906 the fair was open on Sunday.&#13;
It was the desire of the management&#13;
to give those who could not get&#13;
out to the grounds on week days an&#13;
opportunity of viewing the exhibits&#13;
that had been gathered from all parts&#13;
of this great state. The Sunday program&#13;
was in keeping with the day.&#13;
There were sacred concerts, both in&#13;
the afternoon and evening, while no&#13;
shows of any kind w^re operated and&#13;
all boistrousness was sternly repressed.&#13;
The fair of 1907 will be closed upon&#13;
Sunday. This action was taken, not&#13;
because the previous openings of the&#13;
fair on this day had not home out&#13;
every contention made by the executive&#13;
committee as to the advantages&#13;
that would accrue.to those who could&#13;
not visit the fair at any other time,&#13;
but simply to silence the criticism&#13;
that came from many quarters, and&#13;
to weld into a compact unit those who&#13;
were giving the society's officers their&#13;
support.&#13;
man of ordinary size thus bears all tbe&#13;
time" a pressure of about 30,000 pounds,&#13;
but he does not. feel it, because the&#13;
pressure is exerted iu every directionabove,&#13;
below and aronnd him—and because&#13;
bis body Is tilled with air and&#13;
other fluids that press outward, thus&#13;
maintaining a state of equilibrium&#13;
•?, V*;:&#13;
m pi.&#13;
:f".-.&#13;
'€&#13;
There is no case of indigestion, no&#13;
jnalt*r how irritable or how obstinate&#13;
i b a t w i l l not be speedily releived by&#13;
the use of Kodol. The main factor&#13;
in curing the stomach of any disorder&#13;
is r*Pt, and tb« only way to get&#13;
yest is to actually digest tbe food for&#13;
the stomach itself. Kodol will do it.&#13;
It is a scientific preparation of vegetable&#13;
acids container the very same juices&#13;
found in a healthy stomach. It&#13;
eon forms to the Pure Food and Drugs&#13;
Law.&#13;
Sold by F. A Bigler. Druggist&#13;
A prompt, pleasant, pood remedy&#13;
for coughs and colds, is Kennedy's&#13;
Laxative Couprb Syrup. It is especially&#13;
recommended fo»- babies and children,&#13;
but. good for every member of&#13;
tbe family. It contains no opiates&#13;
and does not constipate. Contains&#13;
honey and tar and tastea nearly as&#13;
good as raapel synup. Children like&#13;
it,&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Druggist.&#13;
' / • : &gt; " • . " • • • ' ; •&#13;
• ; . : &gt; :&#13;
A country editor, kuown personally&#13;
to his public, wields more&#13;
influence through his thousand&#13;
subscribers than does a city edi-&#13;
The old saying that "things will i tor, personally unknown, through&#13;
» •&#13;
vrr •VW0&#13;
come out in a wash," is beiner&#13;
proven in the "washing" now going&#13;
on in Boise, Idaho. Some&#13;
horribly dirty linen is being exposed&#13;
that will undoubtedly find&#13;
an end in the electric chair.&#13;
his 100,000 subscribers.—Wm.&#13;
Jennings Bryan.&#13;
h.&#13;
».'&gt;V"-&#13;
;!&gt;' "S . -¾&#13;
f "Kv&#13;
. t&#13;
^**&#13;
- 'I'll stop your your pain free. To&#13;
show yon first—what my Pink Pain&#13;
Tablets can do. I will mail yon freef&#13;
a Trial Package of tbem— Dr. Snoop's&#13;
Headache Tablets. Nenralgia, Headache,&#13;
Toothache, Period pa ns, etc.,&#13;
are due alone to blood congestion.&#13;
Dr. 8hoopV Headache Tablets simply&#13;
kill pain by coaxwg away the unnatural&#13;
blood pressure, That is all&#13;
A d d r ft s s Dr. Shoop, Kacine,&#13;
Wis. Sold by All Dealers.&#13;
• * :&#13;
The Canadian blue law under&#13;
h the sale of Sunday newsrs&#13;
may be punished with a&#13;
of $250 or two months' imprisonment&#13;
has gone into effect.&#13;
There are fully 20,000 American&#13;
papers sold in the Dominion on&#13;
Scutday, H is said, and this trade&#13;
4t fOtiflill wiped out.&#13;
When yon fe«l th« need of a pill&#13;
take a D«Witts Little early Risei.&#13;
Small pill, safe pill, sure pill. Easy&#13;
t o take—peasant a n d effective.&#13;
iTrives away headaches.&#13;
8old by F. A. Sigler&#13;
MICHIGAN BUILDING AT STATE&#13;
FAIR.&#13;
Standing conspicuously. In the foreground&#13;
as one approaches the main&#13;
entrance to the State Fair grounds,&#13;
Detroit, is the magnificant structure&#13;
that entertained thousands of visitors&#13;
to the Louisiana Purchase exposition&#13;
under the name of tbe Michigan Building.&#13;
As one views the grounds from&#13;
the Woodward avenue approach itttall&#13;
columns, airy verandas, and ornate&#13;
architecture show the care that&#13;
was expended by the S t Louis com&#13;
missioners who selected the plans before&#13;
its erection In St. Louis.&#13;
After the long journey from St.&#13;
Louis to Detroit, and reconstructed U&#13;
Is even more beautiful and graceful&#13;
than when erected in the Missouri&#13;
city. It Is now a permanent struc&#13;
ture, while when first built the walls&#13;
were of staff and intended to stand&#13;
only for a few short months. While&#13;
at St. Louis the building stood upon&#13;
a temporary foundation consisting of&#13;
a few piles, today It is on a solid&#13;
foundation and there is not the slightest&#13;
danger of the structure sagging,&#13;
for no expense was spared when it&#13;
became a companion structure to the&#13;
glass and brick buildings nearby.&#13;
Early in 1905 the St. Louis fair&#13;
commissionervS offered the building to&#13;
the officers of the Michigan Agricultural&#13;
society for the sum of $1,250.&#13;
The original contract price had beon&#13;
$16,000 and in addition to this the&#13;
contractors stood a loss of $4,000 due&#13;
to the high wages that were paid during&#13;
the fair. The offer was eagerly&#13;
accepted, but before the building was&#13;
finally erected in Detroit the society&#13;
paid out an additional $17,000. v&#13;
This year the entire upper floor&#13;
will be devoted to the art. collection&#13;
which will be under the direction of&#13;
Prof. A. H. Griffith, director of the Detroit&#13;
Museum of Art. Part of the lower&#13;
floor will be devoted to the mineral&#13;
exhibit, of which Rep. W. J. Galbraith,&#13;
of Calumet, will be the superintendent.&#13;
This exhibit promises to be the&#13;
finest collection of mining products&#13;
ever 3hown in the history of the&#13;
world.&#13;
In the Michigan building friends can&#13;
meet friends, and seek rest on its cool&#13;
verandas. The views In all directions&#13;
are worth patiently sitting In a steamer&#13;
chair and studying as the kaliedoscope&#13;
of life and activity passes before&#13;
one's view.&#13;
The Story of a Word.&#13;
A comparison of old editions . of&#13;
Scott's "Monastery" with oue of later&#13;
date will reveal a slight alteration in&#13;
the text of u sentence iu the tenth&#13;
chapter. For the word "morse" au*&#13;
trther is substituted. A tule of comedy./,&#13;
attaches to the word which has gone.&#13;
"Hardened wretch," says Father Buslace,&#13;
"art thou but this instant deliv-&#13;
#red from death, and dost thou so soon&#13;
moras thoughts of slaughter?" The&#13;
origin Of the word morse seems sorely&#13;
to beve troubled the etymologists.&#13;
Two learned correspondents of Notes&#13;
and Queries, Mr. Wheatlejm^lls us,&#13;
accounted for the word. One explained&#13;
It as "to prime," as when one primes&#13;
a musket, from O. Fr. "amorce," powder&#13;
for the touchhole (Cotgrave), and&#13;
the other by "to bite" (Lat. "mordere");&#13;
hence "to indulge in biting, stinging&#13;
ar gnawing thoughts of slaughter." On&#13;
the other side were those who said that&#13;
the word W M a misprint for something&#13;
else: "That the word as a misprint&#13;
should have been printed and read by&#13;
millions for' fifty years without being&#13;
challenged and altered exceeds tbe&#13;
bounds of probability," exclaimed the&#13;
apologists for morse. But when tile&#13;
manuscript was examined there "nurse"&#13;
Was the word, plainly written.—St.&#13;
lames' Gazette.&#13;
V&#13;
The oureau of information at the&#13;
State fair will he located near the&#13;
main entrance this year. This bttreaa&#13;
will furnish visitors the names, location&#13;
and rates of many excellent&#13;
boarding and rooming •houses In D*^1&#13;
troit.'a8 well as to direct them to hx&gt;&#13;
tela and restaurants. It is the with&#13;
of the fair officials that oat of town&#13;
visiter's feel free to consult this bureau&#13;
for information of any kind, which&#13;
will be promptly and gladly furnished.&#13;
— '- '.-•'-'&#13;
The beautiful stained glass window&#13;
In the Michigan bulMing stowing «&#13;
life slae figure of Father Marquette&#13;
la one-of the most beautiful and ***&#13;
fistic examples e'f gtalne&amp;gKgs work&#13;
ever seen In Michigan. It Is Just at&#13;
the turn in the stairway of the bw}ld/.&#13;
Ing and can be seen on the way to&#13;
the art exhibit.&#13;
%&#13;
»r&#13;
. * i&#13;
He fired the Slick.&#13;
"I bave fired the walking-stick I've&#13;
car ried over 40 years, on account of a&#13;
-ore that resisted every kind of treatment,&#13;
until 1 tried Bucklea's A mice&#13;
Salve; that has healed tbe sore and"&#13;
made me a happy man," writes John&#13;
Garrett, sf North Mills, N. 0. Guaranteed&#13;
for Piles, Burns, etc., by P. A.&#13;
Sigler, druggist. 25c.&#13;
A Bride't Dilemma.&#13;
A humorous romance Is reported&#13;
from Natal, where a youthful Hindoo&#13;
bride was recently called upon to&#13;
choose between her husband and he,r&#13;
jewels. The case came before tbe Durban&#13;
police court in tbe first Instance,&#13;
where the bride's parents, says the&#13;
Natal Mercury, accused her husband of&#13;
abdnctins her while under thirteen&#13;
years of age. The bride, however,&#13;
claimed to be eighteen, and the magistrate&#13;
dismissed the oa«e. Outside the&#13;
court a tug of war took place between&#13;
the two parties for the possession of&#13;
the bride, In the course of whleh it appeared&#13;
that what her parents partieu&#13;
lavly desired was not herself, hut li««r&#13;
jewelry. A sergeant of police then sal&#13;
In judgment and decided that the .|e&gt;v,-&#13;
elry belonged to tin* parents, and the&#13;
girl must choose between her Imsban i&#13;
and her bracelets. After some cogitation&#13;
she chose the husband, who&#13;
promptly unfastened the bangles from&#13;
her arms and handed them to her&#13;
parents.&#13;
NEW PREMIUM LIST OUT.&#13;
Replete with information the 1907&#13;
liBt of premiums that will be given by&#13;
the Michigan Agricultural Society at&#13;
the State Fair ie-©etrolt, August 29&#13;
to September «, will he mailed to live&#13;
stock dealers, fajmers and manufacturers&#13;
early in Jlne. The premjtiil^ ^&#13;
list will be In the form of a 124-paffe.¾.^&#13;
book and will be as attractive as tigr'.-1..';&#13;
printer's art can make it. j f -&#13;
Tbe hook will show a marked tZ&#13;
f :-e;ise '&lt;&lt;: L'.;e numoef of prfzes that&#13;
will be given, to exhibitors this year,&#13;
iv.\n will contain useful and varied Ini\'.!'!&#13;
iiat!'.:n that will be essential to&#13;
I'wry ii(i&gt;oa visiting the FaL^&#13;
Among the illustrations lif^he book&#13;
will be likenesses of President PosUl,&#13;
Secretary U'.itterfleld, General Manager&#13;
Charles Floyd, and General Superintendent&#13;
A. J. Doherty. of the new&#13;
grounds, the Michigan building, and&#13;
the Immense exposition hall and horticultural&#13;
building.&#13;
In the book will be the announcement&#13;
of the details that have been&#13;
worked out iu order to take care of&#13;
the greatly increased attendance that&#13;
Is expected this fall. Provisions that&#13;
have been made for the comfort of vis--&#13;
itors wfll be outlined, while a number&#13;
of pages will be devoted to information&#13;
particularly valuable to^the exhibitor.&#13;
This booi; will be sent to anyone&#13;
on application.&#13;
'Adrift!&#13;
" * • :&#13;
•v.&#13;
^&#13;
#&#13;
.«&#13;
For ^cratches, burns, cuts, insect&#13;
lMfes and the many little hurts common&#13;
to every famiiv, De Witt's Carbolizpd&#13;
Witch Hazel Salve i« tke best&#13;
remedy. It is so,(thiDHr, coo'incr, e'earfand&#13;
healing. He sure to sret tie Witts,4&#13;
•loW by F. A. Sigler, DroggU*..&#13;
GRAND EXCURSIONS&#13;
T R U N K to&#13;
R a i l w a y N o r f o l k , V i r g i n i a .&#13;
C y i l e m 60 Da^ ind Season Tic'sT.on Silo&#13;
D a i l y u p t o N o v . 3 0&#13;
VARIOUS ROUTES&#13;
S A R A T O G A SPKINGS, N. Yduly&#13;
3, 4, 5. 6. and 7 - Knights Templar.&#13;
P H I L A D E L P H I A , PA.&#13;
-July 12.13. 14.15 and 16 - - B. P. O. f]-&#13;
BOSTON. MASS&#13;
duly 25, 26. 27 and 29 - N-E- Old Home&#13;
Week.&#13;
Special inducements in low round trip&#13;
rates to the West and Northwest.&#13;
Round trip Summer Tourist tickets to&#13;
Principal Canadian and New England&#13;
points on sale daily after dune 1st.&#13;
Return limit* October aist.&#13;
Liberal stop-overs.&#13;
Full particulars at local ticket office.&#13;
NIQHT ENTERTAINMENT AT&#13;
STATE FAIR.&#13;
In connection with the night attractions&#13;
to be offered at the State Fair at&#13;
Detroit this year, the Inspiring and&#13;
brilliant pyrotechnic spectacle, "The&#13;
Eruption of Vesuvius," will be the&#13;
feature.&#13;
Nothing ao elaborate has ever heretofore&#13;
been attempted by Henry J.&#13;
Pain. The magnitude of the production&#13;
can best, be appreciated when it&#13;
-A-WAH § mm for HUSH&#13;
IBimmd&#13;
OHMMU&#13;
Instant relief to sufferer* of&#13;
RhfumatitttjKUMifTrwUa&#13;
Stomach Dlsorfert.&#13;
Get a bottle to-day* Is purely a vegetable compound. Iflld&#13;
in effect but one the most effectual remedies known for restoring&#13;
the entire system. It is derived from nature, not&#13;
compound of drugs and chemicals that only allay the pain,&#13;
but cures to stay cured after all so-called •' scientific " treatments&#13;
have failed.&#13;
For sale by druggists. Send for circular*. Addreea,&#13;
INDIAN MEDICINE CO., Mllford, Ohio.&#13;
A large grnve of forest trees on the&#13;
State Fair grounds this year will provide&#13;
abundant shade, and afford a cool&#13;
plaee where visitors who do not care&#13;
to lunch at any of the numerous restaurants&#13;
may eat their lunches and&#13;
enjoy a picnic dinner with friend*.&#13;
The grove is remote from tbe more&#13;
frequented places and free from dirt,&#13;
noise and other annoyances.&#13;
rarmers visiting the State Fair&#13;
should make a special effort to see&#13;
tha display of corn. Tba producta o t&#13;
Michigan cornfields will be gathered&#13;
from evtry section of tba state and be&#13;
displayed under one roof.&#13;
8 More Money for Eggs F under most any conditions. There is a lot of money to be made&#13;
B in the egg business if conditions are right. There is no reason&#13;
§ why Farmers and Poultry Raisers should not make just as good&#13;
H profits on their investments as any other line of business, and it is&#13;
possible for them to do so. The price of eggs during the winter&#13;
months is double and sometimes more tban double that- paid&#13;
during the summer months. The only way to take, advantage of this advance is&#13;
to hold summer eggs for winter prices. That fresh egg* can be £ept from six to&#13;
nine months or more has been proven by careful testing with&#13;
HACER'S ECC PRESERVATIVE&#13;
and anyone using this Preservative need never sell a docen egg* for anything but&#13;
the highest market price, ixnd for SampU and Circulars tilting j/ou Ml aiout it.&#13;
HACER ECC PRESERVING OO.t - St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
' « &amp;&#13;
rk&#13;
M I !Jfc^_ L yft _^ sU&#13;
f •&#13;
• • A&#13;
;'iWr&#13;
V*k\&#13;
SAJS€*,&#13;
7 ^ 7&#13;
afar,(., ...&#13;
7 T ? : •&#13;
' ***&#13;
*$*• *f ;' .-•*'*&#13;
,. IT-.. Vi' . f&#13;
^Jwlyteififfi.inyf: t J * itw past&#13;
ajiva I awr Wort triad so ^effectually&#13;
diepoas* of taalaria and blUvown^t."&#13;
Vw'$*^''*&amp;tit.&amp;i&amp; • &amp;&lt;V at&#13;
F. A. &amp;tf^r'$ dr.u* »u&gt;nv&#13;
Tfcf» Ilsta ojjft^ijsu uuttidrs and their&#13;
worka give tbe titles o/ over 800 poems&#13;
-~4^iaa^ on ^soutuda*&#13;
AU the new* far $tO0 per year.&#13;
uDaortfcetor Up Faetee? Otspatci.&#13;
HT.ti&#13;
PATENTS&#13;
3?&#13;
Free&#13;
***;, - : ^&#13;
ocu «EO a N a D r FEN oco. , ^ 5 2 ^&#13;
adviw, )M«r to olnuia jnucntt, trade roan*,&#13;
«opgrrighta.«lfr, , M m i . COUNTftlCa.&#13;
Stuifusx dirtct with Wtukixgton tovtt {apt,&#13;
wumtyandcfltntktpaUni.&#13;
fctert and Inf rinnrntnt Praetlss Ixelusisfly.&#13;
Write or oome to tut at&#13;
•SI Sieta Btwat, «yp. TJalUd I M N&#13;
WAaHiMaTON.o. e GASNOW&#13;
• :* TRS&gt; tjn*e#fHMis -They Aesw •&#13;
The Vfrpecrte of the areraga small&#13;
mere, aeaiscnip^ toiiuirfcw, 'have evej,&#13;
Ixxu ma/fc M*i»';Wf thflp thoae «ropounced&#13;
b£ n youngater to bia father,&#13;
who,bud taken him f o r * s t e a m y irlp^ gives iastapt and lasting relief to&#13;
Here is ajpttrtlul Hat:&#13;
Hlu t^jTt- wrfter down there any&#13;
waiter.thai) tho water in the Atlantic&#13;
oceanV&#13;
"Wh.:t makes the water wet?*&#13;
"How luauy men c&gt;ultf be drowned&#13;
in ,y#ter a? 4qep *u* that?.**...,, -&#13;
"Is that big m a n w i t h the gold buttons&#13;
on his coat the father of all those&#13;
men who do whatever he tells then*&#13;
tor&#13;
"Where do all those soapsuds behind&#13;
the boat come from!"&#13;
"Could a' train to as fast on the water&#13;
as this boat?"—Chums.&#13;
„ TMes.uet qniok and certain relief&#13;
from Dr. Sbooc'e Magic Ointment.&#13;
PlttM* potoft is made alone for Piles,&#13;
a 4d m i c t i o n is positive and certain,&#13;
tte^jw, paiflful, protruding or hiind&#13;
jpilerdisappear like maffic by itsnise&#13;
Large nlckie-capped glass jar 50 cents&#13;
Sold by All Dealers. ;&#13;
healing, antiseptic balm. ; Ooaiainiag&#13;
sneh healing ingredients as Oil&#13;
Enaaliptot, Tbymoi, Ment.boi, etc, k&#13;
I will aeeU jo» tree, to prove jBtwii, ^ ^&#13;
saMeles o* » &gt; Dr. 8ecepa Bastora- J ^ J f j S t f ^&#13;
lift, and my Book, on either Djt~ ^ , « waa t a t r t ^ i ' « *&#13;
pepsia. tb^ Heart of the KidMys.|bomt&#13;
Catarrh of the nose and throat.&#13;
Make the free test and see for yourself&#13;
what this preparation can and'&#13;
will accomplish Address Dr. Snoop&#13;
Kacme, Wis. Large jars 50 cents&#13;
i . i j ;&#13;
:-V-^(:. k ^&#13;
All That 8avsd Him. *&#13;
*«Yes, sir, he was obliged t o g o In the&#13;
snake country, so he* took a gallon of&#13;
Georgia corn along with hlm.H&#13;
"And how did he moke out?"&#13;
"Splendid! Got so full and wabbled&#13;
so the snakes missed him every time&#13;
they struck at him!"~Atlanta Constitution.&#13;
Laughing cheerfulness throws sunlight&#13;
on all the paths of life.—Rlchter.&#13;
®»&#13;
m&#13;
-**»+,.&#13;
T&#13;
x x x x ;&#13;
CoFFee&#13;
Chums&#13;
All the news for 11.00 per year.&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appettia. loss of tlrenfth,&#13;
RQM, hoadaohe, oomtipation, bad&#13;
general debility, aoor riainga, and catarrh&#13;
of the atomaeli aie all doe to indigewioa&#13;
Kadel re&amp;evselndigeitioD. This new rilesss&#13;
eryrepressnta the natural Juices of dlgee*&#13;
Hen i s they eziat in a healthy stomaefc&#13;
eembiaed with the greatest known tease&#13;
eod reconstruct!v» properties. Kodol fer&#13;
dynepaU eeee net only rsUeve indif eefeoa&#13;
svhFdyasepala, bet this famous romee&gt;&#13;
fcatee mil atomaok troublas by cloanainf,&#13;
pewfylng, aweetenlng and strengtheaiaf&#13;
the muoous membranes lining the stomach.&#13;
^ Mr. a S. B * of Raveeswood, W, Va., «tx«—&#13;
**!«utroabMw1tllMvitontteh for twenty years.&#13;
Redo) eared me end we era now uatse tt la ntt&#13;
for baby."&#13;
Kodol Digests What Y o n Eat.&#13;
•ottlea only. ReSerea indlcastion, aoor ataaeeafc,&#13;
belehinf of eas, etc.&#13;
Prefiered by S. a DeWlTT A o a , OHIOAOO*&#13;
8old by F. A. Slgler, Dmgglat.&#13;
Heart ewenath. or&#13;
Sfeeqatb. orNerve »&#13;
ttlvelj, not one week hewt * »&#13;
esU.. aetoauy d^eaeedT» U&#13;
Twble*4»f U&gt;t Stomach, Urn**.*?. "**•" ••*• *M Httte feBe^svJjtoj?&#13;
Kidaevs, are meply s«mptomt of a 1 ^ _ ^ C ^ * * ? ? * * * l £ $ £ f i £ : '&#13;
mon error of treating symptoms only.&#13;
Symptom treatment is'treating tie&#13;
result not the cause. Weak Stomach&#13;
nerves—the ineide nervee—mean tiio&#13;
maoh weakness, always. And the&#13;
Heajt and iiidneys as well, have their ^^^, «aeMed. a fc **~~ aiwi»e^&#13;
controlling or inside nerves. Weaken ^ « t o y M t f f n e m gjtsyaam-j»eJas83tf&#13;
these nerves, and you inevitably hava -.implyty^SAmStttS^^^S^i&#13;
weak tiul organs. Here uT where Dr. ^ W * 1 ® ^trotu?* more eaves&#13;
8hoop's Eestoruive has made its fame.&#13;
No otter remedy even claims to treat&#13;
the-inside nerves". Also for bloat- ^ ¾ ¾ ¾&#13;
ing, biliousoess, bad brtath or compie-, ina twert diftaeei. tSTBhoon'tV, . ^..____&#13;
Write me today for sample "and" free i ^ S ^ t X ^ * ^ ^ ^ '&#13;
^ook. Dr. Shoou, Racine, Wis. The , s e l f t S e e e P w J ^&#13;
Eestontive is sold by All Dealers.&#13;
AU the newa tor tLH psa- year.&#13;
Subecrihefor the Pinctoey Diepetch&#13;
streoath, Wtthout UattWHeert&#13;
lo the fe»*D sta amned otohoetr ottlUonnfafc hne rarneda ,k kbeys else&#13;
u fboop'a^eetoimtivehasinthasejt dooeeo&#13;
. tor weak and atttnf Beet " " " '&#13;
Dr. Bbooo'a&#13;
.¾^&#13;
« . '&#13;
*w&lt;&#13;
.f? '• •'; ''•.^e;:Jr.'&#13;
The Longer You Drink I t -&#13;
The Better You Like It&#13;
That's because McLaughlin's XXXX&#13;
Coffee is always the same—day in—day out&#13;
—always of the same good quality, blended&#13;
just right, and roasted to a turn—that's&#13;
satisfaction, and 16 full ounces to the&#13;
pound is economy.&#13;
T h t handy air-tight package and the&#13;
glazing of pure sugar keeps the coffee&#13;
clean and fresh—protected from dust, dirt&#13;
and foul odors.&#13;
McLaughlin's XXXX Coffee is Sold by&#13;
W. E. Murphy&#13;
W . W Barnau*&#13;
H. M. W\ : ti on&#13;
.. $ k -&gt;;••• AS IT IS GOpl&#13;
)&#13;
&lt;?• J!&#13;
: 1 ¾ % ^ ¾ ^&#13;
&amp;&#13;
I THa&gt; GREAT.&#13;
EST OF ALL CEREAL FOOD&amp;&#13;
No fad or uncertain mixture. A Natural FOOD&#13;
LAXATIVE. A whole kernel of Rye to each flake,&#13;
ASK YOUR GROCER FOR IT or write us for our three special&#13;
A pound package by mail, postpaid, for 25 cents. It will&#13;
positively cure the most aggravated case of constipation. Write to-day.&#13;
, QiUIHEAPOLIS CEREAL COMPANY.&#13;
^ 1 . H. Oopt. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN.&#13;
ffelferireww Wmmttl Em&#13;
Fat**&#13;
' E X P E R I E N C E ! Experience ia one of the greatest factors in almost&#13;
aa; walk in life. It ia what givee .the Farmer, Doc"&#13;
tee, Merchant and Mechanic ancceea. In mannfectttrtng&#13;
H ia an all importanteletnent. We are carriage&#13;
manufactarera of over twenty-five years' experience&#13;
and we claim to know the bnaineaa from A to Z. We&#13;
will itake oar reputation that we make aa good work&#13;
tor the money' aa it ia poaaible to make. Our two&#13;
leaden are oar No. so Top Baggy *t the popular&#13;
price of $50.00 and oar No. 00 Top&#13;
Baggy at $60.00. Nothing bat the best&#13;
go into theee jobs in order to make&#13;
them oome up to our standard. Write&#13;
{tar fall apedflcetlona, cute and refer*&#13;
eoeea. Do it to-day and see what we&#13;
can* offer you for your oaen and saTe&#13;
all dealer proflta, Write at once and&#13;
J. At HUNOIRFORD * 8OH, Urr&gt;eer, MlcWmn.&#13;
3TATB of MICHIGAN; The Probate Court for the&#13;
County t'f Livingston. At a session of said&#13;
court, held at the probate office In the village of&#13;
Howell, in fluid co'.inty, ou the ith day of June&#13;
a r&gt; 1S*07. Present, Arthur A. Montagne, Jud^e&#13;
of Probate. In trie matter of the estate of&#13;
EDGAR L. SMITH, deceased&#13;
Mlaa M. Smith having filed in said court his&#13;
petition praying that a certain instrument in writing,&#13;
purporting to be the laat will and testament&#13;
of said deceased, now on rile in said court be&#13;
admitted to probate, an I that the administration&#13;
of said estate be granted to Flora J. Smith or to&#13;
("'me other suitable person&#13;
j It is ordered, that the 5th day of July&#13;
; A. I&gt;. 1907, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at said&#13;
Probate Office, be and is hereby appointed for&#13;
I hearing said petition;&#13;
j And H is further ordered that public notice&#13;
[ thereof be giTen by publication of a copy of this&#13;
| order for 3 successive weeks previous to said day&#13;
of hearing, in the Pinckney DISPATCH, a newpnaper,&#13;
printed and circulated in said county.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MOSTAC.UK,&#13;
t 27 Judge of Probate&#13;
Mortgage Sale&#13;
WHEHKAS default has been made in the conditione&#13;
of a ctrtain mortgage, whereby the power&#13;
of sale therein has become operative, made by&#13;
I1KNUY THIEBOLT and his* wife CAROLINE&#13;
T HIE BOLT, of Deerfteld, Livingston County,&#13;
Michigan, to NELSON LAMB of the Bame place&#13;
aforeaaid; bearing date March Sflth, A. f&gt;. 1882,&#13;
and recorded in the office of the Register of&#13;
Deeds for Livingston County, Michigan, in Liber&#13;
.V2 of Mortnges at pa^e .501 thereof on March kith&#13;
A. [&gt;. 18.¾ which said mortgage was duly assigred&#13;
by NELSON LAMB on the 10th day of August,&#13;
1896 to HENKY THIEBOLT J It. which assignment&#13;
was recorded in the Register of Deed's office&#13;
for the County of Livingston on the 12fh day of&#13;
August, 1SC6 in Liber 85 of Mortage* at page 47,&#13;
and by HENRY THEIBOLT JK. duly assigned&#13;
to CAROLINE THEIBOLT on November \ 189«&#13;
and recorded in the Register's office, Office for&#13;
Livingston Couuty on the l$th day of May, LS98,&#13;
in Liber 85 of Mortgagee at paga -X7. And by&#13;
CAROLINE THEIBOLT duly assigned to HENRY&#13;
THEIBOLT JR. on March li, 1907 snd record&#13;
eH in the Office of the Register of Deeds for Lirni-&#13;
jton County on March 19, 1907 in Liber 90 at&#13;
. pairetill. And whereas t^e arncunt claimed to&#13;
, K&gt; due on said Mortgage at this date is the sum of&#13;
' One hundred and eighty do lars and eighty rive&#13;
cents (Si80.8S) of principal nnrt interest and no&#13;
uuit or proceeding having been instituted to recover&#13;
the deht secured by paid mortgage or any&#13;
part thereof:&#13;
Therefore notice is&gt; hereby given that "&gt;y Tirtu*'&#13;
j{ ot said power of sale and in persuanco of the&#13;
statues in such case made and provided the said&#13;
moitgagewM he foreclosed by sale of the premises&#13;
therein described at public, auction to the highest&#13;
bidder at the West front door of the Court Honne&#13;
in the vtSjage of ifowell in said County ot Livingston&#13;
that eeing the place of holding thv Circuit&#13;
Court fer the County of Livingston on Saturdav&#13;
the 13th day of July A. P. 19C7 at Id o'Uock in the&#13;
forenoon of said day, or so much thereof as ro«v&#13;
)&gt;e necessary to pay the principal and interest&#13;
dup on said mortgage, the Attorney fee provided&#13;
therein and costs of said *at&lt;\ of the following&#13;
described premises, *,,•&gt; wit romniencing twenty&#13;
rods Eaat of the Northwest corner of Seciion&#13;
twenty two r&gt;J) in township four {4) North of&#13;
Range five (."&gt;) East Michigan, running&#13;
Soutn eight tods thence East sixty rods thence&#13;
North ek'ht rode thence West to begining coni.&#13;
lining three acres of land.&#13;
HENKY THEIBOLT, JR.,&#13;
Asei^nee of the Mortgagee.&#13;
Datt^l, Howell, April 4. 1^7.&#13;
WK. P. V.^WlNKI.1,&#13;
attorney for Assicnce.&#13;
Poauaamo xvaar TaoaanAX Hoa^uBib *»&#13;
F R A N r v U. A N D R E W S to C O&#13;
EDITOR* AID PHOPHIETOR*.&#13;
a ibBcription Price SI in Advance&#13;
Watered at tnu Pobto&amp;c* at Pinckney, Jliciiij;*!&#13;
aa Becoua-clasB matter&#13;
Advertising m e n made known on application.&#13;
Buelneoa Carfls, $4.0U per &gt;ear.&#13;
Deatb and marriage uotices published tree.&#13;
AunounceinentttoteatertaiamentBmay be pan&#13;
for, it desired, by pr renting the otnee with tick •&#13;
etBofaduuBBion. In caae tickets are not irougtt&#13;
to' Uieotnce, regular rates will be charge u.&#13;
All matter in local notice culumn will Dech^rnu&#13;
ea at 5 cents par line or fraction thereoi, for **?t}&#13;
insertion. Where no time ia epecined, all notict«&#13;
wlllbeinaerted until ordered discontinued, am.&#13;
will be charged for accordingly. f#T-All changee&#13;
at adrertiBeiuentB AlUaT reacn this office aa aarlj&#13;
aa TuaeoAT morning to Insure an insertion t b .&#13;
8'auie wuek.&#13;
JOS 1&gt;£IJV2IJ\G !&#13;
InallitB braacb.ee, a specialty. We haTeallkinv.e&#13;
and the latest styles oi Type, etc., wnicb. enabk»&#13;
us to execute all kinds of work, such aa Book*,&#13;
Pamplets,Poeteie, Programmes, Bill Heada.Nou&#13;
Heatia, statement!, Cards, Auction Bilii, etc.,ii&gt;&#13;
euperiyr styles, upon the shortest notice. Prices si&#13;
low an i;ood work can be none.&#13;
ALL BILLS PATABLE KIHHTOK KVKBX MONTH.&#13;
Dr. Shoop's&#13;
Restorative ««A LL DEALERS. n&#13;
Health as* WetHk&#13;
Insured health to the average&#13;
great wealth.&#13;
TH£ VILLAGF DIRECT0KY&#13;
VlLLAGt OFFICERS.&#13;
PKBBIDINT&#13;
TausTasa S. d.Teeple,&#13;
James »uiiili,&#13;
W. A. Ni\^n (.&#13;
C'LtKK&#13;
TatASUHEH&#13;
As^LHSOH&#13;
&gt;TKKET COMMlrtSIoNKl,&#13;
11 i.Al.l 11 Ulr'FlULh . ( ; ,&#13;
iil'TiiKM,!&#13;
M A U S U A I . L&#13;
CMURCHtb&#13;
J. C. Dunn&#13;
Ed. Farnuui.&#13;
Jatufs iioutie.&#13;
. V, VauWinKle.&#13;
Koger Carr&#13;
). A. Cadwell&#13;
i». \\ .Murta&#13;
M, Lavey&#13;
1L. r'. airier&#13;
W . A. Carr&#13;
^ littn. L. iUcrt&#13;
v — — — •- -&#13;
ir&gt; I !&#13;
DR. JOHNSON'S&#13;
AFTERDINNERPILL&#13;
INSURES HEALTH: TIT IT.&#13;
iS PURELY VEflnABLE,&#13;
and waeoesd by the Doetor&#13;
tor twenty yean in&#13;
active-practice, and ia&#13;
conceded by au having&#13;
used it to be the'&#13;
Little StoMch rra&#13;
on the market. It ia a&#13;
PREVENTATIVE of&#13;
Sick Head ache,&#13;
Dyspepsia, Dizziness,&#13;
Heartburn,&#13;
Bad Taete In&#13;
M o u t h , Coated&#13;
Tongue, Loss&#13;
Appetite&#13;
and all other m o r&#13;
conditions arising&#13;
a disordered stomach^&#13;
PREVENTION&#13;
is the order of this day and age, as it is much&#13;
more scientific to prevent a.diseased condition&#13;
than to cure it. You can secure this&#13;
LITTLE PILL of ANY FIRST-CLAat DRUftCIST&#13;
who will be pleased to serve yon, 88 dpeee tot&#13;
25 cents. Don't take some other * jnat aa&#13;
good" for there fcmt any other that will&#13;
please you at all after trying this one...&#13;
L. L. JOHNSON, M. D. Prop.&#13;
Atlanta, Georgia.&#13;
MJiriiuLUST ±.i\sCOi'AL (JUUltl'H.&#13;
Kev. U. c, uiLtiejoha pastor, aervicas ever&gt;&#13;
cjuuday morning *i w;Ju, ana every annua;&#13;
evening at I ; W O I K . U , t'rayer meetiuji'i'hurc&#13;
day eveiuu^b. ^uuuay acuooi at i. iuae ot uiuru&#13;
m^aervic*. ^li== .MAKV VANPLKBT, bupt.&#13;
flLVEUSSAHTOilTIC&#13;
Stock Fountain&#13;
PAYS FOft ITSELF THE FIRST YEM. i! i :&#13;
C\ONotth.&lt;&#13;
' Uev.&#13;
oAi'iONAL c m ucu.&#13;
KJ. W. Aiyine paetor. .-«rviu «ve&#13;
suaaay luoruing at W.H) and jvery omnia&#13;
eveuinx at T:o&lt; o'ciock. t'rav't u-oeuu^ lu,.,&#13;
day evsnings. Sunday echooi at eloae ot Uiori.&#13;
ingservk.e. Percy Swarthout, supi.,, stucco&#13;
ieeple Jsec.&#13;
^ T . M.AKV'S 'JAi'HuulC CHURCH.&#13;
O Kev. Al. J. Oommerford, laator. Service*&#13;
every Sunday. Low maaa ax T:30o clotK&#13;
higji Luaas with sermon at ".30 a. m. Catechisa&#13;
t J;tHjp. in., veaperaenw! -:. Jdlctionat 7:3u y.a.&#13;
. — . . . . I . . • I. . . . . . j — . • — •&#13;
SOCIETIES;&#13;
The A. O. H. Society of this place, meets ever)&#13;
third Sunday inttte Fr. Mattaew Hall.&#13;
John Tuomay and M. T. Kelly,County DeU^aie:&#13;
Aatateatlt&#13;
Never fails to&#13;
work. Does&#13;
not overflow.&#13;
No mud or&#13;
filth. P u r e&#13;
cool wateart,' •*&lt;.-•• ----^-&#13;
Gai&#13;
T o d o&#13;
claimed.^&#13;
Bij Seller&#13;
fl&gt;Hii &gt;V. C. T. U. meets the hrat Friday of each&#13;
X month at ^:30 p. m, at the home oi Dr. 11. F.&#13;
Mgler, .Everyone interested in temperance ie&#13;
coadiaily invited. Mrs. Leal airier, Pres; Mr».&#13;
Ktia burfee,Secretary. '&#13;
I^he C. T. A- and B. aociet&gt; of thla place , ni»&gt;&#13;
every third Saturaay evening in the Fr. Aim&#13;
thew Hall. John Ijonohue, i resident.&#13;
NIGHTS OF MACCABEES.&#13;
.Meetevery Friday evening on or beiore tn^&#13;
of the moon at their hall in the Swarthout bldg&#13;
Visiting brothers arecordialiy invited.&#13;
CUAS. L. CAXTEKII.. Sir hnmht Comrcarj&#13;
Se/af e»t SO Oejer* TrtmL&#13;
MONEY BACK IP NOT SATlBPlEDt ^&#13;
GF.DGE BROS. IRON ROOFING Q|k&#13;
Fountain St.. Atider3ori; Ind.&#13;
utz&#13;
6 0 YEARS*&#13;
EXPERIENCE&#13;
Kl&#13;
LiTingston Lodge, N'o.TiS, F &amp;[A. M.&#13;
Communication Tuesday evening, on or be fort&#13;
thefull oft he moon. Kirk VanWinkle, W&#13;
Keguii;&#13;
il&#13;
0RDKRUF KASTERN" STAR meets each month&#13;
the Friday evening following the regular F.&#13;
A. A. M. meeting, MasJS'KTTK VAUGHN, W~. i l .&#13;
OKI ER OF MODERN WOODMEN Meet the&#13;
first Thursday evening of eaeh Month in the&#13;
Uaocabsa hall. C. L.Grimes V. C.&#13;
LADIES OF THE MACCABEES. Meat every U&#13;
and 3rd Saturday of each rconth at 2:30 p m.&#13;
K. O. T. M. hall. Visiting s.uters cordially in&#13;
vited. LILA CQSIWAY, Lady Com.&#13;
KNIGHTS OF THE LOYAL GUARD&#13;
F. L. Andrews P. i s . 1&#13;
T R A C K M * R K S&#13;
D C « I 6 N £&#13;
C O P Y R I G H T S , e t c&#13;
Anvof.e ?en1tn- asttetch and deecrintwn may&#13;
qutccly ;wcert.»in our oyintod free«hetl&gt;&#13;
inveiit ion »a probably patentable. Comnt&#13;
ttons strictly conauentlaLHMIOMOl&#13;
sent free, oidoat airency foreeeoftn&#13;
n*PcaMten ntao itiaqktyen w KthbroonegAhe teMrraen,n i *&amp; t oe. Scknrtnc Jlmericaiit A handsomely llhtstrated weekly. Tjtreeat c*r«&#13;
n-utton of any nctenttno JoenuU. Terms, SS a&#13;
rnr: tour months, SI. Sold byaU ne*sclealem&#13;
MUNN&amp;Co«iB—'NewTort&#13;
Branch OrBee, Kw F St, WaahUieton, IX C.&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
thence I H. F. S-QCER M. D- C . ' l , SIQLER M. D&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIGLER,&#13;
Phyaidaasaad Surgeon*. All calls promptly&#13;
attended to day or night. Office on Main vreet&#13;
Pinckasy, Mksh.&#13;
I AY^tc &lt;• C Sweet to Eit&#13;
U d A ' X l d O A Caaay leetj Laxabe&#13;
ILL HE C O U C H&#13;
CURE THE LUNGS&#13;
FRANK L ANDREWS&#13;
NOTARY PUBLIC&#13;
WITH SEIL&#13;
AT CIS PATCH OFFICE&#13;
)&#13;
mn Dr. Kings&#13;
New Oiscov&#13;
FOR £ 0MSUMPTI0N&#13;
0UGHS aea&#13;
^OLOS&#13;
Priee&#13;
50c a $1.00&#13;
Free Trial.&#13;
Guaranteed for all TBBQAT end&#13;
VOW T B O U B l A l ^ o r K O W f&#13;
SACK.&#13;
kfisk TT*&#13;
JQ5W •--'•-&#13;
&lt;w''' ^K&#13;
* T L * * * j . i r ^ „ /.I • • &gt; • •. \ r * ,• •• ..^ -^. v.-' -»#'J •$ jfi&lt;" * * * * * *&#13;
• * : &lt; ."*S7&#13;
. -'ABU • -&#13;
&gt;&#13;
LOME LOST. Campaign etfaUia* fta*W» *&#13;
Man Aged 74 »u««nfcii*h-«* 41 far j a campaign uattstfAn**mta which&#13;
"v.&#13;
&amp; -'• • •"'•'TO&lt;KIW IT •UOY.FQ^ •&#13;
~ ' d t f j ^ ^ A w f t l © * ' CRIES&#13;
Trte Tax Problem.&#13;
The tax commiaaion is finding considerable&#13;
work outlined for it by citizens&#13;
and corporatioaa complaining of&#13;
unequal valuations fixed by assessing&#13;
©Ulcers.&#13;
Secretary Wells H. Brown will go&#13;
to Bellaire to investigate the complaint&#13;
of a large power company that&#13;
Its" assessment is aweasonaftW, and&#13;
excessive. He will also visit Rapid&#13;
City, where it is claimed much property&#13;
has been left off the assessment&#13;
rolls. One complaint fioni a tannery&#13;
company at Cheboygan calls into&#13;
question nearly all the-assessments In&#13;
the township of Inverness.&#13;
The Detroit United Railway has&#13;
filed objections to its assessment in&#13;
Ypsilaati,; and the Benton Harbor &amp;&#13;
South Bead Railway Co. complains of&#13;
an excceasive assessment \p. all the&#13;
townships through which the road&#13;
runs. Another electric company that&#13;
seeks to obtain a lower assessment is&#13;
the Grand Rapids, Grand Haven &amp;&#13;
Muskegon Electric Railway Co.&#13;
No Race Suicide.&#13;
Probably the largest family in the&#13;
jounty, and &gt; probably the greatest&#13;
number df living children of any man&#13;
to Michigan. Thirty children have&#13;
been born to him by his two wives,&#13;
the first having six, and his present&#13;
spouse being the mother of 24. She is&#13;
15 years old, and Methner is 63 years&#13;
of age. With his 200-acre farm, Mr.&#13;
Methner is able to employ his boys to&#13;
advantage, 15 of them at present aslistlng&#13;
him with his farm work. Methner&#13;
traveled to Lansing on May 31,&#13;
to tell President Roosevelt about his&#13;
family, but the secret service men&#13;
looked upon him with suspicion, and&#13;
kept him outside the lines.&#13;
&amp;&#13;
Jkt&#13;
itt-&#13;
J:-&#13;
-V-1&#13;
* • • * :&#13;
! $ &gt; • • . • !&#13;
fsiy&#13;
! * • •••• .&#13;
•M.&#13;
fc*- * &lt; V .,.,&#13;
Made Deaf and Dumb.&#13;
David Buckeloo, son of Henry Buckeloo,&#13;
of Grand Rapids, who was struck&#13;
by lightning, will probably be left deaf&#13;
and dumb. He recovered consciousness&#13;
eighteen hours after being struck&#13;
down. Physicians say there is every&#13;
Indication that he will not be-able to&#13;
hear or speak again.&#13;
The forest fires which raged north&#13;
and west of Alpena for three days, destroying&#13;
fhqpdumber camps of Albeit&#13;
Lough and threatening the clubhouse&#13;
of the Turtle Lake club, have been extinguished&#13;
by heavy raius.&#13;
Pastor's Wife Is Dead.&#13;
Mrs. D. C. Fleming, wife of one of&#13;
Charlotte's pastors, died Saturday under&#13;
peculiar circumstances. Mrs&#13;
Fleming was taken ill at the supper&#13;
table and doctors thought she was&#13;
suffering from ptomaine poisoning&#13;
from eating ice cream, but as others&#13;
were not taken sick the doctors on&#13;
further investigation pronounced her&#13;
death due to a ruptured blood vessel.&#13;
Rev. Fleming has held pastorates at&#13;
Lnkevlew, Petoskoy, Vassar, Free-&#13;
^ 2 ^ »l»4„*tk«r Michigan towns. Five&#13;
• a w t a n KiilaaV&#13;
Abraham Verlee, aftai 8 jwara, son&#13;
of Peter Verlee, of Vreeland, a few&#13;
miles southeast of Grand R a p i ^ ran&#13;
in front of a Grand Rapids &amp; Holland&#13;
interurban car late Thursday afternoon,&#13;
and was instantly killed.&#13;
The little fellow was playing ball,&#13;
and his father sat on the pornh of&#13;
their home, watching him. He saw&#13;
the car bearing down on his child, but&#13;
was speechless with horror and could&#13;
do nothing, seemingly being riveted&#13;
t o the spot.&#13;
Sparrow Bounties.&#13;
Last fall the board of supervisors&#13;
of Genesee county created a fund&#13;
for the payment of bounties for spar-&#13;
% row heads on'the basis of 2 cents&#13;
*|piece, to offset the effect of the repeal&#13;
of the atate sparrow bounty law.&#13;
-•The local bounty system has been in&#13;
Vogue for six months and the total !&#13;
expense up to date has been $920, rep- j&#13;
resenting a reduction of over 40,000&#13;
in the sparrow population of the conn&#13;
ty.&#13;
• AHanatfntf WlfaVAffaoUan.&#13;
Peter Etterle, aged 74, chart**&#13;
Charles 'B. Karchner, «s*d 45, with the&#13;
alienation of the affectum of hit wile,&#13;
who ia 73 y e a r c o f age. He demand*&#13;
$10,000 damages. The parties reside&#13;
in Kent county.&#13;
According to the court records Eaterle&#13;
a year ago gave Karchner a&#13;
deed to hla property In Lowell on hit&#13;
agreeing to pay a mortgage of $260&#13;
and give the Eateries a home for the&#13;
aest of their lives. Esterle avers that&#13;
after a short time Karchner Induced&#13;
his aged wife to consent to sending&#13;
him to the poorhouae while she was&#13;
to be given a home by Karchner.&#13;
Esterle told his story to Prosecutor&#13;
Brown, or Grand Rapids, who ordered&#13;
Karchner to return the deed and&#13;
Karchner was given a mortgage for&#13;
$250 to cover the amount he had paid.&#13;
At the first opportunity Karchner&#13;
foreclosed and the property was being&#13;
sold at auction from the city hall&#13;
steps when the papers alleging alienation&#13;
were served on Karchner. He&#13;
stopped the sale and it was adjourned&#13;
for two weeks., The Esterles have&#13;
lived together for 4"J years.&#13;
MILLIONS.&#13;
The Stati Expenditure* Grow to Large&#13;
( Proportions.&#13;
The total expenditures of the present&#13;
legislature will anionnt to practically&#13;
$9,500,000, according to Rep.&#13;
Morrice, acting chairman of the ways&#13;
and means committee of the house.&#13;
The previous legislature made up a&#13;
budget of $7,300,000. Necessary increase&#13;
of expenditures to maintain the&#13;
state institutions and keep up with&#13;
the growth of the state, are ascribed&#13;
as the reason for the increase of $2,-&#13;
200,000 in expenditures over that&#13;
necessary two years ago.&#13;
The so-called general budget, which&#13;
provides for the expenses of the state&#13;
departments, will amount to approximately&#13;
$2,500,000, according to the&#13;
estimates now before the ways and&#13;
means committee. Two years ago that&#13;
budget was complete at $1,125,000 and&#13;
Gov. Warner is of the opinion that&#13;
about the same amount should provide&#13;
for the departments this year.&#13;
Today the appropriation bills for the&#13;
big schools of the state were reported&#13;
out. The committee recommended&#13;
that there be given the university approximately&#13;
$650,2X7 In the form of a&#13;
3-8 mill tax Instead of the 1-2 mill tax&#13;
as was asked by the university-*&#13;
friends, and which would have netted&#13;
that institution about $800,000.&#13;
Prisoner Skipped.&#13;
Sheriff A. L. Briggs, of Monroe&#13;
county, appealed to local officials* for&#13;
assistance in recapturing Spencer&#13;
Brookfield, alias William Ash, a prisoner&#13;
who escaped about J J o'clock&#13;
Thursday morning in Detroit, while&#13;
being taken to the penitentiary at&#13;
Jackson.&#13;
Briggs and his prisoner came to&#13;
Detroit on an electric car and were&#13;
to leave on the first Jackson car. His&#13;
hands were manacled and his light&#13;
overcoat had been thrown over his&#13;
arms to cover the cuffs. He had stepped&#13;
upon the platform of the car, the&#13;
sheriff just ahead of him. when he&#13;
suddenly turned and jumped to the&#13;
ground and ran. The officer followed&#13;
the fleeing man from the car and gave&#13;
chase, but was unable to overtake&#13;
him.&#13;
The missing priaouer is described&#13;
as ;50 years old, wearing a black coal,&#13;
light trousers, brown derby hat, patent&#13;
leather shoes and how glasses&#13;
Burned to Death.&#13;
-• Miss Sina* Richards, of Saulte Stc.&#13;
Marie, was running a sewing machine&#13;
at night when a lamp fell to the floor.&#13;
She tried to extinguish the flames by&#13;
fitting on the lamp, but her clothing&#13;
took fire and she ran into the street,&#13;
.covered with flames. A neighbor rush-&#13;
•ed to the rescue, throwing his coat&#13;
around her when *she fell to the&#13;
ground. She was taken to the hospital,&#13;
where she died in great agony.&#13;
A Triple Operation.&#13;
A triple operation was performed&#13;
upon George Taylor, the Grand Rapids&#13;
carpenter who fell from a scaffold&#13;
ing across a wire charged with 19,000&#13;
volts of alternating electric current&#13;
on May 20. Taylor's left, arm, through&#13;
which the current entered his body,&#13;
and the toes of both feet, where the&#13;
current passed out, became affected&#13;
with dry gangrene and had to be amputated.&#13;
The amputation of all the members&#13;
had to be performed at the same time&#13;
to shorten the time of anesthesis and&#13;
four doctors were employed. Only the&#13;
toes were removed so as to enable&#13;
Taylor to retain full use of his fept,&#13;
if possible further amputation may be&#13;
required.&#13;
A Deposition.&#13;
Representative Ward lias signified&#13;
his willingness to make a statement&#13;
to Prosecutor Robison, of Detroit,&#13;
concerning the death of Edith Presley.&#13;
Mr. Ward is. still-too weak, physic&#13;
ally, to undergo the fatigue of a railroad&#13;
trip and it is thought that matters&#13;
can be arranged BO that Mr. Robison&#13;
will take the legislator's deposition&#13;
in Lansing or in Bancroft, Mr.&#13;
Ward's home.&#13;
STATE NEWS BRIEFS.&#13;
Howiand Convicted.&#13;
Frank Howiand, who shot Charles&#13;
B. Carroll, of Marcellus, In his wif«'s&#13;
foaai fcfl Laport.e, Tnd., has been found&#13;
grtftty of Intent to murder, and must&#13;
-serve a term of two to 21 years. Carroll&#13;
has three bullets in his body and&#13;
physicians say he cannot survive one&#13;
year. Judge Dodge instructed the .jury&#13;
that the "unwritten law" should not&#13;
be considered. Howland'a parents are&#13;
•orominent Grand Ranida people&#13;
On special request of Congressman&#13;
Die-kema. the acting secretary of war&#13;
has issued an order asking Gen. Mc-&#13;
Kenzle to give Congressman Diekema&#13;
the flood report of the federal board&#13;
of engineers. Grand Rapids is to have&#13;
the benefit of the government engineer's&#13;
suggestions, hut the report cannot&#13;
be made public.&#13;
Ira F. Clark, of Boston, Mass.. Is&#13;
visiting his sister. Mrs. Charlotte&#13;
•warn in saanftft tovfti apd undoubte&#13;
d * tpraad tat lafectfe*,of vaxloui&#13;
devastating diseases in thair paaaaga&#13;
from ona country to another on board&#13;
ship. It ia announced that ft, will&#13;
toon bf compulsory for every TjlpuT&#13;
catering a Franch harboj from ctitfaln&#13;
other porta to hare all its rata exterminated.&#13;
r ^ - y.&#13;
P U R I F I E R L I F E IN9URANCX&gt;&#13;
ftaneflta from New Law, WMe*&gt; A *&#13;
mains Substantially Unchanged.&#13;
^Through the influence of GOT.&#13;
Hughes, the New York Legislature decided&#13;
to make no radical changes in&#13;
the new insurance law. It was pointed&#13;
out by Gov. Hughes that the New York&#13;
law has already accomplished widespread&#13;
reforms, with proportionate&#13;
benefits to policyholders, and that it&#13;
should be given a thorough trial before&#13;
any axuendLments were seriously&#13;
considered. It Is estimated that the&#13;
cost of the mismanagement of the past&#13;
did not average more than 20 cents to&#13;
each policyholder, while the benefits&#13;
to present and future policyholders&#13;
will amount to many times more and&#13;
be cumulative besides, The speed&#13;
craze of the big companies and the excessive&#13;
cost of securing new business&#13;
was the most extravagant evil of the&#13;
old managements. Uader the new&#13;
regime the cost of new business has&#13;
already been greatly reduced, along&#13;
with other economies.&#13;
The showing made by the Equitable&#13;
Life Assurance Society ia its report&#13;
for 190C was a strong . argument&#13;
against meddling with the new l a w -&#13;
In the Equitable alone there was a&#13;
saving of over $2,000,01)0 in expenses,&#13;
besides an increase in the incdme&#13;
from the Society's assets amounting&#13;
to as much more. The ratios of the&#13;
Equitable's total expenses to its total&#13;
income was 19.42% in 1904, 17.38% in&#13;
1905, and only 14.48% in 1906. The&#13;
dividends paid to Equitable policyholders&#13;
in 1906 amounted to $7,289,734,&#13;
which was an increase of more than&#13;
9% over 1905.&#13;
While the Equitable made a better&#13;
showing than any other big company,&#13;
all reported radical economies and under&#13;
such conditions the Legislature&#13;
wisely decided to leave the law substantially&#13;
as it stands.&#13;
FAILED IN SMALL THINGS.&#13;
88 ^ tv **»&#13;
*l*di i&gt;*.i&#13;
uPjeje'.. Rvvaax awawaiataaaw ^ww- -^afpji *#!JS*&#13;
Mef.Maui, t|£' ' " 1. , - ^ ,«„• » - , «&#13;
f Colonel Oast and »t§ maaUtanU i 'f** *+**"*•£?&#13;
made an inspection of the Mtnnaaati'aT f * * - *-**-&#13;
taunch Which wan .rank with the &gt; ©idshlpmea&#13;
and «rew a wjek ago* After&#13;
* careful examination, It w a i&#13;
found that the launch* while hound&#13;
from , the Jameetown exposition&#13;
grounds to the battleship Connecticut,&#13;
at Anchor off Old*Point, had run into&#13;
a steel hawser, such as are used in&#13;
towing gigantic car floats used by the&#13;
railroads.&#13;
It was found that the brass prow&#13;
of the launch showed signs of Baring&#13;
struck the hawser. The, laUer&#13;
then, no doubt, passed under the keel&#13;
of the tiny craft. When the cable&#13;
struck that part of the boat it came&#13;
In contact with the condenser pipes.&#13;
They were torn away, and the shock&#13;
threw the launch over on its starboard&#13;
side. The tiny craft then was&#13;
hurled to the bottom of .Hampton&#13;
Roads and became the tomb of its&#13;
eleven jeeupants.&#13;
Part of the hull of the launch was&#13;
crushed in by the impact with th*&#13;
cable, but the steamboat inspectors&#13;
and the members of, the naval hoard&#13;
of Inquiry expressed the unanimous&#13;
opinion that the ill-fated v e s p l was&#13;
not struck by a barge or tug, but had&#13;
Congressman* Evidently Was No Hero&#13;
to His Wife.&#13;
There is a certain congressman&#13;
who, whatever authority he may hold&#13;
In the councils of atate, is of comparatively&#13;
minor importance in his own&#13;
household. Indeed, it has been tinkindly&#13;
intimated that his wife is "the&#13;
whole thing" in their establishment.&#13;
Representative and Mrs. Blank&#13;
had been to Baltimore one afternoon.&#13;
When they left the train at Washington,&#13;
on their return, Mrs. Blank discovered&#13;
that her umbrella, which had&#13;
been intrusted to the care of her husband,&#13;
way missing.&#13;
"Where's my umbrella?" she demanded.&#13;
"I'm afraid I've forgotten It, my&#13;
dear," meekly answered the congressman.&#13;
"It. must still be in the train."&#13;
"In the train!" snorted the lady.&#13;
"And to think that the affairs of the&#13;
nation are intrusted to a man who&#13;
doesn't know enough to take care of a&#13;
woman's umbrella!"—Success Magacine.&#13;
Quaker Wit.&#13;
A Quaker riding in a carriage with&#13;
a fashionable woman decked with a&#13;
profusion of jewelry, as a substitute,&#13;
perhaps, for her scantiness of clothes,&#13;
heard her complaining of the cold.&#13;
Shivering in her lace bonnet and&#13;
shawl, she exclaimed, "What shall I&#13;
do to get warm?"&#13;
"I really don't know," replied the&#13;
Quaker solemnly, "unless thou put on&#13;
*nother breastpin."—Sunday Magazine,&#13;
W E N T TO TEA&#13;
And It Wound Her Bobbin.&#13;
Tea drinking frequently affects people&#13;
as badly as coffee. A lady in Salisbury,&#13;
Md., says that she was compelled&#13;
to abandon the use of coffee a&#13;
good many years "ago, because it&#13;
threatened to ruin her health and that'&#13;
she went over to tea dfdnking, but&#13;
finally, she had dyspepsia so bad that&#13;
she had lost twenty-five pounds and&#13;
no food seemed to agree with her.&#13;
She further saj-3: "As thi3 time I&#13;
was Induced to take up the famous&#13;
food drink, Po3tum, and was so much&#13;
pleased with the results that I have&#13;
never heen without it since. ' I commenced&#13;
to improve at once, regained&#13;
my twenty-five pounds of flesh and&#13;
went some beyond my U3ual weight.&#13;
"I know Postum to be good, pure,&#13;
and healthful, and there never was an&#13;
Webster, aged X2 years, of Deer field., article, and never win be, I believe,&#13;
Ho Is 79 years old, hale and hearty j t h at doeg so surely take the place of&#13;
and has Just returned from Denver,: coffee, as Postum Food Coffee. The&#13;
Col., where h* attended, as a delegate,! beauty of it all 1¾ that it is satisfying&#13;
a reunion of the Sons ofthe Americam and wonderfully nourishing. T feel as&#13;
Revolution. There are only 14 Soasi l f 1 C 0 , l M n o t a I n K l t a p r a l a e g t o o l o u d &lt; .,&#13;
of the American&#13;
United States.&#13;
Revolution in t a * 1 Send "The Road to WellviUe," in pkgs.&#13;
Senator Morgan Dead.&#13;
United States Senator John Tyler&#13;
Morgan, of Alabama, for 30 years a&#13;
Democratic member of the upper&#13;
house of congress, chairman of the&#13;
senate committee on inter-state&#13;
canals, and prominent as a brigadiergeneral&#13;
in the confederate army, died&#13;
Tuesday night.&#13;
Senator Morgan had been in bad&#13;
health for a number of years. He suf&#13;
fered from angina pectoris, which&#13;
finally caused his death. At the death&#13;
bed were his daughters, Miss Mary&#13;
Morgan and Miss Cordelia Morgan,&#13;
both of Washington, and his secretary&#13;
J. 0. Jones.&#13;
#8^0 . ^ t t - f w -&#13;
1¾¾¾&#13;
&amp; trtvalng,^n^le^Wrtenily «*&#13;
a L % A ^ t r y hamlet aojna toil**&#13;
4*$$;?*£* oW t* «Ml a meroha*&#13;
a W 61¾ gW*. t*f#T*** o*lr ona&#13;
hotel in the plaoe^and t*Us.had an u*&#13;
s^vorr w%»M«atttt# v'*s&gt; jm oaljr "oo$&#13;
aight to staj, £owevec, an he cw*&#13;
eluded to make the be#f of a bad bar*&#13;
g a i n . ; •• " v '••'^ • •&#13;
He w*at to M* «**» ^aarty,&#13;
fen&amp;ntiihe »ie4,of —•-*"*-*&#13;
electrifc'button, Which, of , _&#13;
conspieaotw ay (£ ahseasW : "&#13;
JHfe&amp;|MiHBtt*4» thiak that a* Md&#13;
soeni nea^portw beio^fca^ sacking&#13;
bis head out of the door, he yelled&#13;
lustily: * u-.,&#13;
"Hey, you black rascal, com* $ u p&#13;
here!" . . l ! ; ^ - "-&#13;
"Yas'r, yaa'r, Fs oomin\*^ wasjthe&#13;
quick response; and a moment later&#13;
the old darkey appeared before the&#13;
drummer, bowing obsequiously, cap in&#13;
hand. ... " • "• *:?•',.&#13;
"I want some hot wafer, and I want&#13;
i f quick," said the drummer.&#13;
The developments establtehed-the .t^mbiiag. -We ain't got no hot&#13;
fact that the men charged with t h e r •&#13;
navigation of the launch were at their&#13;
posts and did their duty when the fatal&#13;
collision occurred.&#13;
collided with the cable between the, ^ y*yn .now'ful sorry, boss, poitfful&#13;
tug and car float. : L«owarM replied the neiro. his voice&#13;
ig. "We ain't 'got no&#13;
watah, but I kin; hot y ^ ^ome.w&#13;
BLACK, ITCHING SPOTS O N FACE.&#13;
- T ' •&gt;%*',' v-&gt; mw ^--- -&#13;
Physician Cailtd It laaema in Worst&#13;
Form—a^atrsnt DesRalreri»»Jarrr&#13;
Cutioura Remedies Cared Her.&#13;
4"About four years ago TUfap affilctwith&#13;
black splotches all-over my&#13;
face and a few covering my-;&gt; body,&#13;
whioh- produced a severe ltohlng irritation,&#13;
and which caused me a great1&#13;
deal of suffering, to such an extent&#13;
that I was forced to cnYVf&amp;Two of the&#13;
. After a&#13;
An Earthquake Theory.&#13;
,A dispatch from Montgomery City,&#13;
Mo., says: Dr. Thomas Jefferson Jackson&#13;
See, astronomer of the United&#13;
States naval observatory at Mare&#13;
Island, Cal., now in that city, visiting&#13;
his old boyhood home, says he has&#13;
discovered the one common cause of&#13;
earthquakes—the leakage of the ocean&#13;
bottom, which gives rise to steam&#13;
beneath the earth's crust.&#13;
He also points out that the chief&#13;
danger of the agitations is along the&#13;
sea coast.&#13;
"It seems to be clearly proved," said&#13;
Dr. See, "that the earth is not contracting,&#13;
but that the effects of cooling&#13;
of the globe are insensible. The&#13;
earth may be slightly expanding. San&#13;
Francisco is not likely to have another&#13;
earthquake in 100 years."&#13;
Fell 250 Feet.&#13;
Three freight, cars broke from, a&#13;
Grand Trunk train of 14 cars Saturday&#13;
in the middle of the lower steel&#13;
irch bridge and pluuged into the Niagara&#13;
rapids, 250 feet below. In leaving&#13;
the track they damaged both the&#13;
upper and lower decks of the bridge&#13;
(0 a considerable extent.&#13;
When the cars struck the water&#13;
they were not badly damaged, but&#13;
the current of the rapids carried them&#13;
to the whirlpool, where they were&#13;
broken to pieces. A brakeman had a&#13;
narrow escape.&#13;
leading physicians of&#13;
thorough examination ol the dreaded&#13;
complaint they ifanuounced^ i t to be&#13;
skin eczema in the wor^t form. Their:&#13;
treatment did me no good. Finally 1&#13;
became despondent and decided to discontinue&#13;
their services. My husband&#13;
purchased a single set of the Cutlcura&#13;
Remedies, which entirely stopped the&#13;
breaking out. I continued the use of&#13;
the'Cutlcura Remedies for six months,&#13;
and after that every splotch was entirely&#13;
gone. I have not felt a symptom&#13;
of the eczema since; which was threje&#13;
years ago. Mrs. Lizzie E. Sledge, :ftflf&#13;
Jones Ave., Selma, Ala., Oct. 2 8 ; n i &amp; ? %&gt;4&#13;
Gone to Oyster Bay.&#13;
President Roosevelt has gone to&#13;
Oyster Bay for the summer. The party&#13;
which left Washington included Mrs.&#13;
Roosevelt, Mrs. Cowles. wife of Rear-&#13;
Admiral Cowles, Secretary and Mrs.&#13;
Loeb and Mr. McLatta. The president&#13;
hopes to pass a very quiet summer at&#13;
OyBter Bay, and according to present&#13;
plans with probably not more than&#13;
one exception he will remain there&#13;
continuously until he leaves for Canton,&#13;
0., for the unveiling of the Mc-&#13;
Kinley memorial monument, September&#13;
30.&#13;
The Deadly Fourth.&#13;
The state department of health has&#13;
Issued to all local boards of health a&#13;
statement showing that 44 deaths have&#13;
occurred in Michigan in celebrating&#13;
Independence day in four years. Attention&#13;
Is called to the extreme danger&#13;
to children in handling fireworks&#13;
and assistance is asked In enforcing&#13;
the law against the sale of fireworks&#13;
and firearms to minors. Local officers&#13;
are asked to pass ordinances and to&#13;
post the statements of the health officer&#13;
as to the cause and the dangerf&#13;
of tetanus.&#13;
Convicted the Mayor.&#13;
Mayor Eugene A. Bchmilz, of San&#13;
Francisco, was found guilty Thursday&#13;
by the Jury in the extortion case of&#13;
the French restaurants. The verdict&#13;
was a surprise, as the testimony had&#13;
made a fair case against Abe Ruef,&#13;
while the only thing against Schmltz&#13;
was Ruef'8 declaration that he divided&#13;
the retainer with the mayor.&#13;
Schmltz emphatlcalyy denied this, and&#13;
as Ruef's testimony evidently was&#13;
forced few expected more than a disagreement.&#13;
"There's a Reasou.'&#13;
Cloud Burst Fatal.&#13;
The Black Hills have heen entirely&#13;
cut off from communication with the&#13;
outside world since the evening of&#13;
the 12th. A rain and hail storm,-last*&#13;
ing six hours, washed out the rail,&#13;
road bridges and tracks and destroyed&#13;
telegraph wires. Three persons are&#13;
known to have lost their lives.&#13;
Hfs idea of a Good Time.T&#13;
The retired contractor sighed as he&#13;
got into his dress suit and thought of&#13;
the elaborate dinner and the opera&#13;
that were to come.&#13;
"Some day," he said, "I'll git real&#13;
desp'rit, an' then do you know what&#13;
I'll d o r&#13;
"Something terrible, ire doubt," replied&#13;
his ambMotfgtwlfje.&#13;
"I suppose it wouldn't look well in&#13;
print." he admitted, ."bii^f can't help&#13;
that. What I'll do will be to throw&#13;
away these high-priced cigars, put on&#13;
some old clothes, go out an' come in&#13;
by the back way an' smoke a quarter&#13;
pound of cHt-up chewin' tobacco in a&#13;
cob pipe while J'm talkin' things over&#13;
with the coachman in the barn,"—The&#13;
Bohemian.'&#13;
,M*&#13;
Ths Eternal Woman.&#13;
1^ is because it Is always Impossible&#13;
to know how a woman will act,&#13;
to grasp the Workings of her mind,&#13;
to pierce the veil that hides the innermoat&#13;
recesses of her soul, that she has&#13;
held such complete sway over man.&#13;
He can never definitely rely upon her,&#13;
—London World.&#13;
Don't Sneeze Your Head Off?&#13;
Krause's Cold Capsulea will cure you almost&#13;
instantly. At all Druggists, 25c*&#13;
When duty is clear, to put one's&#13;
self questions about it l a to suffer defeat—&#13;
Victor Hugo.&#13;
8ELL.NO QyEEH WASHERS&#13;
In new territory is like&#13;
selling silver dollars at&#13;
^oorr They go slow at&#13;
3 ¾ / f a t fere's no&#13;
trtflJble Idr prbve they&#13;
are,worth more than&#13;
the . pries-, asked for&#13;
rtham. &lt;5*t Introductory&#13;
plan today.&#13;
TfTrttafel t|Mh vanlid.&#13;
JAS. H. KNOLi; Mfr., Rending Pa.&#13;
SICK HEADACHE&#13;
p £ -— 4_'iPosftlfel?e«r*4 *y&#13;
They also reHsve ttl*&gt;&#13;
tress trom Dytpt psta, Indigestion&#13;
and Too Hearty&#13;
Xattag. A perfect reav&#13;
edy tor Diaalnset Nwwew,.&#13;
Drowslasa. Bad lasts'&#13;
rn tas Mouth. Ooassf&#13;
Toatas, Fain in the Bitfgf&#13;
TOEpm Lrvxg.&#13;
regaim the Bows*. J o t t y T&#13;
$ifttfftL MBttMSL&#13;
Onmim Must Bar&#13;
51&#13;
Ea&gt;Simiift Signature,&#13;
MFUrt*rw4taw?tli&#13;
&gt;&#13;
*&#13;
vV'wwrtu-. # i &gt;•"*;- j | g | g y ^ ^ * » «&#13;
^ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ^ .&#13;
93¾ T &gt; ^ '&#13;
6i55P* SBMa. i4lv^, ••&#13;
"T^*v&#13;
!;: -t V " *""'/&#13;
fWe"';^?*!: * . /-&#13;
Pfei * £&#13;
7 «% •".. ^&#13;
'i(u:'' • '&#13;
W^^M&#13;
•' H $%P&#13;
' * " ' • " &gt; . *&#13;
• " • : ! ; &gt; * '&#13;
t*W*F y H&#13;
. 1 ^, If.&#13;
w U l &amp; : ^ : .&#13;
" ^ v Si J*"Vt&#13;
"W"W&#13;
^ f t ^ W ^ ^ ilM^Slllife'&#13;
jmi mr'1&#13;
******JHM WiBto^yV «f ft «*»* M *&#13;
C*&#13;
Spring Catarrh /• « ire// tfetiaed&#13;
Spring disease. The&#13;
usual symptoms are given&#13;
above. A Bottle of Pe-ru-na&#13;
taken In time will promptly&#13;
arrest the course of the disease&#13;
known as Spring Catarrh.&#13;
• - • ' . • ; • : * ' . : &lt; *&#13;
...^......&#13;
' T - , . ' '•*- • ..*•&#13;
£*•'&#13;
Paint Buying&#13;
Made Safe&#13;
White Lead and&#13;
Linseed Oil need&#13;
no argument, no&#13;
advertising to&#13;
maintain themselves&#13;
as the best&#13;
and most economical&#13;
paint yet known to&#13;
man. Thedifncultyhas&#13;
been for the buyer to be&#13;
always sure of the purity&#13;
of the white lead and oil.&#13;
We have registered the&#13;
trade mark of the Dutch Boy painter&#13;
to be the final proof of quality, genuineness&#13;
and purity to paint buyers&#13;
everywhere. When this trade mark&#13;
appear* on the keg, you can be sure&#13;
that the contents is P u r e W h i t e&#13;
Lead made by the Old Dutch Process.&#13;
SEND. FOR BQ.OK&#13;
" A Talk on Paint." gW«f Yalnjble. Ipfrvnoatlon&#13;
on ttWfealnt aobdaotr Fraeupon n ^ w k&#13;
NATIQNAL. IZ&amp;D. COMPANY&#13;
f* vkiehtvtr o/ th4 follow&#13;
iJ - ¾ 8 '**** *• w*1 *** **'•&#13;
MtVoiK *&lt;•**»• Bntaln. OlemltB^&#13;
Cincinnati. Onio*c&lt;v ' £t. Loot*. Phlla-&#13;
* Bro*C©&gt;^ Ftti§i&#13;
1Q. Bt. Loola. Phili&#13;
Ja- (John T. Lowl* Broe, C o ^ Pitaj&#13;
bara&gt; [National i w i A OH Co.]&#13;
' * &gt; -&#13;
. A*oi« •tt*&gt; **»•** Meigaecl to flu*&#13;
AJWWJ BUUttaU o n wttJt r W*toryt&#13;
U «eein* tbat muty y*ara ago, when&#13;
lt-#w the custom of the Injormnce uiv&#13;
aenrrlterB to jwt up at auctioa "***&#13;
•B^i/tnAt had been long overdue and,&#13;
not heard from, a young apprentice&#13;
to Philadelphia happened to attend&#13;
one &lt;H tbete auctkrteiat which a large&#13;
ship named the Dorothea was put up&#13;
tor aale. ,&#13;
The veaeel had taken aboard a very&#13;
valeabl* cargo, which WouM go wftft&#13;
the ship to f^»e successful bidder, but&#13;
the very.'./get that the property was&#13;
«y v^itubje jhwj kepi.tbe underwriters&#13;
•f^^fle^ag^taaqralt untU lQng alter&#13;
tt;4iia fcecopie generally believed that&#13;
ahe-wae * total wfeck.&#13;
Ce|tfeQtieiitly thV auctioneer cried&#13;
the good ship Dorothea many times&#13;
witboui.getUnjr .a bid. Finally the&#13;
young appreutiee'Jokingly bid Ave dollart,&#13;
as aobody Would bid higher, the&#13;
vessel and her cargo were knocked&#13;
down to him. Imagine the astonishment&#13;
of the maritime world when the&#13;
Dorothea was reported sailing into&#13;
Delaware bay.&#13;
The apprentice sold his prize for&#13;
enough to start him In business, aad&#13;
for years the house thus formed was&#13;
one of the leaders in enterprise and resources&#13;
in the Quaker city. But at&#13;
all times the head of the firm and&#13;
his family successors made a point&#13;
ofr owning and operating a ship named&#13;
the Dorothea, which name also was&#13;
given tbg oldest daughter in each&#13;
succeeding generation.&#13;
Shortly before the Spanish war, however,&#13;
the third head of the house was&#13;
in failing health, and the only hope&#13;
of saving his life, he was advised, was&#13;
to live at sea. Accordingly he gave&#13;
an order to the Cramps for a large&#13;
and luxuriously appointed yacht, to&#13;
be called the Dorothea, of course, and&#13;
no expense was spared in her construction&#13;
and equipment.&#13;
Unfortunately, death came to the&#13;
owner before his yacht was finally&#13;
finished and the government paid a&#13;
fancy price for the Dorothea early In&#13;
1898.&#13;
With the close of the war there&#13;
was no purely naval duty for which&#13;
the Dorothea was fitted, and yet the&#13;
government did not wish to sell her&#13;
because there wa» no possibility of&#13;
getting a price for her anything like&#13;
what she had cost. She was accoriingly&#13;
laid up at the League Island&#13;
navy yard until, says the Chicago&#13;
Chronicle, the Illinois Naval reserves&#13;
succeeded in convincing the navy department&#13;
that they were entitled to&#13;
her.&#13;
NO* 0*y ar*-N&lt;glrt,&#13;
, . i|( .( J99/Y9fr*':f / &gt; '':••; --•&#13;
/ W « i H. Vajttr, *ngii»er, of Chat*&#13;
(rorth, me* wrltet: "Kfdpey dteeaae&#13;
was lurking in my&#13;
system for years. I&#13;
had torturing pais&#13;
la the side and&#13;
back and t'm nrine&#13;
was dark and full&#13;
of sediment I was&#13;
racked with pain&#13;
day and night,&#13;
•f could not sleep or&#13;
eat well, and finally became crippled&#13;
3nd bent over with rheumatism. Doan's&#13;
Kidney Pills brought quick relief, and&#13;
in time, cured me. Though I lost 40&#13;
pound's,VI now weigh 200, more than&#13;
ever before." -* .&#13;
Sold by all dealers. CO cents a box.&#13;
Foeter-MIlburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.&#13;
nfBBF7&#13;
iotit oymalvaaC flsergVgtoi, : . •&#13;
.**• Be your, awa taskmaster, your POM&#13;
baa other reapontlMIiUaa than- looking&#13;
after -you.&#13;
Ladles Can Wear 8hoss&#13;
One aize amaller after using Allen's Foot*&#13;
Ease. A certain cure for swollen^weating,&#13;
hot, aching feet. At all Druggi*tt-, 25c. Accept&#13;
np Bubatitutc. Trial package FRE&amp;&#13;
Address A. 8. OInurted, Le Roy, N. Y.&#13;
6o He Rang Off.&#13;
"And yon didn't propose to herf MNo." .&#13;
"Why?"&#13;
"I was leading right up to it, bat&#13;
suddenly noted that her voice had a&#13;
sort of previous-engagement ring."—&#13;
Smart Set .&#13;
&amp;TP mm**&#13;
^9^^^^^W^S ^Itf.:.-^.:&#13;
K I U N E Y&#13;
, PILLS&#13;
: - ^ K i D N t * :. ...&#13;
-.-^-&#13;
?^H,&#13;
S-~: ..-#*&#13;
" V .&#13;
**;&#13;
J H T S* O O'Ui :'± «"&#13;
'J'&#13;
w. i k u . , DETROIT; NO. 25, 19OT..&#13;
SYMPATHY FOR THE F18H.&#13;
- * • &gt; * m&#13;
Mica Axis&#13;
m&#13;
Best hbricant 'fdr' asks in las&#13;
wqrid-' leng weating and very sd-&#13;
•4*&#13;
Kakae a heavy load draw iik* s&#13;
fight on*. Ssvei hull the west ea&#13;
wagon and team, and increases the&#13;
eammg capacity of yeer outfit&#13;
1 Ask year desist rot lik* Axkrr&#13;
J?'&#13;
- *&#13;
The Value of a Smile.&#13;
It is wonderful what an effect a&#13;
bright look or smile may have on one&#13;
we meet. If we only knew just how&#13;
much good It may do, we should always&#13;
try to carry smiles about with&#13;
us.&#13;
The little woman who goes about&#13;
the street with such a bright, happy&#13;
face and cheery ward for all she&#13;
knows, seems to have the effect of&#13;
sunshine, says Chicago Journal. When&#13;
she does her shopping everyone seems&#13;
to brighten and respond to her happy&#13;
greeting as. naturally as a flower&#13;
opens to the sunlight.&#13;
A little smile, a look of sympathy,&#13;
are things that cost nothing, and we&#13;
know from our experience how just&#13;
one may brighten a whole day.&#13;
Life is hard at best, so let us do&#13;
all we can to brighten the lives of&#13;
others, and thus brighten our own&#13;
lives.&#13;
The Retort U n k i n d .&#13;
Gerald—Man Is descended from the&#13;
monkey.&#13;
Geraldine—I don't think you are&#13;
any improvement upon your ancestors.—&#13;
N. Y. Press.&#13;
The Devil's Wllte.&#13;
The devil entangles youth v»ith&#13;
beauty, the miser with gold, the ambitious&#13;
with power, the learned with&#13;
Calae doctrine.&#13;
Vain Search for Cannon.&#13;
A tradition still survives in Luzerne&#13;
county, Pennsylvania, that when Gen.&#13;
John Sullivan marched through that&#13;
region in 1779 on his expedition against&#13;
the Indian confederacy of Central New&#13;
York he buried some superfluous brass&#13;
cannon along the Wilkesbarre mountain.&#13;
To search for these revolutiotfary&#13;
relics a number of the best known&#13;
clticens of Ashley have formed themselves&#13;
into an historical society. Recently&#13;
the members scoured the mountain&#13;
in the vicinity of Laurel run, but&#13;
could find no relics except a few Indian&#13;
.arrow points.&#13;
Uneasy.&#13;
"Will your books stand a heavenly&#13;
audit?".asked the minister.&#13;
The magnate in the congregation&#13;
squirmed uneasily.&#13;
He knew that an unbiased audit&#13;
wholly earthly would jar him harJ&#13;
enough.—Philedalphia Ledger.&#13;
in the Dark.&#13;
"Don't yott think that doctor comes&#13;
oftener than he needs to?"&#13;
"How should I know ' what his&#13;
ar*r—Life.&#13;
Upton Sinclai t Amazing Parable on&#13;
Charity of the Rich.&#13;
Upton Sinclair, in an address before&#13;
i body of Chicago Socialists, said ol&#13;
tharity:&#13;
"The average charity, the charity oi&#13;
the rich, seems rather futile to me.&#13;
The rich oppress the poor enormously,&#13;
then they help them slightly. It i»&#13;
like the young lady angler.&#13;
" 'Why,' said a man to this young&#13;
lady, 'do you always carry a bottle of&#13;
liniment with' you on your fishing excursions?'&#13;
She sighed.&#13;
" 'I am sorry,' she said plaintively,&#13;
'for the poor little fish. And so, when&#13;
[ take one off the hook, I always rub&#13;
Its cut mouth with some liniment'"&#13;
WORKING WOMEN,&#13;
WHAT THEY SHOULD KNOW ••"*?&amp;• i i f f&#13;
The Lie £c:crding to Mr. Dooley.&#13;
"A' lie may be as simple as th'&#13;
thrnth. Th' fact iv th' matter is that&#13;
th' rale thruth is niver simple. What&#13;
we call thruth an' pass around fr'm&#13;
hand to hand is on'y a kind iv a currency&#13;
that we use f'r convenience.&#13;
There are a good many counterfeiters&#13;
an* a lot iv th' counterfeits mus' be&#13;
in circulation. I haven't anny question&#13;
that I take in manny iv thira&#13;
ever me intellechool bar ivry day, an*&#13;
pass out not a few. Some iv th' counterfeits&#13;
has as much precious metal&#13;
in thim as th' rale goods, on'y they&#13;
don't bear th' governmirtt stamp."—&#13;
From Dissertations by Mr. Dooley.&#13;
$1J0 Reward, $100.&#13;
ffce reader* or \U\* p«p&lt;r*lH b*&gt; rleased t* learn&#13;
t j t i there 1 • »t K-a-i one dretded dltciMe tb»t iclence&#13;
L M Ueeu able to nire la til 1U l U g e i , and tbat U&#13;
Catari-li. I U . I I Caiarrn Cure ll the only positive&#13;
cure 11.1W knenvu 10 tba medical fraternity. CaUrrb&#13;
be log a ouDiUtutiJual dl»ea»e, r«qulr«i a constitutional&#13;
irexinieut. llall't Catarrh. Cure It taken Internally,&#13;
anting directly upon tbc blood and mncoui&#13;
•urfacee of (be Kyitem, thereby destroy log (be&#13;
foundittlou of tbe disease, and glTlns the patient&#13;
•trenittU by building up ttM eonttttattoa aad aaatit-&#13;
Inf n*iure'ln duiui it* work. Tbe proprietors bare&#13;
to much faith la lm euratlre power* that they offer&#13;
One Hundred Dollar* for any caae that It faila to&#13;
cure. Send for lUt of teitlmonlala.&#13;
Afldrew F. .1. CHKSKT * CO., Toledo, 0,&#13;
Sold hv all Dru&lt;i;Ku,75c.&#13;
. l a k e Uali'e Family PlUi for constipation.&#13;
The Web of Life.&#13;
Life is the daily web of character&#13;
We unconsciously weave. Our thoughts,&#13;
imaginations, purpose, motives, love,&#13;
will, are the under threads; and the&#13;
passing moment is the Buttle, swiftly,&#13;
ceaselessly, relentlessly, weaving&#13;
these threads into a web; and that&#13;
web is life—S. D. Gordon.&#13;
MRS.5ADIE: ABBOTT&#13;
"Women for the most part Bpend&#13;
their lives at home, and it is these&#13;
women who are willing and ambitious&#13;
that their homes shall be kept neat&#13;
and pretty, their children well dressed&#13;
and tidy, who do their own cooking1,&#13;
sweeping, dusting and often washing,&#13;
ironing and sewing for the entire&#13;
family, who call for our sympathy.&#13;
Truly the work of such a woman&#13;
is "never done?' and is it any wonder&#13;
that she breaks down at the end of a&#13;
few years, the back begins to ache,&#13;
there is a displacement, inflammation&#13;
or ulceration of the abdominal organs,&#13;
a female weakness is brought on, and&#13;
the struggle of that wi*e and mother&#13;
to continue her duties is pitiful.&#13;
Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable&#13;
Compound, made from native roots&#13;
and herbs, is the exact medicine a&#13;
woman needs whose strength is overtaxed.&#13;
It keeps the feminine organs&#13;
in a strong and healthy condition.&#13;
In preparing for childbirth and recuperating&#13;
therefrom it is most efficieut.&#13;
It carries a woman safely&#13;
through the change of life and in&#13;
making her strong and well assists&#13;
her to be a good wife and mother.&#13;
Mrs. Sadie Abbott, of Jeannette,&#13;
Pa., writes :&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham—&#13;
"I suffered severely with pain every&#13;
month and also a pain in my left aide. My&#13;
doctor prescribed for me but did me no&#13;
good; a friend advised Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound and I wroU you in&#13;
regard to my condition. I followed your&#13;
advice and am a perfectly well woman. The&#13;
pains have all disappeared and I cannot&#13;
recommend your medicine too highly."&#13;
MRS-PREE MC-KITRICK&#13;
Mrs. Pree McKitrick, of La Fargtj,&#13;
Wis., writes :&#13;
Dear Mrs. Pinkham:&#13;
"For six years I suffered from 'fjcnale&#13;
weakness. I was so irregular that I would&#13;
go from three weeks to six months, so I&#13;
thought I would give Lydia £. Pinkham1*&#13;
Vegetable Compound a trial. ltNow I am once more well and can do toy&#13;
work without a pain. Any one who wishee,&#13;
can write to me and I will answer all letter*&#13;
gladly."&#13;
Women should remember that Lydift&#13;
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
holds the record for the greatest&#13;
number of actual cures of female ill»^&#13;
Every suffering woman i n t t - e&#13;
United States is asked to accept t h e&#13;
following invitation. It is free, will&#13;
bring you health and may a i r e&#13;
your life.&#13;
Mrs* PiikfcAfl's lovltmHee te W M K S .&#13;
Women suffering from any form o f&#13;
female weakness are invited topromptly&#13;
communicite with Mrs.&#13;
Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. From the&gt;&#13;
symptoms given, the trouble may be&gt;&#13;
located and the quickest and surestway&#13;
of recovery advised. Out of her&#13;
vast volume of experience in treating&#13;
female ills Mrs. pinkham probably&#13;
has the very knowledge that will&#13;
help your cose. Her advice is free:&#13;
and always helpful.&#13;
HFS&#13;
' : • &amp; • .&#13;
Lydia E. Plakhaa's Vegetable Conpwtd Succeeds Wfcct* Others rtB.&#13;
9 oo DROPS&#13;
d^^^LiJjr^nrrm&#13;
A L C O H O L 3 P E R C E N T ,&#13;
AX^eelaWfrVppsniionlbrAs&#13;
.similatin§iheFoodjMjRpgu1a&#13;
nn^«?S«wadisarjrlBo«lsflf&#13;
I N F A N T S - T H I L D R F N&#13;
v*&#13;
*&#13;
Ptoraotes Digpstkm£hrrtr¥&#13;
ness and Rest.Contains neithr&#13;
Oriimi.NuTphine norMaenL&#13;
N O T N A R C O T I C .&#13;
A^t/witoHuzzflmn&#13;
Aperfert Remedy forConsHj*&#13;
Hon, Sour Stonadt.Dlyrtao&#13;
Worms jC«rvnlsionsJf&gt;cnsit&#13;
ness ori L o s s OF SEEEP.&#13;
ftcSimtk Sifratwttf&#13;
NEW YORK.&#13;
CASTORU For Infants and Children.&#13;
The Kind You Have&#13;
Always Bought&#13;
Bears the&#13;
Signature&#13;
of&#13;
We Cure PBe%&#13;
AND&#13;
TO PAT&#13;
TO TOUR&#13;
TOU ARE i h n&#13;
Pile?. Mala «*4 »fl other dls«»&lt;M of It* ractoa cw«4 '&#13;
br a MW P A I N L E S S D I S S O L V E N T METHOD.&#13;
Our ova discorery, a secret proccaa kaown only to&#13;
oorseWM. No hazardous operation, knife, or chlorofoni&#13;
u&gt;ed. Many bad casei cared i&amp; oa* oajaWaB tmtaMat&#13;
and few cases require more than two week*(or a complete&#13;
cur*. ,&#13;
A F e w Mtcbigaa R a t a r e a c a s&#13;
F. C Rheabortom, Union City; Mrs. A. L. HarrtJL&#13;
OWIMW. Mr. Geo, W. Ruprijfat. S. Praakfort; Albart C&#13;
Bate*. Bensoaii; S.S. Aldricb.R. R. 17, I t U i a r , M t e&#13;
Mae Fosleson. St. Louis; Georee Staufler, Saarta; S. C.&#13;
Pierce. Alma, Richard Martini, Sebewaiaf, Mrs. W. L&#13;
Porr, Albion; A. J, Bradford, Baldwin.&#13;
Write a full description of Tour cafe a* yon osdentaadl&#13;
it and we will tell you just what we can do (or ym aaa&#13;
the cost. Remember Bothiof paid until cured. Wt Mara&#13;
treated over 4,000 cases witacut a sinfle (aitare.&#13;
Our free booklet explains onrtmtmcat rally and cootains&#13;
tbe names and addresses of people near you waoak&#13;
we would gladly have yoo tea or write rot referaaot.&#13;
Drs. BURLESON &amp; BURLESOH&#13;
RECTAL S R O A U S T t&#13;
103 Moaree SL, Graae Reside. M5cki|a«&#13;
«.!ShSi...':^&gt;.',&#13;
Jit&#13;
Exact Copy of Wrapper,&#13;
For flver&#13;
Thirty Years&#13;
CASTORU TME oanraua aa&gt;a»«*M«, ••*» *aa« i&#13;
'FREE To eonTin«« naf&#13;
that !*»&gt; ^ i&#13;
bsprova bar bcalta&#13;
anddoafive ataltt&#13;
* ^ ^ ^ for 1». Wo will&#13;
send, hor abootatehr free a laij* trial&#13;
boa of Purtte* with book OTTMIIIIIJ tlons and gmnlB« tastimoadato. Bend&#13;
yoar naoM aad addrou on a&#13;
el&#13;
and heal*&#13;
m u e o u t foeOoDa, soen^u nasal eatarErorra.a ap ee lvt•Jio&gt;• catarrh and InOavamatloa eauaod fay ftaaV PAXTINE&#13;
nine ills; soro eyes, aoro tteoal and&#13;
mouth, by direct local treatment Ito anaatlve&#13;
power over tbcae troubles is axtraordiaary&#13;
and fives Immediate&#13;
Thousands of women are using and no*&#13;
oramcn&lt;iiug It every day. eooeats af&#13;
rlnin^suorbymall. Keraember,however,&#13;
IT COSTS T6U NOTHINO TO THY IT&#13;
TI^K M. PAJLTON CO^ Boatoa,&#13;
•; •/V&#13;
A "WBI*" NUTS 4¾ Brake old bueslM run hkonew. Ookk ttaiiera&#13;
vflrTpK&gt;Hubietor»ffenfc». £x«Jna&gt;T* tarrlt&#13;
nAimufiffcuinctv iumfwtoM,*Wa&#13;
PATCHTS^,™*&#13;
itt*k**iu»rik.wsB, Beak A aCtai&#13;
"J.^1''''&#13;
J&amp;*. •i;&gt; ,ii*?&gt;.K*i wiSk • I m i - * "• n ' Tin&#13;
•.nv '&#13;
;**.&#13;
r't^.jr V&#13;
»AU&gt;*&lt; ' - V / v ^ &lt; •*•••&gt; ..V •• •'•'•-: - v "&#13;
V " . . - ^ : , ¾ ' * :&gt; i •' &gt;.&gt;';. 7,1 . . ,•'• ' ^ " ' • • • » • • .&#13;
• . - ••••• » . ; • • ' • • ' * . • •' t • . ; » . • ' - • ' T • " • , . „• &gt; '&#13;
.^,&#13;
• W *&#13;
I&#13;
W9 ; • * ?&#13;
j ^ W J i ' ^ g y e , ! ^&#13;
•A s&#13;
f i&#13;
* - * iii'iiwi»&#13;
Urn » wVin&#13;
'• Y.t..-' ' *&#13;
!• II img&#13;
f T " &gt; &gt;^.&#13;
W&#13;
» * * '&#13;
•'**v;-.&#13;
« •&#13;
•' X&#13;
4¾¾ • * » .&#13;
:¾v&amp; - -.:&#13;
m •tf~&#13;
•ti^&#13;
, ftttii Wr fempeadeau&#13;
D. M, Mock* wa« in Detroit&#13;
T w t d a y - .&#13;
Tbomai Cooper of Jackson visi&#13;
t e d h i i mother Sunday.&#13;
&gt; Twelve men - began work on&#13;
Will Gardner'* barn Tuesday.&#13;
Dr. J . W. Monks of Howell&#13;
spent Sunday with bis parents.&#13;
Wm. Doyle spent a few days of&#13;
last week with friends in Lansing.&#13;
"- Mrs. Wm. Murphy and daughter&#13;
Bessie, were in Jackson SatnV&#13;
day.&#13;
Michael Dunne of Jackson visited&#13;
relatives here the first of the&#13;
weeB«&#13;
Bert Van Blaricum sold a valuable&#13;
horse to Howell parties this&#13;
week.&#13;
Robert Kelly and Will Cooper&#13;
attended the show at Jackson Saturday.&#13;
H. B. Gardner and daughter,&#13;
Aria, have returned from a weeks&#13;
visit in Lansing.&#13;
iiert Barter, o( Elton, Wis., says "I&#13;
have only taken four dose*s ' 01 your&#13;
Kidney "ind Bidder Tills and they&#13;
have dotiH for me more t^an any other&#13;
medicine ba? ever done. I am still&#13;
taking tbe pij's. as I want a perfect&#13;
cure.11 Air. Barber refers to DeWitt's&#13;
Kidney and Bladder Pills, which are&#13;
unequaled lor Backache, weak kidneys,&#13;
intimation of the bladder and&#13;
urinary troubles, A weeks treatment&#13;
for 25 cents. *&#13;
Bold by F. A. Sifter, Druggist.&#13;
June 27 is the d*te of the Meft.&#13;
odist excursion to Detroit.&#13;
• « Clyde a»d Hiram pmtik, x?l torn&#13;
tJ of M a r e h o w e ^ r a ahort time.&#13;
^ftlisa Viola Bergeii ia v«jfittiog&#13;
A daughter of W. H.. &amp; Wood I * r * R U , *h a r t ftt t h e [ • * * * * *&#13;
will teach.in the Coruopa high&#13;
school the coming year. %&#13;
House.&#13;
Bora to Gny Smith and wife, of&#13;
Arrangements have been com- D ^ o i t , an eight pound daughter,&#13;
T*^#* mmmm&#13;
W I I I I I M I I&#13;
.fm- •w # ^&#13;
m*m*m*m&#13;
^•^fm^rn^&#13;
O M ^ V C d ^ A . IMJLJi.&#13;
•H&gt;^ff"'.&#13;
?«•&#13;
pleted by tbe lecture committee , J u n e 1 5 &gt;&#13;
for their seasons couwfe. Mr. Brigg6 and wife, of .piuck-&#13;
The few warm days makes t h e n e ^ v i s i t e d a t J a m e f i Henry's laat&#13;
citizen with the the summer cot- T u e s d a y *&#13;
Uge think of hieing himself away. Miss Winnie Peters vinited her&#13;
Better wait until after Jury 4. pareut.s Wm. Peter's and wife,&#13;
The business college has the o v e r Sunday,&#13;
promise of being a larger success Mr, 8. VanHorn and wife are&#13;
tbe coming year th,in la9t. F . M. entertaining Mrs. ^VanHorn's&#13;
Dye haB been retained as instruct- aunt this week,&#13;
or and superintendant. Connie Cook has returned from&#13;
Perry £lnat was in DetroJ* o i * d a j&#13;
JftfM'nmk^ * ••-'•. '''•'{ if"'''"*, -^/^---.&#13;
Nice rain Tae*la/ m&amp;img a n j it&#13;
does noUoot Mttlea yefc&#13;
Geo. F. Green ba» b*»*n going game&#13;
this week a» the result af tteppimr on&#13;
a rnsty pajl •&#13;
Mm, Harris PaJine* of Bliwfield,&#13;
is the guest of her g^plparents, Ut,&#13;
and Mrs. A. B. Green.&#13;
Di.-H. P. 8igler and Rev. Littlejohn&#13;
were in Ana Arbor Wednesday. Dr.&#13;
Sutler attended the reunion of his&#13;
• ' **&gt;{&#13;
"I" •' . 1 ;&#13;
. - &gt; ~ - • ; ' -&#13;
• ' • « • • • : - ' ; • • ,&#13;
. ^ - - -&#13;
* i*?* y&#13;
i Business Pointers. i&#13;
g'\^ FOR I A L I .&#13;
&amp; ' *&#13;
^ ^ Choice eating potatoes.&#13;
^ 8 ^ G. W. Clark.&#13;
FOR SALB.&#13;
Carmen No. 3 seed potatoes.&#13;
J. 0. Alackinder.&#13;
FOR SALR.&#13;
1¾ ,, A quantity of White Wax Hrans,&#13;
|^j4flpo some buckwheat for seed.&#13;
K | v ^ V. G. Dinkel.&#13;
Wraad Traak RAilway Hjntem*&#13;
East Bonnd from Pinckney&#13;
No128 Passenger Ex SanfiftT, 0:28 A.M.&#13;
^Q. 30 Passenger Ex. Snnda&gt;, 4:55 P. M.&#13;
Weet Bound from Pincknev&#13;
No. 27 Pawenger Ex. Snndnv, 10:01 A. M.&#13;
No. 29 Passenger Ex. Suuday. 8:44 P. M'&#13;
Solid wide vestibule traina of coaches and ele«p&#13;
In? cars are operated taNevOfork (and Philadelphia)&#13;
-'-^iagara Palls by the wtarid- Trunk-Le.&#13;
nigh v alrey Koute.&#13;
W. H. Clark, A^eat.&#13;
W7l. WRIGHTDENTIST&#13;
C l a r k B l o c k P i n c k n e y , Mich.&#13;
P a i n l e s s E x t r a c t i o n&#13;
1 .1 W. DANIELS,&#13;
J , GENERAL AUCTIONEER.&#13;
Satistacticn Guaranteed. For information&#13;
call at DISPATCH Office or address&#13;
Gregory, Mich, r. f. rl. 2. Lyndilln phone&#13;
connection. Auction bills and tin cups&#13;
furnished free.&#13;
Arthur Garlqnd seut Alma college&#13;
a gift of $500 last week to&#13;
provide for a scholarship in memory&#13;
of his daughter, Hazel B.&#13;
Garland, for some worthy student&#13;
in the kindergarten department.&#13;
The legislature., gave the State&#13;
sanitarium at this place a frost.&#13;
Instead of the $140,000 asked for&#13;
to put the institution in good running&#13;
shape, they cut off the $100,-&#13;
000 and made the amount $40,000.&#13;
medical class.&#13;
obUdrlil e « r c i i » *t t i e M. » .&#13;
qJmwfc; T b i mma* b j tbe pwtwr&#13;
wtio^eof t b t b t « t b t hM prowb«A&#13;
8«v«r»! w*n btjrd U&gt; i»y, " I N ^&#13;
nfto f)uit be rt&gt;*^ in U« ae€r far&#13;
tni^.". We we glad Mr. &lt;M|M « ^ ,&#13;
fcindljr 6o*t6ftt to this reqaw^ aod » •&#13;
hope tbow who did not bear&#13;
Sunday will t» jireMnt wb«n&#13;
peated.&#13;
Tb© Thursday evening&#13;
are Browinjr i» interest eacl&#13;
it Urt&#13;
« „, . . • • " . ' , . "' : ' &gt; - Brf rybedy welcome.&#13;
Guy Teaple has coma^noetj dr»w«nr .^ ^ &lt;?• ;•/ nk*i#u*«&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
Fred Fish waa home over Sunday.&#13;
* Q&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Fisk entertained&#13;
friends from Jackson Sunday.&#13;
Berkley Isham of Gregory visited&#13;
friends in this place Sunday.&#13;
Miss. Mayme Fish in home&#13;
from her school work at Corunna.&#13;
Wm. Fisk and R. W. Lake took&#13;
in the excursion to Detroit Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. Guy Hall visited near&#13;
Stockbridge from Saturday until&#13;
Monday.&#13;
Miss Ebna Tiplady spent a portion&#13;
of this week«rith Mrs. Louis&#13;
Shehan.&#13;
Mrs. Dennis Shehan of Genoa&#13;
visited her sister, Mrs. Arthur&#13;
Shehan one day last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hicks of&#13;
Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Hicks,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Swarthout&#13;
aud Mrs. Emma Burgess and&#13;
daughter of Pinckney were entertained&#13;
Sunday at Bert Hick's.&#13;
the south and will spend a part of&#13;
the season at his cottage.&#13;
Peter Cou.iway and wife entertained&#13;
her nieci and family from&#13;
Webberville, last Sunday.&#13;
Mrs. John Strain, of Detroit,&#13;
was a guest of her parents, Ghas.&#13;
Smith and wife, t h e past week.&#13;
Jesse Henry is shipping ice in&#13;
good earnest these warm days&#13;
with quite a gang of men, pud yet&#13;
cannot fill the orders.&#13;
Mr. E. Wines aud wife, Mr.&#13;
Doan and wife, of Ann Arbor, also&#13;
Rube Blade, spent Sunday with&#13;
their parents, Geo. Blade and&#13;
wife.&#13;
We have been wondering of late&#13;
what made C. G. Smith wear such&#13;
a broad smile, and was passing&#13;
around cigars, but have just&#13;
learned he is grandpa.&#13;
Mrs. Ray Tompkins and mother&#13;
Mrs. Larkin, was called to Ann&#13;
Arbor, last week, to see Mrs.&#13;
Tompkin's sister, Mattie who was&#13;
very sick with heart trouble, but&#13;
is reported better at this writing.&#13;
C.S.CAv&amp;vcODeTVuv&#13;
Expert Auctioneer&#13;
Over 20 Years Iiperieice&#13;
DEXTER, MICH. "•jjR&#13;
IE 38, FREE BOX 68&#13;
J. W. BIRD&#13;
PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED&#13;
For information, call at the Pinckney DISPATCH&#13;
offiee. Auction Bills Free&#13;
Webster RuraPPhone&#13;
* Arrangements made for sale by phone at&#13;
my expense.&#13;
Address, Dexter, Michigan&#13;
g B -~ ' ' .- LJ f f -&#13;
IOSCO.&#13;
Listen for the Wedding bells.&#13;
Miss Mae Bickford spent last&#13;
Saturday with Mrs. Greening.&#13;
Mrs. Haviland entertained&#13;
friends from Webberville last Saturday.&#13;
Mr. aud Mrs. Wirt Stowe attended&#13;
commencement at Ypsilauti&#13;
last week.&#13;
Mra. Haviland and Mrs. Greening&#13;
spent Tuesday with friends in&#13;
Stockbridge.&#13;
Me8dames Bradley and Messenger&#13;
visited Mrs. F . A. Gardner&#13;
one day last week.&#13;
Chas. Mapes aud wife visited&#13;
his brother Horace and family at&#13;
Stockbridge last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Gardner attended&#13;
I.O.O.P. memorial service&#13;
at Stockbridge Sunday last.&#13;
Miss Hazel Stowe graduated&#13;
with honors from Ypsilanti High&#13;
School last Thursday. She is&#13;
now at home.&#13;
visare&#13;
are&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG .&#13;
Chas Burroughs and family&#13;
ited her people Sunday.&#13;
Clyde aud Hiram Smith&#13;
home for their vacation.&#13;
Mr. aud Mrs. Bert Hookar&#13;
the proud parents of a boy.&#13;
Juo. VanHorn and family spent&#13;
Saturday with friends in Hamburg.&#13;
Laurence Dunning had the misfortune&#13;
to sprain his wrist last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Salmon return&#13;
to their home in Bronton, NJ.,&#13;
this week.&#13;
Children's day at the Cong.&#13;
church in North Hamburg Suuday&#13;
at 3 o'clock.&#13;
Bert Benham uid a friend from&#13;
Ann Arbor were guests of his&#13;
people over Sunday.&#13;
stone for tbe foa&amp;dabioa of * W F : w&#13;
idenee on his lot rwdaUj^wefeisorf&#13;
between W. A. Carr's and K 7 . BtfeW.&#13;
Instead of going away tai* !M»ujav»r,&#13;
did it everocnur to yourtfr t«k6 your&#13;
vacation at home and do some of those&#13;
things you have always thought you&#13;
would do if yon only had time.&#13;
The Anderson farmers club met at&#13;
the pleasant home of Mr. and Mrs. V.&#13;
G. Dinkel June 8 and was largely&#13;
attended A short program was rendered.&#13;
After supper had been serred&#13;
the meeting adjourned.&#13;
A gasoline stove in the kitchen at&#13;
the home of Jacob Bowers run over&#13;
Tuesday ofternoon and caused quite&#13;
a little blaze. However there was&#13;
plenty of help handy and the fire was&#13;
extinguished before it bad gained&#13;
muoh headway and tbe damage was&#13;
slight.&#13;
For several weeks past the work ot&#13;
preparation of the steel and concrete&#13;
for the new railroad bridge over the&#13;
(Jedar river just west of this piace has&#13;
been in progress and the work was&#13;
completed and rested en a substructure&#13;
ready to be'slid over upon the&#13;
foundations on Sunday, but on Friday&#13;
of last week, the substructure gave&#13;
way, being undermined by the water,&#13;
and the heavy mass slid into the river,&#13;
makinar a heavy loss as much cf the&#13;
work will be lost, —Review.&#13;
T h e S c h o o l E x h i b i t&#13;
flow that Ghildrew day is over, l»t&#13;
every one take up tbe Sunday school&#13;
work with a determination to make&#13;
this tbe banner year for tbe- Pinokfte^&#13;
Cong'l Sunday school. This can be&#13;
accomplished by every one taking&#13;
part.&#13;
A Christian Endeavor Society was&#13;
organized last Friday evening. We&#13;
trust this will b? a gre&amp;t help to the&#13;
church in days to come, as it has been&#13;
in tbe past.&#13;
Service next Sunday Morning and&#13;
evening as uanal. Morning, "The&#13;
Hand of God." Evening, "The Hand&#13;
of Russia.1' All are welcome.&#13;
Af. £. Church Notes,&#13;
at.&#13;
for&#13;
her son&#13;
r V E&#13;
5 Cmtttmtmt WITCH HAZEL&#13;
rorPtUt, Bern*, Sorts.&#13;
LAKELAND .&#13;
Mrs. Kice visited&#13;
Charles Smith last week.&#13;
Mr. S. Cooper of Howell was&#13;
shaking hands with old friends&#13;
^ s t week.&#13;
We understand that any one&#13;
can go from Lakeland to Ann&#13;
Arbor and back the same day for j t a l k a t t n e Preab't church Sunday&#13;
40 cents, on the A. A. By. J evening.&#13;
Rev. John Vine, pastor of the&#13;
Baptist church at Gregory, and&#13;
PLAIOTTELD.&#13;
Wirt Watson, of Jackson, visited&#13;
at R. G. Chipman's, last Sunday.&#13;
Maccabee ice-cream sale at the&#13;
hall again this week Saturday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Pearl Ostrander entertained a&#13;
lady friend from Howell, the first&#13;
of the week.&#13;
Miss Agnes McGee, of California,&#13;
visited her brother, W. C.&#13;
McGee, last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mra. Conk returned&#13;
last Friday from Chelsea where&#13;
they have been caring for a sick&#13;
sister.&#13;
The Maccabees succeeded in&#13;
selling ten gallons of ice cream at&#13;
their birthday party last Saturday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Mrs. Calking, state president&#13;
of the WCTU gave an interesting&#13;
The annual exhibit of the work ac*&#13;
comnlished in the different grades of&#13;
the school here took place at the High&#13;
School rooms Tuesday and Wedmsdaj.&#13;
This has proven an interesting&#13;
part of Commencement week for several&#13;
years, and this year was no exception.&#13;
None of tbe grades are left out, but&#13;
from the first division to the 12th&#13;
grade each scholar has their work on&#13;
exhibition, and the best of it is not&#13;
"special" work for the exhibit but is&#13;
the work of their every day studies,&#13;
and from the drawing of "the Sun&#13;
Bonnett Babies1'in tho first grades, to&#13;
the drawings of physiology and geometry&#13;
classes in thft high school there is&#13;
a marked improvement.&#13;
Commissioner Knooihuizen was present&#13;
and expressed himself as highly&#13;
pleased with the work and says that it&#13;
should he done in all the schools in the&#13;
statu but it is done only a lew, Pinckney&#13;
being the only one- in the county&#13;
and he was proud of tho showing. It&#13;
could not help but do good where ever&#13;
carried out.&#13;
Tbe church was packed to its&#13;
most capacity Sunday morning&#13;
the cbitdrens day exercises. The pro*&#13;
gram was excellent and went off without&#13;
a hitoh. It was a little long so&#13;
there was no session of Sunday&#13;
school. Tbe church was nicely decorated&#13;
with ferns and flowers. The collection&#13;
amounted to over $12&#13;
The prayer meetings are being keep&#13;
up in good shape at this season but&#13;
there is still room for others to come&#13;
in and join. Come once in a. while&#13;
and it will do us all good.&#13;
"This little pig went to market"&#13;
doesn't amuse tonight. Baby's not&#13;
well; what's the matter, her dear little&#13;
cheeks are so white; Poor littfe turn*&#13;
my is aching, naughty old pain go&#13;
away, Cascasweet mother must give&#13;
her, then she'll be bright as the day.&#13;
It is here&#13;
Sold by r . A. Sifter, Draodit&#13;
FARMERS!&#13;
We want your cream&#13;
We pay as much as any one&#13;
We do careful vork&#13;
We are alive&#13;
Try us; write us&#13;
LOST&#13;
Tuesday evening, a pair of long&#13;
silk gloves. Please leave at this office.&#13;
Dudley Butter Co.&#13;
E. F. OUOLEV. TRHS. IND GEH'L BKS'R&#13;
SAGINAW, MICHIGAN&#13;
Mr, O. Clark while working in&#13;
the ice house fell off the runway&#13;
between the ice house and the car j Miss Suie E. Brearley were m a r&#13;
they were loading, and jarred him ried last Wednesday, June 12, by&#13;
up a little. Rev. Thomas Denman.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
•-•4 M&#13;
f 1&#13;
"1&#13;
'&#13;
•ib ..-m&#13;
«tf-&#13;
. * * . * . * • £ ;^::^&#13;
^•flroJ&amp;asN: ^ ^ ^ . Z ^ l , . &gt;.»..V&#13;
"1 f&#13;
-A]</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch June 20, 1907</text>
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                <text>June 20, 1907 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1907-06-20</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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                  <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>
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            <elementText elementTextId="37066">
              <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>
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              <text>PINCKNEY, LIVINGSTON CO., MICH., THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1907. No. 26&#13;
For&#13;
Quality Bowman's F O P&#13;
P r I ce&#13;
Come to us for your hot weather needs in our&#13;
line.&#13;
HoBiery, Summer Underwear, Ribbons, Laces, Corsete, Embroideries,&#13;
Liuens, White Goods, Silkalines, Art Denims, etc.&#13;
B e s t OOc w o r k s h i r t * , 4 0 c&#13;
B r o w n i e o v e r a l l s . 2 5 c&#13;
S p e c i a l q u a l i t y o v e r a l l * S O c&#13;
E x t r a v a l u e In a s u m m e r c o r s e t , 3 5 c&#13;
Try to match our values. We iuvite comparison on every&#13;
item sold by us.&#13;
E v e r y day i s bargain day&#13;
E. A. Bowman's&#13;
Howell's Busy Store m&#13;
LOCALNBWS.&#13;
visited i n&#13;
is "Flower&#13;
are&#13;
-, "•**?.&#13;
has&#13;
this&#13;
Paul Uurlett of Dexter&#13;
this place the past week.&#13;
Next Sunday, June 30,&#13;
Day" at the county farm.&#13;
Rev and Mrs. A. Gr. Gates&#13;
spending the week at Base lake.&#13;
Tb© weather the past week&#13;
Brtdt haadreds ot tons of hay in&#13;
tieiaitj.&#13;
The ladies of the Con^'l church&#13;
made $10.20 at their tea Wednesday&#13;
evening last.&#13;
Noyes Wilcox of Dansville visited&#13;
at Mr. and Mrs. H. .1. Ulark's the&#13;
last ot last week.&#13;
Geo. White and family of Pinpfree&#13;
were the ^nests ot Mr. and Mrs. W&#13;
E. Tupper Thursday last.&#13;
Mrs. F. L. Andrews visited friends&#13;
aid rtlftlives in Howell and Oceolt&#13;
Tfcar*Uj and Friday last.&#13;
The position of county a«ent ot the&#13;
Btate Hoard ot Corrections and Charities,&#13;
which has been vacant since the&#13;
death of D. 0. Can-, of Fowlerville,&#13;
has been fi.led by the appointment of&#13;
William Kuhn.&#13;
I&#13;
is.,***-&#13;
GASOLINE&#13;
RED STAR BRAND,&#13;
Host. Ry T«t&#13;
DOES NOT SMOKE&#13;
ASK YOUR DKALEK&#13;
i 12f»&#13;
Only one week more before the&#13;
Fourth.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Mowers visited&#13;
in Iosco Sunday.&#13;
Eugene Campbell and family are&#13;
visiting relatives and friends in Flint.&#13;
Miss Katy Lam born of Iosco is visiting&#13;
her sister, Mrs. George Mowers,&#13;
here.&#13;
Several teachers from this vicinity&#13;
are attending the summer normal at&#13;
Ypsilanti.&#13;
K 0 . T. M. M. take notice that tb»&#13;
per capita tax and tent dues are due&#13;
this month. $1.10.&#13;
If you have not paid your KOTMM&#13;
per capita tax and tent dues of $ 1.10&#13;
Get busy as this is the last week.&#13;
MLs Norma Vautfhn served tea to&#13;
a party of young lady friends Tuesday&#13;
•yelling in honor of Mrs. Harrie Palnitr.&#13;
TlCvS is the last week in which to&#13;
pay the K. 0. T. M. M. per capita tax&#13;
and tent dues of $1.10. Members&#13;
please take notice.&#13;
Miss Norma Vaughn is spending a&#13;
a tew days with Mrs. Harrie Palmer&#13;
of Hlisstield, having returned home&#13;
with her Wednesday.&#13;
A glimpse into the show window of&#13;
Murphy and Dolan is enough to set&#13;
the average American boy half crazy.&#13;
A tannine fourth of -Inly exhibit.&#13;
The Anderson farmers club will not&#13;
hob a regular meeting in July but,&#13;
will hold a basket picnic on the north&#13;
bank of School-lot lake July 4. Let,&#13;
all come and have a good old fashioned&#13;
picnic" and good time.&#13;
Mrs. S.J. Kennedy -tnd two sons&#13;
left here Monday tor Seattle, Wash ,&#13;
to join lu*r Lusbflnd, who has been&#13;
holding a ^nod position there the past,&#13;
year. She was accompanied by her&#13;
s^ter, Mis&gt; Flota Hall. Their many&#13;
fronds, while sorry to have them&#13;
l(\ve, wish them snccess.&#13;
The Little Paper Printed&#13;
W h e r e You Used To Live.&#13;
The folluwing little po*m was cliped&#13;
out of a paper an- seut us by H.&#13;
H. Hau&gt;e, of WaUina, N. Y , and&#13;
snows which way the "old Hoys' of&#13;
Pinckney are thinking.&#13;
'Han't filled with cut* and pictures uur lh« l»tt*t&#13;
Qtfwe diapAtche*;&#13;
And the paper's ofttn duuipeatxl, and ibe print&#13;
la sometime* blurred.&#13;
There its only une edition, unit ibe ayw quite often&#13;
catches&#13;
True** of a miasm*! letter, and at timet) » min-&#13;
Hpelltxl word.&#13;
No cttblegramB nor specials anywhere the battle&#13;
ragee,&#13;
The makeup in mayhape a trifle crude and&#13;
primitive&#13;
Hut uu atniuepheie ot humeliie tlllts and permeateb&#13;
the p»ges&#13;
Of the little country paper, printed where yuu&#13;
ubed to live.&#13;
How the heart grows soft and tender while its&#13;
coluiun'H you're persuing,&#13;
JCvery item is lautiliar, every name yon know&#13;
lull well,&#13;
And a flood of recollection passes o'er while&#13;
you're uiueinj,'&#13;
On the pant, mid weaves iihuut you an in:a:j;imitive&#13;
spell"&#13;
You can HI e the old home village, unce again in&#13;
fancy; seeming&#13;
To he clapping hand of neighbor, and of friend&#13;
and relative:&#13;
And their faces rise before you as you're idly,&#13;
fontl'y dreaming,&#13;
O'er the little country paper printed where ye ;&#13;
used to live.&#13;
—KunNas City Journal.&#13;
M. E. Church Notes,&#13;
Do You Fish?&#13;
S&amp;** If so, Tou surely should see our&#13;
fine and complete tine of Fishtng&#13;
Tackel, casting rods, baits reels,&#13;
hr.es, minnow nets and pails. In&#13;
fact everything in the fishing line&#13;
S§e our show case—it will&#13;
fairly make your mouth water&#13;
Teeple Hardware Co.&#13;
There was a t.ood attendance at the&#13;
preaching service in the morning but&#13;
as usual at this time or the year there&#13;
was a falling off in the Sunday school,&#13;
the attendance being only 96. This is&#13;
the smallest for several weeks. Remember&#13;
that it is the vacation season&#13;
and many will be *way for a few&#13;
weeks, but those who ate at home&#13;
should make the more effort to attend&#13;
so as to keep up the average. Next&#13;
Sundiy morning the pastor will&#13;
preach a patriotic sermon.&#13;
The storm of the evening made the&#13;
attendance at League small. Next&#13;
Sunday eyening will be the election&#13;
of officers and all Leaguers are requested&#13;
to be present.&#13;
Please bear in mind that tonight&#13;
alter the prayer meeting will occur&#13;
the election of lay delegate to the&#13;
annual conference. All members are&#13;
requested to be present.&#13;
Cong'I Church Notes&#13;
A large and attentive audience listened&#13;
to a fine sermon by the pastor&#13;
last Sunday morning. On account of&#13;
the storm the attendance was small in&#13;
the evening but an excellent -.eriiion&#13;
delivered to those who had the courage&#13;
to go.&#13;
The sermon next, Sunday will be&#13;
Patriotic as July 4th comes on the&#13;
following Thursday. All will be most&#13;
welcome.&#13;
Don't tail to come to the Thursday&#13;
evening meeting.&#13;
No doubt Teddy had reference to&#13;
the Town Hali when he said, "Give us&#13;
a sguare deal.' Why didn't they fol*&#13;
Jow his advice?&#13;
iJaymond Sigler spent Monday and&#13;
Tuesday with his wife and her people&#13;
at Northville. Mrs. i3ro.vn,his wife's&#13;
mother, is still very ill.&#13;
Do not forget that the Hamburg&#13;
and Putnam farmers club hold their&#13;
annual picnic at Island lake at Lakeland&#13;
Thursday, July 4. You are invited&#13;
to come and enjoy yourself.&#13;
A. J. Presley has oeen entertaining&#13;
his wife ai d daughter from P&gt;eld\ng,&#13;
the past week. They attended a family&#13;
reunion at the home ot'^ Frank&#13;
Beach of Marion Monday.&#13;
Next Monday evening occurs the&#13;
annnal school meeting and will te&#13;
held in the school house as usual.&#13;
The patrons xhould tn»*n out and honor&#13;
the present board by re-election.&#13;
They have done well b\ the district&#13;
the past two years and should be returned&#13;
to office.&#13;
Buy a Nobby Suit of&#13;
Foremost Clothes&#13;
Ttiey (it like Tailor Made&#13;
and ar«i JUST as HOOD&#13;
P r i c e * f r o m $ 7 . 5 0 t o $»».&lt;K). p e r » u l t&#13;
T h e C t l e b r a t e d B l $ l n S h i r t s a t $I.OO&#13;
A feautiiul line of'.rents Neckwear&#13;
Cuff Buttons UoiUr Buttons, Stick&#13;
Pins Pine HdKf&#13;
Nobbv U its, etc.&#13;
Fancy Hosiery.&#13;
C ill and &gt;ee us.&#13;
LL Holmes Clothing Co.&#13;
Pinckney , IV ich.&#13;
J f&#13;
1&#13;
The W. I. C. Society&#13;
The \V. I. U. (.fthe M. K Sunday&#13;
school will give a lawn social at the&#13;
parsonage, Friday evening, June 28.&#13;
Ice cream and cake will be served&#13;
on the lawn, and a literary program&#13;
will be given in the ehmvh. Every&#13;
one is c irdirtlly invited.&#13;
Program as follows:&#13;
ln&gt;trument;il Silo&#13;
IJt'citiuion&#13;
&lt;. . c i i i t M i l . i ' l a n d&#13;
i-'(il! 'IV -^WiU'l h i i U t&#13;
Roy Loverly of Howell, was i s towrft&#13;
(he first of the wee!;.&#13;
Oar trees are growing nu-e'v on the&#13;
si(uare--due to the rare of the Village.&#13;
Win, Kennedy Jr. wa- in Jackson,&#13;
Detroit and Wind-ov the tir&gt;r *'&gt;t the&#13;
week.&#13;
The Township board met recently&#13;
and declared by full vote that tbe Village&#13;
(V-uncil shall not come in OTR&#13;
pUy house any more-&#13;
Kocitation&#13;
Yi'oal Sdlo&#13;
l'e.'it ,J tion&#13;
ti&gt;trum»*nt«l Snlo&#13;
llscitatinn&#13;
Instrumenta l Tri.i !&#13;
Griiiu1 , I'Yrn HnitU.'&#13;
Mediation&#13;
Instrntiiental Snlo&#13;
Keritation&#13;
ViVHl l»Hrf '-I;-.!, &lt;•&#13;
0 Ii'tlll 'I'uppiui;&#13;
a!ph Millar&#13;
M.iry Kl;• k 1 ,iT:. 1&#13;
• il.niys l'&gt;rn\\ n&#13;
H,;rohl (• vi&gt;-\ r&#13;
:-':i!-.r.y &gt;\vsri hunt, G r a n&#13;
\ -T:v t&gt;h.iin&#13;
S-Vvn Hciulee&#13;
Sar;i KM.&gt;rf&#13;
.. :.&lt;i Harold i O'icvv&#13;
The&#13;
Pinckney Exchange Bank&#13;
Established 1884&#13;
W i l l p a y .'! }ior cenl interest nil time&#13;
I crtilieati s nt l.'epusit.&#13;
| G. W TEEPLE. CASHIER.&#13;
WHAT IS THE W.C.T.U.&#13;
DOING?&#13;
P e r i l a p s every one&#13;
desont k'ticnv t h a t a&#13;
n u m b e r of years ajjfo&#13;
t h a t people l a n d i n g&#13;
at t h e e m i g r a n t stations&#13;
were olilij^eil&#13;
t o d r i n k beer o r ^ o&#13;
t h i r s t y .&#13;
T h r o u g h W . C . T . r .&#13;
Influences t h e r e is&#13;
now milk a n d water&#13;
provided a n d n o&#13;
beer.&#13;
' r&#13;
Ice Cream Soda&#13;
Come in ami oat&#13;
a pure, refreshing&#13;
dish of - - -&#13;
"Silk Floss" Ice Cream&#13;
either in the form of&#13;
a "Sundae or Soda."&#13;
We are sure t o&#13;
please you as we&#13;
have all the latest&#13;
flavors.&#13;
C a r b o r u t e d WafauNfc&#13;
A H K i n d s o n 2c*»&#13;
X • ,\&#13;
. ' • « . * » •&#13;
: ^&#13;
,1&#13;
% lr-&#13;
•-*-4+&amp;*";'*k'&#13;
! 3\T4V TJOOT XOT\*\ ot T l ^ a SVore&#13;
m&#13;
iij *&#13;
SV^W ^ o s .&#13;
;.m,\ i « 1 . * .&#13;
:.^1&#13;
***&#13;
.*&amp;&lt;*+'• &lt; . • - • - ^&#13;
» * * .&#13;
) ' - ' • • • . r V * • . . • • ; ' t&#13;
4 - v . .&#13;
• if '&#13;
A'- •&#13;
gmthnqg fifispatrh.&#13;
F3ULH&amp; L. AKDBBWB, P u b .&#13;
PINCKNEY, -:- MICHIGAN&#13;
» : : . ' , . : " " '* - '••• • - " " . .' .-.:=1 •=.&#13;
Still a Mission to Perform.&#13;
It st-eujs the new ways of getting&#13;
through and over the Alps by railways&#13;
and tunnels have nut wholly done&#13;
*way with opportunities tor the "pious&#13;
monks of St. Jiernard" to show huspitaliiy&#13;
and even to extend help in a&#13;
crisis. There me still venturesome&#13;
souls who disregard the injunction to&#13;
"try not the puss" and who brave the&#13;
dangers of (he trip through iee and&#13;
snow, and sometimes they full vfPtims&#13;
lo (heir temerity and have a elose call&#13;
before they are rescued by the monks&#13;
and the dogs. It appears from statistics&#13;
on this .subject that last year not&#13;
less than l,.-iU0 persons, snowbound&#13;
and exhausted, were eared for at the&#13;
institution maintained by the monks,&#13;
and numbers would have perished but&#13;
t'ur the succor provided. A considerable&#13;
portion of those thus helped represented&#13;
tourists, including American&#13;
and English travelers, though more&#13;
than u thousand were poor peasants or&#13;
tramps making their way over the&#13;
mountains because they lacked means&#13;
to go in more costly fashion. But all&#13;
had the same care at the hospice, -and&#13;
none was under obligation to give in&#13;
return anything more than conscience&#13;
and the state of finances suggested.&#13;
There is a box at the door in which all&#13;
offerings may be deposited, but there&#13;
is no solicitation from any visitor,&#13;
rich or poor. And the chances are,&#13;
says Troy Times, that the majority of&#13;
the thousand were unable to give even&#13;
:i smart pecuniary return for the service&#13;
so readily and mercifully extended.&#13;
T H E&#13;
EVENTS NOTED&#13;
GOVERNOR'S I N T I M A T I O N&#13;
IS OF A SPECIAL&#13;
SESSION.&#13;
A PRIMARY REFORM BILL&#13;
In a Brief Mcb&amp;age the Failure to Pass&#13;
the Primary Bill [b Scored and A n -&#13;
other Setsion May Be Called.&#13;
The Me6*age.&#13;
In connection with the appropriations&#13;
made by the legislature &lt;J»ov.&#13;
Warner sent in a message in which&#13;
he said: "1 desire to express my appreciation&#13;
of much ot the work accomplished&#13;
during the present legislative&#13;
st-ssion. While, as at all previous&#13;
sessions, some commendable bills&#13;
have -failed of passage, while others&#13;
less desirable have met with the approval&#13;
of a majority of both of the&#13;
houses, there have been enacted a&#13;
number of especially worthy laws&#13;
which call for more than passing notice."&#13;
Of the primary bill in particular&#13;
he said: "Those legislators who&#13;
have opposed the passage of the primary&#13;
bill, cannot, in my judgment,&#13;
and do not, as a matter of fact, even&#13;
feebly claim that their action either&#13;
has been or will be approved by anything&#13;
approaching a respectable minority&#13;
of the citizens of Michigan.&#13;
"It is but fair to the legislature,&#13;
WIND STORM.&#13;
Nine Bulldlngt Wrecked in Bay City&#13;
—Streets Blocked.&#13;
A terrific wind and rain storm Saturday&#13;
night struck Bay City and for&#13;
half an hour the (streets were so filled&#13;
with flying Bhingles, boards and debris&#13;
that travel waa unsafe, The wind&#13;
was accompanied by rotary gustB, one&#13;
of which assumed cyclonic propurtlonw&#13;
iu the south end of the city and threw&#13;
lour houses from their foundations, unroofed&#13;
several more and blew down&#13;
smokestacks, chimneys and trees by&#13;
the score.&#13;
Street car traffic In the south end&#13;
was brought to a standstill and the&#13;
interurbun service was crippled for&#13;
several hours, a number of poles being&#13;
blown down, carrying with them&#13;
feed and trolley wires. Only a portion&#13;
of the city lighting service is iu&#13;
operation, and a portion of the hie&#13;
alarm telegraph system is out. Both&#13;
telephone systems suffered severely.&#13;
Along the river front considerable&#13;
damage was done to manufacturing&#13;
plants and five large empty icehouses&#13;
were totally destioyed, the buildings&#13;
collapsing- The Pere Marquette tracks&#13;
into the city were blocked by uprooted&#13;
trees. Although two of the houses&#13;
blown down were occupied, no one&#13;
waa reported injured except one man,&#13;
who had an arm broken. He was&#13;
struck by a piece of flying board.&#13;
WSDONE ORCHARD'S STORYr -•&#13;
*,&#13;
T H E&#13;
• • &lt; % WORK OF T H * LEGISLA:&#13;
T U R E BRIEFLY R E V I E W E D .&#13;
AT T H E CLOSE.&#13;
THE SESSIONS FEATURES&#13;
Rose Above Mediocrity and CMd Some&#13;
Good W o r k as Shown by a Glance&#13;
at the Results.&#13;
anil&#13;
Ex-Senator Kelly.&#13;
William D. Kelly, who represented&#13;
Muskegon county in the lower house&#13;
from 1895 to 1901, and was state senator&#13;
from the Twenty-third district&#13;
from 1901 to 1905, is dead at Ballard,&#13;
Wash. Two years ago Senator Kelly&#13;
suffered a breakdown in mind and&#13;
am' to the people of the state, for me health, and a petition was made to&#13;
When the immigrant officials at&#13;
Ellis Island learned that Charles Papernini.&#13;
late of Italy and now an&#13;
aspirant for future citizenship in the&#13;
United States, was 90 years of- age&#13;
they hesitated about admitting him&#13;
because of a iicssibility of his coining&#13;
on the public for support. They began&#13;
to look for his visible asset, says&#13;
the Cleveland Plain Dealer. In the&#13;
first place, he was strong and vigorous.&#13;
In the second place, he carried&#13;
a goodly sum of money concealed&#13;
about his person. In the third, he had&#13;
eight sons and four daughters, all&#13;
earning good incomes in this country.&#13;
Also 35 grandchildren, a number of&#13;
whom are in business, supporting&#13;
themselves and their children. Also&#13;
nine great-grandchildren, who are&#13;
also candidates for future citizenship.&#13;
to t'riy at this time that it is my present&#13;
belief that a special session of&#13;
the legislature should be called for a&#13;
date yet to be determined upon, and&#13;
that at such special session, I shall&#13;
recommend the passage, not only of&#13;
this bill, but also of a bill requiring&#13;
that all lobbyists be registered and&#13;
regulated, so that the people of the&#13;
state ma\ know just who are opposing&#13;
measures drafted in their interests."&#13;
An Unmailed Letter.&#13;
A clerk's blunder at the. state capital&#13;
at Lansing has coist the .Michigan&#13;
naval militia the warship San Juan&#13;
de Austria, which the navy department&#13;
at Washington offered them, and&#13;
the erstwhile Spanish sea tighter capt&#13;
u n \ | by Admiral Dewey in Manila&#13;
bay lias gone irretrievably to the Connecticut&#13;
reserves. The governor apsend&#13;
him to t h e Kalamazoo asylum,&#13;
but later he went west. Mr. Kelly MAS&#13;
born in Ottawa county Nov. 26, 1865,&#13;
and was a real estate dealer, lumberman,&#13;
organizer of the Muskegon chamber&#13;
of commerce^ besides many other&#13;
Muskegon business ventures. He&#13;
leaves a widow, father, three sisters&#13;
and two brothers&#13;
A "Big ConaWnation."&#13;
According to Edward Harris, a&#13;
Kalamazoo coal merchant, his 16-yearold&#13;
son, Walter, was severely whipped&#13;
with a steel whip until "his back and&#13;
legs were all cut and he was then&#13;
thrown into a creek and told to get&#13;
out the best way he could. .&#13;
This was a part of the initiation&#13;
into the "Big Combination," a fraternity&#13;
composed of the athletes In the&#13;
high school. The affair happened Saturday&#13;
night and the boy has since&#13;
The Defense of H a y * * 0 &lt; f Charged&#13;
With M«rder of W » h * * Otvemor.&#13;
Thetff6*in|- of tftv c#»e of the state&#13;
leav.ea.the battle afcalftat and for the&#13;
M%P*MlHi»a D - Haywood in mldfleld&#13;
aaiTfrlSp-"apw forward the sides&#13;
cbal&amp;ge—the (Wense assumes the aggressive,&#13;
the prosecution is ou_the de»&#13;
tensive. The state will carry its caston&#13;
thsrrtfgh an aggressive cross-exanv&#13;
ination and then present testimony i s&#13;
rebuttal, but its main proposition aael&#13;
showing are already before the jury.&#13;
Orchard has been traced through tty&#13;
of the more important movements cd^»,&#13;
nected with the alleged attempt&#13;
the life of Fred Bradley In San Frl&#13;
cisco by Independent witnesses, ant&#13;
his story of the poisoned milk has&#13;
been carried down to the chemist who&#13;
analyzed it. It has been independently&#13;
shown that while Orchard was In&#13;
San Francisco, Pettibone, using false&#13;
names, telegraphed money to him&#13;
twice, and that a registered letter or&#13;
package was sent to San Francisco&#13;
from Pettibone's Denver address under&#13;
a name used by Pettibone iu sending&#13;
one of the telegraphic remittances.&#13;
Other than by Orchard's word it has&#13;
not been shown that the Bradley explosion&#13;
was caused by a bomb.&#13;
Orchard's story of his journey to&#13;
Canyon City to kill former Gov. Peabody&#13;
is giv«n general confirmation by&#13;
the testimony of Win, Vaughan, who&#13;
was Orchard's traveling companion.&#13;
Orchard went to Canyon City ostensibly&#13;
as an insurance agent, and the&#13;
state h a s produced a letter of recommendation&#13;
written to the Insurance&#13;
company for him by Pettibone.&#13;
Orchard's testimony as to the Independence&#13;
station outrage and the murder&#13;
of Detective Lyte Gregory stand&#13;
alone.&#13;
The chief corroboration or Orchard's&#13;
testimony has been as to things he&#13;
did and the time and manner of their&#13;
doing, and it is contended by the defense&#13;
that aside from nis testimony&#13;
there is not a single piece of independent&#13;
evidence against Haywood or any&#13;
fact that independently connects Haywood&#13;
with the crime charged or any&#13;
other crime.&#13;
.*ftt:&#13;
proved the official request to the navy jh&lt;&lt;jn confined to his home,&#13;
department, and the letter, all made Walter is game and refuses to make&#13;
out. that meant a new ship for the a statement to his father as to who&#13;
reserves, was given to a clerk at the ' initiated n i m » u u t declares (hat he is&#13;
capital to be mailed. i I U ) W &lt;»• full fledged member of the&#13;
That clerk was so busv he forget ' l]iK Combination." Mr, Harris is&#13;
it. All he had to do was to put it in ' n u K ' n worked up and provoses to take&#13;
A concerto, explaius the New York&#13;
Evening Mail, is a symphony wherein&#13;
one instrument is given persistent&#13;
prominence; in other words, an extended&#13;
instrumental solo with orchestral&#13;
accompaniment, often taking&#13;
three-quarters of an hour to perform.&#13;
It is the deification of a single instrument—&#13;
the highest achievement Its&#13;
player can attain. A concerto is to the&#13;
pianist, violinist, or 'cellist what, grand&#13;
opera is to the singer. It is a tonedrama&#13;
in three acts—energetic, tender,&#13;
then climatic. There are brief&#13;
intermissions between these three&#13;
'movements," and during these pauses&#13;
the player receives applause like a&#13;
"star"—bowing and smiling—until&#13;
again the baton raises, the orchestra&#13;
starts in, and the performance goes&#13;
on.&#13;
an envelope, stick on a stamp and&#13;
drop in the mail box. After a long&#13;
time the Detroit naval reserves grew&#13;
anxious. Through Congressman Denby&#13;
inquiry was made of the navy department&#13;
as to what had been done&#13;
with Michigan's request for the boat&#13;
He got the reply that Michigan had&#13;
never made a request. And furthermore&#13;
he was told that Connecticut,&#13;
quick to act and having second chance&#13;
at the ship, had acted with instant&#13;
request, and the boat was theirs&#13;
Search in (he clerk's desk at Lansing&#13;
revealed the letter just as it had&#13;
been given him for mailing. It is.back&#13;
lo tile Yantie for all the Wolverines,&#13;
some action in spite of what the eoq&#13;
wants.&#13;
The Old Man's End.&#13;
Erik Wikforss, 70, an eccentric man&#13;
of means, committed suicide some&#13;
tune yesterday by hanging himself in&#13;
l i s home iu Hattlo Creek. Wikforss&#13;
married a young woman a few years&#13;
ago and became a father in his old&#13;
age. His wite left him, and Wikforss&#13;
gradually became despondent, and ill.&#13;
He leaves considerable property, but&#13;
has no known relatives or friends.&#13;
&gt;y&#13;
When dueling was an actual factor&#13;
in the social order of this country it.&#13;
had many worthy and notable exponents,&#13;
including no loss distinguished&#13;
personages than Henry Clay, Andrew&#13;
Jackson, Alexander Hamilton, De Witt&#13;
Clinton, Stephen Decatur, and others&#13;
of the same type; but nowhere on this&#13;
continent was it so much an established&#13;
institution as in that peculiarly&#13;
romantic old city of Xow Orleans. It&#13;
was woven into iho very fabric of the&#13;
life of the community, and many a&#13;
crumbling tombstone in the antiquated&#13;
Creole cemeteries bears grim and&#13;
silent, witness to the fact, though to&#13;
understand the situation more clearly&#13;
one should hreathe, so to speak, the&#13;
atmosphere of the period.&#13;
With which eye do yon wink? This&#13;
is a question which Sir .lames Criehton-&#13;
Hrowne of London has asked in a&#13;
circular sent out to many hundred&#13;
persons in an effort to learn whether&#13;
umbiih xterity is prevalent. Sir James&#13;
announced the other day that about&#13;
¢0 pev cent, of the replies were from&#13;
perpr-ns who can wink with the left&#13;
fve '.MY, ::0 per cent, from those who&#13;
eaT vink with either eye, and nine&#13;
p f em. from those who cannot wink&#13;
a-' a I. This is printed purely an a&#13;
matter of scientific information, for it&#13;
is written that "a naughty person - , ,&#13;
wiDketh with his eyes."&#13;
Refused Diplomas.&#13;
The graduation of the '07 class of tin&#13;
Mellovue high school was marred&#13;
the act that none of the graduates re-&#13;
| f e i \ e d diplomas because of trouble&#13;
witli the school board. Some time ago&#13;
ibe board decided that each of the&#13;
graduates must give brief orations,&#13;
but the members of the class replied&#13;
that it would not be possible for all&#13;
&lt;»f them to do this. The board resented&#13;
the "uppishness" of the pupils&#13;
uud insisted that the order must be&#13;
obeyed. The graduates communicated&#13;
with the state superinteiuTent. of public&#13;
instruction and were informed that&#13;
;t was not compulsory for them to deliver&#13;
orations in order to he entitled&#13;
to diplomas and they stood their&#13;
?-: round.&#13;
Two members of the class, however&#13;
gave orations and -were granted diplomas,&#13;
but they promptly returned them&#13;
!&gt;&lt; cause the others did not receive&#13;
fbeirs. The matter has caused con-&#13;
•-id. ralde feeling, many taking sides&#13;
with the graduates.&#13;
The "Second Messiah."'&#13;
A religious fanatic claiming to he&#13;
• he second Messiah is said to be oaimm.&#13;
g dissensions in the homes of the&#13;
Germau settlement in St.. Joseph, and&#13;
several heads of families have appealed&#13;
to the authorities for protection&#13;
• liistiov Fremont Evans, of the municipal&#13;
enurt, told the complainants th;jf&#13;
be was unable to take action without&#13;
•* &lt;b finite complaint and referred the&#13;
matter to the oily attorney.&#13;
This "second Messiah" is said to&#13;
have made ;,n converts \\ lie, obey hi-&#13;
•-'lightest behrst. In the&#13;
ihey L',ro\eI en (lie tloor&#13;
.-.: range an: ies as though&#13;
i-.pel!. E*ch of thorn iv&#13;
to Tho preacher eme-tenth ,,r :,i&#13;
i'.ossessos or earns.&#13;
Gorky and the Czar.&#13;
Maxim Gorky, in a letter to the Nation,&#13;
denounces the Anglo-Russian entente,&#13;
and puts forward reasons why&#13;
England should refuse the Russian&#13;
government money. He describes the&#13;
czar in the following terms:&#13;
"A degenerate, as egotistic as an animal&#13;
and equally ignorant of every principle&#13;
of justice. He is incapable of&#13;
work and is guided solely by the instinct&#13;
of self-preservation. Apart from&#13;
this instinct, lie has neither aim, idea&#13;
or duty,&#13;
"His business is in disorder and on&#13;
the v&lt; v vv.r .- (!! b )T.;::'up:cy. Every&#13;
day he seems to be approaching nearer&#13;
and nearer to ruin. He is a tyrant;&#13;
in his home a cruelly, sensualiy diseased&#13;
man, hated by and repugnant, to&#13;
all, incapable of high aims and lost to&#13;
ail human feeling.&#13;
"He is still physically strong, and&#13;
the knowledge of his approaching annihilation&#13;
is no secret to him. It arms&#13;
him with the courage of despair. He&#13;
has no scruples and fights like a. wild&#13;
beast. He already shows, however,&#13;
signs of weariness, and the end which&#13;
he so well deserves is drawing near."&#13;
• Things Done and Not Done.&#13;
The forty-fourth session of the legislature&#13;
adjourned at 1:35 o'clock Wednesday&#13;
afternoon, though officially it&#13;
was noun when the gavels fell iu the&#13;
house and senate. By its work of the&#13;
last ten days this legislature has raised&#13;
itself above the plane of mediocrity&#13;
and established a record that will&#13;
compare favorably with previous sessions.&#13;
Factional differences always&#13;
stand out sharply in political matters,&#13;
so that the battles between the senate&#13;
and administratlonists and the so-called&#13;
boxeru have tended to blind the&#13;
vision as to the really good work that&#13;
has been accomplished. With the&#13;
exception of the primary bill, every&#13;
sharp contest has resulted in some&#13;
good being accomplished and the pies-&#13;
*nt primary law could have been perfected&#13;
but for the fact that the administration&#13;
insisted on having the 4u&#13;
per cent provision stricken out.&#13;
The work that has chief prominence&#13;
was the passage of the railroad twocent&#13;
passenger fare bill; the constitutional&#13;
convention which is to convene&#13;
October 22; the establishment&#13;
of a system of juvenile courts throughout&#13;
the state; the repeal of the limited&#13;
liability act and the change of&#13;
venue act; making railroads common&#13;
carriers of livestock; the department&#13;
insurance bill regulating the conduct&#13;
of such companies; banking bill compelling&#13;
directors to audit the accounts&#13;
under oath semi-annually and report&#13;
to the banking department; its corporation&#13;
bill which prohibits the issuing&#13;
of watered stock on the organization&#13;
of industrial .companies; the binder&#13;
twine plant, and the cash tax&#13;
highway improvement bill,&#13;
The crowning feature of the closing&#13;
days of the session tfas the passage&#13;
of the railroad commission bill, the&#13;
agreement of which surmounted almost&#13;
impassable obstacles. Other bills&#13;
passed that deserve notice are the&#13;
one abolishing wild cat bucket shops;&#13;
cutting down the interest that can be&#13;
c h i i g e d by chattel mortgage sharks,&#13;
and one that regulates the interest to&#13;
be charged by pawnbrokers and loan&#13;
agents to the legal rate and 3 per&#13;
&lt; ent additional.&#13;
Of the bills that failed, may be mentioned&#13;
the repeal of the mortgage tax&#13;
law; the bank bill authorizing the organization&#13;
of state banks in small&#13;
places with lower"^jggpttalization than&#13;
is now required; the Michigan United&#13;
Railway bill, which was an effort to&#13;
chatige the law relative to the bonds&#13;
that could he accepted by state banks.&#13;
It was simply that this company found&#13;
they could not float their bonds under&#13;
the present restrictions and wanted&#13;
a mote lenient provision, but it was&#13;
defeated by the state bankers. On a&#13;
majority vote the bill would have won.&#13;
hut an effort to discharge the committee&#13;
of the whola falb'd, a two-thirds&#13;
vote being required, and cave was t:ik-&#13;
( n that the hm:sr never reached the&#13;
gem ra! order, The hon-e failed to&#13;
pass the bill givir.g the tax commission&#13;
power to, review assessments of&#13;
its own volition, it being pigv.an-heled W,'lt'r"'-- - K ™ ^ - n f .&gt;T!"',si ^ ' b t to good&#13;
^ Seventy indicted.&#13;
A special grand jury closed its session&#13;
in Denver, Saturday, and reported&#13;
to Judge Lewis aoout 7») indictments&#13;
against men prominent in Colorado,&#13;
Wyoming, Nebraska, New Mexico,&#13;
Utah, Nevada, Wisconsin and Missouri,&#13;
principally for alleged coal and&#13;
timber land frauds, although a few&#13;
alleged mining fakers and a couple of&#13;
cases of postoftice robberies were also&#13;
included in the list. Judge Lewis refused&#13;
to give out the names of thOM&#13;
indicted until arrests are made.&#13;
THE MARKETS.&#13;
D e t r o i t — C a t t l e - K x t r a . rtiv-f.d s t e r r a&#13;
a n d h f l f e r s , $fi ll^wd: . s t e e r s a n d h e i f -&#13;
ers. l,(UKi t o 1,200 I P s , $:, 12 H (Si r. 7 : . ; n t e c r s&#13;
a n d h e i f e r s , MX) t o 1,0(10 I h s , $.) 7r,jt»&#13;
f&gt; 2U, tfruss s t e e i - n a n d l i e i f e i s ' t h a t a r e&#13;
fat. MM) to 1,(10(1 l b s , \:\ r.orti i r,n, K T » S H&#13;
s t e e i . s a n d In l f c r n t h a t a r e f a t ' fum t o&#13;
70(( Ib.s, $;* thUvA; e h o t r e f a t c o w s , %?. 7f&gt;&#13;
(a I .i«&gt;: K&lt;md f a t c o w s . $:t :'.". -?&lt; rvT.) • c o m -&#13;
m o n c o w s , %2&lt;&lt;i 2 7Ti; d i n n e r s . ? | Vui (?j 2 •&#13;
c h o i c e h e a v y h u l l s , $4 2"&gt;&lt;W I 7;V, f a i r t o&#13;
Komi hohifrjniiH, bull*, $,i : , 0 ^ : : 7;,- s u&gt;ek&#13;
h u l l s . $:Ua :&lt; Mi; c h o i c e f e e d i n g s t e e r s&#13;
Mm t-&gt; 1,000 n&gt;s, $;i 7r,r,j 1 :ev f a i r feerii&#13;
n g s t e e r s . ,S(i(i t o l.odn l h s , %:&lt;, Mitfri'&#13;
c h o i c e s t o c k e r s , f&gt;&lt;ui t o Too n&gt;s, $:{ 2UH&#13;
•'! 7.r.; f a i r s t o c k e r s . r&gt;00 t o 7 o n ' | b H . J:: (&lt;i&gt;&#13;
3 life milk&lt; r s , l a t ' K c , yoiinj.';. m e d i u m&#13;
age. fldfrvfa); c o m m o n m i l k e r s , %\s&lt;n :jo.&#13;
V ( n l c a l v e s - M a r k e t u'n- t o 'aic l o w e r&#13;
t h a n h i s t T h u r s d a y ; hes-f, $*;&lt;-«»,• 7 5 '&#13;
o t h e r s . J A'fir, r,o.&#13;
M i l c h c o w s a n d s p r i n g e r s - - S t e a d y&#13;
^ S h e e p 1111,1 l a m b s - - M a r k &lt; I d u l l , l a s t&#13;
T h u r s d a y ' * p r i c e s ; q u a l i t y p o o r R,.f-d&#13;
l a r n h s . $ . 1 ^ (&gt;' 50; f a i r to ^ n u l l amb s , f a&#13;
VM&gt; ; l i t f h t t o c o m m o n l a m b s $ • ^ ri •&#13;
s p r i n g h i m t i s , $ 7 ^ 7 .'(&gt;, f a i r t o K e n d&#13;
t m t c h e r s h e e p , $ 4 m ) r,0; c u l l s a n d c o m -&#13;
m o n , f;'. r&lt;t:; no.&#13;
H o g s - - M a r k . f :;.)c h i g h e r t h a n )m&lt;t&#13;
W e e k , I t a n ^ p of j , r&#13;
Ills&#13;
' w o r s h i p "&#13;
a n d p e r f o r m&#13;
in a h y p n o t i c&#13;
l i g i o u s l y pay;;&#13;
or all he&#13;
1,'( c;in&gt; tin&#13;
'i'iO'1 b y&#13;
'"'I uie serious tn.jiirb .&#13;
Florence lien fh'iel, in&#13;
Arbor, who was run down h'v&#13;
Kinne's anto^ driven&#13;
the invitafioris w r p '&#13;
Mie wedding of her •&#13;
arid L. 11, Cone, and&#13;
ly married in private&#13;
J i n&#13;
l u d t i o&#13;
Mrs. Kinne,&#13;
Tdr:iw:i tor&#13;
' •'. .v ::..- D a i s y ,&#13;
nev were qniet-&#13;
Their wedding&#13;
j Haywood's Work.&#13;
! The state has hit out. straight, from&#13;
the shoulder in the case against Willmm&#13;
D. Haywood. It. proved that at the&#13;
time when it is known that, Jlarf.y&#13;
Orehard was in Idaho on the trip&#13;
which ended in the murder of ex-Gov&#13;
Steunonherg and when Haywood must&#13;
have known that he was not faraway,&#13;
even he did not, know exactly where ho&#13;
was, the secretary of the. Western&#13;
Federation of Miners was writing to&#13;
ibe Cripple Crf.ek wife of Orchard,&#13;
saying that the last, he knew of Orchard&#13;
was in Alaska. Enough has&#13;
be* n brought out already in this trial&#13;
to convince anybody who heard the&#13;
testimony that Haywood well knew&#13;
thai. Orchard was not in Alaska ar&#13;
• 1:. The defense will scarcely contend&#13;
oiher.vise. This letter from ' Hay wood&#13;
to Mrs. Oichanl was produced in evidence,&#13;
If is in the handwriting of the&#13;
defendant.&#13;
by&#13;
v.- i&#13;
H a n i e l C. S m i t h , a g e d M , a n d M i s s&#13;
Henrietta. Hill, aged Mil, » school&#13;
teacher, were married in Prescot; by&#13;
Justice Maurer, in K. O. T. M. hall In&#13;
..... t „ t. ,. , , " ; ! n t ' presence of 180 guesta, mostly the&#13;
., tp to K u.ope has also been indefi- i groom's' descendants. This is his&#13;
rdtely postponed. , 1 ( ) u r t h raarrlmonlaI v e n t u m&#13;
in committee, the alleged r«'.:s&lt;,ns&#13;
ing that, the big milling ccnv.iariies objected,&#13;
as they don't want the tax commission&#13;
to walk into the copper arid&#13;
iron counties and boost the assessed&#13;
.valuations.&#13;
The last bill pas,-ed by the senate&#13;
just before adjournment was one raising&#13;
the salary of .Mrs. Mary Spencer,&#13;
state librarian, to $l,X0u and then&#13;
every one sang "So Long, Mary,"&#13;
There was almost a slip-up on the&#13;
bill appropriating $7,000 for n silver&#13;
service and colors for the battleship&#13;
Michigan. The house committer&#13;
struck out the names of the delegation&#13;
named in the bill and the conference&#13;
committees appointed forgot, to meet.&#13;
Senator Eland finally got busy and&#13;
the senate accepted a verbal report b ^&#13;
which the senate receded and the governor&#13;
will nanle the delegation.&#13;
The house finally adopted the suggestion&#13;
of Atty.-On. Hird and passed&#13;
the joint resolution proposing an&#13;
amendment to the constitution' providing&#13;
that public utilities sbail be assessed&#13;
under the ad valorem system,&#13;
by whomsoever owned.. At present&#13;
only public utility corporations are so&#13;
assessed and advantage was taken to&#13;
evade the law by firms and co-partnerships.&#13;
The amendment is an important&#13;
one.&#13;
tfy reducing the general purpose tax&#13;
lo $1,100,(100, the budget appropriated&#13;
by the legislature was kept down to&#13;
?ri,1.".0,7,:,5.12. The governor decided&#13;
on this move after consulting with tbe&#13;
auditor-general and learning fj);i*&#13;
(hero is now nearly $2,IH)0,&lt;HIO in the&#13;
state Ireasury, which is ampb1 to m e t&#13;
any deficiency that may arise. A; M;r&#13;
last moment tbe bouse agreed to an&#13;
appiopriation of .i-VeOHo for if C;;s;Vr&#13;
monument to bo erected ;n Monroe&#13;
and the highway department appropriation,&#13;
which was raised to $^'r,0,uJii,&#13;
was given immediate effect,&#13;
Charles H. Davis, aged C7, of W1I&#13;
son township, civil war \eteran&#13;
dropped dead while driving cows&#13;
home&#13;
l i c r s , $fi'2f,S,•il'HO; p i ^ s . " $ ,V':&gt;S&lt;fr O^'io ;&#13;
l i g h t y o r k c r s , $6 i&gt;5fai; ;t(i; r o u g h s J&#13;
5 ft; s t a g s , 1-3 off; c r i p p l e s , $2 oft&#13;
E a s t&#13;
)0()&#13;
r Q U K h s , $ 5 , 4 ( W 5 . r &gt; 0 ; s t n . g a ,&#13;
H u f r n l o — H e s t e x p o r t s t e e r s&#13;
pfi,2:&gt;(Jrfi.fi5; b e s t s h i p p i n g s t e e r s $5 0 0 ®&#13;
(1.50; best. 1,000 t o L 1 0 0 - l b . , $5.40@Y)!&gt;(P&#13;
h*-Ft t u t r o w s , $&lt;Ue(;.75; f a i r t o g o o d '&#13;
F3.r&gt;fo?f ;?.75; t r i m m e r s , $2 (&lt;i 2 . 2 5 ; h o s t&#13;
h e t f i r s , $ 5 f j ' 5 . 2 5 ; m e d i u m t o gor&gt;'d 1 4 ©&#13;
4.25; b e s t f e e d i n g : s t e e r s , %\Cu A 25 \ e a r -&#13;
l i n g s t e e r s . s a f f . s . r . O : c o m m o n ' ' s t o c k&#13;
s t e e r s , $ 2 . 7 5 ^ 3 ; e x p o r t h u l l s , $J50rd&gt;&amp;-&#13;
b o l o g n a b u l l s , $ 1 . 5 0 ^ , 1 . 7 5 : . s t o c k b u l l * '&#13;
5 2 . 5 0 ^ 3 . 2 5 ; g o o d c o w s s t e r n l y , o t h e r s&#13;
d u l l : pood t o e x t r a , $ 10fa' 5 0 ; m e d i u m t o&#13;
g o o d , $ 3 . W 1 S ; c o m m o n , $20fa2?l&#13;
H o p - s : M a r k e t s t r o n g ; a l l ' c r n r l e s&#13;
JO,.50 fa 6.55- - - • — •- K ' r&#13;
$1fa! 4.50.&#13;
S h e e p : M a r k e t d u l l a n d s l o w e r -&#13;
s p v i n K l n m h s , $fl 50 fa 7.50; vein-lingM*&#13;
Jfifafi.25; c u l l p , $5(((.5.50: w e t h e r s $ 5 2 5&#13;
fa5.75; c u l l s , $,1fa'4; e w e s . $4,50fa;5&#13;
C a l v r a Rt.en.dy; b e s t , $ 7 . 2 5 ; h e a v y , %i&#13;
(irnin, Kte.&#13;
T V t r o H — W h e a t — C a s h X n 2 T*A&#13;
MV( e; J u l y . 5 0 0 0 b „ J I t f).p.',.- r&gt; (1(10 b a .&#13;
nt f M ^ c . 10.000 h n a t P i n , 20.000 1,,, a t -&#13;
OS'-vC, 10,000 h u a t OH-ie, I d 000 lvo a t r';U.&gt;e. 15.000 b u o t fO'I-V', 5,000 h u A t r Mr. 10,000 h n a t 9 1 " , r ; S e p t e m b e r H f l .&#13;
000 b u fit P 7 r . 25 0 0 0 b n r&gt; t ! &gt; f i ^ r 20 Ot'lO&#13;
h u a t fUvlio. 2 5 . 0 0 0 h u f J t ; i P j o ' l o ' o o o&#13;
l,n o t O O U r . 10,000 h a ;it t d r . 5 Olio' b u&#13;
ot to, VJc. 15,(100 b u ;,f ft; ••»„,', 5.000 l n i a t&#13;
Of, 0,0. 5,000 b u a t fu; i+l&gt;, 10.000 b u n t rtf,c; I V e e m h r r . 1 o ono u U ; ) T f,r(r "0 0 0 0&#13;
b u a t t ) S ^ 4 r , 15.000 bit n t f e s ^ r . ' i f f o o o&#13;
b u n t r&gt;S*ir. 10,(1110 I,,, a t OKUr. 25 000 h u&#13;
a t f o S ' i r , 15,000 b u ;&gt;f ftsV, ?0 00(V b u a t&#13;
OS H e . 5,000 b , i a t f»K V.'.c, 15(100 b n&#13;
!)SM&gt;&lt;\ 5 000 t m nt (IS *., e 10 0fin&#13;
O s ^ r , 15.000 b u n t ft So; X o 5 ' r o d&#13;
No. 1 w h i t e , »1 ^,-..&#13;
C o r n — C &gt; i n h N o&#13;
2 c u r s a t 5fic; X o&#13;
t!5r. 1 n t M ^ c .&#13;
Onts—Clfifch X o . 1 w h i t e&#13;
I S r \ i e ; S e p t e m b e r , 1si;&gt;o.&#13;
H y e - f a s h NTo. 2. S 7 c . '&#13;
T i f f i n s — C a s h a n d J u n e . SI&#13;
2 i n i s ut SI 7 1 . c l o s i n g fit J1&#13;
( " l o y e r s r cd " P r i m e s n o t , J!&gt;&#13;
1 On l,;i»'s a t SS : 1 i c c e i i i h e r Ss&#13;
sik&lt;' 5 7 5 0.&#13;
T i m o t h y S'-o,l ...._-p,&#13;
-^..f&#13;
Me; Xo.&#13;
4 V e l l O W ,&#13;
.1 yellow.&#13;
1 ear at&#13;
earn at&#13;
72: .Tuiy,&#13;
74 h h l .&#13;
: Oetohrr,&#13;
p r i m e A l -&#13;
*2 15.&#13;
i n i i •^TX't, 2 0 h a c r s a t&#13;
AMTJHKMENT* IN n r c m o i T&#13;
W e e k E n d i n g , l u n e 29, 11)07.&#13;
25c&#13;
W * t u r d a y&#13;
L T H U ' V ~ P r l c M » R l w f \ y i i i : x \ 2 5 n 5^0 7!fe&#13;
M a t i n e e * W e r l n e P d a v a n d&#13;
" W l m t H . i p p r n c d t o .TonrK."&#13;
T K M I T . K T H K A T K H A S P \ V o \ n i c n r A V T W&#13;
A f t e r n o o n * 2 15. 10c t o i V ; K v * n t n « t ' e v&#13;
r JDc. to «». Advanced \ audevllle, Harry&#13;
•£*; ^&#13;
»«*, &lt;'i#i&#13;
fjfi'-&#13;
"V^&#13;
&lt;-'&#13;
j * * * ' ••&#13;
mm&#13;
? » r ^ - . , • V -1 ) - •-•! * • * • &gt;r •• ' • • • - T " , V • " • • « &lt; ; • ' •.. v? « '.••'•J • " * . , , —i^gFiip- I P MB*&#13;
'•&lt; minimum/ i n , ^ * » • a J b l W 'ty; ' -'-''few.'*!!&#13;
in l i n n I I&#13;
&lt; % * ; • ' •'•f;.i :" '*•&#13;
J*.&gt;~&#13;
• # - — - -&#13;
k—-&#13;
C H A P T E R II.—Continued.&#13;
I did not argue with hini, for, after&#13;
that Saturday's outburst, I had made&#13;
up my mind to avoid stirring Bob up&#13;
unnecessarily. Also, I had to admit to&#13;
myself that t h e things h e had then&#13;
said had raised some unucomfortable&#13;
thoughts in me, thoughts that made&#13;
me glance leas confidently now and&#13;
then a t the old sign of Randolph &amp;&#13;
Randolph and a t the big ledger which&#13;
showed that I, an ordinary citizen of&#13;
a free country, was the absolute possessor&#13;
of more money than a hundred&#13;
thousand of my fellow beings together&#13;
could acciimulatet in a lifetime, although&#13;
each had worked harder, longer,&#13;
more conscientiously, and with&#13;
perhaps more ability than I.&#13;
AB to how Beulah Sands' code had&#13;
affected my friend, I was ignorant.&#13;
For the first time in our association I&#13;
was completely in the dark as to what&#13;
he wras doing stockwise, Up to that&#13;
Saturday 1 was the first to whom he&#13;
would rush for congratulations when&#13;
he struck it rich over others on t h e&#13;
exchange, and he invariably sought me&#13;
for consolation when the boy3 "uppercut&#13;
him hard," as h e would put it.&#13;
Now he never said a word about his&#13;
trading. I saw that his account with&#13;
the house was inactive, that his balance&#13;
was about t h e same a s before&#13;
Miss Sands' advent, a n d I came to&#13;
the conclusion that he was resting on&#13;
his oars and giving hi3 undivided attention&#13;
to her account and t h e execution&#13;
of his commissions. His handling&#13;
of the business of the house showed&#13;
no change. He still was the best&#13;
broker on the floor. However, knowing&#13;
Bob as I did, 1 could not get it&#13;
out of my mind that his brain was&#13;
running like a mill-race in search of&#13;
•ome successful solution of t h e tremendous&#13;
problem that must be solved&#13;
in the next three months.&#13;
Shortly after the October 1 statements&#13;
had been sent out, Bob dropped&#13;
in on Kate and me one night. After&#13;
she had retired and we had lit our&#13;
cigars in (he library he said:&#13;
"Jim, I want some of that old-fashioned&#13;
advice of yours. Sugar is selling&#13;
at 110, and it is worth it; in fact&#13;
it is cheap. The stock is well distributed&#13;
among investors, not much of&#13;
It floating round 'the street.' A good&#13;
big buying movement, well handled,&#13;
would jump it to 175 and keep it there.&#13;
Am I sound?"&#13;
I agreed with him.&#13;
"All right. Now what reason Is&#13;
there for a good, big, stiff uplift? That&#13;
tariff bill is up at Washington. If it&#13;
goes through, sugar will be cheaper&#13;
at 175 than at 110."&#13;
Again I agreed.&#13;
' " S t a n d a r d Oil' and the sugar people&#13;
know whether it is going through,&#13;
for they control the senate and the&#13;
house and can induce the president to&#13;
be good. What do you say to that?"&#13;
"O. K.," I answered.&#13;
"No question about it, is there?"&#13;
"Not the slightest."&#13;
"Right again. When 26 Broadway*&#13;
gives the secret order to the Washington&#13;
boss and he paaaes it out to t h e&#13;
i r a f t e n , there will be a quiet accumulation&#13;
of the stock, w o n t there?"&#13;
"You've tot that right. Bob."&#13;
"And the man who first knows when&#13;
Washington begins to take on sugar is&#13;
the man who should load up quick&#13;
and rush it up to a high level. If he&#13;
does it quickly, the stockholders, who&#13;
now have it, will' get a juicy slice of&#13;
the ripening melon, a slice that otherwise&#13;
would go to those greedy hypocrites&#13;
at Washington, who are always&#13;
mabUcly proclaiming that they a r e&#13;
th«re to serve their fellow country-&#13;
MM, kut who never tire of expressing&#13;
themselves to their brokers a s not be&#13;
ing in politics for their health."&#13;
"3o far, good reasoning," I com&#13;
mented.&#13;
"Jim, the man who first knows when 1&#13;
the genataors and congressmen and&#13;
rs of the cabinet, begin to buy ;&#13;
is the man who can kill four i&#13;
with one stone: Win bark a&#13;
of Judge Sands' stoleu fortune;&#13;
increase his own little pile against the&#13;
first of January, when, if the little Virginian&#13;
lady is short a few hundred&#13;
thousand of the necessary amount, he&#13;
could, if he found a way to induce her&#13;
to accept it, supply t h e deficiency;&#13;
fatten up a good friend's bank account&#13;
a million or so, and do a right good&#13;
turn for t h e stockholders who a r e&#13;
about to be, for the hundredth time.&#13;
bled out of profit rightfully theirs."&#13;
Bob was afire with enthusiasm, the&#13;
first I had Been him show for three&#13;
months. Seeing that I had followed&#13;
him without objection so far, he continued.&#13;
"Well. Jim, I know the Washington&#13;
huving his begun. All I know I Uava&#13;
dug out for myself and am free to use&#13;
it any way I choose. I have gone over&#13;
the deal with Beulah Sands, and we&#13;
have decided to plunge. She h a s a&#13;
balance of about $400,1)00, and I am&#13;
going to spread it thin. I am going to&#13;
buy her 20,000 shares and take on 10,-&#13;
000 for myself. If you went in for 20,-&#13;
000 more, it would give me a wide sea&#13;
to sail in. I know you never speculate,&#13;
Jim, for the house, but I thought&#13;
you might in this uttse go in personally."&#13;
"Don't say anything more, Bob," I&#13;
replied. "This time the rule goes by&#13;
the board. But I will do better; I'll&#13;
put up a million and you can go as&#13;
high a s 70.000 for me. That will give&#13;
you a buying power of 100,000, and I&#13;
want you to use my last 50,000 shares&#13;
as a lifter."&#13;
1 had never speculated in a share&#13;
of stock since I entered t h e firm of&#13;
Randolph &amp; Randolph, and on general,&#13;
special, and every other principle was&#13;
opposed to stock gambling, but I saw&#13;
for t h e figures set for them by Bob,&#13;
$X75, a t wfcich price the Sands' profit*&#13;
would be $1,200,000. Bob was beside&#13;
himself with joy. He dined with Kate&#13;
an4 me, and as 1 watched him my&#13;
heart almost stopped beating at t h e&#13;
thought—"if anything bhould happen&#13;
to upset his plans!" H i s happiness&#13;
was pathetic to wimeas. He was like&#13;
a child. He threw away all the reserve&#13;
of the past three months and laughed&#13;
and was grave by turns. After dinner,&#13;
a s we sat in the library over our&#13;
coffee, he leaned over to my wife and&#13;
said:&#13;
"Katherine Randolph, you and J i m&#13;
don't know what misery I have been&#13;
in for three months, and now—will tomorrow&#13;
never come, so I may get into&#13;
tne whirl and clean up this deal and&#13;
send that girl back to her father with&#13;
^ e moaey! I wanted her to telegraph&#13;
t h e judge that things looked&#13;
like she would win out and bring back&#13;
the relief, but she would not hear of&#13;
It. She is a marvelous woman. She&#13;
has not turned a hair to-day. I don't&#13;
think her pulse is up an eighth tonight.&#13;
She has not sent home a word&#13;
of encouragement since she has been&#13;
here, more than to tell her father she&#13;
is doing well with her stories. It&#13;
seems they both agreed the only way&#13;
to work t h e thing out was 'whole&#13;
hog or none," and that she was to say&#13;
nothing until she could herself bring&#13;
the word 'saved' or Tost.' I don't know&#13;
but she is right. She says if she&#13;
should raise her father's hopes, and&#13;
then be compelled to dash them, the&#13;
effect would be fatal."&#13;
Bob rushed the talk along, flitting&#13;
from one paint to another, but invariably&#13;
returning to Beulah Sands and towaa&#13;
noised about long before teu&#13;
o'clock that sugar would open wild,&#13;
and then, too, I wanted to be handy if&#13;
Bob should,need any quick advice.&#13;
A minute before t h e gong struck,&#13;
there w e r e 300 men jammed around&#13;
the sugar-pole; men with set, deter&#13;
mined faces; men with their coats&#13;
btittoriKd tight and shoulders thrown&#13;
back for the rush to which, by com&#13;
parison, thai of a football learn is&#13;
child's play. Every m a n in that&#13;
crowd was a picked man, picked fur&#13;
what was coming. Each felt that&#13;
upon his individual powers to keep a&#13;
clear head, to shout loudest, to forget&#13;
nothing, to keep his feet, and to stay&#13;
as near the center of the crowd as possible,&#13;
depended his "floor honor," perhaps&#13;
h i s fortune, or, what was more&#13;
to, him, his client's fortune. Nearly&#13;
every man of them was a college&#13;
graduate who had won his spurs at&#13;
atbletivs or a seasoned floor man&#13;
whose training had been even mure&#13;
severe tkan that of the college campus.&#13;
When it was known before the&#13;
opening of the exchange that there are&#13;
to be "things doing" in a certain&#13;
stock, it Is the rule to send only the&#13;
picked floor men into the crowd.&#13;
There may be a fortune to make or to&#13;
lose in a minute or a sliver of a minute.&#13;
For instance, the man who that&#13;
morning was able to snatch the first&#13;
5,000 shares sold at 140 could have&#13;
resold them a few minutes afterward&#13;
at 152 aud secured $60,000 profit. And&#13;
the man who was sent Into the crowd&#13;
by his client to sell 5,000 shares at the&#13;
"opening" and who got but 140, when&#13;
the price would be 152 by the time he&#13;
reported to his customer, was a man&#13;
to be pitied. Again, t h e trader who&#13;
the night before had decided that&#13;
sugar had gone up too fast, and who&#13;
had "shorted" (that is, sold what he&#13;
did not have, with the intention of repurchasing&#13;
at a lower price than he&#13;
sold it for) 5,000 shares at 140 and&#13;
who, finding himself in that surging&#13;
mob with sugar selling at 152, could&#13;
only get out by taking a loss of $60,-&#13;
000, or by taking another chance of&#13;
later paying 102—such a trader was&#13;
also to be pitied.&#13;
(•"26 Broadway" Is the Wall s t r w t figure,&#13;
of speech t;jir "Standard Oil," which&#13;
has its home there.)&#13;
(TO BI-3 CONTINUED.)&#13;
SQUAW A N E A T H O U S E K E E P E R .&#13;
She Must Live in a Tent, However,&#13;
to Prove This.&#13;
Have Gone Over the Deal w i t h Beulah Sands, and We Are Going to&#13;
Plunge."&#13;
how Bob had worked it out, and that&#13;
•to make the deal sure it was necessary&#13;
for him to liave a good reserve buying&#13;
power to fall back on it, after he&#13;
got started, the "System" masters,&#13;
whose game he was butting in to and&#13;
whoso plana ha might upset should&#13;
try to shake down the price to drive&#13;
him out of their preserves. Bob&#13;
knew how I looked at his proposed j&#13;
deal and ordinarily would not have al- !&#13;
lowed me to have the short end of it, I&#13;
but no changed had ho become in his ;&#13;
anxiety to make that money for the&#13;
Virginians that he grabbed at my acceptance.&#13;
I&#13;
'Thank you, Jim," h e said, fervently,&#13;
and ho continued: "Of course, I&#13;
see what's going through your head,&#13;
but I'll accept the favor, for the deal&#13;
is bound to he successful. I know ;&#13;
your reason for coming in is just to !&#13;
help out, and that you won't feel bad-1&#13;
ly because your last 50,000 shares will i&#13;
be used more a s a guarantee for the j&#13;
deal's success than for profit. And '&#13;
Miss Sands could not object to the&#13;
part, you play, as she did at the underwriting,&#13;
for you will get a big profit&#13;
anyway."&#13;
Next day sugar was lively on the exchange.&#13;
Bob bought all in sight, and&#13;
handled the buying in a masterly way.&#13;
When the closing gong struck, Beulah&#13;
Sands had 20.000 shares, which averaged&#13;
her 115; Bob apd I had 30,000 at j&#13;
an average of 12.1, and the stock had j&#13;
closed 1.32 bid and in big demand. J&#13;
Miss Sands' 20,000 showed $340,001 •&#13;
profit, while our 30,000 showed $210,-'&#13;
i)00 at the closing price. All the ,&#13;
houses with Washington wires were&#13;
wildly scrambling for sugar as soon&#13;
as it began to jump. And it certainly&#13;
looked as though the shares wera good&#13;
morrow and its saving profits. Finally,&#13;
he got to a pitch whore it seemed&#13;
as though he must take off the lid, and&#13;
before Kate or I realized what was&#13;
coming he placed himself in front of&#13;
us and said:&#13;
"Jim, Kate, I cannot go into to-morrow&#13;
without telling you something&#13;
that neither of you suspect. I must&#13;
tell some one, now that, everything is&#13;
coming out right and that, Beulah in to&#13;
be saved; and whom can I tell hut&#13;
you, who have been everything to me?&#13;
—I love Beulah Sands, surely, deeply,&#13;
with OVITV bit of me. I worship her.&#13;
I tell you, and to-morrow, to-morrow it"&#13;
tins deal comes out a s it must come,&#13;
an 1 I can put $1,500,000 into her&#13;
hands and send her home ro her father,&#13;
then, then, I will tell her I love&#13;
her, and Jim, Kate, if she'll marry me,&#13;
good-by, good-by to this hell of dollarhunting,&#13;
gcod-by to such misery as I&#13;
have been in for three months, and&#13;
home, a Virginia home, for Beulah and&#13;
me." He sank into a chair and tears&#13;
rolled down his cheeks. Poor, poor&#13;
Bob, strong as a lion in adversity,&#13;
hysterical as a woman with victory in&#13;
sight.&#13;
The next day sugar opened with a&#13;
wild rush: "25,000 shares from 140 to&#13;
152." That is the way it came on the&#13;
tape, which meant that the crowd&#13;
around the sugar-pole was a mob and&#13;
that the transactions were so heavy,&#13;
quick and tangled that no one could&#13;
tell to a certainty just what the first&#13;
or opening price was; but after the&#13;
first lull, after the gong, there were officially&#13;
reported transactions aggregating&#13;
25,000 shares and at prices varying&#13;
from 140 to 152. I was over on&#13;
the floor to see the scramble, for it&#13;
Put the squaw in a tepee and she Is&#13;
the neatest of housekeepers, says the&#13;
Denver Republican. Everything in&#13;
one of these big, roomy tents is in&#13;
apple-pie order. The blankets are&#13;
neatly rolled and stowed away under&#13;
the edge of the tepee, leaving the center&#13;
clt;ar. Bright-colored blankets&#13;
and line fur robes a r e spread about,&#13;
and a wonderfully beaded dance drum&#13;
hangs from one of the poles. But, on&#13;
the other hand, put a squaw in a&#13;
house and she is anything but a success.&#13;
(Jo into one of these frame&#13;
houses and you will find the mattresses&#13;
laid along the floor, with the&#13;
whole family sprawling thereon. The&#13;
cracked cook stove will be in the middle&#13;
of the floor, with anything but&#13;
agreeable odors coining therefrom&#13;
while the meal is in progress. Outside&#13;
the bedsteads and springs will be&#13;
used as chicken roosts. But the squaw&#13;
doesn't let her housekeeping stoortcomings&#13;
worry her. When she puts&#13;
on an elk-tooth robe, valued at anything&#13;
from $1,000 to $:1,000, and rides&#13;
to the fair or to the agency on a Sunday&#13;
astride a beaded saddle, she is a&#13;
picture of contentment that any of her&#13;
white sisters might envy,&#13;
Keyra'd Tenure in England.&#13;
Th^ curious cuotoa: of keyhold tenare&#13;
still prevails at Crowland, the&#13;
famous abbey town in the Lincolnshire&#13;
fens, where there are a number&#13;
of cottages which are neither copyhold,&#13;
freehold nor leasehold. They&#13;
were originally built on waste land,&#13;
and in each case the possessor of the&#13;
key holds an undisputed tenancy. Although&#13;
some of the occupiers have replaced&#13;
the mud and 'hatched dwellings&#13;
of antiquity w k h brick and slated&#13;
buildings, they have no power to sell&#13;
or will them away, for they have no&#13;
deeds. On a tenant dying the first&#13;
person to cross the threshold takes&#13;
his place, if he so desires. Many devices&#13;
have been resorted to to obtain&#13;
the keys. The properties carry a&#13;
county vote, but t h e poor law guardians&#13;
always refuse to grant relief to&#13;
the tenants.—London Globe.&#13;
ABODE OF TRAITOR&#13;
B E N E D I C T A R N O L D S MANSION I N&#13;
P H I L A D E L P H I A .&#13;
House i» One of the Few Specimens&#13;
of Colonial Architecture Left i n&#13;
the Country—Now belongs&#13;
to the City.&#13;
Mount Pleasant, in t h e East Park,&#13;
near Columbia avenue entrance, which&#13;
Is almost equally well known to park&#13;
visitors as Arnold's mansion, 1» to he&#13;
the headquarters of La Morlgaata&#13;
Klambo, t h e newly formed organization&#13;
of fashionable women motoriBta,&#13;
aays the Philadelphia Public Ledger.&#13;
Few buildings in t h e park equal&#13;
idount Pleasant in interest, and none&#13;
Is older. It is one of the few well proserved&#13;
country mansions built in this&#13;
country In Colonial times. As a specimen&#13;
of architecture modeled upon the&#13;
style made popular by Sir Christopher&#13;
Wren, it is one of t h e half dozen&#13;
or less which remain in this country.&#13;
The house, which John Adams—&#13;
who dined there in 1774—declared was&#13;
the most elegant in Pennsylvania, was&#13;
built for Capt. John Mcpherson in&#13;
1762. In 1779 MacPherson grew tired&#13;
of the place and sold it to Gen. Benedict&#13;
Arnold, who had married Peggy&#13;
Shippen. In its time the mansion haa&#13;
borne three names. MacPherson&#13;
called it The Hills and also Clunie,&#13;
and subsequently it w a s known a s&#13;
Mount Pleasant.&#13;
Capt. MacPherson was one of t h e&#13;
most original men In the province. If&#13;
he had not been immensely wealthy&#13;
he probably would not have been tolerated;&#13;
but as a privateersman in&#13;
England's wars with France and&#13;
Spain before the revolution h e w a s&#13;
lucky and came home with a genuine&#13;
gold galleon. He had two sons. O n e&#13;
was a n officer In t h e British army,&#13;
bu* resigned his commission on t h e&#13;
breaking out of the revolution and became&#13;
a major in the Continental army,&#13;
The other son was with the colonists&#13;
from the beginning of the struggle&#13;
and was killed at the attempt to tako&#13;
Quebec, being the first Philadelphian&#13;
of importance to give up his life for&#13;
the cause.&#13;
When Arnold married Peggy Shippen,&#13;
daughter of Edward Shippen, subsequently&#13;
chief justice of Pennsylvania,&#13;
he bought Mount Pleasant a n d&#13;
settled it on himself for life, with&#13;
the remainder of his wife and children.&#13;
At the time Arnold wa3 military&#13;
governor of Philadelphia, and&#13;
Fudge Peters,' who occupied Belmont,&#13;
the seat across the Schuylkill from&#13;
Mount Pleasant, accused the general&#13;
of having converted $50,000 to his own&#13;
use and of having used this toward&#13;
the purchase of Mount Pleasant.&#13;
Arnold did not long remain at&#13;
Mount Pleasant. After his treason he&#13;
of course had to leave the country,&#13;
and the state of Pennsylvania confiscated&#13;
his life interest in the beautiful&#13;
"state. Haron de Steuben became the&#13;
next tenant of the place and Arnold's&#13;
life interest, was sedd to Colonel Richard&#13;
Hampton for $S50.&#13;
In the Shippen correspondence, published&#13;
a few years ago, there are several&#13;
references to Mount Pleasant. I n&#13;
1785 it; a letter from Mrs. Arnold to&#13;
her father it appears that Arnold had&#13;
an idea of privately getting title to the&#13;
property for his family. He changed&#13;
his mind, however, and suggested that&#13;
the place be sold at public sale for as&#13;
much as it would bring. In 1796&#13;
Mount Pleasant was sold, but for&#13;
barely enough to satisfy t h e mortgages&#13;
upon it.&#13;
Gen. Jonathan Williams, a revolutionary&#13;
patriot and commercial agent&#13;
of the United States in France from&#13;
1777 to 17S5, bought the country seat&#13;
and lived there for years. T h e&#13;
| property remained in his family for&#13;
J many years and was purchased by&#13;
the park commission by virtue of t h e&#13;
act. of 1867, which permitted the acquisition&#13;
of what are now park properties.&#13;
Growing Old.&#13;
It is ten p. m. They are seated In&#13;
the parlor. "No," she says, bowing&#13;
her head: "Pa says I am too young&#13;
to become engaged." It is just 1:30&#13;
a. m. They a r e still seated in t h e&#13;
parlor. Suddenly, from somewhere&#13;
upstairs, a gruff voice shouts. ''Henrietta,&#13;
if that fellow waits a little&#13;
longer you'll be old enough to arcept&#13;
his proposal!"—Woman's Home Companion.&#13;
Women always feel the deepest&#13;
pity for the happy woman who would&#13;
be unhappy if she knew t h e truth&#13;
about her husband.&#13;
Curious Personalities of Inventors.&#13;
Of course, outside the independent&#13;
aud salaried professional inventors is&#13;
the great army of men who, while&#13;
actively, engaged in occupations embracing&#13;
every line of human endeavor,&#13;
develop new ideas, often of great&#13;
value, and just as &lt;^ften altogether oot&#13;
of their line of regular work, says&#13;
the Engineering Magazine.&#13;
An inquiry into the personalities of&#13;
a few dozen inventors, to whom patouts&#13;
have been granted during t h e&#13;
last year, shows some remarkable&#13;
facts. Among them, a sea captain&#13;
has patented a steering gear for automobiles,&#13;
while a carriage builder has&#13;
invented a ship's capstan.&#13;
A blacksmith has papers for a fishing&#13;
reel; a shoemaker for a typewriter;&#13;
a physician for a door lock;&#13;
and an undertaker for a hoisting derrick,&#13;
and many others show just a s&#13;
strange deviation*, from their regular&#13;
walks of life. •&#13;
The best preparation for the future&#13;
is the present well seen to.—George&#13;
MacdonaldL&#13;
Has Nothing to. Mourn For.&#13;
Man says that he Is « reasoner aurt&#13;
.hat woman is not. Considering how&#13;
much nicer she is, reasoning faculties&#13;
must be a great handicap.&#13;
w "&amp;:.:&#13;
Ifr&#13;
*VHP:W r&#13;
» . , ! •&#13;
... »• m*tyn**im*V - •tV.-Krr-TrTflirwrrw'&#13;
Site § uwkneg |!tepatefc&#13;
F. L. ANDREW3 A CO. HKOHKILTU&#13;
THURSDAY, .IILNK 'J7, 19U7.&#13;
The biography' oi" Hurry Orchard&#13;
HittkeH t h e Jeasc J timet* stories&#13;
Hound like exploitsnf amateurs.&#13;
I'll stop your, y o u r i»it i ri lr«e. To&#13;
show yi u fii st ' what my Pink I'ain&#13;
T a b l e t s can do. 1 will in;n! you tine&#13;
a T r i a l P a c k a g e o! t h e m D r . S h u u p V&#13;
lleitdacbe '1'aldHts. _ N e u r a l g i a , Headache,&#13;
Tool liar he,- i V n u d p a ; n s , etc.,&#13;
are dues alone, t o . idocd.• c o n g e s t i o n .&#13;
i)i . ShoojOs .Headacjie T a b l e t s s i m p l y&#13;
kill pain liy coH-xino ".way t h e utimil&#13;
ura! bipod pie-ssiire. T h a t is all,&#13;
/\ (1 d r e &gt; •- Dr. Slump, Kaeine,&#13;
Wis. So'd l.y All D e n i e s .&#13;
I W C . T . U&#13;
Juliied hy IUC- I'iuukiu'y W. &lt;:. T . V&#13;
| funuuued Uuiii lani wat-k]&#13;
Districts t h r e e mid four m a d e a&#13;
net gain of over I DO members.&#13;
The p r e s i d e n t s of these districts,&#13;
Mrs. AHIIH Cleveland of Montgomery&#13;
and Mrs. E. L. Calkins of&#13;
Kulanio/oo, j^ave short synopsis of&#13;
tlie work dune d u r i n g the year.&#13;
Wednesday m o r n i n g a short interesting&#13;
talk WHS .given by Mrs.&#13;
liosetta T b u r u i a n of J a c k s o n , national&#13;
s u p e r i u t e n d a n t of work&#13;
a m o n g colored people. Mrs.&#13;
T h u r u m i i is o n e of t h e best known&#13;
g » » » » • » » . » » . . • »'i&gt; » I « I B&#13;
A S t o r y - o f Old j&#13;
5«; .-*-..-•&#13;
[ O r i g i n a l . . ]&#13;
T h e r e an- p a r t s ol New York. w h e r e&#13;
i t\ e belter c l a s s e s of the curly inhabit&#13;
tuils oim; lived, now being t o r u d o w n&#13;
lu m a k e w a y lor busbies., blocks. One&#13;
of llii' last io be demolished w a s (lie&#13;
\ t i n (Jenkiu house, originally buili in&#13;
What w a s t h r u the c o u n t r y .&#13;
In llie e a r l y pari ot the ulueieenl&#13;
century t h i s house w a s already more&#13;
t h a n HH» y e a r s old. l'msaing t h e door&#13;
way, wltti w i n d o w s ul eaeb side and&#13;
a n a r e h e d o n e uliuvc u u n i v e r s a l con&#13;
struetiou d u r i n g the s e v e n t e e n t h and&#13;
e i g h t e e n t h c e n t u r i e s one would enter&#13;
a laryo s q u a r e a p a r t m e n t from whieli&#13;
a staircase, t u r n i n g at ri&gt;;lii angles, led&#13;
c o l o r e d w o r k e r s i n t h e W . C T . U . • t u t h e s e r i a l story. Directly opposiie&#13;
W o r k . I t h e door, b e t w e e n the hist a m i second&#13;
fore. I n s t e a d were simply colored&#13;
p a n e s g i v i n g no picture at all. l i e&#13;
w a s tnmkiiiK t h a t t h e revelutlon inu.-d&#13;
h a v e been s u p e r n a t u r a l w h e u A a no&#13;
c a m e d o w n t h e wtulrcuse und, s w l u . :&#13;
t h e w o n d e r on his lace, said:&#13;
" F a t h e r h~ :&gt; told m e all. T h e sou &lt;f&#13;
my uiurU«r»il uneestor, his in hid mi&#13;
b a l a n c e d by tUe vrline, had t h e .\ in&#13;
dow m a d e in I!:* land with a picture&#13;
vt the m u r d e r in the KIUHS, rwtiolriii.^&#13;
a s t r o n g Ifudit to briu;;- it out. F a t h e r&#13;
considers it all so many yv«or»tlous&#13;
back not to be a bar between tue two&#13;
b r a n c h e s of t h e family. B u i n o w t h a t&#13;
I know It a n d could not b r i n g myself&#13;
to m a r r y a Van t l e n k l n he will not&#13;
1 Insist and h a s pdven his c o n s e n t to o u r&#13;
union. KL1SK R. 1IAKHISON.&#13;
F r e s h A " r S o c i e t y .&#13;
nittuy lives. ' ' '&#13;
The work is conducted in m a c k&#13;
the same m a n n e r as in o t h e r large&#13;
cities, t h a t is, t h e Society providing&#13;
transportation to a n d from&#13;
the homes, as well as incidental&#13;
expense, while t h e homes are p r o -&#13;
vided g r a t i s by charitably inclined&#13;
residents of the small towns und&#13;
farmers, who are interested in doing&#13;
s o m e t h i n g for poor children.&#13;
There is no expeuse or obligation&#13;
upon those t a k i n g children, excepting&#13;
t h e i r board and keapiug&#13;
for the time being. G r e a t care is&#13;
exercised in the sending of children,&#13;
and every effort is made to&#13;
The 1* resident may use no&#13;
stronger expression' t h a n " B y&#13;
(Jeort'e" but it has been disclosed&#13;
M i^w i » i • - i i p i auirle, w a s a w i n d o w oi' s t a i n e d ^lass.&#13;
rs. D o r a Bliss, president of " * • , ,,,„,_&#13;
' ^ ' Only t h e family occupying t h e house&#13;
sion of " W h a t I would like to see&#13;
incorporated in t h e revised constitution&#13;
of Michigan." S o m e clauses&#13;
m e n t i o n e d were prohibitory&#13;
t h a t he can emphasize it. at any j l a w H g H i n s t t h e l i q u o r traffic,&#13;
i p u c k ; s t r i g e n t laws against use and sale&#13;
ty is ai-rangiug to commence the&#13;
season's work. D i n i n g t h e past&#13;
eleven years upwards of 2,^)0&#13;
the sixth district, led in a discus-j knew that it was stained, localise a | children have been sent out for a&#13;
c u r t a i n w a s a l w a y s kept over it. Why t w o w e e k s ' v a c a t i o n i n t h e c o u n -&#13;
this w a s d o n e no one seemed to know. J ,. , . , , 1 , , , ,&#13;
" , ,.,, ,, ,, r ,, , H,.,f try at a eost ot little more than&#13;
It w a s a t r a d i t i o n ot t h e family t h a t&#13;
t h e window must he kept coyered.&#13;
time with.&#13;
acting LMin&#13;
a rt • m a r k a M e "&#13;
disal&gt;led. with&#13;
! !u&gt; luntj^ a m i . i h r o a t .&#13;
iflp me, and all hope&#13;
IN ' M M -kable Kt'M'iic.&#13;
riii' t r u t h :- , t i , i n ^ e r t!ian liidion,&#13;
[i'a- on. i u: ;•&gt;• l&gt;e:ui deiinui^trated in&#13;
t h e l i t t l - tn'-vn of I'Ydora, T e n n . , t h e&#13;
re-. I- tue o f t ' . \ \ I'eppe r. He wiites.:&#13;
k' i sva- in 1'i'ii, cnt ii ely&#13;
tieinori'liaiO'- &lt;•' ' '&#13;
J hi.-* ors till U"i '&#13;
hii'i lU'il when&#13;
K m u ' - New I i&#13;
relief came,&#13;
ceased : t h e t»let&#13;
idlv, and in t . i c e weeks .1 was a b l e to&#13;
^'0 to Arurl&gt;." t i i u i r a n t - ' e d c u r e - t ' o i *&#13;
LMUL.M.- a n d enlds. 50e. a n d $ 1 . a*- F .&#13;
A. S i l l e r ' s !»iutr &gt;tore. T r i a l bottle.&#13;
free.&#13;
I i&gt;etrail » t a k i n g D r .&#13;
ejiviry. T h e n i n s t a n t&#13;
TIM&gt; cou^r h inur soon&#13;
intr d i m i n i s h e d r a p -&#13;
t i n e hot s u m m e r night- it w a s about ( ) f [{H l u a i e t i c i a r i e s&#13;
IS'JU Anne van t!eukin and Kobert ; . ,. , , , ,&#13;
:,. , ,,, , ,,„ , p e r m a n e n t , comfortable tiomjs,&#13;
WITH, a young naval officer w ho had l ' , '&#13;
sei'ii servii-e in the war of ism, were ' and many have remained tliiotighof&#13;
tobacco, severe laws against «i n i u -- *"*!»* apartment, whiel. was o u t t h e s u m m e r &gt;&#13;
, ,. , . . , . ' .. ! the living room of the family. Miss. . . e n - i -i.&#13;
gambling. Memorial services tor v a u ( ! t M i U i l l w a s t h o S(lk, prospective; 1 lie recipients ot this c h a n t y&#13;
W. C. T. U. workers who have heir to her parents' estate, and they have no other chance of g e t t i n g&#13;
died d u r i n g the year was led by ; lw.1 set their hearts on her marryhig ' HW t -l l o u l c r o w t ] e a and uusaui-&#13;
" [Hubert van Uenkin, a descendant of. ,. ., , ., ,&#13;
Mrs. J o h n s o n of Flint. -another branch of the family, who | t a i T Blirronndiugs, are the child-&#13;
At t h e afternoon session, de- possessed a farm on the northern end ; ren of t h e worthy poor, and t h e&#13;
p a r t m e n t r e p o r t s were made.; f ^anhattmi ^ ^ j ; l j ^ ^ Pro11^-1 short stay in the country has a&#13;
secure only those who will prove&#13;
The Michigan Fresh Air Socie-1 Batibfactory in every way.- Surely&#13;
there must be a large n u m b e r of&#13;
kindly disposed people in this vicinity,&#13;
who would be pleased to&#13;
co-operate in such a worthy cause.&#13;
F u r t h e r particulars can be obtained&#13;
by addressing the Secre-&#13;
#1.01.) per c a p i t i . Quite a n u m b e r t t t r H l .y &gt; Dli. J A M E S A. P O S T , 11.4&#13;
have found , Biiim S t j Detroit, Mich.&#13;
Detroit, h e a l t h a n d heredity Mrs.&#13;
S. M. B o w e r m a n , Medical t e m p e r -&#13;
ance by Mrs. Mary B. F o l s o n .&#13;
Mrs. L. T. Field, the evangelistic&#13;
s u p e r i u t e n d a n t , led an interesting&#13;
discussion on " A r e the laws of&#13;
Michigan a d e q u a t e for the pro-&#13;
Citiit iiiutMl X e x t W e e k .&#13;
The Republican p a r t y can look , tection of t h e lunne."&#13;
the United Slates all over a n d not&#13;
be able lo fit:d a man that can&#13;
pull the votes of the people for&#13;
presided! like Koosevelt. It may&#13;
not be the proper t h i n g according&#13;
to polities to i;ive him t h e third&#13;
A Missouri editor says that men&#13;
swear to keep from crying and&#13;
women cry to keep from swearing ment," said the ffirl&#13;
term, but he is the man needed rand neither one has any sympafor&#13;
the next president,to carry on. thy for the o t h e r ' s expression of&#13;
the work already begun.&#13;
There is no &lt;-a-e of indigestion, no&#13;
m a t t e r how i r r i t a b l e or how o b s t i n a t e&#13;
that svii; not be speedily relajved by&#13;
t h e u&gt;e &gt;.t S'-odol. T h e m a i n fact.&#13;
or in c u r u i e t h,n stonwudi o\ a n y diso&#13;
r d e r is n.~:, and the only way to get&#13;
xe~t i- to ; i i f u a ' ' y digest t h e trod tor&#13;
t h e -toinni li it-elf. Kodol will do it.&#13;
It i&gt; a M.'.ieiiiitic p r e p a r a t i o n ot vegetable&#13;
acid- c o n t a i n s t h e very s a m e j u i c -&#13;
es tonnd in a h e a l t h y s t o m a c h . It&#13;
eonloin,-- to t h e P u r e Food a n d D r n g s&#13;
Law.&#13;
Sold by F . A. Slgler, D r u g g U t .&#13;
feeling.&#13;
- A p r o i h p t , p l e a s a n t , good r e m e d y&#13;
for c o u g h s a n d colds, is K e n n e d y ' ^&#13;
L a x a t i v e Coutrh S y r u p . It i- especially&#13;
v e c o n t m e n d e d for babies and childr&#13;
e n , but eood fo" every m e m b e r ol&#13;
t h e family. It c o n t a i n s no o p i a t e s&#13;
a n d doe- not c o n s t i p a t e , C o n t a i n s&#13;
honey and t a r a n d tastes n e a r l y as&#13;
good a&gt; m a p e l s y r u p . C h i l d r e n likw&#13;
it.&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler, Drnggtat.&#13;
The state health d e p a r t m e n t is&#13;
out with a circular in regard to&#13;
the sale of d a n g e r o u s fireworks,&#13;
toy pistols, cannon crackers, torpedo&#13;
canes, etc. They claim that&#13;
a greater n u m b e r of d e a t h s from&#13;
lockjaw results after our celebration&#13;
of the F o u r t h of J u l y than at&#13;
any other time. T h a t the increase&#13;
of fatalities and casualties then&#13;
occurring can lie to a great extent&#13;
prevented is beyond q u e s t i o n ; and&#13;
t h a t it should bo prevented is t h e&#13;
responsibility of the c.ival officials&#13;
in every locality. T h e r e is- a&#13;
s t r i n g e n t law governing the sale&#13;
of such goods to children and it&#13;
be well for the officers and others&#13;
interested to look it up.&#13;
The Magic No. Ii.&#13;
N u m b e r thre..' i- a w o n d e r f u l m a s&#13;
cot for Ceo. H. D a r n s , ot Cedar ( t r o v e ,&#13;
Me., a c c o r d i n g to a l e t t e r which r e a d s :&#13;
•l Al*er suffering m u c h w i t h liver a n d&#13;
k i d n e y t r o u b l e , and b e c o m i n g gre.at.ly&#13;
d i s c o u r a g e d by rho failure to find relief,&#13;
I t n e d Kle-l/u; f i t t e r s , a n d as a&#13;
r e s u l t 1 a m a well m a n t o - d a y . T h o&#13;
first, bottle reLeved und t h r e e bottles&#13;
c o m p l e t e d t h e cure.'1 G u a r a n t e e d&#13;
best on e a r t h tor s t o m a c h , liver a n d&#13;
k i d n e y t r o u b l e s , by F . A. S i g l e r ,&#13;
D r u g g i s t . 50c.&#13;
ing to be of considerable value. In-&#13;
T h e d e p a r t m e n t s i n c l u b e d t h e " I , a w d , t o d a y it is w o r t h millions. Hut&#13;
b r a n c h . T h e L . T . L . by M i s s ; A u u e ' s h e a r t had been e x c h a n g e d for&#13;
C h a r l o t t e B a r n t i m of H a s t i n g s , j J ? f t t of &gt;-ou«g L l e u t e n u u t W r y u , and ,&#13;
n t h e m a t c h with her r e l a t i v e w a s re- |&#13;
w o r k a m o u n g t h e c o l o r e d p e o p l e | p u i s i v e to her. Nevertheless, having&#13;
b y M r s . F r a n c e s E . P r e s t o n of ! been b r o u g h t up to obey her p a r e n t s in&#13;
such m a t t e r s , a s girls were in those&#13;
days, she had no t h o u g h t of refusing&#13;
t h e m in t h i s instance. Besides, she |&#13;
realized t h e iniitortanee of doubling |&#13;
t h e family w e a l t h and k n e w t h a t W r y n J&#13;
had n o t h i n g but his pay in the navy.&#13;
One e v e n i n g W r y n w a s pleading a \&#13;
hopeless c a u s e . A n n e Vhis firm In her j&#13;
d e t e r m i n a t i o n to carry out t h e plan |&#13;
laid d o w n for her. !&#13;
"I h a v e used every a r g u m e n t , " said i&#13;
W r y n at last, ''and h a v e no more to&#13;
bring f o r w a r d . Wo sail, if the wind is&#13;
fair, t o m o r r o w for the Mediterranean,&#13;
and w h e n 1 return t hope I novel&#13;
shall r e t u r n you will belong to another."&#13;
' j&#13;
"You h a v e not used every argu-&#13;
T h e r o is one J&#13;
that is k n o w n only to the m e m b e r s of I&#13;
this family, and that Is only a tra- j&#13;
dition." j&#13;
" W h a t is it'.'" j&#13;
" T h a t a Y;in (Jenkln shall not marry j&#13;
a Van ( i e n k i n . "&#13;
"And wliy'.'"&#13;
"1 don't know. T w o Van (ienkin i&#13;
brothers c-ame to America a century |&#13;
a n d a h a l f a no. S o m e t h i n g occurred&#13;
b e t w e e n t h e m to give rise to this t r a - !&#13;
dition."&#13;
There w a s a p a u s e in t h e e o n v e r s a - '&#13;
tion, T h e lhaitenanl w a s thinking&#13;
how lie luighl use this information to i&#13;
a d v a n t a g e , the girl brooding over having&#13;
to aei contrary lit her wishes. A&#13;
storm w a s gathering without.&#13;
"Oil, \'&lt;&gt;v a breath of air!" Anne e \&#13;
claimed. - winging her fan,&#13;
"I'm g o i n g up the staircase- to oper,&#13;
the w i n d o w . "&#13;
"You c u i ' t . " S&#13;
"1 can I ry."&#13;
W r y n w o n t up to the w i n d o w and .&#13;
began a - e r i c s of j e r k s to open it. Tie&#13;
failed to do so, but t h e c u r t a i n that !&#13;
covered it, old and rotten, suddenly&#13;
came t u m b l i n g down. Satisfying him- i&#13;
self t h a t the w i n d o w w a s s c r e w e d to |&#13;
t h e c a s i n g , he gave up the a t t e m p t and&#13;
rejoined Miss Van (ienkin.&#13;
The s t o r m broke with g r e a t vi &gt;- !&#13;
lonce. T h e front door stood ajar, and&#13;
a gust of wind blew it wide open, at&#13;
the s a m e time e x t i n g u i s h i n g every&#13;
candle in a candelabra s t a n d i n g on a&#13;
talile. T h e r e crime a vivid flash of&#13;
lightning.&#13;
The lo\ ers were facing t h e window&#13;
and s a w a sight t h a t froze the very ,&#13;
m a r r o w in their bones. In the glass&#13;
w a s a furore of a man in the old 1 Hitch&#13;
j costume of two centuries before. He&#13;
j w a s falling b a c k w a r d with a poniard&#13;
I In his side, from the wound of which&#13;
spurted a red stream. Before him&#13;
stood t h e man who had slain him.&#13;
The p o r t r a i t s of both men h a n g on the&#13;
i walls In the Van (ienkin m a n o r house.&#13;
i They w e r e llie two b r o t h e r s who came&#13;
to A m e r i c a when M a n h a t t a n Island&#13;
J w a s sold by the I n d i a n s to the white&#13;
! men. T h e one who w a s slain w a s the&#13;
a n c e s t o r of Anna, the one who slew&#13;
him the a n c e s t o r of H e r b e r t van (ien-&#13;
| kin. T h e r e w;is but au InstHut's il-&#13;
! l u m i n u t l o n , then d a r k n e s s Anne&#13;
s p r a n g Into the a r m s of Robert. W r y n .&#13;
The n«*2.t morning the sun shone&#13;
brightly. W r y n went to the m a n o r&#13;
house to take leave tiefore sailing of&#13;
Anne v a n (ienkin. The c u r t a i n had&#13;
not b e e n put again over t h e stained&#13;
w i n d o w , and he wan surprised to see&#13;
n o t h i n g of the scene t h a t h a d turned&#13;
t h e s c a l e s In his favor t h e night be&#13;
wonderfull effect upon their&#13;
rfe Fired the Stick.&#13;
•*I h a v e tired t h e w a l n i n g stick I've&#13;
cat tied over -1() \ e . i i - , on a c c o u n t of a&#13;
irore t h a t resisted t very kind of t r e a t -&#13;
m e n t , u n t i ! I h m d I5uc!;l«n's A r n i c a&#13;
S a l v e ; t h a t ha,- healed tlm sort; a n d&#13;
m a d e me a h a p p y man,'1 w r i t e s J o h n&#13;
G a r r e t t , ot N o r t h Mills, N . ('. G u a r -&#13;
a n t e e d for Piles, H u m s , e t c , by F, A .&#13;
health, b r i n g i n g h a p p i n e s s i n t o ' Sdgler, druggist. 25c.&#13;
H i n t M o t T n k e n ,&#13;
"l-'rom i he --raiimiai ical s t a n d p o i n t , "&#13;
said the fair maid with the lofty forehead,&#13;
" w h i c h (in you consider correct,&#13;
'I had r a t h e r go home' or '1 would&#13;
r a t h e r go home'.'' "&#13;
" N e i t h e r , " p r o m p t l y responded t h e&#13;
y o u n g man. "I'd m u c h r a t h e r stayh&#13;
e r e . "&#13;
W hen ymi tee&#13;
take a DeVVitt-&#13;
S m ;•&#13;
tin; need of&#13;
Little e a r l y&#13;
• a ' e pnl&#13;
a mil&#13;
Hiset.&#13;
n r e pill. Ka-y&#13;
a n (1 effective,&#13;
P l L&#13;
t o t a k e - p ' e a - a n t&#13;
Drives a w a y h e a d a c h e - .&#13;
Sold by F. A. Slgler D r u s t f i t&#13;
G R A N D&#13;
T R U N K&#13;
f^ ,i 11 vv a y&#13;
*i, y s t c m&#13;
E X C U R S I O N S&#13;
to&#13;
N o r f o l k , V l r A I n l a .&#13;
VADRaIOiUlSy ROuUpT EtS o N o v . 3 0&#13;
S A R A T O G A S P R I N G S , N. Y&#13;
4. .-&gt;. n K n h i h ' :- I ' e m p l o r&#13;
I w l v&#13;
n i i v&#13;
P H 1 L A I J L L P H 1 A , P A&#13;
1 ^. l-'l, 1:&gt; o m l In - -• }',. [• ( ). 1&#13;
B O S T O N . M A S S&#13;
on 'J7 oiid '.'o - \ l . o i i l Moinc&#13;
\ \ V r k ,&#13;
&gt;peci.il indui i-nii'ui s iii low round trip&#13;
r.il.cs t o ' I ic \ \ V s l oiul Nor t.!n\-c.s f.&#13;
Uovawl ' r i p &gt;,uinn icr 1 our i:-1. t icke"..- to&#13;
Print• ip, 0 e i i u i i i i a i i e n d New l i n u l . u u l&#13;
p o i n t s on sole a.iil\' aft.^-r -lunt: 1st-&#13;
Uet.uni limit.. ( i c t o b e r 31s: .&#13;
Libi-ral s t o p - o v e r s .&#13;
A Big Washing&#13;
In Six Minutes.&#13;
The above \H nv ii&#13;
Washer the only&#13;
lustration of the "1000 (iravity"&#13;
washing nuichine which will&#13;
wash a tubfull of dirty clothes in six minutes.&#13;
The nmnufacturow of thin machine have so much&#13;
faith in it, that they offer to send it to any reliable&#13;
party on M days free trial. If the machine is unsatisfactory&#13;
at the end &lt;»!' the )50 days, yon can send&#13;
it back to T h e 1000 Wnshei&#13;
will pny I lie frieght charges&#13;
11 w o n ' t c o s t v e i l ii c e n t&#13;
(Company,&#13;
lioth ways,&#13;
except foi'&#13;
stamp. \\ rite tolny 1&#13;
and they&#13;
a postage&#13;
* v . l . • &lt; &lt; - - • • "&#13;
THE ' 1 9 0 0 ' ' WASHER CO.,&#13;
BiNGHAMTON.NY.&#13;
•*-Vi&#13;
r-A-WAH •unr w*t\ irBI'Mn&#13;
The Rellal.lr In.Uan&#13;
O L O O D P U R l l l t R&#13;
I am for MEN,&#13;
WOMEN ana&#13;
CHILDREN&#13;
Instant relief to sufferers of&#13;
Rheumatism,KidneyTrouble,&#13;
Stomach Disorders.&#13;
Get. a bottle to-day/ Is purely a vegetable compound. Mild&#13;
in effect h u t o n e t h e m o s t effectual r e m e d i e s k n o w n f o r r e -&#13;
s t o r i n g flic e n t i r e s y s t e m . Tt i s d e r i v e d from n a t u r e , n o t&#13;
c o m p o u n d of d r u g s a n d c h e m i c a l s t h a t o n l y a l l a y t h e p a i n ,&#13;
but cures to stay cured after all ao-called " s c i e n t i f i c " treatm&#13;
e n t s have failed.&#13;
For sale by druggists. Send for circulars. Address,&#13;
I N D I A N M E D I C I N E C O . , M i l f o r d , O h i o .&#13;
More Money for Eggs p under most any conditions. There is a lot of money to he made&#13;
p in the i-r.; business if conditions arc. riidit. There is no reason&#13;
S why F a r m e r * and P o u l t r y U n i s c r S s h o n l d not make -just as good&#13;
H pro!its on their investments as any other line of bn:--me-s, and it is&#13;
possible for them to do so. The price of eggs during this winter&#13;
months is double and sometimes more than double that paid&#13;
during t h e summer month*. The only way to t a k e advantage, of this advance is&#13;
to hold s u m m e r eggs for winter prices. That fresh eggs can lie k e p t from six to&#13;
nine months or more has been proven by careful testing with&#13;
HACER'S ECC PRESERVATIVE&#13;
and a n y o n e using this Preservative need never sell a dozen eggs for anything b u t&#13;
the highest market price. Send for ^Sample ami Circulars telling you all about it,&#13;
JHACER ECC PRESERVING CO., - St. Louis, Mo.&#13;
X&#13;
* • % &gt; * . .&#13;
• &gt;*"•&#13;
1 feyfc*::-; - '•&#13;
A Fortuufttc Texan.&#13;
Mr, E. W. Uoodloe, of 107 at. Louib&#13;
St„ UUIUH, Tex. nayit: ' lu the p«u»t&#13;
year I Lave beorne acquainted witb&#13;
Dr. Kind's New Lite Pills, and no laxative&#13;
I ever betore tried so effectually&#13;
disposes or malaria and billiuuant-.ss.'&#13;
They dun'r nr:ud ui Kripe. 25&lt;r. tit&#13;
F. A. Siller's dru^.' *iore.&#13;
The lists or I-hiijli.sJi authors&#13;
WW&amp;i give the tlth'H of over U U d UJt'"'&#13;
H»ys on "Solitude." ^° litHMXls&#13;
Aft the news for 11.00 per year.&#13;
Subscribe tor the P*aekney Dlapatch.&#13;
TENTS&#13;
P R O C U R E D AN D O " T E N D E D . , ^ l l J m o d e l t&#13;
draw 111,.-0: ]j!ioCo.turt*••&gt;!' • \ .-• i -ii Ktidrret) report.&#13;
Free advice, luw to uliuila ii.itenw, trude rnarhn, |&#13;
cypyriHliUJ, LUi, JN ALL C O U N T R I E S .&#13;
Business direct with Washington saves time,]&#13;
money ami often the patent.&#13;
Patent and Infringement Practice Exclusively.&#13;
Writo "r come to u* at&#13;
tttS Ninth Btrwt. op p. UnlUd •tatetJ'ataat 911»,&#13;
W A S H I N G T O N , D. C .&#13;
i1&#13;
Piles get quick apd certaia rjliot&#13;
from Dr. Sboou'tJ Magic Ointment.&#13;
Please noteit ib made alone for Filet),&#13;
and its action is positive and certain.&#13;
Itcbiug, paiulul, protruding or blind&#13;
piles disappear like uia^ic by its use.&#13;
LttiKf nickle»capped glass jar 50 cents&#13;
.Sold by All Dealers.&#13;
A demonstration In handling bees&#13;
will be i-'iven each day in the apiary&#13;
exhibit. This part of the State Fair&#13;
exhibits la constantly growing year by&#13;
fear.&#13;
Free, for Catarrh, juat to prove&#13;
merit, a Trial size Box of Dr. Shoop's&#13;
Catarrh Remedy. Let me bend it&#13;
now. It is a snow wbite, creamy,&#13;
healing, antiseptic balm. Containing&#13;
such l.ealiug ingredients as Oil&#13;
Eucaliptus, Thymol, Mentbul, etc., u&#13;
gives instant and lasting relief to&#13;
Catarrh of the nose and throat,&#13;
ilake the tree test and see lor your&#13;
suit what this preparation can and&#13;
will accomplish. Address Dr. 8hoop&#13;
Kaciue, Wis. Large jars 5(J cents&#13;
St a t e o f M i c h i g a n , the. p r o b a t a c o u r t fur&#13;
the c o u n t y of Livingotou,- At aaeeBiou of uaid&#13;
(Joart, held at t h e P r o b a t e Office in the Village of&#13;
Howell lu uaid 'Jouuty, on the "ilind day of J u n e&#13;
A. u. 1U07. Present, H u u . A r t h u r . A . M o n t a g u e ,&#13;
H e r F i r » t B i r t h .&#13;
Black Sarah was busily employed&#13;
about our northern kitchen, remarked&#13;
Judge of Probate, lu the matter of the estate of j a pL'oiuiiieut housekeeper, when I had&#13;
occasion to go out there and by way&#13;
of being pleasant said:&#13;
'You are from the south, are you&#13;
not, SarahV"&#13;
"haw, yes, miss!" was the answer.&#13;
"lioru In the south'."" I continued.&#13;
"Originally bawu In Itichmond,&#13;
miss," was the astonishing reply.—&#13;
Header Magazine.&#13;
j J AM KB JJOVLK, deceased&#13;
i J o h n D untie IIUVIUK tiluU in said court&#13;
: his tiual account aw executor ot said t "date, a u d&#13;
hia petition pruyiuy for t h e allowance thereof.&#13;
1 I t in ordered, t h a t F r i d a y , the l'Jtu day of J u l y&#13;
j A. 1)., 11)07, at tun o'clock in t h e n i r e n o o u , at uaid&#13;
! probate office, be and ib hereby a p p o i n t e d foi&#13;
. e x a m i n i n g a u d a l l o w i n g said account.&#13;
It la f u r t h e r ordered, t h a t public n u ' i c e&#13;
thereof be j^ivwu by publication of a copy uf&#13;
t h i s o r d e r , for t h r e e euceeasive weeks previous t o&#13;
i eald day of h e a r i n g lu t h e Piueltney Dibi'Ai'c H a&#13;
newspaper p r i u t e d a u d circa ated in *aid county.&#13;
ARTHUR A. MONTAGUE,&#13;
Judge of Probate. 2y&#13;
:±:'~.-\&#13;
y^yw&#13;
II I ni*iM ff1&#13;
Coffee- ^ • • : ' ' ' ^ M:.:/-:i::f '; 'v' ''v$$&#13;
- ' l •"!*&amp;:&lt;&#13;
\ N&#13;
i-N; :'•:•-&#13;
;',(•;;.'.-.?&#13;
?w&#13;
\r&#13;
: ¾ ^ :&gt;;:'--&gt;^.&#13;
\N*&#13;
.A *&gt;&#13;
Sour&#13;
Stomach No appetite, k m of strength,&#13;
nen, headache, constipation, bad breetfc&#13;
general dobiUtgr, soar rietogs, and catarfk&#13;
of the rtomaoh era ail due to lodigoettoev&#13;
Kodol reUeveaindifeetion. Thto new dleor»&#13;
ery represents the natural Juices of digea&gt;&#13;
tlon as they exist In a healthy stomaofc&#13;
combined with the greatest known toast&#13;
and reconstructive properties. Kodol for&#13;
dyspepsia does not only relieve indigesttos)&#13;
and dyspepsia, but this famous remee&gt;&#13;
kelps all stomach troubles by cleanatagi&#13;
purifying, sweetening and strengthaoinf&#13;
the mucous membranes lining the stomach.&#13;
Mr. S . S . Ball, erf lUranswood, W . Va&#13;
I will mail you tree, to prove merit,&#13;
bauuples of my Dr. Hbeop's Kestorative,&#13;
and my. Book on either Dyspepsia,&#13;
the Heart or tLe Kidneys.&#13;
Troubles of the Stomach, Heart or&#13;
Kidneys, are merely symptoms uf a&#13;
deeper ailment. Don't make the com&#13;
mon error ot treating symptoms only.&#13;
Symptom treatment is treating tne&#13;
result not the cause. Weak Stomach&#13;
nerves—the inside nerves—mean h'to&#13;
mach weakness, always. And tbe&#13;
Heart and Kidneys as well, have their&#13;
controlling or inside nerves. Weaken&#13;
these nerves, and you inevitably, have&#13;
weak vital organs. Here is where D£.&#13;
Bhoop'ti itestontiYe has made* its fame.&#13;
No otrer remedy even claims to treat&#13;
tbe •'inside nerves"1. Also for bloating,&#13;
biliousoess, bad biealb or complexion,&#13;
use Dr. Shoups Restorative.&#13;
Write me today for sample and tree&#13;
Book. Dr. tahooo, Racine, Wis. Tbe&#13;
Restontive is sold by All Dealers.&#13;
All the newa tor | L 0 0 per year.&#13;
Subscribe tor tbe Plnckney Dispatch&#13;
^1u H c d t o Qtzy.&#13;
"You ventine int.) \V;iil strei't occa-&#13;
Hionnlly.' vii.i the laml).&#13;
"^f.v «• • '' answered tlio maguutP.&#13;
"Is iliffereut from yuurs. "I don't dar«&#13;
venture out of It for fear of what they&#13;
would do lu my absence." Washington&#13;
Star.&#13;
Weak Women l s&#13;
fcwil&#13;
T o w e a k a n d a i r i n f w o m e n , t h e r e i s a t l e a s t o n e&#13;
IT.&#13;
muirt b e c o m b i n e d . O n e is local, o n e is oonatiuv&#13;
w a y t o h e l p . B u t w i t h t h a t w a y . t w o teeatmeuta,&#13;
&amp;&amp;.&#13;
1 was troubled with sour stomach (or twenty r e a r s .&#13;
Kodol cured m e and we a r e now uatut tt to BBSS&#13;
i o r b a b r . "&#13;
Kodol Wserts What Y o n Eat.&#13;
Sorties only. R e U e r e s Indigestion, sour stoaaasa*&#13;
belchint of gas, etc.&#13;
P V e p a r a d b y E . O. D e W I T T &amp; O O . . OHI0AO6V&#13;
Sold by F. A. Sigler, Drugglirt&#13;
Use McLaughlin's XXXX&#13;
Coffee Every Day Because—&#13;
McLaughlin's XXXX Coffee is always&#13;
uniform in quality and properly blended&#13;
and roasted.&#13;
You do not get good coffee one day and&#13;
poor coffee the next.&#13;
The handy air-tight package and the glazing&#13;
of pure sugar keeps this coffee clean and s&#13;
fresh, protected from dust, dirt and foul odors.&#13;
Each package is one pound full weight.&#13;
McLaughlin's XXXX Coffee is Sold by&#13;
W . E Murphy&#13;
W . W . Barnard&#13;
H. M. Wiliiston&amp; Co.&#13;
RTATK &lt;»f MICJIIOAN; T h f l'rohatt? C o u r t for l h e&#13;
_ C o u n t y of L i v i n g s t o n . At a session of s a i d&#13;
court, held at the p r o b a t e oltioe in t h e village of i&#13;
'Howell, in »aid eo'.inty, on the 'Mil ilay &gt;&gt;f J u n e&#13;
.vnli'07. r r e ^ e u t , A rtliuv A, &gt;ronta^ue, J u d ^ e i&#13;
of P r o b a t a , i II t h e m a t t e r of the estate uf&#13;
Knci.ui L. S M I T H , deceased !&#13;
Silas M. S m i t h h a v l p ^ filed in &gt;aid court his i&#13;
petit ion prayini; that a eertain i n s t r u m e n t in writing,&#13;
juirportinjc to he t h e last will and testament&#13;
of snid deceas' d, now on tile in eaid court h e&#13;
admitted to p r o b a t e , an 1 that t h e a d m i n i s t r a t i o n&#13;
of Hiiiil cfliate he g r a n t e d to l'lora .1. Smith or to&#13;
[ Home cither m u t a b l e ])traon&#13;
j It ir&lt; o r d e r e d , t h a t t h e 5th day of J u l y&#13;
I A. I). 19o7, at t e a o'clock in t h e forenoon, at eaid&#13;
i I'rohate Office, b e a n d ip liereby a p p o i n t e d for&#13;
hearing Bald petition;&#13;
And l U ia fur ther ordered tha t *p ublic notice&#13;
j thereof be ^iveti liy p u b l i c a t i o n of a copy of t h i s&#13;
j order for 3 wucceselve weeks p r e v i o u s to Paid day&#13;
i of hearing, in t h e Finckney D I S I ' A T C H , a newfp&#13;
a p e r , p r i n t e d and circulated in sdid c o u n t y .&#13;
A K T I I U K A. M O N T A I . C K ,&#13;
I t -7 Judtro of I ' r o h a t e&#13;
She $mkM)i gi^pauh&#13;
i*UaLlbUKlJ KVKKY IHUiWiJAV I J K M A b t i l&#13;
F R A N K . l_. A N D R E W S &lt;So C O&#13;
tUlTOHb *«u HHOHHItTOKtt.&#13;
S ' l b a c n y t i o a P r i c e $1 i a A d v a n c e .&#13;
i u t e r e d at. cue ij oacottic« a t 1'iuckney, M i c h l ^ a i&#13;
aa aecoud-claab m a i l e r&#13;
A-lvurii»in&gt;: r a t e a m a d e icnowu o u a p p l i c a t i o n .&#13;
BtiBliiena (Jardu, J4.0U p e r y e a r ,&#13;
r e a t t i a u d m a r r i a g e n o t i c e s p u h l i s h u d f r e e . i&#13;
A n n o u n c e c u e u t s of e n t a r t a i u u i e u t B m a y be p a u&#13;
tor, it ueaired, by p i ' j a e u t i n g l h e office with tick- i&#13;
eta of aduiibBion. l u caae t i c k e t s a r e n o t b r o u ^ i t&#13;
to t a e o t t i c e , r e g u l a r r a t e s w i l l b e c U a r f i u , j&#13;
A l l m a t t e r i n l u c a l n o t i c e c o l u m n w l l i o e c h . r v :&#13;
ed a t o c e n t s p e r l i n e o r fraction, t h e r e o f , foi eai. u ',&#13;
i a s e r t i o a . W h e r e n o t i m e its specified, a l l a o u c t ^&#13;
will be i n s e r t e d u n t i l o r d e r e d d i s c o n t i n u e d , aut.&#13;
| # i l l b e c h a r g e d f o r a c c o r d i n ^ l y , g j T " A l l c h a n g e t&#13;
I sjf a d x e r U s e m e n t s ML'ST r e a c h t h i e office ae e a r l ;&#13;
| DS T D K S U A T m o r n i n g t o i n s u r e a n l n o e r t i o n ih..&#13;
1 n a m e w e e k . I J on miAUA G /&#13;
| i n a l l i u b r a n c h e s , a s p e c i a l t y . We k a v e a l l k i m . ^&#13;
a n d t h e latest Btylee of T y p e , e t c . , which enables&#13;
us t o e x e c u t e all k i n d s of work, s u c h as Booke,&#13;
P a m p l e i a , Poatere, P r o g r a m m e s , b i l l H e a d s , ISoti&#13;
Ueada, s t a t e m e n t s , Cards, A u c t i o n Bills, e t c . , I D&#13;
s u p e r i o r s t y l e s , upon t h e s h o r t e s t n o t i c e , i'ricefcai&#13;
low as ^ o o d w o r k c a n be a o n e .&#13;
ALL UILL3 PAYABLE KIHMT Oi^ BVKRY MONTH.&#13;
t i o a a l . b u t b o t h a r e i m p o r t a n t , b o t h e s s e n t i a l&#13;
Dr. Bhoop's N i g h t Cure is t h e L o c a l .&#13;
Dr. Bhoop's Restorative, t h e Constitutional.&#13;
T h e former—Dr. Shoop'u N i g h t Cure—-is a t o p i c a l&#13;
m u c o u s m e m b r a n e auppoaitory r e m e d y , w h i l e Dr.&#13;
Bhoop's R e s t o r a t i v e ia w h o l l y a n i n t e r n a l t r e a t ,&#13;
m e n t . T h e R e s t o r a t i v e r e a c h e s t h r o u g h o u t t h e&#13;
entire system, seeking t h e r e p a i r of a l l n e r v e ,&#13;
all tissue, a n d a l l blood a i l m e n t s -&#13;
T h e " N i g h t C u r e " , a s its n a m e implies, d o e s i t s&#13;
w o r k w h i l e you bleep. It soothes sore a n d inflamed&#13;
m u c o u s surfaces, h e a l s local w e a k n e s s e s a n d&#13;
discharges, w h i l e t h e Restorative, eases n e r v o u s&#13;
e x c i t e m e n t , gives r e n e w e d v i g o r a n d a m b i t i o n ,&#13;
builds u p wasted tissues, b r i n g i n g a b o u t r e n e w e d&#13;
strength, vigor, a n d e n e r g y . T a k e Dr. S n o o p s&#13;
Restorative—Ta blets o r Liquid—as a g e n e r a l tonia&#13;
t o t h e s&gt; stem. l o r positive l o c a l h e l p , use a s well&#13;
Dr. tShoop's&#13;
N i g h t&#13;
'•ALL DEALERS."&#13;
THE VILLAGE DIREIIOKV&#13;
V I L L A G E O F F I C E R S ,&#13;
PUKBIUKNT&#13;
lilUSTJSEH S. J . Teeple,&#13;
J a m e s S m i t h ,&#13;
W . A. .Nixon &lt;&#13;
CLKKK.&#13;
TltKASUHEH&#13;
A s s K S h o l l&#13;
STKEKT C0MM1S810NEH&#13;
J . C Dunn&#13;
Ed. F a r u u m .&#13;
J ames Rociie.&#13;
'. V. VauWiuKle.&#13;
Uojjer C a r r&#13;
I. .V. Cadwell&#13;
i), W . M u r t a&#13;
M. Lavey&#13;
Health and Wealth.&#13;
I n s u r e d h e a l t h t o t h e a v e r a g e m a n m e a n s&#13;
g r e a t w e a l t h .&#13;
DR. JOHNSON'S&#13;
AFTER DINNER PILL&#13;
INSURES HEALTH. TRY IT.&#13;
IS PURELY VEGETABLE,&#13;
is&#13;
JOHNSONl&#13;
JTER-D1NM&#13;
PILL&#13;
2 5 C e n t&#13;
rttaT rtn i&#13;
ajiTW^ v.*&#13;
f a m a d o u a . u C&#13;
E r e c t i o n s ,&#13;
irftur rlian^nui*)&#13;
^JOHNSON&#13;
a n d w a s u s e d b y t h e D o c -&#13;
t o r for t w e n t y y e a r s in&#13;
a c t i v e p r a c t i c e , a n d is&#13;
c o n c e d e d by a l l h a v i n g&#13;
u s e d i t to b e t h e b e s t&#13;
Little Stomach Pill&#13;
o n t h e m a r k e t . I t ia a&#13;
P R E V E N T A T I V E of&#13;
S i c k H e a d a c h e ,&#13;
D y s p e p s i a , Dizzin&#13;
e s s , H e a r t b u r n ,&#13;
Bad T a s t e in&#13;
rnijjuauttf M o u t h , C o a t e d&#13;
T o n g u e , L o s s of&#13;
A p p e t i t e&#13;
a n d a l l o t h e r m o r b i d&#13;
c o n d i t i o n s a r i s i n g from&#13;
a d i s o r d e r e d s t o m a c h .&#13;
P R E V E N T I O N&#13;
is t h e o r d e r of t h i s d a y a n d a g e , a s it is m u c h&#13;
m o r e scientilie to p r e v e n t a d i s e a s e d c o n d i -&#13;
t i o n t h a n t o c u r e ii. Y o u c a n s e c u r e t h i s&#13;
L I T T L E P I L L of ANY FIRST-CLASS DRUGGIST&#13;
w h o will b e plea.-sod t o s e r v e y o u , 35 d o a e s for&#13;
25 c e n t s . D o n ' t t a k e s o m e o t h t r " j u s t a s&#13;
good " for t h e r e i s n ' t a n y o t h e r t h a t will&#13;
p l e a s e y o u a t all after t r y i n g thia o n e .&#13;
L. L. JOHNSON, M. D. Prop.&#13;
A t l a n t a , G e o r g i a .&#13;
l l K A L T l l Ui'PtCKH&#13;
A'lTOUMKV&#13;
M AltSil ALL&#13;
u r , U. t". t i n i e r&#13;
W. A. Carr&#13;
c nan. Lidert&#13;
(JHURCHL5.&#13;
M i i l ' U O i J l S T h i ' l b C O l ' A L C U L R C U .&#13;
ppmimic AS ins cool&#13;
Mortu'ftKC Sal*'&#13;
\ V I I E U I : . \ S default h a s been made iD the conditions&#13;
of a r e r t a i n mnrlpa^.i, w h e r e b y the power&#13;
of sale t h e r e i n has lieconii1 o p e r a t i v e , m a d e by&#13;
HKNRY T H I K B O L T and hie wife C A K O L 1 N E&#13;
THII'.ROLT, of Deerfiold, Livin^pfon County,&#13;
Michigan, to NELSON LAMll nf t h e Bfttnc place&#13;
aforesaid; b e a r i : ^ date March C'.tth, A . I ) . 1S8J,&#13;
and recorded in the office of t h e Retriater of&#13;
Deed-* for Livin^pton County, Michigan, in Liber&#13;
:rl of Mintages at paj^e oftl thereof on March ;Wth&#13;
A I), 1SS2 which said mortgage w a s duly a ^ i ^ r i e d&#13;
by NELSON LAM.R on t h e 10th day of A u g u s t ,&#13;
ISfiii to H E N R Y T H I E H 0 L T J l i which assignment&#13;
was recorded in t h e Ke^i«ter of Deed's otticn&#13;
tor the County of Livingston on t lie lOtli day of&#13;
August, ISffi in Liber So of .Mortage^ at pagv -17,&#13;
and by H E N R Y T H E I H O L T lh'. doly npsigned&#13;
to C A R O L I N E T H E i r . O L T on November :., 1 sOO&#13;
and recorded in t h e Ke^ister's Office, Office for&#13;
Livingston County on the i R h day of May, lS'.tS.&#13;
in Liber S."i of "Mortgages at p a ^ Ofo. And by&#13;
aun0a&gt; m o r n i u j ; ai iu;^io, a u u e v t r y a t i n u a j&#13;
uveuin^ a t i ;uii o ' c i o c a , i'ra&gt;er l u e e t i n ^ T n u i t '&#13;
Uay e v e n i n g s , b u u u a y s c u o o C a l c l o s e u t UIOTL&#13;
i n - s e r v i c e . M i s s -UAKV V A M E L K E T , S u p t .&#13;
i A O . M j l t l i i j A l ' i O N AL O l i L - ' U C a .&#13;
\*' liev. G. W. Myiue p a s t o r , .^ervio. e v e ; ,&#13;
a u u u a y u i o r n i a ^ s i iU:3u a u a e v e r y s u u u c ;&#13;
e v e n i n g at 7:0C o ' c l o c k . P r a y e r m e e t i n g 1 n..^-.&#13;
day e v e n i n g s . S u n d a y s c h o o l at c l o s e O I I U O I L&#13;
i n g a e r v i c e . Percy S w a r t h o u t , a u p t , , iloccc&#13;
l e e p l e a e c .&#13;
O R e v . M. J , Cumuierford, P a s t o r&#13;
every S u n d a y . L o w&#13;
higii m a s s w i t h s e r m o n at *&#13;
t d ;0U p . m . , v e s p e r s a n J&#13;
' j e r v i c d&#13;
m a s s a t ,":;iu o clo^ is&#13;
30 a. m . Catechia!1&#13;
J d i c t i o n a t 7 ;3U p . •.&#13;
SOCIETIES.&#13;
VaLVELESS AUTOMATIC&#13;
Stock Fountain&#13;
PAYS FOR ITSELF THE FIRST YEAR.&#13;
4 1&#13;
No Valves&#13;
or float3 to&#13;
g e t o u t o f&#13;
o r d e r .&#13;
Autematio&#13;
N e v e r f a i l s t o&#13;
w o r k . D o e s&#13;
n o t o v e r f l o w .&#13;
N o m u d o r&#13;
t i l t h . P u r e&#13;
c o o l w a t e r .&#13;
Guaranteed&#13;
T o d o a s&#13;
claimed.&#13;
&gt;&#13;
m h e A. O. 11. Society of t h i s pfcee, m e e t s ever&#13;
X t h i r d S u n d a y inttie ft. Alattaew i l a l l ,&#13;
J o n n T u o i n e y and M. T. Kelly, County D j l e g a t t .&#13;
| f l \ h . E W. C, 1'. U. meets t h e brst F r i d a y of e m l i&#13;
I J . m o n t h a t ' J : ¾ p . m, at t h e h o m e of Dr. U. E.&#13;
f Nigler. Jbivecyone i n t e r e s t e d in t e m p e r a n c e is&#13;
i coadially invited. .Mrs. Leal S i f t e r , Pres; -Mr;.&#13;
I r . t t a D u r t e e , S e c r e t a r y . '&#13;
p t i e C . T . A . H U Q B . si!ciet.y of t h i s p l a c e , n&gt;«.&#13;
Big Seller&#13;
Sold on 30 Dmya' Trtat.&#13;
MONET BACK IF NOT SATISFIED.&#13;
GEDGE BROS. IRON ROOFING CO.&#13;
Fountain St.. Anderson, Ind.&#13;
Y&amp;n ' . A K O I J N E T H E l f l O L T d n l v assigned to H E N - f e v e r y t h i r d S a t u r u a y e v e n m g m t h e r r. fc.v&#13;
r . V ^ I „ , . thew H a l l . J o h n Donohuo, I r e s i d e n t .&#13;
^ « ' \ HY T H E I B O E T .IK. on March VI, lfio; -md record | * ]&#13;
VAy 'Nd in t h e Office ot t h e Register of Deeds for Liv- I J T N R i l l T S O F M A C C A B K K S .&#13;
. ^ niiiston C o u n t v on Maridt 10. IW7 in inber ltd at ! X V M e e t e v e r y Friday e v e n i n g o n o r b e f o r e t u n I&#13;
6 3 Y E A R S '&#13;
E X P E R I E N C E&#13;
T H E G R E A T -&#13;
E S T O F A L L C E R E A L F O O D S .&#13;
N o f a d o r u n c e r t a i n m i x t u r e . A N a t u r a l F O O D&#13;
L A X A T I V E . A whoW: k e r n e l o f R y e t o e a c h flake.&#13;
A S K Y O U R G R O C E R F O R I T o r w r i t e : u s f o r o u r t h r t t S p e c i a l&#13;
Off e r f . A p o u n d p a c k a g e b y m a i l , p o s t p a i d , f o r 25 c e n t s . I t w i l l&#13;
p o s i t i v e l y c u r e t h e m o s t a g g r a v a t e d c a s e of c o n s t i p a t i o n . W r i t e t o - d a y .&#13;
MINNEAPOLIS CEREAL COMPANY,&#13;
H. H. Dopt. M I N N E A P O L I S , M I N N .&#13;
n Solkttto** W»ntmt/ /EV«rrjr*rAaw«.&#13;
P ^ f ^ ) • ? | B • • ? 1 | A p I E x p e r i e n c e is o n e of t h e jrroat^st factors in a l m o s t&#13;
t ^ k l ^ E i I m l H P I W E • a n y w a l k in life. I t in what, Rives t h e F a r m e r , Doc."&#13;
tor, M e r c h a n t a n d M e c h a n i c success. I n m a n u f a c t -&#13;
u r i n g It in a n all i m p o r t a n t e l e m e n t . W e a r e c a r r i a g e&#13;
m a n u f a c t u r e r s of o v e r twenty-five y e a r s ' e x p e r i e n c e&#13;
a n d w e claim t o k n o w t h e b u s i n e s s from A t o Z. W e&#13;
will s t a k e o u r r e p u t a t i o n t h a t w e m a k e a s jrood w o r k&#13;
for t h e m o n e y a s i t i s possible t o m a k e . O n r t w o&#13;
l e a d e n a r e o u r N o . 30 T o p B u g g y a t t h e p o p u l a r&#13;
p r i c e of $50.00 a n d o u r N o . fiO T o p&#13;
B u g g y a t fflO.00. N o t h i n g b u t t h e b e s t&#13;
g o i n t o t h e s e jobs in o r d e r t o m a k e&#13;
t h e m c o m e u p t o o u r s t a n d a r d . W r i t e&#13;
for full specifications, c u t s a n d referenoea.&#13;
D o i t to-day a n d s e e w h a t w e&#13;
c a n offer y o n for y o u r c a s h a n d save&#13;
a n d e a l e r profit*. W r i t e a t o n c e a n d&#13;
g e t o n r g r e a t offer.&#13;
J. A. HUNCERFORD A SON, Lapeer, Michigan,&#13;
t n ^ s t o n C o u n t y on March 10, li»o7 in inber ltd at&#13;
pat;e I'd 1. And whereas t h e mr.iii'U claim."•d to&#13;
be due on said Mortfti^e at this d.ite is the sum of&#13;
One h u n d r e d and eiqhty do lars a n d eighty five&#13;
cents (SlStl.S-*) of principal and interest and no&#13;
•=uit or proce?din^ bavin:,' been instituted to recover&#13;
t h e debt secured by said mortpacjft o r a n y&#13;
part thereof:&#13;
Therefore notice is hereby j;iveii that by virtue&#13;
of said power of sain and in p e r s n a n c e of t h e&#13;
statues in such ea&gt;e made and provided t h e said&#13;
nioi ttjace will he foreclosed by pule of t h e p r e m i s e s&#13;
therein descrihed at public auction to the highest&#13;
bidder at t h e West front door of the Court H o u s e&#13;
ii. t h e village of Howell in said County of T.iviii&gt;r-&#13;
&gt;tor that heintf the place ot holding t h e ' ' i r c n i t&#13;
Court for t h e County of Livingston on Saturday&#13;
The IHth day of J u l y A. 1&gt;. 1!V7 at 10 o \ lock in t h e&#13;
toivnoon ot said day, or so ininli thereof as mav&#13;
be n e c e s s a r y to pay t h e principal and i n t e n s t&#13;
ilue on saio IUOT tirade, the Attorney fee provided&#13;
tlirrem ami cost- of '-aid -ale. uf the following&#13;
i;e&gt;eribed premises, to w i t : c o m m e n c i n g twrnfv&#13;
rods Knst of the N o i t h w e s t eornei' of Section&#13;
tuciC.ytwo i-,VM in t o w n s h i p four , t ' Nortti of&#13;
lv'an^e 11 v» l.^) Enst M i e h i ^ i n , vunnin^' f hence&#13;
Sniitn ei^ht iodfl thence Eai't ,.i\ty rod-; t h e n c e&#13;
North eis:hf rods thepce West, to h o ^ i n i n ^ c o n - ,&#13;
tai nine; three acres o' land. I&#13;
H K N K i T U M r . O L T , .Tl,'..&#13;
.\ssii;iiie o ' t l . e Mort.-aL.-ee.&#13;
Hated, Howell, \ p r i l I, 1 '. 7. '•&#13;
W M . P . Y A N W I X K I . K ,&#13;
A t t o r n e y f o r A •&gt;• ^:._-nee&#13;
I 3Y-i&gt;tc Q C Sweet to Eat&#13;
L O A " V l 3 « 1 A Caaft Uml LuatM&#13;
Leetevery Friday e v e n i n g o n o r b e f o r e ftui&#13;
01 t h e m o o n at t h e i r h a l l i u t h e . S w a r t h o u t n l . i l '&#13;
Visiting b r o t h e r s a r t e . o r d i a l l y i n v i t e d . ,&#13;
t H A S . L. C A M I T . K L L , b i r k n i g h t C o n . m a n |&#13;
Livin^Bton Lodge, No.rti, P&#13;
C o m m u n i c a t i o n Tuesdav e v e n i n g , on or t h e t nil of t h e moon.&#13;
0'&#13;
&amp;'. A . M. K e g u U '&#13;
r hetort&#13;
Kirk Van Winkle, \V. M&#13;
K D E K OE EA.STEKN S T A R m e e t s e a c h m o n t h&#13;
t h e F r i d a y evening following t h e r e g u l a r E.&#13;
.% A. M. m e e t i n g , M R S . N K T T K V A U G H N , W . i i .&#13;
nK1&#13;
Vjflrst T h u r s d a y evening of eaoh M o n t h i n t h e&#13;
Maccabe^ h a l l . C. L . t t r i m e a V. C.&#13;
LA D I E S OE T H E M A C C A B E U S . Meat every 1*&#13;
a n d ;ird S a t u r d a y of each m o n t h a t i&gt;:Hf&gt; p ~m.&#13;
K. O. T . M . hall. Visiting s i s t e r s c o r d i a l l y in&#13;
v i t e d . L I L A C O N i W A Y , L a d y C o m .&#13;
' N I G H T S OK TMK L O Y A L itUAP.D&#13;
k E. L. Aniirews P. M, 1&#13;
T R A D E M A H K S&#13;
D f l ^ l C N S&#13;
C O P Y R I G H T ? &amp;.C&#13;
Anronr* s^ti.•''.:-j n sl.^tch nnrl d^cr';^-, 1 may&#13;
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lnvrc.nou is prohnblv pfitentdhte. O m i m u n i i *&#13;
«on^tricfly,Mn«dP!.f»al. HANDBOOK on P a t e n t s&#13;
p^nt free, ot 'est H t e m y for socurin* patent*.&#13;
I.irour^ t a k e n throuKh Munn A Co. r e o a t w&#13;
n v ' i i i nnticc, without charge, in t h e Scientific American. A h s n o s n m o l v Illustrated ww&gt;klT. T./»rvest clrerlntion&#13;
of anv ^eremitic Journal. Terms. $3 a&#13;
y e a r ; four months, $1. * . l d byal#-n«w^rk&gt;aipr%&#13;
MUNN iCo.3 G 'B r o a ^. New York&#13;
Branch Office, rto F S U Washlnpton I&gt;. C&#13;
BUSINESS CARDS.&#13;
H . F . S I G L E R M . D . C. L. SIGLER M. r&#13;
DRS. SIGLER &amp; SIuLER,&#13;
P h y s i c i a n s a n d SurK'Hon&gt;. All calls promptly&#13;
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POLL&#13;
IAUD C U R E THE L.U&#13;
«E COUCH&#13;
WITH ^&#13;
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Uiattit.&#13;
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WITH SEAL&#13;
^T DISPATCH OFFICE&#13;
Or, King's&#13;
r nNn er/^wON S OJMPiTsIOcN Gvsnr&#13;
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Giiaranteed for all THKOAT and&#13;
L U N G TROUBLES, or M O N E Y&#13;
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•'19*1' \&#13;
i g .T. .^ILIUIB. ^^UuK^aga • W i » t | 1^IL'*&lt;M»&lt;ilWW&gt;&lt;W—1½ &lt; ;•.!•» I£H5H» nT^IJr^^'Ji^^W^TTiWFTT^ I l l f c l I I I IPI&#13;
, . • ; * • .&#13;
ALL READY&#13;
MickeyFmn's&#13;
Big Fire&#13;
Cracker&#13;
i — i i — ^ - — — m i I - I I I i. i i H I . . • • i n — — — a&#13;
The explosion that wound up the&#13;
Fourth of July Celebration&#13;
on Cooney Uland.&#13;
Two mammoth firecrackers stood in&#13;
t h e window of Casey's grocery." They&#13;
were 12 inches long and proportionately&#13;
thick.&#13;
For a month before the Fourth of&#13;
July these gigantic Indicators of enthusiasm&#13;
had stood in the window like&#13;
British soldiers on dress parade, while&#13;
a predatory spider hung a filmy hammock&#13;
between them and calmly killed&#13;
his buzzing victims over two powder&#13;
mines.&#13;
The firecrackers were the admiration&#13;
and the envy of all the boys in&#13;
Cooney Island. It was seldom that a&#13;
youthful nose was not flattened against&#13;
the window pane in ardent covetousness.&#13;
But the price demanded by Casey&#13;
for the thunderers was prohibitive, so&#13;
far as the boys were concerned, and&#13;
there was not one of them patriotic or&#13;
courageous enough to invest 25 cents&#13;
in a single ecstatic explosion.&#13;
Said Mickey Finn timidly one evening&#13;
when he had been sent by his&#13;
mother to get a quarter of a pound of&#13;
tea and half a pound of pork:&#13;
"Mr. Casey, I suppose now, (hat&#13;
whin wan o' thim big fellows wlnt off&#13;
It would blow the stars out of tin;&#13;
sky?" his mind filled with blissful&#13;
thoughts of mighty explosions.&#13;
Casey stopped measuring out a half&#13;
pint of New Orleans molasses, raised&#13;
a monitor finger, and replied:&#13;
"Micky, my boy, I'd be afeerd to tell&#13;
you what would happen if I stood wan&#13;
o' thim big fellow^- out on the sidewalk&#13;
and touched the stem wid the&#13;
lighted end of a five cent ciga-ar. The&#13;
noise would be terrible, terrible, my&#13;
son. 'Twould make your head ring&#13;
like an anvil, and you would see&#13;
sparks like fireflies.&#13;
"Would it blow the house down?"&#13;
asked the boy in an awed whisper.&#13;
"No, I don't think it would," said&#13;
Casey. "It might shake the chimly&#13;
flown and break all the glass in the&#13;
In Ardent Covetousness.&#13;
Tvlnrlys in small ijiiTc.-i, and there&#13;
would be paper in the street s as&#13;
would fill an impty barrel o' flour. Oh,&#13;
but thim big fellows is mighty powerful,&#13;
Micky, mighty powerful. They&#13;
use them in China to kill murderers&#13;
and robbers. They put wan o' thim&#13;
big firecrackers bechune the teeth of&#13;
a murderer and make him light the&#13;
fuse wid his own hand and blow his&#13;
own head off. Thim Chinese is mighty&#13;
crool, Mickey, mighty crool."&#13;
This vivid description inflamed Mickey's&#13;
desire, which was Casey's motive&#13;
in telling it, fdr t h e incident occurred&#13;
on the eve of the Fourth, and Casey&#13;
was afraid that the big firecrackers&#13;
would be carried over the national holiday&#13;
and remain a loss on his hands.&#13;
In order to deepen the impression already&#13;
made upon the boy Casey permitted&#13;
him to handle one of the twins.&#13;
The boy's eyes had widened to&#13;
their utmost capacity when he was&#13;
outside the window, but now that he&#13;
could feel the red jacket his hands&#13;
trembled with the eagerness of possession&#13;
and lie would have given ten&#13;
years of his life to own it.&#13;
"Take it along wid you, Mickey,"&#13;
said Casey, cajolingly. "Thim crackers&#13;
were made in Chow Chow, in&#13;
China, for the Cooney Island trade,&#13;
and I want to get rid of thinT I have&#13;
on hand before 1 send another order&#13;
to Wan Lung, the haythin."&#13;
"But I have no money," said Mickey&#13;
sorrowfully. "My father is goiu' to&#13;
give me three bunches of little firecrackers&#13;
and a pin wheel, but 1 know&#13;
lie wouldn't buy wan o' thim big firecrackers&#13;
for me."&#13;
"Well," continued Casey, "you come&#13;
down here to-morrow mornin' and&#13;
carry in a half ton of coal for me and&#13;
I'll give you the big cracker."&#13;
The next morning Mickey was busy&#13;
for two hours carrying chestnut coal&#13;
in a nail keg and dumping it in Casey's&#13;
cellar. Just after noon, with a smile&#13;
covered with coal dust and a bosom&#13;
full of chuckles, he received his prize.&#13;
No grass grew under bis bare fee*&#13;
as he ran homeward, the preeiou.,&#13;
powder mine clasped to his bosom.&#13;
Holding the big firecracker aloft as&#13;
he darted through the kitchen door,&#13;
he exclaimed:&#13;
"Mother, I have it! Ain't it. a&#13;
beauty?"&#13;
"Well, I doni. see anything abiut it.&#13;
to be makin' a fuss over," said Mrs.&#13;
Finn, who, like most, mothers, had&#13;
no love for fireworks. "Now, don't, be&#13;
bringin' it nearer to me, as Mickey&#13;
ran toward heT. "1 don't, want, to be&#13;
blown into the middle o' next week.&#13;
Throw the dirty thing away! I'm&#13;
afeered o' me life while you have it in&#13;
your hands! Now, don't be goiu' near&#13;
the stove wid it! Arrah, ye little&#13;
spalpeen, will yc take it off the stove?&#13;
Take it off afore yo blow the roof off&#13;
the house!" and the frightened woman&#13;
ran into the bedmom and peered&#13;
through the keyhole.&#13;
With the recklessness of boyhood,&#13;
Mickey exclaimed, as he lit a match&#13;
and reduced hi3 mother to hysterics&#13;
by pretending to light, the firecracker&#13;
stem:&#13;
"You needn't be afeered, mother. I'll&#13;
nip it out afore it goes off."&#13;
In this simple fashion the afternoon&#13;
of the Fourth passed away in the Finn&#13;
household varied by the boy with occasional&#13;
visits to the neighbors, whom&#13;
he threw into a panic of fear by pre&#13;
tending to light the big explosive.&#13;
Mrs. Murphy and her three children&#13;
were gathered around the kitchen&#13;
table when Mickey placed the lighted&#13;
mammoth in the middle of the table.&#13;
Two of the boys went head first&#13;
through the window, while Mrs. Murphy&#13;
tried to crawl under the kitchen&#13;
stove.&#13;
All this excitement afforded the boy&#13;
a good deal of delight, but be reserved&#13;
for the evening the culmination&#13;
of his Joy. He intended to blow&#13;
his father up as he sat in his chair on&#13;
the back stoop.&#13;
Mickey thought it would he an inspiring&#13;
sight to witness his father flying&#13;
across the back yard and plowing&#13;
up the ground with hia nose. In&#13;
"order that he might hftvo an audienre&#13;
appropriate to so great an occasion,&#13;
Mickey had spread the news among&#13;
all the boys of the neighborhood, and&#13;
at nine o'clock 50 hoys ant on the&#13;
fence surrounding the hack yard. Mr.&#13;
Finn, tired of the excitement of the&#13;
day, had fallen asleep in his rocking&#13;
chair on the back stoop, when Mickey&#13;
lit the stem of the. big cracker and&#13;
placed it carefully under his father's&#13;
chair.&#13;
The moon shone brightly, illuminating&#13;
the grin on every boyish face.&#13;
Every ear was strained to catch the&#13;
faint hissing of the fuse and every eye&#13;
intent upon the sleeping man.&#13;
The fuse burned itself out, and the&#13;
silence and suspense was deepening.&#13;
Had Fallen Asleep.&#13;
A minute passed and another, until&#13;
Mickey could stand the strain no longer,&#13;
He reached down and lifted the&#13;
firecracker from beneath the chair.&#13;
As he held it up in the moonlight&#13;
to examine it, a mosquito lit upon his&#13;
father's nose and the old gentleman&#13;
iiwoke. Crabbing the firecracker from&#13;
his son's band he arose and holding it&#13;
aloft, he said:&#13;
"Hoys, there will be no explosion&#13;
to-night, I'm sorry to disappoint you.&#13;
I was afeered that Mickey might do&#13;
some harrum wid that big cracker, so&#13;
whin he wasn't lookin' this afternoon I&#13;
took the powder out of it and filled&#13;
it. wid clay. So, you see that the show&#13;
is over, and ye may as well go home&#13;
and go to bed. There'll be no more&#13;
explosions only what I give Mickey&#13;
wid a shingle afore I turn in. Good&#13;
night to ye all. Come around some&#13;
other night, whin there is somethin'&#13;
doin'."&#13;
FOURTH OF J U L Y DON'TS.&#13;
Don't allow the children to bend&#13;
over fireworks which will not "go off."&#13;
They sometimes do it. unexpectedly&#13;
with unfortunate results to the little&#13;
meddler.&#13;
* * •&#13;
Don't, neglect, to send for a physician&#13;
at once in the case of a serious&#13;
burn, to prevent a possible scar or&#13;
worse still, blood poisoning, from ignoifint&#13;
or improper treatment of the&#13;
wound.&#13;
* * *&#13;
Don't, forget to have gome remedies&#13;
for burns at. hand. When the skin&#13;
is not. broken by a burn scrape a raw&#13;
potato, place on a piece of soft, linen&#13;
and use as a poultice. Bicarbonate of&#13;
soda—the ordinary baking soda—is excellent,&#13;
for burns whether the skin&#13;
is broken or not. If broken apply the&#13;
dry soda, if unbroken dampen the soda&#13;
with water to make a paste and apply&#13;
to the spot. The pain will he instantly&#13;
relieved.&#13;
* * •&#13;
Don't leave the windows of a town&#13;
house open if it is to be left for the&#13;
day. Stray rockets and sparks may&#13;
find an entrance.&#13;
S X A M P L * OF T R U E CHIVALRY.&#13;
Modern Lover Proves Himself Equal&#13;
to Heroes of the Past.&#13;
There was a moment of profound&#13;
alienee. He was the first to speak.&#13;
"You are richer than 1 am," he faltered,&#13;
with emotion.&#13;
She bowed her head, replying nothing.&#13;
But now the true nobility of his&#13;
character manifested Itself.&#13;
"Yet for all that I am no better&#13;
than you are!'.' he cried, and folded&#13;
her to bis breast.&#13;
And when, her conscience accusing&#13;
her, she tried to tell him that not&#13;
only her father but four of her uncles&#13;
were Pittsburg millionaires, he Bealed&#13;
her lips with kisses, and would hear&#13;
nothing.—Puck.&#13;
* .&#13;
T H E REORGANIZED N E W YORK&#13;
LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY.&#13;
The new Board of Trustees of the&#13;
New York Life Insurance Company,&#13;
chosen by the policyholders under the&#13;
Armstrong laws, has taken charge of&#13;
the company's affairs and has begun&#13;
the work of reorganization.&#13;
In choosing the principal officers of&#13;
the company, the Board has adhered&#13;
to the idea that a life insurance company&#13;
should be managed by life insurance&#13;
men. The new president is&#13;
Darwin P. Klngsley, a college bred&#13;
man of good New England stock, who&#13;
has been in the company's service in a&#13;
variety of capacities for a period of&#13;
nearly twenty years. In the parlance&#13;
of life insurance, he "began with the&#13;
rate book" and has advanced step by&#13;
step up to his present position.&#13;
The first vice president of the company&#13;
is Thomas A. Buckner, who has&#13;
served the company for more than a&#13;
quarter of a century,—indeed has&#13;
never had any other business connection.&#13;
Associated with these men are&#13;
others long trained in the company's&#13;
service, each an expert in his own department&#13;
of work. Wm. E. Ingersoll,&#13;
who has for many years had charge&#13;
of the company's great business in&#13;
Europe, is one of the second vice presidents,&#13;
and will continue at the head&#13;
of the company's office in Paris.&#13;
Rufus W. Weeks, who has been in&#13;
the company's service for nearly forty&#13;
years, ranks next to Mr. Buckner as&#13;
vice president, and continuous as chief&#13;
actuary of the company.&#13;
The policyholders have expressed&#13;
their belief in this company in no uncertain&#13;
terms. The upheaval in life insurance&#13;
within the last two years has&#13;
resulted in a great deal of misunderstanding&#13;
and policyholders, alarmed on&#13;
matters which were not very clear to&#13;
them, have been disposed to give up&#13;
their contracts at a heavy sacrifice.&#13;
This has not been true in the New York&#13;
Life to any great extent. The company&#13;
had $2,000,000,000 insurance on&#13;
its books when the life insurance investigation&#13;
began, and while the laws&#13;
of tlit* State of New York now do not&#13;
permit any Qompany to write over&#13;
$1,-)0.000,000 a year (which is about&#13;
one-half the New York Life formerly&#13;
Aid), the company's outstanding business&#13;
still exceeds $2,000,000,000.&#13;
Policyholders generally will be still&#13;
further reassured by this action of the&#13;
Board, as it places at the head of the&#13;
company to protect their interests men&#13;
of thorough training and unexceptionable&#13;
character.&#13;
THUD&#13;
CHRIST]&#13;
WORLD&#13;
F A I T H F U L SERVICE. \&#13;
Woman Who Has Been Sixty Years 9&#13;
Sunday 8chooJ Teachar.&#13;
"In the teaching of a Blblt&#13;
t h e ' s e c r e t of longevity and tfeit&#13;
taining of a yftttfr&#13;
ful splrft with&#13;
gray hairs," says&#13;
Mrs. Mary A.&#13;
Wright, who for&#13;
nearly 60 years&#13;
has been a teacher&#13;
in the First&#13;
Baptist Sunday&#13;
Bchool in Barlington,&#13;
N. J. Mrs.&#13;
MHS. MAUY A. W r l « h t ' w h ° i 8&#13;
WRIGHT. now six years beyond&#13;
the "three score aud ten," took&#13;
her first Bible class in the Baptist&#13;
Sunday school in Burlington when but&#13;
16 years of age, and is still teaching,&#13;
says Christian Herald. She joined the&#13;
school when only eight and later,&#13;
when she was given a class, the girls&#13;
she taught were almost as old as herself.&#13;
She continued for some time as&#13;
an instructor of boys and girls; but&#13;
In later years she has devoted herself&#13;
to the teaching of adults, and her&#13;
Bible class for women has long been&#13;
the largest in the city. She is a remarkable&#13;
little woman and her faithfulness&#13;
and enthusiasm in her work&#13;
have served as inspirations to the hundreds&#13;
of younger teachers and scholars&#13;
In the Sunday school, and to many&#13;
others.&#13;
She •conies of a family many members&#13;
of which were prominent aa Bible&#13;
teachers. Her father was a minister&#13;
of the Gospel and her mother was one&#13;
of the first teachers In the First Baptist&#13;
Sunday school, organized in Burlington&#13;
in 1825. Her husband, the late&#13;
Noah E. Wright, was also an active&#13;
Sunday school worker, and for 40&#13;
years was connected with the same&#13;
school where his wife is still teaching,&#13;
and where he himself was, for&#13;
several terms, superintendent. Besides&#13;
being a teacher, Mrs. Wright i t&#13;
prominent in mission work.&#13;
Teachers and officers of tlm flnartij"&#13;
school and members of Mrs. Wrigfcfs&#13;
large Bible class tendered her a complimentary&#13;
reception recently. Speaking&#13;
of her career, Mrs. Wright says:&#13;
"I have made many mistakes in life,&#13;
but the teaching of the Bible is not a&#13;
mistake. One would suppose that&#13;
after so many years' study the Bible&#13;
would grow old and uninteresting,&#13;
but every time I read it I find something&#13;
new. When I started as a Sunday&#13;
school teacher I little thought that&#13;
I would spend so long a time in the&#13;
work, but had I my life to live over&#13;
again I would still teach a Bible class.&#13;
1 will give you a recipe for keeping&#13;
young. 'Teach a class in a Sunday&#13;
school.' "&#13;
mp*M^&amp;&#13;
The Mules Understood.&#13;
A story is told of Senator Knute&#13;
Nelson, who spent some of his early&#13;
years In a logging camp. He there&#13;
discovered the necessity of certain&#13;
emphatic language in order to make&#13;
mules move. "All varieties" of&#13;
tongues were in demand in that camp:&#13;
Scandinavian, German, Italian—but&#13;
none of the words used seemed to&#13;
have the explosive force to adjust&#13;
the tempo of the mule to the desired&#13;
&lt;-&gt;ace. Along came a strapping Irishman,&#13;
who used some popular expletives,&#13;
usually indicated In print by&#13;
ilank, blank, or . The mules&#13;
moved! "There's a language all&#13;
mules understand," said the Irishman&#13;
—"and it's not me mother tongue,&#13;
.xyther."—Joe Mitchell Chappie, in&#13;
National Magazine.&#13;
Good Advice.&#13;
Keep the wound open and send for&#13;
the doctor.&#13;
Historic Island for Sale.&#13;
Raasay island, in the Inner Hebrides,&#13;
which lies between the mainland&#13;
of Scotland and the Isle of Skye,&#13;
has failed to find a purchaser at the&#13;
upset price of $225,000 placed upon i t&#13;
Its name is the Scandinavian for "the&#13;
place of the roe deer," and the shootings,&#13;
with the mansion house and&#13;
grounds at the southern end, constitute&#13;
the chief value of the island.&#13;
Near the northern end are the rulnt&#13;
of Brochel castle, the residence of lti&#13;
ancient lairds, the MacLeods. lo&#13;
celtic lore Raasay has a place and in&#13;
England literature it la mentioned in&#13;
Samuel Johnson's "Journey to thf&#13;
Western Islands of Scotland."&#13;
Advanced.&#13;
"Hiram," said Mrs. Komkob to her&#13;
husband, who was reading the Weekly&#13;
Screech, "they say that Jones man&#13;
who has taken the farm next to oura&#13;
is mighty intellectual."&#13;
"I guess he is." replied Farmer&#13;
Kornkob. "He knows four different&#13;
| almanacs by heart." — Milwaukee&#13;
Sentinel.&#13;
Methodist China Mission.&#13;
The Methodist China mission in tha&#13;
Hingua conference reports .'1,251 members,&#13;
1,,SS2 probationers and 4,583 inquirers.&#13;
The increase during the past&#13;
year was ,'156 members, 262 probationers,&#13;
653 inquirers. The contributions&#13;
for the year were $.-),1.19 for pastoral&#13;
support, $5,042 for home missions, and&#13;
over $3,000 for building purposes. Tha&#13;
outlook for 1907 is very propitious.&#13;
The native preachers are doing excellent&#13;
work and are gladly welcomed&#13;
and heard by the people.&#13;
Work Among&#13;
For several years past Ood has&#13;
doing a work among the Jews which&#13;
has never been done before. Until&#13;
recently there was no New Testament&#13;
In Hebrew. In 1885 the first copies&#13;
appeared. The demand for this has&#13;
been so great that 600,000 copies have&#13;
been printed. These have produced&#13;
a marvelous change of thought and&#13;
feeltni respecting Christ&#13;
*:'i&gt;Mt&amp;'&gt; **«§£&#13;
'7ft&#13;
*&#13;
I&#13;
T h a l a * JCdrntdsl P. Dw)fJft,n»fcQ&#13;
died In Philadelphia in HOT. am* left&#13;
large sums of money to religious&#13;
causes, evidently was not a strong&#13;
d e n o m i n a t i o n a l ^ . The orphans' court *&#13;
of Philadelphia has just awarded *&#13;
these bequests: Protestant Episcopal&#13;
Church of the United States. $50,000; I&#13;
Presbyterian Church of Aaariea, $fty I&#13;
000; Methodist Episcopal..CfcwNsY « f ' 1&#13;
the United States, $20,0«t; 'Tnjs^f^''"*"" j I&#13;
Men's Christian Association, ItMttr-*• v ' v fc$ I&#13;
and American Sunday School Union, ]&#13;
$15,000.&#13;
Goes Back to Russia.&#13;
Archbishop Tlckhon Bellavin of the&#13;
Holy Orthodox and Apostolic church In&#13;
the Unfted States has been transferred&#13;
to the archbishopric of Yareslav,&#13;
one of the most ancient and&#13;
prominent in Russia. His grace camo&#13;
to America nine years ago.&#13;
Does Good Work.&#13;
The student, volunteer movement has&#13;
been instrumenfal in sending about&#13;
n.OOO volunteers to foreign parts since&#13;
the movement was inaugurated i&amp;&#13;
1892,&#13;
* \ i r tj &gt; i BSfrMsifc f s^sstf. **r -.' .****,&#13;
»0$: mim 18 Off, cwjfo^Y^a&#13;
«**«&amp;*&#13;
# ^ ¾&#13;
-&amp;***'&#13;
T«k*n V t y * n t h * , F j &gt; * i Warping S y m p -&#13;
t o m * Ato Notlcad M u c h 1 N * « 0 l * » *&#13;
Suffering M a y Bo S«v«4.&#13;
"'"i- Ax§ you troubled ^ i t h pallor, loss of&#13;
4 fpftfifc waves of heat ptussing over the&#13;
~ iMld/* sJiortness of breath after slight&#13;
^ 0X«fMon, » peculiar skipping of t h e&#13;
, i * w t Ui»iwpoor digestion, cold extremi-&#13;
H i t Of ft feeling of weight and fulluet*'/&#13;
4 P » 4*0* M &amp; e t h e mistake of tliinking&#13;
Mtfco#- |JN*W, are diseases in themselves&#13;
KB&amp;to noidled with temporary relief.&#13;
This is the way the nervea give warning&#13;
that they are breaking down. I t&#13;
biiuply meana t h a t the blood lias become&#13;
impure and uanuot carry enough nourishment&#13;
to the nerves to keep them healthy&#13;
and ablu to do their work.&#13;
Rest, alone, will sometimes give t h e&#13;
nwded relief. T h e tonic treatment by&#13;
Dv. Willuuna' Pink P i l k , however, prevents&#13;
the final breakdown of the nerves&#13;
and the more serious diseases which&#13;
follow, because t h e pills act directly&#13;
upon the impure blood, making it rich,&#13;
red and pure.&#13;
Mrs. E . O. Bradley, of 103 Parsells&#13;
avenue, Rochester, N . Y., says:&#13;
" I was never very healthy a n d some&#13;
years ago, when in a run-down condition,&#13;
I suffered a nervous^bock, caused&#13;
by a misfortune t o a fridPrL I t was so&#13;
great that I was unfitted for work.&#13;
" I waa jnst weak, low-spirited a n d&#13;
nervous. I could hardly walk and could&#13;
not bear t h e least noise. My appetite&#13;
was poor and I did not care for food. I&#13;
couldn't sleep wTell a n d ouop for t w o&#13;
weeks got scarcely a n hour's sleep. I&#13;
had severe headaches most of t h e time&#13;
and pains in the back and spine.&#13;
" I was treated by t w o doctors, being&#13;
under t h e care of one of them for six&#13;
months. I got no relief a n d then decided&#13;
to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. I&#13;
soon began to feel better a n d t h e improvement&#13;
was general. My appetite&#13;
became hearty a n d m y sleep better.&#13;
The headaches all left and also the pains&#13;
in my back. A few more boxes entirely&#13;
cured me and I w a s able to go back t o&#13;
work. I felt splendid a n d as though I&#13;
liad never been sick.''&#13;
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are invaluable&#13;
in such diseases as rheumatism, aftereffects&#13;
of the grip and fevers, neuralgia,&#13;
St. Vitus' dance and even partial&#13;
paralysis and locomotor ataxia.&#13;
Dr. Williams' Piuk Pills are sold b y&#13;
all druggists, or will be sent, postpaid,&#13;
on receipt of price, 50 cents per box, six&#13;
boxes for $2.50, by the Dr. Williams&#13;
Medicine Company, S c l w ' v •••••'i- v v&#13;
^. Home, Sweet Home.&#13;
Tho wife of a naval officer attached&#13;
to t h e academy a t Annayolis h a s in&#13;
her employ an Irish servant, who recently&#13;
gave evidence of nostalgia.&#13;
"You ought to be contented and&#13;
not pine for your old home, Bridget,"&#13;
said the lady of the house "You a r e&#13;
earning good wages, your work is&#13;
light, everyone is kind to you, and&#13;
you have lots of friends here."&#13;
"Yis, mum," sadly replied Bridget;&#13;
"but it's not the place where I he that&#13;
makes me so homesick; it Is the&#13;
place where 1 don't be."&#13;
Satisfied.&#13;
A seedy-looking loafer, having ordered&#13;
and eaten a large and sumptuous&#13;
dinner, explained to the waiter&#13;
that he had no money.&#13;
The waiter immediately told the&#13;
restaurant proprietor, who sent for a&#13;
policeman.&#13;
The proprietor, going up to t h e unwelcome&#13;
guest, explained that he had&#13;
sent for a policeman.&#13;
"Thank goodness! you didn't send&#13;
for a stomach pump!" the seedy one&#13;
replied, with huge contentment.—Illustrated&#13;
Bits.&#13;
A Spider That Fishes.&#13;
Prof. Berg, in Buenos Ayres. h a t&#13;
discovered a spider which practices&#13;
flsbinf at times. In shallow places it&#13;
• p l a t between stones a two-winged,&#13;
©oalee! net, on which It runs in t h e&#13;
water and captures small fish, tadpoles,&#13;
etc. That it understands its&#13;
Work well Is. shown by the numerous&#13;
shriveled skins of little creatures that&#13;
he about In t h e web net.&#13;
I m p o r t a n t t o M o t h e r s .&#13;
KxMftJne carefully every bottle of CASTOTttA,&#13;
a Bate end Mr* N*M*f lot infanta and children,&#13;
sad Malta* it&#13;
BJg*tfu**f&#13;
In TJse For Over 3 0 Years.&#13;
The Kind Yoa Have Always Bought&#13;
Paper Palls for Milk.&#13;
Paper pails are t h e latest sanitary&#13;
device for t h e delivery of pure milk&#13;
In LottUon a n d other large English&#13;
tovaj|. They a r e used only once.&#13;
~~~ acej made of pulp and a r e sterillMd&#13;
hy ft h e a t of 600 degrees Fahren-&#13;
BeR.&#13;
Does Your Head Ache?&#13;
Tf eo, got a box of Krauso's IFeadache&#13;
Cap.-ules'&lt;&gt;f your Druggist. 2,"k\ Norman&#13;
Lichty Mfc. Co., 1\&gt;K Moines, In.&#13;
Teaching the Young Idea.&#13;
The United States has 260.000 school&#13;
buildings, In. which 480,000 teachers&#13;
arc at. work teaching nearly 18,000,000&#13;
children.&#13;
Mrs. Wlnslow'a Soothing Syrup.&#13;
For children te«thl&amp;c, »oft«*tJ* th« gurei, reducaa b»&#13;
AamooatlOn.aMaya pals, cur«» wladcoUu. 25cabolU«&#13;
In order t o size up t h e average m a t&#13;
correctly, get his estimate of himself&#13;
and knock off 50 per c e n t&#13;
.MMUUl T A U L .&#13;
Qu**r Brand of Liquor Must Be Used&#13;
In Tennsssee.&#13;
Walter Stephenson, while out training&#13;
a pair of bloodhounds near t h e&#13;
Dlkeman springs, was subjected to a&#13;
unique experience, says the Nashville&#13;
American. He was just finishing a&#13;
long chase with his dogB and sat&#13;
down on a log to rest, when he espied&#13;
upon the eastern horizon a speck,&#13;
which he took to be a large kite. He&#13;
paid little attention 40 the object,&#13;
and shifted hia gaze temporarily to&#13;
other scenes. Soon bis attention was&#13;
attracted to a whirring noise, and&#13;
looking upward, h e saw that the speck&#13;
which he had a tew moments before'&#13;
discovered In the eastern sky had&#13;
approached almost directly over him,&#13;
and that the object was in reality a&#13;
huge balloon, but of a pattern and&#13;
appearance h e had never in b i s life&#13;
before seen. He discovered that the&#13;
floating mass was rapidly approaching&#13;
t h e earth. Of a sudden, t h e ob&#13;
server says, strains of music calcu&#13;
lated to charm t h e spheres burst from&#13;
the balloou, which circled round and&#13;
round and finally landed at Kldeman&#13;
springs. A number of strange people&#13;
emerged from t h e car, which wag&#13;
closesly curtained with a substance&#13;
that fairly glistened in the sunshine&#13;
that temporarily burst through t h e obscuring&#13;
clouds, and all going to the&#13;
big, flowing spring, knelt by it In a&#13;
supplicating attitude and so remained&#13;
for a minute or more. Mr. Stephenson&#13;
says that while this waB going on he&#13;
sat quietly within speaking distance,&#13;
and when t h e strange visitors arose&#13;
to their feet and he supposed their devotfonal&#13;
exercises were over, h e asked&#13;
if h e might be permitted to inquire&#13;
who they were, and what their mis&#13;
sion? He said that instantly a visard&#13;
was lifted by one of the company and&#13;
the benign lace of a lady showed from&#13;
underneath and said in German:&#13;
"Haben sie Beten?" (did you pray?")&#13;
and instantly all were aboard, the air&#13;
ship rose, circled about for a minute&#13;
or more, and was gone in a westerly&#13;
direction.&#13;
Mr. Stephenson says that t h e incident&#13;
left an impression upon him that&#13;
he can never forget,and while he knows&#13;
that i t , was some human invention&#13;
it looked and the music sounded more&#13;
like that of angels than or mortals.&#13;
One on the Ticket Seller.&#13;
"Step right up this way, ladies and&#13;
gentlemen," said the flashy youth in&#13;
the circus ticket wagon. "Step lively,&#13;
please. Get your tickets,—the show is&#13;
just going to start. Two for you,&#13;
sir?"&#13;
A benevolent round-cheeked old&#13;
rube and his Hock of children stood&#13;
at the edge of the crowd, a bunch of&#13;
gaudy tickets in one hand and a hand&#13;
ful of silver in the other. His pursed&#13;
lips suddenly turned into a broad&#13;
smile, he hesitated and then walked&#13;
doubtfully toward the ticket window&#13;
still counting the change. lie. edged&#13;
his way through the crowd and addressed&#13;
the fashionably dressed youth&#13;
above him:&#13;
"You made a mistake in yer change,&#13;
sir," he said. ,&#13;
The ticket man fumed up and phoc'.t :&#13;
his head. ~ 1&#13;
"No mistakes rectified after you i&#13;
leave the window, Rube—don't you '&#13;
see the sign? Move along. Make way&#13;
for the others."&#13;
"But," expostulated the farmer.&#13;
"No buts go with me. Get along."&#13;
"Now, see here," paid the Rube, seriously.&#13;
"Cut it out, Rube—yer wastin' my&#13;
time. No mistakes in change rectified&#13;
after you leave the window. D'ye&#13;
h e a r ? "&#13;
"Well, all right," said the rustic, J&#13;
Miming to go, "I vvus only tryin' to&#13;
tell ye that ye guv me five dollars*too&#13;
much."&#13;
L I T T L E CAUSE FOR W O R R Y .&#13;
r&#13;
' • » ' ' "&#13;
More or Leaa Glittering Bait Herd Out&#13;
to Cew Punchers.&#13;
Over in t h e Salmon river meadows&#13;
country, in Idaho, ranged a wild and&#13;
woolly bunch of long-haired cow&#13;
punchers, whose knowledge of t h e&#13;
world was confined mainly t o trips'&#13;
after cattle into surrounding counties.&#13;
Into this reckless but verdant community&#13;
there came the smoothtongued&#13;
representative of a wild&#13;
west show, who hired several riders&#13;
i t a high salary to do a hair-raising&#13;
act, t h e chief feature behjg that they&#13;
should appear to be thrown from their&#13;
horses and dragged by t h e 'pot.&#13;
After they had practiced in a corral&#13;
for a while one c* them loosened&#13;
himaelf and rising from the dirt, disheveled&#13;
and dazed, inquired;&#13;
"Say, mister, ain't this ruther dangerous?&#13;
We might git killed."&#13;
"That's all right," chirped t h e&#13;
show's representative cheerfully.&#13;
"Your salary will go -on just t h e&#13;
same."—Llppiccott's Magazine.&#13;
Injury from Mosquitoes.&#13;
New Jersey h a s many places ideal&#13;
in situation and accessibility, and one&#13;
such place developed rapidly to a certain&#13;
point and there it stood, baited&#13;
by t h e mosquitoes that bred in the&#13;
surrounding marsh lands. Country&#13;
club, golf, tenuis and other attractions&#13;
ceased to attract when attention&#13;
was necessarily focused on t h e biting&#13;
or stinging pests that intruded everywhere,&#13;
and t h e tendency was to sell&#13;
out. But t h e owners were not ready&#13;
to quit without a fight, and an improvement&#13;
society was formed which&#13;
consulted with my office and followed&#13;
my advice. In one year the bulk of&#13;
the breeding area was drained, mosquitoes&#13;
have since been absent almost&#13;
entirely; one gentleman, not a&#13;
large owner, cither, told me his property&#13;
had Increased ¢50,000 in value,&#13;
and new settlers began to come in.&#13;
This year one of the worst breeding&#13;
areas of t h e olden day was used as&#13;
a camming gorund, and 100 new residences&#13;
are planned for next year.—&#13;
Prof. John U. Smith, in the Popular&#13;
Science Monthly.&#13;
W i t h a Proviso.&#13;
"When universal peace is Anally established,"&#13;
said Alfred H. Love, the&#13;
president of the Universal Peace un&#13;
ion, in an interview in Philadelphia,&#13;
"then many a man who now ridicules&#13;
the peace movement will claim to&#13;
have been its lifelong champion. It&#13;
is always so. We thump and kick a&#13;
poor, weak, struggling movement at&#13;
its fnception, and when it has succeeded&#13;
and no Icnger needs our help, we&#13;
give it the most solicitous support.&#13;
There was once a young lady whose&#13;
betrothed, a very poor young man,&#13;
was about to set out for South Ameri&#13;
ca to seek his fortune in the rubber&#13;
trade. As he took his leave of her the&#13;
night before his departure, he said,&#13;
tremulously: 'And you swear to be&#13;
true to me, Irene?' 'Yes, Heber,' cried&#13;
che girl; 'yes—if you're successful.' "&#13;
TREATMENT INDUCED A CHILL.&#13;
Napoleon's Famous War Horse.&#13;
Marengo, the famous war charger of&#13;
Napoleon, is said to have been the&#13;
greatest horse known to modern history.&#13;
The emperor rode Marengo for&#13;
the last time in the battle of Mount&#13;
St. Jean, where the horse received his&#13;
seventh wound. The steed died at the&#13;
age of 36 years.&#13;
Old German Warships Hidden.&#13;
Every time t h e kaiser visits Dantrig,&#13;
says a London Mail correspondent,&#13;
all the old warships in the harbor&#13;
are towed to a position in which&#13;
he can see them.&#13;
Down on the Whole Sex.&#13;
Hewitt—Do you think that, red-haired&#13;
women a r e apt to be bad tempered?&#13;
Jewett—Yes, and black-haired, yellow-&#13;
haired, brown-haired and any&#13;
other old color, natural or artificial.&#13;
A Moral Pincushion.&#13;
There are few families in which&#13;
there is not a moral pincushion, and&#13;
the people who a r e forced to live with&#13;
them are the only ones capable of telling&#13;
just how aggravating these selfmade&#13;
martyrs are, for the moral pincushion&#13;
is usually a person eat on up&#13;
with self-consciousness.&#13;
This type of woman gets wrinkles&#13;
around her eyes, has her mouth drawn&#13;
down at the corners and her forehead&#13;
puckered with heavy lines, the result&#13;
of deep study as to how each wicked&#13;
speech could bo meant for her.&#13;
DOCTOR'S FOOD T A L K&#13;
Makes Twelve Minutes.&#13;
He—These eggs are as hard a3&#13;
bricks. How long did you boil them?&#13;
She—Twelve minutes.&#13;
He—Why, I told you only the other&#13;
day not to boil them more than three&#13;
minutes.&#13;
She—Yes; I know. You fob] me&#13;
three minutes for each egg, and here&#13;
are four; so that makes 12 minutes.&#13;
—Lustige HIaetter.&#13;
Confucius: The superior man ir,&#13;
slow in his words and earnest In his&#13;
conduct.&#13;
Selection of Food One of the Most Important&#13;
Acts in Life.&#13;
A Mass. doctor pays: "Oar health&#13;
and physical and mental happiness&#13;
are so largely under cur personal control&#13;
that the proper selection of food&#13;
should b*, and is one of the most, important&#13;
acts in life.&#13;
"On this subject, I may say that I&#13;
know of no food equal in digestibility,&#13;
and more powerful in point of nutriment,&#13;
than t h e modern Grape-Nuts,&#13;
four heaping teaspoons of which is sufficient&#13;
for the cereal part of a meal,&#13;
and experience demonstrates that t h e&#13;
user is perfectly nourished from one&#13;
meal to another.&#13;
'T am convinced that, the extensive&#13;
and general use of high class foods of&#13;
this character would increase the term&#13;
of human life, add to the sum total of&#13;
happiness and very considerably improve&#13;
society in general. I am free to&#13;
mention t h e food, for t personally&#13;
know of its value."-&#13;
Grape-Nuts food ran bo used by&#13;
babes in aims, or adult?. It i- ready&#13;
cooked, can be served instantly,&#13;
either cold with cream, or with hot&#13;
water or hot milk poured oxer. All&#13;
sorts of puddings and fancy dishes can&#13;
he made with Grape-Nuts. The food&#13;
is concentrated and very economical,&#13;
for four heaping teaspoons a r e sufficient&#13;
for the cereal part of a meal.&#13;
Read t h e little book, "The Road to&#13;
Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason."&#13;
Remedy &lt;tyv*n In Hospital Tent Mur*&#13;
H q y * S«*n Pleasant.&#13;
The captain tells a story which runs&#13;
Bometbjng like this: .In camp one&#13;
morning t h e first sergeant reported&#13;
that Private B had a ehilL "IB it&#13;
a serious one?" asked t h e captain.&#13;
"Well, sir, I don't know just how serf-,&#13;
OUB it 13, but it's a big one, for it&#13;
seems to be all over him, and he&#13;
weighs 200 pounds. On seeing him&#13;
the captain found him looking rather&#13;
blue, and instructed t h e drat beigeaut&#13;
to send him to the surgeon in charge&#13;
of a corporal.&#13;
Soon after breakfast t h e captain&#13;
saw the corporal and asked h im how&#13;
the man was getting on. "Oh, he's&#13;
all right now," was t h e reply, "I took&#13;
htm up to the hospital tent, and when&#13;
1 Raw what kind of medicine t h e docor&#13;
gave him I had a chill too.'*—Army&#13;
and Navy Life.&#13;
T H O U G H T C H I L D W O U L D D I E .&#13;
Whole Body Covered with Cuban Itch&#13;
—Cuticura Remedies Cured a t Cost&#13;
of Seventy-Five Cents.&#13;
"My little boy, when only an infant&#13;
of three months, caught t h e Cuban&#13;
Itch. Sores broke out from his head&#13;
to t h e bottom of hi8 feet. H e would&#13;
itch and claw himself and cry all the&#13;
time. He could not sleep day or night,&#13;
and a light dress is all he could wear.&#13;
I called one of osir best doctors t o '&#13;
treat him, but he seemed to get worse.&#13;
He suffered so terribly that my husband&#13;
said h e believed h e would have&#13;
to die. I had almost given up hope&#13;
when a lady friend told me to try the&#13;
Cuticura Remedies. I used t h e Cuticura&#13;
Soap and applied t h e Cuticura&#13;
Ointment and he at once fell into a&#13;
sleep, and he slept with ease for t h e&#13;
first time since two months. After&#13;
three applications the sores began to&#13;
dry up, and in just, two weeks from the&#13;
day I commenced to use the Cuticura&#13;
Remedies my baby was entirely well.&#13;
The treatment only cost me 75c, and I&#13;
would have gladly paid $100 if I could&#13;
not have got it cheaper. I feel safe in&#13;
saying that the Cuticura Remedies&#13;
saved his life. He is now a boy of live&#13;
years. Mrs. Zar.a Miller, Union City,&#13;
R. F. D. N•). 1, m u n c h Co., Mich., May&#13;
17, 190G."&#13;
Knotty Point to Decide.&#13;
"Ts a goat a sheep?" Is a xoological&#13;
question that the commissioners of&#13;
this county have been called upon to&#13;
decide officially. There h a s long been&#13;
a state law providing that t h e county&#13;
shall reimburse farmers for sheep&#13;
killed by dogs. A. R_ Harward, oi&#13;
Miffln township, h a s hied a claim for&#13;
$50 for Angora floats so destroyed.—&#13;
Columbus correspondence, Pittsburg&#13;
Dispatch.&#13;
STATE or Onio. C I T T &lt;nr Tot-KOO,I g l.ii'AH em-TV. f *&#13;
FRANK .1. i IIKNKI make* oatfc that ho Is lenlor i&#13;
part.uT of the ttnu r.f !•'. .1. C n m r &amp; Co . ii 'I:IR&#13;
ImislufM In the city &lt;-* TuleUu. County md si»te&#13;
af n'Mi J. and ttut s..M firm will pmy tbc turn of&#13;
ONK IH'NDUHI) ItoLLAltS for emeft au'l rvfry&#13;
rase nf CATARRH that e*ujuulbe cured by tUe use of&#13;
lUi.i.'.s CATAKKU C'L'iiE.&#13;
FUANK.I. CHi:SI V&#13;
Swore to l)cr&gt;rp mo and f u'jscriiied ID my jirestiue,&#13;
this dili iUy of DaemlK'r, A. I).. i»*. .&#13;
t - ' — A. W. OLEASOK.&#13;
1 ^-^1 NOTARY I'int.t.',&#13;
llall;» Catarrh Curr 1« tmkrn Internally ami acts i&#13;
directly mi the L*l.&gt;&lt;.&gt;d and mucous aurftccn of !ha&#13;
•y&amp;tem. hclid ivz testiitti.ulal^ free.&#13;
F. J. &lt;:HKMEY A CO., Toledo, ().&#13;
RoM tiy nil IVmpplot*. 1VTake&#13;
Hali't-i-'auiily i'l.'i for romtlpation.&#13;
Hot Shot for t h e Men.&#13;
Speaking at Carl:ff, Wales, recently,&#13;
Miss Gawthorpe, a suffragette,&#13;
stated that a bride's blushes are&#13;
caused by the knowledge of the kind&#13;
of man she is going to marry.&#13;
NATURE PROVIDES&#13;
FOR SICK WOMEN&#13;
a more potent remedy in t h e roots&#13;
and herbs of the field t h a n was ever&#13;
produced from drugs.&#13;
In t h e good old-fashioned days of&#13;
our grandmothers few d r u g s were&#13;
used in medicines a n d Lydia B.&#13;
Pinkham. of Lynn, MaRS., in h e r&#13;
study of roots and herbs and their&#13;
power over disease discovered and&#13;
gave t o t h e women of t h e world a&#13;
remedy for their peculiar ills more&#13;
potent and efficacious t h a n any&#13;
combination of drugs.&#13;
W«t«r M n w f c a M y Pur*.&#13;
fat water of Loch Katrine, l a 8oot&gt;&#13;
land, Is wonderfully pure. I t hold*&#13;
only quarter-pound of alluYial deposit&#13;
to every 1,000 gallons of water. T h *&#13;
Thame* average* four pound* to Ut*&gt;&#13;
1.000 gallons.&#13;
DODDS&#13;
KIDNEY&#13;
0, PILLS&#13;
.itI v ^vyv&gt;i|.&#13;
!S&gt;_"Guii*^&#13;
PAY WHEN CURED PILES P O S I T I V E L Y N O&#13;
MONEY ACCEPTED&#13;
U N T I L C U R E D&#13;
antee t o cure y o u o r charge nothing*.&#13;
You d o not pay one cent until aatialled&#13;
you are cured and you «re t o be the sol*&#13;
fudge. Write to-day and w e will aend&#13;
y o u a booklet explaining our new treat*&#13;
m e m and containing teatimoniaIs ahowingwhat&#13;
w e have done for thousands&#13;
of people from all parts of the country.&#13;
Drs. Burleson &amp; Burleson&#13;
R E C T A L S P E C I A L I S T S&#13;
1 0 3 M o n r o e S t r e e t&#13;
G R A N D R A P I D S , MICH.&#13;
SICK HEADACHE Positively cured b y&#13;
these Little P i l l s , ;&#13;
Tliey also rellere Distress&#13;
from Dyspepsia, Indigestion&#13;
and Too Hearty&#13;
Eating. A perfect remedy&#13;
for Dizziness, Nausea,&#13;
Drowsiness, Bad Tastela&#13;
the ilentn. Coated&#13;
Tongue. Pain in the Side, .&#13;
TORPID LIVER. Tn*y ft&#13;
regulate the Bowels. Purely VegetabLe.&#13;
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE, SMALL PB1CL&#13;
Genuine Must Bear&#13;
Fac-Slmile Signature&#13;
REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.&#13;
Rheumatism&#13;
CURED FREE&#13;
Samples sent to any sufferer. Send us&#13;
your name and address.&#13;
NYE RHEUMATIC C O .&#13;
3 9 Monroe Street, Grand Rapids, Mich.&#13;
T H E DAISY FLY K I L L E R -i^troT.aii ih«&#13;
flies fcud ktloriit&#13;
comfort to eTpry&#13;
home. It lasts t be Sn t l r o reason.&#13;
»rmle«8 to p«rconx.&#13;
n e * » , neat&#13;
and will not aoll or&#13;
injure anyililnjr.&#13;
Try thfm one* and&#13;
yon will jjrrw ba&#13;
without them. If&#13;
nnt kept by &lt;teat-&#13;
_ . er», sent pr*p«ld&#13;
f u r t t c HiKtiLDSulaas, MflfelAjb AH&gt;.,Bm*1jn,a. T.&#13;
If afflicted with I&#13;
sore cyti, u^e f Thompson's Eye Water&#13;
W. N. U „ DETROIT, NO. 26, 1907.&#13;
L Y D I A&#13;
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound&#13;
iaan honest, tried and t r n e remedy of unquestionable therapentie'ralue.&#13;
During- its record of more t h a n thirty years, its long- list of actual&#13;
cures of those serions ills peculiar to women, entitles Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound t o t h e respect and confidence of every fair minded&#13;
person and every thinkinjr woman.&#13;
When women a r e troubled with irregular or painful functions,&#13;
weakness, displacements, ulceration or inflammation, b a c k a c h e *&#13;
flatulency, pen era.I debility, indigestion or nervous prostration, 'they&#13;
should remember there is one tried and t r u e remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable Compound.&#13;
No other remedy in t h e country hns such a Teeord of cures of&#13;
female ills, and thousands of women residing1 in evi«ry port of the United&#13;
States hear willing1 testimony to the wonderful virtue of L}'dia E. Pinkham's&#13;
Vegetable compound and what it has done for them.&#13;
Mrs. Pinkham invites al l sick women to write her for advice. She h a s&#13;
puided thon.»amls to health. For twenty-five years she has been advising1&#13;
sick women free of charpe. She ij- the dauphter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinkham&#13;
and as her assistant for years before her decease advised u n d e r h e r&#13;
immediate direction. Address, Lyrj|&gt;, Mass.&#13;
ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE ^ ^ C&#13;
A Cirttln Cur* for Tlr*d, Hot, A«Wag Fett. V \ M * ~ i r V 9 f c * ~ u .&#13;
D O H O T A C C E P T A S U B S T I T U T E . ca CTCT? box.&#13;
Trial Package,&#13;
AdUrtu*. Allen&#13;
R &lt;' I mated,&#13;
"J».. ' . A&#13;
4 - ^&#13;
,&gt;- •*r&#13;
,;&gt;'V" &lt; * . . ' . * . ISP I.,," i^nwir v w ^ WBWWF ""•fflf?&#13;
! -J^.&#13;
P l i r « »••»»*'i&#13;
' « . . « * •&#13;
• &gt;&#13;
RL&#13;
sr&#13;
&amp; &amp; ' •&#13;
t&#13;
'•4&#13;
w-&#13;
£&gt;!":*&#13;
1^&#13;
.AMA^A^k N O R T H tiAMBUttlj. | Kuel Coniway is again at t h e&#13;
$ * r,M i r v ' i '11 1 "t! ^ f d bpriuj^ factory.&#13;
2 Among QUr Correspondents •' , n , l l l " ' s , ^ ^ ^ / &lt;^&gt; ^ ^ - - t h e ice kii,K: i*&#13;
1 3 r * M r . »"&gt;d ^1 )S- t &lt; i ' « m U u n n i n g&#13;
* «^ h e r e t o r a t e w t l a v s .&#13;
T t f * T # T m T W T * T » T * T ^ T K f T h u r s d a y , J ui&gt; I I .&#13;
' ' , v,~ , . .,, ,. M r.'and Mrs. Coniway t u e n i t -&#13;
Mr. ami M rs. Myron E l y ot . '&#13;
, - , , • , ertuiuniL; m e n d s tins week.&#13;
Howell attended the e\ercmub at&#13;
HOWELL.&#13;
Chas. Van K e n r e u ami wife&#13;
moved to L a n s i n g last week.&#13;
T h e legislature before adjourning;&#13;
raided the sanatorium appropriation&#13;
lo $78,000. This is about&#13;
half what ought to be given this&#13;
institution.&#13;
Geo. JJarnes, of the {{(publican,&#13;
announces himself as a candidate&#13;
for delegate to t h e constitutional&#13;
convention. T h e primary for&#13;
NORTH HAMBURG . A n I n j u s t i c e D o n e , LIFE ROOT IN ZOA-PHORA n 1&#13;
i-'k&#13;
*,. •N4.&#13;
the church Sunday.&#13;
. . . . iriLr his d a u g h t e r . Mrs. J . H e n r y .&#13;
Miss J e n n i e Haze and Mn-s&#13;
L-- v \ i • ,.;u;fu,i U( li... 1 T h e AOOG a r e p l a n i n g for an&#13;
KiULr ot Adrian visited at J no. l °&#13;
Way buck in tlit ou'b Joseph Kirtlmid | proof of the Value of This Important&#13;
n « u s l V n v d or di-dicttled lu ihe l o w u s h i p u t | MeUtdUOl Agtttlt&#13;
1'ntnaui iii'fi'laiii piece of html, n o w k n o w n&#13;
as die Yillayv siptare in P h i e k n e y . Hi is&#13;
wus a gill m a d e by him to be used for&#13;
T o w n s h i p pin poses. At ihie l i m e I'inck- .&#13;
L. L u m b o r u of Gregory is visit- ! n e y Villus WN» uoi incorporated »iwply j t h * C u r e u f W o l u e l 1 * i n * ' * ' &gt;*%'&#13;
uouiiuK in »» pyn of the tuwn.ship. H i b | T h e N a t i u u a l a t aodard Dispe&#13;
FOB W0.UEi&gt;.&#13;
Great Physicians Brcouinieud It f | f&#13;
YauFieets t h e latter part of the , ™* vv™m *{)V'Ui] hUlw " e a r f n t u m | eat* ami adyuncement. Froi,. th»t time up : thousand paxes,&#13;
j i n t e n t was t«&gt; m u k e lliia H ^tt't to nil the. ;&#13;
I people wittiin tin''J'owiiship tor tlieir i n t e r - ' * .&#13;
thousand panes, aoknowledfltl «1&#13;
a medical work of nearly .IWt&#13;
ers Monday.&#13;
week.&#13;
The church was crowded S u u -&#13;
day for ("hildj-en's Day exercises&#13;
and the children did " credit to j Mr. and M r s . J udsuu Churchill,&#13;
themselves and those who t r a i n e d j of Lansing, are visiting at Mrs.&#13;
tiu.l u . iC's. brother, Wru. Cady for a few&#13;
days.&#13;
T h e Howell band will furnish&#13;
Mrs. Wm. Cady and Mrs. Nellie ' to tin- presem eiU-l, on,- &lt;.f 11» him tukeu a i standard authoiity by the m e d i q i i j ^ ^&#13;
(Miurchill visited at F r a n k Mow- i P'i.l, in „Ur public MJIWUV UU- vill^Rera , feasion every where. It wa» e«M»* *JT—-&#13;
and TownspeupU- alike. such world famed physicians as no-&#13;
On account of the busy times&#13;
nominations will be hehl Aug. 1:&lt;, j w j t h the. farmers, T h e Young&#13;
and t h e election on Hept. 17. | Peoples Literary club will be ' music at t h e F a n n e r s club picnic&#13;
Howell will vote on t h e sew«r j postponed till three weeks from 1 for their d i n n e r ; s&lt;» bring a little&#13;
question J u l y 15. Of course it&#13;
m e a n s the expenditure of some&#13;
money but a town t h e size of&#13;
Howell should have a sewerage&#13;
system for t h e protection of t h e&#13;
health of her citizens.&#13;
1..,-,1 Tui'sduy evening the Township bart Aiuuvy Hare, M, D., professor of&#13;
liuntil nH'i and pasbed a retjulution to the theiapeutii'is and materia tuediua in&#13;
the rflVei thai the Town Uull should he the Jefferson Mediual Uollcye ol I'hilused&#13;
lor T o w n s h i p purposes a n d l\,r n o a i i o l p l j i a ? M ^ i n y H . R u s b y , M v l ' ) . , of.&#13;
other, tln'1't.'bv »'.\eludin'! the V i l l a g e hoard ., r , . , - b u»,rf • ,ir, . n, 7 1 • .i Columbia University, New 101k, dtm&#13;
tor all t u n e . \ \ hat us the reason tor thmr . . . xr.,, . , . ,, ,. -4 others ot eiina promaienite.&#13;
in.t u n r Utile Village within i h e limits • " I *&#13;
I'lus i / i e a t m e d i c a l a u t h o r i t y d e s -&#13;
l s 11&#13;
S a t u r d a y n i g h t .&#13;
" T h i s l i n l e p i , ; w e n t t o n e t r k e t "&#13;
d o e s i . ' t a m u s e t o n i y h t . I&gt;;iliy'v' n o t&#13;
w e l l ; w l n i i ' s t h e i n a t t i ' r , h e r d e a f l i t t l e&#13;
c h e e k s a r e s o w h i t e ; I ' o o r l i t t l e t i u n&#13;
, inv is achitiLf, n;i u . ^ h t y o l d p a i n }»'o&#13;
W i l b e r r i o h n s o n o f t h i s f d a c e '• a w a v , Piisc i s w e c t m o t l i e r m u s t L',ivi'&#13;
&gt; !l i •&gt; l u ' i j l i l a s t h e iiity.&#13;
S o l d b y F . A. S i g l e r , D n i g g l i t .&#13;
extra.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. K. E . N o r t h a r d of&#13;
and IMiss Minnie Ferdice of JMt. j lier, then&#13;
pleasant, were married at their • 1* is liere&#13;
h o m e here Wednesday. Mr.&#13;
J o h n s o n lias been the eflicient :&#13;
QOTrTTT IWATITnTtf1&#13;
clerk in his father's d r u g s t o r e for j ' ' ' b u t Mrs. Travis, who was injured&#13;
several years and has made many 1 T l l ° H . H . S . students are home | d o m e | ) u t rtt this writing is well.&#13;
friend, who extend congratula-! f o r a f e w w e e k s vacation. ; - - - -&#13;
tions. - , - - j B e r n a r d Olenu is home f r o m , C H I L S O N&#13;
the V. of M.. enjoying a vacation. I Mr. W h i p p l e of Howell called&#13;
The . carpenters commenced [ at J. Sweenys S u n d a y .&#13;
wcrk on C. l&gt;rogan's house Mon-i John Sweeny and family left&#13;
mon to everv lamilv. DeWitt'.s Car I last. T'uesday for Bav View.&#13;
I'ohzrd Y\ itrh |{:&lt;/el Salve is the best • Mrs. E t h e l Loisy of J a c k s o n Mrs. H anes Oswald is recoverieni(&#13;
ay, It is so.,;hiuur, coo!ins.', c'ean j visited N. Pacey and family last in from tier recent illness.&#13;
of t h e T o w n s h i p a n d d o e s s h e not p a v lier&#13;
full r a t e uf t a x a t i o n lo t h e t o w n s h i p ' e v e r y c r i u e s t ilH H(M h m a n d US* o t t h e D e s t&#13;
y e a r ' ' W a s i i ^ h e i n t e n t of liie » i v e r t o I H e d i C l u e n s r H C O K l d a e d i n t h h p h a c -&#13;
inake a ^il't in the T o w n s h i p at h n ^ e , a n d nicico|jeias of t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s , G r e a t&#13;
not - r a n t t h e s a m e p r i v e l i - e t o t h e c i t i z e n s H f i t u U , d l l d (.! e r m i l l i y , w i t h n u m e r o u s&#13;
reteience lo others. In discussing tli«&#13;
ot&#13;
11&#13;
and Mrs. Wm. Cady. ' I T ^ 1 '!;V.w,,r|!,i1, ^^111. ^ C Z J ? ; ^ ^ °" Xh * ^ ^ ° "D U j B ^ ^&#13;
, ' h l s »il1- ' l l r ' ,,WMS|,1» , , l , a n l h : , s , , u U'*- &gt; menstrual 01-anism of women. The&#13;
While Mrs. Will and Mrs. E. ; al ri.ht to u.ke such action ;i« U did nor a : r e m e d t a y ^ i u c m i S K l | discharge&#13;
Travis were on tho roatl to this ' - o ? l ? h t , enher, as the lownsop ho Ms J J* a n d&#13;
Ypsilanti, Mr. E . T. E d m u n d s t»f (,f the village'.' *\Ve know he did not m-&#13;
A u u Arbor, Mr. Will Miller of ! tend it in this n-mnuer. lie lived in tin' pinpeitins of M^« Root, this hest 0&#13;
Fiuckiiey spent Sunday with Mr. V.llaov himself and wishe.l to see &lt;l»e Vil ^uthontie^ expfaines the wonderful&#13;
J ~ j&gt; 1 1 ' I ' . . . . . . . . 1 . : ) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , , ^ t , , / . _ . . . . . , , . .&#13;
•• , . 1 - 1 1 i.- • 1 i no d e e d w h a t e v e r a s a p p e a r s i r om till&#13;
, place then- horse became t n g h e n e d ^ ^ ^ ^ {[ ^ ^ . ^ .{ .^ l l I l f a i r | r ! u „ f „ | , and reonlates the menstrut&#13;
' a n d ran away but was c a u g h t by&#13;
F o r s T a f r h e - . l a u n s , e u t s . i n s e c t&#13;
i t e s a m : t h e niHiiv l i t t l e h u r t s conta&#13;
n d he;i;:):'_-. b e s u r e t o ^jet D e W ' i t t s .&#13;
^old by F. A. Sigler, Druggtit.&#13;
t&#13;
and it is mu-;illed i o i . Tin- intent was I f u n c i i o n A h e n 11 1 e ^ u l a t ' o r t w o p r o -&#13;
J e S S H e i l i y . N o d a m a g e t o a n y O l i e ; never to favor t h e T o w n s h i p a n d e x c l u d e ! p r o f u s e . N o t i c e t h a t t h e effect is t o&#13;
the Yill.c'c. T h e Village lias paid all t h e ' r e g u l a t e a n d r e s t o r e n o r m a l f u n c t i o n s&#13;
e x p e n s e of seitinj.' out trees a n d beautify- o r g a n s , n o m a t t e r w h e t h e r t h e t r o u b l e&#13;
ing t h e p a r k for t h e past in or 15 years, b e s u p p r e s s e d m t m s t r n a t i o n , o r i t s o p -&#13;
k e p t the inside of the H a l t in r e p a i r and also ,)0S;fH nvofust)&#13;
s t andingT , its shaitf of t, a x a t i o n for r ep' a i r,s rTi nh i. s med.i.c.i nal, p,l ant, ,L .i.t.e ,H, „o„o,t , on outside ; last year there was $1.1 e x p e n d - , ,, &lt;• j&#13;
, , . ,. ' , -.- ,, -i 1 with others ot eciual value, are round&#13;
e d l o r t r e e s , t h i s y e a r a b o u t .&gt;&gt;, a l l p a i d n v x&#13;
t li e villa«'e ^n ^oaFhora. Your drusgist will&#13;
The writer has made impiiry to find out' supply you with this remedy, already&#13;
why such a feeling exists b e t w e e n t h e p r e p a r e d , c o m p o u n d e d ill j u s t t h e&#13;
T o w n s h i p a n d Village hoards. T h e cause l'itfht p r o p o r t i o n s , a n d p u t Up i n&#13;
seems to IH« in t h e difference of o p i n i o n in s e a l e d , s t e r i l i z e d , d o l l a r b o t t l e s . A s k&#13;
regard to s e v e r a l matters aliVeting the hi m f o r Zoa-Pllor-.a—DO f u r t h e r e x p l a -&#13;
u . , . i n „ , - , , Village of l ' i n c k n e y alone h u t not t h e : n f t t i ( m w j , , h() n t 3 e ( ] ( 1 d . E a c h p a c k a g e&#13;
Miss L u l u Abbott spoilt H few Owosso a few days last week. |Townsh'P. It seems m bad the Hotel c o n t a i n e B ( ; o n i , , l e t e a n d B X p l i c i t Hire,-&#13;
. days last week with her sister 111 M i s f i K ( i i t h Eosecrans visited j *l u m h | by v}"**\\il ^ ' m s&#13;
1&#13;
t , ' . b a a ' ^ ,t h '/tions tor usin^ the medicine, also a&#13;
&lt;• :•* ; Howell. j l o r s i s t e i . ] n H a m b u r g last week.&#13;
week. Louis Sweeny was home from&#13;
Business: Pointers 4 Miss Maude Vacev of Howell&#13;
t o w n iiall s h o u l d h e c l o s e d ; it s e e m s to ha(&#13;
ttiat t h e g r i s t m i l l s h o u l d b e c l o s e d ( o r a&#13;
Elmer Sweeney and .wife of ! jeasi an eilort made to do so(.&#13;
visited her parents of this place Mericount, N. D., are visiting his j We do not question the sincerity „f ,Mir HxpUinin^ about the various fornix of&#13;
Sunday. ' „ n v m , k ' ' \ Township and Village otlieers but do ihev womanly weakness and disease and&#13;
copy ot "Dr. Fenoelly's Advice to&#13;
Women''' a little hook of tfieat vfrle* "^'&#13;
FOR SALJB.&#13;
t'hoiee ea' itio potatoe.-.&#13;
(i. W . C l a r k .&#13;
FOR SALES.&#13;
Carmen Xo. 0 seed potatoes.&#13;
.1. 0 . Mac kinder.&#13;
F O R S A I i B .&#13;
A &lt;|U.in,;,1;. of W h i t e W a x b r a n s ,&#13;
a l s o N0 H)(. nix k w b e a t t o r seed,&#13;
V. (1. D i n k e ] ,&#13;
Hrand Trunk Kailwav System.&#13;
1. nil I'.minil from I'hu k iu&gt;y&#13;
No1 V.N ;\auMiinBr 1'^x , Sum n \ , :i: j s A. M&#13;
.No. 'in I'li-M'ti^cr Kx. Sunday, t :.',,* ]', M,&#13;
W&gt;'Hl Hisnnil fruiii r i i i r k n e v&#13;
No. '..'7 I'a^Bunu'er Ex. S i n u l m , :n.nl A. M .&#13;
No. -J'." r.'ifRon^']' F-:x, S::ndny, Silt P. MSi)!&#13;
i il \i ill,' \ 0--( ilviile t rai r,a uf eoaeIn•-&gt; ami ^lei'],&#13;
i n_r ' .1 r- in v ,&gt;p&lt;&gt; rat eft I,, New Ynvlf fii nil I Mi i I ml r IJIIUM&#13;
• \' iii N it.,.1111 I'.ilU ],v 11;,. 1 ,ronil T i n n k -l.c&#13;
hitih \-H11CV Kouti',&#13;
W. II. Clark. A i ' r n t .&#13;
W. T. WRIGHT&#13;
DENTIST&#13;
C l a r k U l o c k P l n n k n c y , M i r . h .&#13;
f a i n I e s s L i x t r a c t i o n&#13;
I 7\ \\ . I &gt; A M K I &gt; .&#13;
\jm O I 7 M . 1 1 A 1 , A T I 'T I 0 N 1-: K n .&#13;
Sa t is tact n n &lt; r m i r a n ' e e d . f o r information&#13;
call :it I Msi'A r i l l I Miice or 'idilres-&#13;
( r r e g o r v . M i ell. r. f. d. "J. l.vmlillii plunn&#13;
c o n n e c t i o n . Auction bills a n d tin i n p -&#13;
furn ished 1 re*'.&#13;
parents.&#13;
l-hlna Abbet entertained Lena M l , a i u ] M r 8 , i j e i . t S t e w a r d of S l lO\w lln1 prope r s*p irit and do thev hi'in- the pro|ier treat ment tor then- cure.&#13;
Coleman of Howell last Friday J h ^ h t o n called in this vicinity : tlI satisfy a iiu]e „, ctv s,?i&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
L l e a n o i ' a n d C'athrvnt* Brogan&#13;
tit ihe T o w n s h i p or Village in taking action It y o u d e s i r e ' m o r e i n f o r m a t i o n&#13;
. ( . , . pile held by indi- aliout Zoa-IMi )i a, t.he Zoa l'hora&#13;
a n d S a t l l l ( h l \ . ^ , , , , , 1 , , , . ! viduals of e i t h e r h o a r d . N i n e - t e n t h s of&#13;
, r T , , , i -i 1 • i 'ht' voiers a n d t a x p a v e r s of the T o w n s h i p&#13;
J. H. Sweeny has rented his , ,.... •,, , . . .&#13;
*„ut,',l i V Y,,sil,u„i .Mo,„l„y l „ ; | , o u s , . , O I m l i i e ; f l , , m Howell for ' '"" " "UK""" ^ ""' '"' "'&#13;
attend the suimner Normal. ^j1 ( i 8 l i m n u &gt; r&#13;
A/.el Stowe and sister Ceeile H0 l t lwi Lell Steward of lirighwere&#13;
the gue*tH of their sister, h m iH v i s i t i n g h e r g r a n d m o t h e r&#13;
_ , ' usiiiy u i e h a l l 1,,1 v i l l i , g e p u r p o s e s a m i n o&#13;
Mrs. N. M. Case.&#13;
Mrs. ('. Diinv,lasl Wednesday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. \\. M. Olenn a t - : Mrs. H* Damman is nicely retended&#13;
the funeral of his sister, c o v e r i n g from the operation slu&#13;
Mrs. ('has. Vines last S a t u r d a y . ; underwent two wreks ago.&#13;
EAST PUTNAM.&#13;
• 1 1&#13;
d e a l i n g w i t h e a c h o t h e r : g r a n ! r i g h t s to&#13;
( h e o t h e r s t h a t voii w o u l d a s k for y o u r -&#13;
s e l v e s . A m e n d y.0111 r e s o l u t i o n s o as lo&#13;
g r a n i t h e V i l l a g e h o a r d t h e p r i v i l e g e of&#13;
Usi 11 *j t h e ha&#13;
0.,&#13;
Kalama/.oo, Midi., will cheerfully&#13;
answer all inquires. No higher authority&#13;
regarding' the' value and use of&#13;
a medicine is known ilian that, ahove&#13;
mentioned. In addition, and to provH&#13;
conclusively lo the most skeptical, the&#13;
value of Zoa- I'liora, we have the personal&#13;
experience of Dr. I'mi^elly, the&#13;
Charles Lrown and son, C m t e r , t ) f M i l l i l , - t o n H l H M l t a foNV &lt; l f t 3'f l «&#13;
w e r e in S t c c k b r i d - e t h e first; ()f ^ i t h t h e i r s i s t e r , M r s . C a r l D a m -&#13;
h e \ \ ' e e k .&#13;
Mr. a n d M r s , J o h n M c l . n t y r e&#13;
other—this is fair aim just and (lie intenl&#13;
of the g i \ ' e r , and when the p r o p e r time f o r i n u l a t o r ot Z o a - P h o i a , w l i o 1 sed&#13;
t h i s p r e s c r i p t i o n c o n s t a n t l y i n h i s p r i -&#13;
v a t e p r a t ice for m a n y y e a r s in t r e a t - .&#13;
HIL' tLi * v a r i o u s d i s e a s e s a n d a i l m e n t s&#13;
to w h i c h t h e d e l i c a t e o r g a n i s m of&#13;
w o m a n is s i n g u l a r l y s u b j e c t .&#13;
comes next spring for Village a n d T o w n -&#13;
hip elections the people will (hen show&#13;
appi'oViit of your action in g r a i n i n g wind&#13;
A r t h u r D y n e s a n d s i s t e r M i l d r e d j was intended by the man ihat 1 ir the&#13;
i 11.&#13;
&lt; &gt;NK I N T K K K S T K H .&#13;
nian. The school htiiidwiir proposition in&#13;
ChiMreiTs day exorcises were \ Cheisca is having hard sledding. The&#13;
held at t h e Cong'l church Sunday : Sl'lln|d tl0ii111 voted to submit to ;-ote&#13;
e n t e, r.t,a-i n, e d c o m p a n y S a t u r d a yJ V..,. M. . . I,,,h. e c h,.i .l -d,r e n rend&lt;, &gt;i'ed a' 11 t i, nu &gt;i• I,"„0.!,"„1„-„" and h u n d a y . ' .&#13;
nice ])i'ogi'aru,-.&#13;
Miss Bessie Fisk of flackson has tl,'y&#13;
been spending somr time with her&#13;
|)arents at this place.&#13;
Miss Flola Hall star led for Seattle,&#13;
Washington, Monday, with&#13;
her sister, Mrs. S. d. Kennedy.&#13;
Misses Elizabeth, Kate, and&#13;
Irene llunio of Corunnn visited&#13;
. Mayme Fish Fid hiy ami Snturday. paid nr t laier than .Inlv 2o&#13;
The Idvmgston county Mutual Kire&#13;
assessment is again due.&#13;
C V. Van Winkle.&#13;
ihnt barber, ot Klton, Wis., says "L&#13;
have only taken tour doses of your&#13;
Kidney and b'mlder Pills and they&#13;
i t i o n li&gt; b o n d for. S;!0,fl()(l lor iuivc n o n e f o r m e m o r e t h a n a n y o t l i -&#13;
for a n e w s c h o o l h u i h l m g w h o m w a s • ,.,- m e d i c i n e h a s e v e r n o n e . | km s t i l l&#13;
c r r r i e d . Nrnv otic m a n , w i t h -ix «IIII- L , - t , ,, • . a .&#13;
,^,..,,,. ,,.,,, , , , , . • ,- l . t a k i n g t h e p i l l s a s w a n t a p e r f e c t&#13;
poi t e i s , ha vc h a d a n n i p i n c t i n n s u'ved I ' '&#13;
on t h e stdiool hoai d to r e s t r a i n t h e m cure." M r. Barber rele I s IO I)e Witt's&#13;
Tl&#13;
NOT1CK.&#13;
ie v 1 i 1 a&lt;re t a x voli if&#13;
r o m i s s u i n g t h e b o n d s . K v e r y t o w n K i d n e y a n d B l a d d e r F i l l s , w h i c h i r e&#13;
a l w a y s # h a . s a few n o n w h o a r e r e a d y n n r q u a h d | o r B a c k a c h e , w e a k k i d -&#13;
to k n n c k a. g o o d t h i n g , a n d s o m e e v e n&#13;
k m ck t h e i r o w n t w n S u e men&#13;
n e y s , i n t i m a t i o n of t h e b l a d d e r av&lt;l&#13;
n 0 w .11 i n v&#13;
hands and i wil' bo ready to receive&#13;
taxes at a n v time. Taxes must be&#13;
should not he entitled to citizenship.&#13;
W e never knMv a " k n n c k e r " y d , who '01&#13;
ever did anything commendable. j&#13;
m i l i a r y t r o u b l e s , A w e e k s t r e a t m e n t&#13;
. 0 c i o i r -&#13;
Hold by F . A. Sigler, Dniggtst.&#13;
(&#13;
Expert Auctioneer&#13;
Over 20 Years Experience&#13;
DEXTER, MICH.&#13;
PHONI38. FREE&#13;
J. W. 151RD&#13;
PRACTICAL AUCTIONEER&#13;
SRTISFftCTION GU&amp;R&amp;NTEED&#13;
F o r inlormatioii, call at the l ' i n c k n e y ]&gt;is-&#13;
I&gt;\TI 11 , ,'he:'. Auction Mills F r e e&#13;
V.cLst.cl' i ^ i r o l ' P h o n e&#13;
Arrangements nmrtV for sale hy (dione at&#13;
m y ex pense.&#13;
Auoress. Doxt.or, , ,utiigai,&#13;
•fohn Svveeny of Chilson and&#13;
his son, l^lmer. of Maricount, N.&#13;
Dak., were cullers in this vicinity&#13;
the first of the weed;.&#13;
Miss M ' y m e Fish of Corunnn,&#13;
sjient part of the last week with&#13;
tier pnrents here. S h e left Monday&#13;
for ^i p.silanti to n'tend the&#13;
Hummer Normal.&#13;
Miss Murta Hall of Williamston&#13;
BOX 68 ' v^s1'''1^ n^ ^'n.V H'dls from F r i d a y&#13;
until Monday. She then sturted&#13;
for Bay \ iew acciimpanied by iier&#13;
nephew, Alger Hull.&#13;
,1. A . C:ad w e l l , Tre:*:- :m&#13;
FARIVIERS!&#13;
\ Is it ll)Lr&#13;
J^WITT'S rsSK WITCH HAZEL ., .&#13;
S A L V E For Piles, Burns, Sores.' ]hm([tv'&#13;
LAKELAND .&#13;
Win. Claventor&#13;
friends in Ann Arbor.&#13;
The Lakeland Hotel is doing a&#13;
[large amount of businerr these&#13;
I days.&#13;
Mrs. E. Rreminsta-11 haR re- o a m i , l u .&#13;
turned from a^yro weeks visit at 5 A 111 If A W ,&#13;
W e w a n t v&lt; d i r c r n i m&#13;
W e p a y a s niiudi a s a n y o n e&#13;
W e d o r a t v f u l vork"&#13;
\ \ T e ; t ! \ ' a i l \ e&#13;
LY\ US: write us&#13;
1&#13;
mm&#13;
NEW SODA FOUNTAIN&#13;
AVe ha\"e installed a. now&#13;
Soda f o u n t a i n and are now&#13;
ready to serve yon a euol&#13;
dish of&#13;
, 1&#13;
•v!&#13;
-^&#13;
^iwwffpp.&#13;
Dudley Butter Co.&#13;
E. F. DUOLEr. TRE1S. IND GEH'L MNG'R&#13;
MICHIGAN</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch June 27, 1907</text>
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                <text>June 27, 1907 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>Frank L. Andrews</text>
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